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 |
---|---|
14706 | But could my kind engross me? |
14706 | Hoary and bent I dance one hour: What though I die at morn? |
14706 | Stern Art-- what sons escape her? |
11554 | If you propose to convert us after you have conquered us, why not convert us before you have conquered us? |
11554 | Is there, then, anything whatever to be said for the English in the matter? |
11554 | What could such mere order of the words matter? |
11554 | What was it then that first made war-- and made Napoleon? |
11554 | What was this thing to which we trusted? |
11554 | Why, as a fact, did not England interpose? |
12491 | ''How did our Master Himself sum up the law in a few words?'' |
12491 | Have we really learnt to think more broadly? |
12491 | Is it really so certain that he would go deeper into the matter than that old antithetical jingle goes? |
12491 | Or have we only learnt to spread our thoughts thinner? |
12491 | The famous remark of the Caterpillar in''Alice in Wonderland''--''Why not?'' |
12491 | The story of Henry Durie is dark enough, but could anyone stand beside the grave of that sodden monomaniac and not respect him? |
12491 | Why did he who loved where all men were blind, seek to blind himself where all men loved? |
12491 | Why was he a monk, and not a troubadour? |
12491 | Why was it that the most large- hearted and poetic spirits in that age found their most congenial atmosphere in these awful renunciations? |
11560 | Are these to judge mankind? |
11560 | But how is he prevented from revenging himself with an axe? |
11560 | But whom did Prussia ever emancipate-- even by accident? |
11560 | Can anyone candidly say that they have left on any one of these people the faintest impress of progress or liberation? |
11560 | How long is anybody expected to go on with that sort of game; or keep peace at that illimitable price? |
11560 | How long must we pursue a road in which promises are all fetishes in front of us; and all fragments behind us? |
11560 | If he hits his neighbour on the head with the kitchen chopper, what do we do? |
11560 | What is their non- reciprocity but an inability to imagine, not a god or devil, but merely another man? |
11560 | What is their sophism of"necessity"but an inability to imagine to- morrow morning? |
20897 | But what would our populace, in our epoch, have actually learned if they had learned all that our schools and universities had to teach? |
20897 | I fully accept the truth in Mr. Kipling''s question of"What can they know of England who only England know?" |
20897 | If a man has a right to choose his wife, has he not a right to choose wrong? |
20897 | If a man has a right to vote, has he not a right to vote wrong? |
20897 | What did they believe of their fathers? |
20897 | What forced her into it? |
20897 | What would the guttersnipe have learnt as a graduate, except to embrace a Saxon because he was the other half of an Anglo- Saxon? |
20897 | Who was St. Thomas, to whose shrine the whole of that society is thus seen in the act of moving; and why was he so important? |
20897 | Why, for instance, are they called Canterbury Tales; and what were the pilgrims doing on the road to Canterbury? |
12245 | ''Hast Thou sent the rain upon the desert where no man is?'' |
12245 | ''Who is this that looketh out of the window, fair as the sun, clear as the moon, terrible as an army with banners?'' |
12245 | But what have lovers to do with ridiculous affectations of fearing no man or woman? |
12245 | For who would trouble to bring to perfection a work in which even perfection is grotesque? |
12245 | Has the poet, for whom Nature means only roses and lilies, ever heard a pig grunting? |
12245 | Shakespeare is fit for something better than writing tragedies''? |
12245 | Who ever feels that the giants in Greek art and poetry were really big-- big as some folk- lore giants have been? |
12245 | Why is there not a high central intellectual patriotism, a patriotism of the head and heart of the Empire, and not merely of its fists and its boots? |
12245 | you''re young for smokin'', but I''ve sent for yer mother.... Goin''? |
35115 | And a voice valedictory.... Who is for Victory? |
35115 | But who will write us a riding song Or a fighting song or a drinking song, Fit for the fathers of you and me, That knew how to think and thrive? |
35115 | But who will write us a riding song, Or a hunting song or a drinking song, Fit for them that arose and rode When day and the wine were red? |
35115 | His sins they were forgiven him; or why do flowers run Behind him; and the hedges all strengthing in the sun? |
35115 | In the city set upon slime and loam They cry in their parliament"Who goes home?" |
35115 | Men that are men again; who goes home? |
35115 | Now who that runs can read it, The riddle that I write, Of why this poor old sinner, Should sin without delight--? |
35115 | The Logical Vegetarian"Why should n''t I have a purely vegetarian drink? |
35115 | Who Goes Home? |
35115 | Who goes home? |
35115 | Who goes home? |
35115 | Who is for Liberty? |
35115 | Why should n''t I take vegetables in their highest form, so to speak? |
22362 | ''Complimentary?'' 22362 All owners are they?" |
22362 | But when we come to him and his work itself, what is there to be said? |
22362 | Dickens has taken the sword in hand; against what is he declaring war? |
22362 | Dickens, the Gissing school will say, was here pointing out certain sad truths of psychology; can any one say that he ought not to point them out? |
22362 | How far can a writer thus indicate by accident a truth of which he is himself ignorant? |
22362 | How far can an author tell a truth without seeing it himself? |
22362 | Micawber interrupts practical life; but what is practical life that it should venture to interrupt Micawber? |
22362 | Might it not quite reasonably mean that all men should be equally ceremonious and stately and pontifical? |
22362 | Mr. Lammle, with"too much nose in his face, too much ginger in his whiskers, too much sparkle in his studs and manners"--of what blood was he? |
22362 | No one would pretend that the death of little Dombey( with its"What are the wild waves saying?") |
22362 | Should it not rather mean that all men are equally polite? |
22362 | Thackeray has described for ever the Anglo- Indian Colonel; but what on earth would he have done with an Australian Colonel? |
22362 | What are suns and stars, what are times and seasons, what is the mere universe, that it should presume to interrupt Mrs. Nickleby? |
22362 | What can it matter whether Dickens''s clerks talked cockney now that half the duchesses talk American? |
22362 | What is there to be said about earthquake and the dawn? |
22362 | What would Thackeray have made of an age in which a man in the position of Lord Kew may actually be the born brother of Mr. Moss of Wardour Street? |
22362 | What would the old Quarterly Reviewers themselves have thought of the Rhodes Scholarships? |
22362 | Why did Dickens at the end of this book give way to that typically English optimism about emigration? |
22362 | Why should equality mean that all men are equally rude? |
14203 | How did our Master Himself sum up the law in a few words? |
14203 | For how could a man even wish for something which he had never heard of? |
14203 | Have we really learnt to think more broadly? |
14203 | In every man''s heart there is a revolution; how much more in every poet''s? |
14203 | Or have we only learnt to spread our thoughts thinner? |
14203 | The famous remark of the Caterpillar in"Alice in Wonderland"--"Why not?" |
14203 | The only question that remains is what was the joy of the old Christian ascetics of which their asceticism was merely the purchasing price? |
14203 | The story of Henry Durie is dark enough, but could anyone stand beside the grave of that sodden monomaniac and not respect him? |
14203 | Why did he who loved where all men were blind, seek to blind himself where all men loved? |
14203 | Why should any critic of poetry spend time and attention on that part of a man''s work which is unpoetical? |
14203 | Why should any man be interested in aspects which are uninteresting? |
14203 | Why should we jeer at him because he has a great many uniforms, for instance? |
14203 | Why was he a monk, and not a troubadour? |
14203 | Why was it that the most large- hearted and poetic spirits in that age found their most congenial atmosphere in these awful renunciations? |
11605 | Who can live in Italy to- day? |
11605 | And is it not the plain meaning of good news that it must come from outside oneself? |
11605 | Are these to judge mankind? |
11605 | But how is he prevented from revenging himself with an axe? |
11605 | But whom did Prussia ever emancipate-- even by accident? |
11605 | Can any one candidly say that they have left on any one of these people the faintest impress of progress or liberation? |
11605 | Did I tell you that Leonardo''s hair must have been German hair, because so many of his contemporaries said it was beautiful? |
11605 | Germany invades England... How long is anybody expected to go with that sort of game, or keep peace at that illimitable price? |
11605 | Have you read some of the German explanations of Hamlet? |
11605 | How can such people appreciate art; how can they appreciate religion-- nay, how can they appreciate irreligion? |
11605 | How does one create a Creator? |
11605 | How does one invent a message? |
11605 | How long must we pursue a road in which promises are all fetishes in front of us and all fragments behind us? |
11605 | If he hits his neighbour on the head with the kitchen chopper, what do we do? |
11605 | Is it not the plain meaning of the Gospel that it is good news? |
11605 | What is it that has united all of us against the Prussian, as against a mad dog? |
11605 | What is their non- reciprocity but an inability to imagine, not a god or devil, but merely another man? |
11605 | What is their sophism of"necessity"but an inability to imagine to- morrow morning? |
11605 | What would you feel first, let us say, if I mentioned Michael Angelo? |
11605 | Who but God could have graven Michael Angelo; who came so near to graving the Mother of God? |
11605 | Would you take the trouble to prove that Michael Angelo was an Italian that this man takes to prove that he was a German? |
11605 | _ Quae reggio in terris_... What place is there on earth where the name of Prussia is not the signal for hopeful prayers and joyful dances? |
19535 | Am I a boy?--Why am I a boy?--Why are n''t I a chair?--What is a chair? |
19535 | Have you formed any conception of the condition of marksmanship in the British Army? |
19535 | Each one of them was whispering to himself,"What can I alter?" |
19535 | God, Pompilia, will you let them murder me?" |
19535 | He said in substance,"If we are democrats, let us have votes for women; but if we are democrats, why on earth should we have respect for women?" |
19535 | If he is to be anything else than this, why should we desire him, or what else are we to desire? |
19535 | If the Superman will come by human selection, what sort of Superman are we to select? |
19535 | If the Superman will come by natural selection, may we leave it to natural selection? |
19535 | If the flag of England was a piece of piratical humbug, was not the flag of Poland a piece of piratical humbug too? |
19535 | If the new drama had an ethical purpose, what was it? |
19535 | If the ordinary man may not discuss existence, why should he be asked to conduct it? |
19535 | If we hated the jingoism of the existing armies and frontiers, why should we bring into existence new jingo armies and new jingo frontiers? |
19535 | Into what kind of world did he step? |
19535 | Is there a father''s heart as well as a mother''s?" |
19535 | It_ is_ true that the Irishman says,"Who will tread on the tail of my coat?" |
19535 | The immediate answer, of course, is sufficiently obvious: the ape did not worry about the man, so why should we worry about the Superman? |
19535 | We can imagine him crying,"Why in the name of death and conscience should it be tragic to be a widow but comic to be a widower?" |
19535 | What have you grasped in me? |
19535 | What then is the colour of this Irish society of which Bernard Shaw, with all his individual oddity, is yet an essential type? |
19535 | When a demagogue says to a mob,"There is the Bank of England, why should n''t you have some of that money?" |
19535 | and if Ibsen was a moral teacher, what the deuce was he teaching? |
19535 | and second, What did he imagine it to be? |
19535 | or of Stevenson,"Shall we never shed blood?" |
19535 | or, if the phrase be premature, What did he imagine it was going to be? |
1719 | And was not God my armourer, All patient and unpaid, That sealed my skull as a helmet, And ribs for hauberk made? 1719 And well may God with the serving- folk Cast in His dreadful lot; Is not He too a servant, And is not He forgot? |
1719 | Brothers at arms,said Alfred,"On this side lies the foe; Are slavery and starvation flowers, That you should pluck them so? |
1719 | But even though such days endure, How shall it profit her? 1719 For was not God my gardener And silent like a slave; That opened oaks on the uplands Or thicket in graveyard gave? |
1719 | I go not far; Where would you meet? 1719 Or that before the red cock crow All we, a thousand strong, Go down the dark road to God''s house, Singing a Wessex song? |
1719 | To sweat a slave to a race of slaves, To drink up infamy? 1719 What goddess was your mother, What fay your breed begot, That you should not die with Uther And Arthur and Lancelot? |
1719 | What have the strong gods given? 1719 Why dwell the Danes in North England, And up to the river ride? |
1719 | Will ye part with the weeds for ever? 1719 And his grey- green eyes were cruel, And the smile of his mouth waxed hard, And he said,And when did Britain Become your burying- yard? |
1719 | But as he came before his line A little space along, His beardless face broke into mirth, And he cried:"What broken bits of earth Are here? |
1719 | But who shall look from Alfred''s hood Or breathe his breath alive? |
1719 | Do you have joy without a cause, Yea, faith without a hope?" |
1719 | Eldred the Good is fallen-- Are you too good to fall? |
