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 |
---|---|
26912 | Do we give enough attention to those inner disciplines that are so essential if a good life is to be enjoyed by our young people? |
26912 | Do we take full advantage of this opportunity? |
30295 | But, having reached these conclusions regarding the separate departments of the Army social work, what about the movement as a whole? |
26498 | Shall it succeed? 26498 But why should practical John Cooper be disposed to anticipate a special distinction for the infant who was the fifth of his numerous progeny? 26498 If Peter Cooper received in the end a handsome sum from this investment, who could grudge him the wealth so acquired? 30820 Going by Bus? 30820 Going by Car? 30820 Going by Train? 30820 Little children get tired on a long trip, and who can blame them? 15623 Did they appreciate this? 15623 Of what other American philosopher and theologian has this been true? 15623 Who can estimate the eloquence of that simple fact? 15623 Why did he do it? 26974 So you are a Cornishman, are you?" |
26974 | Well, what do you want to know that for? 26974 Well, you sent for me, and I have come; what do you want?" |
26974 | What is that to you? |
26974 | I wonder if you were born there in one of those cottages? |
14003 | But how about the perforations? |
14003 | How could a crook change them? |
14003 | But who would not act on the practical certainty that the dice were loaded long before the hundredth throw was reached in such a case? |
14003 | To the question,"What is the primary requisite for a conscientious opinion on the genuineness of any submitted handwriting?" |
14003 | [ Illustration: Who has not heard of Emile Zola? |
13014 | How advantageous is the not hearing supplied by this Art? |
13014 | How important a Benefit is this? |
13014 | How lame and defective is that Speach, which is performed by Signs and Gestures? |
13014 | How little are they capable to receive of those things which concern their eternal Salvation? |
13014 | How miserable is the condition of the Deaf? |
13014 | Many more Particulars concerning the_ Voice_ might yet further be inquired into, such as, how it is, that every one may be known by his_ Voice_? |
13014 | Who can refuse to help them by all means which are possible? |
13014 | Who doth not commiserate__ this sort of Persons? |
14976 | What has become of him? |
14976 | Where is he? |
14976 | Where''s that Nigger? |
14976 | Men and women of America, are you proud of this record which the Anglo- Saxon race has made for itself? |
14976 | What conditions developed him? |
14976 | What manner of man was this fiend incarnate? |
14976 | Who were his preceptors? |
28576 | Of what use to any person are two or three drinks a day? |
28576 | Several of my friends looked inquiringly at me and one asked:"On the wagon?" |
28576 | What kind of a human being is he who comes into a club and takes one cocktail and no more?--or one highball? |
28576 | Where do you get off as a preacher-- or a censor, or a reformer-- in this matter? |
28576 | Who appointed you as the apostle of non- drinking? |
28576 | Why make a hermit of yourself just because you think drinking may harm you? |
28576 | Would n''t it be better to miss some of this stuff you have come to think of as fun, and live longer? |
30392 | How can a young cashier pay the drafts of his illicit pleasures, or procure the seed, for the harvest of speculation, out of his narrow salary? |
30392 | If its channels are slimy with corruption, what limit can be set to its malign influence? |
30392 | Is he safe, or honest? |
30392 | Which shall he choose, honesty and mortifying exclusion, or gaiety purchased by dishonesty? |
30392 | Who will fear to be a culprit when a legal sentence is the argument of pity, and the prelude of pardon? |
26870 | And why may not that misfortune happen to a woman who is brought to bed by herself? |
26870 | If the law punishes such a woman with death for not publishing her shame, does it not require more from human nature than weak human nature can bear? |
26870 | In such a case, is it to be expected, when it could answer no purpose, that a woman should divulge the secret? |
26870 | In that case, can any man, whose heart ever felt what pity is, be_ angry_ with the memory of such an unfortunate woman for what she did? |
26870 | When committed under a phrenzy from despair, can it be more offensive in the sight of God, than under a phrenzy from a fever, or in lunacy? |
26870 | Will not the best dispositions of mind urge her to preserve her character? |
26870 | and why else did she not do so and so? |
14866 | But is this business, sense, or conservation? |
14866 | But what about those who ought to know better? |
14866 | What could appear to have less in common than electricity and sanctuaries? |
14866 | Where else are there so many intimate appeals both to the child and the philosopher? |
14866 | Yet I must not forget the"flies"--who that has felt them once can ever forget them? |
14975 | Eight negroes lynched since last issue of the_ Free Speech_ one at Little Rock, Ark., last Saturday morning where the citizens broke(?) |
