This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.
identifier | question |
---|---|
3691 | And now, what is Red to do? |
3691 | How is he to get out of it? |
3691 | To whom did the gun belong? |
3690 | ("What is he doing, the great god Pan, Down in the reeds by the river?") |
3690 | What is a''lectric? |
44867 | And beyond those limits--? |
44867 | And now, how far is it possible at the present time to speculate on the particular outline the future will assume when it is investigated in this way? |
44867 | And suppose it was a rather important promise? |
44867 | Are we simply separating and contrasting two sides of everybody''s opinion? |
44867 | But suppose it was not such very great suffering we were going to inflict, but only some suffering? |
44867 | But why? |
44867 | How far may we hope to get trustworthy inductions about the future of man? |
44867 | Why are we so bound to it? |
44867 | Why should not this rising curve rise yet more steeply and swiftly? |
44867 | Why should things cease at man? |
44867 | Would a man do right or wrong if he broke such a promise? |
4225 | Am I a mind mysteriously linked to this thing of matter and endeavour? |
4225 | Am I my body? |
4225 | And finally the man or woman must be fully adult. ” “ Twenty- one? |
4225 | And what after all is my distinctive something, a few capacities, a few incapacities, an uncertain memory, a hesitating presence? |
4225 | Are I and my respectable colleagues much more than successful evasions of THAT? |
4225 | Are they an hereditary cast, a specially educated order, an elected class? |
4225 | But perhaps the Church will not endure a broad- minded man in its body, speaking and reforming, and will expel him? |
4225 | But what is Beauty, you ask, and what will Power do? |
4225 | But who can define cruelty? |
4225 | Do I believe that, had one a mind ideally clear and powerful, the whole universe would seem orderly and absolutely predestined? |
4225 | Do not these unavoidable barriers to public service, or religious work, stand on a special footing? |
4225 | Do you note how in this that I have written, such a word as Believer will begin to wear a capital letter and give itself solemn ridiculous airs? |
4225 | Does courage always ensure us victory? |
4225 | Does it follow that thought is futile and discussion vain? |
4225 | For a splendid thing any risk or any defiance may be justifiable, but is it a sufficiently splendid thing? |
4225 | How do these beliefs on which I base my rule of conduct stand to Christianity? |
4225 | How far is the leaving of a third person to count as cruelty? |
4225 | How is a man then to behave towards these test oaths and affirmations, towards repeating creeds, signing assent to articles of religion and the like? |
4225 | How may he best do this? |
4225 | How then are we to think and argue and what truth may we attain? |
4225 | Is not the method of the scientific investigator a valid one, and is there not truth to the world of fact in scientific laws? |
4225 | Is the Catholic Church merely the Roman communion or does it include the Greek and Protestant Churches? |
4225 | Is the scientific method of value in biology? |
4225 | Is the whole of this scheme of things settled and done? |
4225 | It matters no doubt in its place and time, as all things matter in their place and time, but where in it all is the eternally indispensable? |
4225 | Most people are different from me I perceive, but which among them is better, which worse? |
4225 | Now what is the practical outcome of all these criticisms of the human mind? |
4225 | One is asked, Do you believe in Marriage and the Family? |
4225 | WHAT IS GOOD? |
4225 | WHAT IS GOOD? |
4225 | Was that gain inevitable? |
4225 | What am I? |
4225 | What are they? |
4225 | What if one does wrong so extremely as to condemn one ’s life, to make oneself part of the refuse and not of the building? |
4225 | What is the exact value of these thoughts we are thinking and these words we are using? ” He wants to take thought about thought. |
4225 | What is the meaning of war in life? |
4225 | What modern population will stand a famine? |
4225 | What should be the attitude of a right- living man towards his State at war and to warlike preparations? |
4225 | Yes or no? |
4225 | “ What am I to do? ” is the perpetual question of our existence. |
21781 | ( a) What are the protovertebrae? |
21781 | ( b) How does the notochord originate in the frog? |
21781 | ( c) How are the vertebrae laid down in the tadpole? |
21781 | ( c) What bone in the rabbit is generally regarded as corresponding to the quadrate cartilage of the frog? |
21781 | ( d) How is the central nervous system developed in the frog, and( e) in the rabbit? |
21781 | ( d) In what important respects does the vascular mechanism of the frog differ from that of the fish, in correlation with the presence of lungs? |
21781 | ( e) In what important respects do the centra of the vertebrae of the frog, the dog- fish, and the rabbit differ from one another? |
21781 | ( e) What is the structure and origin of the ovarian follicle in the rabbit, and( f) of the ovarian stroma? |
21781 | ( f) What conclusions may be drawn from the facts stated as to the origin of the central nervous system in evolution? |
21781 | ( g) What is the"granulosa"and what the"zona pellucida"? |
21781 | By what means would you determine whether a given nerve is motor or sensory? |
21781 | Each also(? IX.) |
21781 | From which of the primary cell- layers of the embryo are they respectively developed? |
21781 | How are such structures interpreted? |
21781 | How are they removed? |
21781 | How do protozoa differ from higher animals( metazoa) as regards( a) structure,( b) reproduction? |
21781 | How do you account for the primitive streak? |
21781 | The Mullerian duct(? |
21781 | There are supra- and basi- as well as ex- occipital bones; the para- sphenoid is(? |
21781 | They finally appear to(? |
21781 | To what series of cavities in the frog are the metapleural canals to be compared? |
21781 | We have just mentioned that the heart- muscle is striated, but who can alter the beating of the heart by force of will? |
21781 | What are bilateral symmetry and metameric segmentation? |
21781 | What are the chief anatomical differences between a typical cranial, a spinal, and a sympathetic nerve? |
21781 | What are the chief excretory products of an animal? |
21781 | What are the functions of the skin? |
21781 | What are the most characteristic points in the mammalian vertebral column? |
21781 | What do you know concerning the functions of the several parts of the brain in the frog? |
21781 | What explanation can you give of the differences between the two cases? |
21781 | What is a gastrula? |
21781 | What is a goblet cell? |
21781 | What is a secretion? |
21781 | What is a villus? |
21781 | What is an excretion? |
21781 | What is botryoidal tissue? |
21781 | What is cartilage bone? |
21781 | What is ciliated epithelium? |
21781 | What is known of its functions? |
21781 | What is membrane bone? |
21781 | What is tendon? |
21781 | What is the lymphatic system? |
21781 | What is the notochord, and how is it developed in the frog? |
21781 | What is the relation of respiration to the general life of the animal? |
21781 | What is their function? |
21781 | What other structures of the adult rabbit display a similar repetition of similar parts? |
21781 | What parts are added to this in the higher type? |
21781 | What structures have been regarded, as renal organs in amphioxus? |
21781 | What substance is excreted by the renal organ of a frog, and what relation does this substance bear to the general life of the organism? |
21781 | Whence comes the force? |
21781 | Where does it occur in the rabbit? |
21781 | Where does it occur? |
21781 | With what lower type has the gastrula been compared? |
21781 | c., calcar(?= a sixth digit). |
19229 | A certain lack of solitude there may be perhaps, and-- Will conspicuous advertisements play any part in the landscape?... |
19229 | And as for the world beyond our urban regions? |
19229 | And how will the New Republic treat the inferior races? |
19229 | And upon that assumption, in what direction are these new motor vehicles likely to develop? |
19229 | But how does this fit into the childless, disunited, and probably shifting_ ménage_ of our second picture? |
19229 | But is it likely that this will remain a rude levy? |
19229 | But is it? |
19229 | But then, on the other hand, does the ordinary monogamic wife do that? |
19229 | But what of the Welsh- speaking Welshman? |
19229 | But why was it not invented? |
19229 | Can the wife in any sort of polygamic arrangement, or a woman of no assured status, attain to the maternal possibilities of the ideal monogamic wife? |
19229 | Charity is in the air, and why should not charming people meet one another? |
19229 | He will echo our question,"Why_ did_ people stand it?" |
19229 | How can capable and active men be expected to live and work between this upper and that nether millstone? |
19229 | How far will that possible diffusion accomplish itself? |
19229 | How is it that the steam locomotive appeared at the time it did, and not earlier in the history of the world? |
19229 | How will it deal with the black? |
19229 | Is Germany to her utmost possibility making capable men? |
19229 | Now, in what direction will matters move? |
19229 | Or is Germany doing no more than cash the promises of those earlier days? |
19229 | Or is it only unprecedented? |
19229 | Our marksmen will snatch at their field- glasses, tremulously anxious,"Is that a white flag or no?... |
19229 | Spanish and Russian are mighty languages, but without a reading public how can they prevail, and what prospect of a reading public has either? |
19229 | Was its appearance then due only to the attainment of a certain necessary degree of public credit, or was it correlated with any other force? |
19229 | What can you expect of them? |
19229 | What else is there? |
19229 | What is the will and purpose that these men of will and purpose will find above and comprehending their own? |
19229 | What life or strength will be left in the old order to prevent this new order beginning? |
19229 | What now are the centripetal forces against which these inducements contend? |
19229 | What of the Basque and the Lithuanian who can speak only his mother tongue? |
19229 | What will have happened? |
19229 | What will these aggregating world- languages be? |
19229 | Why should it be so hopeless to suggest an edition of the"Golden Bough"with footnotes by Mr. Lang and Mr. Fraser''s replies? |
19229 | Why should not men of opposite opinions collaborate in their discussion? |
19229 | Will the resultant of these forces be, as a rule, centripetal or centrifugal? |
19229 | [ 45]_ Is War Now Impossible?_ and see also footnote, p. 210. |
19229 | [ 51] How will the landscape shape itself to the dominant men of the new time and in relation to themselves? |
19229 | and where finally will they take us? |
19229 | how will it deal with the yellow man? |
19229 | how will it tackle that alleged termite in the civilized woodwork, the Jew? |
19229 | how will they react upon the railways? |
11289 | Meanwhile,they will say, with a stiff impatience unusual in their class,"about_ us_?" |
11289 | And how far does it mean a reconstruction of human society, within a few score of years, upon sounder and happier lines? |
11289 | And was there not some fearful rubbish, not only in German but in English and French, about the"decadence"of France? |
11289 | And what after all is the Prussian dream of world empire but an imitative response to the British empire and the adventure of Napoleon? |
11289 | And what is our fundamental purpose in all this reform of our higher education? |
11289 | And what prospects are there of a_ lingua franca_? |
11289 | And when one is taken by surprise the tendency is not to say with the untrained man,"Now, who''d ha''thought it?" |
11289 | Are people likely to overcome these very serious difficulties in the future, and, if so, how will they do it? |
11289 | But what of the result? |
11289 | But what when presently the beam has so tilted against Germany that an unprofitable peace has become urgent and inevitable? |
11289 | Had he not better wait for that? |
11289 | Had they not bombarded Algiers?... |
11289 | How FAR WILL EUROPE GO TOWARD SOCIALISM? |
11289 | How are they going to behave when they realise fully that they have suffered and died and starved and wasted all their land in vain? |
11289 | How best can this new spirit be defined? |
11289 | How far in each country will imagination triumph over tradition and individualism? |
11289 | How far is this thing going to be done finely; how far is it going to be done cunningly and basely? |
11289 | How far will greatness of mind, how far will imaginative generosity, prevail over the jealous and pettifogging spirit that lurks in every human being? |
11289 | How far will she be chastened and disillusioned by the end of this war? |
11289 | How will so- and- so behave, and how will the nation take it? |
11289 | In other words, what are the prospects of a fairly fundamental revolution in German life and thought and affairs in the years immediately before us? |
11289 | Is it already proven a dream? |
11289 | Is it, in fact, a hopeless and ineradicable trait that we stick to extravagance and confusion? |
11289 | Is the Russian seeking only a necessary outlet to the seas of the world, or has he dreams of Delhi? |
11289 | It is n''t now a question of"What thing-- what faculty-- what added power will come to hand, and how will it affect our ways of living?" |
11289 | It is-- or shall I write,"it may be"? |
11289 | It was only when the agitation of the Pankhurst family, aided by Miss Robins''remarkable book"Where are you going to...?" |
11289 | Let us ask, can we do without him? |
11289 | May we even hope that Great Britain will step straight out of the war into a phase of restored and increasing welfare? |
11289 | Men? |
11289 | Must that reconstruction be preceded by a revolution in all or any of the countries? |
11289 | Now is the time to ask what sort of training should a university give to produce the ruling, directing, and leading men which it exists to produce? |
11289 | Shall we toss to see who shall do it, and let the other man go off to find something useful to do?" |
11289 | The international question is, can we get a new Germany? |
11289 | The national question everywhere is, can we get a better politician? |
11289 | To what extent can the world produce the imagination it needs? |
11289 | V. HOW FAR WILL EUROPE GO TOWARD SOCIALISM? |
11289 | Was the hope expressed in those phrases a dream? |
11289 | What are these Allies going to do about their"subject races"? |
11289 | What had brought that about? |
11289 | What is Coming? |
11289 | What is the world going to do about the"subject races"? |
11289 | What more obvious course, then, than to keep them going by turning them on to manufacture goods of urgent public necessity? |
11289 | What reason is there to suppose that they will relapse into a state of superfluous energy after the war? |
11289 | When they learn too that the cause of the war was a trick, and the Russian invasion a lie? |
11289 | When, they asked, was it to be returned to them? |
11289 | Where will it be strongest? |
11289 | Will England presently produce a military genius? |
11289 | Will any country go altogether to pieces in hopeless incurable discord? |
11289 | Will the economic history of the next few decades be the story of a restoration of the capitalistic system upon a new basis? |
11289 | but"Now, what was it we overlooked?" |
11289 | or what will Mr. Belloc say the day after to- morrow? |
10291 | What can_ they_ know about foreign politics? |
10291 | And having ascertained these things, ask yourself what is the present value of Gibraltar? |
10291 | And if it is true, have the statesmen of the Allies made it as transparently and convincingly clear to the German people as possible? |
10291 | And if we can, why is there all this voluminous, uneasy, unquenchable disputation about War Aims? |
10291 | And now will the reader take the map of the world and study the air routes from London to the rest of the empire? |
10291 | And, finally, will he study the air routes out of Germany to anywhere? |
10291 | Are aeroplanes, for example, armament? |
10291 | Are men of light and purpose to have a voice in public affairs or not? |
10291 | Are these incompatibilities understood? |
10291 | Are we men of English blood and tradition to see our affairs controlled by such"foreigners"as Wilson, Lincoln, Webster and Washington? |
10291 | Are we to hand over these most intimate affairs of ours to"a lot of foreigners"? |
10291 | At present all the political luncheon and dinner parties in London are busy with smirking discussions of"Who is to go?" |
10291 | But do we, as a nation, stick closely to this clear and necessary, this only possible, meaning of our declared War Aim? |
10291 | But has the reader any assurance that this sane solution of the African problem has the support of the Allied Governments? |
10291 | But here, again, has the general mind yet thought out all that is involved in this proposition? |
10291 | But how are we to prevent the enslavement and economic exploitation of the blacks if we have no general watcher of African conditions? |
10291 | But is it the whole and complete truth? |
10291 | But why do they not say it plainly? |
10291 | But, the reader will say, what evidence is there of any republican feeling in Germany? |
10291 | Could a Greek village in Bulgarian Macedonia plead in the Supreme Court? |
10291 | Could any Indian population in India appeal? |
10291 | Could anything be more palpably shifty and unsatisfactory, more senile, more feebly artful, than the recent utterances of the German Chancellor? |
10291 | Did he? |
10291 | Down with Proportional Representation"? |
10291 | For any sort of man except the German the question is, Will you be a free citizen or will you be an underling to the German imperialism? |
10291 | Given reparation in Europe, is Germany to be allowed a fair share in the control and trade of a pooled and neutralized Central Africa? |
10291 | Has this War- Aims controversy really got down to essentials? |
10291 | Have the British settled, for example, with Italy and France for the supply of metallurgical coal after the war? |
10291 | How far may the supreme court of the world attend to grievances between subject and sovereign? |
10291 | In such offences Germany has been the chief of sinners, but which among the belligerent nations can throw the first stone? |
10291 | Is it not time that these base imputations were repudiated clearly and conclusively by our Alliance? |
10291 | Is it to be union by conquest or is it to be union by league? |
10291 | Is that true? |
10291 | Is there nothing more to be done on our side? |
10291 | Let the reader ask himself the following questions:-- Does he know what the Allies mean to do with the problem of Central Africa? |
10291 | Mr. McCurdy has been asking lately,"Why not the League of Nations_ now_?" |
10291 | Suppose Germany makes sudden proposals affecting native labour that win over the Portuguese and the Boers? |
10291 | The article that follows was published in the_ Daily Mail_ under the heading,"Are we Sticking to the Point? |
10291 | The question I would put to the reader is this: Are we all logically, sincerely, and fully carrying out the plain implications of this War Aim? |
10291 | To do as we please? |
10291 | What Londoner knows anything about his member? |
10291 | What are the ends that_ must_ be achieved if Africa is not to continue a festering sore in the body of mankind? |
10291 | What are these broad essentials? |
10291 | What do we mean by our Empire, and what is its relation to that universal desire of mankind, the permanent rule of peace and justice in the world? |
10291 | What has been the value of that freedom? |
10291 | What in plain English are we up to there? |
10291 | What is the alternative to that? |
10291 | What is the world to him? |
10291 | What sort of gathering will embody it? |
10291 | Which do we want?" |
10291 | Why are we, and why are the German people, not given some definite assurance in this matter? |
10291 | Why do they justify imperialism to Germany? |
10291 | Why do they maintain a threatening ambiguity towards Germany on all these matters? |
10291 | Why do they not shout it so compactly and loudly that all Germany will hear and understand? |
10291 | Why does the great mass of the German people still cling to its incurably belligerent Government? |
10291 | Why is not the Peace Conference sitting now? |
10291 | Why not state it plainly now? |
10291 | Why should they? |
10291 | Why, then, does the waste and killing go on? |
10291 | Will he next study the air routes from Paris to the rest of the French possessions? |
10291 | Will it go along those lines? |
10291 | Will it make that severance? |
10291 | Would it not be wise to answer that question in the affirmative before the voice in which it is asked grows thick with anger? |
56484 | Are the workers here in any way members of the community? |
56484 | Are you an Anarchist? |
56484 | Are you an Anarchist? |
56484 | But the old religion of Oneida? |
56484 | How many hours a day may a child work in New York,I began to ask people,"and when may a boy leave school?" |
56484 | Is n''t that possible? |
56484 | May we not become a peculiar people-- like the Jews? |
56484 | Resist what? |
56484 | The Chinese? |
56484 | Was it by any chance very, very black? |
56484 | Was n''t he making trouble? |
56484 | What are you going to make your future_ of_, for all your airs? |
56484 | What do you mean? |
56484 | What on earth,said I,"is that baby doing abroad at this time of night?" |
56484 | What shall be those counter elements of civilization? 56484 What will the property- owners in Paterson say to us if this man is released?" |
56484 | Who was he? |
56484 | Whose head? |
56484 | Why did he go there? |
56484 | Will this enormous space of sunlit woodland and marsh and meadow really be filled at any time? |
56484 | With all this,I asked him,"why does n''t the place_ think_?" |
56484 | You do n''t think they''ll swamp you? |
56484 | A hundred tons of water stuns one altogether, and what more do you want? |
56484 | All depends upon the answer to this question: Is the average citizen fundamentally dishonest? |
56484 | And at a cheaper rate?... |
56484 | And of all the races upon earth, which has suffered such wrongs as this negro blood that is still imputed to him as a sin? |
56484 | And then-- what use will it make of its prey? |
56484 | Are n''t we driving ahead westward at a pace of four hundred and fifty miles a day? |
56484 | Are you ashamed of your poor relations? |
56484 | Are you bound to inform your customer of every defect? |
56484 | Are you bound to spend more upon cleaning and packing them than he demands?--to wrap them in gold- foil gratuitously, for example? |
56484 | But where will one find that class? |
56484 | But will the uneducated whites endure even so submissive a vindication as that? |
56484 | Do geographical positions or mineral resources make for riches? |
56484 | Do you think it is generous?" |
56484 | How are you going to answer these questions? |
56484 | How far do they suffer under that plight of feminine education-- notetaking from lectures?... |
56484 | How far, I wonder still, are these girls thinking and feeding mentally for themselves? |
56484 | How shall it be prevented from becoming in obedience to a similar inexorable law, a curse? |
56484 | How subtle, how collected and patient, how far capable of a long plan, is this American nation? |
56484 | III Is Progress Inevitable? |
56484 | Is an abundant prolific life at a low level indicated? |
56484 | Is he a rascal and humbug in grain? |
56484 | Is he fair?" |
56484 | No national income- tax is legal, and there is practically no power, short of revolution, to alter that.... Could anything be more emphatic? |
56484 | Or between themselves for the matter of that? |
56484 | Or is he fundamentally honest, but a little confused ethically?... |
56484 | Suppose you are, then are you bound to examine your goods minutely for defects? |
56484 | Suppose you want to grow very rich and found a noble university, let us say? |
56484 | The seller seeks to appreciate, the buyer to depreciate; and where is there room for truth in that contest? |
56484 | Then can you decently join in the outcry against the Chicago butchers? |
56484 | Then if you intrust that duty to an employee ought you to dismiss him for selling defective goods for you? |
56484 | They have secret agents, false names, concealed bargains,--what else could one expect? |
56484 | They have, no doubt, carried sharpness to the very edge of dishonesty, but what else was to be expected from the American conditions? |
56484 | Well, do you expect me, now I''m here, to shut the door on any other poor chaps who want a start-- a start with hope in it, in the New World?" |
56484 | What are you going to make your future_ of_, for all your airs, we want to know? |
56484 | What can you do with a public opinion made of this class of ingredient? |
56484 | What do they discuss one with another? |
56484 | What elements of a future, as futures have gone in the great world, are at all assured to you?" |
56484 | What is America saying to itself? |
56484 | What is happening to those who have not got and who are not getting wealth, who are, in fact, falling back in the competition? |
56484 | What is the form of that process as one finds it in America? |
56484 | What made him so sure of this progressive magnificence of Boston''s growth? |
56484 | What matters it? |
56484 | What shall we have? |
56484 | What will they be up to?" |
56484 | Who can invent a rule to determine what expedients are permissible and what not? |
56484 | Will they suffer the horrid spectacle of free and self- satisfied negroes in decent clothing on any terms without resentment? |
56484 | _ What_ Princess?" |
29472 | A man sent to me only a week ago to ask what my sonnet''The Scarlet Thread''_ meant_? |
29472 | But what can one do? |
29472 | But why do you try and hide your taste under these mere formalities in frames? 29472 But why?" |
29472 | But_ why_ do they say you must? |
29472 | By the bye,said I,"how is Mrs Harborough?" |
29472 | Did you ever see such abominable_ rudeness_, sir? |
29472 | Entertaining? |
29472 | Golf here? |
29472 | Has it ever occurred to you, George, that one of the most uncomfortable things in the world must be to outlive your age? 29472 Have n''t they used up all their originality ages ago? |
29472 | Have you ever read a ladies''newspaper? |
29472 | Have you seen_ Punch_? |
29472 | How do you get that sort of work? |
29472 | How''s Euphemia? |
29472 | I can not afford to go to these swells and get original work of theirs----"What do you want with''these swells''and their original work? |
29472 | I suppose that autotype cost thirty shillings, and this carpet about five pounds? |
29472 | Is that dreamland furniture really so unstable in use? |
29472 | Perhaps a lack of opportunity? 29472 Shall I throw this away?" |
29472 | Well,I said, when the pause seemed sufficient;"what did she say?" |
29472 | Well? |
29472 | What do you_ mean_, sir? 29472 What do you_ think_ of marriage, George?" |
29472 | What next? 29472 What_ is_ music,"said my uncle, after a moody silence,"that reasonable people should listen to it? |
29472 | Where do the literary people meet together, George? 29472 Who are these people?" |
29472 | Why do you argue? 29472 Why, to- morrow?" |
29472 | Why,returned my uncle,"should you hang up things less interesting than your wall paper, in mere imitation of your neighbours? |
29472 | You do your best,the gentleman with the long hair was saying;"and they say,''What is it for?'' |
29472 | You rhyme? |
29472 | ''And now, Mr Something- or- other,''said one of the young ladies, addressing the pedagogue in command,''what is_ this_ to teach us?''" |
29472 | ''Are we,''I said,''in the sixties or the nineties? |
29472 | ''Is it wholesome?'' |
29472 | ''What_ shall_ I do with all these people?'' |
29472 | A new piece for La Belle Dame Sans Merci? |
29472 | A stranger? |
29472 | And why cake-- infantile cake? |
29472 | And why----?" |
29472 | But do I weary you, thrusting my nose into your meditations?" |
29472 | But what woman could overlook a nose like mine? |
29472 | But why do n''t they go to bed? |
29472 | Did you notice the shape? |
29472 | Do n''t you see the mere popularity of these things of the pavement is enough to condemn them in the estimation of every right- minded person?" |
29472 | Do you hear, George? |
29472 | Do you think I never saw the cake shop? |
29472 | For instance, when she asked,''Who sends the members of Parliament to Westminster?'' |
29472 | Have you ever been in a draper''s shop, George?" |
29472 | Have you ever seen a little boy picking dormice out of a cage? |
29472 | How could she shut out her visions of it, and look her love into my eyes, glaring at her over its immensity? |
29472 | How is Euphemia? |
29472 | How would you like one popped on to_ you_ now? |
29472 | Is it not open to such men as yourself to discover new men? |
29472 | Is it such a headlong wreck of one''s ideals as they say?" |
29472 | Is n''t it worth hunting studios for, and even, maybe, going to the Academy? |
29472 | Now, will you not congratulate me?" |
29472 | Of course you have heard of the Fitz- Brilliants? |
29472 | Only, do n''t you know Willis has Love and Life and Love and Death? |
29472 | Surely, if a wife is worth having she is worth being ridiculous for? |
29472 | Then think, what am I to do, George, if that cad Hagshot sends me a present?" |
29472 | Then why has my niece Annie dropped admiring Poynter, and why does she pretend-- and a very thin pretence it is-- to admire Whistler?" |
29472 | Think: Is it Art to write a book with an object, to paint a picture for strategy?'' |
29472 | Throw it away? |
29472 | Was it lack of courage? |
29472 | Was it, I ask again, a lack of courage? |
29472 | What are you looking at your watch for, George? |
29472 | What good is it? |
29472 | What price the five- guinea specimen of his early style then? |
29472 | What were you thinking of?" |
29472 | When the moth gets into it, or the dust-- did not Carlyle warn us against this, lest they''accumulate and at last produce suffocation''? |
29472 | When will you get married?" |
29472 | Where but in a photograph would you see a parting so straight as this? |
29472 | Where did you happen to meet her?" |
29472 | Where do they let off wit now, George? |
29472 | Where do they sparkle? |
29472 | Who looks at them? |
29472 | Why did you presume to talk to artists about art? |
29472 | Why do you always say''I pass''in the game of decoration? |
29472 | Why not biscuits, or cigarettes, or chocolate? |
29472 | Why should a sane healthy woman be covered up in white gauze like the confectionery in a shop window when the flies are about? |
29472 | Why should a woman who is going to marry require a complete outfit of that sort? |
29472 | Why were Landseer and Sidney Cooper popular a few years ago, and why does every tea- table sneer at them now? |
29472 | Why were you ever laid? |
29472 | Why, I ask you, were you not hatched? |
29472 | Why, for instance, do men brush their hair so excessively when they go before the lens? |
29472 | You do n''t think she will want me to marry her, do you? |
29472 | You might have been-- what might you not have been? |
29472 | You take me? |
29472 | a fear of the unknown dangers that lie outside the shell? |
29472 | the colour? |
29472 | the size? |
29472 | they say;''nutritious?'' |
17508 | About what price, sir? |
17508 | And while you were having these very fine moods? |
17508 | And why not so? |
17508 | Braces? |
17508 | Calf-- kid-- dogskin? |
17508 | Can not we see to the uttermost limits of space? |
17508 | Collars, cuffs? |
17508 | Do you like it? |
17508 | Find the salesman pleasant? |
17508 | How much? |
17508 | How_ could_ you come to me,it seems to say,"when all these really brilliant flowers invite you?" |
17508 | I say,said I,"is not that rather rough on the ladies?" |
17508 | I wonder how long it would take to get to the top of the house from the bottom? |
17508 | May I ask your size, sir? |
17508 | Meaning me, sir? |
17508 | Nothing more, sir? |
17508 | What can I have the pleasure? |
17508 | Where are the wardrobes of Painted Pine? |
17508 | Why ca n''t you play without swearing, Muster Gibbs? |
17508 | Wo n''t you try it? |
17508 | 6d.? |
17508 | Am I in rags, that I should endure this thing? |
17508 | And can I avoid seeing at last how it is they hang together? |
17508 | And then who has not read Carlyle''s gloating over a certain historical suit of leather? |
17508 | And what then if_ our_ heavens were to open? |
17508 | Are not the words in their fittest context in the original? |
17508 | Are they birds? |
17508 | Ask:"How can you say such things?" |
17508 | At once the fascinating question arises, What will this being be? |
17508 | Bacon? |
17508 | But I was quite taken with my idea----Where is it? |
17508 | But does this necessitate acknowledgment to the man, now in Hades, who sucked that orange and strewed the peel in your way? |
17508 | But to show how good it is-- did you ever know a quarrelsome person give up the use? |
17508 | But what is this? |
17508 | But why do they keep on with this cross- examination? |
17508 | But you know the parable of the seven devils? |
17508 | Can I help thinking of them, then, and asking why I suffer thus? |
17508 | Could there be a better type of sordid and mercenary deliberation maintaining a fair appearance? |
17508 | Curious way of spending Sunday afternoon, is it not? |
17508 | Dining- room chairs-- query-- rush bottoms? |
17508 | Even this: Why, after all, should correct spelling be the one absolutely essential literary merit? |
17508 | For some words at anyrate may there not be sometimes one way of spelling a little happier, sometimes another? |
17508 | For why should one repeat good things that are already written? |
17508 | Have you any more matches?" |
17508 | Have you lithia? |
17508 | His test of literary merit is"What good does it do you?" |
17508 | How can they pass their lives?" |
17508 | How much do you want?" |
17508 | How shall he ask for his liquor? |
17508 | How should_ I_ know the technicalities of his traffic? |
17508 | However, we need scarcely depreciate the sea as a bath, for what need is there of that when the river is clearly better? |
17508 | I suppose he got at last to three- cornered notes in the vernacular; and meanwhile what could a poor girl do? |
17508 | I---- On the score of personal dignity, why should a young man of respectable antecedents and some natural capacity stoop to this kind of thing? |
17508 | If the lower plants, why not the higher? |
17508 | In moulding a head, do you take a lump and fine it down, or do you dab on the features after the main knob of it is shaped? |
17508 | Is it not immediately infinitely more soft and tender? |
17508 | Is there not something exquisitely pleasant in lingering over those redundant letters, leaving each word, as it were, with a reluctant caress? |
17508 | Is_ that_ what you aspire to be, that twopence- coloured edition of yourself? |
17508 | It is natural to ask,"Whence come all these old boots?" |
17508 | It may be he will read this-- amused-- recking little of the mysteries of fate.... Is killing a salesman murder, like killing a human being? |
17508 | May I say that Mr. Sandsome was at his full? |
17508 | Might it not rather be an art? |
17508 | Now_ will_ you let me go? |
17508 | On the other hand, what is more natural than an outburst of righteous indignation at the ruin of some carefully studied climax of feeding? |
17508 | One forthwith asked me''What the----''--I really can not quote these puerilities--''what the idiotic_ clichà ©_ that mattered to me?'' |
17508 | Or keep it_ all_ on the floor?" |
17508 | Price you were saying is? |
17508 | Rather, is it not more becoming to be angry at his careless anticipation? |
17508 | So_ Where are the wardrobes of Painted Pine?_''"Prosaic! |
17508 | Some of it is not that; and, for the rest, is a woman like a toy balloon?--just a surface? |
17508 | Suppose such a creature were to appear-- and it is, we repeat, a possibility, if perhaps a remote one-- how could it be fought against? |
17508 | Suppose you let off some clever little thing, a subtlety of expression, a paradox, an allusive suggestive picture; how does it affect ordinary people? |
17508 | Surely Shakespeare or Lamb, or what other source you contemplate, has had the thing long enough? |
17508 | Surely his friends have cherished the story out of no petty love of depreciatory detail? |
17508 | The blows I have endured from her? |
17508 | The gaunt, familiar hand comes out suddenly, swiftly, this time surely? |
17508 | The good old days of thumb- biting--"Do you bite your thumbs at us, sir?" |
17508 | Then suddenly she remarked,"Why not put your coal in a bassinette? |
17508 | Then the silent gentry who brew our Chartreuse; what are they in retirement for? |
17508 | Then what did Shakespeare live on? |
17508 | There are certain verses-- Heaven help me, but I have forgotten them!--about"_ i_ vel_ e_ dat"(_ was_ it dat?) |
17508 | These great plain valuable things, as plain as good women, as complacently assured of their intrinsic worth-- who does not know them? |
17508 | They were_ viveurs_.... We have witnessed Religion without Theology, and why not an Unsectarian Thebaid? |
17508 | Were the gods ever so insulted? |
17508 | What business has a man to think of things right in front of you, poke his head, as it were, into your light? |
17508 | What respectable townsman, for instance, knows what"scabiosa"is? |
17508 | What right has he to set up dams and tunnel out swallow- holes to deflect the current of your thoughts? |
17508 | What use is there for external ears, nose, and brow ridges now? |
17508 | What would he think if my cricketer retaliated by asking, in the pause before the sermon, how the vicarage pony took his last bolus? |
17508 | What''s this? |
17508 | What''s this? |
17508 | Why did he throw his breakfast out of the window? |
17508 | Why not? |
17508 | Why should I be expected to know the price of gloves? |
17508 | Why should he? |
17508 | Why, I say, should I know the price of gloves? |
17508 | Why, then, should not the stomach be ultimately superannuated altogether? |
17508 | Would it let at eighty? |
17508 | Yet even at the risk of shocking the religious convictions of some, may not one ask whether spelling is in truth a matter of right and wrong at all? |
17508 | Yet one may ask, Do we not a little over- estimate the value of orthography? |
17508 | Yet where are the books? |
17508 | Yet would he consider it improvement to put a piece of even the richest of old tapestry or gold embroidery into his new pair of breeks? |
17508 | You ask: Have you read the_ Wheels of Chance_? |
17508 | _ Where are the wardrobes of Painted Pine?_''"Comes round again, you see! |
17508 | of their lives? |
17508 | they might argue,"and is it not altogether blue and void?" |
17508 | wide will cover room, width 16 ft., length 27- 1/2 ft.?" |
11502 | Then shall we strive for_ power_? 11502 Then what is worth while? |
11502 | What shall I do with myself? |
11502 | What_ shall_ we strive for? 11502 10 What changes are likely to occur in the more intimate social life of the people of the United States? 11502 A little quiver of the paint, a faint aura, about the spectacular masses of Chesterton? 11502 And he would emerge from these negotiations in possession of a number of complete libraries each of-- how many books? 11502 And then? 11502 And why should they do that if they are really individuals? 11502 And, above all, would n''t the pitching and tossing make them quite horribly sea- sick? 11502 And, fourthly, what are the latent possibilities of the American women? 11502 Are we an awakening people? 11502 But have we really done all that could have been done? 11502 But now, as between us and the Master of Elibank or Sir Hugh Bell or any other Free Trade Liberal capitalist or landlord, which side is he on? 11502 But who are these people? 11502 Can not this be done far more effectively through biography and autobiography, for example? 11502 Change them-- their instincts, their very nature, rooted in the centuries? 11502 Do we want London rebuilt? 11502 Has he ever found freshness or power in a schoolmaster''s discourse; or found a schoolmaster caring keenly for fine and beautiful things? 11502 Has he ever turned aside to learn what this headmaster or that thought of any question that interested him? 11502 Have we English those qualities, and are we doing our utmost to select and develop them? 11502 Have we pride enough to attempt still to lead mankind, and if we have, have we the wisdom and the quality? 11502 Have we really made anything like a sane use of our resources? 11502 He asks:Why are all men gamblers?" |
11502 | He discusses our Longing for Immortal Imperfection, and"Did we once live on the moon?" |
11502 | How can it be? |
11502 | How can"Kappa"expect inspiration from the decorous resultants who satisfy these conditions? |
11502 | How is the work going to be done in the harder, cleaner, more equalised, and better managed State that, in one''s hopeful mood, one sees ahead of us? |
11502 | I ask it with all diffidence, but has our naval preparation been free from a sort of noisy violence, a certain massive dullness of conception? |
11502 | I ask the reader: What have we got to show that man? |
11502 | IS THERE A PEOPLE? |
11502 | If one can hear a thing at two miles, how much the more will one not hear it at a distance of two yards? |
11502 | If our ideal is partly right and partly wrong, are they trying to build up a better ideal? |
11502 | If the schoolmaster at large is grey and dull, shirking interesting topics and emphatic speech, what must he be like in the monotonous class- room? |
11502 | If we do, is there, after all, any reason why we should rebuild it on its present site? |
11502 | Increase the scale of the trouble only two or three times, and would our system recover? |
11502 | Indeed, I believe, could I put the thing directly to the profession--"Do you not yourselves feel needlessly limited and dull?" |
11502 | Is it any marvel that we are a badly organised nation, a nation of very widely diffused intelligence and very second- rate guidance and achievement? |
11502 | Is it not time at least that this last, this favourite but threadbare article of the schoolmaster''s creed was put away for good? |
11502 | Is n''t there the lyric; and, above all, is n''t there the play? |
11502 | Is the Navy_ bright_? |
11502 | Is the scientific method of value in biology? |
11502 | Is there a People? |
11502 | Is there? |
11502 | It is interesting to ask, Is England really waking up? |
11502 | Now, again, comes the question:"What shall I do?" |
11502 | Now, have we really developed any considerable proportion of the potential human quality available to meet the demand for wits? |
11502 | Now, how is the paying to be done? |
11502 | One asks:"What keeps a workman working properly at his work?" |
11502 | Or are we just the children of Good Luck, who are being found out? |
11502 | Or is it possible that some entirely more representative and effective collective control of our common affairs can be devised? |
11502 | Or will that only come about after the population of the world has passed through a phase of absolute recession? |
11502 | Or, as an alternative, vary Socialism to fit John Smith? |
11502 | Our inquiry is this: What social structure is this pool of mixed humanity developing or likely to develop? |
11502 | Remember that we are working upward from Mr. Shaw''s question of"Why not separate at the choice of either party?" |
11502 | SYNDICALISM OR CITIZENSHIP"Is a railway porter a railway porter first and a man afterwards, or is he a man first and incidentally a railway porter?" |
11502 | Secondly, and in relation to this, what possibilities of pride and leading are there in the great university foundations of America? |
11502 | The question that should occupy our directing minds now is no longer"How can we get more Dreadnoughts?" |
11502 | They believe-- what exactly do they believe about the people? |
11502 | WILL THE EMPIRE LIVE? |
11502 | Was it an impossible dream? |
11502 | We raise the whole question of"What are the limits in marriage, and how and when may a marriage terminate?" |
11502 | Well, is there any reason to suppose that our Navy is going to keep above the general national level in these things? |
11502 | What answer do we give them? |
11502 | What are Chesterton and Belloc doing? |
11502 | What are you going to do with them? |
11502 | What books, he would say, have all my libraries to possess anyhow? |
11502 | What brand can ever be lit at altars that have borne no fire? |
11502 | What can still be done and what has to be done to avoid the phase of social destruction to which we seem to be drifting? |
11502 | What consequences may be expected? |
11502 | What does it mean for us? |
11502 | What does the most powerful man in the world amount to standing at the brink of Niagara, with his solar plexus trembling? |
11502 | What had I to say about it? |
11502 | What is he going to do? |
11502 | What is his power compared with the force of the wind or the energy of one small wave sweeping along the shore? |
11502 | What is it that tangles this question so curiously that there is not only a failure to arrive at a conclusion, but a failure to join issue? |
11502 | What lies before us in the next decades? |
11502 | What new phase in the life of our nation and our Empire does this tremendous ceremony inaugurate? |
11502 | What sort of working arrangements are our renascent owning and directing classes likely to make with the new labouring class? |
11502 | What will it leave of things visible? |
11502 | What would you do, dear reader-- what should I do-- if a slump went on continually? |
11502 | When in its turn this latest reign comes at last to its reckoning, what will the sum of its achievement be? |
11502 | Where is he to be taken to see these crowning fruits of our release from toil? |
11502 | Which is likely to prove the shorter operation?" |
11502 | Whither are these forces taking us? |
11502 | Why are they in particular doing this for the community? |
11502 | Why should n''t it? |
11502 | Why should they not follow the precedent of Aristotle, and accept Utopias as material? |
11502 | Why should we employ people to do the bulk of these things at all? |
11502 | Why should we not as a community do them ourselves? |
11502 | Why, in other words, should we not have a labour conscription and take a year or so of service from everyone in the community, high or low? |
11502 | Will our universities, our teaching, our national training, our public services, gain a new health from the reviving vigour of the national brain? |
11502 | Will the Empire Live? |
11502 | Will the growing idea of a closer social organisation have developed by that time to the possibility of some collective effort in this matter? |
11502 | Will they presently begin to tell as a restraining and directing force upon public thought? |
11502 | Will they state a Utopia and how they propose it shall be managed? |
11502 | Would Chesterton or Belloc quarrel with that? |
11502 | Would he be given the ghost of a chance now of putting that gift at his country''s disposal? |
11502 | _ Money_? |
11502 | _ Now_ will you respect a prophet?" |
11502 | and if she is, what sort of awakening is she likely to have? |
11502 | but"What have we to follow the Dreadnought?" |