1719 | In cloud of clay so cast to heaven What shape shall man discern? |
1719 | Not less barbarian laughter Choked Harold like a flood,"And shall I fight with scarecrows That am of Guthrum''s blood? |
1719 | Or show daisies to the door? |
1719 | Or will you bid the bold grass Go, and return no more? |
1719 | Smiled Alfred,"Seek ye a fable More dizzy and more dread Than all your mad barbarian tales Where the sky stands on its head? |
1719 | When Guthrum sits on a hero''s throne And asks if he is dead? |
1719 | Where have the glad gods led? |
1719 | are you bloodless now?" |
31184 | A MARRIAGE SONG Why should we reck of hours that rend While we two ride together? |
31184 | And hope, that is a hardy shrub, And goodness, that is God''s last word-- Will someone take me to a pub? |
31184 | And how shall I repay? |
31184 | And should not Evangelicals All jump at shedding Gore? |
31184 | And who are we( as Henson says) That we should close the door? |
31184 | Are our legs our own, master? |
31184 | Art thou come back on earth for our teaching To train or to warn--? |
31184 | But what will there be to remember Or what will there be to see-- Though our towns through a long November Abide to the end and be? |
31184 | Can you not even conserve? |
31184 | Do they, Smith? |
31184 | Do they, fasting, tramping, bleeding, Wait the news from this our city? |
31184 | Have a myriad children grown old, Grown gross and unloved and embittered, Grown cunning and savage and cold? |
31184 | Hissing"There is still Committed"If the voice of Cecil falters, If McKenna''s point has pith, Do they tremble for their altars? |
31184 | How came we brawling by these bitter springs, We of the North?--two kindly nations-- we? |
31184 | How should I pay for one poor graven steeple Whereon you shattered what you shall not know, How should I pay you, miserable people? |
31184 | How should I pay you everything you owe?34 Unhappy, can I give you back your honour? |
31184 | Know you what earth shall lose to- night, what rich, uncounted loans, What heavy gold of tales untold you bury with my bones? |
31184 | Make answer, our flesh, make an answer, Say, whence art thou come-- who art thou? |
31184 | Must I for more than carnage call you claimant, Paying you a penny for each son you slay? |
31184 | My little village smoke; or pass the door, The old dear door of that unhappy house That is to me a kingdom and much more? |
31184 | Not for me be the vaunt of woe; Was not I from a boy Vowed with the helmet and spear and spur To the blood- red banner of joy? |
31184 | O ill for him that loves the sun; Shall the sun stoop for anyone? |
31184 | Only hands and hearts and stomachs-- what have you to do with these? |
31184 | Russian peasants round their pope Huddled, Smith, Hear about it all, I hope, Do n''t they, Smith? |
31184 | Shall the sun weep for hearts undone Or heavy souls that pray? |
31184 | Smith, Where the Breton boat- fleet tosses, Are they, Smith? |
31184 | THE MARCH OF THE BLACK MOUNTAIN 1913 What will there be to remember Of us in the days to be? |
31184 | The doubts that were so plain to chase, so dreadful to withstand-- Oh, who shall understand but you; yea, who shall understand? |
31184 | Though I forgave would any man forget? |
31184 | Was it all nothing that she stood imperial in duresse? |
31184 | We are only men, master, have you heard of men? |
31184 | What is the price of that dead man they brought me? |
31184 | What is the price of that red spark that caught me From a kind farm that never had a name? |
31184 | What know we of à ¦ ons behind us, Dim dynasties lost long ago, Huge empires, like dreams unremembered, Huge cities for ages laid low? |
31184 | Why should we reck of grin and groan While we two ride together? |
31184 | Why should we reck of ill or well While we two ride together? |
31184 | Why should we reck of scorn or praise While we two ride together? |
31184 | Will someone take me to a pub? |
31184 | Yea, ruined in a royal game I was before my cradle; Was ever gambler hurling gold who lost such things as I? |
31184 | You have engines big and burnished, tall beyond our fathers''ken, Why should you make peace and traffic with such feeble folk as men? |
13342 | Canst thou play with him as with a bird, canst thou bind him for thy maidens? |
13342 | Do you care for nature much? |
13342 | Another lady who did not know him, and therefore disliked him, asked after a dinner party,"Who was that too- exuberant financier?" |
13342 | But Browning might simply be describing the material incident of the man being knocked downstairs, and his description would run:--"What then? |
13342 | Can it be? |
13342 | Do I carry the moon in my pocket?" |
13342 | Do grey skies and wastes covered with thistles mean nothing? |
13342 | Do the people who call one of Browning''s poems scientific in its analysis realise the meaning of what they say? |
13342 | Does an old horse turned out to graze mean nothing? |
13342 | Does the earth mean nothing? |
13342 | For what is the state of affairs? |
13342 | How can ye chant, ye little birds, And I sae fu''of care? |
13342 | If a man had gone up to Browning and asked him with all the solemnity of the eccentric,"Do you think life is worth living?" |
13342 | If his grandfather had been a Swede, should we not have said that the old sea- roving blood broke out in bold speculation and insatiable travel? |
13342 | Is that plain?" |
13342 | It is really true that such a line as"Irks fear the crop- full bird, frets doubt the maw- crammed beast?" |
13342 | Now what, as a matter of fact, is the outline and development of the poem of"Sludge"? |
13342 | The only genuine answer to this is,"What does anything mean?" |
13342 | The question now arises, therefore, what was his conception of his functions as an artist? |
13342 | What art can wash her guilt away?" |
13342 | What do you really say to dashing down a plate on the floor when you do n''t like what''s on it? |
13342 | What made those holes and rents In the dock''s harsh swarth leaves, bruised as to baulk All hope of greenness? |
13342 | What poet was ever so magnificently lucid? |
13342 | What poet was ever vainer than Byron? |
13342 | What porridge had John Keats?" |
13342 | What porridge had John Keats?" |
13342 | Whence came this extraordinary theory that a man is always speaking most truly when he is speaking most coarsely? |
13342 | Who fished the murex up? |
13342 | Will you believe me, though? |
13342 | to be able to ask impudently of them now? |
13468 | Shall I, the gnat that dances in Thy ray, dare to be reverent? |
13468 | Another may say,"Why should the real democracy of a young country be tied to your snobbish old squirarchy?" |
13468 | But what was it that went wrong? |
13468 | But where is Sir Herbert Samuel''s national home? |
13468 | But why are there lions, though of French or feudal origin, on the flag of England? |
13468 | But would President Wilson say it? |
13468 | But would even a German Chancellor put it exactly like that? |
13468 | Can Armenian usury be a common topic of talk in a camp in California and in a club in Piccadilly? |
13468 | Could we talk of the competition of Armenians among Welsh shop- keepers, or of the crowd of Armenians on Brighton Parade? |
13468 | Does Dickens show us a realistic Armenian teaching in the thieves''kitchens of the slums? |
13468 | Does Shakespeare show us a tragic Armenian towering over the great Venice of the Renascence? |
13468 | For if a man is ignorant of his other self, how can he possibly know that the other self is ignorant? |
13468 | He is the head of the whole Moslem religion, and if he does not know, who does? |
13468 | How can I even say that I always had it, or that it did not come from somewhere else? |
13468 | How had this immemorial institution disappeared in the interval, so that nobody even dreamed of it or suggested it? |
13468 | How often would he have met a Franciscan or a Zionist? |
13468 | How often would he have met a Moslem or a Greek Syrian? |
13468 | How was it that when equality returned, it was no longer the equality of citizens, and had to be the equality of men? |
13468 | If I have a self of which I can say nothing, how can I even say that it is my own self? |
13468 | If everybody is satisfied about how it is done, why does not everybody do it? |
13468 | If the Normans were really the Northmen, the sea- wolves of Scandinavian piracy, why did they not display three wolves on their shields? |
13468 | In a great industrial city like London or Liverpool, how often do they even meet each other? |
13468 | Is it seriously suggested that we can substitute the Armenian for the Jew in the study of a world- wide problem like that of the Jews? |
13468 | It suggests a sort of derisive riddle; where does London End? |
13468 | My simple Eastern Christian would almost certainly be driven to cry aloud,"To what superhuman God was this enormous temple erected? |
13468 | One man may say,"Why should the jolly English inns and villages be swamped by these priggish provincial Yankees?" |
13468 | The rising generation, when asked by a venerable Victorian critic and catechist,"What does God know?" |
13468 | They may be talking in such terms as they use after a motor smash or a bankruptcy; where was the blunder? |
13468 | They may be writing such books as generals write after a military defeat; whose was the fault? |
13468 | Was a Vestal Virgin like a Christian Virgin, or something profoundly different? |
13468 | Was he quite serious about Venus, like a diabolist, or merely frivolous about Venus, like a Christian? |
13468 | What I want to know is, why do we not all do the same? |
13468 | What did they mean by devils? |
13468 | What do we mean by madness? |
13468 | What is evil? |
13468 | What is pain? |
13468 | What made the difference? |
13468 | What was it that had happened between the rise of the Roman Republic and the rise of the French Republic? |
13468 | When I told a distinguished psychologist at Oxford that I differed from his view of the universe, he answered,"Why universe? |
13468 | Why did not the French and English princes find in the wild boars, that were the objects of their hunting, the subjects of their heraldry? |
13468 | Why did the equal citizens of the first take it for granted that there would be slaves? |
13468 | Why did the equal citizens of the second take it for granted that there would not be slaves? |
13468 | Why do we not also do this and become rich?" |
13468 | Why does not a cultivated clergyman in Cornwall make a casual remark to an old friend of his at the University of Aberdeen? |
13468 | Why does not a harassed commercial traveller in Barcelona settle a question by merely thinking about his business partner in Berlin? |
13468 | Why has not John Bull been content with the English bull, or the English bull- dog? |
13468 | Why should it not be a multiverse?" |
13468 | Why was an English king described as having the heart of a lion, any more than of a tiger? |
13468 | Why was not the Parthenon originally built in the neighbourhood of Potsdam, or did ten Hansa towns compete to be the birthplace of Homer? |
13468 | Would Mr. Moore have thought that story any more incredible than the other? |
13468 | Would anybody put it in the exact order of words and structure of sentence in which Dr. Weizmann has put it? |
13468 | Would he have risen to his feet and told Mr. Yeats that all was over between them? |
13468 | Would he have thought it worse than a thousand other things that a modern mystic may lawfully believe? |
27250 | A man who takes a holiday at Trouville or Dieppe is not confronted on his return with the question,''When is your book on France going to appear?'' |
27250 | And if we did ask him to bring his wife, how many wives would he bring? |
27250 | Are these the amiable and pacific relations which will unite England and America, when Englishmen can get to America in a day? |
27250 | Are you an atheist?'' |
27250 | Assuming all the desperate composure of Slim Jim himself, I replied,''You mean you are connected with the police authorities here, do n''t you? |
27250 | But because I know that Bilge is only Bilge, shall I stoop to the profanity of saying that fire is only fire? |
27250 | But is my American critic really ready to treat the sacrifice of blood in the same way as the sacrifice of beer? |
27250 | But perhaps a better answer would be that given to W. T. Stead when he circulated the rhetorical question,''Shall I slay my brother Boer?'' |
27250 | But right in what? |
27250 | But the English are not always saying, either in romance or reality,''What''s to be done, if our food is being poisoned by all these baronets?'' |
27250 | But what are those rights? |
27250 | But what did it write on Belshazzar''s wall?... |
27250 | But what would be the good of imaginative logic to prove the madness of such people, when they themselves praise it for being mad? |
27250 | Can it be possible that he brought it from Virginia, where the cigarettes come from? |
27250 | Can we say in any special sense nowadays that clergymen, as such, make a poison out of the blood of the martyrs? |
27250 | Can we say it in anything like the real sense, in which we do say that yellow journalists make a poison out of the blood of the soldiers? |
27250 | I suppose most of your people are agricultural, are n''t they?'' |
27250 | If he was a lunatic who thought he was an astronomer, why did he have a badge to prove he was a detective? |
27250 | If the police insist on his wearing clothes, will he recognise the authority of the police? |
27250 | If there are no rights of men, what are the rights of nations? |
27250 | If_ Martin Chuzzlewit_ makes America a lunatic asylum, what in the world does it make England? |
27250 | In short, as in the American formula, is he a polygamist? |
27250 | In short, as in the American formula, is he an anarchist? |
27250 | Is Mr. Campbell content with a Prohibition which is another name for Privilege? |
27250 | Is bloodshed to be as prolonged and protracted as Prohibition? |
27250 | Is the Hairy Ainu content with hair, or does he wear any clothes? |
27250 | Is the normal noncombatant to shed his gore as often as he misses his drink? |
27250 | O, hidden face of man, whereover The years have woven a viewless veil, If thou wert verily man''s lover What did thy love or blood avail? |