14975 | Has it a motive? |
14975 | One by one the Southern States have legally(?) |
14975 | So great is Southern hate and prejudice, they legally(?) |
14975 | We feel this to be a garbled report, but how can we prove it? |
14975 | What is to be done? |
14975 | What lesson? |
14975 | Will the great mass of Negroes continue to patronize the railroad? |
15134 | Then, could we possibly prevent these Indians from hunting the deer wherever they meet them? |
15134 | What happened to the great auk and the Labrador duck in the Gulf? |
15134 | What happened to the musk- ox in Greenland? |
15134 | What is happening everywhere to every form of beneficial and preservable wild life that is not being actively protected to- day? |
15134 | What is the cause of this? |
15134 | When his companion made to walk towards the animals, Sir---- said to him roughly:"''Where are you going?'' |
33920 | After all, are we so far removed from the blue- law regime of early New England? |
33920 | Now, can you account for that? |
33920 | The foregoing, at least, shows some of the Christian features(?) |
33920 | Were the Prohibitionists on hand at that time with any sort of a program, solution or panacea for the difficulty? |
33920 | Where will it all end? |
32404 | Admit it be not the same( as I have but too much reason to fear it is,) can not the members of both houses read print as well as written hand? |
32404 | And what can a poor creature do, in terror of his life, surrounded by a pack of ruffians, and no assistance near? |
32404 | Does that make his better, or mine worse? |
32404 | Have not many silly projects been laid before parliaments ere now? |
32404 | How can the poor work when candles are so dear? |
32404 | If he be not necessitous, what a sordid wretch is he to withhold his scheme for lucre? |
32404 | If my antagonist be necessitous, where is the merit? |
32404 | Or does he think they are so prejudiced to dislike a thing the worse for being offered without view of gain? |
32404 | What a shame it is that at least 100_l._ should be collected in some beats, and the poor watchman should not have the one- tenth part of the money? |
32404 | Where is the courage of the English nation, that a gentleman, with six or seven servants, shall be robbed by one single highwayman? |
22220 | Now,continued the Chief,"how did they know in Ottawa the same thing you taught us out at the reserve in Saskatchewan?" |
22220 | At another time some wise person suggested to pay by cheque, to which French replied,"Who will cash them in the wilderness?" |
22220 | But he held a celebration even then, for were not these grim old traders men of British stock who were holding a new Empire for the British Crown? |
22220 | Can the half- breed hunter or freighter be expected to be more apt in adapting himself to change? |
22220 | Conan Doyle probably sensed the situation when he wrote the stirring lines:"Who''s that calling? |
22220 | If the Police had not come to this country where would we all be now? |
22220 | To have my horse and my arms taken away? |
22220 | What should I return for? |
22220 | on his back before the rider mounted, the horse had a right to ask:"Why this heavy burden?" |
42104 | Can anyone help him? |
42104 | May I ask you to use your influence to have this case examined into, and to see that the lunatic prisoner is properly treated? |
29117 | Courageous? |
29117 | For what, and for why? |
29117 | Grindrod, old fellow,''thus loudly did bellow, The traveller mellow--''How are ye, my blade?'' |
29117 | She hath never been whipped before, she says, since she was a child( what can her mother and late lady have been about, I wonder? |
29117 | Then he said,''Will you let me have it?'' |
29117 | What will you say of me? |
34377 | Whosoever? |
34377 | And what has been the result of all this? |
34377 | At the close of his address, an attempt was made by the--_hearers_( can they be called?) |
34377 | The reader may now be desirous of asking--"And what has been the_ result_ of all this service?" |
34377 | Whence does he obtain refreshment for the inner man_ himself_? |
31888 | What do you feed the little devil for? |
31888 | And ought we not to expect some of these to be sad? |
31888 | Is it too much to ask for half these sums for the enforcement of the law for Children, when, without it, their sufferings must continue? |
31888 | To the man''s suffering child? |
31888 | To the suffering child of other like- minded men in the locality? |
31888 | To which I replied, in surprised indignation,"Why did you not tell us?" |
31888 | can you, a man who will batter into a shapeless thing a baby face with his fist? |
31888 | to whom? |
29582 | And how often have we seen Families in deep Mourning on these_ sad Occasions_? |
29582 | How many great Ladies are there, that would sooner be reconcil''d to the death of a Child, or a near Relation, than to that of a favourite Lap- Dog? |
29582 | Says an Author, what, Shall_ her Grace_ fancy herself as hail at Fourscore as she was at Forty? |