33889 | What could a man require more from a nation so pliant and so prone to seek after knowledge? 33889 And are we to stop at a United States of the Old World? 33889 And could it not be extended from its present limited range until it reached practically the whole adolescent community? 33889 And how can we set about doing it? 33889 And if so, will the debacle extend to America? 33889 And is this a mere fantastic talk, or is this a thing that could be done and that ought to be done? 33889 And it is equally reasonable to ask the great political personages of the British Empire: what will Ireland be in twenty- five years''time? 33889 And now what else? 33889 And outside this canonical Book or Books, shall we leave all the rest of literature in a limitless Apocrypha? 33889 And we have a very considerable literature of books on-- what shall I call it? 33889 And what will be the chief organs and organizations and works and methods with which this Council of the World State will be concerned? 33889 And what would the American community probably do in such a case? 33889 Are not we and they and all the race still just as much adrift in the current of circumstances as we were before 1914? 33889 Are theygenerally necessary to salvation"? |
33889 | Are we just drifting into an unknown darkness in all these matters with blind leaders of our blindness? |
33889 | Are we to contemplate the prospect of a modern Bible in twenty or thirty thousand volumes? |
33889 | But are these intellectuals right in their estimate of the common man? |
33889 | But are they sound questions? |
33889 | But are we to contemplate a sort of dual world-- the New World against the Old? |
33889 | But do we provide that idea of a place in the world for our people to- day? |
33889 | But does it do that to- day? |
33889 | But how are those relations going to develop? |
33889 | But is it a league of nations that is wanted? |
33889 | But is it so? |
33889 | But is our race capable of such an effort, such a complete reversal of its instinctive and traditional impulses? |
33889 | But would he be right? |
33889 | But you see my conception of the college course? |
33889 | But_ must_ you? |
33889 | Can so little a leaven leaven so great a lump? |
33889 | Can there be any comparison between the educational efficiency of the two methods? |
33889 | Can we extend it over most or all of a modern population? |
33889 | Can we find premonitions of any such bold and revolutionary adaptations as these, in the mental and political life of to- day? |
33889 | Can we re- cement our increasingly unstable civilization? |
33889 | Could we not do much more than we do to make the broad issues of various current questions plain and accessible to our students in the college stage? |
33889 | Did the prosperities and confident hopes with which the twentieth century opened, mark nothing more than a culmination of fortuitous good luck? |
33889 | Discussed and re- discussed? |
33889 | Do we even keep them steadfastly in our minds? |
33889 | Do we want to get rid of patriotism altogether? |
33889 | Does education even pretend to do as much to- day? |
33889 | Does it sound like rubbish to you? |
33889 | Has the cycle of prosperity and progress closed? |
33889 | How are we to choose him? |
33889 | How can one take sides between them? |
33889 | How can we have forecasts and prophecies of things that are happening now? |
33889 | How do they mean them to develop? |
33889 | How else, we ask, could you have it? |
33889 | How far are we, reader and writer, for example, working for these large new securities? |
33889 | How is it with the people around us? |
33889 | If it is possible for us isolated workers to do as much then why should not the thing be done in a big and authoritative manner? |
33889 | If the mass of common men are incurably patriotic and belligerent why is there a note of querulous exhortation in nearly all patriotic literature? |
33889 | Is a response to this appeal latent in the masses of mankind? |
33889 | Is he so patriotic as they make out? |
33889 | Is he such a shallow and vehement fool as they seem to believe? |
33889 | Is it a preposterous one? |
33889 | Is it an offence to gamble? |
33889 | Is it an offence to hold fertile fields and not cultivate them? |
33889 | Is it an offence to hold fertile fields and undercultivate them? |
33889 | Is it an offence to speculate? |
33889 | Is it an offence to spend exorbitant sums that might otherwise go in reproductive investments, to gratify the whims and vanities of your wife? |
33889 | Is it an offence to spend your money on yourself and refuse your wife more than bare necessities? |
33889 | Is it an offence to use your invested money merely to live pleasantly without working? |
33889 | Is it any wonder that the bookings from London to Warsaw are infinitesimal in comparison with the bookings from New York to St. Louis? |
33889 | Is it possible to rationalize the at present chaotic will of mankind? |
33889 | Is not this idea a legacy from the days when states were small communities needing a leader in war and diplomacy? |
33889 | Is the college stage of our present educational system anywhere near its maximum possible efficiency? |
33889 | Is there any precedent to justify us in hoping that such a change in world ideas is possible? |
33889 | Is there anything in history to justify hope for so gigantic a mental turnover in our race? |
33889 | It is a tremendous exercise to read and understand, but is it universally necessary? |
33889 | It would be a quite possible thing to do.... Is it worth doing? |
33889 | Let us ask whether it is probable that the world state will have any single personal head at all? |
33889 | May they not be a little affected by false analogies? |
33889 | Now how is this to be done? |
33889 | Now is this a final limitation? |
33889 | Now what is this_ schooling_ to do-- what is it doing to the new human being? |
33889 | Now what should college give the young citizen, male or female, upon the foundation of schooling we have already sketched out? |
33889 | Now what was this change in conditions that had confronted mankind with the perplexing necessity of abandoning war? |
33889 | Or can not a lot of these things be figured out by able and intelligent people? |
33889 | Or is the American( and Pacific?) |
33889 | Or whether they think that there will be a greater United States-- of all America-- or of all the world? |
33889 | Or will there be a World King? |
33889 | Our test of a college education is-- Does it make a successful business man? |
33889 | Polished and finished, and made the opening part of a new Bible of Civilization, a new common basis for a world culture? |
33889 | Should we include the Book of Job? |
33889 | Should we include the Song of Songs? |
33889 | Some sort of genteel recluse-- or men and women? |
33889 | That it is a reasonable and proper thing to ask our statesmen and politicians: what is going to happen to the world? |
33889 | They ask, for example, where will the World Congress meet; and how will you elect your World President? |
33889 | To what will this staggering and blundering, the hatreds and mischievous adventures of the present time, bring us? |
33889 | We must ask:"What have you done, what are you doing to help or hinder the peace and order of mankind?" |
33889 | Well, what were they? |
33889 | What are the modern equivalents of these books? |
33889 | What are we going to do about Shakespear? |
33889 | What do they think they are training? |
33889 | What is happening to our race? |
33889 | What is it that intervenes between the universal human need and its satisfaction? |
33889 | What is the To- morrow they are making? |
33889 | What is the life it produces? |
33889 | What is this greater idea to be? |
33889 | What is want of aptitude? |
33889 | What loyalty and what devotion can we expect this multiple association to command? |
33889 | What sort of better social order are you making for? |
33889 | What sort of world order are you creating? |
33889 | What will India be? |
33889 | What would an American citizen think of such an outbreak? |
33889 | What would be our equivalent of this part of the Bible to- day? |
33889 | What would be the equivalent for the Bible of a world civilization? |
33889 | Whither are they guiding our destinies? |
33889 | Why make two bites at a planet? |
33889 | Why should that draft not be revised by scores of specialists? |
33889 | Why should we not make all this classification of property and the restraints upon each class of property, systematic and world- wide? |
33889 | Why, for instance, is Mr. Rudyard Kipling''s"History of England"so full of goading and scolding? |
33889 | Will he pack his bag, get aboard a train and go there? |
33889 | Will this council be directly elected? |
33889 | Wo n''t your World President, they say, be rather a tremendous personage? |
33889 | You think I am talking of a dreamland, of an unattainable Utopia? |
33889 | system still sufficiently removed and still sufficiently autonomous to maintain a progressive movement of its own if the Old World collapse? |
34962 | ''But is n''t it so?'' 34962 ''Even to you?'' |
34962 | ''I gather you throw some doubt?'' 34962 ''That we on our part----?'' |
34962 | ''The Roman Catholic young person?'' 34962 ''Then it is n''t altogether tangible yet?'' |
34962 | ''You mean Miss Merton_ painted_?'' 34962 ''You mean----?'' |
34962 | Am I too soon, sir? |
34962 | And if there is n''t much water, ca n''t you set light to the stuff? 34962 And what interpretation can we put upon_ that_?" |
34962 | Are you not an immortal soul? 34962 Brompton,"he said,"what are you doing?" |
34962 | But about these Wild Asses? |
34962 | But is this in reality true? 34962 But you did n''t get all that out of the''Encyclopædia''?" |
34962 | Could I have just a tiny drop more? 34962 Did_ you_ see anything?" |
34962 | Do you mind if I do it? 34962 Had n''t we better go?" |
34962 | He makes literature include philosophy? |
34962 | If you can stand that sort of thing? |
34962 | Is it? |
34962 | Is n''t that a bit--_extra_? |
34962 | Is n''t that some sort of trick? |
34962 | Is n''t there something you could put in it-- something called red pepper? 34962 Is there no power of thought among free men strong enough to swing them into armies that can take this monster by the neck? |
34962 | It''s the garden of the''New Republic''? |
34962 | Might n''t they do a lot of mischief? |
34962 | Now what was that? |
34962 | Ought there to be such a thing as a literary artist? |
34962 | Ought there, in fact, to be Henry James? |
34962 | Punishment? |
34962 | Should all literature be anonymous? |
34962 | Something in this line? |
34962 | Then one has to assume it is a continuing, coherent mind, that is slowly becoming wider, saner, profounder, more powerful? |
34962 | Ultimately you''ll catch it for that? |
34962 | Was n''t one an engineer? |
34962 | Was your lot the only lot that ever escaped? |
34962 | Well? |
34962 | Well? |
34962 | What book? |
34962 | What is a man of my kind to do? |
34962 | What, my dear James,he asked,"is this mind of humanity at all without a certain touch of romance, of adventure? |
34962 | While this great strong wickedness has developed in Germany, what thought have we had in our English- speaking community? 34962 Why Keyhole?" |
34962 | Why do you smoke it the other way round? |
34962 | Why have a president? |
34962 | Why not? |
34962 | Why''Royal''? |
34962 | Yes, but how should we do it? |
34962 | Yes? |
34962 | You like that cigar? |
34962 | ''How can I put it so that they_ must_ attend and see?''" |
34962 | (_ When asked_,"Why_ in modern dress?" |
34962 | And on that foundation, what has been done?" |
34962 | And then, slowly but surely, it crept into men''s minds that the game was up----''""You will alter that phrase?" |
34962 | And who taught you to think, Dodd? |
34962 | Are n''t we intellectually just a by- product? |
34962 | Are there no men to think at least as earnestly as one climbs a mountain, and to write with their uttermost pride? |
34962 | Are they feeling it?'' |
34962 | But are you sure that is the Race at all? |
34962 | But have you_ thought_ to- day? |
34962 | But what the devil do_ we_ stand for? |
34962 | But when has American criticism ever had the intellectual pluck to proclaim an American? |
34962 | But whence the language? |
34962 | But why has n''t she any natural instinct in the matter? |
34962 | Could he do it now? |
34962 | Could n''t he perhaps find a warm stuffed tiger? |
34962 | Could n''t he perhaps get the Infinite with the chill off? |
34962 | Could one run a church with an unsalaried priesthood? |
34962 | Did public advertisements make a more intelligent or less intelligent appeal now than they used to do? |
34962 | Do you know the date of the''New Republic''? |
34962 | Do you not see, then, what an arrogant worship, what a sacramental thing it is to lift up brain and hand and say,''_ I too will add_''? |
34962 | Does he mean by that expression a Great Wisdom and Will that must be, or a Great Wisdom and Will that might be? |
34962 | Eh?" |
34962 | Failing that, why should we not deal with these questions through the anonymity of a gramophone?... |
34962 | Has n''t she discovered Lowes Dickinson?" |
34962 | Have you ever heard guinea- fowl at dawn?" |
34962 | Have you ever known living human beings do that? |
34962 | Have you seen nothing? |
34962 | He wants it to have a unity, he demands homogeneity.... Why_ should_ a book have that? |
34962 | He was just a professional lawyer- politician who had lost his sense of values.... How was_ I_ to know?... |
34962 | How could Dodd dare to argue? |
34962 | I keep my ear to the_ Hibbert Journal_, but is it enough?'' |
34962 | I shall lose her one of these days.... How can I hope to keep for ever that proud and fickle heart?" |
34962 | I tried it once----""Tried what?" |
34962 | I''ve planned that-- and who_ would_ he murder but Keyhole?... |
34962 | If Goethe had a second time on earth----? |
34962 | In all societies?... |
34962 | In the natural course of things it would be one of these literary lords....""What would he say?" |
34962 | Is any literary achievement essential to greatness? |
34962 | Is it? |
34962 | Is there anything here to hold a people together? |
34962 | Is there anything to make a new world? |
34962 | Is this what exists and goes on? |
34962 | It is a nightmare in which we try continually to escape and have no- whither to escape.... What is to come out of this struggle? |
34962 | Just anything that may come out of it, or something we mean_ shall_ come out of it?" |
34962 | Laurence?'' |
34962 | Must men be bullied for ever? |
34962 | No light? |
34962 | No sound? |
34962 | No warning?" |
34962 | Or let me drink it boiling, out of a pannikin or something? |
34962 | That''s plain, is n''t it? |
34962 | Then he will thank God for the English classics, ask where now is our Thackeray? |
34962 | Then the world had-- what? |
34962 | Was it due to the haste of criticism or the illiteracy of publishers? |
34962 | Was the thought process of the world growing, spreading, progressing, or was it going to pieces? |
34962 | What are you driving at?" |
34962 | What does our world of letters amount to? |
34962 | What is the good, Wilkins, of pretending that the Wild Asses are the instruments of Providence kicking better than we know? |
34962 | What more natural than to believe he was also writing it down? |
34962 | Whence came your habits of conduct? |
34962 | Where is any strength on its side? |
34962 | Where is any_ power_ for Pacificism? |
34962 | Where is our strength to go against that strength of the heavy German mind? |
34962 | Where is the Mind of our Race?" |
34962 | Who made the language that gives a bias to all your thoughts? |
34962 | Who taught you to talk? |
34962 | Why does n''t one sometimes tap these sources? |
34962 | Why should a gardener carry a spade? |
34962 | Why should he answer huskily? |
34962 | Why should the presence, the doubt, the sense of something else elusively in the air about them, become intensified at the encounter? |
34962 | Will the world be happy without Literary Greatnesses? |
34962 | Would Lord Haldane perceive him? |
34962 | Would authors write if they remained unknown? |
34962 | Would the Race Mind incorporate Dodd or dismiss him? |
34962 | You see my case? |
34962 | You see our leading effect?" |
34962 | _ Others?_... |
34962 | our Charlotte Brontë? |
34962 | our Tennyson? |
34962 | where now our Burns? |
34962 | would you like a hot grog?..." |
159 | Am I eligible for solid food? |
159 | And now? |
159 | And the other Thing? |
159 | Are you the one I met on the beach? |
159 | But where are the huts? |
159 | Do you hear? |
159 | Excellent fellows, are n''t they? |
159 | Has he come? |
159 | He comes to live with us? |
159 | How long have you been on this island? |
159 | How long? |
159 | I say,said I,"where can I get something to eat?" |
159 | I suppose if anything should turn up, M''ling can take care of himself? |
159 | Is Caplatzi still flourishing? 159 Is it still to be this and that? |
159 | Is there a Law now? |
159 | Is there a Law, thou Other with the Whip? |
159 | Is there a Law? |
159 | Is this an ocean menagerie? |
159 | It looks like it, does n''t it? |
159 | Little points to them,said I, as calmly as possible, with a catch in my breath;"and a fine black fur at the edges?" |
159 | May I not come near you? |
159 | Montgomery,said I,"what was that thing that came after me? |
159 | Moreau? |
159 | See,said I, pointing to the dead brute,"is the Law not alive? |
159 | Sucking his drink? |
159 | The day you came here? |
159 | Then you take the things you make into those dens? |
159 | They were men: what are they now? 159 Was he not made?" |
159 | Well? |
159 | Well? |
159 | Well? |
159 | Wha''wo n''t do? |
159 | What am I doing? 159 What are these beasts for? |
159 | What are you doing, man? |
159 | What do you mean? |
159 | What does it all mean? |
159 | What makes you think I shall torture you? |
159 | What ship is this? |
159 | What was that thing that came after me? |
159 | What''s that? |
159 | What''s the good of getting away? 159 Where are the others?" |
159 | Where did you pick up the creature? |
159 | Where have you been? |
159 | Where is he? |
159 | Where is the Sayer of the Law? |
159 | Where? |
159 | Who are these creatures? |
159 | Who are you? |
159 | Who are you? |
159 | Who is he? |
159 | Who is he? |
159 | Who is that? |
159 | Why did you set-- your people onto me when I was in the hut? |
159 | Why the devil do n''t you get out of the way? |
159 | Why? |
159 | Would you know him again? |
159 | Yes? |
159 | Yes? |
159 | Yes? |
159 | You admit that the vivisected human being, as you called it, is, after all, only the puma? |
159 | You''ve been meeting some of our curiosities, eh? |
159 | Your arm is broken,he said, and then,"Tell me exactly how it happened-- what happened?" |
159 | Your men on the beach,said I;"what race are they?" |
159 | ( Can you imagine language, once clear- cut and exact, softening and guttering, losing shape and import, becoming mere lumps of sound again?) |
159 | A locked enclosure on a lonely island, a notorious vivisector, and these crippled and distorted men? |
159 | After all, what is ten years? |
159 | And Moreau, what was it that Moreau had said? |
159 | Are we bubbles blown by a baby?" |
159 | Are we not Men? |
159 | Are we not Men? |
159 | Are we not Men? |
159 | Are we not Men? |
159 | Are we not Men? |
159 | Are we not Men?" |
159 | Are we not Men?" |
159 | Are we not Men?" |
159 | Are we not Men?''" |
159 | Are you in fear of me still?" |
159 | As it is-- And besides, what will become of the decent part of the Beast Folk?" |
159 | Besides, why should we want to shoot you when you have just offered to drown yourself?" |
159 | But how can we prove it? |
159 | But the laws we feel our way towards-- Why, even on this earth, even among living things, what pain is there?" |
159 | But what does it show? |
159 | Could it be possible, I thought, that such a thing as the vivisection of men was carried on here? |
159 | Did you? |
159 | Do you not see these men still fear you, go in dread of you? |
159 | Do you think that excuses his assaulting his passengers?" |
159 | Do you think the whole damned ship belongs to you?" |
159 | Does the captain think he is going to sell them somewhere in the South Seas?" |
159 | Have you seen them?" |
159 | He held his own hand out and counted his digits slowly,"One, two, three, four, five-- eigh?" |
159 | He repeated his question,--"How do you feel now?" |
159 | He stared at me for a moment, and then repeated,"Pointed ears?" |
159 | How does he strike you?" |
159 | I have no doubt you have heard of these things?" |
159 | I suppose that''s what_ your_ humanity would suggest? |
159 | I tried again, and shouted,"Who is there?" |
159 | If I don''t-- well?" |
159 | Is he dead indeed?" |
159 | It''s queer--""Montgomery,"said I, suddenly, as the outer door closed,"why has your man pointed ears?" |
159 | It''s the taste of blood, you know.--What was the brute like?" |
159 | May I ask what that signifies?" |
159 | Merchandise, curios? |
159 | Montgomery went on much as you are disposed to do at first, and then--"What became of the other one?" |
159 | Much the brutes care for the Law, eh? |
159 | Notice your arm''s sore? |
159 | Of course you know a squint may be induced or cured by surgery? |
159 | Then Montgomery hiccoughed,"Who-- said he was dead?" |
159 | Then as I handled the books on the shelf it came up in consciousness: Where had I heard the name of Moreau before? |
159 | Then sharply, seeing I gripped my arm,"What''s the matter?" |
159 | Then what will happen with the Beast Folk?" |
159 | Was it a beast or was it a man?" |
159 | Was this possible or that possible? |
159 | Was this the same Moreau? |
159 | We ca n''t massacre the lot-- can we? |
159 | Were they peering at me already out of the green masses of ferns and palms over yonder, watching until I came within their spring? |
159 | Were they plotting against me? |
159 | What are we to do with him?" |
159 | What can have happened? |
159 | What could it all mean? |
159 | What did he want with me? |
159 | What did he want with the beasts? |
159 | What is your theologian''s ecstasy but Mahomet''s houri in the dark? |
159 | What on earth was he,--man or beast? |
159 | What the devil-- want beasts for on an island like that? |
159 | What was it? |
159 | What was it?" |
159 | What was the Hyena- swine telling them? |
159 | What was wrong with them? |
159 | What were they all? |
159 | What were they like?" |
159 | What''s it all for, Prendick? |
159 | When would they return, and how? |
159 | Where am_ I_ to join on? |
159 | Where is your justification for inflicting all this pain? |
159 | Where''s some brandy?" |
159 | Whiskey?" |
159 | Who are you, to tell me what I''m to do? |
159 | Why am I here now, an outcast from civilisation, instead of being a happy man enjoying all the pleasures of London? |
159 | Why should a man go on all- fours and drink with his lips? |
159 | Why, then, do you fear them? |
159 | Why, too, had he pretended they were not his when I had remarked about them at first? |
159 | Would Moreau and Montgomery never return? |
159 | You saw the captain?" |
159 | he exclaimed at some petulance of mine;"ca n''t you see I''m in a worse hole than you are?" |
159 | he repeated,"what can this mean?" |
159 | said I, sharply,--"the other Kanaka who was killed?" |
159 | said he, stupidly; and then with a light coming into his eyes,"Why, it''s Mister-- Mister?" |
12750 | Academy? |
12750 | And the orchid? |
12750 | Anyhow, you will keep the secret?... 12750 Anything new? |
12750 | Are these the things collected by that poor young fellow you told me of the other day? |
12750 | Are these-- alive? 12750 Are you going to talk studio to me?" |
12750 | Bellows,he said,"is that you?" |
12750 | But how do they form new plants? |
12750 | But how will you see your canvas? |
12750 | Butcher-- Butcher? |
12750 | Ca n''t I do anything for you? |
12750 | Ca n''t you see it''s me? |
12750 | Ca n''t you speak? |
12750 | Davidson,said I,"what on earth''s come over you?" |
12750 | Did they hang you well? |
12750 | Did you not think it would blow up the house? 12750 Do n''t you think it time you got me something to eat?" |
12750 | Do you do figure- work at all? |
12750 | Ever been thirsty, Graham? |
12750 | Funny case, was n''t it? 12750 Had I anything in my hand when I spoke to you, dear, just now?" |
12750 | Have I not served my Lord? |
12750 | Have some more whisky, Bellows? |
12750 | Have you exhibited very much? |
12750 | Have you lost your wits? |
12750 | Help me to sit down,said he, presently;"and now-- I''m sorry to trouble you-- but will you tell me all that over again?" |
12750 | How about the others? 12750 How did I come to make it? |
12750 | How did it happen? |
12750 | How did you get it? |
12750 | How did you play it off upon them? |
12750 | How the deuce could you dream that? |
12750 | I could almost swear--"What? |
12750 | I mean did they put you in a good place? |
12750 | I presume you saw the rascals making for the shrubbery, and dropped down on them? |
12750 | I suppose,said I,"you are out of work just at present?" |
12750 | I suppose,the pale man said with a slight smile,"that you scarcely care to have such things about you in the living-- in the active state?" |
12750 | I wonder if you know enough to know what that is? |
12750 | I wonder why? 12750 It''s a little thing in the telling, is n''t it? |
12750 | Look at that,said Holroyd;"where''s your''eathen idol to match''i m?" |
12750 | Malays, are n''t they? |
12750 | Of course? |
12750 | Orchids? |
12750 | Put on my shoes? 12750 The rest were all right?" |
12750 | To the canoe? |
12750 | Unpleasant? 12750 Was the Lord Dynamo still hungry? |
12750 | Well.... You''ve heard of the Aepyornis? |
12750 | Well? |
12750 | Well? |
12750 | Whadyer mean? |
12750 | What are you after, Hagshot? |
12750 | What are you dewin''with that switch? |
12750 | What did they tell you? |
12750 | What on earth are you going to do with that_ beastly_ green? |
12750 | What the devil''s that? |
12750 | What was that? |
12750 | What''s come to it? |
12750 | What''s come to you, Hooker? |
12750 | What''s she got in her''and? |
12750 | What''s the matter with you? |
12750 | What''s the matter with you? |
12750 | What''s the matter? |
12750 | What''s this? |
12750 | What''s up, man? |
12750 | What_ do_ you see? |
12750 | What_ was_ it? |
12750 | What_ was_ that fearful smash? |
12750 | Where? |
12750 | Which way? |
12750 | Who''s been killing calves here? 12750 Whom did you collect for?" |
12750 | Why do you keep moving about then,he said,"making faces and all that-- sneering and squinting, while I am painting you?" |
12750 | Why not Mephistopheles? 12750 Why not?" |
12750 | Why? 12750 Yes,"said Wilderspin;"_ is n''t_ it?" |
12750 | You do n''t see a moth on the edge of the table there? |
12750 | _ How did it end_? 12750 ''Look here,''says I to Hooker and the other Englishmen;''what are we to do now?'' 12750 ''You know the Chin way, George?'' 12750 --or was it Hooker? 12750 Ai nt he a- clawin''out of the keb? 12750 And what''s the writing? |
12750 | Are they dangerous now?" |
12750 | At that he stepped back a pace, and cried out with almost a whimper,"What, in heaven''s name, has come over me?" |
12750 | But it was a queer thing to happen to a man; was n''t it-- altogether?" |
12750 | But when did they find these bones?" |
12750 | Could it see him? |
12750 | Did he run after you?" |
12750 | Did he see Holroyd kill himself? |
12750 | Did they get any more eggs? |
12750 | Did you get those home? |
12750 | Do you follow me?" |
12750 | Do you happen to know? |
12750 | Do you know what hallucination means?" |
12750 | Ever heard of the dinornis? |
12750 | For the new miracle of Nature may stand in need of a new specific name, and what so convenient as that of its discoverer? |
12750 | Have you fixed that there wire across the path from the laundry?" |
12750 | How about a scarlet robe and call him''One of the Sacred College''? |
12750 | How could you bring yourself to do it, man?" |
12750 | How does it stand at present?" |
12750 | How fared the chase? |
12750 | How shall we get it to the canoe?" |
12750 | I say!--What''s that red paint for?" |
12750 | I wonder if you''ve heard the name of Butcher ever?" |
12750 | It''s a bargain?" |
12750 | Jolly quick thing, Bellows-- eigh?" |
12750 | May I offer you my arm?" |
12750 | Or if it was a diamond, how came he by it, and why should he offer it at a hundred pounds? |
12750 | See? |
12750 | Shall we re- bury them over here, or take them across the strait in the canoe?" |
12750 | That gone, and a little more fire in the eye-- never noticed how warm his eye was before-- and he might do for--? |
12750 | The corner of the mouth? |
12750 | The eye, then? |
12750 | The eyebrows-- it could scarcely be the eyebrows? |
12750 | The patch of stars he saw was in Sagittarius and south- eastward; the door was north-- or was it north by west? |
12750 | The puzzle is, what are the flowers for? |
12750 | Then opening the topic abruptly,"What on earth is this cock- and- bull story they have of a flying man?" |
12750 | Then suddenly, with a queer rush of irritation,"What are you staring at?" |
12750 | Then with an abrupt transition to unreasonable anger:"What is the good of waiting here all the day? |
12750 | They called''em Aepyornis-- what was it?" |
12750 | Was he an ingenious monomaniac, or a fraudulent dealer in pebbles, or has he really made diamonds as he asserted? |
12750 | Was he going to faint? |
12750 | Was it in retreat? |
12750 | Was it pure hallucination? |
12750 | Was the thing coming on again? |
12750 | Was the thing, whatever it was, inside or out? |
12750 | Were there other people in the place?" |
12750 | What did a dead Chinaman signify? |
12750 | What do_ you_ think? |
12750 | What price Passionate Pilgrim? |
12750 | What ship is that?" |
12750 | What the devil was it? |
12750 | What was this familiar street? |
12750 | What_ do_ you mean to do with it?" |
12750 | Where did you get it?" |
12750 | Where had the door got to? |
12750 | Where the devil are we?" |
12750 | Which way_ are_ you, Bellows?" |
12750 | Why could n''t the brute have got himself decently caught on the opposite bank, or shot in the water? |
12750 | Why do n''t you show yourself like a man, Bellows?" |
12750 | Why? |
12750 | Why?" |
12750 | Wonder if he''s after''Arry''Icks?" |
12750 | Wot''s_ he_ got?" |
12750 | Would he have anything to tell me worth the money, or was he the common incapable-- incapable even of telling his own story? |
12750 | You do n''t happen to remember, perhaps?" |
12750 | You do n''t mean to paint in the open, by night?" |
12750 | You know I have made some dodos and a great auk? |
12750 | You saw the road?" |
12750 | he said to Thaddy--"The Thing I fought with?" |
12750 | you do n''t think you can paint a picture like that?" |
456 | ''And next?'' 456 ''Next?'' |
456 | ''No?'' 456 ''What have I to do with these things now?'' |
456 | Aluminum? |
456 | And did you dream again? |
456 | And that was the end? |
456 | And then he will be sane? |
456 | And then? |
456 | And then? |
456 | And they carried guns? |
456 | And you are ready to go? |
456 | And you have come into the world? |
456 | Any luggage, sir? |
456 | Anyhow, you will keep the secret? 456 But I should have thought an aeroplane?" |
456 | Cones? |
456 | Did the fellows-- make it disagreeable? |
456 | Did you ever play North- West Passage with me? 456 Did you hear that--"_ Bogota?_ His mind has hardly formed yet. |
456 | Did you not think it would blow up the house? 456 Died?" |
456 | Do you ever dream? 456 Do you mean--?" |
456 | Do_ we_ come in the way? 456 Does he say--?" |
456 | Dreams? |
456 | Eigh? |
456 | Eigh? |
456 | Even now--"The dream is always the same-- do you mean? |
456 | Got it? |
456 | Has no one told you,''In the Country of the Blind the One- Eyed Man is King?'' |
456 | Have I not served my Lord? |
456 | Have you been telling Mr. Raut of all these contrasts of flame and shadow you think so splendid? |
456 | He does not suspect? |
456 | How did you get it? |
456 | How many days? |
456 | How much was there of it? |
456 | How? |
456 | I Faraglioni? 456 I beg your pardon?" |
456 | I did n''t show any signs did I in those days of having a secret dream? |
456 | I suppose,said I,"you are out of work just at present?" |
456 | I wonder if you know enough to know what that is? |
456 | If I were to consent to this? |
456 | Is n''t there something called consecutive dreaming-- that goes on night after night? |
456 | Is that sort of thing always dreaming? 456 Left whom?" |
456 | Like what? |
456 | Like--? |
456 | Living in a different time,I said:"do you mean in some different age?" |
456 | Look at that,said Holroyd;"where''s your''eathen idol to match''i m?" |
456 | May I sit up? |
456 | Must you be led like a child? 456 My hat?" |
456 | Nipping your arm off? |
456 | Now,_ what_ affects it? |
456 | Past? |
456 | See? |
456 | Sight? |
456 | Sight? |
456 | Steel? |
456 | Stop a planet in its flight, rob it of its centrifugal force, what then? 456 The garden?" |
456 | The girl? |
456 | The year three thousand, for example? |
456 | This seems bosh to you? |
456 | To open? |
456 | Vestiges of daylight? 456 Was the Lord Dynamo still hungry? |
456 | Well? |
456 | Well? |
456 | Well? |
456 | What are you dewin''with that switch? |
456 | What is a new star to me? |
456 | What is blind? |
456 | What was that about''lived in vain?'' |
456 | What was there to do but flight? 456 What were they like?" |
456 | What? |
456 | When? |
456 | Where did you go? |
456 | Where does he come from, brother Pedro? |
456 | Why did you not come when I called you? |
456 | Yes? |
456 | Yes? |
456 | Yes? |
456 | Yes? |
456 | You do n''t find yourself in doubt; did this happen or did it not? |
456 | You mean? |
456 | You mean? |
456 | You wanted to see me? |
456 | You wo n''t think I''m mad? |
456 | Your dreams do n''t mix with your memories? |
456 | _ Now?_he said, faintly. |
456 | _ You_ do not want me,he said,"to lose my gift of sight?" |
456 | ''Do n''t you know? |
456 | ''If I say good- night to them, and go in,''I asked myself,''what will happen?'' |
456 | ''Poor little chap,''said he;''and are you lost then?'' |
456 | ''What has Evesham been saying?'' |
456 | ''What?'' |
456 | After all, I thought, this is life-- love and beauty, desire and delight, are they not worth all those dismal struggles for vague, gigantic ends? |
456 | And I have rejected it, Redmond, and it has gone--""How do you know?" |
456 | And the result of that attraction? |
456 | And the size? |
456 | And then did the pale electric lights near the station cheat the rough planking into a semblance of white? |
456 | And then? |
456 | And then? |
456 | As beautiful as your scales and all this silver vesture of the earth and sky?" |
456 | But all the same, what on earth did Horrocks mean about"white as death"and"red as sin?" |
456 | But did he see like that? |
456 | But did it betray him? |
456 | But what does it matter? |
456 | Can not you hear the path as you walk?" |
456 | Coincidence, perhaps? |
456 | Did he after all know? |
456 | Did he see Holroyd kill himself? |
456 | Did that fatal unfastened door awaken some memory? |
456 | Did the man mean to take the thing coolly? |
456 | Did you ever have Carnaby twist your arm? |
456 | Do you hear? |
456 | Do you remember me as a kid at Saint Athelstan''s?" |
456 | Do you remember? |
456 | Do you think I am coquetting with your people in coming here?'' |
456 | Do you think my clothes are beautiful, dear moth? |
456 | Eh? |
456 | Even if Evesham did force the world back to war, what was that to me? |
456 | Even if you died-- even if you died--''"''Yes?'' |
456 | Fresh scenes and fresh happenings-- until I came upon the last--""When you died?" |
456 | Had he heard all? |
456 | Had he just been within an ace of being murdered? |
456 | Had they heard aright? |
456 | Have you ever heard of a dream that had a quality like that?" |
456 | He broke out in an argumentative monotone:"But why should it be? |
456 | He hated and resisted these things, but what could he do? |
456 | How can I describe to you the scene we had before us? |
456 | How long had he been in the room? |
456 | I interrupted suddenly:"You have been to Capri, of course?" |
456 | I was a man with the heart of a man, and why should I feel the responsibility of a deity for the way the world might go? |
456 | If there is no refuge, if there is no place of peace, and if all our dreams of quiet places are a folly and a snare, why have we such dreams? |
456 | If, indeed, this battle, this slaughter and stress is life, why have we this craving for pleasure and beauty? |
456 | Is it dreaming? |
456 | Mad? |
456 | Might n''t it be something else?" |
456 | Odd, eh?" |
456 | Odd, is n''t it? |
456 | Or if it was a diamond, how came he by it, and why should he offer it at a hundred pounds? |
456 | Or is it something else? |
456 | She was dressed-- how can I describe it? |
456 | Should he charge them? |
456 | Should he charge them? |
456 | Should he charge them? |
456 | Suppose this slouching, scowling monster_ did_ know anything? |
456 | Then he asked me suddenly if I had heard of a great and avenging declaration that Evesham had made? |
456 | They all sought their own narrow ends, and why should not I-- why should not I also live as a man? |
456 | Was he an ingenious monomaniac, or a fraudulent dealer in pebbles, or has he really made diamonds as he asserted? |
456 | Was he deluding himself with his own fancies, or had Horrocks actually held him back in the way of the train? |
456 | Was it wise to be here? |
456 | Was there, after all, ever any green door in the wall at all? |
456 | Were there other people in the place?" |
456 | What did they call it?" |
456 | What do you want to tell me?'' |
456 | What had he heard? |
456 | What had he seen? |
456 | What, he asked himself, had really happened on the line? |
456 | When could the door have opened? |
456 | Where did you get it?" |
456 | Who wants to pat panthers on the way to dinner with pretty women and distinguished men? |
456 | Would he have anything to tell me worth the money, or was he the common incapable-- incapable even of telling his own story? |
456 | You remember? |
456 | You see-- how can I tell you? |
456 | You were n''t there by any chance? |
456 | You''ve never seen it? |
456 | _ No_;_ you_ would not have me do that?" |
456 | what have I done?" |
456 | where are you?" |
6424 | About that woman? |
6424 | All your population? |
6424 | Am I so like you? |
6424 | And exactly the same thing happened to both of you? |
6424 | And it has succeeded? |
6424 | And it''s going on? |
6424 | And now, what is forbidden? |
6424 | And now,I said,"have n''t we got very nearly to the end of your prohibitions? |
6424 | And the Chinaman? |
6424 | And the Rule? |
6424 | And the women do this? |
6424 | And then? |
6424 | And then? |
6424 | And you do n''t want to know how I got here? |
6424 | And you found yourselves suddenly on a mountain side? 6424 And you want to talk to me about it instead of listening to me?" |
6424 | Another world-- eh? 6424 Beauty? |
6424 | Both lost? |
6424 | But are n''t they a power? |
6424 | But how could I go back to my laboratory, mixed classes with young ladies, you know, after a thing like that? 6424 But what has this,"he asks,"to do with her?" |
6424 | But you spoke? |
6424 | But you would not like,he cried in horror,"your daughter to marry a Chinaman or a negro?" |
6424 | But, then-- where is the incentive----? |
6424 | By the Oberalp? |
6424 | Climbers, I presume? |
6424 | Do n''t you think that rather more beautiful than-- say-- our National Gallery? |
6424 | Do n''t you worry about losing your way? |
6424 | Do you mean elope with her? |
6424 | Do you mean to say neither of you know your own numbers? |
6424 | Do you mind,I say to this official,"telling us some more about ourselves?" |
6424 | Do you realise quite,I ask,"that within a week we shall face our Utopian selves and measure something of what we might have been?" |
6424 | Do you recall the Zermatt valley? |
6424 | Free? |
6424 | Have you ever found anyone seriously ill without doctors and medicine about? 6424 How do you know? |
6424 | How? |
6424 | I expect there was fighting? |
6424 | I say,I plunge,"what do you think of me? |
6424 | I suppose you''ve got your thumbs? |
6424 | Is the Woman''s Rule a sumptuary law as well as a regimen? 6424 It is good?" |
6424 | It''s queer, is n''t it? 6424 Need it go on?" |
6424 | No money? |
6424 | Not up from the lake? |
6424 | Nothing better to do? |
6424 | Saw her? |
6424 | Suppose she breaks the Rule afterwards? |
6424 | That is the Rule for your earthly orders? |
6424 | The Furka? |
6424 | The mountains? |
6424 | Then what are they after? |
6424 | There''s no chance of anyone overtaking you? |
6424 | Twenty- one? 6424 Well?" |
6424 | Well? |
6424 | Well? |
6424 | Were n''t you listening to me? |
6424 | What are your numbers? |
6424 | What do we know of the beauty they replace? 6424 What do you mean?" |
6424 | What else can we do? |
6424 | What else may not the samurai do? |
6424 | What is the good of reckoning... might have beens? |
6424 | What is the matter, madam? |
6424 | What is the matter? |
6424 | What is the matter? |
6424 | What is yours? |
6424 | What would you advise me to do? |
6424 | What? |
6424 | What? |
6424 | What? |
6424 | When shall we start? |
6424 | Where am I? |
6424 | Where are your papers? |
6424 | Where is the train for London? |
6424 | Where? |
6424 | Which building? |
6424 | Who in the name of Galton and Bertillon,one fancies Utopia exclaiming,"are_ you_?" |
6424 | Who is in this world? |
6424 | Who knows what will come in sight round the bend of the valley there? 6424 Why ca n''t they get away? |
6424 | Why should n''t it do? |
6424 | Why should they be? |
6424 | Wot does Cham''lain_ si_? |
6424 | Yes,said my double;"in Utopia we who are samurai die better than that.... Is that how your great men die?" |
6424 | Yes? |
6424 | You came up out of the Ticino valley? |
6424 | You do n''t believe that? |
6424 | You have come far? |
6424 | You have n''t any doubt left? |
6424 | You have no changing fashions? |
6424 | You live at times in a house? |
6424 | You mean? |
6424 | You say_ We_,said I, with the first glimmering of a new idea,"but_ you_ do n''t participate?" |
6424 | You think of death? |
6424 | ... incitements to disarrange? |
6424 | ... the balance of population?" |
6424 | A few hints----?" |
6424 | A natural death is better than an artificial life, surely? |
6424 | And my friend?" |
6424 | And the clerk''s face----? |
6424 | And then, am I to be accused of poverty? |
6424 | And this? |
6424 | And why?" |
6424 | Are they an hereditary caste, a specially educated order, an elected class? |
6424 | Are they not very like the people one knows? |
6424 | At the sight of him she asks with a note of relief,"What am I to do, sir, here?" |
6424 | B.,"he says, slowly,"little a, nine four seven, I_ think_----""Do n''t you know?" |
6424 | Beyond that, what conditions should a marriage contract in Utopia involve? |
6424 | But are n''t there people who can not pass examinations?" |
6424 | But are you sure you have n''t your papers or numbers? |
6424 | But he''s---- How did I know he was the sort of man a disciplined world has a use for?" |
6424 | But is n''t there a vow of Chastity?" |
6424 | But now you think better of a modern Utopia? |
6424 | But suppose that in no district in the world is there work within the capacity of this particular man? |
6424 | But the others; what would a saner world do with them? |
6424 | But what else is there to do, unless you kill? |
6424 | But what is your_ definition_( stress) of artificial? |
6424 | But what sort of language would we have the world speak, if we were told the miracle of Babel was presently to be reversed? |
6424 | But where are we drifting? |
6424 | But why was he intruded? |
6424 | But with regard to a certain petting of myself----? |
6424 | But wrinkled age? |
6424 | CHAPTER THE SECOND Concerning Freedoms Section 1 Now what sort of question would first occur to two men descending upon the planet of a Modern Utopia? |
6424 | Do I mean we are never to view the promised land again except through a foreground of fellow- travellers? |
6424 | Do you realise just where the propositions necessary to a modern Utopia are taking us? |
6424 | Does he realise this is indeed Utopia? |
6424 | Does my friend look like hopping from India to the Saint Gotthard at one hop? |
6424 | Does that render their association upon terms of equality in a World State impossible? |
6424 | Eh? |
6424 | Eh?" |
6424 | For all that, are not our dresses as beautiful as yours?" |
6424 | Have I yet in Utopia set eyes on a bald head? |
6424 | He has gone wrong on earth, no doubt, has failed and degenerated, but what was it sent him wrong? |
6424 | He was a great red- faced man, with fiery hair, a noisy, intolerant maker of enemies, with a tender heart-- and he was one of the samurai?" |
6424 | How are they made so? |
6424 | How can one think of him as bad? |
6424 | How could we live and where could we live? |
6424 | How did I get from Norway hither? |
6424 | How far will such conditions be prescribed? |
6424 | How will the work of this planet be done? |
6424 | I had a thought, and added,"Do n''t they sometimes, well-- take a good deal of care, dressing their hair?" |
6424 | I mean-- may she dress as she pleases?" |
6424 | I say, cheerfully,"have you heard?" |
6424 | I should ask, and"where?" |
6424 | I should see desirable men approaching me, and I should think;"Now, if I were to speak to_ you_?" |
6424 | I suppose no samurai may bet?" |
6424 | I wonder why it is that to lie securely in bed, with the light out, seems ever the same place, wherever in space one may chance to be? |
6424 | If that is so, what of my Utopia? |
6424 | If they seemed distressed, or if they seemed to think a course right----"... Have I come to Utopia to hear this sort of thing? |
6424 | If you drink no port, then what are walnuts for? |
6424 | In the past ingenious men have speculated on the inquiry,"Which language will survive?" |
6424 | Indeed, should we be in Utopia at all, if we could not talk to everyone? |
6424 | Is he----"he hesitated,"mad?" |
6424 | Is not the suppression of these notes my perpetual effort, my undying despair? |
6424 | Is that any reason why we should propose to preserve it for ever in a condition of tutelage? |
6424 | Is there, however, an all- round inferior race in the world? |
6424 | It''s a scar from the earth-- the sore scar of your past----""And what are we all but scars? |
6424 | It''s so strange to have seen them so recently, and now not to see them at all.... Where have they gone?" |
6424 | Meaning----?" |
6424 | No animal substance inside, no vegetable without;--what could be simpler or more logical? |
6424 | Now did I say anything of the sort? |
6424 | Now what will be the nature of the Utopian contract of matrimony? |
6424 | Now where shall we put this most excellent man? |
6424 | Now, had I come upon a hopeless incompatibility? |
6424 | Or, again, where is the sin in a glass of tawny port three or four times, or it may be five, a year, when the walnuts come round in their season? |
6424 | Our position is so entirely exceptional, so difficult to explain----""What have you been doing?" |
6424 | Perhaps then you will understand----"He shakes his head, and then bursts out with,"What do I want with a double? |
6424 | Section 2 How would things be"different"in the Modern Utopia? |
6424 | Section 2 What prohibitions should we be under, we two Uitlanders in this Utopian world? |
6424 | Section 3 Will a Utopian be free to be idle? |
6424 | Section 4"Is n''t_ that_ reality?" |
6424 | Section 7 How will a great city of Utopia strike us? |
6424 | She was n''t by any chance one of the samurai?" |
6424 | The question of all others of importance to us at present is what do they do with their tramps? |
6424 | The sound birth being assured, does there exist any valid reason for the persistence of the Utopian marriage union? |
6424 | There are scenes and insults----""She told you?" |
6424 | There will be no masking of the lesson;"which do you value most, the wide world of humanity, or this evil trend in you?" |
6424 | Utopia has sound sanitary laws, sound social laws, sound economic laws; what harm are these people going to do? |
6424 | Was his failure inherent, or did some net of cross purposes tangle about his feet? |