27250 | One of the questions on the paper was,''Are you an anarchist?'' |
27250 | Only, if war is the exception, why should Prohibition be the rule? |
27250 | Shall I blaspheme crimson stars any more than crimson sunsets, or deny that those moons are golden any more than that this grass is green? |
27250 | Take that innocent question,''Are you an anarchist?'' |
27250 | The inquisitor, in his more than morbid curiosity, had then written down,''Are you a polygamist?'' |
27250 | Then there was the question,''Are you in favour of subverting the government of the United States by force?'' |
27250 | To which a detached philosopher would naturally feel inclined to answer,''What the devil has that to do with you? |
27250 | Was he a detective? |
27250 | Was he a wandering lunatic? |
27250 | Was he an astronomer? |
27250 | What has become of all those ideal figures from the Wise Man of the Stoics to the democratic Deist of the eighteenth century? |
27250 | Which has most to do with shekels to- day, the priests or the politicians? |
27250 | Who and what was that man? |
27250 | Why not wear his uniform, if he was resolved to show every stranger in the street his badge? |
27250 | Why should the world take the chains off the black man when it was just putting them on the white? |
27250 | Would etiquette require us to ask him to bring his wife? |
27250 | _ Is the Atlantic Narrowing?_ A certain kind of question is asked very earnestly in our time. |
27250 | or''Are you a philanthropist?'' |
27250 | which is intrinsically quite as impudent as''Are you an optimist?'' |
12037 | ''A bubble-- have you ever spied''The colours I have seen on it?'' |
12037 | ''Do I not guard your secret from the sun? |
12037 | ''In all your turning, what have you found?'' |
12037 | ''Show thine ancient flame and thunder, Split the stillness once asunder, Lest we whisper, lest we wonder Art thou there at all?'' |
12037 | ''This is a common man: knowest thou, O soul, What this thing is? |
12037 | ''Why should you rise? |
12037 | A NOVELTY Why should I care for the Ages Because they are old and grey? |
12037 | A little red dust, if the wind be blowing-- Who shall reck of its coming or going?'' |
12037 | And for the Lady Olive-- who shall speak? |
12037 | And the Devil''s dance? |
12037 | And where am I? |
12037 | And you-- what is your right, and who are you, To praise God? |
12037 | Are you alive? |
12037 | Blind, startled fools-- think you I know it not? |
12037 | But once the blood''s wild wedding o''er, Were not dread his, half dark desire, To see the Christ- child in the cot, The Virgin Mary by the fire? |
12037 | But what shall God not ask of him In the last time when all is told, Who saw her stand beside the hearth, The firelight garbing her in gold? |
12037 | Do I win? |
12037 | For her? |
12037 | Have you sunk Lower than anger? |
12037 | His hat drops to the ground._] OLIVE[_ looking up._] Captain, are you from church? |
12037 | I stand erect, crowned with the stars-- and why? |
12037 | In earth or heaven What has a better right? |
12037 | Is not this hell''s own wit? |
12037 | Is one leaf less on the tree? |
12037 | Is this wine less red and royal That the hangman waits for me? |
12037 | Know I not His ways? |
12037 | May I not go within? |
12037 | My grief I send to smite you, no pleasure, no belief, Lord of the battered grievance, what do you know of grief? |
12037 | Nay; torture not the torturer-- let him lie: What need of racks to teach a worm to writhe? |
12037 | OLIVE[_ turns her face to him._] I hear six birds sing in that little tree, Say, is the old earth laughing at my fears? |
12037 | Quaff, like a brave man, as he did, Wine and death as heaven pours-- This is my fate: O ye rulers, O ye pontiffs, what is yours? |
12037 | REDFEATHER[_ quietly._] Lord Orm? |
12037 | Shall I not cry the truth?'' |
12037 | Shall not one mortal man alive Hold up his head? |
12037 | Should I slander you?'' |
12037 | THE BEATIFIC VISION Through what fierce incarnations, furled In fire and darkness, did I go, Ere I was worthy in the world To see a dandelion grow? |
12037 | THE HOLY OF HOLIES''Elder father, though thine eyes Shine with hoary mysteries, Canst thou tell what in the heart Of a cowslip blossom lies? |
12037 | THE OUTLAW Priest, is any song- bird stricken? |
12037 | THE PRAISE OF DUST''What of vile dust?'' |
12037 | The nations come; they kneel among the flowers Sprung from your blood, blossoms of May and June, Which do not poison them-- is it not strange? |
12037 | These whimperers-- have they spared to us One dripping woe, one reeking sin? |
12037 | They cursed me: what was that to me Who in that summer darkness furled, With but an owl and snail to see, Had blessed and conquered all the world? |
12037 | They talk; by God, is it not time Some of Love''s chosen broke the girth, And told the good all men have known Since the first morning of the earth? |
12037 | Thief, dog, and son of devils-- where are these? |
12037 | Think you to teach me? |
12037 | We that stood up proud, unpardoned, When his face was dark and his heart was hardened? |
12037 | What care? |
12037 | What do I come to do? |
12037 | What is it? |
12037 | What thought you, truly? |
12037 | What toast, what toast remaineth, Drunk down in the same good wine, By the tippler''s cup in the tavern, And the priest''s cup at the shrine? |
12037 | What would you here? |
12037 | What would you there, sir? |
12037 | What? |
12037 | When I say''Coward,''is the law awake? |
12037 | Where is my good? |
12037 | Where shall I hide my carrion from the sun? |
12037 | Who knows what round the corner waits To smite? |
12037 | Why should I bow to the Ages Because they were drear and dry? |
12037 | With a bout at foils? |
12037 | Write, then, that I[_ Leaps to the ground before her._] Descended into heaven.... You are ill? |
12037 | You dread to lose yourself before the stars-- Do you not dread to sleep? |
12037 | [_ A pause: then in a low voice._] Would he not be good? |
12037 | can he not Be kicked or paid? |
12037 | do you know him? |
12037 | the little real hoard, The secret tears, the sudden chivalries; The tragic love, the futile triumph-- where? |
470 | What are those two beautiful and industrious beings,I can imagine him murmuring to himself,"whom I see everywhere, serving me I know not why? |
470 | What man of you having a hundred sheep, and losing one, would not leave the ninety and nine in the wilderness, and go after that which was lost? |
470 | And on which the sincerity? |
470 | And what have they done? |
470 | But is there any one so darkly read in stars and oracles that he will dare to predict what Mr. Asquith will be saying thirty years hence? |
470 | But let us ask ourselves( in a spirit of love, as Mr. Chadband would say), what are the ballets of the Alhambra? |
470 | But poor women in the Battersea High Road do say,"Do you think I will sell my own child?" |
470 | But when we ask,"But what have these nails held together? |
470 | Did Raleigh think it sensible to answer the Spanish guns only, as Stevenson says, with a flourish of insulting trumpets? |
470 | Did Sydney ever miss an opportunity of making a theatrical remark in the whole course of his life and death? |
470 | Does Mr. Henry James infect us with the spirit of a schoolboy? |
470 | For if we admit that there must be varieties in art or opinion what sense is there in thinking there will not be varieties in government? |
470 | How can it have come about that a man as intelligent as Mr. McCabe can think that paradox and jesting stop the way? |
470 | How do you know a camel when you see one?" |
470 | How, then, can he recognize its aspects? |
470 | I replied with a natural simplicity and wonder,"About what other subjects can one make jokes except serious subjects?" |
470 | If so, where is the sense of all their dreams of festive traditions? |
470 | If the Superman is better than we, of course we need not fight him; but in that case, why not call him the Saint? |
470 | If the two moralities are entirely different, why do you call them both moralities? |
470 | If we do not expect the unexpected, why do we go there at all? |
470 | If we expect the expected, why do we not sit at home and expect it by ourselves? |
470 | In a purely democratic state it would be always saying,"What laws can we obey?" |
470 | Is literature better, is politics better, for having discarded the moralist and the philosopher?" |
470 | Is the art of Whistler a brave, barbaric art, happy and headlong? |
470 | Is the man who shoots angels and carves beasts into men humble? |
470 | Is the prophet of the future of all men humble? |
470 | It is a far deeper and sharper question to ask,"What can they know of England who know only the world?" |
470 | It is as if a man were asked,"What is the use of a hammer?" |
470 | It is very banal and very inartistic when a poor woman at the Adelphi says,"Do you think I will sell my own child?" |
470 | On which side would be the solemnity? |
470 | Or, again,"What man of you if his son ask for bread will he give him a stone, or if he ask for a fish will he give him a serpent?" |
470 | The Man- God of old answers from his awful hill,"Was ever sorrow like unto my sorrow?" |
470 | The ordinary man of sense would reply,"Then what makes you call them all camels? |
470 | The question is not whether we go up or down stairs, but where we are going to, and what we are going, for? |
470 | To use a fine phrase for emotional sanity, was his heart in the right place? |
470 | Unfortunately, the philosopher who talks about aspects of truth generally also asks,"What is truth?" |
470 | Was Essex restraining his excitement when he threw his hat into the sea? |
470 | Was Grenville concealing his emotions when he broke wine- glasses to pieces with his teeth and bit them till the blood poured down? |
470 | Was he fond of children-- or fond of them only in a dark and sinister sense? |
470 | We were inclined to ask,"Who wants to gather moss, except silly old ladies?" |
470 | Were all the Elizabethan palladins and pirates like that? |
470 | Were any of them like that? |
470 | Were even the Puritans Stoics? |
470 | What do you mean by a camel? |
470 | What fairy godmother bade them come trotting out of elfland when I was born? |
470 | What god of the borderland, what barbaric god of legs, must I propitiate with fire and wine, lest they run away with me?" |
470 | What has health to do with care? |
470 | What have your nails done?" |
470 | What is the good of begetting a man until we have settled what is the good of being a man? |
470 | What is the good of telling a community that it has every liberty except the liberty to make laws? |
470 | What were the giant''s religious views; what his views on politics and the duties of the citizen? |
470 | Where are your contented Outlanders? |
470 | Where is your British prestige? |
470 | Where is your carpentry? |
470 | Where is your free South Africa? |
470 | Who are the Irish? |
470 | Who were the Celts? |
470 | Why should Mr. McCabe be so eloquent about the danger arising from fantastic and paradoxical writers? |
470 | Why should he be so ardent in desiring grave and verbose writers? |
470 | With us the governing class is always saying to itself,"What laws shall we make?" |
470 | and answered,"To make hammers"; and when asked,"And of those hammers, what is the use?" |
470 | then what answer is there? |
11505 | And could he have failed to notice,the others reason indignantly,"how disgusting we were? |
11505 | As long as there are roses and lilies on the earth shall I not remain here? |
11505 | Is not life a lovely thing and worth saving? |
11505 | Should I not prolong the exquisite miracle of consciousness? |
11505 | And what is the good of being a Tariff Reformer if you ca n''t say that? |
11505 | And what, in the name of the Nine Gods, is the ordinary man? |
11505 | Are we without the fault because we have the opposite virtue? |
11505 | Briefly, have we left off being brutal because we are too grand and generous to be brutal? |
11505 | But does any one believe that the brewer throws bags of gold into the party funds without any particular reason? |
11505 | But does any one believe that the laborious political ambitions of modern commercial men ever have this airy and incommunicable character? |
11505 | But shall we attack it? |
11505 | But the question is not how cheap are we buying a thing, but what are we buying? |
11505 | But what can it mean? |
11505 | But what point would there be in so performing an arbitrary form of respect that it was not a form of respect? |
11505 | But what should we think of the man who kept his hands in his pockets and asked the lady to take his hat off for him because he felt tired? |
11505 | But who can tell how much influence in keeping members away may have been exerted by this calm assumption that they would stop away? |
11505 | Can this institution be defended by means of any of them? |
11505 | Did he expect to find a fossil Eve with a fossil apple inside her? |
11505 | Did he suppose that the ages would have spared for him a complete skeleton of Adam attached to a slightly faded fig- leaf? |
11505 | Did they look for the funeral games of Patroclus? |
11505 | Did they think that immortality was a gas? |
11505 | Did they think that it was something to eat? |
11505 | Did they think that long rows of Oriental dancing- girls would sway hither and thither in an ecstasy of lament? |
11505 | Did they think there would be human sacrifice-- the immolation of Oriental slaves upon the tomb? |
11505 | Did you ever hear a small boy complain of having to hang about a railway station and wait for a train? |
11505 | Do any of these broad human divisions cover such a case as that of secrecy of the political and party finances? |
11505 | How can any man be expected to help to make a full attendance when he knows that a full attendance is actually forbidden? |
11505 | How can the men who make up the Chamber do their duty reasonably when the very men who built the House have not done theirs reasonably? |
11505 | How could physical science find any traces of a moral fall? |
11505 | How could physical science prove that man is not depraved? |
11505 | How, for instance, do we as a matter of fact create peace in one single community? |
11505 | If it is a matter of sentiment, why should he spoil the scene? |