29582 | The Gentleman seem''d to be greatly surprized at the thing:_ What impudent Rascal has made free with my Character?_ answers the Priest. |
23320 | And can we determine to what extent possibilities are increased of the offspring of deaf parents being likewise deaf? |
23320 | Are the deaf viewed merely as so many people deprived of the sense of hearing, in whom also the power of speech is often wanting? |
23320 | Are they always to be reckoned with in the life of the state and the regard of society? |
23320 | But what of these pupils, and where were they? |
23320 | Have we ground to believe or fear that this deafness will crop out far more surely than in the children of parents not deaf? |
23320 | The question may be asked, How does the public at large, how does"the man in the street,"look upon the deaf? |
23320 | This is, what is the cost of it all? |
23320 | Were they found at the doors of the new institutions, clamoring for admission? |
23320 | Why any more than other children? |
23320 | Why, they ask, should the deaf children of the state who are as capable of being educated as others be considered objects of the state''s charity? |
23320 | Would it not be well to inquire whether or not deafness may be eliminated, or at least reduced to an appreciable degree? |
29292 | --now is that not the sublimation of piffle? |
29292 | Gruesome, is it not? |
29292 | How can he remain a social animal, with the fellowship of his kind, and stay on the water- wagon? |
29292 | How does the account stand? |
29292 | If he had nerve enough to go through his novitiate and get his degree, why should he deliberately return to the position he voluntarily abandoned? |
29292 | Is it worth while or not? |
29292 | What are the big equations? |
29292 | What has he been fighting for? |
29292 | Wherefore, what have I personally gained by quitting and what have I personally lost? |
29292 | Why did he begin? |
29505 | But have the leaders attended to this? |
29505 | Does the destitution of old age never occur to their thoughts, until the moment that it commences, when helpless infirmity assails them? |
29505 | I am free to admit that the Christians rather than the Jews require to be enlightened upon this point; but have you attempted this? |
29505 | Is not the thought of an hereafter sometimes present to their minds? |
29505 | Is not the welfare of their children an all- powerful feeling with them? |
29505 | Is obtaining occasional charity, that relieves them only for a short period, the sole aim of their lives? |
29505 | They are called_ a nation_; and I avail myself of the word: but in what consists their nationality? |
29505 | They are designated_ the British Jews_: how are they identified with the title? |
29505 | They are termed_ a body_: in what do they assimilate? |
29505 | What has been done by you for the elevation of your brethren? |
29505 | Will you quietly sit by and hear vituperation heaped upon your creed and upon yourselves, without being roused to the slightest effort? |
31629 | Do you know it''s against the law for a boy of 13 to have cigarettes? 31629 What is meant by a''special enquiry''?" |
31629 | What''s your name? 31629 Could n''t you remember it? |
31629 | Does he want to sell flowers? |
31629 | How could the articles found be made use of in the enquiry?" |
31629 | How do they work? |
31629 | Is he a workman needing tools? |
31629 | Is one set of finger- marks identical with another? |
31629 | Is there an epidemic of burglary at some district in London? |
31629 | Mr. Gooding:"Why did you refer to your pocket- book for what he said? |
31629 | What do we get for it? |
31629 | What is this?" |
31629 | Where do you live?" |
14977 | A FIELD FOR PRACTICAL WORK The very frequent inquiry made after my lectures by interested friends is"What can I do to help the cause?" |
14977 | As soon as this news was received, the sheriffs of Ballard and Carlisle counties and a posse(?) |
14977 | Can you remain silent and inactive when such things are done in our own community and country? |
14977 | Can you send Miss Ida Wells to write it up? |
14977 | Does he mean the crime which the statutes of the civilized states describe as such? |
14977 | If ye do not feel the chain, When it works a brother''s pain, Are ye not base slaves indeed, Slaves unworthy to be freed? |
14977 | Is true freedom but to break Fetters for our own dear sake, And, with leathern hearts, forget That we owe mankind a debt? |
14977 | Is your duty to humanity in the United States less binding? |
14977 | It is a coldblooded, deliberate, brutal falsehood which this Christian(?) |
14977 | Then bowing his face in his hands, he asked:"Is it true, did I kill her? |
14977 | This boat left Cairo at twelve o''clock, Thursday, with nearly three hundred of Cairo''s best(?) |
14977 | What can you do, reader, to prevent lynching, to thwart anarchy and promote law and order throughout our land? |
14977 | While it was being discussed, the question was submitted to Miss Willard:"What do you think of the race problem and the Force Bill?" |
14977 | are ye fit to be Mothers of the brave and free? |