6424 | Was the lady looking well?" |
6424 | Was this the reductio ad absurdum of my vision, and must it even as I sat there fade, dissolve, and vanish before my eyes? |
6424 | We are really, you know, explorers, strangers----""But what world do you mean?" |
6424 | We follow the vein, we mine and accumulate our treasure, but who can tell which way the vein may trend? |
6424 | We might have a house in London, but who would call upon us? |
6424 | We prescribe a regimen of food, forbid tobacco, wine, or any alcoholic drink, all narcotic drugs----""Meat?" |
6424 | What are they? |
6424 | What differences from terrestrial conditions will ensue? |
6424 | What do I care if things have been different here? |
6424 | What good was it to trot along the pavement through this noise and tumult of life, pleading Utopia to that botanist? |
6424 | What good would it be to recommend Utopia in this driver''s preoccupied ear? |
6424 | What if instead of that Utopia of vacant ovals we meet relinquished loves here, and opportunities lost and faces as they might have looked to us? |
6424 | What is all my world after?" |
6424 | What is life but a scarring? |
6424 | What is there to keep them together? |
6424 | What is there to prevent a parallel movement of all the civilised Powers in the world towards a common ideal and assimilation? |
6424 | What other device will give a man so great a freedom with so strong an inducement to effort? |
6424 | What reason is there for us to remain casual workmen here, when you allege we are men of position in the world, if there is n''t something wrong? |
6424 | What sorrows? |
6424 | What sort of road would that be? |
6424 | What will be the economics of a modern Utopia? |
6424 | What will their range be, their prohibitions? |
6424 | What, for instance, will Utopia do with Mr. Roosevelt? |
6424 | Where falls the balance of freedoms here? |
6424 | Where in your world have you seen papers like this?" |
6424 | Where, then, is the power of your wealthy man?" |
6424 | Who knows what may happen to us anywhere? |
6424 | Who will these men be? |
6424 | Who, in a really civilised community, would grudge that measure of invasion? |
6424 | Why are you standing up?" |
6424 | Why could not a modern Utopia be discussed without this impersonation-- impersonally? |
6424 | Why do I think of her as dressed in green? |
6424 | Why not stop this dismal grizzling and carry her off?" |
6424 | Why should they not aim at a common literature, and bring their various common laws, their marriage laws, and so on, into uniformity? |
6424 | Why should they not work for a uniform minimum of labour conditions through all their communities? |
6424 | Why should they? |
6424 | Why should we men play the part of bacteria upon the face of our Mother?" |
6424 | Why, once you are rid of them, should you pester criminals to respect an uncongenial standard of conduct? |
6424 | Will they be a caste? |
6424 | Would this new sort of Utopian State, spread to the dimensions of a world, be any less forbidding? |
6424 | Yet still I have my uses, uses that vanish in monotony, and still I must ask why should we bury the talent of these bright sensations altogether? |
6424 | Yet, after all, why should two men be smiled into apathy by the Infinite? |
6424 | You do n''t think I''m an impostor?" |
6424 | You in this decent world have no means of understanding----""No?" |
6424 | You knew him in your world?" |
6424 | You may have to condemn most, but why_ all_? |
6424 | You must have a class of rich, powerful outsiders----""_ Have_ we?" |
6424 | You must seclude, but why should you torment? |
6424 | a race? |
6424 | an organisation in the nature of a Church? |
6424 | he says,"and you scorn these trams of theirs? |
6424 | how far can they be prescribed in a Modern Utopia? |
6424 | says my friend,"and how on earth it reeks and stinks with smoke?" |
6424 | what jars to our preconceptions will he and I receive here? |
6424 | what_ are_ they critical about on earth? |
5230 | ''It''s an empty sleeve, is it? 5230 ''Ow do, Teddy?" |
5230 | ''You said it was an empty sleeve?'' 5230 Ai n''t hurt the girl,''as''e?" |
5230 | Ai n''t it? |
5230 | Ai n''t one of a sort enough for you? |
5230 | Ai n''t you nothin''better to do-- busy day like this? |
5230 | Am I dreaming? 5230 Am I drunk?" |
5230 | Am I imagination? |
5230 | Am I mad? |
5230 | And what''s_ he_ been up to? |
5230 | And you troubled no more about the hunchback? |
5230 | And you--? |
5230 | Are all the doors of the house shut? |
5230 | Books? |
5230 | But after all-- why not? 5230 But how can I sleep? |
5230 | But how did you get to Iping? |
5230 | But how was it all done? |
5230 | But how''bout this paper? 5230 But how''s it done?" |
5230 | But how? |
5230 | But they take long enough to get well, do n''t they? 5230 But what devilry must happen to make a man invisible?" |
5230 | But when does the Tramp come in? 5230 But where is he? |
5230 | But where_ are_ yer? |
5230 | Ca n''t I have some more to eat before I tell you all that? 5230 Can I take your hat and coat, sir?" |
5230 | Can you hear-- anything? |
5230 | Chesilstowe? |
5230 | Did n''t I hear the window? |
5230 | Did n''t go Back by any chance? |
5230 | Do I look like an insane person? |
5230 | Do n''t it? 5230 Eh?" |
5230 | Food? |
5230 | For instance, would it be a breach of faith if--? 5230 Griffin?" |
5230 | Have I had visions? 5230 Have you a bandage on?" |
5230 | Have you a dressing- gown? |
5230 | He did n''t have any pals-- it do n''t say he had any pals, does it? |
5230 | How did the shooting begin? |
5230 | How long did it take? |
5230 | How on earth--? |
5230 | How? |
5230 | Hullo,cried the policeman,"who''s there?" |
5230 | Invisible, eh? |
5230 | Is it your bill you''re wanting, sir? |
5230 | Is there such a thing as an invisible animal? 5230 Is_ he_ invisible too?" |
5230 | It''s enough, ai n''t it? |
5230 | Just escaped and that''s all, eh? |
5230 | Knocked him on the head? |
5230 | Listen to reason, will you? |
5230 | Look at the clock? |
5230 | Looks a bit like a disguise, do n''t it? 5230 No one?" |
5230 | No shutters? |
5230 | No? |
5230 | On came the band, bawling with unconscious irony some hymn about''When shall we see His face?'' 5230 Ostria, or America?" |
5230 | Out? |
5230 | Since when did you learn to invade the private rooms of a man in misfortune? |
5230 | Tap? |
5230 | That chap at the inn--"Well? |
5230 | Then why did you let me go on and tell you all this blarsted stuff, then? 5230 There are no diagrams?" |
5230 | There is no speedier delivery? |
5230 | There''s no way of climbing up here? |
5230 | This do? |
5230 | This, this Invisible Man, then? |
5230 | To- morrow? |
5230 | Wait a bit,said the mariner, rising and speaking slowly,"D''you mean to say--?" |
5230 | Warn''t speaking to us, wuz he? |
5230 | Was that a letter? |
5230 | Was you hurt, sir? |
5230 | Well? |
5230 | Well? |
5230 | Well? |
5230 | Well? |
5230 | Well? |
5230 | Well? |
5230 | Well? |
5230 | Well? |
5230 | Well? |
5230 | What am I to do? |
5230 | What am_ I_ to do? |
5230 | What am_ I_ to do? |
5230 | What are you going for? |
5230 | What do I make by it? |
5230 | What do you mean to say? |
5230 | What do you mean? |
5230 | What else can we do? |
5230 | What else_ can_ you be? |
5230 | What happened when you went out into the Strand? |
5230 | What the devil''s this? |
5230 | What the dooce? |
5230 | What was that? |
5230 | What were the shots? |
5230 | What were you planning to do when you were heading for Port Burdock? 5230 What will they be writing next?" |
5230 | What window? |
5230 | What yer listenin''there for, Hall? |
5230 | What''s happened? |
5230 | What''s he been doin'', then? |
5230 | What''s that smashing? |
5230 | What''s that? |
5230 | What''s the shot wound? |
5230 | What''s this for? |
5230 | What''s up? |
5230 | What''s up? |
5230 | What, real like? |
5230 | Where did you get the money? |
5230 | Where have they put my clothes? |
5230 | Where is he? |
5230 | Where''s he gone? |
5230 | Where_ are_ yer? 5230 Where_ are_ yer? |
5230 | Where_ are_ yer? |
5230 | Who ever heard the likes of that? |
5230 | Who lit the candle? |
5230 | Who''s coming? 5230 Who''s coming?" |
5230 | Who''s letting off revolvers in Burdock? 5230 Who''s moving on?" |
5230 | Who''s that speaking now? |
5230 | Who? |
5230 | Why do n''t you finish and go? |
5230 | Why does n''t he fire? |
5230 | Why is n''t my bill paid? |
5230 | Why not? |
5230 | Why not? |
5230 | Why not? |
5230 | Why was n''t my breakfast laid? 5230 Why!--ain''t it enough?" |
5230 | Would you mind, sir, this man a- coming to look at the clock, sir? |
5230 | Yes? |
5230 | Yes? |
5230 | Yes? |
5230 | You all right thur? |
5230 | You are certain that is the earliest? |
5230 | You have n''t a revolver? |
5230 | You think I''m just imagination? 5230 You went straight to Iping?" |
5230 | You''aven''t been eatin''bread and cheese? |
5230 | You-- all-- right thur? |
5230 | _ Was_ he? |
5230 | _ You_ did n''t do any shooting? |
5230 | _ You_? |
5230 | ''Did I hear a cat?'' |
5230 | ''Empty sleeve?'' |
5230 | ''How the devil,''said I,''can you move an empty sleeve like that?'' |
5230 | ''I was saying,''said he,''that there was the prescription burning, was n''t I?'' |
5230 | ''My cat?'' |
5230 | ''Now then?'' |
5230 | ''See what?'' |
5230 | ''Well?'' |
5230 | ''What''s up?'' |
5230 | ''When are you going to publish this work of yours?'' |
5230 | ''Who''s that?'' |
5230 | A long research? |
5230 | Accidents, sir, happen in a moment, do n''t they?" |
5230 | Already?" |
5230 | Ambition-- what is the good of pride of place when you can not appear there? |
5230 | And I gave her butter to get her to wash.""And you processed her?" |
5230 | And now what am I to do?" |
5230 | And now, Kemp, what else?" |
5230 | And that grocer lout?" |
5230 | And then--""Well?" |
5230 | And what I want you to understand is this--""But whereabouts?" |
5230 | And what''s''e doin''''ithout''is close, then? |
5230 | But in air? |
5230 | But the fact remains that I saw-- I certainly saw right down his sleeve--""But did you-- are you sure? |
5230 | But why not come? |
5230 | CHAPTER XIX CERTAIN FIRST PRINCIPLES"What''s the matter?" |
5230 | CHAPTER XXIV THE PLAN THAT FAILED"But now,"said Kemp, with a side glance out of the window,"what are we to do?" |
5230 | Ca n''t you see my position?" |
5230 | D''you mean to say--?" |
5230 | Did I kill that fool of a constable?" |
5230 | Did he really sleep last night? |
5230 | Did n''t you see him on the lawn? |
5230 | Do I_ look_ like a Treasure Trove? |
5230 | Do n''t you remember me, Kemp? |
5230 | Do you know?" |
5230 | Do you think I live without eating?" |
5230 | Eh?" |
5230 | Griffin, of University College?" |
5230 | Has the world gone mad-- or have I?" |
5230 | Have you already forgotten your physics, in ten years? |
5230 | How are you hid?" |
5230 | How can you hope to gain happiness? |
5230 | How the devil was I to know the blessed turning? |
5230 | How the dooce is it done?" |
5230 | If I get up shall I run into you? |
5230 | If I let you go will you promise not to try any nonsense and do what I tell you?" |
5230 | If he lets me in will you promise not to rush the door?" |
5230 | Is it that?" |
5230 | Is there anything more that I can get you?" |
5230 | It''s a filthy nuisance, my blood showing, is n''t it? |
5230 | It''s just like the ghost of a foot, ai n''t it?'' |
5230 | Just imagination?" |
5230 | Lemme get my mark on yer..."Are yer_ buried_?" |
5230 | May I ask-- How is it? |
5230 | Never heard tell of Invisible Men before, I have n''t, but nowadays one hears such a lot of extra- ordinary things-- that--""That all he did?" |
5230 | No man with a trap who would go over? |
5230 | On the village green an inclined strong[ rope? |
5230 | Pretty straight story, eh? |
5230 | See that? |
5230 | Should he remark that the weather was very cold for the time of year? |
5230 | So that if I may make so bold as to say it, sir--""Will you get me some matches?" |
5230 | Suppose he wants to rob-- who can prevent him? |
5230 | Suppose he were to take his luck with a shot? |
5230 | Surely a shilling''s enough?" |
5230 | That''s no reason why I should be poked to pieces by every stupid bumpkin in Iping, is it?" |
5230 | The smash?" |
5230 | There''s not the slightest doubt that I could kill you both and get away quite easily if I wanted to-- do you understand? |
5230 | They have n''t noticed--""Have you fastened it?" |
5230 | Up the staircase were piled a multitude of those bright- coloured pot things-- what are they?" |
5230 | Was I talking to myself? |
5230 | Was it dangerous? |
5230 | Was it legal? |
5230 | Was it medical? |
5230 | Was my appearance really credible? |
5230 | Was she quite sure? |
5230 | Was that a movement downstairs? |
5230 | Was that footsteps he heard behind him? |
5230 | Was that really a voice? |
5230 | What are the asses at now?" |
5230 | What are you fishing after?'' |
5230 | What d''yer mean by letting a man make a fool of himself like that for? |
5230 | What did you do next?" |
5230 | What does it matter?" |
5230 | What else is there we can do? |
5230 | What else?" |
5230 | What has this to do with Griffin?" |
5230 | What is the good of the love of woman when her name must needs be Delilah? |
5230 | What on earth ought I to do?" |
5230 | What the devil keeps that sleeve up and open, if there''s nothing in it? |
5230 | What the devil_ is_ his game?" |
5230 | What was I doing? |
5230 | What was I to do? |
5230 | What was it about?" |
5230 | What''s it all about?" |
5230 | What''s that downstairs?" |
5230 | What''s the row?" |
5230 | Where are you? |
5230 | Where is it? |
5230 | Where shall I give it to you?" |
5230 | Where''d you be, if he took a drop over and above, and had a fancy to go for you? |
5230 | Whiskey? |
5230 | Why am I assaulted by a policeman in this fashion?" |
5230 | Why could n''t they leave me alone? |
5230 | Why dream of playing a game against the race? |
5230 | Why have n''t you prepared my meals and answered my bell? |
5230 | Why the deuce was he chasing a tramp?" |
5230 | Why was I always alone and secretive? |
5230 | Would Mr. Wadgers come round? |
5230 | Would he subscribe? |
5230 | You ca n''t grumble if your breakfast waits a bit, if my bill''s been waiting these five days, can you?" |
5230 | You do n''t blame me, do you? |
5230 | You do n''t blame me?" |
5230 | You gart whad a wand?" |
5230 | You know I dropped medicine and took up physics? |
5230 | You know what fools we are at two- and- twenty?" |
5230 | You know?" |
5230 | You know?" |
5230 | You saw it was an empty sleeve?'' |
5230 | You see? |
5230 | You''d have expected a sort of pinky to show, would n''t you? |
5230 | _ Had_ you any plan?" |
5230 | _ Where_ shall I hide?" |
5230 | _ Why_ killing?" |
5230 | said Kemp,"and how did you get like this?" |
5230 | she said, going off at a tangent;"ai n''t you done them taters_ yet_, Millie?" |
5230 | she said,"and give them a good dry in the kitchen?" |
33913 | A very pretty Angel? |
33913 | A what? |
33913 | After they''ve gone to pieces here? |
33913 | And are you sure? |
33913 | And did she improve after that? |
33913 | And do n''t you regard Mr Angel as a gentleman? |
33913 | And now, dear, I want you to tell me frankly-- Do you really believe that creature was a man? |
33913 | And that lean, bent old man trudges after that heavy blade of iron pulled by a couple of horses while we go down to eat? |
33913 | And that pink flower that sprang out of the box----"Out of the box? |
33913 | And then a glorious youth? |
33913 | And then you were a little boy? |
33913 | And then? |
33913 | And you have to eat like this every day? |
33913 | And you have your little pink babies? |
33913 | And you? |
33913 | And? |
33913 | Are these notes? |
33913 | Are you hurt? |
33913 | Are you hurt? |
33913 | Are you sure they are natural? |
33913 | Are you... separated from..._ your_ world? |
33913 | Are_ all_ men so odd as this? |
33913 | As you are? |
33913 | But might I make so bold as to speak to you for a moment? |
33913 | But the Imitations? |
33913 | But the wings? |
33913 | But what are they doing meanwhile? |
33913 | But what...? 33913 But what_ have_ you to say?" |
33913 | But who_ can_ he be? |
33913 | But why does everyone-- everything-- want to give pain? |
33913 | But_ why_ should he be about the shrubbery... in that dreadful costume? |
33913 | Can you do Imitations, Mr Angel? |
33913 | Carncher Answerme? |
33913 | Come on d''yer say? 33913 Did you really make that up yourself?" |
33913 | Did you,_ ahem_, notice how they behaved? |
33913 | Do I understand that you consider me as-- as something in a dream? |
33913 | Do all men have to do that? 33913 Do n''t they come?" |
33913 | Do n''t you eat? |
33913 | Do n''t you think so? 33913 Do you know,"said Sir John, with scarcely a pause,"he''s been going about this village preaching Socialism?" |
33913 | Do you like these things-- these nuts? |
33913 | Do you never yawn in the angelic country? |
33913 | Do you often kill? |
33913 | Do you think I am a Man-- like yourself? 33913 Do_ you_ look for sympathy?" |
33913 | Does not Mr Angel play from ordinary.... Music-- from the ordinary notation? |
33913 | Eigh? 33913 Eigh?" |
33913 | Evenin'', Sir,said Horrocks, and added in a kind of mysterious undertone,"_ Could_ I speak to you a minute, Sir?" |
33913 | Have ye nothin''better to do than listen at people''s doors for what you can pick up? |
33913 | Have you been pithed? 33913 Have you told Sir John who did it?" |
33913 | Hawkins? |
33913 | He has quite a genius for music, Vicar, so I hear? |
33913 | How are you? |
33913 | How can that be? |
33913 | How''s the wing? |
33913 | How''s the wing? |
33913 | I beg your pardon? |
33913 | I beg your pardon? |
33913 | I did-- perhaps inadvertently-- make such--"And you do n''t know where he comes from? |
33913 | I hope I am not inconveniencing you? |
33913 | I suppose you know it? |
33913 | I suppose you know this world of ours pretty well? 33913 I suppose you know you are trespassing?" |
33913 | I went out to look for a strange bird this afternoon.... Do you believe in angels, Mendham, real angels? |
33913 | I wonder if you and Mr Angel could manage a duet? |
33913 | Is it a painful operation? |
33913 | Is it new to you? |
33913 | Is killing making like that? |
33913 | Is that so? |
33913 | Is that yonder a man? |
33913 | Is this here village called Siddermorton? |
33913 | It is not so in the Angelic Land? |
33913 | Journey tire you yesterday? |
33913 | Just fooling with a fiddle, eigh? |
33913 | Let me assist you to remove your coat? |
33913 | Looks cosy, do n''t it? |
33913 | May I ask one question first? |
33913 | May I ask_ who_ this Mr Angel is? |
33913 | May I make so bold, sir, as to arst when Mr Angel is a- going? |
33913 | My what? |
33913 | No angel would alarm four ladies...."Is_ that_ what it is all about? |
33913 | Nor who his father is, I suppose? |
33913 | Now what_ was_ that woman? |
33913 | Or have you found it? |
33913 | Padding the Hoof, matey? |
33913 | See what? |
33913 | Slabs, piles of stone, these railings.... Are they afraid?... 33913 So you flew all the way, eigh? |
33913 | Spinal curvature? |
33913 | The Pain when I feel your bone? |
33913 | The_ what_? |
33913 | To ask when Mr Angel is going? |
33913 | Was that your barbed wire? 33913 Well, Amy, chattering to George as usual?" |
33913 | Well? |
33913 | Well? |
33913 | Well? |
33913 | Well? |
33913 | Well? |
33913 | Were you a little pink baby? |
33913 | Were you robed then as you are now? |
33913 | What HAVE I done? |
33913 | What can I do to help you? |
33913 | What can it be for? |
33913 | What do all those crazy dots mean? |
33913 | What do you do for him? |
33913 | What do you think of that Barcarole thing of Spohr''s? |
33913 | What do you think? |
33913 | What does it all mean? |
33913 | What does this mean? |
33913 | What dots? |
33913 | What has happened to me? |
33913 | What is a silver wedding? |
33913 | What is it? |
33913 | What is it? |
33913 | What is that? |
33913 | What is the matter with this man? |
33913 | What is the matter? |
33913 | What woman? |
33913 | What''s that? |
33913 | What''s the trouble? |
33913 | What? |
33913 | What_ do_ they matter? |
33913 | What_ have_ I done? |
33913 | Where did you get that_''at_? |
33913 | Where did you get them clo''es? |
33913 | Where did you learn the language then? |
33913 | Where''s that? |
33913 | Who are you,he said, in a low quivering voice;"who am I-- that you should order me out of this place? |
33913 | Who are you? |
33913 | Who''s_ e_ then? |
33913 | Who''s_ he_ got now? |
33913 | Who? |
33913 | Why did I not face them all-- say,''This is the best of life''? 33913 Why do n''t I sleep in a bed? |
33913 | Why do n''t you listen to him? |
33913 | Why does he go to and fro like that? 33913 Why does he lie so still?" |
33913 | Why does he sway about so? 33913 Why is everything raised up on big wooden legs?" |
33913 | Why is it so here? |
33913 | Why should I get out of this wood? |
33913 | Why,asked the Angel,"do you sleep like this instead of sleeping up in the air on a Bed?" |
33913 | Why? |
33913 | Yes,said the Angel;"is_ he_ pithed?" |
33913 | Yes? |
33913 | You have artists then among the Angels? |
33913 | You have asked him to stop with you-- indefinitely? |
33913 | You have yourself round,he said,_ apropos_ of the portrait,"Why want yourself flat?" |
33913 | You play? |
33913 | You say the creature is staying at the Vicarage? |
33913 | You see,began the Vicar,"I scarcely understood----""Is that''die''?" |
33913 | You will write to the Bishop, of course? |
33913 | _ After_ lunch, I think you said? |
33913 | _ That_ was a maiden? |
33913 | _ What?_said the Doctor in a quick, sharp voice. |
33913 | _ Why?_said the Angel. |
33913 | ("Are your shoes out, dear?") |
33913 | Am I not dreaming that you must go?" |
33913 | And I have heard another story....""But what can I do?" |
33913 | And Miss Papaver,"Does Willie keep up his lessons?" |
33913 | And the poor boy''s a cripple, eh? |
33913 | And then turning suddenly on the Vicar,"Where does he come from?" |
33913 | And what will Sir John do?" |
33913 | And you see that little red place there?" |
33913 | And you wanted to make me like that-- wanted to put glass eyes in me and string me up in a glass case full of ugly green and brown stuff?" |
33913 | Are you sure they were confined to the wings? |
33913 | Are you the man who put down that barbed wire? |
33913 | As it is-- am I to take proceedings or no?" |
33913 | As you did me?" |
33913 | Before we talk, may I have the pleasure-- the melancholy pleasure-- of tying it up? |
33913 | Besides, was it not his duty to prepare his sermon in good time? |
33913 | Can I really be awake?" |
33913 | Can not you abandon this ridiculous story of yours?..." |
33913 | Did other people see these visions, or were they confined to him alone? |
33913 | Did you notice how he fussed after the genius?" |
33913 | Did you notice the effeminate delicacy of his face? |
33913 | Do I understand you, Mrs Hinijer, that you do n''t like Mr Angel?" |
33913 | Do n''t you feel hungry?" |
33913 | Do n''t you find it inconvenient, Mr Angel?" |
33913 | Do the new arrivals complain much about their medical attendants? |
33913 | Do these Dead ever try and get up again? |
33913 | Do you have much of this Pain in the Land of Dreams?" |
33913 | Do you?" |
33913 | Does it amuse him?" |
33913 | Eigh? |
33913 | Eigh?" |
33913 | Ever heard of a pithed frog?" |
33913 | Frightened? |
33913 | Had he been dreaming all the afternoon? |
33913 | Had he lived a virtuous celibate life for thirty odd years in vain? |
33913 | Hatbox?_"("I suppose he ought to have a silk hat,"said the Vicar;"it''s the correct thing up there. |
33913 | Have I gained_ no_ character?" |
33913 | Have you never had patches of colour swim before your eyes before, on a brilliant sunlight day?... |
33913 | Have you_ never_ heard of an Angel?" |
33913 | He found the oak chairs odd--"You''re not square, are you?" |
33913 | He went on"Dadda, Pappa, Daddy, Mammy, Pappy, Father, Dad, Governor, Old Boy, Mother, dear Mother, Ma, Mumsy.... No good? |
33913 | His neglected hair? |
33913 | His tendency to quite unmeaning laughter? |
33913 | How do you begin?" |
33913 | How is it? |
33913 | How''s your excrescence?" |
33913 | How_ can_ I tell him?" |
33913 | I hope---- they were not frightened at my wings?" |
33913 | I never did!----How did this gunshot happen, Mr Angel?" |
33913 | I suppose you ca n''t throw any light on that obscure pathological manifestation?" |
33913 | I think it''s the best way... Quite sure Mr Angel did it?" |
33913 | Is that enough?" |
33913 | Is your Pain any better?" |
33913 | It''s not a thing one should have done in a hurry----""Do you mean my wings?" |
33913 | May I assist you?" |
33913 | May I look at it, Mr-- Angel, I think you said?" |
33913 | Music without life----it''s Ruskin I think?" |
33913 | No conveyance?" |
33913 | Not that little housemaid at the Vicarage--?..." |
33913 | Now what have you to say?" |
33913 | Of course it''s very kind indeed of you to take such an interest----""Are you really going to improvise?" |
33913 | Or was he the sport of a complicated hallucination? |
33913 | Or why not tell a simple straightforward story? |
33913 | Oxon Patent Versatile, 1s 11½d._"("But how will he get them on?" |
33913 | Pants?_"_ 2 suits Pyjamas. |
33913 | Perhaps some of your-- friends have travelled? |
33913 | Possibly it strikes you as unfair?" |
33913 | Price? |
33913 | Quite romantic-- isn''t it? |
33913 | Razor?_"_ ½ doz. |
33913 | See that chap ploughin''?" |
33913 | Self- meas.? |
33913 | Shirts(? |
33913 | The Greeks and Romans----""What is this?" |
33913 | This was the kind of document he was making:"_ 1 Black Melton Frock Coat, patts? |
33913 | Unwisely, because how was he to imagine the reception the Angel would receive? |
33913 | Was the Angel grossly ignorant or only grossly impertinent? |
33913 | Was the man jesting? |
33913 | Was there really an angel in the drawing- room? |
33913 | Were you the only one in your family?" |
33913 | Whad yer think? |
33913 | What are we men made of?... |
33913 | What are you laughing at?" |
33913 | What did I see? |
33913 | What do these everyday things matter?" |
33913 | What do you think?" |
33913 | What do you think?" |
33913 | What does it leave you? |
33913 | What good_ can_ it do?..." |
33913 | What might she not say of this business, before her indignant imagination came to rest? |
33913 | What next? |
33913 | What was the Vicar thinking of? |
33913 | What_ was_ the good of talking to a man like Sir John Gotch about Angels? |
33913 | When presently they sat cracking nuts-- which the Angel found congenial enough-- and the girl had gone, the Angel asked:"Was that a lady, too?" |
33913 | When the glory of a man is his hair, what''s a woman to do? |
33913 | Where are they?" |
33913 | Where was I?)" |
33913 | Where was he? |
33913 | Where''s Mr Jarvis? |
33913 | Who am I to set myself up against your experience? |
33913 | Why can not an act rest on its own merits?... |
33913 | Why do you do it?" |
33913 | Why do you keep making these noises in your throat? |
33913 | Why does he do it? |
33913 | Why does he keep on trying to pick up his hat like that-- and missing it?" |
33913 | Willyanswerme? |
33913 | Wo n''t you come down?" |
33913 | Wo n''t you take some Burgundy? |
33913 | Wontchr? |
33913 | Wot else? |
33913 | Yes-- what else should I mean?" |
33913 | You ai nt such a Ninny....""But if ye did n''t want me to hear, why did you cry out so loud? |
33913 | You silly girt staring Gaby, what do n''t know any better than to come holding yer girt mouth wide open for all that you can catch holt on? |
33913 | You will find it better----""You propose I should feign to become a man?" |
33913 | You''aven''t the price of a arf pint in your pocket,''ave yer?" |
33913 | _ Why?_""You see,"said the Vicar,"I take an interest in birds, and I(_ ahem_) collect them. |
33913 | _ what_ has happened to me?" |
33913 | measure his neck), 6s ea._"_ Socks? |
33913 | perhaps you remember? |
33913 | said Mrs Hinijer, suddenly projecting from her window;"Delia, is that you?" |
33913 | said the Angel softly,...."_ Hawkins?_ The name is strange to me.... |
33913 | what is the matter?" |
33913 | £3, 10s._"_? |
42989 | ''Have you read it?'' 42989 A cotton one, p''raps, sir?" |
42989 | And are you really going? |
42989 | And do I understand,said I,"that I--?" |
42989 | And how do you know that it_ is_ the Fruit of the Tree? |
42989 | And if you should chance to hit a ship? |
42989 | And the globe? |
42989 | And this has come to me? |
42989 | And which way do I go? |
42989 | And you are ready to go? |
42989 | And you''ve been happy ever after, eh? |
42989 | Are you dead certain that clockwork will act? |
42989 | Are you ready? |
42989 | As a child, did you get very much religious training? |
42989 | But can not we go on, meeting one another, loving one another, without any great scandal or misery? 42989 But do n''t you want to eat it yourself? |
42989 | But how did you come by it? |
42989 | But if it does n''t? |
42989 | But is it happiness? 42989 But what can he do?" |
42989 | But what line will he take? |
42989 | But why me in particular? |
42989 | But why the cord? |
42989 | But--''take it off''? |
42989 | Cones? |
42989 | De gun? |
42989 | Dear me, Jane, did you? 42989 Did I do that myself in a flash of absent- mindedness?" |
42989 | Did I tell you Jane''s girls have had scarlet fever? |
42989 | Did you call me a fool? |
42989 | Do something with''em.... Did you think it was a treat? |
42989 | Do you think it is wise, Jane? |
42989 | Do you want me to criticise these plays? |
42989 | Eigh? |
42989 | Eigh? |
42989 | Eigh? |
42989 | Fail me? |
42989 | George,she said in an awestricken whisper,"did you see?" |
42989 | Got it? |
42989 | Happened? |
42989 | Have I got that right? |
42989 | Have you been telling Mr. Raut of all these contrasts of flame and shadow you think so splendid? |
42989 | Have you heard? |
42989 | Having a look at the jigger? |
42989 | He does not suspect? |
42989 | Heard what? |
42989 | His papa, ma''am--"His_ what_, Jane?" |
42989 | How are you getting on with your flying- machine? |
42989 | How do you know? |
42989 | How is this Sunday different from all other Sundays, little woman? 42989 How long does it take to reach the bottom of the ocean?" |
42989 | How long have they been calling this Monson''s Folly? |
42989 | How much? |
42989 | How should_ I_ know she belonged to a Porroh man? |
42989 | How the devil should_ I_ know? |
42989 | How? |
42989 | How? |
42989 | If you do n''t care to eat it, and it bothers you, why do n''t you throw it away? |
42989 | Is it to be flight? |
42989 | Is it? |
42989 | Is it? |
42989 | It will be very dangerous at first, will it not? |
42989 | It''s all a delusion, is it? 42989 Jorgon is going to play presently; have you heard him before?" |
42989 | Matter? |
42989 | May I arst why? |
42989 | My hat? |
42989 | Nipping your arm off? |
42989 | No? |
42989 | Not pass me? |
42989 | Not-- surely not the immaculate Hill? |
42989 | Not_ this_? |
42989 | Nothing happened, sir? |
42989 | Oh, what_ is_ the matter? |
42989 | Please, m''m, may I go and see a wedding to- morrow? |
42989 | Suppose it was? |
42989 | Suppose so? 42989 Suppose you saw into the hearts and minds of everyone about you, into their most secret recesses-- people you loved, whose love you valued?" |
42989 | Take_ what_ off? |
42989 | That future,he said,"would you in truth change it?" |
42989 | That slide--"Moved? |
42989 | The street? 42989 Then this is the end?" |
42989 | Then you are engaged to him? |
42989 | There is neither ghost of earl nor ghost of countess in that room, there is no ghost there at all; but worse, far worse--"Well?" |
42989 | To open? |
42989 | Vestiges of daylight?... 42989 Well?" |
42989 | Well? |
42989 | Well? |
42989 | Well? |
42989 | Well? |
42989 | Well? |
42989 | What do you keep on posing for? |
42989 | What do you mean? |
42989 | What do you think of it, Steevens? |
42989 | What does he say? |
42989 | What inducement has he? |
42989 | What might that be? |
42989 | What was his name? 42989 What was that I heard?" |
42989 | What was you saying behind my back about my playing? |
42989 | What''s that about bread and butter, Weybridge? 42989 What''s the idee?" |
42989 | What''s up? |
42989 | What''s up? |
42989 | What''s wrong now? |
42989 | What''s wrong with my playing now? |
42989 | What''s your definition of righteousness? |
42989 | What? |
42989 | Where am I? |
42989 | Where''ll he come up? |
42989 | Who the juice are you? |
42989 | Why do n''t you drink? |
42989 | Why not fasten the weights directly to the sphere? |
42989 | Why not give it away? |
42989 | Why not? 42989 Why not?" |
42989 | Why should I? |
42989 | Why should n''t I? |
42989 | Why should n''t he? |
42989 | Why should n''t it? |
42989 | Why_ should_ he? |
42989 | Will you hurt me much? |
42989 | Wonder who the deuce I am, eh? 42989 Yes?" |
42989 | Yes? |
42989 | You are a student? |
42989 | You believe now,said the old man,"that the room is haunted?" |
42989 | You did not kill him yourself? |
42989 | You did? |
42989 | You do n''t quite follow me? |
42989 | You got him killed? |
42989 | You liked it? |
42989 | You spoke? |
42989 | You wanted to see me? |
42989 | You will not perhaps mind taking my name, taking my position, but would you indeed-- willingly-- take my years? |
42989 | _ Eigh?_he said, at the top of his voice, as though he thought I had gone, and was startled at my remark. |
42989 | _ What?_said Pollock. |
42989 | _ What_ do you mean by taking off? |
42989 | ''What do the nations want?'' |
42989 | *****"Do you like the potatoes, dear?" |
42989 | --My name, you know--''Do you see the clouds lowering over the land? |
42989 | 259 beginning double quotes added and nested double quotes changed to single quotes("''Have you read it?'' |
42989 | A vision? |
42989 | All right, eh? |
42989 | And besides"--"Well?" |
42989 | And besides-- how did you come by it?" |
42989 | And had the clockwork really been sufficiently tested? |
42989 | And now, Ted,''he''d say, spinning round in his study chair,''how''s Young England?'' |
42989 | And out of it flapped-- You guess? |
42989 | And the lamps? |
42989 | And then,"Fail me? |
42989 | And what was I? |
42989 | And why not take some of this delightful toadstool with him, for them to eat? |
42989 | Are you mad?" |
42989 | Are you wearing your hair in a new way without warning me? |
42989 | Besides, what had he to sell? |
42989 | But I am always inclined to distrust these philanthropists- on- principle"--"Are you quite sure?" |
42989 | But all the same, what on earth did Horrocks mean about"white as death"and"red as sin"? |
42989 | But how to prove it? |
42989 | But it shows you, do n''t it?" |
42989 | But it''s the steering"--"Have n''t I been rushing, night and morning, backwards and forwards, through this squirrel''s cage? |
42989 | But what does it matter? |
42989 | But, you know, what can you expect? |
42989 | Can not a man seek after righteousness for righteousness''sake?" |
42989 | Can you recommend me a physician for mind troubles? |
42989 | Coincidence, perhaps? |
42989 | Coombes?" |
42989 | Daubrà © e has made rocks run like water under big pressures-- and, you mark my words"--"If the glass did break in,"said Steevens,"what then?" |
42989 | Did a man near to death begin instinctively to withdraw himself from the meshes of matter and sense, even before the cold hand was laid upon his? |
42989 | Did he after all know? |
42989 | Did he like it or did he not? |
42989 | Did the man mean to take the thing coolly? |
42989 | Did you like it?" |
42989 | Do they still show children dissolving views? |
42989 | Do you know, all his workmen call that place of his''Monson''s Folly''? |
42989 | Do you see the clouds, Ted?'' |
42989 | Eden?" |
42989 | Eigh? |
42989 | For my own part"--"Has your wife got Jane''s recipe for stuffing trout?" |
42989 | Grumbling as usual about the insufficient pay of naval officers? |
42989 | Had I been dreaming of Eden overnight? |
42989 | Had I passed out of being into something that was neither being nor not- being? |
42989 | Had he been dull? |
42989 | Had he heard all? |
42989 | Had he just been within an ace of being murdered? |
42989 | Had the bed turned round? |
42989 | Have you altered the curtains, or rearranged the furniture, or where is the indefinable difference of it? |
42989 | Have you ever felt a straight jet of high pressure water? |
42989 | Hill?" |
42989 | How can I express it? |
42989 | How could he fight such an establishment? |
42989 | How could he tell now whether he might not have identified the thing without shifting it? |
42989 | How could they find out? |
42989 | How long do they last?" |
42989 | How long had he been in the room? |
42989 | I said,"How the devil did I get here?" |
42989 | If that is not cheating"--"If I was a cheat,"said Hill, with the note of hysterics in his voice,"should I come here and tell you?" |
42989 | In a whisper she said,"You love me?" |
42989 | Is it too extravagant if I tell you that it seemed to me as if Regent Street had, for the moment, done that? |
42989 | Is there anywhere where I can talk to you?" |
42989 | It was pretty straight sailing, you''d think, for me, eh? |
42989 | It''s dreadful, is n''t it? |
42989 | Leaving what? |
42989 | Let me see-- where_ am_ I? |
42989 | No ties, braces--?" |
42989 | Nothing? |
42989 | Or where should we be? |
42989 | Perhaps he was being"tried"? |
42989 | Plattner?" |
42989 | Seen any snakes lately?" |
42989 | She had been quiet for a minute, and then she suddenly remarked,''William is a lot above me, ma''am, ai n''t he?''" |
42989 | Should I drift off presently, like a puff of smoke from a gun, in some kind of half- material body, an attenuated version of my material self? |
42989 | Should I drift to some spiritualistic_ sà © ance_, and there make foolish, incomprehensible attempts to affect a purblind medium? |
42989 | Should I find myself suddenly among the innumerable hosts of the dead, and know the world about me for the phantasmagoria it had always seemed? |
42989 | Should he identify it? |
42989 | Should he own up to the accident now? |
42989 | Should he try and clear the towers, or swerve eastward? |
42989 | So there was a quaver in his voice as he asked,"Is it to be flight?" |
42989 | Sun, sky, sea, rocks-- what was it? |
42989 | Suppose Wedderburn too had shifted the slide? |
42989 | Suppose he had a sale, sold things for almost anything? |
42989 | Suppose this slouching, scowling monster_ did_ know anything? |
42989 | Then, why not"Go to the Money- Lenders"? |
42989 | There''s nothing more I can show you? |
42989 | This clean sky and gentle swell is just the kind of thing for swinging off a dozen tons of lead and iron; is n''t it?" |
42989 | To me, how could one throw away a thing like that, glowing, wonderful? |
42989 | UNDER THE KNIFE"What if I die under it?" |
42989 | Was I indeed Elvesham, and he me? |
42989 | Was I indeed immaterial? |
42989 | Was all life hallucination? |
42989 | Was he deluding himself with his own fancies, or had Horrocks actually held him back in the way of the train? |
42989 | Was he not the new Grammar School master making his dà © but? |
42989 | Was it two hundred pounds about-- or one hundred pounds? |
42989 | Was it wise to be here? |
42989 | Was that last night, or the night before? |
42989 | Was the whole universe but a refracting speck upon some greater Being? |
42989 | Was there any Eden? |
42989 | Was there any ground for the belief in the presentiment of death? |
42989 | Was there no sympathetic ruler anywhere in the world? |
42989 | Was this dulness of feeling in itself an anticipation? |
42989 | We got to do this, and we got to do that"--"If you do n''t mean to study my connection,"said Mr. Coombes,"what did you marry me for?" |
42989 | We should see into everything, through everything, into the deepest meaning of everything"--"Why do n''t you eat it, then?" |
42989 | Were our worlds but the atoms of another universe, and those again of another, and so on through an endless progression? |
42989 | Were there other souls, invisible to me as I to them, about me in the blackness? |
42989 | What are they-- these Watchers of the Living? |
42989 | What did they do?" |
42989 | What do I want? |
42989 | What else did you expect? |
42989 | What had he heard? |
42989 | What had he seen? |
42989 | What has happened? |
42989 | What phantom was it? |
42989 | What real need was there of a desk? |
42989 | What taking line was there to bait the sale? |
42989 | What was it I had not done? |
42989 | What was it Wedderburn was saying? |
42989 | What was this strange reddish dawn in the interminable night of space? |
42989 | What was unfolding itself? |
42989 | What will a life be that has no childhood at the beginning?" |
42989 | What''s the matter with you? |
42989 | What''s up? |
42989 | What, he asked himself, had really happened on the line? |
42989 | Whatever had made him think a mortal would buy such things? |
42989 | When could the door have opened? |
42989 | When did dey begin?" |
42989 | When one has been awake most of the night, and has no hope, what_ is_ the good of getting up punctually? |
42989 | Where''s Mr. Plattner? |
42989 | Which way shall we go?" |
42989 | Which will it be? |
42989 | Who do they say--?" |
42989 | Why are you bothering yourself to lend that book"--he indicated William Morris by a movement of the head--"to everyone in the lab.?" |
42989 | Why could n''t he be nice-- as he used to be? |
42989 | Why did n''t you marry a slavey?'' |
42989 | Why do you concern yourself about the beggar in the gutter? |
42989 | Why do you trouble about the interests of the race? |
42989 | Why had he bought this and neglected that? |
42989 | Why not here and now? |
42989 | Why not?" |
42989 | Will the mathematicians ever be clever enough to save us all this patching and experimenting? |
42989 | You are n''t angry with me, Sid, are you, about that braid? |
42989 | You do n''t want to shirk the consequences of your own acts?" |
42989 | You follow all that? |
42989 | You''re a type of student-- Cambridge men would never dream-- I suppose I ought to have thought-- Why_ did_ you cheat?" |
42989 | You''ve never seen it? |
42989 | he did n''t stick out at that?" |
42989 | how about their account? |
42989 | or should he leave this question unanswered? |
42989 | or was I indeed, even as I felt, alone? |
42989 | said I;"my wits are going, or am I in two places at once?" |
42989 | said Steevens;"you do n''t think--?" |
42989 | she said;"ca n''t people enjoy themselves?" |
42989 | what have I done?" |
7308 | Ai n''t he killed you? |
7308 | Ai n''t the old woman me aunt? |
7308 | Ai n''t you going to kiss me, Elfrid, now we''re alone together? |
7308 | And besides, what good are you to me this morning, do you think? |
7308 | And now, who''s for a bit more pie? |
7308 | And yours? |
7308 | Anyone see it begin? |
7308 | Anyone''_ ave_ a bit of''am with it? 7308 Are_ you_ lonely?" |
7308 | As''e been calling you names? |
7308 | Biggish sort of man, I expect? |
7308 | Bit vulturial, is n''t it? |
7308 | Bread, O''Man? |
7308 | Business brisk? |
7308 | But it do n''t seem much good his having been alive, does it? |
7308 | But what''s the fuss? |
7308 | But where''s Jim? |
7308 | But who is he? |
7308 | Ca n''t we have some other point of view? |
7308 | Can I have tea? |
7308 | Can we get her out? |
7308 | Can you get past? 7308 Can you paint and carpenter a bit?" |
7308 | Can you punt? |
7308 | Caught many? |
7308 | Cold meat? |
7308 | Come to bed? |
7308 | Coming to church? |
7308 | Could I? |
7308 | Did n''t think_ I''d_ come, did you? |
7308 | Did n''t you? |
7308 | Did you charge him anything? |
7308 | Did you know my father much, Uncle Pentstemon? |
7308 | Did you see the boards at the back? |
7308 | Do I look like it? |
7308 | Do n''t you know who Uncle Jim is? 7308 Do_ you_ mean getting on?" |
7308 | Don''t-- what? |
7308 | Early Norman arches, eh? |
7308 | Eh? |
7308 | Eh? |
7308 | Eh? |
7308 | Found a shop? |
7308 | Gals in service? |
7308 | Get on or get out, eh? |
7308 | Got the ring? |
7308 | Hain''t he''urt you? |
7308 | Have a bit of cheese? |
7308 | Have n''t you sent to the police? |
7308 | Hear that? |
7308 | Hear what? |
7308 | How about the key? |
7308 | How d''you know? |
7308 | How do you know? |
7308 | How do you think that corner shop of yours will figure out? |
7308 | How long''s he been about? |
7308 | How much did you say they''d given him? |
7308 | How''s it your beat? |
7308 | How? |
7308 | I beg your pardon? |
7308 | I beg your pardon? |
7308 | I say,he asked,"who''s Uncle Jim?" |
7308 | I say,said Mr. Polly,"how old are you?" |
7308 | I wonder what he wanted a hatchet for? |
7308 | If you do n''t clear out? |
7308 | In fact, I''m sick of your turning your back on me, see? |
7308 | Is n''t he shouting? |
7308 | Jer( kik) doing? |
7308 | Kik-- jer doing? |
7308 | Lego hands,said the clergyman;"got the ring? |
7308 | Life insured? |
7308 | Looking for work? |
7308 | Makes it look a bit thicker, eh? |
7308 | Need n''t unpack like a pig rooting for truffles, need you? |
7308 | Nor a reformatory? 7308 Not going to drive us?" |
7308 | Not had an accident, Elfrid? |
7308 | Not the Larkins lot? |
7308 | Nothing the matter? |
7308 | Now does this Marlowe monument really and truly_ matter_? |
7308 | Now, my man,came his voice from outside,"be careful what you''re saying--""Oo in all the World and Hereafter are you to call me, me man?" |
7308 | Of course seventy- five is five pounds less, is n''t it? 7308 Off to church already?" |
7308 | Our Jim? |
7308 | Out this way? |
7308 | Scooted? |
7308 | See any shops in Stamton? |
7308 | See? |
7308 | Seen old Rumbold? |
7308 | Shinning up a water- spout in your line? 7308 That assault? |
7308 | That little granddaughter of mine been saying things? |
7308 | That was n''t all talk? |
7308 | Then what''s all that blood beside your ear? |
7308 | Then why ca n''t you say so? |
7308 | There''s some cold boiled beef,she said, and added:"A bit of crisp lettuce?" |
7308 | They are,said Aunt Larkins,"and better gals----""That Annie?" |
7308 | Think of investing your money? |
7308 | This yours? |
7308 | Truffles? |
7308 | Understand me? |
7308 | Virginia creeper? |
7308 | Was there an inquest on that chap? |
7308 | Well, what happened to the old man with the oil can? |
7308 | What are you called? |
7308 | What chap? |
7308 | What did I tell you? |
7308 | What did I tell you? |
7308 | What did they send him to the Reformatory for? |
7308 | What did you give him last time? |
7308 | What do you carry in that little bag thing? |
7308 | What do you mean? |
7308 | What do you think you''ll do? |
7308 | What for? |
7308 | What for? |
7308 | What is it? |
7308 | What more does a brave man want? |
7308 | What on Earth do you think you are doing with that window, Parsons? |
7308 | What others? |
7308 | What rings? |
7308 | What running expenses have we got to provide for? |
7308 | What sort of a size is he? |
7308 | What sort of work do you want? |
7308 | What the Deuce shall I do? 7308 What window?" |
7308 | What you done to your face, Elfrid? |
7308 | What you mean? |
7308 | What''d''e steal a''atchet for? |
7308 | What''s he want? |
7308 | What''s it all about? |
7308 | What''s that, O''Man? |
7308 | What''s the Good of a Cross summons? |
7308 | What''s the matter? |
7308 | What, to catch the mice? |
7308 | What_ wo n''t_ I do? |
7308 | Where are you going? |
7308 | Where is she? |
7308 | Where the devil do_ I_ come in? |
7308 | Where you been all this time? |
7308 | Where''s Morrison? 7308 Where''s that muddy- faced mongrel?" |
7308 | Where? 7308 Where?" |
7308 | Where? |
7308 | Where? |
7308 | Who cares? |
7308 | Who else could it have been-- in the very cloes''e wore? |
7308 | Who says steak and kidney pie? 7308 Who says steak and kidney pie?" |
7308 | Who was Miriam? |
7308 | Who''m I going to sit next? |
7308 | Why are you riding about the country on a bicycle? |
7308 | Why did I ever get in this silly Hole? |
7308 | Why did I ever? |
7308 | Why do n''t he come in? |
7308 | Why not? |
7308 | Why the hell was I ever born? |
7308 | Why? |
7308 | Why? |
7308 | Widow I presume? |