11505 | If it is not a matter of sentiment, why should he ever have visited the scene? |
11505 | If it was the man''s religion to live as long as he could, why on earth was he enlisting as a soldier? |
11505 | If the canal is to be taken as realistic, why not the hat and the head? |
11505 | If the trumpet give an uncertain sound, who shall prepare himself for the battle? |
11505 | If we are not interested, why on earth should we be worried? |
11505 | In what other sense could one believe in the Holy Ghost? |
11505 | Is Lord Curzon one of the rugged and ragged poor men whose angularities have been rubbed away? |
11505 | Is choosing your husband''s dinner one of these things? |
11505 | Is indecency more indecent if it is grave, or more indecent if it is gay? |
11505 | Is it not exquisite?" |
11505 | Is it penetrated through and through with a mystical charity, with a psychological tenderness? |
11505 | Is it really true that our English political satire is so moderate because it is so magnanimous, so forgiving, so saintly? |
11505 | Is it really true that we are_ better_ than brutality? |
11505 | Is it really true that we have_ passed_ the bludgeon stage? |
11505 | Jones?" |
11505 | My correspondent says,"Would not our women be spared the drudgery of cooking and all its attendant worries, leaving them free for higher culture?" |
11505 | Or are we without the fault because we have the opposite fault? |
11505 | Or is he one of those whom Oxford immediately deprived of all kind of social exclusiveness? |
11505 | So it comes to this: If you have no faith in the spirits your appeal is in vain; and if you have-- is it needed? |
11505 | The Puritans are always denouncing books that inflame lust; what shall we say of books that inflame the viler passions of avarice and pride? |
11505 | They did not say,"You do n''t like melted lead?.... |
11505 | They had passed to their homes at twilight through the streets of that beautiful city( or is it a province? |
11505 | Was it not true, for instance, that the other day some mad American was trying to buy Glastonbury Abbey and transfer it stone by stone to America? |
11505 | What can be the sense of this sort of thing? |
11505 | What can people mean when they say that science has disturbed their view of sin? |
11505 | What is Britain? |
11505 | What is the good of saying that? |
11505 | What on earth does all this mean? |
11505 | What part do these gentlemen play in the mental process? |
11505 | What sort of view of sin can they have had before science disturbed it? |
11505 | What traces did the writer expect to find? |
11505 | What, in the name of Acheron, did they expect it to be? |
11505 | When people say that science has shaken their faith in immortality, what do they mean? |
11505 | Where is Britain? |
11505 | Why do we laugh? |
11505 | Why is it funny that a man should sit down suddenly in the street? |
11505 | Why should it be unpleasant to the well- ordered and pious mind? |
11505 | Why should they not mean the ritual of the world? |
11505 | Why should we celebrate the very art in which we triumph by the very art in which we fail? |
11505 | Why take something which was only meant to be respectful and preserve it disrespectfully? |
11505 | Why take something which you could easily abolish as a superstition and carefully perpetuate it as a bore? |
11505 | instead of"How is your wife?" |
11505 | the King of Britain? |
130 | A man chooses to have an emotion about the largeness of the world; why should he not choose to have an emotion about its smallness? |
130 | And to the question,"What is meant by the Fall?" |
130 | And what is the matter with the anti- patriot? |
130 | And what is the matter with the candid friend? |
130 | Are there no other stories in the world except yours; and are all men busy with your business? |
130 | But do we want so crude a consummation? |
130 | But do we want the universe smashed up for fun? |
130 | But even supposing that those doctrines do include those truths, why can not you take the truths and leave the doctrines? |
130 | But how can this be an answer when even in saying"Japan has become progressive,"we really only mean,"Japan has become European"? |
130 | But how can we rush if we are, perhaps, in advance of our time? |
130 | But the question is, do we want to have longer and longer noses? |
130 | But we may ask in conclusion, if this be what drives men mad, what is it that keeps them sane? |
130 | But what are we to say of the fanatic who wrecks this world out of hatred of the other? |
130 | But what do we mean by making things better? |
130 | Can I thank no one for the birthday present of birth? |
130 | Can he hate it enough to change it, and yet love it enough to think it worth changing? |
130 | Can he look up at its colossal evil without once feeling despair? |
130 | Can he look up at its colossal good without once feeling acquiescence? |
130 | Can he, in short, be at once not only a pessimist and an optimist, but a fanatical pessimist and a fanatical optimist? |
130 | Christianity had also felt this opposition of the martyr to the suicide: had it perhaps felt it for the same reason? |
130 | Could I not be grateful to Santa Claus when he put in my stockings the gift of two miraculous legs? |
130 | How can I answer if there is no eternal test? |
130 | How can I denounce a man for skinning cats, if he is only now what I may possibly become in drinking a glass of milk? |
130 | How can it be noble to wish to make one''s life infinite and yet mean to wish to make it immortal? |
130 | How can man be approximately free of fine emotions, able to swing them in a clear space without breakage or wrong? |
130 | How can one say that Christmas celebrations are not suitable to the twenty- fifth of a month? |
130 | How can we contrive to be at once astonished at the world and yet at home in it? |
130 | How can we make a man always dissatisfied with his work, yet always satisfied with working? |
130 | How can we rush to catch a train which may not arrive for a few centuries? |
130 | How can we say that the Church wishes to bring us back into the Dark Ages? |
130 | How can you overtake Jones if you walk in the other direction? |
130 | I am not saying this fierceness was right; but why was it so fierce? |
130 | I said to him,"Shall I tell you where the men are who believe most in themselves? |
130 | If Cinderella says,"How is it that I must leave the ball at twelve?" |
130 | If I ask,"Why credulous?" |
130 | If better conditions will make the poor more fit to govern themselves, why should not better conditions already make the rich more fit to govern them? |
130 | If clean homes and clean air make clean souls, why not give the power( for the present at any rate) to those who undoubtedly have the clean air? |
130 | If sweaters can be behind the current morality, why should not philanthropists be in front of it? |
130 | If the standard changes, how can there be improvement, which implies a standard? |
130 | If you are merely a sceptic, you must sooner or later ask yourself the question,"Why should ANYTHING go right; even observation and deduction? |
130 | If you like to put it so, shall it be a reasonable or an unreasonable loyalty? |
130 | If you see clearly the kernel of common- sense in the nut of Christian orthodoxy, why can not you simply take the kernel and leave the nut? |
130 | In Sir Oliver Lodge''s interesting new Catechism, the first two questions were:"What are you?" |
130 | In what world of riddles was born this monstrous murder and this monstrous meekness? |
130 | Is he enough of a pagan to die for the world, and enough of a Christian to die to it? |
130 | Is there any answer to the argument that those who have breathed clean air had better decide for those who have breathed foul? |
130 | Is there any answer to the proposition that those who have had the best opportunities will probably be our best guides? |
130 | It may be so, and if it is so how are we to test it? |
130 | Perhaps you know that you are the King of England; but why do you care? |
130 | The Evolutionist says,"Where do you draw the line?" |
130 | The question was,"What did the first frog say?" |
130 | The real problem is-- Can the lion lie down with the lamb and still retain his royal ferocity? |
130 | They are both movements in the brain of a bewildered ape?" |
130 | They do not prove that Adam was not responsible to God; how could they prove it? |
130 | They might reasonably rejoin( in a stentorian chorus),"How the blazes could we discover, without being angry, whether angry people see red?" |
130 | Thus, if one asked an ordinary intelligent man, on the spur of the moment,"Why do you prefer civilization to savagery?" |
130 | To the question,"What are you?" |
130 | Was Lord Bacon a bootblack? |
130 | Was the Duke of Marlborough a crossing sweeper? |
130 | We say there must be a primal loyalty to life: the only question is, shall it be a natural or a supernatural loyalty? |
130 | What could be better than to have all the fun of discovering South Africa without the disgusting necessity of landing there? |
130 | What could be the nature of the thing which one could abuse first because it would not fight, and second because it was always fighting? |
130 | What could it all mean? |
130 | What is the evil of the man commonly called an optimist? |
130 | What is the matter with the pessimist? |
130 | What on earth is the current morality, except in its literal sense-- the morality that is always running away? |
130 | What was this Christianity which always forbade war and always produced wars? |
130 | Who ever found an ant- hill decorated with the statues of celebrated ants? |
130 | Who has seen a bee- hive carved with the images of gorgeous queens of old? |
130 | Why should a man surrender his dignity to the solar system any more than to a whale? |
130 | Why should not good logic be as misleading as bad logic? |
130 | Why, then, should one worry particularly to call it large? |
130 | and"What, then, is the meaning of the Fall of Man?" |
130 | her godmother might answer,"How is it that you are going there till twelve?" |
19094 | Say, could somebody see to one of these trunks? 19094 A child? 19094 A shock? 19094 And I suppose, to the medical mind, seeing fairies means much the same as seeing snakes? 19094 And may I ask you, Professor Hocus Pocus, or whatever your name is, whom you are calling a schoolboy? 19094 And what a mass of harm may have come of not believing in Apollo? 19094 And what harm came of believing in Apollo? 19094 And what have I stolen? 19094 And what have I to do with that? 19094 And what is that? 19094 And what is that? 19094 And what is that? 19094 And what is the cruellest crime? 19094 And what''s that? 19094 And what_ are_ we to do with Morris? 19094 And why should n''t you tell me? 19094 And why? 19094 And you''ll say with me that the great business for a King is remembering people? 19094 Are there any developments? 19094 Are you interested in modern progress? 19094 Art for the people, eh? 19094 Believe in fairies? 19094 But do n''t you think there may be floating and spiritual stars which will last longer than the red lamps? 19094 But what are all those cries and gasps I hear? 19094 But what the devil are you for, if you do n''t believe in a miracle? 19094 But you come in the shape and size of a man? 19094 By the way, let me have a look at those goldfish of yours, will you? 19094 By the way, what is a Conjurer''s dinner? 19094 Ca n''t you believe in devils? 19094 Can I be of any use? 19094 Can I speak to the Doctor? 19094 Can I take your explanation to him now? 19094 Conjuring? 19094 Did they say so? 19094 Do n''t you have a newspaper or something? 19094 Do n''t you know the kind of man who, when you talk to him about the five best breeds of dog, always ends up by buying a mongrel? 19094 Do n''t you see? 19094 Do you believe it? 19094 Do you blame him very much if he, too, tried to have a holiday in fairyland? 19094 Do you call that a toy? 19094 Do you mean a toy? 19094 Do you really find that very unpardonable? 19094 Do you really mean I may say anything I like? 19094 Do you reckon that will take us in? 19094 Do you say you can make stones disappear? 19094 Do you want me to fight? 19094 Do you wish you had never been a conjurer? 19094 Does it never strike you that doubt can be a madness, as well be faith? 19094 Does it remind you of the French Revolution? 19094 Does my sister commonly select such evenings to take the air-- and the damp? 19094 Forgive me, but may I detain you for one moment? 19094 Got a lantern, Duke? 19094 Have I committed a worse crime than thieving? 19094 Have n''t you got a Cause or something? 19094 Have you told the Duke? 19094 He? 19094 How can the Church have a right to make men fast if she does not allow them to feast? 19094 How do you cook rabbits? 19094 How do you feel? 19094 How do you know he''s a wizard? 19094 How do you mean? 19094 How does the Conjurer sheath a sword? 19094 How''s that for Agnosticism, Dr. Grimthorpe? 19094 However damnable it is? 19094 However dark it is? 19094 However dreadful it is? 19094 I thought you yourself considered the family superstition bad for the health? 19094 If you may hide truth from the world, why may not I? 19094 If yours is a professional secret, is not mine a professional secret too? 19094 Indeed? 19094 Is she very anxious? 19094 Is the Doctor with him now? 19094 Is the Duke ill? 19094 Is there anything else? 19094 Is there no such thing as irreligious mania? 19094 Is there no such thing in the house at this moment? 19094 Killed a policeman? 19094 May I bring you back for a moment to the argument? 19094 May I say a word? 19094 May I speak to the Conjurer? 19094 Must move with the times, eh? 19094 Oh, then do you believe in fairies? 19094 Or a four- leaved clover, say? 19094 Room horrible? 19094 Shall I carry them for your Grace? 19094 Shall I fetch the Duke? 19094 Shall I take the programmes for your Grace? 19094 She is not singing those songs to him, is she? 19094 So drinking decently is a conjuring trick that you can do, anyhow? 19094 Suppose he said the bosh he was talking was the language of the elves? 19094 Suppose he said the silly circles he was drawing for practice were really magic circles? 19094 Suppose you had a son in such a position, would you not expect people to tell you the whole truth if it could help you? 19094 That asking questions may be a disease, as well as proclaiming doctrines? 19094 That is so, Professor? 19094 The answer to what? 19094 The question is, what kind? 19094 The-- er-- Daily Sword- Swallower or that sort of thing? 19094 Tricks of the trade, eh? 19094 Upon which has the curse fallen? 19094 Was that what first made you think he was a wizard? 19094 We had some good conversations, did n''t we? 19094 We old buffers wo n''t be too strict with you if your view of things sometimes gets a bit-- mixed up, shall we say? 19094 Well, Professor, what''s the news in the conjuring world? 19094 Well, and the journalist? 19094 Well, as old Buffle used to say, what is a man? 19094 Well-- what else is there to drink? 19094 Well? 19094 Well? 19094 Well? 19094 Well?... 19094 Were n''t there as many who believed passionately in Apollo? 19094 What am I saying? 19094 What are you saying? 19094 What are you? 19094 What did they do? 19094 What difference? 19094 What do you mean? 19094 What do you mean? 19094 What do you mean? 19094 What do you mean? 19094 What do you mean? 19094 What do you want? 19094 What does he look like? 19094 What does he talk about? 19094 What does it all mean? 19094 What does your coat mean, if it does n''t mean that there is such a thing as the supernatural? 19094 What does your cursed collar mean if it does n''t mean that there is such a thing as a spirit? 19094 What is the definition of a child? 19094 What old apparatus do you want so much? 19094 What shall we do? 19094 What shock? 19094 What was your explanation, by the way? 19094 What''s his name? 19094 What''s that? 19094 What''s the matter? 19094 What''s what, eh? 19094 What''s what? 19094 Where are you going? 19094 Where is my brother? 19094 Which one is that? 19094 Who am I? 19094 Who are you? 19094 Who? 19094 Whose voice is that? 19094 Why are nice men such asses? 19094 Why ca n''t you leave the universe alone and let it mean what it likes? 19094 Why did you give it up? 19094 Why is that? 19094 Why not? 19094 Why not? 19094 Why not? 19094 Why should n''t the thunder be Jupiter? 19094 Why, really-- are you the...? 19094 Why, what does she do? 19094 You believed quite simply that I was a magician? 19094 You do n''t drink wine yourself? 19094 You do n''t think she''ll keep him awake all night with fairy tales? 19094 You do n''t think she''ll throw the medicine- bottle out of window and administer-- er-- a dewdrop, or anything of that sort? 19094 You know the Duke has two wards who are to live with him now? 19094 You mean that it''s really quite simple? 19094 You would really be willing to pay a sum like this to know the way I did that trick? 19094 [_ Abruptly._] And how''s Patricia? 19094 [_ Abruptly._] Why did you wear that cloak with the hood up? 19094 [_ After a silence, very suddenly._] What is that noise? 19094 [_ After a silence._] Where is Mr. Morris Carleon? 19094 [_ Almost nervously._] Why, what do you mean? 19094 [_ Angrily._] Well, what am I? 19094 [_ Astonished and angry._] Do you really mean that you take the cheque and then tell us it was only magic? 19094 [_ Becoming nasal again in anger._] That''s so, eh? 19094 [_ Breaking the silence in unusual exasperation._] Any what? 19094 [_ Dreamily._] Where shall wisdom be found, and what is the place of understanding? 19094 [_ Exasperated._] Why the devil do you dress up like that if you do n''t believe in it? 19094 [_ Genially._] And whereabouts is that? 19094 [_ Hastening forward._] You want the Doctor? 19094 [_ Humorously, as he puts in his head at the window._] See here, does a Duke live here? 19094 [_ In a lower voice._] What would you suppose? 19094 [_ Jumping up and bustling about, altering cards, papers, etc., on tables._] Room horrible? 19094 [_ Looking at him steadily._] Do you mean he is going mad? 19094 [_ Looking at him._] Do you believe in your own religion? 19094 [_ More and more thoughtful._] You would pay much more....[_ Suddenly._] But suppose I tell you the secret and you find there''s nothing in it? 19094 [_ More good- humouredly._] Well, what is a model public- house? 19094 [_ Pacing the room again._] Could it be done with mirrors? 19094 [_ Quietly._] I suppose you mean you knew something odd about the family? 19094 [_ Restrainedly._] Shall I take the programmes, your Grace? 19094 [_ Rising rather shakily._] And what are you going to do? 19094 [_ Rising, rigid with horror._] How I did that trick? 19094 [_ Sceptically._] Do you know the language of the elves? 19094 [_ Sharply._] Has it any inhabitants? 19094 [_ Smiling faintly._] And what did this friend of yours do? 19094 [_ Smiling._] Well, then, where''s Patricia? 19094 [_ Smiling._] Why? 19094 [_ Staring._] All what? 19094 [_ Starting._] Indeed? 19094 [_ Still dashing cards about the table._] Miss Carleon, might I speak to you a moment? 19094 [_ Still looking at him._] And do n''t you think you ask me a rather unfair question, Dr. Grimthorpe? 19094 [_ Swinging round suddenly on the table._] But do you blame a man very much, Miss Carleon, if he enjoyed the only fairy tale he had had in his life? 19094 [_ Turns to_ HASTINGS,_ who has gone over to a table with the papers._] You know Mr. Carleon is coming this afternoon? 19094 [_ With a sneer._] Will you disappear now? 19094 [_ With a sort of fury._] Well, does anybody believe it? 19094 [_ With amazement._] The_ conjurer_? 19094 [_ With violence._] Or perhaps you do n''t believe in devils? 19094 _ Enter_ PATRICIA CARLEON[_ Still agitated._] Patricia, where have you been? 19094 _ Was_ Joan of Arc a Vegetarian? 1718 A question? |
1718 | A woman? 1718 All?" |
1718 | And is THIS, may I ask,he said,"the sanity that is spreading?" |
1718 | And is this true? |
1718 | And no shots hit the Warden, though they were fired quite close to him too? |
1718 | And people in their senses? |
1718 | And pray where in earth or heaven are there any prudent marriages? 1718 And who wrote that?" |
1718 | But are you Smith? |
1718 | But how do you know,cried Rosamund desperately,"that Mr. Smith is a known criminal?" |
1718 | But was there in Smith''s taste any such variety as the learned doctor describes? 1718 But where is your husband taking you?" |
1718 | But why do you bring in these people here? |
1718 | Can the court now sitting throw any light on a truly singular circumstance? 1718 Catchin''flies?" |
1718 | Do you mean to say,asked Inglewood,"that you still doubt the evidence of exculpation we have brought forward?" |
1718 | Do you mean you want to marry me? |
1718 | Do you, perhaps,inquired Pym with austere irony,"maintain that your client was a bird of some sort-- say, a flamingo?" |
1718 | Doctor demandin''something? 1718 Does the aunt mind much?" |
1718 | From what quarter? |
1718 | Have you looked at it? |
1718 | Have you noticed this about him,asked Moon, with unshaken persistency,"that he has done so much and said so little? |
1718 | Have you,continued Moon,"identified the houses in Hoxton up which they climbed?" |
1718 | How can poor Mr. Smith be so dreadful as he is by your account? |
1718 | I''m all for lies in an ordinary way; but do n''t you see that to- night they wo n''t do? 1718 In the first place,"continued Moon,"have you the date of Canon Hawkins''s last glimpse of Smith and Percy climbing up the walls and roofs?" |
1718 | Inglewood,said Michael Moon, with his blue eye on the bird,"have you any friends?" |
1718 | Inglewood,said Michael Moon,"have you ever heard that I am a blackguard?" |
1718 | Is my name Moon? |
1718 | Is n''t the mere sight of him enough to banish all your morbid reflections? |
1718 | Is that one of your jokes? |
1718 | Is your name Hunt? 1718 It is impossible, then, to trace him?" |
1718 | It will then be asked,` Why does Innocent Smith continue far into his middle age a farcical existence, that exposes him to so many false charges?'' 1718 Kites are all right, but why should it only be kites? |
1718 | Knew what? |
1718 | Let us what? |
1718 | Matriculation? |
1718 | Michael,cried Rosamund, wringing her hands,"how can you stand there talking nonsense? |
1718 | My darling, what else is there to do? |
1718 | O Diana,cried Rosamund in a lower voice and altering her phrase;"but how did you tell her?" |
1718 | O lord, he is n''t a woman too, is he? |
1718 | Oh, how can one explain a change in sun and moon and everybody''s soul? |
1718 | Oh, what''s the good of talking about men? |
1718 | Outlived it? |
1718 | Perhaps a version of alive and kicking? 1718 Rosamund,"she cried in despair,"what shall I do with her?" |
1718 | Shall I die in defence of this sacred pale? 1718 Silly?" |
1718 | Snakes? |
1718 | Symptoms? |
1718 | The defence? |
1718 | Well, hang it all,said Moon, in an injured manner,"if Dr. Pym may have an old friend with ferrets, why may n''t I have an old aunt with poplars?" |
1718 | Well, really,cried Inglewood, left behind in a collapse of humour,"have I noticed anything else?" |
1718 | Well,answered Moon,"that Beacon House is a certain rather singular sort of house-- a house with the tiles loose, shall we say? |
1718 | Well,said Michael quietly,"will you tell me one thing? |
1718 | Well,said Michael, cocking an eyebrow at him,"was there any burglary in that terrace that night? |
1718 | Well,said the girl solidly,"what is there to wake up to?" |
1718 | What am I to do now, I wonder? 1718 What do you mean?" |
1718 | What do you mean? |
1718 | What do you mean? |
1718 | What is the matter? |
1718 | What is the meaning of this queer coincidence about colours? 1718 What on earth am I to do with her?" |
1718 | What other occupation is there for an active man on this earth, except to marry you? 1718 What was Dr. Warner talking about just before the first shot?" |
1718 | What was this telegram? |
1718 | What would be the good of gold,he was saying,"if it did not glitter? |
1718 | What? |
1718 | Who are you? 1718 Who is there?" |
1718 | Why did n''t you get their evidence? |
1718 | Why do n''t they make more games out of wind? |
1718 | Why do you want us to go inside? |
1718 | Why does everybody repeat riddles,went on Moon abruptly,"even if they''ve forgotten the answers? |
1718 | Why not? |
1718 | Why, did n''t you know? |
1718 | Why, what bush do you mean? |
1718 | With her? |
1718 | Would it have much authority? |
1718 | Yes,he said at last;"but how can I lean on this gate if you keep on opening it?" |
1718 | You are sure it''s impossible? |
1718 | You see all this,said Rosamund, with a grand sincerity in her solid face,"and do you really want to marry me?" |
1718 | You''ve got the evidence of the Sub- Warden who heard some shots; where''s the evidence of the Warden himself who was shot at? 1718 ` And why is it dangerous?'' |
1718 | ` But why?'' 1718 ` Do you believe in the gods?'' |
1718 | ` Do you mean,''I demanded,` that the owner of this house approves of all you do?'' 1718 ` Do you really mean,''I cried,` that you have come right round the world? |
1718 | ` Does he drink too much, then?'' 1718 ` Have you no other house of your own?'' |
1718 | ` I ca n''t express a millionth part of what I''ve thought of,''I cried,` but it''s something like this... oh, ca n''t you see it? 1718 ` Is it not even shorter,''I asked,` to stop where you are?'' |
1718 | ` Mine,''said the burglar,` May I present you to my wife?'' 1718 ` Nora?'' |
1718 | ` What do you mean?'' 1718 ` What do you mean?'' |
1718 | ` What do you mean?'' 1718 ` What song do you mean?'' |
1718 | ` What will do him good?'' 1718 ` Why does n''t he strike us dead?'' |
1718 | ` Why, what is the matter?'' 1718 ` YOU have had an escape from death?'' |
1718 | ` You know the house, then?'' 1718 `"The Doll''s House"?'' |
1718 | ''Ow can we drop in and buy the` Pink''Un''at the railway station at Kosky Wosky or whatever it was? |
1718 | ''Ow can we go and do a gargle at the saloon- bar on top of the Sierra Mountains? |
1718 | ''Ow can we test all those tales? |
1718 | Agreed? |
1718 | An allegory, shall we say? |
1718 | And this seemed to me a strange question to ask, for what should a man do except what men have done? |
1718 | And when Inglewood broke through his native politeness so far as to say suddenly,"Is your name Smith?" |
1718 | And will you kindly tell me what the deuce is the good of a jewel except that it looks like a jewel? |
1718 | Are you Innocent?" |
1718 | Are you mad?... |
1718 | Are you, may I ask, a professional acrobat on a tour, or a travelling advertisement of Sunny Jim? |
1718 | But does he want specially to be snapshotted by all the journalists~prostratus in horto~? |
1718 | But how does this picking of holes affect the issue? |
1718 | But if I followed the star, should I find the house?'' |
1718 | But is there any evidence of such variety here? |
1718 | But we still ask whether they were ever born?" |
1718 | But what do you expect? |
1718 | But what else are all the trees and clouds for, you silly kittens?" |
1718 | By the way, what was the Seal of Solomon? |
1718 | By the way,"he cried out, pointing in quite a startling way,"where does that door lead to?" |
1718 | Ca n''t you find that mandoline of yours, Rosamund?" |
1718 | Can he produce it?" |
1718 | Could a Greek tragedy be more gray and cruel than that daybreak and awakening? |
1718 | Did it come direct from the prisoner?" |
1718 | Did n''t I tell you I wanted to talk to Inglewood?" |
1718 | Do I understand that you want to get back to life?'' |
1718 | Do n''t you know that? |
1718 | Do n''t you know what it is to be all one family circle, with aunts and uncles, when a schoolboy comes home for the holidays? |
1718 | Do n''t you see one only breaks the fence or shoots the moon in order to get HOME?'' |
1718 | Do n''t you see that everything in this garden looks like a jewel? |
1718 | Do n''t you see there''s something sacred in the silliness of such things?'' |
1718 | Do n''t you think so?" |
1718 | Do you know anything of him?'' |
1718 | Do you like being hanged upon nothing? |
1718 | Do you notice that maniacs mostly try either to destroy other things, or( if they are thoughtful) to destroy themselves? |
1718 | Do you see that fifth house along the terrace with the flat roof? |
1718 | Do you,''he asked with a sudden intensity,` do you never want to rush out of your house in order to find it?'' |