7308 | Will you have your beef in the tap or outside? 7308 Would it put you out very much if I went off for a day or two for a bit of a holiday? |
7308 | Would you like some jam? |
7308 | You Lizzie''s boy? |
7308 | You bicycle? |
7308 | You calling me a pig? |
7308 | You do n''t mean--Well,_ did_ he mean? |
7308 | You mean,said Miriam,"you''re in love with me, Elfrid?" |
7308 | You want a ferryman? |
7308 | You''re really meaning it? |
7308 | You''re stopping for a bit of supper? |
7308 | You''re sure it was him? |
7308 | _ Do_ they grip? |
7308 | _ They_? |
7308 | _ Who''s_ Uncle Jim? |
7308 | _ Who''s_ going to touch yer front room? |
7308 | ''Ave you been to prison?" |
7308 | ''Good old Aunty Flo,''he says,''ai n''t you dee- lighted to see me?'' |
7308 | ''Ow long do you like your eggs boiled?" |
7308 | ''ow d''you mean?" |
7308 | A stout yet still fairly able- bodied gentleman in white and black checks enquired:"What''s the fellow up to? |
7308 | After that they made a sort of password of:"Do you bite your thumbs at Us, Sir?" |
7308 | Ai n''t there no police here?" |
7308 | Ai n''t you going to ask me in, Aunty dear?'' |
7308 | And what am I to do? |
7308 | Anyone seen a tie?" |
7308 | But how do you use the advantage rightly? |
7308 | But that girl with the red hair-- was she a countess? |
7308 | But----""Yes?" |
7308 | Ca n''t give you a piece of this brawn, can I?" |
7308 | Ca n''t we sit here for a bit and rest? |
7308 | Can I be of any assistance?" |
7308 | Can I put you a table over there?" |
7308 | Catching Uncle Pentstemon''s eye:"Ca n''t send_ you_ some brawn, sir?" |
7308 | Children perhaps? |
7308 | Did it know he was married? |
7308 | Do I_ look_ reformed?" |
7308 | Do n''t understand me? |
7308 | Eh?" |
7308 | Ferry? |
7308 | Fetch and carry? |
7308 | Garden? |
7308 | Go on being the knight who wants to kiss my hand as his-- what did you call it?" |
7308 | Had n''t they after all wanted him to marry her? |
7308 | Had she forgotten altogether?... |
7308 | Had sorrow dared to touch her? |
7308 | Have you got the bottled beer ready to open, Betsy? |
7308 | He took a long walk, for after all what is the good of hurrying back to shop when you are not only insolvent but very soon to die? |
7308 | He wanted-- what_ did_ he want most in life? |
7308 | He was one of that sort--""Dissolute?" |
7308 | Here? |
7308 | How about chump chops?" |
7308 | How are you getting on?" |
7308 | How are you, Elfrid? |
7308 | I got a Thing for you....''_ Ear_ me? |
7308 | I shall be wanting the basket back and mind you let me have it.... Have you nailed him down yet? |
7308 | I''ll kick you ugly, see? |
7308 | I''m going to absquatulate, see? |
7308 | I''m just one of those blokes who do n''t stick at things, see? |
7308 | In a voice thick with fury he said:"I s''pose you''d like me to wear that silly Mud Pie for ever, eh? |
7308 | Is it a new one?" |
7308 | Is it perjoocery to make a slip? |
7308 | Larkins?" |
7308 | Little dog outside.... Miriam ready?" |
7308 | Mrs. Johnson in a shrill clear hospitable voice:"Harold, wo n''t Mrs. Larkins''_ ave_ a teeny bit more fowl?" |
7308 | Mrs. Polly--""But who''s Mrs. Polly going to be?" |
7308 | Nor any institution?" |
7308 | Or is n''t it?" |
7308 | Polly?" |
7308 | Polly?" |
7308 | Real, I suppose?" |
7308 | Rent?..." |
7308 | Right? |
7308 | See? |
7308 | See? |
7308 | See? |
7308 | See? |
7308 | See? |
7308 | See? |
7308 | See? |
7308 | See? |
7308 | See? |
7308 | See?" |
7308 | See?" |
7308 | See?" |
7308 | See?" |
7308 | See?" |
7308 | Seen my stick, O''Man? |
7308 | Should he administer a resounding kick? |
7308 | Should he go through the shop to the Manchester department, or risk a second transit outside? |
7308 | Should he kick this solid mass before him? |
7308 | Should he"chuck"the outfitting? |
7308 | Some braver strain urged him to think of Miriam, and for a little while he lay still...."Well, O''Man?" |
7308 | Then the clergyman said:"Who gifs Worn married to this man?" |
7308 | There''d have to be whiskey and sherry or port for the ladies....""Where''ll you get your mourning?" |
7308 | These your gals?" |
7308 | This lady wants to_ know_,''_ ave_ the Prossers left Canterbury?" |
7308 | This place gets more of your mouth than it wants.... Seen this?" |
7308 | Up here?" |
7308 | Was he really just a"lazy slacker"who ought to"buck up"? |
7308 | Was it a fire or a ship-- or something?" |
7308 | Wash bottles? |
7308 | Well,--why invert it?" |
7308 | What can I do for you?" |
7308 | What else could he do? |
7308 | What is it saying to us? |
7308 | What was he going to do? |
7308 | What would Miriam say when she learnt this, and was invited to face the prospect of exile-- heaven knows what sort of exile!--from their present home? |
7308 | What''s the duties? |
7308 | What''s the matter with you?" |
7308 | What''s up?" |
7308 | What''s your idea of the figures?" |
7308 | What''s your wages?" |
7308 | Where could he have put the razor down? |
7308 | Where was she now, and what had become of her? |
7308 | Where''s he going now?" |
7308 | Which of them was it, had caught her spirit to attend to them?... |
7308 | Who hasn''t?--anyhow gone as far as thinking of it? |
7308 | Who says steak and kidney pie?..." |
7308 | Why could n''t she?" |
7308 | Why had he entertained this illusion of a helpless woman crying aloud in the pitiless darkness for him? |
7308 | Why had he felt remorse? |
7308 | Why had he lived such a life? |
7308 | Why had he never thought of clearing out before? |
7308 | Why had he submitted to things, blundered into things? |
7308 | Why not listen to the call of duty and go back to Miriam now?... |
7308 | Why should n''t he? |
7308 | Why, if things were like this, had remorse and anxiety for Miriam been implanted in his soul? |
7308 | Will you wait for me for five years? |
7308 | Wo n''t that little man of yours, Mrs. Punt-- won''t''e''_ ave_ a bit of''am?..." |
7308 | Wo n''t you get down?" |
7308 | Wot you been doing to your face?" |
7308 | Would there be a cross- examination? |
7308 | Would you want me to serve through?" |
7308 | You ai n''t in a''urry, are you? |
7308 | You see, Mr. Polly, I used to''_ ave_ a young gentleman, a medical student, lodging with me--"Voice from down the table:"''Am, Alfred? |
7308 | You the noo bloke at the Potwell Inn?" |
7308 | You venturing downstairs again?" |
7308 | You''d like a bit of jam to your tea, I expect? |
7308 | You''re a Christian?" |
7308 | _ Ceteris paribus?_""That''s about it,"said the fat woman. |
7308 | _ Was_ he feeble? |
7308 | _ Why_ should downstrokes be thick and upstrokes thin? |
7308 | _ Why_ should the handle of one''s pen point over one''s right shoulder? |
7308 | _ Why_ should writing slope down from right to left? |
7308 | and get quite an hour of it, and sometimes Mr. Rusper would come into the outfitter''s shop with"Heard the( kik) latest?" |
7308 | he cried with a start at a noise in the bar,"who''s that?" |
7308 | he replied;"with old Corks, the chemist, and Mottishead, the house agent, and all that lot on the Bench? |
7308 | it said,"this, within limits, is your affair; what are you going to do?" |
7308 | said the Canterbury employer,"with your arms pulled out of their sockets?" |
7308 | she cried as he drew near,"''asn''t''e killed you?" |
7308 | was she a queen? |
7308 | what were they to him? |
7308 | what''s_ going to happen? |
7308 | where was I?" |
7308 | where''s she gone to?..." |
30340 | After so much? |
30340 | All right, sir? |
30340 | And how goes Cambridge? |
30340 | And now---- Have you forgotten? |
30340 | And now? |
30340 | And then? |
30340 | And what has brought you back? |
30340 | And what is the end? |
30340 | And yet----"What? |
30340 | And you forgot? |
30340 | Are you Doctor----? |
30340 | But I-- do you expect me to be content with_ this_? |
30340 | But Mary,I said looking at her colorless delicate face,"do n''t you love me? |
30340 | But Stephen,she says;"if none of these things are really true, why do they keep on telling them to us? |
30340 | But do you mean----? |
30340 | But how could life be more beautiful,I said,"than when it serves big human ends?" |
30340 | But how? |
30340 | But in a man of twenty- six? |
30340 | But is that All you want? |
30340 | But then, I say Stratton, why did you go for Maxton at Blake''s? 30340 But what can you do for me? |
30340 | But where? |
30340 | But why should n''t it? |
30340 | But you talked together? |
30340 | But your politics-- your work? |
30340 | But,I said, stupid and persistent,"what are you going to do?" |
30340 | But---- They''ve left an address? |
30340 | By parting? |
30340 | Ca n''t you get up in the morning? 30340 Can you speak,"she asked,"to Lady Mary Justin?" |
30340 | Charming, is n''t she? |
30340 | Come back to what? |
30340 | Did n''t you know? |
30340 | Did you have a comfortable journey? |
30340 | Did you have a good journey? |
30340 | Do n''t say that you forget? |
30340 | Do n''t you think it ought to fill my life? |
30340 | Do n''t you,I asked,"feel there is a God?" |
30340 | Do you mean that you and I are n''t clean now? 30340 Do you mind,"he said to me,"will you go?" |
30340 | Do you remember how long ago you and I sat in the old Park at Burnmore, and how I kept pestering you and asking you what is all this_ for_? 30340 Do you think that Lady Mary Justin thinks of you-- as you think of her? |
30340 | Does_ she_ know? |
30340 | Have n''t you got me? |
30340 | Have you any inkling----? |
30340 | Have you thought,she asked,"of all that will happen if there is a divorce?" |
30340 | How are you going to remedy it, how are you going to protect that Great State of your dreams from this anti- citizenship of sex? 30340 How can I-- on the spur of the moment-- arrange----?" |
30340 | How could I? |
30340 | How dare you name my sister to me? |
30340 | How dare you,he said with a catch of the breath,"mention my sister?" |
30340 | How did you know that? |
30340 | How do I know that she''s not being told some story of my abandonment of her? 30340 I know it is well with the children,"she wrote;"why should I be in perpetual attendance? |
30340 | I think if I met Mary again now----"You mean Lady Mary Justin? |
30340 | If all this pain, waste, violence, anguish is essential to life, why does my spirit rise against it? 30340 If one does not take the high line,"I said,"what does one go into politics for?" |
30340 | If you could stay a little longer,she said,--"Another day? |
30340 | Is he a member? |
30340 | Is n''t it a clean thing_ now_, Stephen? |
30340 | Is n''t old Eccles_ good_? |
30340 | Is that All you want? |
30340 | Is there going to be war, Stephen? |
30340 | It hardly looks like it now, does it? |
30340 | It''s immense, is n''t it, perfectly immense? 30340 It''s the trouble of the deceit?" |
30340 | Mary,I said at the first chance,"are we never to talk again?" |
30340 | Need n''t be? |
30340 | Need she know? |
30340 | Oh? 30340 Parliament?--after that? |
30340 | Politics? |
30340 | Something has happened to our money? |
30340 | Stephen dear, can I possibly marry you? 30340 Stephen my dear,"she wept,"you did n''t? |
30340 | Stephen!--do you really think that we are going to bring anything to bear upon public affairs worth having? 30340 Stephen,"I heard Mary say,"will you leave me to talk to my husband?" |
30340 | Tea? |
30340 | Then what is it? |
30340 | Towards the gardens? |
30340 | Very late? |
30340 | Wednesday? |
30340 | Well, it does seem rather essential----"I suppose if you think so----"Will you tell her? |
30340 | Well? |
30340 | What am I to do? 30340 What are_ you_ going to do with your life, Steve?" |
30340 | What do you mean? |
30340 | What do you mean? |
30340 | What else could I do? |
30340 | What else is there to do? |
30340 | What else is there? 30340 What is the need of talking? |
30340 | What is this? 30340 What might you be wanting?" |
30340 | What more_ could_ you have? |
30340 | What the devil''s it got to do with_ you_? |
30340 | What years of waiting? |
30340 | What_ is_ the word? |
30340 | Where else? |
30340 | Where the_ devil_ am I to go, Tarvrille? 30340 Whether it''s brachy,"said Lady Viping,"or whether it''s dolly--_I_ can never remember?" |
30340 | Who are you? |
30340 | Who''s got all that land stretching away there; that little blunted sierra of pines and escarpments I mean? |
30340 | Who? |
30340 | Why ca n''t I see her? 30340 Why did you never write?" |
30340 | Why do you torment me? 30340 Why have you come back from Italy?" |
30340 | Why must it be like that? |
30340 | Why not? 30340 Why not? |
30340 | Why not? |
30340 | Why should it be gone? |
30340 | Why should n''t I stay here? 30340 Why should one have to tie oneself always to one other human being?" |
30340 | Why should one meet disaster half way? |
30340 | Why,I said presently,"should you always speak of things that ca n''t be? |
30340 | Willingly? |
30340 | Would you mind if I went east? 30340 You can stop this divorce?" |
30340 | You do n''t? |
30340 | You had her letters? |
30340 | You know the old Ice House? |
30340 | You know,I asked abruptly,"why I left England?" |
30340 | You mean to say that there is nothing in it all? |
30340 | You must see it? |
30340 | You walked over to me? |
30340 | You want them watched? |
30340 | You wo n''t make any appeal? |
30340 | You''ll have your coffee out here with us? |
30340 | You''re glad to be with me? |
30340 | You''re sure she''ll be all right? |
30340 | You''ve come back for good? |
30340 | You''ve-- you''ve not done-- some foolish thing? |
30340 | Your companion? |
30340 | _ Then_ will you come back? |
30340 | A gleam of understanding came to me...."Why ca n''t I see her?" |
30340 | A gun?... |
30340 | A little while longer-- adds so little to the offence and means to us----""Yes,"I said,"but-- if Justin knows?" |
30340 | A tiresome inglorious lifelong fight.... You really believe, Stephen?" |
30340 | All that is brave and good and as you would have me, is it not? |
30340 | Am I beautiful in the moonlight? |
30340 | Am I beautiful, my dear? |
30340 | An egotist, of course, but what youth was ever anything else? |
30340 | And that work? |
30340 | And then what could he do? |
30340 | And then?" |
30340 | And who could help you better?" |
30340 | And why did you tell me nothing of that meeting? |
30340 | And why do n''t you make a clean job of your life?..." |
30340 | And why do you want to fight a duel with Maxton? |
30340 | Are n''t they patent? |
30340 | Are we makers or just a means, casually taken up and used by the great forces of God? |
30340 | Are we to go back to seclusion or will it be possible to minimize sex? |
30340 | Are you keen over this Tariff stuff, Steve?" |
30340 | Are you the power behind the respectable Murgatroyd and the honest Milvain? |
30340 | Are you unhappy beyond measure or are you not; and if you are not, what are you doing with life? |
30340 | Assuredly I must have delighted in all those aspects, or why should I remember them so well? |
30340 | Boot? |
30340 | But I do n''t see that it leaves_ you_ much scope for philandering, Stephen, does it?... |
30340 | But I perhaps had changed altogether...."Why did you go away as you did?" |
30340 | But can we keep clean? |
30340 | But what has to be done? |
30340 | But why us? |
30340 | But you see I can make a bargain now-- it''s not an impossible bargain-- and save you and save your wife and save your children----""But how?" |
30340 | But---- Why is this, disaster?" |
30340 | But---- You see?" |
30340 | Ca n''t you understand, Stephen?" |
30340 | Can I?" |
30340 | Did I respond overmuch to these painful aspects in life? |
30340 | Did he perhaps begin to suspect? |
30340 | Did n''t they speak?" |
30340 | Did she indeed want to see me again or was that invitation a mere demonstration of how entirely unimportant seeing me or not seeing me had become? |
30340 | Did you have a good time in Egypt?" |
30340 | Do n''t you remember that? |
30340 | Do n''t you see how much better that is for you and for me-- and for the world and our lives? |
30340 | Do n''t you want me?" |
30340 | Do you know Saint Paul''s, Stephen? |
30340 | Do you remember it, the rocks and the sunshine and all those twisted and tangled little plants? |
30340 | Do you remember?" |
30340 | Do you think I want you-- spoilt? |
30340 | Do you think I''d let you do it for your own sake even? |
30340 | Do you think she has n''t settled down?" |
30340 | Even if we come face to face once more-- no word....""Mary,"I said,"what is it you have to do? |
30340 | Even now do you want to know? |
30340 | Give me something I may keep in my mind through-- through all those years of waiting....""But where?" |
30340 | Got it all.... What have you been up to?" |
30340 | Had it changed at all? |
30340 | Had she changed towards me? |
30340 | Had she wondered why I did not come to her before? |
30340 | Had something betrayed us, might something betray, was this or that sufficiently cunning? |
30340 | Had we extended far enough across the deep valley to our left? |
30340 | Have I, in these latter years, given form and substance and a name to things as vague in themselves as the urgencies of instinct? |
30340 | Have n''t I made that plain to you?" |
30340 | Have n''t I thought enough of those things?... |
30340 | Have n''t I told you that? |
30340 | Have n''t we the brightness?" |
30340 | Have you been working too hard?" |
30340 | Have you ever heard of chintz oil jars? |
30340 | Have you ever thought of me as a mother? |
30340 | Have you forgotten? |
30340 | Have you found any secret that makes living tolerable and understandable? |
30340 | How can one love when one knows the coffee is n''t what it should be, and one is giving one''s lover indigestion? |
30340 | How can you dream it should go on?" |
30340 | How can you stand by me? |
30340 | How did I come? |
30340 | How did I justify myself? |
30340 | How do I know she is n''t being led to believe I no longer want her to come to me?" |
30340 | How do you feel? |
30340 | How far might n''t this undesirable unearth the whole business in the course of his investigations? |
30340 | How is Mrs. Stephen-- and the children?" |
30340 | How is it with you? |
30340 | How should we live? |
30340 | How should we meet? |
30340 | How would she look at me? |
30340 | I said,"But how, Mary?" |
30340 | I said;"why have you come to me?" |
30340 | I think death-- just dead death-- after the life I have had is the most impossible of ends.... You do n''t want-- particularly? |
30340 | I want you to want all the world...._ Why should n''t you?_"I think I must have talked of the greatness of serving the empire. |
30340 | I whispered back and touched her dew fresh lips...."And tell me what you would do to conquer the world for me?" |
30340 | I_ know_, my poor bleeding Stephen!--Aren''t those tears there? |
30340 | If you are going to minimize sex how are you going to do it? |
30340 | Increase or diminish the pains and penalties? |
30340 | Is it indeed in the world?" |
30340 | Is it not time the generations drew together and helped one another? |
30340 | Is it so much worse than thirty minutes? |
30340 | Is n''t it right that I should go?" |
30340 | Is n''t it still? |
30340 | Is publishing a way of peace for the heart? |
30340 | Is that so?" |
30340 | Is there no way at all? |
30340 | It was as you say? |
30340 | Justin?" |
30340 | Let us go somewhere together----""But Stephen,"she asked softly,"_ where_?" |
30340 | Man is a creature becoming articulate, and why should those men have left so much of the tale untold-- to be lost and forgotten? |
30340 | Mr. Stratton, tell me; is that little peaked man near Lady Ladislaw Mr. Roperstone? |
30340 | Not up the tree again?... |
30340 | Now who were those people?" |
30340 | One has the ham for the spinach,--don''t you think? |
30340 | Roperstone?... |
30340 | See? |
30340 | Should I be any good as a squaw? |
30340 | Should I have known of your meeting, Stephen-- ever? |
30340 | Sir Godfrey, who is the dark lady? |
30340 | Somewhere very beautiful....""Why not?" |
30340 | Stephen dear, ca n''t there be love-- love without this clutching, this gripping, this carrying off?" |
30340 | Stephen, if I promise, will you let me go?..." |
30340 | Stephen, indeed you did n''t, did you? |
30340 | Stephen, is there no way out of this? |
30340 | Stratton?" |
30340 | Stratton?... |
30340 | Suppression? |
30340 | The best thing to do is for Mary and me to go abroad----""Yes, but does Mary think so?" |
30340 | They say-- Justin told me-- you think of parliament?" |
30340 | Was I a soft? |
30340 | Was I in love with her still? |
30340 | Was civilization breeding a type of human being too tender to go on living? |
30340 | Was either of us better than some creature of instinct that does what it does because it must? |
30340 | Was it altogether changed? |
30340 | Was my leg coming off? |
30340 | Was n''t I at any rate preparing apparatus for that huge effort at solution that mankind must ultimately make? |
30340 | Was n''t I-- a soft and scented hawk? |
30340 | Was she too remembering? |
30340 | Was there some sort of natural selection?... |
30340 | We could n''t go away together----""Why not?" |
30340 | We killed her.... What does that matter to me now?" |
30340 | We two absurd human beings are spending our days and nights in a sustained and growing attempt to do what? |
30340 | We''ve hurt no one....""You will go?" |
30340 | Were n''t we the Twentieth and they the Eighteenth Century? |
30340 | Were we indeed to go on at that altitude of cold civility? |
30340 | What alternative is there for any woman? |
30340 | What alternative was there for her? |
30340 | What are we for? |
30340 | What are you doing out beyond there? |
30340 | What are you up to with her, and why do n''t you go straight to your manifest destiny as a decent man should?" |
30340 | What can have brought you back?" |
30340 | What could he do for me? |
30340 | What did the things I had done, the things I had failed to do, the hopes crushed out of me, the tears and the anger, matter to_ that_? |
30340 | What do you make of it? |
30340 | What do you mean to do?" |
30340 | What does it mean, Stephen? |
30340 | What else is there for him to do? |
30340 | What had I been dreaming of all this time? |
30340 | What has happened to you? |
30340 | What have you people done with Mary? |
30340 | What is Everything for?" |
30340 | What is humanity as a whole doing? |
30340 | What is it like to you? |
30340 | What is the nature of the world process of which I am a part? |
30340 | What is true? |
30340 | What is wrong with me?" |
30340 | What is your outlook for women? |
30340 | What of conformity, if the truth was that you doubted? |
30340 | What was I to do with my life now? |
30340 | What was a soft? |
30340 | What was to become of my life? |
30340 | What would she think of me? |
30340 | What''s it all about? |
30340 | What''s the good of having your legions in the Grampians and marching up to Philae, while the wives are talking treason in your houses? |
30340 | What''s_ really_ going on? |
30340 | What, I wonder, did we talk about? |
30340 | What_ is_ it all for? |
30340 | What_ is_ this lucid stillness?... |
30340 | Where are you standing?" |
30340 | Where do you mean to serve? |
30340 | Where is Mary?" |
30340 | Where should we go? |
30340 | Where would it be? |
30340 | Where''s your mind in these matters? |
30340 | Who dares call it the last? |
30340 | Who is the dark lady with the slight moustache-- sitting there next to Guy? |
30340 | Who with a sick soul would dream of going to a psychologist?... |
30340 | Why are we so tormented, Stephen? |
30340 | Why are you so greedy, Stephen? |
30340 | Why are you so ignoble? |
30340 | Why at any rate should n''t it be for me?" |
30340 | Why could n''t we and why did n''t we talk together?... |
30340 | Why did you do that?" |
30340 | Why did you two write and go on writing? |
30340 | Why did you write to her? |
30340 | Why do n''t we always get up at dawn, Stevenage, every day of our lives?" |
30340 | Why do you leave it to_ me_ to dig these questions into you-- like opening a reluctant oyster? |
30340 | Why have n''t you tackled these things? |
30340 | Why is it, I thought, that when a son has come to manhood he can not take his father for a friend? |
30340 | Why must I choose between two men? |
30340 | Why must we all repeat things done, and come again very bitterly to wisdom our fathers have achieved before us? |
30340 | Why not make the adventure of life with me? |
30340 | Why not run away with me, throw our two lives together? |
30340 | Why should I be fought for?" |
30340 | Why should I be just a hard- up Vestal Virgin, Stephen, in your honor? |
30340 | Why should I become the votary of a train of consequences? |
30340 | Why should I let all my life be ruled by the blunders and adventures of one short year of adventure? |
30340 | Why should n''t it be? |
30340 | Why should one pretend? |
30340 | Why should one pretend?... |
30340 | Why should we still find the ordinary matter- of- fact things of everyday strange? |
30340 | Why should we take all this as if it were all that there could be? |
30340 | Why should you mind that I see you do?... |
30340 | Why, I asked, should n''t I travel for a year in search of opportunity? |
30340 | Will you never understand?" |
30340 | Will you?" |
30340 | Wo n''t the shadow of our falsehoods darken at all? |
30340 | Would the Boers have the wit to charge through us before the daylight came, or should we hold them? |
30340 | Would they try a bolt across our front to the left? |
30340 | Write to me"? |
30340 | Yes.... Then how can you stand by me?" |
30340 | Yet how was I to get at her and hear what she had to say? |
30340 | Yet what else was there for me to write? |
30340 | Yet---- How did I come to have this odd corner in my brain? |
30340 | You know it?" |
30340 | You speak as if---- What is it Justin demands?" |
30340 | You''d prefer the respectable way, I suppose?... |
30340 | came Mr. Siddons''voice behind me.... How can one explain things of that sort to a man like Siddons? |
30340 | do n''t you understand? |
30340 | how are you getting on? |
30340 | said he,"what is all this story of your shaking Justin by the collar, and threatening to kill him if he did n''t give up his wife to you? |
30340 | she said;"what will happen to you when I am not here to make you look at things? |
30340 | to bring in the cheap Indian or Chinese coolie? |
30340 | what does that matter to me?" |
30340 | you did n''t? |
11696 | A baby in a bath- chair? |
11696 | Ai n''t you been''ome to- day? |
11696 | And are we to die then? |
11696 | And do we? 11696 And now?" |
11696 | And others wounded? |
11696 | And that is all? |
11696 | And the answer, Brothers? |
11696 | And then? |
11696 | And then? |
11696 | And to- morrow? |
11696 | And you? |
11696 | And your lads? |
11696 | Anything fresh? |
11696 | Anything fresh? |
11696 | Are they? |
11696 | Are we to part? |
11696 | Being a good boy, Albert Edward? |
11696 | Besides, Brothers, except for vermin, except for little accidents with evil things, what have we seen of killing? |
11696 | But do n''t you want a nice straight road in the place of all these rotten rutty little lanes? |
11696 | But his gun---? |
11696 | But how is it it''s breaking out in this fashion, all over the place? |
11696 | But if they seek to prevent us? |
11696 | But now? |
11696 | But the hens,said Mr. Bensington;"how are the hens?" |
11696 | But they-- If they want to part us--"What can they do? |
11696 | But we might--"Whither? |
11696 | But what can they do if we do n''t? |
11696 | But what can you do? |
11696 | But what do they propose to do? |
11696 | But where am I to go? |
11696 | But where is it going? 11696 But why?" |
11696 | But you do n''t propose---? |
11696 | But-- what are you? |
11696 | By- the- bye,he said, with a slightly lowered voice,"how does_ she_--?" |
11696 | By- the- bye,he said,"you do n''t give those little chicks meat?" |
11696 | Ca n''t the brasted fool sit on a''ouse or somethin''? |
11696 | Cousin Jane? 11696 D''yer mean they_ got_ Flack?" |
11696 | D''you think they''ll''urt''i m? |
11696 | D''you_ mean_--? |
11696 | Did n''t it work? |
11696 | Did n''t you shoot? |
11696 | Do n''t you know what''s become of him? |
11696 | Do n''t you know? 11696 Do n''t you know?" |
11696 | Do they say much about_ Us_? |
11696 | Do you know what happened to my Son? |
11696 | Do you know,she asked,"that to love me-- is high treason?" |
11696 | Do you mean there are other-- giants? |
11696 | Do you mean to say,she repeated stupidly,"that there are other giants in the world? |
11696 | Do you mean--? |
11696 | Do you notice how he has dropped into the way of calling it Boomfood? |
11696 | Do you see,he would say, for example,"that Caterham has been talking about our stuff at the Church Association?" |
11696 | Doing well? |
11696 | Every one loaded? |
11696 | Flack''s down? |
11696 | For the Royal Society? |
11696 | From them? |
11696 | Growing? |
11696 | Guns? |
11696 | Had n''t I better---? 11696 Has any one seen that rat?" |
11696 | Have they got him? |
11696 | Have you heard anything-- about buying the farm? |
11696 | Have you seen the paper these last few days? |
11696 | He shall play with this first, sing to it and give names to the notes,said Redwood,"and afterwards--?" |
11696 | Healthy? |
11696 | How d''yer_ mean_? |
11696 | How is it to be done? |
11696 | How many? |
11696 | How much what? |
11696 | How much? |
11696 | How the Deuce am_ I_ to know till I see a paper? 11696 How''s it all going?" |
11696 | How? |
11696 | How? |
11696 | How_ could_ I? |
11696 | Hullo,said Cossar,"back already? |
11696 | Hullo? |
11696 | Hypertrophy? |
11696 | I said,said Mr. Bensington, with the self- complacency of a man who has produced a good significant saying,"Why solitary?" |
11696 | I suppose all the lot_ I_ used to know-- Chamberlain, Rosebery-- all that lot--_What_? |
11696 | I thuppothe there''athen''t been any trouble with any of thethe big waptheth to- day anywhere? |
11696 | I wonder what they''ll do? |
11696 | I''m glad to find you here,he began;"the fact is--""Have you seen about this Royal Commission?" |
11696 | If there was n''t gentlefolks to make work for us to do,said Mrs. Caddles,"how should we poor people get a living?" |
11696 | Is Mr. Bensington hurt? |
11696 | Meaning that one might bring up other children---? |
11696 | Money in your pocket? |
11696 | Mother,he would say,"if it''s good to work, why does n''t every one work?" |
11696 | Mr. Redwood, Sir,he began,"would you be willing to come to Mr. Caterham? |
11696 | My dear,he cried;"but does it matter? |
11696 | Name? |
11696 | Nice to''ave a few thousand of_ them_ on the rates, eh? |
11696 | No? |
11696 | Not for a time? |
11696 | Nothing better? |
11696 | Now is there-- anything? 11696 On Herakleophorbia?" |
11696 | Only--He broke off abruptly to ask,"You will not part from me?" |
11696 | Ought we-- what? |
11696 | Ought you to publish? |
11696 | Poison? |
11696 | Rats about? |
11696 | Rats? |
11696 | Redwood,said Bensington;"it''s a curious thing to say, I know, but-- do you think Winkles understands?" |
11696 | Said, where is a seat? |
11696 | Said, where is the sea? |
11696 | Skinner? |
11696 | So far as I can grasp the symptoms--"Yes? |
11696 | So far? 11696 Splash it about, Sir?" |
11696 | Suppose they come to terms? |
11696 | Suppose they do n''t? |
11696 | The other Giants? |
11696 | The rats? |
11696 | The thing is, Bensington, what are we to do? |
11696 | Then why did you begin? |
11696 | They are fighting now? |
11696 | They do n''t denounce us at all? |
11696 | They shot him? |
11696 | Think of the unborn...."Brothers,came the voice of young Redwood,"what can we do but fight them, and if we beat them, make them take the Food? |
11696 | This your stuff? |
11696 | To Caterham? |
11696 | To help others? |
11696 | To me? |
11696 | Wa, wa, wa, wa---But shall we hear Caterham any better? |
11696 | Wawawawa---What did it matter? |
11696 | We would assign them territory--"Where? |
11696 | We? 11696 Well, what''s the matter with that child? |
11696 | Well, why do n''t you stop it? |
11696 | Well, why not? |
11696 | Well,he would say, rubbing his hands,"how are we getting on?" |
11696 | Well--? |
11696 | Well? |
11696 | What I want to know,said Lady Wondershoot,"is it_ right_ this child should have such an extraordinary quantity of milk?" |
11696 | What are ye doing up here, ye swarming little people, while I''m a- cuttin''chalk for ye, down in the chalk pits there? |
11696 | What are ye for, ye swarming little people? 11696 What are_ we_ to do?" |
11696 | What can it be but war? 11696 What did he say?" |
11696 | What did you say? |
11696 | What do you mean? 11696 What do you mean?" |
11696 | What do you think of him, Bensington? 11696 What do you think of it?" |
11696 | What does this_ mean_? |
11696 | What else is there to do? |
11696 | What has come to our brother Redwood? |
11696 | What has happened? |
11696 | What have you done to our child, Dandy? |
11696 | What have you to tell me? |
11696 | What is it all for? |
11696 | What is it? |
11696 | What is the matter? |
11696 | What new folly have these people got into their heads? |
11696 | What of my son? |
11696 | What time? |
11696 | What traffic? |
11696 | What was that? |
11696 | What was that? |
11696 | What''s he say? |
11696 | What''s he saying? |
11696 | What''s the matter? |
11696 | What''s this? |
11696 | What''s wrong with him? |
11696 | What''s_ that_? |
11696 | What-- the''ens? |
11696 | What? 11696 What?" |
11696 | What? |
11696 | Where are they? |
11696 | Where are you? |
11696 | Where did he fall? |
11696 | Where do they make such men? |
11696 | Where is my son, Cossar? |
11696 | Where is my son? |
11696 | Where you going, Redwood? 11696 Where''s Flack?" |
11696 | Where''s Skinner? |
11696 | Where''s that baby? |
11696 | Where''s the telephone, Bensington? |
11696 | Where''s the waggons? |
11696 | Where? |
11696 | Where? |
11696 | Where? |
11696 | Which way? |
11696 | Who cares what they can do, or what they will do? 11696 Who else, Sir?" |
11696 | Who gave the orders? |
11696 | Who have always been if anything a little_ under_--_under_--"The Average? |
11696 | Who would n''t be reactionary? 11696 Who''s this here Caterham?" |
11696 | Who_ was_ he? |
11696 | Why ca n''t they lea''me alone? |
11696 | Why do n''t we all do the obvious? |
11696 | Why does he keep on about it? 11696 Why should I walk within bounds and be refused all the wonders of the world beyond there? |
11696 | Why should I work in this pit day after day? |
11696 | Why should they not agree? |
11696 | Why solitary? |
11696 | Why? 11696 Why?" |
11696 | Why? |
11696 | Will you come? |
11696 | Yes,said the eldest brother;"but what exactly does that mean? |
11696 | You ai n''t''eard anything of Mithith Thkinner? |
11696 | You ai n''t''eard anything of Mithith Thkinner? |
11696 | You do n''t mean it''s contagious? |
11696 | You do n''t propose to discontinue--"In the case of your little boy? 11696 You do n''t think,"he said, turning on her abruptly,"that there''s anything in the sort of thing he said?" |
11696 | You going to shoot off those at me? |
11696 | You have lit to- day--? 11696 You have n''t told these people here? |
11696 | You have never heard of us? 11696 You have not heard?" |
11696 | You have thought? |
11696 | You know nothing? |
11696 | You left Flack? |
11696 | You mean it''s a chick? |
11696 | You mean,he said,"what are we to do?" |
11696 | You mean--? |
11696 | You mean? |
11696 | You think it would do? |
11696 | You wo n''t, eh? |
11696 | You''aven''t''eard anything about Mithith Thkinner,''ave you? |
11696 | You''re going into the holes? |
11696 | Your Son, Sir? 11696 _ Buy the place_?" |
11696 | _ Disturbance_? 11696 _ What_?" |
11696 | _ Why_ do you like doing that? |
11696 | _ You_? 11696 ''Asn''t any one''ad the sense to tell you the law? |
11696 | ''Asn''t no one ever told you?" |
11696 | ''Aven''t they told you-- any of''em? |
11696 | ''This is a matter of life and death,''I said,''do n''t you understand?'' |
11696 | ("But why should n''t one oil the engine from without?" |
11696 | A drunken American sailor wandered about tearfully inquiring,"What''s he want anyhow?" |
11696 | After all,_ ought_ we to go on with it?" |
11696 | And another,"What of that?" |
11696 | And besides-- The rest?" |
11696 | And beyond? |
11696 | And going unanswered,"What''s work_ for_, mother? |
11696 | And if we do n''t? |
11696 | And now--""Now?" |
11696 | And now? |
11696 | And the earwigs will get out of your way--""But about the ratth?" |
11696 | And then:"Did you chaps get''i m?" |
11696 | And then? |
11696 | And where were Skinner''s boots, for example? |
11696 | Anything?" |
11696 | Big_ dogth_ or_ catth_ or anything of_ that_ thort? |
11696 | But in that way, without cruelty, without injustice--""And suppose the Children do not agree?" |
11696 | But still, what can they do?" |
11696 | But why had he been arrested? |
11696 | Ca n''t we find out something the little people_ want_ done and do it for them-- just for the fun of doing it? |
11696 | Ca n''t you see you''re a- frightening the''orses? |
11696 | Could n''t we, brother? |
11696 | Cousin Jane? |
11696 | Curious, is n''t it? |
11696 | D''you think this world was made for old women to mop about in? |
11696 | Did it mean--? |
11696 | Did you get behind them?" |
11696 | Did you see? |
11696 | Do I speak for you, Brothers?" |
11696 | Do n''t you see the prospect before us clear as day? |
11696 | Do you mean to just grizzle and obstruct passively and do nothing-- till the sands are out?" |
11696 | Do you think I will stop for their little rules, for their little prohibitions, their scarlet boards indeed!--and keep from_ you_?" |
11696 | Do you think-- indeed--? |
11696 | Do? |
11696 | Eh? |
11696 | Eh? |
11696 | Eh? |
11696 | Eh? |
11696 | Eh? |
11696 | Enough? |
11696 | Even if they should destroy us every one, what then? |
11696 | Food of Titans.... You prefer the former? |
11696 | Got a telephone? |
11696 | Got money? |
11696 | Guns? |
11696 | Have you killed them all?" |
11696 | Have you no mercy? |
11696 | Have you not heard?" |
11696 | Have you scientific men_ no_ imagination? |
11696 | Have you succeeded? |
11696 | He had been frightened at times and disturbed, but was he not alive still and the same still? |
11696 | He heard Cossar below him insisting,"How else could the thing be done? |
11696 | He repeated,"Did you not know?" |
11696 | He said--""Your specialist in Tact?" |
11696 | He stretched a vast hand towards a cab that became convulsively eager to serve him("Cab, Sir?" |
11696 | He would meditate,"_ Why_?" |
11696 | How had it got there? |
11696 | How the deuce are they to understand that? |
11696 | I ask you, Sir, what can it be but war? |
11696 | I suppose it must be sulphur, eh? |
11696 | I wonder if it''s Research makes''em like that or Cousin Jane or what?" |
11696 | If it had n''t been for Cossar-- Cossar is there?" |
11696 | If so be they_ be_ thissels? |
11696 | Interrupting? |
11696 | Is it fair to the children themselves?? |
11696 | Is it fair to the children themselves?? |
11696 | Is n''t that all?" |
11696 | It drooped its eyes half shut and said,''Then why do n''t you go the other two hundred pounds?'' |
11696 | It is the step we fight for and not ourselves.... We are here, Brothers, to what end? |
11696 | It''s going to dislocate-- What is n''t it going to dislocate?" |
11696 | Itth the ratth I keep a thinking of--''Ow do I know they''aven''t got at Mithith Thkinner while I been up''ere?" |
11696 | Just to loaf about between meal- times? |
11696 | Just what does it mean-- when that day of trouble comes?" |
11696 | License? |
11696 | Next? |
11696 | No doubt they had got Cossar also? |
11696 | Now what sort of books will he need? |
11696 | Odd? |
11696 | One I broke the neck of as it ran past me... See? |
11696 | Or was it nothing? |
11696 | Or''ave I been forgetting?" |
11696 | Rats? |
11696 | Redwood--?" |
11696 | See? |
11696 | See? |
11696 | See?" |
11696 | See?" |
11696 | See?" |
11696 | Sent? |
11696 | Sort of politician, eh?" |
11696 | Sulphur best, eh?" |
11696 | Take the lot in a cab to-- where''s the place? |
11696 | That some food--?" |
11696 | That too might mean many things? |
11696 | The Food of the Gods?" |
11696 | The Food--""Herakleophorbia?" |
11696 | The nutrition of a possible Hercules? |
11696 | The parents, the squire and so on at the big house, the doctor, no one?" |
11696 | Then in a voice that broke he asked:"What has he done to my Son?" |
11696 | Then standing up, and with a swift change of manner:"What''s this?" |
11696 | There''s no more road beyond... Is that Father Redwood?" |
11696 | They may fight against greatness in us who are the children of men, but can they conquer? |
11696 | They who are little can hide from one another, but where are we to hide? |
11696 | Think you can do it? |
11696 | Though clever as could be,"said Mrs. Skinner...."Where''s this child?" |
11696 | Unless you mean to take this Food also, what else is there to do in all the world? |
11696 | We hate it, we do n''t want it; why then should we have it? |
11696 | What Good will it do, he asks, to make poor people six- and- thirty feet high? |
11696 | What am I to do about him?" |
11696 | What are all you people doing with yourselves? |
11696 | What are they doin''? |
11696 | What are they doin''for me while I''m a- cuttin''chalk? |
11696 | What are we coming to?" |
11696 | What are ye all doing, what are ye all for? |
11696 | What are you? |
11696 | What business is it of these little wretches, where we love, how we love? |
11696 | What can they do?" |
11696 | What can you hope to do now? |
11696 | What could it mean? |
11696 | What could it mean? |
11696 | What d''you think you were made for? |
11696 | What did it mean? |
11696 | What difference has it made? |
11696 | What do they want? |
11696 | What do you hope to do?" |
11696 | What does it mean? |
11696 | What else could it be? |
11696 | What else is there to do?" |
11696 | What else?" |
11696 | What good is it to do anything now? |
11696 | What good would it do to kill the giant human when the gigantic in all the lower things had now inevitably come? |
11696 | What have I done, to be condemned to this?" |
11696 | What have they and their world to do with us?" |
11696 | What is it I do not understand?" |
11696 | What is it all for, and where do I come in?" |
11696 | What is the matter?" |
11696 | What is their right-- right without a shadow of reason-- and their treason and their loyalty to us?" |
11696 | What is there more than that? |
11696 | What is there to fight for more? |
11696 | What is this Food of the Gods? |
11696 | What more could any one desire? |
11696 | What must she be thinking of him? |
11696 | What of that? |
11696 | What oh... eh? |
11696 | What other law can there be?" |
11696 | What other monsters might not those deepening shadows hide? |
11696 | What place is there for us among these multitudes? |
11696 | What right have parents to say, My child shall have no light but the light I have had, shall grow no greater than the greatness to which I have grown? |
11696 | What shall we set him to do?" |
11696 | What then? |
11696 | What was he seeking? |
11696 | What was it? |
11696 | What was that? |
11696 | What was the man saying? |
11696 | What was this, warm and wet, on his hand? |
11696 | What worm did they think was living in my giant body? |
11696 | What''s difficult about that? |
11696 | What''s it all for? |
11696 | What''s making them grow so big? |
11696 | What''s the matter with everything-- wasps, puff- balls, babies, eh? |
11696 | What''s the trouble? |
11696 | What''s the trouble?" |
11696 | What''s the world coming to? |
11696 | What''s wrong with him?" |
11696 | What, after all, could Caterham do? |
11696 | What_ can_ they do?" |
11696 | Where are the others?" |
11696 | Where can I get sulphur by the ton in portable sacks? |
11696 | Where does it come from? |
11696 | Where''s Flack? |
11696 | Where''s the bother?" |
11696 | Where''s the lamps? |
11696 | Where''s your bank? |
11696 | Who else could have thought of that? |
11696 | Why ca n''t they lea''me alone?" |
11696 | Why have they kept it from me, that I am not alone?" |
11696 | Why should I come to your exploded windbag? |
11696 | Why should I?" |
11696 | Why should we after all eat, drink, and sleep, remain unmarried, go here, abstain from going there, all out of deference to Cousin Jane? |
11696 | Why should we lie? |
11696 | Why should we temporise? |
11696 | Why was it necessary to keep him in ignorance of a thing like that? |
11696 | Why, after all, was he seized? |
11696 | Why? |
11696 | Will it make them better? |
11696 | Will it make them happier? |
11696 | Will they be more respectful to properly constituted authority? |
11696 | Will this little world of theirs be as it was before? |
11696 | Wot''s it all bloomin''well_ for_?" |
11696 | Wot''s it all_ for_? |
11696 | Would it save them? |
11696 | Would that grey- headed duffer never have done? |
11696 | You have lit to- day--?" |
11696 | You''aven''t''eard anything of thith''ere thtory bout my''enth,''ave you?" |
11696 | You''re quite sure it would n''t be wiser to warn Winkles, wean your little boy gradually, and-- and rely upon the Theoretical Triumph?" |
11696 | _ Ought_ you?" |
11696 | _ Swish, swish, swish, pitter, patter, swish_--... What was that? |
11696 | _ Upset things_? |
11696 | _ Urshot_? |
11696 | _ What are you to do_? |
11696 | _ What_ for? |
11696 | _ Why_ five? |
11696 | _ Why_? |
11696 | he murmured in a mournful vast undertone,"What is it all for? |
11696 | he said at their expressions, and entering,"Well?" |
11696 | he said, and repeated still more darkly,"_ Why_ solitary?" |
11696 | said Bensington,"that''s a cousin of the Prime Minister, is n''t it?" |
11696 | said the little folks,"is n''t it? |
11696 | swore Cossar,"where''s everything got to?" |
11696 | what''s this?" |
11640 | A general election of the truth half- yearly, eh? |
11640 | A trap.... Was it likely-- they came from you? |
11640 | A what? |
11640 | About this girl that''s been staying at the Frobishers? |
11640 | All right, was n''t it? |
11640 | And are you really going away from here to be an amanuensis? |
11640 | And have you read''Looking Backward''? |
11640 | And her name? |
11640 | And how are we to live? 11640 And that is what you have to tell me?" |
11640 | And then, when a great number of people have heard of your views? |
11640 | And then? |
11640 | And work those patents? |
11640 | And you look to them at South Kensington, to do something for you-- a hundred a year or so, when your scholarship is up? |
11640 | And you were married-- before the second examination? |
11640 | And-- what was it? 11640 Are n''t you?" |
11640 | Are you coming up again next year? |
11640 | Are you going downstairs? |
11640 | Birthday? |
11640 | But a Christian-- What do you believe? |
11640 | But how are you to live? |
11640 | But how are_ you_ going to prove it? |
11640 | But how? |
11640 | But how?--Leave London? |
11640 | But must you? 11640 But then,"he asked,"how the devil did we get to_ this_?" |
11640 | But there!--what can you expect from Durham? |
11640 | But what am I to do? |
11640 | But what am I to do? |
11640 | But what is the good of argument and denial? 11640 But what is the good?..." |
11640 | But what is the other thing I can do? |
11640 | But why did you not tell me of this before? |
11640 | But would you really marry a girl...? |
11640 | But you had met before? |
11640 | But you would n''t have every man in the three kingdoms, who disbelieved in spirits, attend_ sà © ances_ before he should be allowed to deny? |
11640 | But, four o''clock? |
11640 | But, how--? |
11640 | Can you read the number? |
11640 | Christian? |
11640 | Clapham-- that''s almost in London, is n''t it? |
11640 | Dear,he whispered,"Is it all right? |
11640 | Did I ever tell you I was married? |
11640 | Did ever man have such a bother with himself as me? |
11640 | Did you get out the nephridium? |
11640 | Did you hear her call me_ Madame? 11640 Did you see?" |
11640 | Did you spot D? |
11640 | Do I? |
11640 | Do n''t I? |
11640 | Do n''t you see that is the only thing for us? 11640 Do n''t you see that we can marry?" |
11640 | Do n''t you think-- perhaps--a little ripple of laughter passed across his mind--"he had a skeleton key?" |