1718 | Does he want to enter the court of justice on all fours? |
1718 | Does it exist? |
1718 | Dog- stealer, horse- stealer, man- stealer-- can you think of anything so base as a toy- stealer?'' |
1718 | Down what chimney from hell would come the goblin that should take away the children''s balls and dolls while they slept? |
1718 | Duke?" |
1718 | Eames, we''ve been to the brink of death together; wo n''t you admit I''m right?'' |
1718 | Have n''t you ever had a spring cleaning?" |
1718 | Have n''t you ever noticed that Miss Duke never sits still-- a notorious sign? |
1718 | Have n''t you ever observed that Inglewood is always washing his hands-- a known mark of mental disease? |
1718 | Have n''t you noticed that we never saw him since we found ourselves? |
1718 | Have we outlived it?" |
1718 | Have you forgotten that only this afternoon we flew the flag of independence and severed ourselves from all the nations of the earth?" |
1718 | Have you noticed anything odd about Smith?" |
1718 | He must have justice; but does he want to ask for justice, not only on his knees, but on his hands and knees? |
1718 | He''d throw off the doctor like the disease, do n''t you know? |
1718 | How and why do you display all this energy for clearing walls and climbing trees in our melancholy, but at least rational, suburbs?" |
1718 | How could he express his trust in us better than that? |
1718 | How could he have shown it better than by escaping in the cab and coming back again? |
1718 | How could he have shown it better than by standing quite still and letting us discuss it? |
1718 | I asked,` should you wish to return to that particular doll''s house? |
1718 | I asked;` what thing?'' |
1718 | I called out;` you are not going on with this blackguard?'' |
1718 | I ventilate the house, and you sweep the house; but what is going to HAPPEN in the house?" |
1718 | If we ca n''t do a little thing like that, what right have we to put crosses on ballot papers?" |
1718 | Inglewood lingered behind them, saying with a certain amicable exasperation,"I say, do you really want to speak to me?" |
1718 | Innocent Smith is only the doctor that visits us; had n''t you come when he called before? |
1718 | Into how many virginal ears has he whispered that holy word? |
1718 | Is it anybody''s interest here to wash this linen in public? |
1718 | Is it not at least a hypothesis holding the field that Dr. Warner is such a man? |
1718 | Is not love a Hercules, Still climbing trees in the Hesperides?" |
1718 | Is there any trace of a gigantic Patagonian in the story? |
1718 | May I ask how the defence got hold of the letter from Curate Percy? |
1718 | Miss Duke is rather--""I know,"cried the stranger, looking up radiantly from his bag;"magnificent, is n''t she? |
1718 | Miss Duke, do you or your aunt want a sort of notice stuck up over your boarding- house--`Doctors shot here.''? |
1718 | Moon is talking about? |
1718 | No one moved of the groups in the garden except Mary Gray, who stepped forward quite naturally, calling out,"Are you ready, Innocent? |
1718 | Now is there any one who doubts that our tale is true?" |
1718 | Smith?" |
1718 | Smith?" |
1718 | Smith?" |
1718 | Smith?" |
1718 | Then he added,"Are there two maniacs here?" |
1718 | Trip?" |
1718 | Warner?" |
1718 | Was Lady Bullingdon''s dressmaker a negress? |
1718 | Was the typewriter an Eskimo? |
1718 | We all see that for any thinking man mere extinction is the... What are you doing?... |
1718 | Well, what abart this Mrs. Smith the curate talks of, with her blarsted shyness-- transmigogrified into a blighted sharpness? |
1718 | What could be more powerful than the combination of Scientific Theory with Common Sense? |
1718 | What other court dares to try one of our company, save only the High Court of Beacon? |
1718 | What other term, it will be said, could be applied to such a being? |
1718 | What should we feel if there were less? |
1718 | What would you say if I called a man wicked on the word of two priests?" |
1718 | What''s the alternative to marriage, barring sleep? |
1718 | What''s the good of a Sovereign State if you ca n''t define a sovereign? |
1718 | What( the undersigned persons ask themselves) is a puddle? |
1718 | What, gentlemen, is the ethical position of marriage? |
1718 | Which of us has ever tried it?" |
1718 | Who the devil are you that you should n''t be unhappy, like the mother that bore you? |
1718 | Who would have thought of that trapdoor? |
1718 | Who would have thought that this cursed colonial claret could taste quite nice among the chimney- pots? |
1718 | Why are children not afraid of Santa Claus, though he comes like a thief in the night? |
1718 | Why do n''t you produce the evidence of the other clergyman, who actually followed the burglar and presumably was present at the crime?" |
1718 | Why have you not got evidence of them?" |
1718 | Why should we care for a black sovereign any more than for a black sun at noon? |
1718 | Will you paint these blue railings red with my gore?" |
1718 | Wot then? |
1718 | Would you be so obliging as to tell me whose house this is?'' |
1718 | Would you read a book, or buy a dog, or go to a hotel on the advice of twenty such? |
1718 | You and I have dawdled round each other long enough, and are we any safer than Smith and Mary Gray, who met last night? |
1718 | You do n''t want last year''s hats there, do you, any more than last year''s leaves? |
1718 | ` Do you mean to kill me?'' |
1718 | ` Well, of all the cheek--''"` Oh, do n''t you understand, do n''t you understand?'' |
1718 | ` What did you know?'' |
1718 | ` What is more immortal,''he would cry,` than love and war? |
1718 | ` What reason?'' |
1718 | asked the great doctor stiffly--"what discovery?" |
1718 | cried Arthur Inglewood in a kind of agony,"are you going to get out of the way?" |
1718 | cried Dr. Warner, fixing his former disciple with a stare,"are you mad?" |
1718 | cried Rosamund;"Michael, what does it mean?" |
1718 | demanded the exasperated Eames;` what song?'' |
1718 | he cried, stepping back from the steely glitter as men step back from a serpent;"are you afraid of burglars? |
1718 | or when and why do you deal death out of that machine gun?" |
1718 | the sooner this ugly business is over the better-- and how can we open the gate if you will keep leaning on it?" |
1718 | what''s the funeral, gents?" |
1720 | A scientific interest, I suppose? |
1720 | About you? |
1720 | Am I cleared? 1720 And how did you get on the track of all this hidden history?" |
1720 | And how do you propose to play the detective? |
1720 | And if that is the truth,said Horne Fisher,"are you going to tell it?" |
1720 | And that is? |
1720 | And what is that? |
1720 | And what is that? |
1720 | And what may that be? |
1720 | And what was that? |
1720 | And who is Usher? |
1720 | And who''s a funk, either? 1720 And why should that particular hole in the ground have anything to do with it?" |
1720 | And why? |
1720 | And you have nothing more immediate than your topography to offer,said Brain, with a sneer,"to help me avenge my friend?" |
1720 | Are n''t you going to dress up? |
1720 | Are you a first- class criminal? |
1720 | Are you a monk? |
1720 | Are you sure? |
1720 | As bad as all that? |
1720 | As they say in the examinations, what did you fail in? |
1720 | Because keeping hens is rather a mild amusement for a poacher? 1720 But how did it happen,"demanded Crane,"that for the first time Bulmer fell in at that particular spot?" |
1720 | But in that case,he cried, in a new and altered voice,"why then of course-- You said a piece of steel--?" |
1720 | But in that case,said March, frowning,"at what sort of unearthly hour in the morning was the murder really committed? |
1720 | But what could it be? |
1720 | But what is to be done? |
1720 | But what will the Chief do at Birmingham without the epigrams whispered to him by his brilliant secretary? |
1720 | But why? |
1720 | But would n''t the shot be heard at the inn or somewhere? |
1720 | But, after all, what could you expect?'' |
1720 | By the way, is there any news of anything? |
1720 | Can you see anything there? |
1720 | Could I have a word with you, sir? |
1720 | Could he have thrown down the statue after he''d stripped the corpse? |
1720 | Could n''t this have been an accident? |
1720 | Dare one suggest,he said,"that some of the things we have been talking about are among the old things that turn out not to be old?" |
1720 | Did Mary Cregan give evidence? |
1720 | Did he tell you what he and Hastings were doing? |
1720 | Did you get anything out of him? |
1720 | Did you hear that cry? |
1720 | Did you know him well? |
1720 | Did you know this unfortunate man? |
1720 | Did you notice that sort of flash or flicker the candle gave before it was extinguished? 1720 Did you quarrel with him?" |
1720 | Did you think I had found nothing but filth in the deep seas into which fate has thrown me? 1720 Did you think there was nothing but evil at the bottom of them?" |
1720 | Do n''t you see that they''re condemning him for the very reason for which they acquit everybody else? 1720 Do n''t you think agricultural laborers would rather have three acres and a cow than three acres of printed forms and a committee? |
1720 | Do n''t you think this is infamous? |
1720 | Do we know anything about him? |
1720 | Do you call that an explanation? |
1720 | Do you collect omnibuses like stamps? |
1720 | Do you know that mood when one could scream because a mat is crooked? |
1720 | Do you know what that means? |
1720 | Do you mean that girl Bridget Royce? |
1720 | Do you mean that you saw the murder? |
1720 | Do you mean to say,asked Crane, quickly,"that there really was a well?" |
1720 | Do you mean to say,asked Grayne,"that this infernal crime is not to be punished?" |
1720 | Do you mean to say,he asked,"that you know more about the business here because you have come from London?" |
1720 | Do you really mean,he said,"that Colonel Morris took the relic?" |
1720 | Do you think England is so little as all that? |
1720 | Do you think I do n''t know you''re always talking about my damned debts and expectations? |
1720 | Does a big fish ever break the line and get away? |
1720 | Fits in with what? |
1720 | Guatemalan Golcondas, was n''t it? |
1720 | Has she turned king''s evidence to that extent? |
1720 | Have they been used in the removal of the relic from downstairs? |
1720 | Have you discovered anything in there? |
1720 | Have you ever considered what it must be like to be a man who does n''t exist? 1720 Have you heard the news?" |
1720 | Hope? |
1720 | How can you possibly see a man? |
1720 | How do you know they are not the secret emissaries of our diplomacy? |
1720 | How was he dressed? |
1720 | How would you begin now? |
1720 | I mean what else could you expect, after making such a muck of it? |
1720 | I suppose you do n''t believe in spirits? |
1720 | If we want country people to vote for us, why do n''t we get somebody with some notion about the country? 1720 If we want to attack Verner, why not attack him? |
1720 | If you agree with us, why the devil do n''t you act with us? |
1720 | If you think it''s right, why do n''t you do what''s right? 1720 Is Sir Howard Horne your cousin?" |
1720 | Is it as bad as all that? |
1720 | Is it like St. Paul''s Cathedral? |
1720 | Is that the real reason of your pious alarms? |
1720 | It is certainly an idea,said Sir Walter, smiling,"but what about the balcony? |
1720 | Look here,said Crane, planting himself in front of him,"can you tell me anything about this business?" |
1720 | Now, how does a man search a revolving bookcase? 1720 Outside?" |
1720 | Poor old who? |
1720 | Studying botany, or is it archaeology? |
1720 | Surely you do n''t mean Jefferson Jenkins, the social reformer? 1720 The meaning of the outrages on Orientals?" |
1720 | There are other windows, are n''t there? |
1720 | Torwood Park does n''t belong to your cousin? |
1720 | Was he alive and well? |
1720 | Was he blind? 1720 Well?" |
1720 | What about me, then? |
1720 | What are you doing with that? |
1720 | What are you going to do next? |
1720 | What are you waiting for? |
1720 | What bad news do you mean? |
1720 | What crime do you mean? |
1720 | What do you mean,asked Boyle,"what mistakes?" |
1720 | What do you mean? 1720 What do you mean? |
1720 | What do you mean? |
1720 | What do you mean? |
1720 | What do you mean? |
1720 | What do you mean? |
1720 | What do you mean? |
1720 | What do you mean? |
1720 | What does all this mean? |
1720 | What does it all mean? |
1720 | What has the bottomless well got to do with it? |
1720 | What have you done about it? |
1720 | What is it? |
1720 | What is it? |
1720 | What is the matter? |
1720 | What is the meaning of this social satire? |
1720 | What man? |
1720 | What on earth are you talking about? |
1720 | What on earth do you mean? 1720 What on earth do you mean?" |
1720 | What on earth do you mean? |
1720 | What on earth is the trouble? |
1720 | What place? |
1720 | What the deuce are you talking about? |
1720 | What the devil do you mean? |
1720 | What would you propose doing? |
1720 | Where is Usher? |
1720 | Where is the Prime Minister? |
1720 | Who said you had? |
1720 | Who''s a child? |
1720 | Why are you the officer in charge now? |
1720 | Why can you conduct the inquiry on your own lines now? 1720 Why did he quarrel with you?" |
1720 | Why do you cry out before you''re hurt? |
1720 | Why do you object? |
1720 | Why not open my mind''s eye for me? 1720 Why should you, of all people, be so passionate about it?" |
1720 | Why, do n''t you know,he observed quietly,"that I am the fool of the family?" |
1720 | Why, you lunatic,cried Henry, in tones of ringing sincerity,"you do n''t suppose you were meant to_ win_ the seat, did you? |
1720 | Wo n''t you sit down? |
1720 | Yes, and what of that? |
1720 | Yes,remarked Fisher,"and what about the bottomless well?" |
1720 | You do n''t mean to say you suspect Tom Travers? |
1720 | You have heard of the magi, perhaps? 1720 You mean you''re staying here with your uncle, like a good boy?" |
1720 | After a pause, Cuthbert Grayne said,"And what are we to say to the newspapers?" |
1720 | Am I not going to be cleared?" |
1720 | And how else could he have unclothed a man covered with that stone monument? |
1720 | And that suggests a very queer idea, does n''t it?" |