11640 | Do what? |
11640 | Do you mean you are going on with that chap when he''s been caught cheating under your very nose? |
11640 | Do you mind if I call in a servant to confirm--? |
11640 | Do you mind if I sit down? |
11640 | Do you mind if you come again? |
11640 | Do you notice the eyes, Lewisham? |
11640 | Do you often come here? |
11640 | Does it? |
11640 | Does that matter? |
11640 | Eh? |
11640 | Eh? |
11640 | Eigh? |
11640 | Expected what, sir? |
11640 | Has he gone mad? 11640 Has it ever occurred to you,"asked Chaffery, apparently apropos of nothing,"that intellectual conviction is no motive at all? |
11640 | Has it ever occurred to you,she said abruptly,"how little a woman can do alone in the world?" |
11640 | Has n''t it got yellow? |
11640 | Has your wife or you a private income? |
11640 | Have n''t you been talking to me? |
11640 | Have you forgotten Whortley? |
11640 | Have you read Sludge the Medium? |
11640 | How are you to write to me? |
11640 | How can I tell you? 11640 How can I?" |
11640 | How could we be beaten-- together? |
11640 | How did you know? |
11640 | How much they could earn honestly? 11640 How''s this, Lewisham?" |
11640 | I have n''t thanked you for your letters,said Lewisham,"And I''ve been thinking...""Yes?" |
11640 | I suppose this-- I say, is_ this_ right? |
11640 | I suppose you read a great deal? |
11640 | I suppose you think it does n''t concern me? 11640 I suppose you will come up again?" |
11640 | I was n''t_ meant_ to know, was I? |
11640 | I would like to know who the Deuce_ you_ are? |
11640 | If I keep it? |
11640 | If Mr. Dunkerley had asked you?... |
11640 | If there were n''t well- off people, how d''ye think I''d get a livin''? 11640 Is he any bally good?" |
11640 | Is it past four? |
11640 | Is n''t it? |
11640 | Is n''t it? |
11640 | Is n''t that enough? |
11640 | Is she a medium or anything of that sort? |
11640 | Is that you, Miss Heydinger? |
11640 | Is this Mr. Bonover approaching? |
11640 | It''s a little surprising, you know,he said very carefully,"if I may say so-- and considering what happened-- to hear_ you_...""Speaking of truth? |
11640 | It''s frightfully complex, is n''t it? |
11640 | Living in London? |
11640 | May I have it? |
11640 | May I have my sheet of paper, please? |
11640 | May I--? 11640 Mind what?" |
11640 | Mr. Lewisham-- wasn''t it? |
11640 | Not Rowton of Pinner? |
11640 | Not enough for you? |
11640 | Not married by any chance? |
11640 | Now how do you account for that, eh? 11640 Objects to religious teaching!--Eh?" |
11640 | Often get that kind of thing? |
11640 | Oh-- nothing,said Lewisham blandly, with his hand falling casually over his memoranda;"what''s your particular little game?" |
11640 | On--? |
11640 | Paid? |
11640 | Really? |
11640 | She does n''t_ object_..."Well? |
11640 | So you know shorthand? |
11640 | Surely,he said,"he has not-- Will you read it out-- the cheque, the counterfoil I mean, that I am unable to see?" |
11640 | The lady''s age? |
11640 | The whitest? 11640 There is no more to say, is there? |
11640 | To Clapham? |
11640 | Was much... pressure necessary? |
11640 | We''re first- rate friends, are n''t we? 11640 We?" |
11640 | Well, and this? |
11640 | Well, who_ would n''t_ be jealous? |
11640 | Well-- what is it? |
11640 | Well-- where''s five thousand two hundred and eighty? |
11640 | Well--_is_ there? |
11640 | Well? |
11640 | Well? |
11640 | Well? |
11640 | Well? |
11640 | Well? |
11640 | Were you? |
11640 | What about? |
11640 | What are_ you_ after? |
11640 | What can we do?--ever? |
11640 | What did you think had come? |
11640 | What do you mean by dogma? |
11640 | What do you mean? |
11640 | What do you think it means? |
11640 | What do you think of doing?--teaching? |
11640 | What do you want? |
11640 | What does it matter to me what has happened or has n''t happened? 11640 What is it?" |
11640 | What is it? |
11640 | What is that you have there? |
11640 | What will become of Mother? |
11640 | What will you do? |
11640 | What work? |
11640 | What''s he done in the way of certificates? |
11640 | What''s this? |
11640 | What''s_ this_? |
11640 | What? 11640 What?" |
11640 | What_ is_ money? |
11640 | When? |
11640 | Where were you educated? |
11640 | Where? |
11640 | Which spike will you have? |
11640 | Who''s gone? 11640 Who?" |
11640 | Why argue about it,said Chaffery gaily, pointing a lean finger at Ethel''s gesture,"when she has''em in her pocket? |
11640 | Why did you ever come on with me? 11640 Why did you never write?" |
11640 | Why did you put my roses here? |
11640 | Why have you broken your promise? |
11640 | Why not? |
11640 | Why not? |
11640 | Why on earth did you put my roses here? |
11640 | Why should I? |
11640 | Why the_ devil_ ca n''t he mind his own business? |
11640 | Why were you looking so miserable? |
11640 | Why? |
11640 | Why_ marry_? |
11640 | Will you go down to your uncle''s again? |
11640 | Worth growing old for? |
11640 | Would you distrust a balance because you bought it? 11640 Would you mind a backward boy? |
11640 | Would you muzzle the ox that treadeth out the corn? |
11640 | Yes? |
11640 | Yes? |
11640 | Yes? |
11640 | Yes? |
11640 | Yes? |
11640 | You are not grieving? |
11640 | You are not-- you are not even sorry? |
11640 | You ca n''t see that? |
11640 | You do n''t happen to be a public- school boy? |
11640 | You do n''t mean to say Miss Heydinger--? |
11640 | You do n''t mind? |
11640 | You do n''t play croquet by any chance? |
11640 | You have made friends in the neighbourhood? |
11640 | You have money? |
11640 | You know,she said,"you must know I would like-- I would love--""You will come?" |
11640 | You mean to say she does n''t understand these things? |
11640 | You mean to say you have been carrying on with that youngster behind my back? |
11640 | You mean-- she wo n''t? |
11640 | You mean-- you think--? |
11640 | You see? |
11640 | You think I could? |
11640 | You thought these came from someone else? |
11640 | You will come to Immering? |
11640 | You will come? |
11640 | You''re not,she said, and dropped her voice,"an_ infidel_?" |
11640 | _ Dare_ you come with me? |
11640 | _ Eh?_said Chaffery. |
11640 | _ Eh_? |
11640 | _ Eh_? |
11640 | _ Married_? |
11640 | _ Miss_ Henderson? |
11640 | _ Now_? |
11640 | _ Was_ I looking miserable? |
11640 | _ What_ colour? |
11640 | _ What_? |
11640 | _ Where_? |
11640 | _ Would_ you? |
11640 | _But-- the trouble-- the expense-- everything-- and your work?" |
11640 | ''This Muck for milk?'' |
11640 | ''What''s this?'' |
11640 | ''Why do n''t you do what he wants?'' |
11640 | A walk? |
11640 | After all, why should Bonover or anyone interfere with his talking to a girl if he chose? |
11640 | Already the Forbes Medal, the immediate step, was as good as lost.... What on earth had he been thinking about? |
11640 | Am I a-- fool, or an impostor?" |
11640 | Am I really a help?" |
11640 | An assistant master like Dunkerley? |
11640 | And if he chose Ethel, even then, would he have his choice? |
11640 | And it shames her-- it reminds her-- Don''t you see how it hurts her?" |
11640 | And miles away perhaps she also was feeling little and lonely.... Would she have trouble with her luggage? |
11640 | And now, what have you got to say for yourselves in this remarkable affair?" |
11640 | And where''d_ you_ be then?" |
11640 | And who had set the musical box going? |
11640 | And you, sir, are so good as to disapprove of the way in which I earn my living?" |
11640 | And,"What good_ does_ it do to keep on?" |
11640 | Anyone else, Binks?" |
11640 | Are you expecting--? |
11640 | Are you the Mr. Lewisham to whom this misguided girl refers in her letter?" |
11640 | Are you?" |
11640 | Argue if you like-- but have you convinced anybody? |
11640 | Bring your Science to bear-- what am I? |
11640 | But he''s waiting and listening--""Are we to go downstairs, Mums?" |
11640 | But how does it work for a shopman?... |
11640 | But how to begin-- how to mark the change? |
11640 | But how to get back to the old footing? |
11640 | But how? |
11640 | But she has seen your letters--""You did n''t show her--?" |
11640 | But suppose that impulse carries me and I do the thing-- that impulse is part of me, is it not? |
11640 | But was she to blame? |
11640 | But what can one do?" |
11640 | But what''s this? |
11640 | But why go on? |
11640 | But why that"If I never write again,"and that abrupt ending? |
11640 | But why was everything so still? |
11640 | But-- why do you ask?" |
11640 | By licence?" |
11640 | Can you see_ this_ counterfoil?" |
11640 | Carlyle?" |
11640 | Chaffery?" |
11640 | Consequently....""You wo n''t take any notice of it? |
11640 | Could anything be simpler or more magnificent? |
11640 | Could it really be--? |
11640 | Could they get back? |
11640 | Did it matter anything to one human soul save her if he ceased to exist forthwith? |
11640 | Did she go up through the town to the avenue on these occasions?... |
11640 | Did_ you_ send those roses?" |
11640 | Distributed Proofreaders LOVE AND MR. LEWISHAM By H. G. WELLS[ Illustration:"Why on earth did you put my roses here?" |
11640 | Do n''t believe-- who does? |
11640 | Do n''t you see? |
11640 | Do n''t you think that perhaps you over- estimate the things I might have done? |
11640 | Do you observe her half- open lips? |
11640 | Do_ you_ believe that such a thing as Lagune exists? |
11640 | Does that surprise you?" |
11640 | Either this dissolves in acid or I have nothing more to do with it-- eh? |
11640 | Even your own position-- Who gave you the right to marry and prosecute interesting scientific studies while other young men rot in mines?" |
11640 | Had she ever"helped"? |
11640 | Had she not known? |
11640 | Has your daughter got her marriage lines?" |
11640 | Have you any grounds?" |
11640 | Have you been?" |
11640 | Have you ever read Matthew Arnold?" |
11640 | Have you far to go? |
11640 | Have you-- have you been married long?" |
11640 | He had come down that hillside and Ethel had been with him.... Had he really felt like that about her? |
11640 | He heard Lagune''s voice next him speaking with a peculiar quality of breathless reverence,"The alphabet?" |
11640 | He plunged at the point he had shirked,"How did you know it_ was_ Miss Heydinger--?" |
11640 | He speculated rather anxiously why? |
11640 | He was obliged to ask, though he was certain of the answer,"Has nothing come?" |
11640 | He"called back"each item of the interview,"And what can I do for you? |
11640 | Hey? |
11640 | How can I do anything? |
11640 | How can I do anything?" |
11640 | How can I work? |
11640 | How can one stop in a house like this? |
11640 | How can the world grow better, when sane, educated people use their sanity and enlightenment to darken others? |
11640 | How could he find the heart? |
11640 | How did_ you_ get on, Lewisham?" |
11640 | How had it been possible to get from such an opalescent dawning to such a dismal day? |
11640 | How have you been getting on?" |
11640 | How in the name of destiny had he come to marry her? |
11640 | How in the name of destiny? |
11640 | How was it done? |
11640 | How? |
11640 | How_ can_ you?" |
11640 | How_ could_ he explain it to her, when the meeting really came? |
11640 | I ask you, sir-- have you given the spirits a chance?" |
11640 | I hope you follow that?" |
11640 | I suppose there''s a sort of difference in education--""And she objects--?" |
11640 | I suppose you think I''m made of stone?" |
11640 | I wonder...""Why should he be so deceitful? |
11640 | If it did, if people suddenly cleared their minds of this ca nt of money, what would happen? |
11640 | If once he began to consider her-- Why should he consider her in that way? |
11640 | If we are to smear our political movements with this sort of stuff...""Does it work?" |
11640 | If you follow me--?" |
11640 | Is it all right?" |
11640 | Is it any wonder that for three memorable years the Career prevailed with him? |
11640 | Is the surface of my skin any more than a rude average boundary? |
11640 | Is this hand that I hold out me? |
11640 | It is hard to be interested in anything just because that is how you have to live, is it not? |
11640 | It is not a question of ways and means-- even before this-- I have thought... Dear one!--_don''t_ you love me?" |
11640 | It was gorgeous, he saw, but why so particularly did it appeal to him? |
11640 | Just as though-- Can''t I have letters about things you do n''t understand-- that you_ wo n''t_ understand? |
11640 | Lagune?" |
11640 | Lewisham?" |
11640 | Lewisham?" |
11640 | Look at the"work"he had undertaken at South Kensington-- how could he go on with that now? |
11640 | Me?" |
11640 | Medium, was it? |
11640 | No? |
11640 | Not Chaffery?" |
11640 | Now why should he suddenly feel afraid? |
11640 | Or should he vacillate and lose both? |
11640 | Or write? |
11640 | Perhaps she might find some place where letters might be sent to her? |
11640 | Religion? |
11640 | Say nothing about it--""But if I''m asked?" |
11640 | See? |
11640 | See? |
11640 | See?" |
11640 | She must have been oh!--bitterly ashamed, or why should she have burst out crying? |
11640 | Should he pretend to see her for the first time when the lights were restored? |
11640 | Should he raise his hat to her again?... |
11640 | Should he run after her? |
11640 | Should he say she was a friend of the Frobishers? |
11640 | Sludge, the Medium? |
11640 | Something moving? |
11640 | Suppose I have an impulse that I resist-- it is_ I_ resist it-- the impulse is outside me, eh? |
11640 | Suppose her aunt were to come to Farnham Junction to meet her? |
11640 | Suppose someone stole her purse? |
11640 | That all your promise... What is it she gives that I could not have given? |
11640 | That is what the best man has to do, is n''t it?" |
11640 | That waterproof collar-- did you notice it? |
11640 | That''s the line our doubting bishops take, and why should n''t I? |
11640 | The Medium, of course; but how? |
11640 | The highest? |
11640 | The question,"What will become of Ethel?" |
11640 | They''re spoilt, and why should n''t we be?" |
11640 | This head? |
11640 | Try one? |
11640 | Two- sided?... |
11640 | Unfulfilled... What had she to do? |
11640 | Was he really watching as he should do? |
11640 | Was it possible--? |
11640 | Was it, after all, just possible that in some degree he himself rather was the chief person to blame? |
11640 | Was she peering at him through the darkness even as he peered at her? |
11640 | Well-- what is the result of these meditations? |
11640 | Were_ you_ cheating?" |
11640 | What Is man? |
11640 | What are we-- any of us-- but servants or traitors to that?... |
11640 | What could be? |
11640 | What could he have been thinking about? |
11640 | What could she be doing? |
11640 | What did she think of him? |
11640 | What had he to do with these puerilities? |
11640 | What if he did happen to be well equipped for science teaching? |
11640 | What in the name of destiny had it all been about? |
11640 | What is decorum? |
11640 | What is the good of hankering? |
11640 | What is this?" |
11640 | What is your address? |
11640 | What is_ he_ for, that he should wonder at Poltergeists? |
11640 | What man hesitates in the choice? |
11640 | What might she not do? |
11640 | What on earth had it all been about? |
11640 | What on earth was Chaffery going to say? |
11640 | What particularly would she do? |
11640 | What particularly would she do? |
11640 | What possible antagonism could there be? |
11640 | What was happening? |
11640 | What was it had gone? |
11640 | What was it he had to do? |
11640 | What was that scent of violets? |
11640 | What was there to hide? |
11640 | What would come of it? |
11640 | What_ is_ clothing? |
11640 | What_ is_ commercial geography?" |
11640 | What_ is_ the good of trying to please you?" |
11640 | What_ was_ happening? |
11640 | When his own typewriter sacrificed him to her stepfather''s trickery? |
11640 | Where are you then, my boy?" |
11640 | Where does she live?" |
11640 | Where had she seen it before? |
11640 | Where might he have reached if only he had had singleness of purpose to realise that purpose?... |
11640 | Where was I? |
11640 | Who_ was_ she?" |
11640 | Why could I not be that to you? |
11640 | Why cry? |
11640 | Why do n''t they thought- read each other? |
11640 | Why had Ethel gone back into the bedroom? |
11640 | Why had he felt that irresistible impulse to seek her out? |
11640 | Why had he married her? |
11640 | Why had his imagination spun such a strange web of possibilities about her? |
11640 | Why in the name of destiny had he married her? |
11640 | Why indeed need Ethel know? |
11640 | Why need she know? |
11640 | Why not put the thing clearly and plainly to her? |
11640 | Why not sit in that chair instead of leaning on the back? |
11640 | Why not?" |
11640 | Why not?" |
11640 | Why on earth had he kept those letters from her? |
11640 | Why should I give up that much of you that is mine? |
11640 | Why should I want more? |
11640 | Why should he act to me...? |
11640 | Why should it be? |
11640 | Why should she be given the thing that is mine-- to throw aside?" |
11640 | Why should she covet what she can not possess? |
11640 | Why should she know?" |
11640 | Why should she think it mean? |
11640 | Why should the educated girl have the monopoly of the game? |
11640 | Why should they want you? |
11640 | Why should they? |
11640 | Why should we separate? |
11640 | Would he stop and accost them? |
11640 | Would she believe he had not seen her on Thursday?--if he assured her that it was so? |
11640 | Would she go past without looking up?... |
11640 | You did not know that I was a shorthand clerk and typewriter, did you? |
11640 | You know the experiment I mean? |
11640 | You remember? |
11640 | You say it is my mind that is me? |
11640 | You see my point of view?" |
11640 | You were n''t at the meeting last Friday?" |
11640 | You would have reflected.... Where had you seen a crowd-- red ties abundant and in some way significant? |
11640 | _ Is_ it dishonest-- rigging a demonstration?" |
11640 | _ Urare_? |
11640 | _ Why_ mean? |
11640 | _ Why_ was I made with heart and brain?" |
11640 | he asked,"shall we-- shall we use the alphabet?" |
11640 | how to efface the things he had said, the things that had been done? |
11640 | said Mr. Blendershin''s chief assistant"Lord!--why not a bishopric? |
11640 | what''s that?" |
35920 | A mer- child? |
35920 | Addy? 35920 Am I doing it right?" |
35920 | And Chatteris? |
35920 | And Miss Glendower? |
35920 | And Miss Waters went? |
35920 | And anyhow, why do they take us? 35920 And besides after all, you know, why should you----?" |
35920 | And do n''t you have_ tea_? |
35920 | And hairdressing? |
35920 | And has he found out yet----"That she''s a mermaid? 35920 And he does n''t?" |
35920 | And if one must n''t have''em, why should one know about''em and be worried by them? 35920 And is she really going to stay with you all the summer?" |
35920 | And now? |
35920 | And out? |
35920 | And she really has... a tail? |
35920 | And that is really what you came for? |
35920 | And that way? |
35920 | And that''s why-- in the old time----? |
35920 | And that? |
35920 | And the aunts? |
35920 | And the other young man? |
35920 | And then-- But how can he? |
35920 | And what else was there for me to do? |
35920 | And what have you been talking about so long? |
35920 | And what then? |
35920 | And what was_ I_ authorised to do? 35920 And yet----?" |
35920 | And----? |
35920 | And----? |
35920 | Anything wrong? |
35920 | Are you prepared to be as intricate as that? |
35920 | As you do? |
35920 | Aunts? |
35920 | Back? |
35920 | Books? |
35920 | But I saw him only at a distance, you know,said the Sea Lady; and then,"And so he is engaged to Miss Glendower? |
35920 | But are you sure? |
35920 | But did he----? |
35920 | But did you really just come----? |
35920 | But do you really mean----? |
35920 | But do you-- do you want him back? |
35920 | But how did the story come about? |
35920 | But how do you tell when it''s Sunday? |
35920 | But how--? |
35920 | But how--? |
35920 | But surely!--what else----? |
35920 | But what else_ could_ I do? |
35920 | But what''s he done? |
35920 | But what? |
35920 | But why reason about it? 35920 But why-- why should the mask of death be beautiful? |
35920 | But you''re not going to let it drop? |
35920 | But, after all, what is the good of talking in this way? |
35920 | But--struggled Adeline,"is it never put out?" |
35920 | Ca n''t it be stopped? |
35920 | Chatteris? |
35920 | Come to think of it,he said,"it''s a rather complicated matter to explain----""To a being without one?" |
35920 | Did you see Miss Glendower? |
35920 | Did_ he_ laugh? |
35920 | Do n''t they make a handsome couple? |
35920 | Do we? 35920 Do you think I''ve been in Folkestone two days doing nothing?" |
35920 | Do you think we''re going to make our public believe anything simply because it''s true? 35920 Do you want him back?" |
35920 | Do you want him back? |
35920 | Does he see-- the other lady? |
35920 | Does he-- ask to be released? |
35920 | Does he? |
35920 | Does that constitute the hundred relatives? |
35920 | Down here? 35920 Dreamer....""Other dreams....""What other dreams could she mean?" |
35920 | Eh? |
35920 | Eh? |
35920 | Everybody has a soul? |
35920 | Except me? |
35920 | Fin and all? |
35920 | For example,he tested,"are there-- by any chance-- other dreams?" |
35920 | For example? |
35920 | Forgiveness? |
35920 | Gord bless you, sir, laugh? 35920 Had any golf lately?" |
35920 | Has Miss Glendower? |
35920 | Have n''t I been telling you? |
35920 | Have you ever looked at eyes through a hole in a sheet? |
35920 | Have you seen the lady? |
35920 | He cannot-- What can he do with her? 35920 He did n''t see you----?" |
35920 | He did n''t write to her about Miss Waters? |
35920 | He has written to you? |
35920 | He says there is one? |
35920 | How can I put it? 35920 How can I say, Mr. Melville? |
35920 | How can I, till I know what it is? 35920 How can we?" |
35920 | How could he? |
35920 | How do I know she is Death? |
35920 | How do they live? |
35920 | How do things stand? 35920 How do you know?" |
35920 | How should I know how it takes him? 35920 How should_ I_ know?" |
35920 | How was_ I_ to know? |
35920 | How''s Paris? |
35920 | How''s the fishing? |
35920 | How? |
35920 | How? |
35920 | How? |
35920 | How? |
35920 | How? |
35920 | I could go around with you in my bath chair? |
35920 | I may take it to the_ Gunfire_ then? |
35920 | I suppose the aunts will tell him? |
35920 | Imagination? |
35920 | In London? |
35920 | In a paper? |
35920 | Is it always golden? |
35920 | Is it mine? |
35920 | Is n''t it a little late in the day to drop it? |
35920 | Is n''t she devoted to him? |
35920 | Is n''t there a smuggling interest to conciliate? |
35920 | Is that charity? |
35920 | Is the young lady in the purple robe who----"Who carried a book? |
35920 | Is there conceivably another way-- another sort of life-- some other aspect----? |
35920 | Is there? |
35920 | It ca n''t be anything wrong? |
35920 | It is n''t as if he had brought about this crisis? |
35920 | Keep_ what_ dark? |
35920 | Look here, Micklethwaite,I said,"why is everybody avoiding that man over there? |
35920 | Look here,said my cousin Melville,"what am I supposed to do? |
35920 | May I ask what you are going to do? |
35920 | Miss Glendower didn''t----? |
35920 | Miss Glendower not well, then? |
35920 | Miss Glendower? |
35920 | Miss Waters? |
35920 | More to do? |
35920 | Mr. Melville, is just precisely where you come into this business? |
35920 | Mr. Melville,she said, innocently,"what_ is_ a soul?" |
35920 | Mr. Melville,she said,"what is a union of souls?" |
35920 | No coming back? |
35920 | No? |
35920 | Not necessarily, is it? 35920 On Miss Waters?" |
35920 | Oom-- what is it? |
35920 | Or a weak will? |
35920 | Prove what? |
35920 | Quite bright? |
35920 | Say you will go? |
35920 | Seedy? |
35920 | She cares for him? |
35920 | She has means? |
35920 | She has means? |
35920 | She hints of these vague better dreams, she whispers of a way----"_ What_ way? |
35920 | She may have had experiences? |
35920 | She really means that canvassing? |
35920 | She said that? |
35920 | She seemed-- And is he very much in love with her? |
35920 | Should n''t what? |
35920 | Suppose he wants to drown himself? |
35920 | Sure? |
35920 | Sure? |
35920 | Surely, dear, you do n''t mind? |
35920 | Talked to her?... 35920 That it is so?" |
35920 | That----? |
35920 | The deeps? |
35920 | The mater sent for you? |
35920 | The mermaid? |
35920 | The other gentleman who----"_ No!_"There was no one----"But several mornings ago? |
35920 | The young man who carried-- who rescued me? |
35920 | There''s something,he said deliberately,"that Mrs. Bunting does n''t seem disposed----""What can it be?" |
35920 | This sort of thing? |
35920 | To her? |
35920 | To see what life was like on land here?... 35920 Understand what?" |
35920 | Undine? |
35920 | Was there ever a more ungracious, ungrateful, unreasonable creature than this same Chatteris? 35920 We''ve got perhaps a little more serious than--"he said doubtfully, and then,"What you have been saying-- did you exactly mean----?" |
35920 | Well, is n''t there? |
35920 | Well, why not? |
35920 | Well? |
35920 | Well? |
35920 | Well? |
35920 | Well? |
35920 | Well? |
35920 | Well? |
35920 | Well? |
35920 | Whaddyer talking about? |
35920 | What are they about? |
35920 | What are you doing away from Hythe at this time? |
35920 | What are you going to do? |
35920 | What broke out? |
35920 | What do such things mean? 35920 What do you mean-- other dreams?" |
35920 | What do you mean? 35920 What do you think of it?" |
35920 | What do you wear? |
35920 | What does Miss Glendower say? |
35920 | What else can she be? |
35920 | What is a great issue? |
35920 | What is it? 35920 What is she?" |
35920 | What is this being, who has come between him and all the realities of life? 35920 What name, sir?" |
35920 | What other woman? |
35920 | What precisely do you mean to do if you get him? 35920 What sort of people are they here?" |
35920 | What the deuce,he said, addressing his inkpot in plaintive tones,"does_ that_ matter?" |
35920 | What things unseen? |
35920 | What were people up to? |
35920 | What''s he done? |
35920 | What''s his attitude? |
35920 | What''s his attitude? |
35920 | What''s one more or less of these ha''penny fever rags? |
35920 | What''s the objection to her? |
35920 | What''s this about a mermaid? |
35920 | What''s this about a mermaid? |
35920 | What, altogether? |
35920 | What? |
35920 | What? |
35920 | What? |
35920 | What? |
35920 | What_ does_ grip your imagination? |
35920 | What_ does_ she want? |
35920 | What_ is_ the difference? |
35920 | Whatever for? |
35920 | Where are the others? |
35920 | Where did she go, Ded? |
35920 | Where''s Miss Waters? |
35920 | Where''s your cigarette? |
35920 | Where''s-- the principal gentleman? |
35920 | Where? |
35920 | Where? |
35920 | Where? |
35920 | Where? |
35920 | Which house? |
35920 | Who is that Miss Waters? |
35920 | Who is this Miss Waters? |
35920 | Who is this Miss Waters? |
35920 | Who_ is_ this other woman? |
35920 | Whom? |
35920 | Why do n''t you ask the lady herself? |
35920 | Why do we? |
35920 | Why do you tell me? |
35920 | Why do you want to know? |
35920 | Why has he done this to me? |
35920 | Why not come down to- night? |
35920 | Why not? |
35920 | Why should n''t I know? |
35920 | Why should n''t I,she asked,"if I want to?" |
35920 | Why? |
35920 | Why? |
35920 | Will you tell her I''m here? |
35920 | Wo n''t they tell you? |
35920 | Would you? |
35920 | Yes, I know, but how? |
35920 | Yes,he admitted,"but I thought_ your_ little movement was to be something more than party politics and self- advancement----?" |
35920 | Yes-- Do n''t you call your little ones----? |
35920 | Yes? |
35920 | Yes? |
35920 | Yes? |
35920 | Yes? |
35920 | Yes? |
35920 | You are contesting Hythe? |
35920 | You are going back? |
35920 | You back? |
35920 | You do n''t mean you''ve called on her? |
35920 | You do n''t want a career? |
35920 | You have seen and talked to her? |
35920 | You here? |
35920 | You know the case for the plaintiff? |
35920 | You know-- all? |
35920 | You left them all right at Sandgate? |
35920 | You mean,she insisted,"you mean----?" |
35920 | You mean,she said, with a pale face, half awakened to a new thought,"the way is----?" |
35920 | You mean----? |
35920 | You mean? |
35920 | You think he can not marry this-- this being who has come among us? |
35920 | You understand clearly she is a properly constituted mermaid with a real physical tail? |
35920 | You understand? |
35920 | You''ll take me ashore? |
35920 | You''re sure of it? |
35920 | You''ve got your arguments? |
35920 | You_ mean_ to save me? |
35920 | Your life, I tell you, is a dream-- a dream, and you ca n''t wake out of it----"And if so, why do you tell me? |
35920 | _ There are better dreams._"What dreams? |
35920 | _ Very_ much? |
35920 | _ What_ little ones? |
35920 | A tall young man with fair-- rather curlyish you might say-- hair, was n''t it? |
35920 | Adeline has straight eyes and clear eyes and fine eyes, and all the difference there can be, what is it? |
35920 | After all, I never saw Adeline at all until after all these things were over, and what is she now? |
35920 | All this work, all this political stuff of hers? |
35920 | And Miss Glendower----?" |
35920 | And come to think of it, why_ should_ an unavoidable deficiency in a lady excuse one that can be avoided? |
35920 | And is it painful at all?" |
35920 | And now will you tell me, Mr. Melville, why should n''t Harry have her? |
35920 | And then, as it were pursuing them all,"Pip, pip,"and the hat and raised eyebrows of a Low Excursionist still anxious to know"What''s up?" |
35920 | And then, you know, the whisper:--"_ There are better dreams._""What dreams?" |
35920 | And then----? |
35920 | And why should I have to compete with her, because he-- because he does n''t know his own mind?" |
35920 | And why, if we choose to do so, and taste this life that passes and continues, as rain that falls to the ground, why should we not do it? |
35920 | Are you sure----?" |
35920 | Are you there?" |
35920 | Breezes and the spring tides.... And Miss Waters?" |
35920 | Bunting?" |
35920 | Bunting?" |
35920 | Bunting?" |
35920 | Bunting?" |
35920 | But I do not think he would have bolted from Sandgate until he had really got some more definite answer to the question,"_ What_ better dreams?" |
35920 | But about those saturated books and drowned scraps of paper, you say? |
35920 | But are you sure she will be in the way?" |
35920 | But if he does he''s clever----""Why?" |
35920 | But-- if he will not come back?" |
35920 | But----""Yes?" |
35920 | Chatteris----?" |
35920 | Chatteris?" |
35920 | Cheerful home, eh? |
35920 | Could any one not absolutely right be quite so clear and emphatic? |
35920 | Did he look back, I wonder? |
35920 | Do I look--? |
35920 | Do n''t you feel it? |
35920 | Do you hear,_ now_?" |
35920 | Eh? |
35920 | Eh?" |
35920 | For me she is death.... Only why have I seen her face? |
35920 | Had she really and deliberately foreshadowed for Chatteris some obscure and mystical submergence? |
35920 | Had she really said this thing and quite in this way? |
35920 | How can a whole life rush to a moment? |
35920 | How can he live with her? |
35920 | How can one answer when ladies talk in this way? |
35920 | How can she breathe under water? |
35920 | How can we know? |
35920 | How can you expect me to do anything of that sort to- night?" |
35920 | How do we know what she is? |
35920 | How do you think we can boil a kettle?" |
35920 | How it''ll all end----""But why has he come to the Métropole?" |
35920 | How? |
35920 | How? |
35920 | I heard her....""And then?" |
35920 | I suppose-- What do you think of her?" |
35920 | If she comes to do mischief, why should n''t she do mischief without making me an accomplice?" |
35920 | Is it finer? |
35920 | Is n''t that enough?" |
35920 | It''s a matter of the imagination----""For him?" |
35920 | Look on-- until things ended in a catastrophe? |
35920 | Melville?... |
35920 | Mermaids? |
35920 | Mr. Bunting remarked with a knowing air,"So you saw him then?" |
35920 | Only very dimly he suspects----""Yes?" |
35920 | Only-- as I was explaining to Mrs. Bunting, one must consider one''s circumstances-- how_ can_ one_ hope_ to keep anything nice under water? |
35920 | Perhaps after all there are things beyond our reason, perhaps after all desire has a claim on us?" |
35920 | Pretty mess all round, eh?" |
35920 | See?... |
35920 | She had brought up a son and two daughters, and besides she had brought down a husband to"My dear, how was_ I_ to know?" |
35920 | She has been asking----""To help?" |
35920 | So I made a mistake?" |
35920 | Something there was in the nature of a caress, I believe, and then I incline to fancy she said"Well?" |
35920 | Still-- one has the two points of view.... You have come up from Sandgate?" |
35920 | Stuck?" |
35920 | Suppose they were not anxious and afraid.... And what does she care for the condition of the poor, after all? |
35920 | Surely Mr. Flange may do what he can to make religion attractive?" |
35920 | THE SEA LADY[ Illustration:"Am I doing it right?" |
35920 | The Wampachers are sending for a Bishop who used to be his schoolmaster----""No stone unturned, eh?" |
35920 | The difference? |
35920 | The other?" |
35920 | They''re all chasing round saying,''Where is this woman- fish sort of thing? |
35920 | Those elements of your chemists----""Yes?" |
35920 | To us who watch you----""You watch us?" |
35920 | Unless we are to believe there is no reason in things, why should this-- impossibility, be beautiful to any one anyhow? |
35920 | Was there not some more plausible interpretation, some phrase that would lie out bridgeways from the plausible to the truth? |
35920 | Was this one of these occasions? |
35920 | Well, why ca n''t she see that she ought to release him for his own good?" |
35920 | What ARE we to do?" |
35920 | What am I to do?" |
35920 | What are you? |
35920 | What can she give you? |
35920 | What does he dream of?... |
35920 | What does he expect?..." |
35920 | What does she mean?" |
35920 | What does the man_ want_? |
35920 | What else is there?" |
35920 | What if she is a mermaid? |
35920 | What is it?" |
35920 | What is she trying to do? |
35920 | What is she? |
35920 | What is the condition of the poor? |
35920 | What is there about her, or me, that has pulled me so astray? |
35920 | What is there about her--? |
35920 | What is this something about Miss Waters?" |
35920 | What life could they have in common?" |
35920 | What other dreams can there be? |
35920 | What was she going to do? |
35920 | What_ is_ it?" |
35920 | Who is she?" |
35920 | Why am I pulled about? |
35920 | Why are they bound? |
35920 | Why are they letting life slip by them? |
35920 | Why have I been asked to come?" |
35920 | Why have I heard her voice?..." |
35920 | Why her''s and not Adeline''s? |
35920 | Why not?" |
35920 | Why should it be finer to see beauty where it is fatal to us to see it? |
35920 | Why should n''t he have her?" |
35920 | Why should reason and justice carry everything? |
35920 | Why should we abstain?" |
35920 | Why should you come, why should any one outside come-- into this world?" |
35920 | Why should-- this being-- come into my life, as she has done, if it_ is_ so simple? |
35920 | Why-- if one has n''t one----?" |
35920 | Why? |
35920 | Yes, but just what_ is_ everything?" |
35920 | You can see her doing it here.... What is she seeking? |
35920 | You do n''t happen to know the nature of her disablement?" |
35920 | You do n''t know what''s the matter, Melville?" |
35920 | You do n''t mean-- positively, in our terrestrial fashion, you know-- to marry him?" |
35920 | You_ are_ a friend of Harry''s?" |
35920 | [ Illustration:"Why not?"] |
35920 | _ Why_ is she very beautiful?" |
35920 | and then less generally,"What''s up_''ere_?" |
35920 | he cried,"if these dreams are for Chatteris, why should she tell me? |
35920 | said Melville,"what?" |
35920 | said Mrs. Bunting to Mabel,"what_ are_ we to do?" |
12163 | A girl? 12163 Am I Master of the earth?" |
12163 | Am I a fool? |
12163 | And a third of the people wear this blue canvas? |
12163 | And here? |
12163 | And how did it grow? |
12163 | And none are destitute in the city? |
12163 | And the Council is really overthrown? |
12163 | And then? |
12163 | And this is the price? |
12163 | And those who meet in the great hall with the white Atlas? 12163 And what was their hope? |
12163 | And where do they work? 12163 And you are certain this Ostrog-- you are certain Ostrog organised this rebellion and arranged for the waking of the Sleeper? |
12163 | And you will rule? |
12163 | And, bye the bye,she added,"are you an Anglican?" |
12163 | Another hour? |
12163 | Are any of your great artists or authors here? |
12163 | Are the others coming? |
12163 | Are you asleep? |
12163 | Are you bringing negroes here-- to keep the people down? |
12163 | Are you hurt, Sire? |
12163 | Better? |
12163 | But I want-- Is it-- it is-- some years? 12163 But about this cap-- what was it?" |
12163 | But does the Master allow such things? |
12163 | But have n''t the Council flying machines? 12163 But how can they know?" |
12163 | But those rocks there? |
12163 | But what am I to do? |
12163 | But what did you think I meant? |
12163 | But what do they assure me? |
12163 | But what was that you said-- sixdoz? |
12163 | But who is Ostrog? |
12163 | But why am I here? 12163 But why?" |
12163 | But, Sire!--How can one fight? 12163 But,_ why_--?" |
12163 | But-- the women? |
12163 | But_ why_? |
12163 | Come where? 12163 Come, come,"said the old man,"if you had a glass of drink now, would you put it in your ear or your eye?" |
12163 | Did n''t you have assurance? |
12163 | Did n''t you have lions? 12163 Do I seem to be the sort of man who would act rashly?" |
12163 | Do n''t you understand, Sire? |
12163 | Do what? |
12163 | Do you control them? |
12163 | Do you know that you have been to myriads-- King Arthur, Barbarossa-- the King who would come in his own good time and put the world right for them? |
12163 | Do you know what I was doing when they came to tell me you had come? |
12163 | Do you mean they are found? |
12163 | Do you mean-- he was stiff and hard? |
12163 | Do you mean--? |
12163 | Do you notice the pinched- in look of his nose, and the way in which his eyelids sink? |
12163 | Does it shock you? |
12163 | E. Warming, 27, Chancery Lane? |
12163 | Eh? |
12163 | Eh? |
12163 | Eight and what? |
12163 | Escape? |
12163 | Exercise? |
12163 | Feel queer? |
12163 | Five or six? |
12163 | Go? |
12163 | Guardian? 12163 Had advice?" |
12163 | Have the arts grown with the rest of civilised things? |
12163 | Have ye any news? |
12163 | Have you been in a Pleasure City? |
12163 | Have you heard? |
12163 | Have you never seen him since that time? |
12163 | Have you wired my cousin? |
12163 | Hopes? |
12163 | How are things going on? |
12163 | How are you to know? 12163 How can I guess?" |
12163 | How can it benefit anyone if harm should happen to me? |
12163 | How do they know? 12163 How do you get the work done?" |
12163 | How do you know? 12163 How is that?" |
12163 | How long did you say? |
12163 | How long have I been asleep? |
12163 | How long would that take? |
12163 | How long? 12163 How long?" |
12163 | How long? |
12163 | How many years? |
12163 | How was I to know? |
12163 | I have worked,said the man,"but what have you been doing?" |
12163 | I suppose the imagination of the people--"Have you not heard our proverb,''When the Sleeper wakes''? 12163 I suppose--""Well?" |
12163 | I''ve understood,said Isbister after a pause,"that he had some moderate property of his own?" |
12163 | If I remember rightly,said Warming,"you were an artist?" |
12163 | If they will not work? |
12163 | In my name?--And you? 12163 In the first place, had n''t I better have some clothes?" |
12163 | In the old times, how did you manage with starving people? |
12163 | Insurance? |
12163 | Is falling? 12163 Is it all one building? |
12163 | Is it rescue? |
12163 | Is it true indeed, that I have been asleep two hundred--? |
12163 | Is motherhood gone? |
12163 | Is that-- some sort of force-- laid on? |
12163 | Is this the Master''s doing, brothers? 12163 Is_ this_ the beginning of the Master''s rule?" |
12163 | Men in hats and feathers? |
12163 | More than a_ what_? |
12163 | More? |
12163 | Must it indeed go in this way? 12163 My double?" |
12163 | Need you ask whether I will help you? |
12163 | No disarmament,said the banners, for the most part in crudely daubed letters and with variant spelling, and"Why should we disarm?" |
12163 | No? |
12163 | No? |
12163 | Old, are you? 12163 Or is your Society? |
12163 | Ostrog? |
12163 | Perhaps,said Lincoln, intercepting a casual glance,"you would like to know some of these ladies?" |
12163 | Red tape, I suppose? |
12163 | Regiments? |
12163 | Rejected whom? |
12163 | Several? |
12163 | Sixdoz lions? |
12163 | Sleeper? 12163 Smashed?" |
12163 | Smithers? |
12163 | Suppose this is only a rumour? |
12163 | That? 12163 The Boss?" |
12163 | The Labour Department? |
12163 | The Sleeper-- when did he awake? |
12163 | The Sleeper? |
12163 | The easy death? |
12163 | The people you said awaited me? |
12163 | The people--"Do you mean--? |
12163 | The world, what you see of it, seems strange to you? |
12163 | Then do you mean that the population of the World--? |
12163 | There is no fighting likely to happen soon? |
12163 | They have told you that, have they? 12163 Things have changed tremendously, I suppose?" |
12163 | This_ is_ London, eh? 12163 Those guns?" |
12163 | Victory? |
12163 | Was it a ca nt? 12163 Was it a social trouble-- that-- in the great roadway place? |
12163 | Well? |
12163 | Well? |
12163 | Well? |
12163 | Well? |
12163 | Well? |
12163 | What Council was that? |
12163 | What Council? |
12163 | What am I to do? |
12163 | What am I to do? |
12163 | What are these Pleasure Cities? |
12163 | What are they doing to the Master? |
12163 | What are you doing? 12163 What can be happening? |
12163 | What can be happening? |
12163 | What council? |
12163 | What did he say? |
12163 | What do they assure me? |
12163 | What do you do when you move that engine forward? |
12163 | What do you mean by company? |
12163 | What do you mean to do? |
12163 | What do you mean? |
12163 | What do you mean? |
12163 | What do you mean? |
12163 | What do you want with me? |
12163 | What does this all mean? |
12163 | What has become of Ostrog? |
12163 | What has happened now? |
12163 | What have they blown up? |
12163 | What have they got to, what has been done? 12163 What is appalling?" |
12163 | What is it? |
12163 | What is that doing? |
12163 | What is that shouting? |
12163 | What is that? 12163 What is that?" |
12163 | What is that? |
12163 | What is the population of London? |
12163 | What is this I hear? |
12163 | What is this? |
12163 | What matters it now that we have Roehampton? 12163 What news of the flying stages?" |
12163 | What place is this? |
12163 | What sort of people are these? |
12163 | What was his name? |
12163 | What was that? |
12163 | What was that? |
12163 | What was the trouble? 12163 What were they discussing? |
12163 | What''s going on now? |
12163 | What''s the good? |
12163 | What? |
12163 | What? |
12163 | What? |
12163 | What_ is_ this Labour Department? |
12163 | Where am I? |
12163 | Where are all the people? |
12163 | Where are the markets? |
12163 | Where are the people? |
12163 | Where do these sleep? |
12163 | Where has Ostrog gone? |
12163 | Where is Ostrog? |
12163 | Where is he? |
12163 | Where was the other? |
12163 | Who am I? 12163 Who am I?" |
12163 | Who are those men? |
12163 | Who are you? 12163 Who are you? |
12163 | Who are you? |
12163 | Who are your great painters? |
12163 | Who is that talking with the lady in saffron? |
12163 | Who is that? |
12163 | Who is_ that_? |
12163 | Who says--? 12163 Who''s the proprietor?" |
12163 | Whose orders? |
12163 | Why not? |
12163 | Why not? |
12163 | Why should I not appeal--? 12163 Why should anything be done to me?" |
12163 | Why should we? 12163 Why should you expect trouble?" |
12163 | Will you let them see you, Sire? |
12163 | Wire, sir? |
12163 | Would it be possible for me to be made a sworn aeronaut, as you call it, forthwith-- before I sleep? |
12163 | Would you care to know that girl, Sire? |
12163 | Yes? |
12163 | Yes? |
12163 | Yes? |
12163 | Yes? |
12163 | Yes? |
12163 | Yes? |
12163 | You are Ostrog? |
12163 | You are my party-- the party of the Sleeper? |
12163 | You do n''t mean--? |
12163 | You find the new world amusing, Sire? |
12163 | You have seen things go down an eddy? 12163 You mean, of course, those good men you used to think so much of because they could cover great spaces of canvas with oil- colours? |
12163 | You said the people were unhappy? |
12163 | You still--? |
12163 | You teach them very little? |
12163 | You were the Sleeper? |
12163 | You will not want to consult me in any matter? |
12163 | You will protect me? |
12163 | You-- did you say--? |
12163 | Your life here is not worth--"But why arms? |
12163 | _ Is_ it too late? |
12163 | _ Must_ the world go this way? |
12163 | _ We_ have no aeronauts? |
12163 | _ What_? |
12163 | _ Why_? |
12163 | All the doorways? |
12163 | Am I any wiser now than two days ago, if it is two days, when I awoke?" |
12163 | And besides, how could anyone escape from these rooms? |
12163 | And if that was so, how did it affect him? |
12163 | And now, how do we turn her nose down to the glide?" |
12163 | And now-- we win?" |
12163 | And now--""Well?" |
12163 | And that rise and fall, like the murmur of breakers on pebbles? |
12163 | And the little doctor-- what was his name?" |
12163 | And the sun on your head, heat, fag, solitude, all the day long, and then, I suppose, you go to bed and try very hard-- eh?" |
12163 | And these--? |
12163 | And what do you think the troubles are about? |
12163 | And what of those hopes? |
12163 | And when I return--?" |
12163 | And who were those people, the distant crowd beyond the deep blue pillars? |
12163 | And why do n''t they ask me for it instead of cooping me up?" |
12163 | And why should he be brought to them, and be looked at strangely and spoken of inaudibly? |
12163 | And, indeed, what are these miseries of which you speak? |
12163 | Apparently he is sliding slowly, very slowly and tediously, down a long slope, if you can understand me?" |
12163 | Are n''t you glad?" |
12163 | Are the doorways closed? |
12163 | Are there any Generals?" |
12163 | Are they dreams? |
12163 | Are you sure Ostrog has him?" |
12163 | Are you sure he is not genuine? |
12163 | As it is, you have seen the people-- outside?" |
12163 | Besides, who can leave the city poor? |
12163 | Boscastle? |
12163 | But how is it with the little lives that make up this greater life? |
12163 | But is it real? |
12163 | But surely you''ve heard? |
12163 | But what do they want? |
12163 | But where? |
12163 | But why was the Wimbledon Park stage black and cheering, too? |
12163 | But you have noticed men and women and children in pale blue canvas, with thin yellow faces and dull eyes?" |
12163 | Can you teach them to forget it? |
12163 | Catalepsy? |
12163 | Company? |
12163 | Could one man--_one man_--?" |
12163 | Could that be his indeed, that little life in his memory two hundred years gone by-- and this as well? |
12163 | Council?" |
12163 | Did I tell you? |
12163 | Did it matter, seeing he was so wretched? |
12163 | Do I pull this? |
12163 | Do they know? |
12163 | Do you know why I have slept two hundred years? |
12163 | Do you mean to say--?" |
12163 | Do you mind? |
12163 | Do you not see? |
12163 | Do you really mean--?" |
12163 | Do_ you_ altogether understand?" |
12163 | Does it not occur to you I am absolutely alone?" |
12163 | Dreadful, is n''t it? |
12163 | Drugs? |
12163 | Eh? |
12163 | Eh? |
12163 | Eh?" |
12163 | Had there been windows? |
12163 | Has he been told anything?" |
12163 | Have all our hopes been vain?" |
12163 | Have you never heard of those days? |