1720 | And who was he? |
1720 | And why do n''t they attack men like Verner for what they are, which is something about as old and traditional as an American oil trust?" |
1720 | Are you coming up there now?" |
1720 | Army contracts?" |
1720 | Besides-- Hullo, who''s that up there?" |
1720 | But how do you know about the letter?" |
1720 | But if so, why do you degrade yourself to serve this dirty foreigner, when you at least saw the last of a genuine national gentry? |
1720 | But is it best? |
1720 | But we can all back you up, ca n''t we? |
1720 | But who knows?" |
1720 | But who was the spy who stole the papers?" |
1720 | But why do they turn up here at this time of night?" |
1720 | But why?" |
1720 | But, to begin with, will you tell me something? |
1720 | Crane?" |
1720 | Did I have it carried away by seven flying dragons, or was it merely a trifling matter of turning it into a milk- white hind?" |
1720 | Did anybody here actually see Lord Bulmer this morning?" |
1720 | Did he call out because he landed in the water, do you think?" |
1720 | Did n''t I hear that Harker was down here?" |
1720 | Did n''t you know Halkett wrote Burke''s book for him? |
1720 | Did n''t you notice that he only fell on the slope of soft grass underneath? |
1720 | Did you ever hear of an artist so clever that he could draw with a gun? |
1720 | Do you know many people called Tompkins? |
1720 | Do you know the Arab legend about that well?" |
1720 | Do you remember that silly talk about how old Isaac could always play his fish? |
1720 | Do you suppose he has n''t always known you as an honest man who would say these things when he got a chance? |
1720 | Do you suppose that Attwood has n''t always known them? |
1720 | Do you think it bad news?" |
1720 | Fisher?" |
1720 | For instance, we both want to turn Verner out of Parliament, but what weapon are we to use? |
1720 | Had you any guess of this at the start?" |
1720 | Has your chief come down yet?" |
1720 | Have n''t you come down here to see Number One before he goes on to Birmingham?" |
1720 | Have you developed a new theory about how this fellow escaped out of the ring round him?" |
1720 | Have you ever had that mystical feeling that things have happened before?" |
1720 | Have you ever heard of irreligious mania? |
1720 | Hawker?" |
1720 | He precipitated himself at it, calling out,"I say, does that connect?" |
1720 | Horne Fisher continued:"Are you only a servant, perhaps, that rather sinister old servant who was butler to Hawker and Verner? |
1720 | How can we make a democracy with no democrats? |
1720 | How could we know you were going to be-- well, really, such a rotten failure?" |
1720 | How did it all come to be like that?" |
1720 | How did it come about, I wonder, that the elder officers are not here to interfere with anything you do?" |
1720 | I mean did you see the statue fall?" |
1720 | I mean that are not there now?" |
1720 | I''ve heard a lot of gossip against him, but is it right to act on mere gossip? |
1720 | If I ran your unfortunate friend through the body, what did I do with the body? |
1720 | If he was alive, it might be you who killed him, or why should you have held your tongue about his death? |
1720 | Is it any worse when a whole great nation is set free as well as a family? |
1720 | Is there anyone else you could be? |
1720 | Like a bad dream come true, was n''t it?" |
1720 | Might be a pun on my pottering about here, might n''t it?" |
1720 | Now there are two things that are puzzling people about that problem, are n''t there? |
1720 | Oil? |
1720 | Or blind drunk?" |
1720 | Or do you keep them in your locker?" |
1720 | Shall I tell you the second hint I hit on, after yours, to make me think it was Jenkins? |
1720 | Tell the truth?" |
1720 | The other four men had already gathered on the same spot and almost simultaneously were calling out to him,"What does he say now?" |
1720 | The required silence remained unbroken for a long time until at last the clergyman said to Symon in a low voice:"I suppose it''s all right about air?" |
1720 | Then after another silence he added:"Do you remember when we first met, when you were fishing in that brook in the affair of the target? |
1720 | There was a faint stir in the stillness, and the magician said,"Can you see what is in the pocket?" |
1720 | There was a heavy silence, and at last Harold March said,"But where is the real relic?" |
1720 | There was another pause and the inquirer added,"Do you see anything of the relic itself?" |
1720 | There was another silence, and then Sir Walter said, quietly:"What sort of notion have you really got in your head, Fisher? |
1720 | Usher? |
1720 | Well, why did not Boyle do it? |
1720 | What about poaching eggs?" |
1720 | What can I do for you?" |
1720 | What could I do? |
1720 | What did he make his money in? |
1720 | What do you think of this Burgundy? |
1720 | What do you think we should do next?" |
1720 | What else should he do? |
1720 | What hope can there ever be of a free peasantry in England if the peasants themselves are such snobs as to want to be gentlemen? |
1720 | What is all this botheration about Sir Isaac and the rest of you? |
1720 | What really happened when you met Bulmer this morning? |
1720 | What will happen if I try to divide this estate decently among decent people?" |
1720 | What''s become of that fellow in green-- the architect dressed up as a forester? |
1720 | What''s the matter with you?" |
1720 | What? |
1720 | When you went through his papers in such a hurry, Harker, were n''t you looking for something to-- to make sure it should n''t be found?" |
1720 | Where does he come from? |
1720 | Where''s his nephew? |
1720 | Who could you be, now? |
1720 | Who is Verner? |
1720 | Why compliment him on being a romantic reactionary aristocrat? |
1720 | Why could n''t he speak? |
1720 | Why do n''t we give the squire''s land to the squire''s tenants, instead of dragging in the county council?" |
1720 | Why do n''t you speak plainer?" |
1720 | Why do we talk to people in Somerset about nothing but slums and socialism? |
1720 | Why does Attwood unmuzzle you like a dog at this moment, after all these years? |
1720 | Why does n''t somebody start a yeoman party in politics, appealing to the old traditions of the small landowner? |
1720 | Why talk about his blue blood? |
1720 | Why was he able to stand in the place of the scarecrow, hidden by nothing but an old hat? |
1720 | Will you?" |
1720 | asked Morton,"and a door, of course, somewhere round the corner? |
1720 | cried March,"shall we never get to the bottom of your mines and countermines?" |
1720 | demanded March,"or the accident? |
1720 | he cried,"have you seen what''s outside?" |
1720 | remarked Harry, humorously,"you beginning to take notice?" |
1720 | what_ is_ a man ashamed of nowadays?" |
20058 | ''Well, what about Bayswater?'' 20058 ''Why?'' |
20058 | Absurd? |
20058 | All those, sir? |
20058 | And be thrashed in public by a red- haired madman whom any two doctors would lock up? |
20058 | And how does your commerce go, you strange guardian of the past? |
20058 | And if they are beaten too? |
20058 | And is this the end of poor old Wayne? |
20058 | And what''s that? |
20058 | And what,asked the other,"would you call the summary of those things?" |
20058 | And you risk it? |
20058 | Any of our summer articles? 20058 Anything else I can do, sir?" |
20058 | Anything more, sir? |
20058 | Anything more, sir? |
20058 | Are they so terrible? |
20058 | Are you insane? |
20058 | Are you mad? |
20058 | Are you, then,he said,"no longer a democracy in England?" |
20058 | Barker,he said,"what is all this?" |
20058 | Beaten-- by what? |
20058 | Bowler,he said,"is n''t there some society of historical research, or something of which I am an honorary member?" |
20058 | But your Majesty,said Barker, eagerly and suavely,"does not refuse our proposals?" |
20058 | But, in God''s name, do n''t you see, Quin, that the thing is quite different? 20058 Ca n''t your''atmosphere''help you?" |
20058 | Can I get you anything? |
20058 | Did not half the historical nations trust to the chance of the eldest sons of eldest sons, and did not half of them get on tolerably well? 20058 Did they never tell you this is the Feast of the Lamps, the anniversary of the great battle that almost lost and just saved Notting Hill? |
20058 | Did what, Señor? |
20058 | Did you not tell me, Wilfrid Lambert,he said,"that I should be of more public value if I adopted a more popular form of humour? |
20058 | Do n''t you realise common public necessities? |
20058 | Do n''t you really think the sacred Notting Hill at all absurd? |
20058 | Do n''t you understand? |
20058 | Do you call me Majesty? 20058 Do you mean now? |
20058 | Do you think fighting is under the Factory Acts? |
20058 | Does a man of your intelligence come to me with these damned early Victorian ethics? 20058 Eh?" |
20058 | Eightpence, tenpence, or one and sixpence a bottle? |
20058 | Fifteen hundred pounds,whispered Mr. Wilson of Bayswater;"can we do fifteen hundred pounds?" |
20058 | From North Kensington? |
20058 | General Barker,he said, bowing,"do you propose now to receive the message from the besieged?" |
20058 | Has your master, Mr. Adam Wayne, received our request for surrender? |
20058 | Have I, then,he said,"your Majesty''s permission to depart? |
20058 | Have you heard the good news? |
20058 | How are we to get on? 20058 How did it happen?" |
20058 | How large now, my lord,he cried,"is the Empire of Notting Hill?" |
20058 | How the devil do I know? |
20058 | How will this do? |
20058 | I beg your pardon? |
20058 | I do n''t mind so much about being dead,he said,"but why should you say that we shall be defeated?" |
20058 | I suppose,he said, looking up appealingly, and sucking the pencil--"I suppose we could n''t say''wictory''--''Wayne''s wonderful wictory''? |
20058 | I suppose,said Adam, turning on him with a fierce suddenness--"I suppose you fancy crucifixion was a serious affair?" |
20058 | I wonder,said Barker, thoughtfully,"if I might speak freely to your Majesty?" |
20058 | I''m so sorry, Auberon,said Lambert, good- naturedly;"do you feel bad?" |
20058 | If I stood firm before, do you think I shall weaken now that I have seen the face of the King? 20058 If that was Portobello Road, do n''t you see what happened?" |
20058 | In what sense,cried Barker, with his feverish eyes and hands,"is the Government on your side?" |
20058 | In what? |
20058 | Is he really off his chump, do you think? |
20058 | Is it altogether impossible to make a thing good without it immediately insisting on being wicked? 20058 Is it possible that a man of your intelligence does not know that it is every one''s interest--""Do n''t you believe in Zoroaster? |
20058 | Is it really true, my dear Wayne,said the King, interrupting,"that you think you will be beaten to- morrow?" |
20058 | Is n''t it obvious? 20058 Is n''t that odd enough for anybody? |
20058 | May I ask the Señor how, under ordinary circumstances, he catches a wild horse? |
20058 | Must I attempt explanations in the romantic manner? 20058 Not really, sir? |
20058 | Now, where are your posters of last night''s defeat? |
20058 | Oh, damn your-- But what''s this? 20058 Oh, do n''t you know?" |
20058 | Oh,said Wayne, somewhat disturbed--"oh, what is it chemists sell? |
20058 | Our cousin of Bayswater,said the King, with delight;"what can we get for you?" |
20058 | Shaving, sir? |
20058 | The matter? |
20058 | Then, which way are they retreating? 20058 To whom have I the honour of speaking?" |
20058 | War? |
20058 | Was it my Lord Buck,he inquired,"who said that the King of England''shall''do something?" |
20058 | Was that Portobello Road? |
20058 | We swung round the corner eastwards, Wilson running first, brandishing the halberd--Will you pardon a little egotism? |
20058 | Well,said Buck, coolly,"how did they? |
20058 | Well? |
20058 | What answer does your master send? |
20058 | What can I do for you, sir? |
20058 | What cockatoo? 20058 What do you mean?" |
20058 | What do you mean? |
20058 | What do you mean? |
20058 | What do you propose to do, Mr. Barker? 20058 What does it all mean?" |
20058 | What does yer Majesty think necessary? |
20058 | What event? |
20058 | What in God''s name is the matter? |
20058 | What is happening now? |
20058 | What is it, then? |
20058 | What is the matter? |
20058 | What is the object of streets? |
20058 | What is the object of supper? |
20058 | What is this, my people? |
20058 | What is your wand? |
20058 | What news does he bring from that land of high hills and fair women? 20058 What news from the Hill of a Hundred Legends? |
20058 | What shall we say to them? |
20058 | What the devil are you talking about? |
20058 | What the devil do you make of that fellow? |
20058 | What the devil is all this? 20058 What thoughts?" |
20058 | What was the meaning of mocking the prophets? |
20058 | What will they do when they consent? |
20058 | What''s that roll in the corner? 20058 What?" |
20058 | What? |
20058 | What? |
20058 | Where are you going? |
20058 | Where is your favour now, Provost? |
20058 | Where''s it been all the time? |
20058 | Where,asked the King, leaning forward--"where in Heaven''s name did you get this miraculously inane idea?" |
20058 | Where? |
20058 | Why ca n''t you keep it to your own private life? |
20058 | Why do you hang them outside your shop? |
20058 | Why do you keep these old things? |
20058 | Why not,said Wayne, gently having reached the crisis of his delicate persuasion--"why not be a colonel?" |
20058 | Why should I? |
20058 | Why should it not make lamp- posts fairer than Greek lamps; and an omnibus- ride like a painted ship? 20058 Why should n''t I have them? |
20058 | Why the dickens not? |
20058 | Why the hell are n''t we holding all those approaches now, and passing in on them again? 20058 Why?" |
20058 | Will wonders never cease? 20058 Will you be so good as to step this way?" |
20058 | You are quite sure,he said,"that you must be beaten?" |
20058 | You ass,said Lambert;"why ca n''t you be like other people? |
20058 | You do n''t know what a thing happening means? 20058 You think that is certain?" |
20058 | You''ve heard the news, Pally-- you''ve heard the news? |
20058 | ''Do n''t you see? |
20058 | ''Is that you?'' |
20058 | Adam Wayne, Lord High Provost of Notting Hill, do n''t you think it splendid?" |
20058 | After all, why was it absurd? |
20058 | And do n''t you know that upon that night every year all lights are turned out for half an hour while we sing the Notting Hill anthem in the darkness? |
20058 | And shall I turn back?" |
20058 | And then came the pamphlet from Oregon( where the thing was tried), the pamphlet called"Why should Salt suffer?" |
20058 | And when should a popular form of humour be more firmly riveted upon me than now, when I have become the darling of a whole people? |
20058 | Are they not witnesses to that terror and beauty, that desire for a lovely death, which could not be excluded even from the immortality of Eden? |
20058 | Are thy relations with thy driver, I wonder, those of the Bedouin and his steed? |
20058 | Are you answered? |
20058 | Are you the patriot, and he the tyrant?" |
20058 | Art in the home, Pally? |
20058 | At last Wayne said, very slowly--"You did it all only as a joke?" |
20058 | At length Barker said suddenly--"Buck, does it ever cross your mind what this is all about? |
20058 | At this crucial moment of our country, the voice of the People demands with a single tongue,''Where is the King?'' |
20058 | Barker always felt so when the King said,"Why trouble about politics?" |
20058 | Before Notting Hill arose, did any person passing through Hammersmith Broadway expect to see there a gigantic silver hammer? |
20058 | Buck, have you ever stood and let a six foot of man lash and lash at your head with six feet of pole with six pounds of steel at the end? |
20058 | But all such larger but yet more soluble riddles are as nothing compared to the one small but unanswerable riddle: Where did they get the horses? |
20058 | But do you keep only, sir, the symbols of this prehistoric sanity, this childish rationality of the earth? |
20058 | But do you really mean that you will trust to the ordinary man, the man who may happen to come next, as a good despot?" |
20058 | But in Heaven''s name what would you have called it-- two days before?" |
20058 | But is it worth it? |
20058 | But may I ask you and appeal to your common good- nature for a sincere answer? |
20058 | But seriously, is n''t it funny?" |
20058 | But what can be the object of it in this case? |
20058 | But what is the good? |
20058 | But what was the good of it? |
20058 | But why am I talking? |
20058 | But why? |
20058 | Ca n''t you do it now? |
20058 | Can not you be content with that destiny which was enough for Athens, which was enough for Nazareth? |
20058 | Can you do nothing else but guard relics?" |
20058 | Can you find a deep philosophical meaning in the difference between the Stuarts and the Hanoverians? |
20058 | Can you not understand the ancient sanctity of colours? |
20058 | Can you see the humour of the stars? |
20058 | Can you see the humour of the sunsets?'' |
20058 | Can you tell me, in a world that is flagrant with the failures of civilisation, what there is particularly immortal about yours?" |
20058 | Can you tell me, in the name of all the gods you do n''t believe in, why I should care for anything else?" |
20058 | Can you write us the special article, Buck? |
20058 | Could any of your glebes and combes and all the rest of it produce so fragrant an idea? |
20058 | Decorations for your private residence? |
20058 | Did Bayswater erect it? |
20058 | Did you ever long for a miracle, Bowler?" |
20058 | Do n''t you see what would have saved you?" |
20058 | Do we not assume the same thing in a jury?" |
20058 | Do you disagree?" |
20058 | Do you happen to sell liquorice?" |
20058 | Do you know that he has the one collection of Japanese lacquer in Europe? |
20058 | Do you know what I am going to do for you?" |
20058 | Do you know what I''ve done, Barker? |
20058 | Do you know what Portobello Road is? |
20058 | Do you know who I am?" |
20058 | Do you not keep more terrible things? |
20058 | Do you not realise the chief incident of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries?" |
20058 | Do you not see that it is the glory of our achievement that we have infected the other cities with the idealism of Notting Hill? |
20058 | Do you really mean that you are-- God help me!--a Notting Hill patriot; that you are--?" |
20058 | Do you really mean to say that at the moment when the Esquimaux has learnt to vote for a County Council, you will have learnt to spear a walrus? |
20058 | Do you remember the times before the war?" |
20058 | Do you think I have no right to fight for Notting Hill, you whose English Government has so often fought for tomfooleries? |
20058 | For what is a state without dreams? |
20058 | Fulham may seek for wealth, and Kensington for art, but when did the men of Bayswater care for anything but glory?" |
20058 | God, what have I done? |
20058 | Had Wayne met some of our men and been defeated? |
20058 | Has Athens asked every one to wear the chlamys? |
20058 | Has he conquered and become by conquest commonplace? |
20058 | Has it occurred to you, my brilliant Barker, that another singular event has happened since that singular event of the lamps going out?" |
20058 | Has nothing been done by Notting Hill than any chance clump of farmers or clan of savages would not have done without it? |
20058 | Have the two greatest marvels been achieved? |
20058 | Have you a rich style?" |
20058 | Have you ever been in his rooms? |
20058 | Have you ever seen his books? |
20058 | Have you hypnotised me? |
20058 | Have you not noticed how continually in history democracy becomes despotism? |
20058 | Have you turned altruistic, and has Wayne turned selfish? |
20058 | Houses upside down-- more hygienic, perhaps? |
20058 | How are we to chase the enemy? |
20058 | How are you, James?" |
20058 | How can they?" |
20058 | How can two hundred men beat six hundred? |
20058 | How, I thought to myself, will this man, used only to the wooden swords that give pleasure, think of the steel swords that give pain? |
20058 | I ask you, in the name of Heaven, who wins?" |
20058 | I say, do you know a little shop anywhere where they cut your hair properly? |
20058 | If no temples and no scriptures are sacred, what is sacred if a man''s own youth is not sacred?" |
20058 | If they fought for these trumpery shops and a few lamp- posts, shall we not fight for the great High Street and the sacred Natural History Museum?" |
20058 | In the Lord''s name, was n''t the joke broad and bold enough? |
20058 | Is Athens angry because Romans and Florentines have adopted her phraseology for expressing their own patriotism? |
20058 | Is Nazareth angry because as a little village it has become the type of all little villages out of which, as the Snobs say, no good can come? |
20058 | Is it possible that you neglect Mumbo- Jumbo?" |
20058 | Is it really not enough for you, who have had so many other affairs to excite and distract you? |
20058 | Is it that I have neglected to rise to the full meaning of their work? |
20058 | Is it the relic of a moral sense?" |
20058 | Is it thoughtlessly, do you think, that I strike the dark old drum of peril in the paradise of children? |
20058 | Is it true? |
20058 | Is n''t it a joke?" |
20058 | Is n''t it immense?" |
20058 | Is there anything we have not thought of? |
20058 | Is there some secret buried in each of these shops which no mere poet can discover?" |
20058 | Is this ancient spirit of the London townships to die out? |
20058 | Is this his victory that he, my incomparable Wayne, is now only one in a world of Waynes? |
20058 | It does n''t really so much matter to you-- what''s a road or so? |
20058 | It will be asked,''Can you see the humour of this iron railing?'' |
20058 | Just as we inaugurated our symbols and ceremonies, so they have inaugurated theirs; and are you so mad as to contend against them? |
20058 | May I ask, Mr. Pinker, if you have any objection to being presented to the Provost and to General Turnbull?" |
20058 | Men walking on hands-- make feet flexible, do n''t you know? |
20058 | Mr. Bowles, shall all this witchery cease?" |
20058 | Must Mr. Mead, the grocer, talk as high as he? |
20058 | My God, what''s this?" |
20058 | O too humble fools, why should you wish to destroy your enemies? |
20058 | Odd to hear me talk like that, is n''t it? |
20058 | Officer,"he continued, addressing the startled messenger,"are there no ceremonies to celebrate my entry into the city?" |
20058 | On what else do all laws rest? |
20058 | Or did he and his men want to get away in disguise? |
20058 | Or did they want to hide in houses somewhere? |
20058 | Or had he flung these horses at us as some kind of ruse or mad new mode of warfare, such as he seemed bent on inventing? |
20058 | Provost Wayne, you stand firm?" |
20058 | Shall it be destroyed? |
20058 | Shall we take a hansom down to Kensington? |
20058 | She can never be utterly of the town, as a man can; indeed, do we not speak( with sacred propriety) of''a man about town''? |
20058 | Suppose we let it alone?" |
20058 | The chemist appeared to pause, only a moment, to take in the insult, and immediately said--"And the next article, please?" |
20058 | The next annotation at the side was almost undecipherable, but seemed to be something like--"How about old Steevens and the_ mot juste_? |
20058 | Then Buck said, in his jolly, jarring voice:"Is the whole world mad?" |
20058 | Then for the first time the great being addressed his adoring onlookers--"Can any one,"he said, with a pleasing foreign accent,"lend me a pin?" |
20058 | Then he said--"Anything out of the shop, sir?" |
20058 | Then the wise men grew like wild things, and swayed hither and thither, crying,"What can it be? |
20058 | Then through the darkness he cried in a dreadful voice--"Did I blaspheme God? |
20058 | To apologise to the admirable Mr. Wayne? |
20058 | To clasp to your bosom the flag of the Red Lion? |
20058 | To hold out for all that time and then to give in of necessity, what does it mean? |
20058 | To kiss in succession every sacred lamp- post that saved Notting Hill? |
20058 | To kneel to the Charter of the Cities? |
20058 | Touching the matter of the defence of Notting Hill, I--""Defence of Notting Hill? |
20058 | Wall- paper? |
20058 | Were they there before we came? |
20058 | What am I saying? |
20058 | What are those boxes, seemingly of lead soldiers, that I see in that glass case? |
20058 | What are you saying? |
20058 | What can it be in me? |
20058 | What can it be? |
20058 | What could be funnier than the idea of a respectable old Apostle upside down? |
20058 | What could be more in the style of your modern humour? |
20058 | What could have happened to the world if Notting Hill had never been?" |
20058 | What could it mean? |
20058 | What did you do with it?" |
20058 | What do you make of him?" |
20058 | What does he want, I wonder? |
20058 | What does it mean?" |
20058 | What else can we say? |
20058 | What have I done? |
20058 | What have you for the ear of your King? |
20058 | What is he doing while his subjects tear each other in pieces in the streets of a great city? |
20058 | What is the good of anything? |
20058 | What is the good of it? |
20058 | What is to be done with such a world? |
20058 | What more can we have on our side than the common sense of everybody? |
20058 | What the devil''s this?" |
20058 | What will London be like a century hence? |
20058 | What with my travels in Asia Minor, and my book having to be written( you have read my''Life of Prince Albert for Children,''of course? |
20058 | What would happen?" |
20058 | What would they say? |
20058 | Whatever were your objects, were they that?" |
20058 | When shall we open the next campaign?" |
20058 | When you drew up the Charter of the Cities, did you contemplate the rise of a man like Adam Wayne? |
20058 | Where have they gone?" |
20058 | Where should I be without tact?" |
20058 | Where''s your red cockatoo?" |
20058 | Which is more certainly the stay of the city, the swift chivalrous chemist or the benignant all- providing grocer? |
20058 | Which should come first to our affections, the enduring sanities of peace or the half- maniacal virtues of battle? |
20058 | Which should come first, the man great in the daily round or the man great in emergency? |
20058 | Which should come first, to return to the enigma before me, the grocer or the chemist? |
20058 | Who created all these things? |
20058 | Who erected that statue? |
20058 | Who ever spoke of a woman about town? |
20058 | Who would have thought of it before Notting Hill arose? |
20058 | Why am I asking questions of a nice young gentleman who is totally mad? |
20058 | Why ca n''t you let it alone? |
20058 | Why ca n''t you let it alone? |
20058 | Why ca n''t you say something really funny, or hold your tongue? |
20058 | Why not let him alone?" |
20058 | Why should I think it absurd?" |
20058 | Why should it condescend to be a mere Empire? |
20058 | Why should it not be you and I? |
20058 | Why should not hairdressers be heroes? |
20058 | Why should they be absurd? |
20058 | Why should they be commonplace? |
20058 | Why should two idiots, one a clown and the other a screaming lunatic, make sane men so different from themselves? |
20058 | Why was it absurd? |
20058 | Will it? |
20058 | Will you do me and my friends, with whom you have held some conversation, the honour of lunching with us at the adjoining restaurant?" |
20058 | Will you hold it feudally from the Provost of Hammersmith? |
20058 | You do really propose to fight these modern improvers with their boards and inspectors and surveyors and all the rest of it?" |
20058 | You felt pretty benedicted, did n''t you, Barker?" |
20058 | You have come, my Lord, about Pump Street?" |
20058 | do n''t you see how they''ve got us? |
20058 | he said;"is it possible that there is within the four seas of Britain a man who takes Notting Hill seriously?" |
20058 | or''Can you see the humour of this field of corn? |
20058 | said Buck, bitterly;"do n''t you see how these maniacs have got us? |
20058 | said Wayne passionately;"is it possible that there is within the four seas of Britain a man who does not take it seriously?" |
20058 | said Wilson, turning round to Barker--"well?" |
20058 | those special powers of knowledge or sacrifice which are made possible only by the existence of evil? |
20058 | where?" |