12163 | Have you still a police?" |
12163 | He recalled the cliff and Waterfall again, and then recollected something about talking to a passer- by.... How long had he slept? |
12163 | He sat silent for a moment, and then asked a question,"Is there a mill or dynamo near here?" |
12163 | He struck his forehead against Lincoln''s and bawled,"What is this darkness?" |
12163 | High and low, rich and poor, one with another... Is there England still?" |
12163 | How are you governed? |
12163 | How can I explain it to you? |
12163 | How did you get here?" |
12163 | How do I come into the midst of it all?" |
12163 | How does it concern me? |
12163 | How he made it? |
12163 | How is it now--?" |
12163 | How is it with man after two hundred years? |
12163 | How is it with the common lives? |
12163 | How long--?" |
12163 | I am wifeless-- childless-- who is it speaks of the childless as the dead twigs on the tree of life? |
12163 | I have gone mad.... Who are those Councillors under the Atlas? |
12163 | I judge there is some struggle between a number of people in this city-- it is London?" |
12163 | I under- estimated--""Do you mean that these infernal negroes are on the way?" |
12163 | If you take alcohol?" |
12163 | If you''d care?" |
12163 | In fact--""Yes?" |
12163 | Is he a mesmerist?" |
12163 | Is it indeed true that I--?" |
12163 | Is it real, or is it only a great delusion?" |
12163 | Is that it?" |
12163 | Is that right? |
12163 | Is that to be-- for ever? |
12163 | Is there London?" |
12163 | Is there a doctor in the village? |
12163 | Is there a new faith? |
12163 | Is there any sort of company?" |
12163 | Is this Council, or committee, or whatever they are, cooking the accounts of my estate? |
12163 | Is this city the world?" |
12163 | Is this the Master''s doing?" |
12163 | Is_ this_ the beginning of the Master''s rule? |
12163 | Is_ this_ the beginning of the Master''s rule? |
12163 | Isbister thought, hesitated and spoke:"No doubt-- his keep here is not expensive-- no doubt it will have improved-- accumulated?" |
12163 | It''s ill.""Did you say-- there had not been-- what?--for a gross of years?" |
12163 | It''s the Stuart blood, I suppose; but really--""Too much?" |
12163 | Just to assert himself-- because he was not elected to the Council?" |
12163 | Many years? |
12163 | Master?" |
12163 | My dear sir, where were you at the time? |
12163 | My people?" |
12163 | No man can keep sane if night after night--""Have you been walking along this coast alone?" |
12163 | No? |
12163 | Not--?" |
12163 | Or is it guessing?" |
12163 | Or was the whole city lit day and night for evermore, so that there was no night there? |
12163 | Or were they all in error, and were the red guards driving all before them? |
12163 | Presently--""Yes?" |
12163 | Suppose he were to accept the proposal, demand some sort of_ company_? |
12163 | Suppose-- which is impossible-- that these swarming yelping fools in blue get the upper hand of us, what then? |
12163 | Surely you could tell? |
12163 | Tell me-- some days ago, perhaps, I was walking along the coast of Cornwall--?" |
12163 | That man in purple?" |
12163 | That you may shift the responsibility to any other man?" |
12163 | The Council? |
12163 | The Sleeper? |
12163 | The hope of mankind-- what is it? |
12163 | The phrase at the time made no deep impression, but afterwards it recurred;--the Black Labour Master? |
12163 | Then suddenly the man in yellow shouted:"What are they doing? |
12163 | Then turning his back on the new comer, he asked in an undertone,"Why is this man_ glaring_ at me? |
12163 | Then, for a time, his mind circled about the idea of escaping from these rooms; but whither could he escape into this vast, crowded world? |
12163 | There were windows on the street indeed, but were they for light? |
12163 | They do not trust.... You know, of course-- something of your position?" |
12163 | They were shouting--?" |
12163 | Very simple?" |
12163 | Was humanity a formula as well as chastity? |
12163 | Was it worth re- polishing? |
12163 | Was that an old man''s senile superstition, too, or had it any truth in it? |
12163 | Was the line clear of people? |
12163 | Was the season summer, and were these merely summer apartments, or was the whole city uniformly heated or cooled? |
12163 | Was the struggle on his behalf alone? |
12163 | Was this old man right, was the report of the people right, and were the revolutionaries winning? |
12163 | We were in the stone age-- compared with this.... And what else have you?" |
12163 | Were you drunk or asleep? |
12163 | What am I to know? |
12163 | What are the people doing? |
12163 | What are they after?" |
12163 | What are you going to do? |
12163 | What country was he in? |
12163 | What did they mean to do? |
12163 | What did they think he meant to do? |
12163 | What do you think of this?" |
12163 | What do you want?" |
12163 | What does it all mean?" |
12163 | What had he done? |
12163 | What had he to do? |
12163 | What has happened to the Sleeper?" |
12163 | What have they to do with me?" |
12163 | What if it does not die out? |
12163 | What is the danger?" |
12163 | What is their hope? |
12163 | What place is it?" |
12163 | What right have they to hope? |
12163 | What was a Pleasure City? |
12163 | What was happening there? |
12163 | What was happening? |
12163 | What was it you had to tell me?" |
12163 | What was it? |
12163 | What was that shouting I heard? |
12163 | What was that sound of pattering feet? |
12163 | What was that? |
12163 | What was their trouble? |
12163 | What was this place?--this place that to his senses seemed subtly quivering like a thing alive? |
12163 | What would happen next? |
12163 | What''s your game? |
12163 | What?" |
12163 | Where could he hide to be inconspicuous when the lights returned? |
12163 | Where have you been? |
12163 | Where is a doctor to be found?" |
12163 | Where is any man when insensibility takes hold of him? |
12163 | Where is the Council? |
12163 | Where is the fight?" |
12163 | Where was the man? |
12163 | Where, precisely, had he seen her?... |
12163 | Who am I?" |
12163 | Who fired? |
12163 | Who is that distinguished looking man?" |
12163 | Who told you to? |
12163 | Who was he? |
12163 | Who was he?" |
12163 | Who will win-- Ostrog or the People? |
12163 | Why could he not let go? |
12163 | Why do n''t they bring some negroes to protect us? |
12163 | Why is Ostrog left there? |
12163 | Why is a great multitude shouting and excited because my trance is over, and who are the men in white in that huge council chamber?" |
12163 | Why is he not captured? |
12163 | Why is he not here?" |
12163 | Why is there no fighting with them?" |
12163 | Why not?" |
12163 | Why should he want to assert himself?" |
12163 | Why should n''t he be a puppet? |
12163 | Why should people be made unhappy?" |
12163 | Why should the natural development of the affections be dwarfed and restricted because a man is a priest?" |
12163 | Why should they try to drug me?" |
12163 | Why should this saner world regard him as Owner and Master? |
12163 | Why was I not warned? |
12163 | Why was he holding so tightly with his hands? |
12163 | Why were the people fighting for him? |
12163 | Why were they shouting? |
12163 | Why, where have you been if you have n''t heard all about the trouble between Ostrog and the Verneys? |
12163 | Why? |
12163 | Why? |
12163 | Why_ harm_?" |
12163 | Will that die out? |
12163 | Would he, after all, be killed before he saw? |
12163 | You do n''t think that after you have dined you might prefer--?" |
12163 | You had the old pounds? |
12163 | You have heard? |
12163 | You heard the smash? |
12163 | You know how they imprisoned you?" |
12163 | You know that? |
12163 | You said there was a monoplane--?" |
12163 | You see how your little germ has grown? |
12163 | You think the Sleeper''s real and woke of his own accord-- eh?" |
12163 | You will be as rapid as possible?" |
12163 | _ What_?" |
12163 | _ Why_? |
12163 | he said, with his voice jumping, and again,"Are you asleep?" |
12163 | the Londoners?" |
12163 | what can it matter whether I speak well or ill?" |
12163 | why should I go on acting? |
14060 | Against us all? |
14060 | Also,cried Herr Heinrich, facing another aspect of his distresses,"how am I to pack my things? |
14060 | And London? |
14060 | And Mr. Lawrence Carmine? |
14060 | And how do you like living in an English household? |
14060 | And is he as obdurate as ever? |
14060 | And she reads like a-- Whatever does read? 14060 And surely why should n''t one?" |
14060 | And the Germans? 14060 And the firing line itself? |
14060 | And the jars are pickles? |
14060 | And what of the towns_ our_ ships have bombarded? |
14060 | And you believe that men will listen to such schemes? |
14060 | And you think it will come? |
14060 | Are n''t I working? 14060 Are you interested in Mr. Britling''s writings?" |
14060 | But I can come again? |
14060 | But has he ever done anything? |
14060 | But has it killed them? |
14060 | But how''s this? |
14060 | But how? |
14060 | But if he does n''t want to go with Rendezvous, why does he? |
14060 | But if she did? |
14060 | But what can I_ say_ to him? |
14060 | But what shall I do without him? |
14060 | But where can that be? 14060 But why did you lose your hand?" |
14060 | But why is it famine? |
14060 | But why? |
14060 | Ca n''t I go out if I like? |
14060 | Can you understand me? |
14060 | Direck has told you? |
14060 | Do n''t you think if I promised well? |
14060 | Do they complain? |
14060 | Do they understand? 14060 Do we go through these ancient gates?" |
14060 | Do you care,he asked,"to drink a German wine? |
14060 | Do you read Utopias? |
14060 | Do you think we came into it for the fun of the thing? |
14060 | Do you think,she asked,"that there is any chance of a shortage of food?" |
14060 | England? |
14060 | Food? |
14060 | Go where? |
14060 | Had a good night? |
14060 | Have n''t I shown in a hundred ways that I sympathise? |
14060 | Have you any news? |
14060 | He''s Fine-- eh? |
14060 | He''s not--? |
14060 | How can one argue with him? 14060 How could you doubt our fleet or our army?" |
14060 | How could you leave me? 14060 How?" |
14060 | I found Miss Corner reading-- what was it? 14060 I must hold the business together,"he said;"but why anyhow should n''t I learn to shoot and use a bayonet?" |
14060 | I says to''i m, I says,''''ave you tried the vibritation of the trains?'' 14060 I was telling Mrs. Britling I had some thought--""But about those Essex relatives of yours?" |
14060 | I who have loved life,he murmured, and could have believed for a time that he wished he had never had a son.... Is the whole scheme of nature evil? |
14060 | I wonder what will happen to Albania? |
14060 | If I_ do_ happen to hurt-- does it matter? |
14060 | If Russia makes war on Austria, Germany will make war on Russia, will she not? |
14060 | In relation to debts and so on? 14060 Is it really-- honest?" |
14060 | Is n''t that enough? 14060 Is there a reply, Sir, please?" |
14060 | Is there indeed a devil of pure cruelty? 14060 Is there no clerical work, no minor administrative work, a man might be used for?" |
14060 | Is there very much, do you think, in the suggestion that some of this Ulster trouble is a German intrigue? 14060 It does n''t say_ severely_?" |
14060 | It is-- what do they call it? 14060 It was in India, I presume,"murmured Mr. Direck,"that Mr. Britling made the acquaintance of the coloured gentleman?" |
14060 | It''s a beautiful day.... Must n''t I go out?... 14060 It''s the clarion of the morn in every proper English home...."You''d like a rasher, coffee? |
14060 | Life struggling under a birth curse? |
14060 | Matching''s Easy? |
14060 | Meaning--? |
14060 | Meaning? |
14060 | Miss Corner''s sister? |
14060 | My dear Parent, you did n''t think I had backed a bill or forged a cheque? |
14060 | Now that''s not difficult, is it? |
14060 | Of Himalayan villages burning? 14060 Of course,"she said,"I knew-- I felt somehow-- you meant to say something of this sort to me-- when you asked me to come with you--""Well?" |
14060 | Oh, what can I_ do_ for him? |
14060 | Old Glory? |
14060 | Only what should we do? |
14060 | Ready? |
14060 | Shall I tell it to her? |
14060 | Shall we take the plates and get the strawberries, Mummy? |
14060 | She says if you''d let her try to do my work for a time...."She_ wants_ you to go? |
14060 | So why should n''t we start to find out together? |
14060 | Suppose after all, he is dead? |
14060 | Suppose they do n''t? |
14060 | Telegraph to whom? |
14060 | That''s about the size of it,said Raeburn...."Do you think, sir, there''ll be civil war?" |
14060 | The last new novel? |
14060 | Then this Miss Corner,said Mr. Direck,"she is the sister, I presume, is she? |
14060 | Then why go? |
14060 | Then why not at the beginning? |
14060 | Wa- a- a- l,he said with a quaver of laughter,"now who''d have thought it?" |
14060 | We''re not short of zinc? |
14060 | Well now, they have a good time, do n''t they? 14060 Well, is n''t it so? |
14060 | Well,he said when he had finished reading,"what do you think of it?" |
14060 | Well,he said,"then you do n''t hate me?" |
14060 | Well,_ that_ wo n''t save Paris, will it? |
14060 | What are all these little packets? |
14060 | What are we to do, Lady Frensham? |
14060 | What did I say? |
14060 | What did we tell you? |
14060 | What do you mean to do? 14060 What do you want?" |
14060 | What does it matter if it is? |
14060 | What form of art,he asked,"are you contemplating in your studies at the present time in London?".... |
14060 | What good is blacking? |
14060 | What have we done? |
14060 | What have you got? |
14060 | What have you? |
14060 | What is a man of my sort to do? |
14060 | What of French machine- guns in the Atlas? |
14060 | What of those Tasmanians_ our_ people utterly swept away? |
14060 | What on earth must it have seemed like at last? 14060 What ought we to be doing?" |
14060 | What sort of dance is this? |
14060 | What the devil are we doing at this hockey? |
14060 | What''ll I come as? |
14060 | What''s that? |
14060 | What''s the good of hanging round talking? |
14060 | What,asked Mr. Van der Pant,"ought one to do?" |
14060 | What_ is_ Religion? |
14060 | Where are you going? |
14060 | Where do you propose to enlist? |
14060 | Where''s our army? |
14060 | Which paper? |
14060 | Who are_ you_, Sir? 14060 Who can blame them?" |
14060 | Who shall we play skat with when you have gone? |
14060 | Who''s this Archduke,he asked,"anyhow? |
14060 | Why do they do such things? |
14060 | Why not since Schleswig- Holstein? |
14060 | Why not? 14060 Why should we always be tied by the fashions and periods of the past?" |
14060 | Why_ do_ you get drawn into arguments? 14060 Will not this generally affect European politics?" |
14060 | Will you want winter things? |
14060 | Yes? |
14060 | Yes? |
14060 | You are of that opinion? |
14060 | You dance? |
14060 | You do n''t dislike me or despise me? |
14060 | You do n''t know whether you love me? 14060 You do n''t still doubt?" |
14060 | You do n''t think I''m just a slow American sort of portent? |
14060 | You have n''t seen Manning about, have you? |
14060 | You said,''What the devil are we doing at this hockey? 14060 You think, on the whole, I might even-- someday--?" |
14060 | You understand me, Hughie? |
14060 | You''ve not met him before? |
14060 | ''I''m in a mess-- a bloody mess, ai n''t I? |
14060 | ''I''ve tried sile,''''e says--""Your first visit to England?" |
14060 | ''Ow the''ell is''e to know_ when_''e did n''t ought to? |
14060 | ''What d''you want to measure the room for? |
14060 | ''What the''ell''s a chap to do?'' |
14060 | ( But why was not Oliver holding her hand?) |
14060 | ..."Why have they come here? |
14060 | After all, had such visions ever been more than idle dreams? |
14060 | After all, what right had we English_ not_ to have a gun or an aeroplane fit to bring down that Zeppelin ignominiously and conclusively? |
14060 | And I am sure the army is with us....""Where did they get those machine- guns and ammunition?" |
14060 | And did you notice how beautifully my pianola rolls are all numbered and catalogued? |
14060 | And he had only shown her the thing once.... Was he indeed burying a marvellous gift under the dust of current affairs? |
14060 | And here they are in the heart of Europe letting off their guns?" |
14060 | And so there is nothing else for us to do but win.... Why could they not leave Belgium alone?" |
14060 | And that is the day of reckoning with their own people.__ What have we been fighting for? |
14060 | And the wrist and arm did n''t even ache enough to keep you awake?" |
14060 | And then had ensued angers, humiliations.... Had every man this sort of crowded catalogue? |
14060 | And where is this Bosnia? |
14060 | And, indeed, was our cause all righteousness? |
14060 | Are you American?" |
14060 | Arrest him?... |
14060 | Besides, then, what would he do with his dull days, his afternoons, his need for a properly demonstrated affection? |
14060 | Britling?" |
14060 | Britling?" |
14060 | Britling?'' |
14060 | But ca n''t I just get a bit of practice somewhere before the game begins?" |
14060 | But do you really figure to yourself what a civil war may mean for the empire? |
14060 | But if the whole thing is cruel, perhaps also it is witless and will- less? |
14060 | But is it the most dreadful war?__ I do not think it is. |
14060 | But is this little wet ditch here the Historical River Thames?" |
14060 | But meanwhile, meanwhile.... How long were men so to mingle wrong with right, to be energetic without mercy and kindly without energy?... |
14060 | But was there not also a personal factor, a meritorious factor? |
14060 | But were these enormous significances being stated clearly enough? |
14060 | But what else was to be done? |
14060 | But would that former peace have ever risen to that?... |
14060 | Can it be wondered if it seemed to the German mind that the moment for the triumphant assertion of the German predominance in the world had come? |
14060 | Can you imagine anything of the sort happening nowadays west of the Adriatic? |
14060 | Could Letty keep things for years in her mind, hard and terrible, as they were now? |
14060 | Could any one but a congenital idiot suppose we should n''t fight? |
14060 | Could there be a better family? |
14060 | Cruel it is and abominable, yes, but is it altogether cruel? |
14060 | Dick?" |
14060 | Did he think she could settle down to her poor work, such as it was, in neglect and loneliness? |
14060 | Did n''t we all trust them not to let off their guns? |
14060 | Dirks?" |
14060 | Do any of us understand?" |
14060 | Do n''t you see that it must be like that?" |
14060 | Do n''t you think, Sir, there''s something about science-- it''s steadier than anything else in the world?" |
14060 | Do you fancy there is any Freedom of the Seas possible beyond such freedom as we maintain, except the freedom to attack you? |
14060 | Do you know what is the maximum weekly output of rifles at the present time in this country?" |
14060 | Do you know? |
14060 | Do you mind?" |
14060 | Do you realise that this Carsonite campaign is dragging these islands within a measurable distance of civil war?" |
14060 | Do you remember how Manning used to hide from him?..." |
14060 | Do you remember what you said when we were bullying off at hockey on Bank Holiday-- the day before war was declared?" |
14060 | Do you see the two of them engaged in mortal combat? |
14060 | Do you think, Sir, there''s very much probability of this war? |
14060 | Does any creature, even the very cruellest of creatures, really apprehend the pain it causes, or inflict it for the sake of the infliction?" |
14060 | Does any one know? |
14060 | Even if we were dumb and acquiescent before, does not the blood of our sons now cry out to us that this foolery should cease? |
14060 | Exactly?... |
14060 | Had n''t he, she asked, had the privilege of loving her? |
14060 | Had n''t she always known he was alive? |
14060 | Had the war done more than unmask reality?... |
14060 | Had we indeed much right to complain if our imperial pose was flouted? |
14060 | Had we not undertaken Empire? |
14060 | Has hate been necessary, and is it still necessary, and will it always be necessary? |
14060 | Has n''t it, after all, a sort of stupid rightness?--isn''t it a stupid reaction to an indolence at least equally stupid?" |
14060 | Have n''t you been saying as much all day?... |
14060 | Have you heard of the''Hymn of Hate''?" |
14060 | He asked me the other day,''But why should I give myself up to philology? |
14060 | He came out of the frame of the porch towards the garden gate.... Who-- who was this stranger? |
14060 | He was ready enough to blame others-- dons, politicians, public apathy, but what was he himself doing? |
14060 | He was studying the dialects of East Anglia--"You go about among the people?" |
14060 | Here''s all this Ulster gun- running-- you heard how she talked of it? |
14060 | How are the old folks at home?" |
14060 | How can I bear it?" |
14060 | How can he shoot? |
14060 | How can they know he is a prisoner without knowing that?" |
14060 | How can you expect the system to produce anything else? |
14060 | How can_ you_ believe in God after Hugh? |
14060 | How could he best help England in the vast struggle for which the empty silence and beauty of this night seemed to be waiting? |
14060 | How far would it carry her? |
14060 | How were we to find it? |
14060 | I do n''t believe I shall ever fire my rifle at an enemy-- ever...."You''ve seen Rendezvous''fresh promotion, I suppose? |
14060 | I had n''t somehow thought of_ you_--""What_ did_ you think of me?" |
14060 | I have n''t dropped a brick, have I?" |
14060 | I suppose one must accept and then make all one can of it.... Have you talked at all to my eldest son?" |
14060 | I want a day off, and I''m dying to take Gladys--""Gladys?" |
14060 | I''m in love with you, all my heart''s in love with you, what''s the good of being shy about it? |
14060 | If I could go....""What does Letty think?" |
14060 | If he wrote such things would they be noted or would they just vanish indistinguishably into the general mental tumult? |
14060 | If one really looks into things in this spirit, where is it going to take us? |
14060 | In a world full of Mrs. Fabers....""Moratorium?" |
14060 | Is all life a war forever? |
14060 | Is it something in the air, something in the climate that makes things harder and clearer in America?... |
14060 | Is it to be dressing- up supper?" |
14060 | Is life in its essence cruel? |
14060 | Is man stretched quivering upon the table of the eternal vivisector for no end-- and without pity? |
14060 | Is n''t it enough to drive the south into open revolt?..." |
14060 | Is n''t that a beautiful pillar rose? |
14060 | Is n''t that enough despicable trickery for God even to play on Teddy-- our Teddy? |
14060 | Is not this malignity indeed only the ape- like precursor of the great disciplines of a creative state? |
14060 | Is there not, he now asked himself plainly, a creative and corrective impulse behind all hate? |
14060 | It comes to one clean and in perfect order.... Is experience worth having? |
14060 | It''s like necessary sanitation....""You are n''t attracted by soldiering?" |
14060 | It''s only because I do n''t believe that the Germans are so stupid as to do such things.... Why should they?... |
14060 | It''s up to you, Duke....""Now where did you learn all that?" |
14060 | Let fly at him? |
14060 | Luck had favoured the British with a well- placed island, a hardening climate, accessible minerals, but then too was there not also a national virtue? |
14060 | Might this not lead to a war?" |
14060 | Mors and crematorium-- do we burn our bills instead of paying them?" |
14060 | Must he in his turn get dented and wrinkled and tarnished? |
14060 | Must it wait for that? |
14060 | My grandmother was an Essex Corner, I must confess I''ve had some thought--""Corner?" |
14060 | No longer did he ask why am I such a fool, but why are we all such fools? |
14060 | O.T.C.?" |
14060 | Of carrying out a scheme of far- seeing vengeance, of making her way through long months and years nearer and nearer to revenge? |
14060 | Of the things we did in China? |
14060 | One goes on for weeks, and then one day one finds oneself crying out,''What is all this for? |
14060 | One had been thinking so often, how will it feel? |
14060 | Or below Paris perhaps?" |
14060 | Or else why should they always be laying foundation stones?... |
14060 | Or had she just snatched at him?... |
14060 | Or how was it they came?... |
14060 | Or is it wise, and merely refusing to pamper us? |
14060 | Or is the whole thing just witless, accidentally cruel perhaps, but not malignant? |
14060 | Or since the Treaty of Vienna?" |
14060 | Or why do they happen?" |
14060 | Our army and navy people were narrow, but in their narrow way he believed they were extraordinarily good.... What would the Irish do?... |
14060 | Out here it has to be an anodyne...."Have you heard of a book called''Tom Cringle''s Log''? |
14060 | Perhaps Booth Wilmington had also had reason for laughing in his sleeve.... Had she even loved Booth Wilmington? |
14060 | Revelation to his father was n''t his business.... What was he thinking of it all? |
14060 | See?" |
14060 | Shall I put your bag in behind, sir?" |
14060 | She paused and contemplated her difficulties...."Could n''t you perhaps say something of the same kind-- such as I''ve been trying to say?" |
14060 | Should he write to his son? |
14060 | Signalling? |
14060 | So did we, so did we...."It wo n''t last you ten years if we go down...."Do you think that our disaster will leave the Atlantic for you? |
14060 | So long as one did one''s best and utmost in a cause so mighty, did it matter though the thing one did was little and poor? |
14060 | Somehow it seems out of proportion--""With what?" |
14060 | South of the Marne? |
14060 | Still.... Could you bring yourself--? |
14060 | Such a hasty fool? |
14060 | Such forms as only the nocturnal imagination would have dared present.... Oh, why had he been such a Britling? |
14060 | Suppose presently things sweep us out of it? |
14060 | Suppose the trouble was something quite different? |
14060 | Suppose, after all, their army was more than a parade, their navy more than a protest? |
14060 | Take no notice?... |
14060 | That the God of the Old Testament was the Devil of the New? |
14060 | The censorship and the press were keeping all this back, but what good was it to keep it back? |
14060 | The girl next to him or the girl next to Mr. Britling or the lady in black might any of them be married, but if so where was the spouse? |
14060 | The ladies affected him as being ill- dressed; there was none of the hard snap, the"_ There!_ and what do you say to it?" |
14060 | They do n''t laugh at you.... At least-- they laugh differently.... Was England the tolerant country? |
14060 | Think you because your sons are dead that there will be no more cakes and ale? |
14060 | This confounded Irish business, one could laugh at it in the daylight, but was it indeed a thing to laugh at? |
14060 | To charge through this patient world with-- how much did the car weigh? |
14060 | To end that folly is as much our duty and business as telling the truth or earning a living....""But how can you alter it?" |
14060 | To whom could such a message be better addressed than to those sorrowing parents; from whom could it come with a better effect than from himself? |
14060 | Vicariously at any rate he had crushed many children.... Why are children ever crushed? |
14060 | War is murder truly, but is not Peace decay? |
14060 | Was Letty really capable of becoming a Charlotte Corday? |
14060 | Was every forty- five- year- old memory a dark tunnel receding from the star of youth? |
14060 | Was it possible for the whole system to break down through a shock to its confidence? |
14060 | Was it possible that people of this sort did"run"the country, after all?... |
14060 | Was it some form of the same trouble that had so tangled and tainted and scarred the private pride of his father? |
14060 | Was n''t he, Direck, as good a man as Booth Wilmington anyhow?... |
14060 | Was n''t that the essence of our liberal and pacific faith? |
14060 | Was n''t there even now in his bedroom in New York a water- colour of Market Saffron church, where the dear old lady had been confirmed? |
14060 | Was she going insane? |
14060 | Was the whole prosperity of the British, the far- flung empire, the securities, the busy order, just their good luck? |
14060 | Was this the incurable British, just as it was the incurable Britling, quality? |
14060 | We take our politics more sadly in the West.... Wo n''t you have another egg, Direck?" |
14060 | We''d naturally settle down side by side and_ do_...""But what should we do?" |
14060 | Were such revenges possible? |
14060 | Were they being understood by the mass of liberal and pacific thinkers? |
14060 | Were they different kinds of birds snatching at the quiet of the night for a dust bath in the sand? |
14060 | Were they night- jars? |
14060 | Were they relying as we were relying on Dreadnoughts, or had they their secrets and surprises for us? |
14060 | Were we indeed standing against tyranny for freedom? |
14060 | Were we not the leaders of great nations? |
14060 | What are we fighting for? |
14060 | What are_ you_, Sir? |
14060 | What can I_ say_?" |
14060 | What claim have_ you_, Sir?"... |
14060 | What did any explanation really matter when you had Teddy, with nothing but a strange beard and a bandaged arm between him and yourself? |
14060 | What do I want with explanations? |
14060 | What does he care for_ you_?... |
14060 | What does it matter? |
14060 | What else could be done? |
14060 | What else do we ever do?" |
14060 | What else is there left for us to do?... |
14060 | What else is there to do now for me?" |
14060 | What had been the Gnostic idea? |
14060 | What have we to gain from hurting one another still further? |
14060 | What is the good of grieving over a smashed automobile? |
14060 | What is the good of pretending? |
14060 | What is to happen to the world if these people prevail?" |
14060 | What ought an intelligent sentry to do? |
14060 | What quarrel had we with him?... |
14060 | What right have_ you_, Sir? |
14060 | What similar story might not the overdue paper tell when presently it came? |
14060 | What sort of bird could they be? |
14060 | What sort of business do you think it''s my duty to go in for?" |
14060 | What was he doing now? |
14060 | What was he going to do? |
14060 | What was it we missed? |
14060 | What was the inspiration of this pressure of spite, this anger that was aroused by ineffective gentleness and kindliness? |
14060 | What was the trouble? |
14060 | What was this rightness that lurked below cruelty? |
14060 | What was war to Matching''s Easy-- to all the Matching''s Easies great and small that make up England? |
14060 | When is it to end?'' |
14060 | Where should he smite and how? |
14060 | Who is to carry on if a lot of you get killed?" |
14060 | Who really believes in any world outside the circle of the horizon? |
14060 | Who will now go on with the education of Billy?" |
14060 | Who would_ let_ them, I should like to know?" |
14060 | Why am I spending what is left of my substance and you what is left of yours to keep on this war against each other? |
14060 | Why are there no trains on the branch line on Sundays for me to go by it?" |
14060 | Why begin a scramble at a groaning board?" |
14060 | Why could n''t he look before he leapt? |
14060 | Why could n''t they stay in their own country? |
14060 | Why did I let him go?" |
14060 | Why did Mr. Britling never weep? |
14060 | Why did he take risks? |
14060 | Why did n''t he come along to her and make her feel she had protecting arms round her? |
14060 | Why did we lie so open to the unexpected crisis? |
14060 | Why do we bother ourselves with loyalties to any other government but that? |
14060 | Why do you jab at me by saying that? |
14060 | Why had we no foresight? |
14060 | Why had we this wilful blindness to disagreeable possibilities? |
14060 | Why have I inherited no vices? |
14060 | Why have they ever begun it?" |
14060 | Why have we loitered so long-- until these tragic punishments come? |
14060 | Why in thunder are they doing everything? |
14060 | Why need he have gone-- so soon?" |
14060 | Why should it? |
14060 | Why should n''t Ulster create an impossible position? |
14060 | Why should n''t one think of Mamie Nelson calmly? |
14060 | Why should n''t women have the vote? |
14060 | Why should they? |
14060 | Why should we be puppets any longer in the hands of crowned fools and witless diplomatists? |
14060 | Why was he always so ready to act upon the supposition that all was bound to go well? |
14060 | Why was he doing nothing to change things, to get them better? |
14060 | Why was he still such a Britling? |
14060 | Why, for instance, had n''t he adhered to the resolution of the early morning? |
14060 | Why, they would ask, should this Englishman preach to them? |
14060 | Why-- he revived again that bitter question of a thousand and one unhappy nights-- why was he such a fool? |
14060 | Why?... |
14060 | Why_ should_ Germany attack France? |
14060 | Will there ever be a sort of man whose thoughts are quick and his acts slow? |
14060 | Will you come there and sit with me on it? |
14060 | Will you make or will you take? |
14060 | Without the ferret of war, what would life become?... |
14060 | Wo n''t you even fight for your own ships that the Germans are sinking?" |
14060 | Wo n''t you fight for the Dutch and Norwegian ships? |
14060 | Wo n''t you get up again?" |
14060 | Would people presently begin to murder the makers of the Great War? |
14060 | Would they be audible and helpful shouts, or just waste of shouting?... |
14060 | Would_ that_ go on again after the war? |
14060 | Yet what are we doing to decide it-- you and I? |
14060 | Yet....""There''s nobody else by any chance?" |
14060 | You and me-- and Miss Corner-- curious thing, is n''t it? |
14060 | _ Did_ they then?" |
14060 | _ Do_ you believe in God?" |
14060 | _ Had n''t_ she? |
14060 | _ would_ you?" |
14060 | but is n''t that stiff reading?" |
14060 | cried Mr. Britling, and"How the_ devil_?" |
14060 | he cried,"except embitter Ireland?" |
14060 | how long?" |
14060 | how shall I behave? |
14060 | how unutterably silly.... Why did I let him go? |
14060 | is it true? |
14060 | said Mr. Britling to one of the corporals;"now where did you chaps get trout?" |
14060 | she asked herself, sitting down before her unlit bedroom fire...."What can I say or do?" |
14060 | she said, and then with a chill intimation,"_ What is it?_"They looked at each other. |
14060 | to tell that she had n''t? |
14060 | what can I_ say_? |
14060 | what if he has n''t a drop of German blood in his veins? |
39162 | ''Ow about Eureka Villa? |
39162 | ''Ow about it? |
39162 | ''Ow d''you like that whiskey I sent? |
39162 | ''Ow d''you mean? |
39162 | ''Ow do we know what''e''s up to, with your money, even now? |
39162 | ''Ow do you know''e''s speckylated everything? |
39162 | ''Ow do you know----? |
39162 | ''Ow goes it? |
39162 | ''Ow is one to know? |
39162 | ''Ow much did you say''ed lef''you, me b''y? |
39162 | ''Ow much? |
39162 | ''Ow the Juice is one to know? |
39162 | ''Ow was you to know? |
39162 | ''Ow''s that? |
39162 | ''Ow, the Juice----? 39162 ''Ow?" |
39162 | ''Ow? |
39162 | ''Ow_ can_ you? 39162 A half bottle?" |
39162 | A''undred pounds p''raps? |
39162 | About my name? |
39162 | About that Waddy----? |
39162 | About what? |
39162 | Ai n''t I tellin''you? |
39162 | Ai n''t I? 39162 Ai n''t lost your situation,''ave you? |
39162 | Along of who? |
39162 | And bort this banjer, put on your best noo trousers and come right on''ere? |
39162 | And has it made you perfectly happy? |
39162 | And how does it feel to have twelve hundred a year? |
39162 | And how many rooms? |
39162 | And it began-- before your money? |
39162 | And sells them? |
39162 | And she told you to get someone to''elp you? |
39162 | And you thrown up your place? |
39162 | And''i m? |
39162 | Are n''t these clubs a bit''ard to get into? |
39162 | Are you getting a book? |
39162 | Are you telling him,gurgled the fat, hairless man,"about dear Lady Jane''s affliction?" |
39162 | Been kep''late at business? |
39162 | Been talking Socialism? |
39162 | Being really C- U- Y- P- S? 39162 Booch,"said Mr. Shalford,"''ave y''r copy of the rules?" |
39162 | Books? |
39162 | Business? |
39162 | But ai n''t sisters girls? |
39162 | But reely,said the Pupil,"not what you call being in Society?" |
39162 | But what d''you mean? |
39162 | But what d''you think it is? |
39162 | But what you break it for? |
39162 | But who would have thought it was going to break like that? |
39162 | But wo n''t she be a bit lonely down here? |
39162 | But wot are we going to_ do_, Artie? |
39162 | But, Artie,said Ann, trying to grasp it,"d''you mean to say he''s took our money?" |
39162 | But, Artie,''ow_ can_ I? |
39162 | But, my dear, what have I done? |
39162 | By you? |
39162 | Ca n''t I pass_ you_ a bit? |
39162 | Ca n''t it be stopped? |
39162 | Calling and all that? |
39162 | Can you run? |
39162 | Can you tell me? |
39162 | Carn''t I go upstairs? |
39162 | Carry this to the station, will you? |
39162 | Coote,he asked,"wot''s a''state- eh- tate''?" |
39162 | Could Cypshi really mean Cuyps? |
39162 | Could n''t I? |
39162 | Crib hunting? |
39162 | D''ju smoke? |
39162 | D''you mean to say our money''s_ gone_, Artie? |
39162 | D''you mean-- she knows? |
39162 | D''you mind? 39162 D''you often come to New Romney?" |
39162 | D''you reely think that was right what Coote was saying? |
39162 | Did n''t Sid tell you he met me? |
39162 | Did n''t let''em in? |
39162 | Did you do them? |
39162 | Do I_ look_ as if I''d ate two?... |
39162 | Do n''t they get shops of their own? |
39162 | Do n''t you see it? |
39162 | Do n''t you see? |
39162 | Do n''t you? 39162 Do you mind pulling out the table?" |
39162 | Do you think of living in Folkestone? |
39162 | Do you think of living in Folkestone? |
39162 | Does n''t it? |
39162 | Drapery? |
39162 | Drop more beer, Art? |
39162 | Dying solemn? |
39162 | Eh? |
39162 | Eh? |
39162 | Eh? |
39162 | Eh? |
39162 | Eh? |
39162 | Eh? |
39162 | Ent I? |
39162 | Er? |
39162 | Funny, is n''t it? |
39162 | Funny, was n''t it? |
39162 | Gimme a start? |
39162 | Gimme to here? |
39162 | Going to marry? |
39162 | Gone? 39162 Has it made you much happier?" |
39162 | Have a cigarette? |
39162 | Have you a garden? |
39162 | Have you got a handkerchief? |
39162 | Have you seen one of his plays? |
39162 | Have you seen our outlook? |
39162 | Heard about Kipps? |
39162 | Here? |
39162 | How about that race? |
39162 | How about the shop? |
39162 | How are_ you_, old chap? |
39162 | How d''yer know the''ouse----? |
39162 | How d''yer mean? |
39162 | How many bedrooms, for example? |
39162 | How many then? |
39162 | How much? |
39162 | How_ old_ are you, Kipps? |
39162 | Hullo, Kipps,he said,"outside----?" |
39162 | I know,said Kipps,"but when is''has''a conjunction and when is''as''a verb?" |
39162 | I s''pose you''re having your holidays? |
39162 | I say, Buggins, what do these here advertisements mean that say so- and- so will hear of something greatly to his advantage? |
39162 | I say, Kipps,he said in a distinct, loud voice,"see''er Ladyship lately?" |
39162 | I say, Sid,''ow''s Ann? |
39162 | I say,he said;"what d''yer think?" |
39162 | I seen your brother,''aven''t I? |
39162 | I suppose it_ is_ legacies sometimes, eh? 39162 I wonder what he meant by the lean years?" |
39162 | If you care for me? |
39162 | If_ I_ do not hold you cheap, you will never hold yourself cheap----"If you do not hold me cheap, you mean? |
39162 | Is he-- a friend of yours? |
39162 | Is it? |
39162 | Is it_ worth_ it? |
39162 | Is n''t it delightful? |
39162 | Is n''t she? |
39162 | It yields you an income----? |
39162 | It''s a bit of a lot, ai n''t it, uncle? |
39162 | It''s all, all right, and all you have to do is write to Watson and Bean and get it----"Get what? |
39162 | It''s love,said Mrs. Botting;"what else can it be? |
39162 | It''s not a very big one, is it? |
39162 | Jest as though''e''d put on what came first? |
39162 | Knew----? |
39162 | Light trousers and all that? |
39162 | Like...? |
39162 | Look''ere,he said suddenly,"_ what_ Kipps?" |
39162 | Look''ere,said Kipps, rubbing a shin that had suffered during his search in the dark,"why are n''t there any candles or matches?" |
39162 | Me? |
39162 | Mean to say it does n''t belong to me? |
39162 | Miss Walshingham,he said,"is it possible that you... could care for me enough to-- to''elp me? |
39162 | Money left and that sort of thing? |
39162 | More potatoes, Artie? |
39162 | Mr. Coote, is n''t he? |
39162 | Mr. Kipps, do you know how many people matriculate into London University every year? |
39162 | Mutton? |
39162 | My dear Arthur,she began, almost kindly,"I should n''t ask you to go to these affairs if I did n''t think it good for you, should I?" |
39162 | Nace, is n''t it? |
39162 | No shirt, I expect? |
39162 | No, if you are asking a question you say_ has_''e-- I mean he--''as he? |
39162 | No? |
39162 | No? |
39162 | No? |
39162 | No? |
39162 | Not Waddy? |
39162 | Not a little chap-- dodgin''about be''ind the others? 39162 Not a moty car?" |
39162 | Not along of that brat of Pornick''s? |
39162 | Not busy? |
39162 | Not down here? |
39162 | Not drapery? |
39162 | Not plain? |
39162 | Not----? |
39162 | Now this----? |
39162 | Now which,said the architect, spreading them out,"is it to be?" |
39162 | Now? |
39162 | O''Bean? |
39162 | One breakfast? |
39162 | One? |
39162 | Oo cares? 39162 Ought I to send''er flowers?" |
39162 | Panic? |
39162 | Rather,he added, with a nervous laugh;"what else?" |
39162 | Reading, eh? |
39162 | Reelly? |
39162 | Reely? |
39162 | Reely? |
39162 | Reely? |
39162 | Remember that wreck? |
39162 | Remember the Hurons, Sid? |
39162 | Remember them cockchafers, Ann? |
39162 | Remember''ow you came out once when we were racing here?... 39162 Rose?" |
39162 | Sawn off? |
39162 | Secret? |
39162 | See what? |
39162 | Seven tums eight seven nine-- was it? 39162 She say so?" |
39162 | She says,''Is Mrs. Kipps at home?'' 39162 Smell?" |
39162 | So I ought to say''as''e?'' |
39162 | That laylock there is pretty, is n''t it? |
39162 | That row about the window tickets? |
39162 | That wo n''t be just yet a bit, will it? |
39162 | The books says that? |
39162 | The last girl? |
39162 | There''s a fire in the study, Mary? |
39162 | Thinking of building a''ouse, are you? |
39162 | To- night? |
39162 | Twenty- six thousand pounds? |
39162 | Two, p''raps? |
39162 | Unexpectedly? |
39162 | Very beautiful sunset it was to- night,said Coote, and Kipps said,"Was n''t it?" |
39162 | Very well, thank you,said Kipps;"how are you?" |
39162 | Wad they say? |
39162 | Wadjer mean? |
39162 | Wadyer mean? 39162 Was that_ you_''it me?" |
39162 | We ought to''ave one servant anyhow,said Kipps,"else''ow should we manage if we wanted to go out together or anything like that?" |
39162 | We''re not hurting you, are we? |
39162 | Well, did n''t you pass one of these here University things? |
39162 | Well, what do_ you_ mean? |
39162 | Well,said Kipps,"what them?" |
39162 | Well,''ow----? |
39162 | Well? |
39162 | Well? |
39162 | Well? |
39162 | Well? |
39162 | Well? |
39162 | Well? |
39162 | Well? |
39162 | Were you making up something? |
39162 | Whad jer''ave? |
39162 | What about him? |
39162 | What about? |
39162 | What are you doang hea? |
39162 | What are_ you_, please? |
39162 | What chap Kipps you''re telling which about? |
39162 | What d''you mean? |
39162 | What did he say? |
39162 | What did she say''xactly? |
39162 | What did they talk about, Ann? |
39162 | What did? |
39162 | What do you mean? |
39162 | What do you think? |
39162 | What does it mean? |
39162 | What else could I mean? |
39162 | What for? |
39162 | What for? |
39162 | What for? |
39162 | What game? |
39162 | What is he? |
39162 | What man? |
39162 | What name did he want? |
39162 | What ought I to do now? |
39162 | What play''s that, Chit''low? |
39162 | What ring do you mean? |
39162 | What sort of a ring? |
39162 | What the goodness''as it got to do wiv''''i m? |
39162 | What was that, Ann? |
39162 | What you mean? |
39162 | What''ave I to do about that? |
39162 | What''aven''t you-- not to? |
39162 | What''s Eureka? |
39162 | What''s a basement? |
39162 | What''s all these dots? |
39162 | What''s brought_ you_ here? 39162 What''s it for?" |
39162 | What''s it going to do, like? |
39162 | What''s rum? |
39162 | What''s the result? |
39162 | What''s this? |
39162 | What''s true? |
39162 | What-- not Sid? |
39162 | What-- truth? |
39162 | What? |
39162 | What? |
39162 | What? |
39162 | What? |
39162 | What? |
39162 | What? |
39162 | What? |
39162 | What? |
39162 | What_ have_ you done? |
39162 | Where for? |
39162 | Where is she now? |
39162 | Where ye bin, my boy? |
39162 | Where you been, Artie? |
39162 | Where you been? |
39162 | Which way are you going? |
39162 | Who is, then? |
39162 | Who''d''ave thought of our being''ere like this six weeks ago?... 39162 Whom to?" |
39162 | Whose name-- Euphemia? |
39162 | Why do I never get anything right? |
39162 | Why not? |
39162 | Why not?... |
39162 | Why? |
39162 | Why? |
39162 | Will you come?... 39162 Wo n''t you have some tea?" |
39162 | You ai n''t been backin''gordless''orses, Artie? |
39162 | You ai n''t thrown up your place, Artie,''ave you? |
39162 | You are n''t hurt, Matey? |
39162 | You been for a walk? |
39162 | You do n''t know_ much_ about books, do you, Artie? |
39162 | You do n''t like them plans? |
39162 | You do n''t mean to say I''m roundabout? |
39162 | You do n''t mind going third? |
39162 | You do n''t mind? |
39162 | You doing anything? |
39162 | You going in? |
39162 | You going t''Boologne? |
39162 | You got a girl? |
39162 | You got your holidays? |
39162 | You left school? |
39162 | You mean we ai n''t got nothin''left, Artie? |
39162 | You mean----he said; and then,"do n''t you hold me cheap?" |
39162 | You mean? |
39162 | You must know----"What? |
39162 | You saw_''er_, you say? |
39162 | You see it? |
39162 | You still in the drapery? |
39162 | You were one of Helen''s pupils in the wood- carving class? |
39162 | You wo n''t think it unconventional to come in, Mr. Kipps, will you? |
39162 | You wo n''t? |
39162 | You''d write? |
39162 | You''re sure you can spare that drawing board? |
39162 | You''ve faced the anagrams? |
39162 | Your plans are undecided? |
39162 | _ Did_ she? |
39162 | _ Is_ it Arthur? |
39162 | _ Whad_ do you say? |
39162 | _ What''s_ up now? |
39162 | _ What?_asked Chitterlow, but he never had an answer. |
39162 | _ Who''s_ gone? |
39162 | _''Ow_ much did you say? |
39162 | ''Ave a segar?" |
39162 | ''Ow can one understand that? |
39162 | ''Ow did it come about?" |
39162 | ''Ow ought one to go?" |
39162 | ''Ow was I to know? |
39162 | ''Ow was I to think about Callers, Artie? |
39162 | ''Ow was I to think about Callers?" |
39162 | ''Ow_ could_ you? |
39162 | ''Stead of which you go sending out the servant and''namelling floors, and then when visitors come----""''Ow was_ I_ to know about y''r old visitors?" |
39162 | ''_ Ow_ are they to get shops of their own? |
39162 | ( sob) You know?" |
39162 | A monologue something in the manner of Masterman? |
39162 | Ai n''t bort a dog yet?" |
39162 | Ai n''t early closing, is it? |
39162 | Ai n''t that enough? |
39162 | And Sid? |
39162 | And did n''t come in?" |
39162 | And what are they doing? |
39162 | And your name now? |
39162 | Are you hurting?" |
39162 | Are you stopping in Folkestone?" |
39162 | Brat!--who could be expected ever to forgive that? |
39162 | But Mrs. Kipps answered him,"Did he want the Pornicks to say he was n''t good enough to be a draper?" |
39162 | But how was one to get it? |
39162 | But if I take it, someone else who does n''t know where to stop-- you see?" |
39162 | But what''s_ that_? |
39162 | But what_ was_ right? |
39162 | But why make unpatriotic reflections in a novel? |
39162 | Chitterlow interrupted his discourse to ask,"You have n''t any brandy in the house, have you? |
39162 | Could he be rich indeed? |
39162 | Could it be that these things had really happened? |
39162 | Could n''t he go without things if he liked? |
39162 | Did Kipps paint? |
39162 | Do n''t y''think?" |
39162 | Do n''t you think anagrams are something chronic?" |
39162 | Does n''t it worry you?" |
39162 | Dukes, it might be, did that-- by permission? |
39162 | Eh?" |
39162 | Eh?" |
39162 | Eh?" |
39162 | Eh?" |
39162 | Eh?" |
39162 | Eh?... |
39162 | Even now with help...? |
39162 | Flight? |
39162 | For a moment her eye rested thoughtfully on Kipps, as she said:"Is there anything heartrending about Anagrams?" |
39162 | For instance, you know, you are careless with your pronunciation.... You do n''t mind my telling you?" |
39162 | Frock coat?" |
39162 | G. Smith on for? |
39162 | Gossip... have tea.... S''pose_ you_ ai n''t married, Kipps?" |
39162 | Got a motor?" |
39162 | He had them at home, but how could one explain that? |
39162 | He stipulated, lest there might be some misconception,"You will marry me?" |
39162 | He would n''t stand this sort of thing, whatever else he stood.... Should he say something about her dress to her-- to- morrow? |
39162 | Here?" |
39162 | How could he ever say anything to her again? |
39162 | How could one eat one''s dinner with people about him like that? |
39162 | How could there be so many if they had n''t? |
39162 | How did one address Royalty? |
39162 | How had it all happened exactly? |
39162 | How long, for example, did the real delirious excitement last?" |
39162 | How to explain to them? |
39162 | How would they take it?... |
39162 | How''s a draper''s shopman to save up five hundred pounds even? |
39162 | How, for example, would one encounter Lady Punnet? |
39162 | I say, Ann: will you_ be_ my girl?" |
39162 | I suppose you wo n''t mind my having another cigarette?" |
39162 | I''spose I got to take it to''er, eh? |
39162 | I''ve often thought of it----....''Member when we raced that time-- out be''ind the church?" |
39162 | If the hotel chose to stick it on to the bill something tremendous what was Kipps to do? |
39162 | If you''re calling here, what name please? |
39162 | In a little while Kipps was amazed to find Ann and himself at this:"You r''ember that half sixpence? |
39162 | In which case, would n''t he have to be presented at Court? |
39162 | Incredible? |
39162 | It seemed incredible now, and yet not wholly incredible, that he had cried real tears for her-- how many years was it ago? |
39162 | It''s in that bookcase.... Wo n''t you sit down?" |
39162 | Jolly, of course, in a way, but what does it lead to?... |
39162 | Just at the end Sid had said to him,"Seen Ann?" |
39162 | Kipps asked a little weakly,"What am I to do?" |
39162 | Kipps?" |
39162 | Kipps?" |
39162 | Kipps?" |
39162 | Kipps?" |
39162 | Kipps?" |
39162 | Kipps?" |
39162 | Kipps?" |
39162 | Kneeling and bowing, and what was it Miss Mergle used to talk about? |
39162 | Lady, I guess, of a superior social position?" |
39162 | Make a row? |
39162 | Masterman says----""Oo''s Masterman?" |
39162 | Millionnaires?... |
39162 | Miss Walshingham, do you care for me at all?" |
39162 | My wretches are big enough, Heaven knows, and do they work? |
39162 | No doubt this was seeing life, but had he particularly wanted to see life that day? |
39162 | Not Toosday?" |
39162 | Nothing more to- day, mum? |
39162 | Old Methusaleh four stars-- and where_ are_ you? |
39162 | Once indeed old Kipps, anxious to get away from this dangerous subject of removals, began:"And what are you a- doin''of in Folkestone? |
39162 | One book''s very like another-- after all, what is it? |
39162 | Oo cares?" |
39162 | Or had some insane fancy whirled him hither? |
39162 | Or is it smells''e says? |
39162 | Or seven eight nine? |
39162 | Or, was it Cuyp? |
39162 | Over a thousand a year made him an Esquire, did n''t it? |
39162 | Refuse to pay? |
39162 | Said Kipps one day,"_ As_''e?--I should say, ah-- Has''e? |
39162 | See? |
39162 | See? |
39162 | See? |
39162 | See? |
39162 | See? |
39162 | See? |
39162 | See? |
39162 | See? |
39162 | See? |
39162 | See? |
39162 | See? |
39162 | See? |
39162 | See?" |
39162 | See?" |
39162 | See?" |
39162 | See?" |
39162 | See?" |
39162 | She said-- what_ was_ it she said about her mother? |
39162 | She was afraid he would marry beneath him,_ was_ she? |
39162 | Shirt?... |
39162 | Shy the rest of the bombe at them? |
39162 | Simply repeated his point? |
39162 | Suppose for once he overrode what she said? |
39162 | Suppose it came to me, what should I do? |
39162 | That do n''t leave much time for meeting, does it?" |
39162 | That is n''t one of my collars there, is it? |
39162 | That outporter''s truck there is horrid-- and the railings, but it''s better than staring one''s social replica in the face, is n''t it? |
39162 | That"Arthur Waddy or Arthur Kipps"--did that imply two persons or one? |
39162 | Then he reiterated firmly,"_ What_ chap Kipps?" |
39162 | Then we''ll''ave a bit of tea, with tea cake-- all buttery, see? |
39162 | They asked curiously all he had done and he said,"Well, what do_ you_ think?" |
39162 | They own machinery, they have knowledge and instruments and powers beyond all previous dreaming, and what are they doing with them? |
39162 | Under the circumstances----? |
39162 | Was it, for example, the correct hour? |
39162 | What brings_ you_ up?" |
39162 | What can you expect from such ridiculous conditions? |
39162 | What could he say to explain his absence from the Anagram Tea? |
39162 | What could you expect? |
39162 | What d''you mean?" |
39162 | What do I mean by that_ or_, eh?--d''ye know?" |
39162 | What does it usually mean? |
39162 | What else can we expect?" |
39162 | What had possessed him? |
39162 | What have_ I_ had? |
39162 | What makes Mr. Coote add an S to Cuyp?" |
39162 | What next?... |
39162 | What price Harry now? |
39162 | What use is a''all? |
39162 | What was the matter with Ann? |
39162 | What wealth is there left in the world after one has paid out a hundred pounds from it? |
39162 | What would n''t they think he had been up to? |
39162 | What would she do? |
39162 | What you cut for me?" |
39162 | What you got a portmanty for? |
39162 | What''s he a- doing of now?" |
39162 | What''s that you got there? |
39162 | What_ is_ Wealth? |
39162 | Whatever''s brought_ you_''ome?" |
39162 | When o''Bean, the solicitor, told me of it, you could''ave knocked me down----""_''Ow_ much?" |
39162 | When you first got your money, you thought that it meant you might buy just anything you fancied?" |
39162 | Where are you staying in Folkestone?" |
39162 | Where are your gentlemen? |
39162 | Where are your nobles now? |
39162 | Where does little Harry come in? |
39162 | Where is it now? |
39162 | Which''ll you have?" |
39162 | Who cares? |
39162 | Who could respect him?... |
39162 | Who was Waddy?" |
39162 | Who''d''ave thought of my ever''aving any money?" |
39162 | Who''s going to respect laws and customs when they come to damn silliness like that?" |
39162 | Who''s going to work and care in a muddle like this? |
39162 | Who''s the fortunate lady?" |
39162 | Why do n''t you? |
39162 | Why had he done it? |
39162 | Why had n''t he gone at ten? |
39162 | Why should n''t they talk together? |
39162 | Why were they all trying to make him one of themselves? |
39162 | Why,''ow long must it be? |
39162 | Will you come?..." |
39162 | Will you smoke?" |
39162 | Wot''ave_ I_ done to get two fousand pounds, Ann?" |
39162 | Would she cut him? |
39162 | Ye know I got a lot of difficulty over them two words, which is which?" |
39162 | Yet what noise is fainter than your finger on the window-- gently done? |
39162 | You ai n''t_ really_ lost your place,''ave you?" |
39162 | You did n''t ought to''ave----""I did n''t say I_''ad_,"he interrupted,"did I, Ann?" |
39162 | You do n''t think----? |
39162 | You going''ome?" |
39162 | You remember what you said about a butterfly? |
39162 | You''ll come''round, eh?" |
39162 | You''re sure it''s not too tight?" |
39162 | _ Has_''e? |
39162 | _ See?_""In London?" |
39162 | _ See?_""In London?" |
39162 | _ Servants_, eh? |
39162 | _ we_ do n''t mind,"said Pierce cordially,"the more the merrier,"and,"why do n''t you get a chair, Buggins?" |
39162 | after my father''s death? |
39162 | and not be able''ardly to go into my own kitchen?" |
39162 | cried Sid;"spending the millions?" |
39162 | do y''r think_ you_''ll ever be able to write London orders?" |
39162 | said Kipps,"not a Natheist?" |
39162 | said Kipps;"what young woman?" |
39162 | she said, and then,"you got yours, Artie?" |
39162 | silk net as per patts herewith'':_ ea._, eh?" |
39162 | under your bed?"... |
39162 | where did you get to?" |
30855 | ''Ow_ can_ you, sir? |
30855 | ? |
30855 | A hundred? |
30855 | After the board? |
30855 | All right? |
30855 | Altogether? |
30855 | And did she? |
30855 | And have n''t we provided it,_ damn_ them? |
30855 | And if we look in-- shall we see hosts and regiments of mushrooms? 30855 And is that Eleanor now or Ellen or-- is there any other name that gives one Ella? |
30855 | And of whom are you going to enquire? |
30855 | And she is dead? |
30855 | And what is it exactly that is to take the place of these isolated little homes and these dreary little lodgings? 30855 And what may that be?" |
30855 | And what shall we do when we get there? |
30855 | Are n''t I always at your service? |
30855 | Are n''t they all rather surprised? |
30855 | Are you thinking of any new branches, Isaac? |
30855 | Are you_ George_ Brumley? |
30855 | Besides,said Mrs. Pembrose,"what else can one do?" |
30855 | Bull mastiff? |
30855 | But I do n''t like to think----Aren''t Great Men after all-- great? |
30855 | But Susan----You do n''t mean that anyone, anyone who''s really honest-- might get into trouble? |
30855 | But ca n''t I see her-- just for a moment? |
30855 | But could n''t he have got work again-- as a baker? |
30855 | But did she call on me? |
30855 | But did you see Sir Isaac? |
30855 | But does n''t it distress you highly, Mr. Brumley,one of the Perth ladies asked,"to be leaving Euphemia''s Home to strangers? |
30855 | But how much do the girls get a week? |
30855 | But how old are the girls they send out? |
30855 | But how, Lady Harman? 30855 But how?" |
30855 | But how? |
30855 | But how_ could_ such a thing have happened? |
30855 | But if no one found out,said Lady Harman,"how do you know?" |
30855 | But surely; is n''t his name enough? |
30855 | But was n''t it wretched in prison? 30855 But what are you going to do with this house?" |
30855 | But what do they do? |
30855 | But what do you mean, Isaac? |
30855 | But what should I have to do? |
30855 | But what, Mr. Brumley, what is to become of the landladies? |
30855 | But where can I escape? |
30855 | But where''s she gone, Snagsby? |
30855 | But where,asked Lady Harman,"could such a thing be done?" |
30855 | But where? 30855 But where?" |
30855 | But why did n''t you come to me? |
30855 | But why? |
30855 | But you, Susan? |
30855 | But,protested Mr. Brumley,"would men marry under those conditions?" |
30855 | But,said Lady Harman slowly, not advancing and pointing incredulously at the unwinking stare that met her own,"is he dead? |
30855 | But,she asked,"have n''t they always mattered?" |
30855 | But-- what are you going to do? |
30855 | But-- what can you do? |
30855 | But-- when will she be at home? |
30855 | Ca n''t we talk about it to Mrs. Pembrose? 30855 Can you suppose for a moment that these things conduce to self- control, to reserve, to consistency, to any of the qualities of a trustworthy man?... |
30855 | Chasing you? 30855 Could n''t you,"he said at last,"go somewhere?" |
30855 | Dead? |
30855 | Did n''t I say they were? |
30855 | Did she talk to you? |
30855 | Do n''t you see what''s the matter? |
30855 | Do n''t you? |
30855 | Do n''t you_ know_? |
30855 | Do you mind,she asked abruptly,"if I smoke?" |
30855 | Do you really think----? |
30855 | Do you think,she asked in a small voice and with the hesitation of one whom no refusal can surprise;"you could give me a cup of tea?" |
30855 | Do you understand nothing of_ love_? |
30855 | Do you understand, Agatha? 30855 Do you want him at once?" |
30855 | Eh? |
30855 | Est- il mauvais? |
30855 | Everything all right, Snagsby? |
30855 | Father''s inquest? |
30855 | Gone? |
30855 | Got a kiss for me, Elly? |
30855 | Have I ever refused you money? |
30855 | Have you been interested in this building? |
30855 | Have you found that work yet? |
30855 | He haggles? |
30855 | He''s-- hard? |
30855 | Health? |
30855 | Here they are, you see, right and ready,said Sir Isaac, and then with an inspiration,"Got any tea for us, Snagsby?" |
30855 | Here,said Sir Isaac,"ca n''t I get off? |
30855 | How are you feeling this afternoon? |
30855 | How can one suddenly turn on a friend? |
30855 | How could such a thing have come about? |
30855 | How did that chap get in? |
30855 | How do you know? |
30855 | How far,he asked,"is it from the nearest railway station?..." |
30855 | How many were there of you altogether? |
30855 | How_ does_ one sell jewels? |
30855 | I ask you what''s my business got to do with you? 30855 I suppose you do n''t know,"she began, addressing Susan''s industrious back;"you do n''t know who-- who owns these International Stores?" |
30855 | I suppose,she said,"you''ve come to see over the place?" |
30855 | I thought,he said after a silent scrutiny, and left her to imagine what he had thought...."But,"he urged to her protracted silence,"you_ care_?" |
30855 | I-- I suppose it''s all Right, dear, now? |
30855 | I----Are you looking at the house? |
30855 | If I want things done? 30855 If she wo n''t?" |
30855 | In any case? |
30855 | Into-- I do n''t quite understand-- what business? |
30855 | Is Sir Isaac----? |
30855 | Is a wife to be on no better footing than a daughter? 30855 Is anything the matter?" |
30855 | Is dear Sir Isaac at home? |
30855 | Is n''t it bad for them? |
30855 | Is n''t there a paper,she asked,"called the_ London Lion_?" |
30855 | Is she beautiful? |
30855 | Is that all you want me to do? |
30855 | Is that_ the_ Agatha Alimony? |
30855 | Is there----Is there someone else? |
30855 | Is this Black Strands? |
30855 | Is this likely to be a good thing at all? |
30855 | Isaac!--where are we going? |
30855 | It''s all right, is n''t it? |
30855 | It''s disheartening, is n''t it? |
30855 | Just take this paper to Mrs. Sawbridge,he said,"and ask her what she thinks of it?" |
30855 | Lady Beach- Mandarin called here----"But when? |
30855 | Lady Harman back yet? |
30855 | Lady Harman,_ what_ has he explained? |
30855 | Lady Harman? |
30855 | Morally? |
30855 | Mr. Brumley, is there a Tube station near here? |
30855 | Mr. Brumley,she said, looking up at him,"have you no thought for our Hostels?" |
30855 | Must we start at once, Clarence? |
30855 | My favourite flower? |
30855 | NO? |
30855 | Neo----? |
30855 | Now how long is that really? |
30855 | Now? |
30855 | Now_ where_? |
30855 | Or perhaps a Thoroughly Vicious collie? |
30855 | Perhaps you know my little Euphemia books? 30855 Pretty?" |
30855 | See Sir Isaac? |
30855 | Shall I place the tea- things in the garden, me lady? |
30855 | Shall I telegraph? |
30855 | She''s been here? |
30855 | Sir Isaac Harman? |
30855 | Sir Isaac? |
30855 | Sir Isaac? |
30855 | Someone else on my side? |
30855 | Someone else? |
30855 | Something,he said, and his face was deadly white--"_Some other man, Elly?_"She was suddenly crimson, a flaming indignation. |
30855 | Taxi, milady? |
30855 | Then he''s not the conventional vulgarian? |
30855 | Then they_ are_ my hostels? |
30855 | Then why did you come here to ask me about it? |
30855 | There is n''t a man? |
30855 | These are Awful questions,he gasped,"rather beyond Us do n''t you think?" |
30855 | This is Black Strands? |
30855 | Waiter,he said,"how do the trains run from here to Putney?" |
30855 | Well,cried Sir Isaac,"why in goodness could n''t you tell me that before, Elly? |
30855 | Well,--it''s your theory, you know-- bad characters? |
30855 | What about? |
30855 | What are you going to do with me then? |
30855 | What can make you think----? |
30855 | What could one infer about a wife from a man like that? 30855 What did you say, Isaac?" |
30855 | What do such things matter,he cried,"when a man is in love?" |
30855 | What do you mean to do? |
30855 | What do you mean? |
30855 | What do you suspect? 30855 What do you think you can do, Lady Harman? |
30855 | What else could they be? |
30855 | What ever d''you mean,he cried,"by making a fool of me in front of those fellers?... |
30855 | What exactly has Georgina done? |
30855 | What had he got to say to you? |
30855 | What have I_ done_? |
30855 | What is it, Isaac? |
30855 | What right have you to open my letter? |
30855 | What the Devil do you mean,he cried,"by chasing me all round the garden?" |
30855 | What the_ devil_? |
30855 | What trouble? |
30855 | What was father to_ do_? |
30855 | What who want? |
30855 | What you been thinking about, Elly,he asked,"subscribing to_ that_ thing?" |
30855 | What''s this? 30855 What, dear?" |
30855 | What? |
30855 | Where have I seen our friend to the left before? |
30855 | Where have you been? |
30855 | Where the devil you been? 30855 Where you been?" |
30855 | Where you been? |
30855 | Where''s Ellen gone? |
30855 | Where''s she got to? 30855 Where?" |
30855 | Who''s going to watch you? 30855 Why is n''t she back?" |
30855 | Why not make Hostels, Lady Harman, for married couples? 30855 Why?" |
30855 | Will you be going back, sir? |
30855 | With_ her_? |
30855 | Wo n''t_ you_ come on our Committee? |
30855 | Yes,he expostulated;"but these Hostels, these Hostels.... We''ve started them-- isn''t that good enough? |
30855 | Yes,said Susan after various explanations and exhibitions,"but where''s the home in it?" |
30855 | You ca n''t? |
30855 | You go to meetings, and try to get to the bottom of Movements, and you want to meet and know the people who write the wonderful things? 30855 You have n''t called?" |
30855 | You know what we are doing? |
30855 | You mean? |
30855 | You really think you would like us to have that house? |
30855 | You think it is likely to answer? |
30855 | You''re sure I can do nothing for you, mummy? |
30855 | You''ve known her a long time? |
30855 | You''ve not made her----? |
30855 | You''ve not taken a house? |
30855 | You''ve seen her again? |
30855 | You-- you write----the lady stopped, and then diverted a question that she perhaps considered too blunt,"there?" |
30855 | Your trouble with your waitresses is over, Sir Isaac? |
30855 | _ Did_ she? |
30855 | _ Dum----? 30855 _ How?_"he asked compactly. |
30855 | _ See?_he said. |
30855 | _ Still?_"No one better,said Mr. Brumley. |
30855 | _ What''s_ beautiful? |
30855 | _ What''s_ noble? 30855 _ What?_"he asked sharply. |
30855 | _ You''ll_ take a cup of tea? |
30855 | ( She was standing behind Mr. Brumley so that he could not see her but-- did their eyes meet?) |
30855 | ( Should he ask for credit? |
30855 | ("Now where are we going out to lunch?" |
30855 | (_ Why should n''t she?_ It would no doubt make Sir Isaac furiously angry-- if he heard of it. |
30855 | A birthday present of all presents is surely one''s very own? |
30855 | A man perhaps? |
30855 | After all, did n''t she owe obedience? |
30855 | All my life is comic-- the story of this-- this last absurdity could it make anything but a comic history? |
30855 | All round the garden?" |
30855 | And an infrequent service? |
30855 | And as for Harman----? |
30855 | And as for the articles themselves, what became of them? |
30855 | And besides, from whom could she borrow?... |
30855 | And had he ever had his desire or his hope, or felt the intensities of life? |
30855 | And he''s giving up the Academic Committee, is he? |
30855 | And if you''re going to have a lot of friends I have n''t got, where''re they coming to see you? |
30855 | And she was all in a flurry for going on.... Did you come down, Mr. Brumley, to see if Lady Harman was ill?" |
30855 | And then blushing vividly:"I''ve got lots of_ things_.... Susan, have you ever pawned anything?" |
30855 | And then with an air of being meticulously explicit,"I mean, is n''t there somewhere, where you might safely go?" |
30855 | And what''s this?" |
30855 | And when I tell him you are here he will want to see you.... You will come up and see him?" |
30855 | And who more worthy of patronage than William Shakespear? |
30855 | And why had she let it happen? |
30855 | And_ how_ is dear Lady Harman?" |
30855 | Are these watchers and trackers sometimes driven to buying things in shops? |
30855 | Bit more sensible than suffragetting, eh, Elly?" |
30855 | Blenker?" |
30855 | Brumley?" |
30855 | Brumley?" |
30855 | Brumley?" |
30855 | Brumley?" |
30855 | Brumley?" |
30855 | But I can hardly expect you to be interested in my troubles, can I?" |
30855 | But I do so wish----Have you seen those great borders at Hampton Court? |
30855 | But all the same,--though they''re mine,--_still_----Why should n''t a woman have work in the world, Mr. Brumley? |
30855 | But ca n''t I perhaps take you in a taxi?" |
30855 | But if I''m to advise----If my advice is to be worth anything....""Yes?" |
30855 | But if these things were not real, what was real? |
30855 | But it was the sort of thing other women of her class did; did n''t all the novels testify? |
30855 | But need ours be?" |
30855 | But that do n''t account for your being out to eight, does it? |
30855 | But the benefits were plain enough, space, light, baths, association, reasonable recreations, opportunities for improvement----"But freedom?" |
30855 | But then,----the Hostels?... |
30855 | But what could you have expected?" |
30855 | But what hope was there of her? |
30855 | But where-- where did he keep them?... |
30855 | Byzantine, with the gold of life stolen and the swans changed to geese? |
30855 | Ca n''t we carry her off right away, Mr. Brumley? |
30855 | Can a woman stay alone at an hotel? |
30855 | Could Isaac be going mad? |
30855 | Could Mr. Brumley give her that? |
30855 | Could anyone else have helped him? |
30855 | Could it be he was in pain again? |
30855 | Could it be that that hood really concealed her? |
30855 | Could it be?... |
30855 | Could n''t you come next Saturday afternoon? |
30855 | Could she have helped him? |
30855 | Could they guess? |
30855 | Did he mean to attempt-- Petruchio? |
30855 | Did n''t she in fact owe him the whole marriage service contract? |
30855 | Did n''t she owe him a subordinate''s co- operation? |
30855 | Did n''t you see him too, Susan?" |
30855 | Did she in any way_ look_--as though----?" |
30855 | Did she? |
30855 | Did they guess? |
30855 | Did you know he had mistresses? |
30855 | Do jewellers buy jewels as well as sell them? |
30855 | Do n''t you know, Lady Harman, that it''s your wifely duty to obey, to do as I say, to behave as I wish?" |
30855 | Do n''t you know, have n''t you an idea? |
30855 | Do n''t you think so?" |
30855 | Do n''t you_ see_?... |
30855 | Do you know, dear, I really think-- if I were to go for a little time to Bournemouth----?" |
30855 | Do you mind?" |
30855 | Does one send to the papers? |
30855 | During that time had he ever talked to a girl or woman with an unembarrassed sincerity? |
30855 | Eh? |
30855 | Eh? |
30855 | Empty? |
30855 | Get at the wonderful core of it?" |
30855 | H''m.... And what sort of people do we get about here?" |
30855 | Had he after all rather overloaded his memory of her real self with imaginative accessories? |
30855 | Had he anything to put beside her own fine detachment? |
30855 | Had he ever said or thought any really sweet or tender thing-- even about her? |
30855 | Had he ever suspected how alien? |
30855 | Had it ever been? |
30855 | Had she really understood what he had been saying to her in the garden? |
30855 | Have n''t you any idea at all?" |
30855 | Have n''t you seen him? |
30855 | Have you read Gissing''s_ Paying Guest_?..." |
30855 | Have you seen them? |
30855 | He perceived now with the astonishment of a man newly awakened just how the great obsession of sex had dominated him-- for how many years? |
30855 | He was really astonished,"Your_ own_?" |
30855 | He went and rapped at her door but after one muffled"Who''s that?" |
30855 | He went to his desk and wrote:--"_ My Dear, I want you to marry me._"What more was to be said? |
30855 | He----How can you imagine, Isaac----? |
30855 | How after all was she going to do things, with not a penny in the world to do them with? |
30855 | How can I be associated with that? |
30855 | How can anyone hope to escape? |
30855 | How can you_ ask_ me such a thing?" |
30855 | How can_ you_ tell what''s right and what is n''t right? |
30855 | How could he deny his complicity? |
30855 | How does one send to the papers? |
30855 | How far would he follow her and was it possible to shake him off? |
30855 | How long was it absolutely necessary for people to keep a home together for their children? |
30855 | How the Devil was I to get away, once she was through the verandah? |
30855 | How was father to know?..." |
30855 | How was_ he_ to know? |
30855 | How?" |
30855 | I am not in the least sorrowful or helpless...."But,"said Mr. Brumley,"are you so free?" |
30855 | I do n''t know if you found that in Venice?" |
30855 | I suppose there are n''t any_ literary_ people about here, musicians or that kind of thing, no advanced people of that sort?" |
30855 | I suppose you come a great deal into London, Lady Harman?" |
30855 | I suppose----Wouldn''t it be sometimes kinder if you took over the old shop-- made a sort of partner of him, or something?" |
30855 | If I want things altered?" |
30855 | If I was n''t in the garden, then where the Devil was I? |
30855 | If a certain separation from Mr. Brumley''s assiduous aid was demanded, was it too great a sacrifice? |
30855 | If he bought those socks, would they appear in Sir Isaac''s bill? |
30855 | If she gave way to this outrageous restriction to- day, what fresh limitations might not Sir Isaac impose to- morrow? |
30855 | If she went up and down on this, she wanted to know what he would do, would he run up and down the fixed flight? |
30855 | If you would care----?" |
30855 | In 1899 nobody would have dreamt of asking and in 1909 even Mr. Brumley was asking,"Are things going on much longer?" |
30855 | Is he really dead? |
30855 | Is there no way----?" |
30855 | It would include Mrs. Pembrose.... Do n''t you see what would happen? |
30855 | It''s a house on Putney Hill, is n''t it, where this Christian maiden, so to speak, is held captive? |
30855 | It''s good- bye-- and why-- why should n''t I go now?" |
30855 | It''s the home that we are going to alter and replace-- and what is it like?" |
30855 | Lady Harman heard a large aside to Lady Viping:"Is n''t she perfectly lovely?" |
30855 | Like that?" |
30855 | Many rooms are there?" |
30855 | May I enquire into it for you? |
30855 | Meanwhile? |
30855 | Might I borrow half a sovereign?" |
30855 | Might it be possible after dark to approach the house? |
30855 | Might she not at least have saved him his suspicion? |
30855 | More than you do for your husband?..." |
30855 | Mr. Brumley appeared attentive and then he said again:"But where have I seen him?" |
30855 | Mr. Brumley, what has a married woman to do with love? |
30855 | Natural for your sister, but why should you? |
30855 | No officers about?... |
30855 | Nothing in any way suburban? |
30855 | Nothing nearer than Aldershot.... That''s eleven miles, is it? |
30855 | Once at least he must have loved her? |
30855 | Only, why should I pretend? |
30855 | See? |
30855 | See? |
30855 | See? |
30855 | See? |
30855 | See? |
30855 | See?" |
30855 | See?" |
30855 | She had never realized before that he was pitiful.... Had she perhaps feared him too much, disliked him too much to deal fairly with him? |
30855 | She knew his address? |
30855 | She''s just a human, kindly little woman.... She''ll feel disgraced.... How can I let a thing like that occur?" |
30855 | Should he go in a state of virile resolution, force her hesitation as a man should? |
30855 | Should he still be formal, still write to"Dear Lady Harman,"or suddenly break into a new warmth? |
30855 | Should he write to her forthwith? |
30855 | Should she speak to him at the end of dinner? |
30855 | Should she speak to him while Snagsby was in the room? |
30855 | Should she still let the lawyer come out? |
30855 | Simply Ella?" |
30855 | So will you take me and put me in a green chair and-- tell me how afterwards I can find the Tube and get home? |
30855 | Some man that you care for? |
30855 | Something within herself seemed to answer,"But did n''t you know this all along?" |
30855 | Surely she must have understood----"But the waitress strike-- what has it got to do with the waitress strike?" |
30855 | Tell me, tell me exactly,_ why_ have you run away? |
30855 | That question originally put in Paradise,"Why should n''t we?" |
30855 | That roof,--a gardener''s cottage?... |
30855 | The bill was five shillings( Should he dispute it? |
30855 | The very under- housemaids were saying:"Where_ ever_ can her ladyship''ave got to?" |
30855 | There is n''t something been going on that I do n''t know?" |
30855 | There''s social work, there''s interests----Am I never to take any part-- in that?" |
30855 | Think_ I_''ve had no temptations?... |
30855 | This friendship has been going on----How can I end it suddenly?" |
30855 | To take some odd trunks with her, meet him somewhere, travel, travel through the evening, travel past nightfall? |
30855 | Was Lady Beach- Mandarin implicated? |
30855 | Was all this world a mere make- believe, and would Miss Beeton Clavier and every one about her presently cast aside a veil? |
30855 | Was anyone? |
30855 | Was death perhaps no more than the flinging off of grotesque outer garments by the newly arrived guests at the feast of living? |
30855 | Was he a married man? |
30855 | Was he very much away from home? |
30855 | Was it conceivable he would carry sacrifice to such a pitch as that?... |
30855 | Was it impossible to do that by going back to the front door of Black Strand? |
30855 | Was it perhaps in other planets, under those wonderful, many- mooned, silver- banded skies? |
30855 | Was n''t it her business to study out- of- the- way types? |
30855 | Was n''t it miserably cold? |
30855 | Was that impropriety? |
30855 | Was that perhaps it? |
30855 | Was that violence? |
30855 | Was there anything she could have done that she had not done? |
30855 | We''ve set them going....""Do you know,"she asked,"what would happen to the hostels if I were to marry?" |
30855 | Were there ever disputes about his expenses?... |
30855 | What after all did he get for it?... |
30855 | What am I that I should expect to be anything but a thwarted lover, a man mocked by his own attempts at service? |
30855 | What are people-- what are women tied up in such a way to do?" |
30855 | What becomes of the people if they do get hurt?" |
30855 | What could it be like? |
30855 | What could the man mean about unscheduled crime? |
30855 | What did he earn? |
30855 | What did he really think of these places? |
30855 | What did he think of Susan Burnet''s idea of ruined lodging- house keepers? |
30855 | What do you mean by it?" |
30855 | What do you mean? |
30855 | What do you think? |
30855 | What do_ you_ know of the rights and wrongs of business? |
30855 | What does one have to do when one''s husband is dead? |
30855 | What does one marry a wife for? |
30855 | What else can you do? |
30855 | What else in honour was there but to be a wife up to the hilt?... |
30855 | What else was there to do but be patient? |
30855 | What girl''s going to feel at home in a strange place like that?" |
30855 | What had he decided so far? |
30855 | What had you thought?" |
30855 | What honest over- nurse was there for him or helper and guide and friend for them, if she withdrew? |
30855 | What is to become of them? |
30855 | What might n''t he do next? |
30855 | What might she not presently be? |
30855 | What might she not presently do? |
30855 | What more was to be said or thought about it? |
30855 | What ought to be the marriageable age in a civilized community? |
30855 | What possible divorce law could the wit of man devise that would release a desired woman from that-- grip? |
30855 | What should she do to- morrow? |
30855 | What the deuce do you think you''ve been getting up to?" |
30855 | What was it? |
30855 | What was it? |
30855 | What was she thinking of? |
30855 | What was she, what did she know of the world into which she wanted to rush? |
30855 | What was the matter with him? |
30855 | What was there in Byzantium to parallel with the electric light, the electric tram, wireless telegraphy, aseptic surgery? |
30855 | What would he do to- morrow? |
30855 | What''s autonomy? |
30855 | What''s been putting ideers into your head? |
30855 | What''s life or anything but that? |
30855 | What''s my business got to do with you?" |
30855 | What''s the matter with you, Elly? |
30855 | What''s this other thing here? |
30855 | Where could they go if they struck? |
30855 | Where else could I be? |
30855 | Where else_ could_ I be?" |
30855 | Where had she got to? |
30855 | Where the devil----?" |
30855 | Where''s she gone? |
30855 | Where?" |
30855 | Who was she to turn upon her appointed life and declare it was n''t good enough? |
30855 | Why had she come back again? |
30855 | Why had she let it happen? |
30855 | Why had she not done as much years ago? |
30855 | Why not? |
30855 | Why not?" |
30855 | Why should I escape? |
30855 | Why should I expect to discover beauty and think that it wo n''t be snatched away from me? |
30855 | Why should n''t he? |
30855 | Why should n''t some of us this very afternoon----?" |
30855 | Why should she want to go away from her husband, go meeting other people, go gadding about? |
30855 | Why should you want to go out after things? |
30855 | Why, after all, should n''t she take life as she found it, that is to say, as Sir Isaac was prepared to give it to her? |
30855 | Within her pretty head, her mind rushed to and fro saying"Brumley? |
30855 | Would Mr. Brumley give her that? |
30855 | Would he have to be embalmed? |
30855 | Would he never be human and passionate and sincere? |
30855 | Would he speak to her at breakfast or should she speak first to him?... |
30855 | Would he try to watch them all? |
30855 | Yet what other wall in all the world was there for Lady Harman to set her back against? |
30855 | You follow all this, Lady Harman?" |
30855 | You said something?" |
30855 | You''re going to all these places-- how? |
30855 | You''re sure, Mr. Brumley, I''m not invading your time?" |
30855 | _ I!_ How can you dare? |
30855 | _ That''s_ a curious side development, is n''t it?" |
30855 | _ That_--that which you spoke of; what has it to do with me?" |
30855 | are you wise? |
30855 | asked Mr. Brumley,"and how?" |
30855 | he blundered,"you aren''t-- you are n''t getting somehow-- not fond of me?" |
30855 | he cried,"what have I done? |
30855 | he said,"is n''t it?"... |
30855 | in clear commanding tones whenever you suppose her to be within earshot? |
30855 | my lady?" |
30855 | or"What ails Portsmouth?" |
30855 | she asked,--"_the_ George Brumley?" |
30855 | she said,"what do you_ mean_? |
30855 | she said,"you do n''t mean you''ve run away?" |
30855 | there is n''t something below all this? |
30855 | what words are there for"taken worse"? |
11870 | ''And next?'' 11870 ''Next?'' |
11870 | ''No,''he said;''but----''''Why can not you leave me alone? |
11870 | ''No?'' 11870 ''What have I to do with these things now?'' |
11870 | Aluminium? |
11870 | And are you really going? |
11870 | And did you dream again? |
11870 | And it does-- twice? |
11870 | And it goes twice? |
11870 | And that was the end? |
11870 | And the orchid? |
11870 | And then he will be sane? |
11870 | And then? |
11870 | And then? |
11870 | And then? |
11870 | And they carried guns? |
11870 | And they sting? |
11870 | And which way do I go? |
11870 | And you are ready to go? |
11870 | And you have come into the world? |
11870 | And you really think such a thing_ is_ possible? |
11870 | And you''ve been happy ever after, eh? |
11870 | And you? |
11870 | Any luggage, sir? |
11870 | Anything amusing? |
11870 | Anything new? 11870 Are these the things collected by that poor young fellow you told me of the other day?" |
11870 | Are these-- alive? 11870 Bellows,"he said,"is that you?" |
11870 | But I should have thought an aeroplane? |
11870 | But how do they form new plants? |
11870 | But is such a thing possible? |
11870 | But what else was there to_ do?_he cried. |
11870 | But why me in particular? |
11870 | Butcher-- Butcher? |
11870 | Ca n''t I do anything for you? |
11870 | Ca n''t you see it''s me? |
11870 | Ca n''t you speak? |
11870 | Capo,he said,"have you your glasses? |
11870 | Cones? |
11870 | Davidson,said I,"what on earth''s come over you?" |
11870 | Dear me, Jane, did you? 11870 Dere is one thing we can do,"he said presently,"What''s that?" |
11870 | Did I do that myself in a flash of absent- mindedness? |
11870 | Did the fellows-- make it disagreeable? |
11870 | Did the little missionary come back? |
11870 | Did you call me a fool? |
11870 | Did you ever play North- West Passage with me?... 11870 Did you hear that--_ Bogota_? |
11870 | Did you see dat? |
11870 | Did you-- by any chance-- see his face? |
11870 | Died? |
11870 | Do something with''em... Did you think it was a treat? |
11870 | Do you ever dream? 11870 Do you mean--?" |
11870 | Do you notice the horses? |
11870 | Do you think I have n''t seen that? |
11870 | Do you think it is wise, Jane? |
11870 | Do you think she lives there now? |
11870 | Do you want me to criticise these plays? |
11870 | Do_ we_ come in the way? 11870 Dreams?" |
11870 | Eh? |
11870 | Eh? |
11870 | Eh? |
11870 | Eigh? |
11870 | Eigh? |
11870 | Even now--"The dream is always the same-- do you mean? |
11870 | Fail me? |
11870 | Funny case, was n''t it? 11870 George,"she said in an awe- stricken whisper,"did you see?" |
11870 | Gibberne,I cried,"how long will this confounded stuff last?" |
11870 | Got it? |
11870 | Had I anything in my hand when I spoke to you, dear, just now? |
11870 | Has God got Hell up his sleeve then? |
11870 | Has any one finished number three? |
11870 | Has no one told you,''In the Country of the Blind the One- eyed Man is King''? |
11870 | Have I got that right? |
11870 | Have I not served my Lord? |
11870 | Have you been telling Mr. Raut of all these contrasts of flame and shadow you think so splendid? |
11870 | Have you ever seen a curtain before a window fixed in that way before? |
11870 | Have you heard? |
11870 | Have you lost your wits? |
11870 | He does not suspect? |
11870 | Heard what? |
11870 | Help me to sit down,said he presently;"and now-- I''m sorry to trouble you-- but will you tell me all that over again?" |
11870 | Hid_ what_? |
11870 | His papa, ma''am----"His_ what_, Jane? |
11870 | How about miracles now? |
11870 | How about the others? 11870 How did he die?" |
11870 | How did it happen? |
11870 | How did it taste? |
11870 | How did these men die? |
11870 | How did you do that? |
11870 | How do you know? |
11870 | How do you manage that? |
11870 | How is this Sunday different from all other Sundays, little woman? 11870 How many days?" |
11870 | How much was there of it? |
11870 | How much will that be? |
11870 | How the deuce could you dream that? |
11870 | How the deuce,said I,"are you holding on up there?" |
11870 | How? |
11870 | How? |
11870 | How? |
11870 | I beg your pardon? |
11870 | I could almost swear----"What? |
11870 | I did n''t show any signs, did I, in those days of having a secret dream? |
11870 | I say,I said, in an undertone, and indicating Gip and the red demon with my eyes,"you have n''t many things like_ that_ about, have you?" |
11870 | I suppose it will wear off? |
11870 | I suppose,the pale man said, with a slight smile,''that you scarcely care to have such things about you in the living-- in the active state?" |
11870 | I wonder why? 11870 I''m dreadfully stupid,"said Fanny,"but who_ was_ Bibulus?" |
11870 | I''m not walking fast, am I? |
11870 | I''ve tried it,he said,"and I do n''t look hurt by it, do I? |
11870 | If I were to consent to this? |
11870 | If you had that? |
11870 | If you were a statesman in a corner, for example, time rushing up against you, something urgent to be done, eh? |
11870 | In there? |
11870 | Is n''t it here? |
11870 | Is n''t it? |
11870 | Is n''t there something called consecutive dreaming-- that goes on night after night? |
11870 | Is that a Magic Sword? |
11870 | Is that sort of thing always dreaming? 11870 Is this_ all_?" |
11870 | It do n''t leave much for ambition, does it? |
11870 | It was lively times I tell you? 11870 It''s a little thing in the telling, is n''t it? |
11870 | It''s all a delusion, is it? 11870 Jest stop rotating, will you?" |
11870 | Joshua? |
11870 | Left whom? |
11870 | Legerdemain? |
11870 | Like what? |
11870 | Like--? |
11870 | Living in a different time,I said:"do you mean in some different age?" |
11870 | Locked in? |
11870 | Look at that,said Holroyd;"where''s your''eathen idol to match''i m?" |
11870 | Look here,I said,"who told you about my great- grandmother''s recipes?" |
11870 | May I arst why? |
11870 | May I sit up? |
11870 | Mechanical? 11870 Must you be led like a child? |
11870 | My dear''Olroyd, what am I to do about dese infernal ants? |
11870 | My hat? |
11870 | Nipping your arm off? |
11870 | Not pass me? |
11870 | Not-- surely not the immaculate Hill? |
11870 | Not_ this_? |
11870 | Nothing out of the way? |
11870 | Now,_ what_ affects it? |
11870 | Of course? |
11870 | Orchids? |
11870 | Past? |
11870 | Please, m''m, may I go and see a wedding tomorrow? |
11870 | Poisoned-- by the ants? |
11870 | Put on my shoes? 11870 Really?" |
11870 | See? |
11870 | Sight? |
11870 | Sight? |
11870 | So I said,''could n''t you change it?'' 11870 Something in this way?" |
11870 | Sounds? |
11870 | Steel? |
11870 | Stop a planet in its flight, rob it of its centrifugal force, what then? 11870 Stop jest a moment while I collect my thoughts... And now what shall I do?" |
11870 | Stop there, will you? |
11870 | Suppose so? 11870 Survivors?" |
11870 | Swarm over him? |
11870 | Tell me,I said,"what happened?" |
11870 | That future,he said,"would you in truth change it?" |
11870 | That slide--"Moved? 11870 That you, Pyecraft?" |
11870 | The garden? |
11870 | The girl? |
11870 | The street? 11870 The year three thousand, for example?" |
11870 | Then they march about alone? |
11870 | Then you are engaged to him? |
11870 | There is neither ghost of earl nor ghost of countess in that room, there is no ghost there at all; but worse, far worse----"Well? |
11870 | This seems bosh to you? |
11870 | To open? |
11870 | To the canoe? |
11870 | Try the stuff? |
11870 | Vestiges of daylight? 11870 Was n''t he the person who built the wall?" |
11870 | Was the egg addled? |
11870 | We have got to be-- what do you call it?--entomologie? 11870 We never found the white wall and the green door...""You mean----?" |
11870 | Well... You''ve heard of the AEpyornis? |
11870 | Well? |
11870 | Well? |
11870 | Well? |
11870 | Well? |
11870 | Well? |
11870 | Well? |
11870 | Well? |
11870 | Well? |
11870 | Well? |
11870 | Well? |
11870 | Well? |
11870 | Well? |
11870 | What are you dewin''with that switch? |
11870 | What can it mean to them? |
11870 | What can one_ do?_he murmured, and turned over and was still again. |
11870 | What can we have the pleasure? |
11870 | What d''yer do it for then? |
11870 | What d''yer mean by it? |
11870 | What do you keep on posing for? |
11870 | What do you mean? |
11870 | What does it matter? |
11870 | What if I die under it? |
11870 | What in Heaven''s name, Pyecraft,I asked,"do you think you''ll look like when you get thin?" |
11870 | What inducement has he? |
11870 | What is a new star to me? |
11870 | What is blind? |
11870 | What is it, Gip? |
11870 | What is it? 11870 What is one to_ do?_"he said, his voice going up to an angry squeak. |
11870 | What is there forward? |
11870 | What is your friend Leonard? |
11870 | What old woman? |
11870 | What shall we have? |
11870 | What the devil''s that? |
11870 | What the goodness am I to_ do?_he said. |
11870 | What was it like? |
11870 | What was that I heard? |
11870 | What was that about''lived in vain''? |
11870 | What was that? |
11870 | What was there to do but flight? 11870 What was you saying behind my back about my playing?" |
11870 | What were, they like? |
11870 | What''s come to it? |
11870 | What''s come to you, Hooker? |
11870 | What''s she got in her''and? |
11870 | What''s the matter with you? |
11870 | What''s the matter with you? |
11870 | What''s the matter? |
11870 | What''s this? |
11870 | What''s up, man? |
11870 | What''s up? |
11870 | What''s up? |
11870 | What''s wrong now? |
11870 | What''s wrong with my playing now? |
11870 | What-- to land? |
11870 | What? |
11870 | What? |
11870 | What? |
11870 | What? |
11870 | What? |
11870 | What_ can_ such people want in Rome? |
11870 | What_ do_ you see? |
11870 | What_ shall_ I do? 11870 What_ was_ it?" |
11870 | What_ was_ that fearful smash? |
11870 | When? |
11870 | Where am I? |
11870 | Where did you go? |
11870 | Where does he come from, brother Pedro? |
11870 | Where is my boy? |
11870 | Where is the trail? |
11870 | Where''s Maydig? 11870 Where''s the recipe?" |
11870 | Where? |
11870 | Which way? |
11870 | Who are you throwing brambles at, you fool? |
11870 | Who knows? |
11870 | Who the juice are you? |
11870 | Who''s been killing calves here? 11870 Whom did you collect for?" |
11870 | Why did you ask five pounds? |
11870 | Why did you not come when I called you? |
11870 | Why do n''t you drink? |
11870 | Why not? 11870 Why not?" |
11870 | Why not? |
11870 | Why not? |
11870 | Why should n''t he? |
11870 | Why should n''t we go out? |
11870 | Why? 11870 Why_ should_ he?" |
11870 | Will you hurt me much? |
11870 | Will you tell me how much all this comes to?... 11870 Wonder who the deuce I am, eh? |
11870 | Yes? |
11870 | Yes? |
11870 | Yes? |
11870 | Yes? |
11870 | You believe now,said the old man,"that the room is haunted?" |
11870 | You did? |
11870 | You do n''t find yourself in doubt: did this happen or did it not? |
11870 | You do n''t mean to say-- eh? |
11870 | You do n''t see a moth on the edge of the table there? |
11870 | You left him? |
11870 | You liked it? |
11870 | You mean? |
11870 | You mean? |
11870 | You say you''ve tried it? |
11870 | You wanted to see me? |
11870 | You were saying,he said, addressing himself to Gip,"before you came in, that you would like one of our''Buy One and Astonish your Friends''boxes?" |
11870 | You will not perhaps mind taking my name, taking my position, but would you indeed-- willingly-- take my years? |
11870 | You wo n''t think I''m mad? |
11870 | You''ll take that box? |
11870 | Your dreams do n''t mix with your memories? |
11870 | _ Did_ he do all this? |
11870 | _ Eigh_? |
11870 | _ Faraglioni_? 11870 _ Is_ there a Hell?" |
11870 | _ Now_? |
11870 | _ What do you mean_? |
11870 | _ You_ do not want me,he said,"to lose my gift of sight?" |
11870 | ''Do n''t you know? |
11870 | ''If I say good- night to them, and go in,''I asked myself,''what will happen?'' |
11870 | ''Poor little chap,''said he;''and are you lost then?'' |
11870 | ''Very well,''I says?? |
11870 | ''Very well,''I says?? |
11870 | ''Well,''I says,''how''s the trade in scissors?'' |
11870 | ''What d''ye take me for? |
11870 | ''What has Gresham been saying?'' |
11870 | ''What''s the matter now?'' |
11870 | ''What?'' |
11870 | ''Who''re ye staring at?'' |
11870 | --or was it Hooker? |
11870 | After all, I thought, this is life-- love and beauty, desire and delight, are they not worth all those dismal struggles for vague, gigantic ends? |
11870 | Ai n''t he a- clawin''out of the keb? |
11870 | Also, they argued, do ants bite or sting? |
11870 | And Gip----? |
11870 | And I have rejected it, Redmond, and it has gone----""How do you know?" |
11870 | And always somewhere in that fat, abundant discourse he will say,"The secret''s keeping, eh? |
11870 | And the result of that attraction? |
11870 | And the size? |
11870 | And then did the pale electric lights near the station cheat the rough planking into a semblance of white? |
11870 | And then to Gip,"Do you see anything you fancy here?" |
11870 | And then,"Fail me? |
11870 | And then? |
11870 | And then? |
11870 | And what do you think''s the matter with me? |
11870 | And what on earth set this wind a- blowing? |
11870 | And what was I? |
11870 | And what''s the writing?" |
11870 | And why not take some of this delightful toadstool with him, for them to eat? |
11870 | And why should they stop at tropical South America? |
11870 | And, besides, why does he keep on eternally eating? |
11870 | And, moreover----? |
11870 | Are they dangerous now?" |
11870 | Are we to run away from these confounded ants whenever they show up?" |
11870 | Are you wearing your hair in a new way without warning me? |
11870 | As beautiful as your scales and all this silver vesture of the earth and sky?" |
11870 | At that he stepped back a pace, and cried out with almost a whimper,"What, in Heaven''s name, has come over me?" |
11870 | But I am always inclined to distrust these philanthropists- on- principle--""Are you quite sure?" |
11870 | But all the same, what on earth did Horrocks mean about"white as death"and"red as sin"? |
11870 | But as for the rest----Where''s the village? |
11870 | But did he see like that? |
11870 | But did it betray him? |
11870 | But do you think----? |
11870 | But how to prove it? |
11870 | But it was a queer thing to happen to a man; was n''t it-- altogether?" |
11870 | But should I let him?" |
11870 | But what was to prevent the ants evolving also? |
11870 | But when did they find these bones?" |
11870 | But, you know, what can you expect? |
11870 | Can not a man seek after righteousness for righteousness''sake?" |
11870 | Can not you hear the path as you walk?" |
11870 | Can you focus as closely as those planks there?" |
11870 | Coincidence, perhaps? |
11870 | Coombes?" |
11870 | Could it see him? |
11870 | Could you do other things besides that?" |
11870 | D''yer know that stick hurt? |
11870 | Did a man near to death begin instinctively to withdraw himself from the meshes of matter and sense, even before the cold hand was laid upon his? |
11870 | Did he ever think of those days in Rome, gone now beyond recalling? |
11870 | Did he like it or did he not? |
11870 | Did he see Holroyd kill himself? |
11870 | Did he, after all, know? |
11870 | Did he, indeed, turn his horse, or did it really of its own accord stampede after its fellow? |
11870 | Did that fatal unfastened door awaken some memory? |
11870 | Did the man mean to take the thing coolly? |
11870 | Did they get any more eggs? |
11870 | Did you ever have Carnaby twist your arm? |
11870 | Did you get those home? |
11870 | Did you like it?" |
11870 | Do they still show children dissolving views? |
11870 | Do you follow me?" |
11870 | Do you happen to know? |
11870 | Do you hear? |
11870 | Do you know what hallucination means?" |
11870 | Do you remember me as a kid at Saint Aethelstan''s?" |
11870 | Do you remember? |
11870 | Do you see the angel with the book?" |
11870 | Do you think I am coquetting with your people in coming here?'' |
11870 | Do you think my clothes are beautiful, dear moth? |
11870 | Domestic?" |
11870 | Down that way-- nothing but pot- banks and chimneys belching fire and dust into the face of heaven... But what does it matter? |
11870 | Eden?" |
11870 | Eh? |
11870 | Eh? |
11870 | Even if Gresham did force the world back to war, what was that to me? |
11870 | Even if you died-- even if you died--''"''Yes?'' |
11870 | For the new miracle of nature may stand in need of a new specific name, and what so convenient as that of its discoverer? |
11870 | Fresh scenes and fresh happenings-- until I came upon the last--""When you died?" |
11870 | Had I been dreaming of Eden overnight? |
11870 | Had I passed out of being into something that was neither being nor not- being? |
11870 | Had he been dull? |
11870 | Had he heard all? |
11870 | Had he just been within an ace of being murdered? |
11870 | Had the bed turned round? |
11870 | Had they heard aright? |
11870 | Have you altered the curtains, or re- arranged the furniture, or where is the indefinable difference of it? |
11870 | Have you ever heard of a dream that had a quality like that?" |
11870 | Have you got it? |
11870 | He broke out in an argumentative monotone:"But why should it be? |
11870 | He hated and resisted these things, but what could he do? |
11870 | He saved your life two minutes before... Why are you our lord?" |
11870 | Hill?" |
11870 | How can I describe to you the scene we had before us? |
11870 | How can I express it? |
11870 | How could he tell now whether he might not have identified the thing without shifting it? |
11870 | How could they find out? |
11870 | How do you take the mixture?" |
11870 | How fared the chase? |
11870 | How long had he been in the room? |
11870 | How shall we get it to the canoe?" |
11870 | How_ can_ they matter? |
11870 | How_ could_ she explain? |
11870 | I did not catch it clearly, because the little man beside me said, in a sharp jerk,"_ What''s_ that?" |
11870 | I doubt if you''ll remember anything of the_ Ocean Pioneer_?" |
11870 | I had it----""From Pattison?" |
11870 | I interrupted suddenly:"You have been to Capri, of course?" |
11870 | I led Gip round the head- wagging tiger, and what do you think there was behind the counter? |
11870 | I said,"How the devil did I get here?" |
11870 | I said,"How would you like your soldiers to come alive, Gip, and march about by themselves?" |
11870 | I was a man, with the heart of a man, and why should I feel the responsibility of a deity for the way the world might go? |
11870 | I wonder if you''ve heard the name of Butcher ever?" |
11870 | If that is not cheating--""If I was a cheat,"said Hill, with the note of hysterics in his voice,"should I come here and tell you?" |
11870 | If there_ is_ no refuge, if there is no place of peace, and if all our dreams of quiet places are a folly and a snare, why have we such dreams? |
11870 | If, indeed, this battle, this slaughter and stress,_ is_ life, why have we this craving for pleasure and beauty? |
11870 | Is it too extravagant if I tell you that it seemed to me as if Regent Street had, for the moment, done that? |
11870 | Is that a miracle, or is it black art, or what is it? |
11870 | Is there anywhere where I can talk to you?" |
11870 | It would be a sort of melancholy pleasure to talk to him again, and what harm could it do? |
11870 | It''s dreadful, is n''t it? |
11870 | Jolly quick thing, Bellows-- eigh?" |
11870 | Leaving what? |
11870 | Let me see-- where_ am_ I? |
11870 | Mad? |
11870 | Maydig?" |
11870 | Might n''t it be something else?" |
11870 | Mr. Piddingquirk--""_ Who_?" |
11870 | My father was near making me promise----""He did n''t?" |
11870 | Niggers? |
11870 | Odd, eh?" |
11870 | Odd, is n''t it? |
11870 | Or is it something else? |
11870 | Or where should we be? |
11870 | Ought it to have been?" |
11870 | Plattner?" |
11870 | Pyecraft?" |
11870 | See? |
11870 | See? |
11870 | See? |
11870 | See?" |
11870 | Shall we re- bury them over here, or take them across the strait in the canoe?" |
11870 | She had been quiet for a minute, and then she suddenly remarked,''William is a lot above me, ma''am, ai n''t he?''" |
11870 | She was dressed-- how can I describe it? |
11870 | Should I drift off presently, like a puff of smoke from a gun, in some kind of half- material body, an attenuated version of my material self? |
11870 | Should I drift to some spiritualistic_ séance_, and there make foolish, incomprehensible attempts to affect a purblind medium? |
11870 | Should I find myself suddenly among the innumerable hosts of the dead, and know the world about me for the phantasmagoria it had always seemed? |
11870 | Should he charge them? |
11870 | Should he charge them? |
11870 | Should he charge them? |
11870 | Should he identify it? |
11870 | Should he own up to the accident now? |
11870 | Smoke? |
11870 | Snooks?" |
11870 | So I said-- even I have my bright ideas at times--''If it got down from Sevenoaks to Snooks, why not get it back from Snooks to Sevenoaks?'' |
11870 | Sun, sky, sea, rocks-- what was it? |
11870 | Suppose Wedderburn too had shifted the slide? |
11870 | Suppose this slouching, scowling monster_ did_ know anything? |
11870 | That lamp, in the natural course of nature, could n''t burn like that upsy- down, could it, Beamish?" |
11870 | The fact is----""Well?" |
11870 | The patch of stars he saw was in Sagittarius and south- eastward; the door was north-- or was it north by west? |
11870 | The puma, the jaguar, were more the masters here... Who were the real masters? |
11870 | The puzzle is, what are the flowers for? |
11870 | The whole thing impressed him as incredibly foolish and wrong, but-- what was one to_ do_? |
11870 | The_ Ocean Pioneer_? |
11870 | Then suddenly, with a queer rush of irritation,"What are you staring at?" |
11870 | Then with an abrupt transition to unreasonable anger:"What is the good of waiting here all the day? |
11870 | There came a piping bawl from inside the door:"That Formalyn?" |
11870 | There was n''t no inscription; why should there be? |
11870 | They called the year differently from our way of calling the year... What_ did_ they call it?" |
11870 | They called''em AEpyornis-- what was it?" |
11870 | Unless you happen to be afraid?" |
11870 | Was I indeed Elvesham, and he me? |
11870 | Was I indeed immaterial? |
11870 | Was all life hallucination? |
11870 | Was he deluding himself with his own fancies, or had Horrocks actually held him back in the way of the train? |
11870 | Was he going to faint? |
11870 | Was it in retreat? |
11870 | Was it pure hallucination? |
11870 | Was it wise to be here? |
11870 | Was n''t it kind of him to mind that fancy of mine, when many men would have taken offence? |
11870 | Was that last night, or the night before? |
11870 | Was the Lord Dynamo still hungry? |
11870 | Was the thing coming on again? |
11870 | Was the thing, whatever it was, inside or out? |
11870 | Was the whole universe but a refracting speck upon some greater Being? |
11870 | Was there any Eden? |
11870 | Was there any ground for the relief in the presentiment of death? |
11870 | Was there no sympathetic ruler anywhere in the world? |
11870 | Was there, after all, ever any green door in the wall at all? |
11870 | Was this dulness of feeling in itself an anticipation? |
11870 | We got to do this, and we got to do that--""If you do n''t mean to study my connection,"said Mr. Coombes,"what did you marry me for?" |
11870 | Were our worlds but the atoms of another universe, and those again of another, and so on through an endless progression? |
11870 | Were there other souls, invisible to me as I to them, about me in the blackness? |
11870 | What are they-- these Watchers of the Living? |
11870 | What can a man do against ants? |
11870 | What d''yer do it for, eh?" |
11870 | What did a dead Chinaman signify? |
11870 | What did they do?" |
11870 | What do these things matter? |
11870 | What do you think? |
11870 | What do you want to tell me?'' |
11870 | What do_ you_ think? |
11870 | What does it matter? |
11870 | What else did you expect? |
11870 | What had he heard? |
11870 | What had he seen? |
11870 | What has happened? |
11870 | What has he to complain of? |
11870 | What is he stuffing? |
11870 | What is it?" |
11870 | What phantom was it? |
11870 | What ship is that?" |
11870 | What the devil was it? |
11870 | What was he to_ do?_ I suggested he should adapt himself to his new conditions. |
11870 | What was it I had not done? |
11870 | What was it Wedderburn was saying? |
11870 | What was it had gone? |
11870 | What was that refined little home to her now, spite of autotypes, Morris papers, and bureaus? |
11870 | What was this familiar street? |
11870 | What was this strange reddish dawn in the interminable night of space? |
11870 | What was unfolding itself? |
11870 | What''s gone wrong? |
11870 | What, he asked himself, had really happened on the line? |
11870 | When could the door have opened? |
11870 | Where had the door got to? |
11870 | Where is the courage that should animate us? |
11870 | Where the devil are we?" |
11870 | Where was I? |
11870 | Where''s Mr. Plattner? |
11870 | Where''s-- where''s anything? |
11870 | Which way shall we go? |
11870 | Which way shall we go?" |
11870 | Which way_ are_ you, Bellows?" |
11870 | Who do they say--?" |
11870 | Who wants to pat panthers on the way to dinner with pretty women and distinguished men? |
11870 | Who would believe me if I did tell? |
11870 | Why are you bothering yourself to lend that book"-- he indicated William Morris by a movement of the head--"to everyone in the lab.?" |
11870 | Why could n''t he be nice-- as he used to be? |
11870 | Why did n''t you marry a slavey?'' |
11870 | Why do n''t you show yourself like a man, Bellows?" |
11870 | Why do you concern yourself about the beggar in the gutter? |
11870 | Why do you trouble about the interests of the race? |
11870 | Why had he left the crystal in the window so long? |
11870 | Why in the name of passionate folly_ this_ one in particular? |
11870 | Why not here and now? |
11870 | Why should she deny herself? |
11870 | Why should she not hear of him sometimes-- painful though his name must be to her? |
11870 | Why should things stop at that any more than men had stopped at the barbaric stage? |
11870 | Why? |
11870 | Why?" |
11870 | Window, or door?" |
11870 | Wonder if he''s after''Arry''Icks?" |
11870 | Wot''s_ he_ got?" |
11870 | Would even his pleasant company compensate her for that? |
11870 | You begin to understand me? |
11870 | You do n''t happen to remember, perhaps?" |
11870 | You do n''t want to shirk the consequences of your own acts?" |
11870 | You got_ fresh_ rattlesnake venom?" |
11870 | You remember? |
11870 | You saw that fish at first? |
11870 | You see-- how can I tell you? |
11870 | You were n''t there by any chance? |
11870 | You will just have lived twice to other people''s once--""I suppose,"I meditated,"in a duel-- it would be fair?" |
11870 | You''re a type of student-- Cambridge men would never dream-- I suppose I ought to have thought-- why_ did_ you cheat?" |
11870 | You''ve never seen it? |
11870 | _ Is_ it dreaming? |
11870 | _ They_ all sought their own narrow ends, and why should not I-- why should not I also live as a man? |
11870 | be a pigeon, will you?" |
11870 | he cried, and broke off with"But what_ can_ one do?" |
11870 | he did n''t stick out at that?" |
11870 | he said to Thaddy--"the Thing I fought with?". |
11870 | it''s you, is it? |
11870 | or should he leave this question unanswered? |
11870 | or was I indeed, even as I felt, alone? |
11870 | said Holroyd,"what now?" |
11870 | said I;"my wits are going, or am I in two places at once?" |
11870 | she said;"ca n''t people enjoy themselves?" |
11870 | what could be in them? |
11870 | what has become of it?" |
11870 | what have I done?" |
11870 | where are you?" |
11870 | with that stupendous violence of effect? |
35338 | A four- footman place? |
35338 | A means,he asked,"to what? |
35338 | Adorable happy young people....Did you notice, dear, how she held that dainty little chin of hers?... |
35338 | After the year before last? |
35338 | After,he said thoughtfully and paused, and then resolved to have it over forthwith,"all you leave will be mine? |
35338 | Again? |
35338 | Alone? |
35338 | And Marjorie? |
35338 | And afterwards? |
35338 | And dreaming? 35338 And how''s Sydney getting on with the music?" |
35338 | And if it comes to that-- where''s my complexion? |
35338 | And leave her? |
35338 | And then perhaps a still bigger house? |
35338 | And then,he asked,"what are we going to do?" |
35338 | And then----? |
35338 | And then? 35338 And then?" |
35338 | And then? |
35338 | And think? |
35338 | And we are to talk? |
35338 | And what do you think is the remedy? |
35338 | And what then? |
35338 | And what would that do? |
35338 | And what''s Daffy doing? |
35338 | And what,said Aunt Plessington,"do they all amount to? |
35338 | And where do we stand? 35338 And yet is n''t it strange? |
35338 | And you''ve come from them to_ this_.... Sir, what_ have_ you come for? |
35338 | And your friend? |
35338 | Are n''t you stiff? |
35338 | Are you for meeting me then, Marjorie? |
35338 | Are you still engaged to Magnet? |
35338 | Are you sure? |
35338 | Are you sure? |
35338 | Because I''ve bought this picture? |
35338 | Behrens? |
35338 | Behrens? |
35338 | Better? |
35338 | Bring back here? |
35338 | Busy? |
35338 | But Madge? |
35338 | But are n''t these rather good? |
35338 | But do I love_ you_, Marjorie? 35338 But have n''t you flown before?" |
35338 | But how_ can_ I, mother? |
35338 | But is n''t this-- rather unusual? 35338 But the way?" |
35338 | But what a pull they get, Trafford, if perhaps-- they do n''t, eh? |
35338 | But what can one do? |
35338 | But what can one do? |
35338 | But what is there to be afraid of? |
35338 | But what right has he to object? |
35338 | But what was it all about? |
35338 | But what? |
35338 | But what_ is_ there to clear up, my dear boy? |
35338 | But why? |
35338 | But your work,she said;"your research?" |
35338 | But,said Trafford incredulous, and with a friendly arm about his admirer,"is this tall young woman yours?" |
35338 | But,she said,"think of the good things in life?" |
35338 | But----Has it been love? 35338 But_ why?_""Oh! |
35338 | Ca n''t you read it after supper? |
35338 | Can we go on like this? |
35338 | Champagne, m''am? |
35338 | Come, Mr. Baynes,she said,"what do your people eat here? |
35338 | Coming down? |
35338 | Could n''t I write? |
35338 | Daffy, dear, do you mind going in for the racquets and balls? |
35338 | Daffy,he said,"what in the name of goodness----?" |
35338 | Davis? |
35338 | Do n''t believe what, dear? |
35338 | Do n''t they? |
35338 | Do n''t we know we''ve got to manage and control''em-- just as we''ve got to keep''em and stand the racket of their misbehaviour? 35338 Do n''t you know, Rag,"she said, forcing herself to speak----"Don''t you guess? |
35338 | Do n''t you think this sort of thing is interesting? |
35338 | Do n''t you_ see_ all you are throwing away? |
35338 | Do n''t_ you_ play? |
35338 | Do you mean that I can spend what I like? |
35338 | Do you really care? |
35338 | Do you remember? |
35338 | Do you think that man means to come here again? |
35338 | Do you think you''d better? |
35338 | Do? |
35338 | Does Marjorie care for me? |
35338 | Does Marjorie like the life you are leading? |
35338 | Does that matter? 35338 Does that strike you as a dull subject?" |
35338 | Done? |
35338 | Dowd,said Trafford after a fair pause,"What would you do if you were me?" |
35338 | Eh, Magnet? |
35338 | Eh? |
35338 | Eh? |
35338 | Er--''Dear Sir,''"Ought n''t it to be simply''Sir,''father, for an editor? |
35338 | Er? |
35338 | Find out-- what it all means, my boy? |
35338 | For good? |
35338 | For myself? |
35338 | Forgot? |
35338 | Go back to your laboratory? |
35338 | Go right away? |
35338 | Going to do-- when? |
35338 | Grant me what? |
35338 | Has it ever been answered? |
35338 | Have n''t I promised? |
35338 | Have you come here, sir, merely to bandy words? |
35338 | Have you ever tasted turtle soup? |
35338 | How are you, old Theodore? |
35338 | How are you? |
35338 | How can we? |
35338 | How is that going to work? |
35338 | How long has it been? |
35338 | How on earth did all this happen?... |
35338 | How? |
35338 | How_ could_ you? 35338 I asked what_ you_ were up to, Daffy?" |
35338 | I beg your pardon, Aunt? |
35338 | I do n''t think the engine''s damaged? |
35338 | I do n''t think you can have it,he said, and then as she remained silent,"Marjorie, do you know how much money I''ve got?" |
35338 | I do n''t want to sleep yet; do you? 35338 I have done nothing----""Will you be off, sir? |
35338 | I wonder, is Salvation the same for every one? 35338 I''ve been a good squaw this time, old man?" |
35338 | I''ve been sleeping, Madge? |
35338 | If Marjorie, or Mrs. Pope, or Daffy...? |
35338 | If he_ chooses_ to do something here,said Durgan not too hopefully,"a man can....""What''s become of the little old room where we two used to work?" |
35338 | Impossible? |
35338 | In London? |
35338 | Industrial development? |
35338 | Is he discovering what you want to discover? |
35338 | Is he hurt? |
35338 | Is he hurt? |
35338 | Is it comfortable? |
35338 | Is it for long? |
35338 | Is n''t it a lark? |
35338 | Is n''t it amazing we did n''t smash our engine? |
35338 | Is n''t it charmingly rural? |
35338 | Is n''t it jolly? |
35338 | Is n''t it rather a waste not to finish a university career? |
35338 | Is n''t that rather what he would like to do, aunt? |
35338 | Is n''t the engine rather wonderful? |
35338 | Is she all right? |
35338 | Is that the Pigmentation Solomonson? |
35338 | Is that the heavier mallet? |
35338 | Is there anything else so rich and beautiful in all the world? 35338 Is your friend hurt?" |
35338 | It is n''t the money? |
35338 | Leave you? |
35338 | Lecturing? |
35338 | Look here, mother, I_ may_ see Mr. Trafford again? 35338 Look here, sir, this is all very well,"he began,"but why ca n''t I fall in love with your daughter? |
35338 | Look here,he said,"do you still love me, Marjorie?" |
35338 | Looking around for something to take up? |
35338 | Love-- still? |
35338 | Madge, what''s up? |
35338 | Marjorie,he asked abruptly,"are you sorry we came?" |
35338 | Marjorie,he said,"did you really mean what you told me the other day, that there was indeed no hope for me? |
35338 | Marjorie,he shouted,"d''you remember? |
35338 | May we all come? |
35338 | May we come? |
35338 | Meaning-- if I were in your place? |
35338 | Mrs. Trafford in? |
35338 | Mummy? |
35338 | My dear, do_ you_ understand? |
35338 | No grub? |
35338 | Nothing organized? |
35338 | Nothing wrong? |
35338 | Nothing? |
35338 | Oh, where have you been? |
35338 | Oh,said Trafford,"have n''t you heard that before? |
35338 | Old man, why are you so prejudiced against a bigger house? |
35338 | Or shall we just sit and talk until the next motor car kills us? |
35338 | Partner,he asked,"will you play out my ball for me? |
35338 | Pass- book? |
35338 | Perhaps a gun? |
35338 | Perhaps recently? |
35338 | Perhaps we might see the Water Garden? |
35338 | Rag,she said,"something''s the matter?" |
35338 | Rom dear,said Mrs. Pope,"will you take the pot in and get some fresh tea?" |
35338 | Shall I call him? |
35338 | Shall I take a shot? |
35338 | Shall we go and look at the aviary? |
35338 | Shall we race? |
35338 | She''s been? |
35338 | Solomonson? |
35338 | Tell me, Mr. Trafford,she asked,"was your wife beautiful like this when you married her? |
35338 | That''s why you''ve never married, Sir Roderick? |
35338 | The colours? |
35338 | The house? |
35338 | The leg''s better? |
35338 | Then what''s going to happen? |
35338 | Then why did n''t you say so? |
35338 | Then_ what?_"Something sane. |
35338 | Theodore getting on in school? |
35338 | They''ve cleared that thing away? |
35338 | To her? |
35338 | Um,he said;"Is n''t this a bit stiff for little women''s brains?" |
35338 | Up here? |
35338 | Up there? |
35338 | We''ll stay here, Mummy, eh? |
35338 | Well, Marjorie,she said as she poured tea for the family,"did you get your laces?" |
35338 | Well, is n''t it? |
35338 | Well, may I speak to Mr. Trafford before he leaves Buryhamstreet? |
35338 | Well, old Marjorie? |
35338 | Well, ought n''t I to go to your father and give him a chance? 35338 Well, sir,"he said with a note of ironical affability,"to what may I ascribe this-- intrusion?" |
35338 | Well, sir? |
35338 | Well,his daughters heard him say, with a witty allusiveness that was difficult to follow,"so the Magnet has come to the Mountain again-- eh?" |
35338 | Well? |
35338 | Well? |
35338 | Well? |
35338 | What are we to do?.... |
35338 | What did I say? |
35338 | What do you mean? |
35338 | What do you say, Magnet? 35338 What do you think of it?" |
35338 | What do you think of my chubby boys? |
35338 | What has he done? |
35338 | What have you? |
35338 | What is it? |
35338 | What next? 35338 What the devil are you doing?" |
35338 | What things? |
35338 | What things? |
35338 | What would you do in my place? |
35338 | What''s the book, Magsy? |
35338 | What''s the book? |
35338 | What? |
35338 | What? |
35338 | What_ is_ a Gawdsaker? |
35338 | What_ is_ there to do? |
35338 | Where are my boots?... |
35338 | Where had we got to when we left England? |
35338 | Where have you been? |
35338 | Where''s the dressing- bag? |
35338 | Where? |
35338 | Where? |
35338 | Where_ have_ you been? |
35338 | Which is the favourite author now? |
35338 | Who is it? |
35338 | Who knows how long or how far? 35338 Who was Dahl?" |
35338 | Who''s for a game of tennis? |
35338 | Who''s here? |
35338 | Who? |
35338 | Who? |
35338 | Why did we come here? |
35338 | Why do n''t you? |
35338 | Why not,he remarked,"have tea?" |
35338 | Why not,she suggested,"wait a year?" |
35338 | Why not? 35338 Why not?" |
35338 | Why not? |
35338 | Why not? |
35338 | Why not? |
35338 | Why not? |
35338 | Why? |
35338 | Why? |
35338 | Will it affect your F.R.S.? |
35338 | Will you come,he cried,"out of all this?" |
35338 | Will you get some water? |
35338 | Will you go back to your work? |
35338 | Will you go, sir? |
35338 | Will you let me come to your laboratory and work with you? |
35338 | Will you let me come to your laboratory and work? |
35338 | Will you try? |
35338 | Wine of the country, yclept beer, red wine from France, or my wife''s potent brew from the golden lemon? |
35338 | With your leg? |
35338 | Wood? |
35338 | Would you like to get out into that? |
35338 | Yes, but_ why?_"Well, if they talk about things-- Discussions like this clear up their minds. |
35338 | Yes,said Trafford as one who reconsiders it,"what would you do?" |
35338 | Yes? |
35338 | You believe in that libel on my dead father? |
35338 | You did n''t know,said Trafford,"I had met you before? |
35338 | You do n''t I hope, mind children? |
35338 | You do n''t remember things you said-- when you were delirious? |
35338 | You do n''t think that I''m shirking----? |
35338 | You do n''t want me to? |
35338 | You do n''t want to be a man? |
35338 | You hear, sir? |
35338 | You know of our little excursion for Friday? |
35338 | You really mean that? |
35338 | You want me to go? |
35338 | You wish to see my husband? |
35338 | You''ll live with us, mother? |
35338 | You''ll take some tea? |
35338 | You''re coming, mummy? |
35338 | Your aunt goes to- morrow? |
35338 | _ How?_"We must get out of its constant interruptions, its incessant vivid, petty appeals...."We might go away-- to Switzerland. |
35338 | _ Is_ it a mother''s duty always to keep with her children? 35338 _ What''s the good of it?_"he said, echoing Trafford''s words. |
35338 | _ Who?_The little voice laughed. |
35338 | _ Wrong?_"You look pale and-- tired about the eyes,said Daffy, leading the way into the drawing- room. |
35338 | ( A voice:"_ Do_ we want them?") |
35338 | ( But what could it have cost him?) |
35338 | A third effort gave"Wathall about, eh?" |
35338 | After all, we''ve had a good time; is n''t it a little ungrateful to forget?..." |
35338 | After this horror of rowdy intervention? |
35338 | Alone? |
35338 | Am I spinning it too fine, Madge?" |
35338 | And about the whole position the question was,"what can one do?" |
35338 | And also she was asking herself with futile reiteration why she had got into debt at Oxbridge? |
35338 | And as for this devotion, what did it amount to? |
35338 | And had this lasted the_ whole_ afternoon? |
35338 | And how''s the Village Club getting on?"... |
35338 | And since we do n''t know God, since we do n''t know His will with us, is n''t it plain that all our lives should be a search for Him and it? |
35338 | And the wall behind--? |
35338 | And the work----? |
35338 | And then? |
35338 | And was there not also an extraordinary egotism in this concentration upon his own purposes, a self- esteem, a vanity? |
35338 | And what, in fact, did the whole thing amount to? |
35338 | And when they grow up, what have we got for them? |
35338 | And where is it now? |
35338 | And you, Marjorie-- will you go indoors?" |
35338 | And, after all, what good were they? |
35338 | Are n''t you, Solomonson? |
35338 | Are n''t you--_white?_""But why are you doing it?" |
35338 | Are n''t you--_white?_""But why are you doing it?" |
35338 | At the present time there are far more educated young women than educated young men available for research work-- and who wants them? |
35338 | But are they?" |
35338 | But did they see that it was clever? |
35338 | But had she made it for him? |
35338 | But here it seemed almost beyond her strength to achieve any sort of tiding over....( Why_ could n''t_ Mr. Pope lie quiet?) |
35338 | But how about your wife being a deprived sort of woman? |
35338 | But is n''t it what life is? |
35338 | But suppose I come back?" |
35338 | But we took it-- as people take flowers out of a garden, cut them off, put them in water.... How much of our daily life has been love? |
35338 | But what was she to do, what was there for her to do?... |
35338 | But what was she to do? |
35338 | But why did n''t he begin to do it? |
35338 | But why not fire a shot to let him know she was near? |
35338 | But with you.... Have we, after all, got out of things at all? |
35338 | But you_ do_ like it?" |
35338 | But-- I say-- how did you get it?" |
35338 | But----""You''re_ sure_ she was n''t kissing him?" |
35338 | Ca n''t one-- converse?" |
35338 | Ca n''t you leave me alone? |
35338 | Can anything else matter,--after we are free from necessity? |
35338 | Can you hold it if I use only one hand?" |
35338 | Could Marjorie have heard? |
35338 | Could that situation be saved? |
35338 | Could they get to Switzerland? |
35338 | Dear, you''re still only a young man; we''ve thirty or forty years before us-- forty years perhaps or more.... What shall we do with our years? |
35338 | Did a man of Pope''s sort quite honestly believe that stuff? |
35338 | Did all these things light up somehow to those dispossessed people-- from some angle she did n''t attain? |
35338 | Did he think of Behrens and curse her under his breath as he entered that tiresome room?... |
35338 | Did he want this great Renascence of the human mind because he was suffering from some subtle form of indigestion? |
35338 | Did n''t I love you from the first, from that time when I was a boy examiner and you were a candidate girl-- because your mind was clear?" |
35338 | Did old Booch over there, for example, guzzling oysters, cry at times upon the unknown God in the vast silences of the night? |
35338 | Did she realize----? |
35338 | Did the Traffords wish to run such risks? |
35338 | Do n''t I want them to have education, to handle things, to vote like men and bear themselves with the gravity of men? |
35338 | Do n''t I want women fine and sane and responsible? |
35338 | Do n''t our instincts tell us? |
35338 | Do n''t you see that unless I can have time for thought and research, life is just darkness to me? |
35338 | Do n''t you think he''s a dreadfully amusing man, Mr. Trafford? |
35338 | Do n''t you think on this special day, it might run to a biscuit?" |
35338 | Do n''t you understand, Marjorie? |
35338 | Do you know anything of the effects of polarized light, the sight of a slice of olivine- gabbro for instance between crossed Nicols?" |
35338 | Do you mean to suggest that I''m reading like a child, who holds a book upside down?" |
35338 | Do you remember how once or twice we''ve lunched at that Viennese place in Regent Street, and how they''ve given us stuffed Paprika, eh?" |
35338 | Do you remember when we were young-- that life seemed so splendid-- it was intolerable we should ever die?... |
35338 | Do you think Mr. Wintersloan will paint this? |
35338 | Do you think that we were just cheated by instinct, that there was n''t something in it we felt and thought was there? |
35338 | Does he do nothing but his researches?" |
35338 | Does it? |
35338 | Does n''t every wife disappoint her husband? |
35338 | Does n''t something tell us all that if we let a woman loose with our honour and trust, some other man will get hold of her? |
35338 | Does this life satisfy_ you?_ If it did would you always be so restless?..." |
35338 | Does this life satisfy_ you?_ If it did would you always be so restless?..." |
35338 | Eh? |
35338 | Eh? |
35338 | Eh?" |
35338 | Eh?" |
35338 | Give me my time again.... Why did you make me, and then waste me like this? |
35338 | Had he as a matter of fact ever wanted it, except that he was glad to have it through her? |
35338 | Had he really so greatly wanted Margharita? |
35338 | Had he, Trafford, really put the thing so that Pope would listen? |
35338 | Had her life no rights? |
35338 | Had n''t she as a matter of fact wanted Margharita ten thousand times more than he had done? |
35338 | Had she ever passed any trees? |
35338 | Had she ever troubled to get to the bottom of that before? |
35338 | Had she hitherto ever really cared what his ends might be? |
35338 | Has Daddy gone to Wamping for some more cricket?..." |
35338 | Have I got you? |
35338 | Have n''t I lost you-- haven''t we both lost something, the very heart of it all? |
35338 | Have n''t I watched? |
35338 | Have n''t all we scientific men had''em in our laboratories working; do n''t we know the papers they turn out? |
35338 | Have n''t we made rather a mess of your lawn?" |
35338 | He does paint, does n''t he?" |
35338 | He loved to discuss"Who are the Best Talkers now Alive?" |
35338 | He was afraid of what might be Sir Roderick''s unspoken judgment on Marjorie and the house she had made-- though what was there to be afraid of? |
35338 | How can I?" |
35338 | How did you get me out of that scrape, Madge? |
35338 | How do doctors tell when a man may stand on his broken leg? |
35338 | How do you do it? |
35338 | How had it begun? |
35338 | How had she got on while he was away? |
35338 | How is Sir Rupert?" |
35338 | How long can it have been?" |
35338 | How long has this been going on?" |
35338 | How much of it mere consequences of the love we''ve left behind us?... |
35338 | How much of real happiness had she and Trafford had together? |
35338 | How much? |
35338 | How much?" |
35338 | How was he going to stay there? |
35338 | How would they look? |
35338 | How''s Rag?" |
35338 | How''s every one?" |
35338 | How''s the Babe?" |
35338 | How_ could_ you?" |
35338 | I can assure you I work sometimes like a man who is exploring a magic palace.... Do you know anything of molecular physics?" |
35338 | I have been brooding upon this and brooding, but now I know....""But how?" |
35338 | I know about telephones all right...."Why had they come here? |
35338 | I mean we are to do this, and do it now, and nothing but sheer physical inability to do it will prevent my carrying it out.... And you? |
35338 | I mean-- of course she was a beautiful girl and adorable and all that; but was n''t she just a slender thing?" |
35338 | I say!--Is there such a thing in the world as a new- laid egg-- and some bread- and- butter?" |
35338 | I say, do I strike you as talking nonsense?" |
35338 | I say, would n''t it keep and improve this goose of ours if we put in a little brandy?" |
35338 | I suppose they have n''t strings?" |
35338 | I think he says such good things at times, do n''t you? |
35338 | I wonder if you have ever been in the Natural History Museum at South Kensington, and looked at Ruskin''s crystal collection? |
35338 | I wonder, which would you like? |
35338 | I wonder----""What?" |
35338 | I_ may_ really speak to him?" |
35338 | If I did know, I would do it.... What are we to do?" |
35338 | If I drag, can you help?" |
35338 | If he wanted a girl he should have her, and if he had to take her by force, well, was n''t it his right? |
35338 | If she did n''t take this by no means unattractive line, what was the alternative? |
35338 | If they travelled second class throughout, and took the cheaper way, as Samurai should?... |
35338 | Is it possible to get a doctor? |
35338 | Is it? |
35338 | Is life just all hunger and need, and are we left with nothing-- nothing at all-- when these things are done?... |
35338 | Is n''t it jolly?" |
35338 | Is n''t it perfectly lovely?" |
35338 | Is that any answer? |
35338 | Is that egg boiled?" |
35338 | Is this salt- cellar English cut glass?" |
35338 | It was like sticking a knife into herself to ask that, but she was now in a phase heroic enough for the task-- was he? |
35338 | It was n''t so fast as this, eh?"... |
35338 | It''s hard? |
35338 | It_ is_ a puzzle, is n''t it? |
35338 | Knife? |
35338 | Knife? |
35338 | Look here, Marjorie, what do you think you are up to with me and yourself? |
35338 | Magnet answered:"Who wants things to eat on your birthday, Theodore?" |
35338 | Magnet noticed Mr. Pope''s profound disturbance? |
35338 | Magnet, Marjorie?" |
35338 | Magnet, you are sufficiently kind to the New?" |
35338 | Magnet,"Mrs. Pope went on as their emotions subsided,"that she really meant what she said? |
35338 | Magnet? |
35338 | Magnet?" |
35338 | Magnet?" |
35338 | Magnet?" |
35338 | Magnet?" |
35338 | Magnet?" |
35338 | Make a pack of all the strongest food-- strenthin''--strengthrin''food-- you know?" |
35338 | Metals? |
35338 | Mr. Trafford''s exordium vanished from his mind, he was at a loss for words until spurred to speech by Mr. Pope''s almost truculent:"Well?" |
35338 | Mummy, have you seen it? |
35338 | Need he know? |
35338 | Now you''ve begun the game you must keep it up?" |
35338 | Now, the whole idea of her movement was to ask, how can we raise the standard of the national habits? |
35338 | Of course, the tradespeople were rather enticing when first one went up----How much, anyhow? |
35338 | Office?" |
35338 | Old donkey cart?" |
35338 | Or consider Sir Almroth Wright, did he speak well of women? |
35338 | Or was he in some unsuspected way unhealthy? |
35338 | Ought he to go into politics? |
35338 | Out of nowhere, quite disconnectedly, would come the human, finite:"Do you remember----?" |
35338 | Peter Dickery, William Dock-- I beg your pardon?" |
35338 | Pope?" |
35338 | Put business in two words and what is it? |
35338 | Rom getting on?" |
35338 | See? |
35338 | See? |
35338 | See? |
35338 | See? |
35338 | See?" |
35338 | Shall we try again?" |
35338 | Shall we walk to the Water Garden, and see if there are any white lilies?" |
35338 | She felt there was more in this than a mere resentment at her persistence about the new house.... Why did n''t he go on with things?... |
35338 | She had always assumed he was beyond measure grateful to her for his home, in spite of all her bills, but was he? |
35338 | She lifted a fire- lit face to him and looked at him with steady eyes and asked----"Where?" |
35338 | She ought, of course, never to have accepted Magnet.... She faced the disagreeable word; was she a liar? |
35338 | She pounced suddenly upon Rex at her left with questions about the Keltic Renascence, was it still going on-- or what? |
35338 | Should he maintain a colossal silence, continue his shielding, and let his friend marry the murderess saved by his perjury, or----?... |
35338 | Should she go back to camp and get the tent? |
35338 | Should she take a load of wood with her? |
35338 | Some would- be humorist suddenly inquired,_ à propos_ of nothing:"What''s the fare to America, Billy?" |
35338 | Tell me, make me your partner; it''s you who know, what are we doing with life?" |
35338 | The slightest touch upon the pathetic note? |
35338 | Then he plunged:"I wonder, mother, if it would put you out very much if I brought home a wife to you?" |
35338 | Then she asked abruptly:"Why are you going away like this?" |
35338 | Then she threw out,"Why should n''t Marjorie think, too?" |
35338 | Then very touchingly to Mrs. Pope:"Mummy, shall we try a game of tennis with the New Generation?" |
35338 | Then with a sort of naturalness that ought to have touched her he said:"Is it possible, Marjorie-- that I might hope?--that I have been inopportune?" |
35338 | Then, almost breathlessly,"I wondered if there should be perhaps-- some one else?" |
35338 | Theodore would like it, would n''t he? |
35338 | Trafford?" |
35338 | Trafford?" |
35338 | Was Daffy really a better wife than herself? |
35338 | Was he able to advise her? |
35338 | Was he abnormal? |
35338 | Was he on their side? |
35338 | Was it fair that she should come back into the sheath because of this passion of his for a vast inexhaustible research? |
35338 | Was it too much to grudge her four? |
35338 | Was n''t most literature in the same class? |
35338 | Was n''t she indeed entitled to travel first- class? |
35338 | Was n''t she, after all, rather a mean human being? |
35338 | Was n''t there some afternoon in the week when she sat and sewed, so that he might come and sit by her and read to her and talk to her? |
35338 | Was she to blame for that? |
35338 | Was the man satisfied? |
35338 | Was there any case for the man at all? |
35338 | Was there anything more pitiful? |
35338 | Was there no way of evading that necessity? |
35338 | We can get a sledge over the snow now? |
35338 | Were they greater than he supposed? |
35338 | Were they less happy now than they had been in the little house in Chelsea? |
35338 | Were they living and moving realities when those others were at home again? |
35338 | Were they murdering her? |
35338 | What are they to do? |
35338 | What are we doing to save them from the same bathos as this-- to which we have come? |
35338 | What are we to tell them when they demand the purpose of all this training, all these lessons? |
35338 | What can I say beyond that? |
35338 | What can equal it? |
35338 | What conceivably might they not say? |
35338 | What could she say to straighten his back and lift his chin? |
35338 | What did I say?" |
35338 | What did it matter for the moment if the dim snow- heaps rose and rose about them? |
35338 | What did they amount to now? |
35338 | What do we need-- I mean the whole race of us-- kings and beggars together? |
35338 | What do you say, Magnet? |
35338 | What do you see me doing-- in the years ahead?" |
35338 | What else was there for Marjorie to contemplate? |
35338 | What had happened to the man? |
35338 | What had happened to them? |
35338 | What had her mother been hinting at? |
35338 | What is the good of bread and health-- and no worship?... |
35338 | What next?" |
35338 | What next?" |
35338 | What remains? |
35338 | What shall we do with our lives and life? |
35338 | What trees were these? |
35338 | What was I saying?... |
35338 | What was going to bring people to her house? |
35338 | What was he going to do? |
35338 | What was he thinking and feeling about her in the train? |
35338 | What was her religion? |
35338 | What was it exactly that Pope had said? |
35338 | What was it he had said in reply to Pope? |
35338 | What was it she had been thinking about? |
35338 | What was that reality? |
35338 | What was that? |
35338 | What was the matter between himself and Marjorie that he could n''t even intimate his sense of their divergence? |
35338 | What would she say? |
35338 | What would they think? |
35338 | What''s going to become of them all?" |
35338 | What''s it like?" |
35338 | What''s the correspondence between the altered angle and the substituted atom? |
35338 | What''s the good of saying you do n''t care about the market- place, that_ your_ business is just to make bombs and drop them out of the window? |
35338 | What_ did_ you do?... |
35338 | When they ask what we are preparing them for? |
35338 | Where have you been?" |
35338 | Where is that brightness and wonder, Marjorie, and the pride and the immense unlimited hope?" |
35338 | Where were they going altogether? |
35338 | Where_ can_ we meet?" |
35338 | Who knows?..." |
35338 | Why after all should he concern himself with these riddles of some collective and ultimate meaning in things? |
35338 | Why are we made for folly upon folly? |
35338 | Why could n''t he take the gift of life as it seemed these people took it? |
35338 | Why did n''t they always dress in flannels and look as fine and slender and active as the elder Carmel boy for example? |
35338 | Why did she do that? |
35338 | Why did they wear those ridiculous collars and ties? |
35338 | Why did you get them together?" |
35338 | Why do n''t they teach a girl to handle an axe?... |
35338 | Why do n''t you come into Parliament?" |
35338 | Why does this bit of clear stuff swing the ray of light so much out of its path, and that swing it more? |
35338 | Why generally and in all sorts of things does Behrens come in?..." |
35338 | Why had he been so violent, so impossible? |
35338 | Why had he come just when he had, just as he had? |
35338 | Why had she? |
35338 | Why not"make money"for a brief strenuous time, and then come back, when Marjorie''s pride and comfort were secure?... |
35338 | Why not? |
35338 | Why not? |
35338 | Why on earth should n''t I see her?" |
35338 | Why she had got into debt? |
35338 | Why should n''t I? |
35338 | Why should n''t he make a supreme effort here? |
35338 | Why should n''t that be tried? |
35338 | Why should n''t we make another sledge from the other bunk and start down--""To Hammond?" |
35338 | Why should n''t we?" |
35338 | Why should n''t you?" |
35338 | Why should one sell one''s brains any more than one sells one''s body?... |
35338 | Why should we wait here on this frosty shelf outside the world? |
35338 | Why should you weep?" |
35338 | Why was he continually lapsing into these sombre, dimly religious questionings and doubts? |
35338 | Why was it that the researches that had held him once, could hold him now no more? |
35338 | Why was n''t she worth it altogether?... |
35338 | Why, after all, should he go to Labrador at all? |
35338 | Why, for instance, when you change the composition of a felspar almost imperceptibly, do the angles change? |
35338 | Why, then, had she agreed to marry him? |
35338 | Will you go with Christabel?" |
35338 | Will you never understand? |
35338 | Will you take a little Burgundy to- night, Mummy?" |
35338 | Wintersloan?" |
35338 | Would n''t the donkey go, poor dear?" |
35338 | Would she ever see him again? |
35338 | Would the girls be hustled and flattered into advantageous marriages, that dinners and drawing- rooms might still prevail? |
35338 | Would the rise of the ground to the ribs of rock never come? |
35338 | Would the world get them in turn? |
35338 | Would they give him the brandy bottle and let him get drunk? |
35338 | Would they go back to it all? |
35338 | Would they in their turn for the sake of another generation have to give up fine occupations for mean occupations, deep thoughts for shallow? |
35338 | Would they talk of her and Trafford? |
35338 | Would you care----? |
35338 | You do n''t mind my praising your wife?" |
35338 | You do n''t play golf, do you, by any chance?" |
35338 | You really_ do_ like it?" |
35338 | _ Was_ it? |
35338 | altogether away, that they find despair in the sky? |
35338 | are n''t I feminist? |
35338 | do n''t you see how you''re behind?" |
35338 | he said cheerfully,"do you?" |
35338 | he said, as one might speak to a child,"why are n''t you in bed? |
35338 | he said, giving her an affectionate but sound and heavy thump on the left shoulder- blade,"got a kiss for the old daddy?" |
35338 | he said, in a peculiar voice that sounded as though his mouth was full( though of course, poor dear, it was n''t),"how''s the First Class?" |
35338 | he said,"in this last uncontaminated patch of air? |
35338 | how can we get rid of bad habits and cultivate good ones?... |
35338 | she said,"you home?" |
35338 | what else can it be?" |
35338 | what was it he needed? |
35338 | what was she herself? |
35338 | why do you always want to turn love into-- touches?... |
35338 | why not? |
35338 | why_ should_ the life of every day conquer us? |
35338 | you are n''t crying, Madge, are you?" |
35338 | § 13 What are we doing with life? |
35338 | § 3"Shall we go and look at the aviary?" |