14977 | whose boast it is that ye Come of fathers brave and free, If there breathe on earth a slave Are ye truly free and brave? |
42435 | What answer, ship Immortal? |
42435 | If you adopt fiat money, where will the most harm be done? |
42435 | Thunders another broadside from pirate alcohol, and what is the effect? |
42435 | Wall Street? |
42435 | What part of this land shows first of all the effect of a debased condition of the currency? |
42435 | Who shall say where end the consequences of alcoholic injury of the blood and of the substance of the brain? |
42435 | Why? |
36003 | ( 8) Is he unduly irritable or irascible? |
36003 | But where shall we find the perfect human family? |
36003 | Has there been a reserve store of conical teeth to increase the number? |
36003 | How is this increase of cusps to be accounted for? |
36003 | They themselves have never been insane; why, then, should their children? |
36003 | WHAT SHALL IT PROFIT A MAN? |
36003 | WHAT SHALL IT PROFIT A MAN? |
36003 | WHAT TO DO? |
36003 | What evidence is there in favour of this theory? |
36003 | Will he say that the perverseness is only a''badness''which should be whipped out of the child? |
36003 | and what is there against it? |
33376 | If we do supply the opium, why do you smoke it? 33376 Are we ready to go to that length to enforce our advanced ideas of total abstinence on the independent States of Holkar and Scindia? 33376 But what are the enormities of which England has been guilty? 33376 Do the supporters of this theory mean that the cultivation of opium should be forbidden throughout_ all_ India? 33376 First, how far is it desirable? 33376 For what purpose but to satisfy such a craving can Nature have scattered in such profusion the materials for its gratification? 33376 For why, if opium be the only obstacle to conversion, are we not more successful in India? 33376 Utri creditis, Quirites?_[ 69] Don Sinibaldo( p. 11). 33376 What, then, are the causes of our failure? 33376 What, then, are the effects of opium- smoking on the Chinese individually and as a nation? 33376 What, then, should a missionary do in the face of all these difficulties? 33376 Why do you even grow it? |
33376 | [ 130] How, then, could the loss be made good? |
33376 | and what if it be wholly unjustifiable? |
37650 | And is any Thing more reasonable, than that they should enjoy that Right, especially when they only make use of it for commendable Purposes? |
37650 | This may put a Tradesman of good Business in great Distress: Must he lose it? |
37650 | Why should we delight in the Intrepidity, tho''it was real, of a Villain in his Impiety? |
37650 | Will you say that he firmly believes that there is no God, nor Life after this, and that Man is wholly mortal? |
26074 | ''Here he comes, holds in mouth this time--What may the thing be? 26074 Shouldest thou not have had compassion upon these, even as I had pity on thee?" |
26074 | And how are we morally advantaged by the knowledge of the infinite depths of space, the composition of the stars and the motions of the planets? |
26074 | And is he not now one of the editors of the_ Journal of Physiology_, which continually details to the world experiments involving terrible torments? |
26074 | Does it not sometimes make us shudder to hear tell of them, or to read them in some chance publication which we take up? |
26074 | For what was this but the very cruelty inflicted upon our Lord? |
26074 | How is the character of man elevated or purified by all the maddening inventions of science? |
26074 | Now did you ever? |
26074 | Now, are we not justified in estimating Professor Sanderson''s nobility of disposition by his books? |
26074 | Now, do you not see that I have a reason for saying this, and am not using these distressing words for nothing? |
26074 | Now, what is it moves our very hearts and sickens us so much as cruelty shown to poor brutes? |
26074 | There''s yet Another child to save? |
26074 | We want to know how medicine is advanced by the agonies of these suffocated animals? |
26074 | What off again? |
26074 | What science brings so much out of so little? |
26074 | or kept alive to endure further torment, in pursuit of knowledge? |
29895 | Did they insult you during your absence from Italy? |
29895 | Have you ever been insane or suffered from pains in the head? |
29895 | Is your father a bad man? |
29895 | Why did you leave your native town? 29895 Although such individuals appear to reason, can it be said that they are in full possession of their mental faculties? 29895 Are you aware that your brother( or mother) is seriously ill? |
29895 | Are you fond of your parents? |
29895 | Are you married? |
29895 | Could not the tendencies of criminals be used for the good of their country? |
29895 | Do they treat you with due respect? |
29895 | Has any one a spite against you? |
29895 | He will say, perhaps:"Did you bring the bill?" |
29895 | How many children have you?" |
29895 | How many hours are there in a day? |
29895 | If they are, how shall we explain the wholesale destruction of those they hold most dear? |
29895 | In what year were you married?" |
29895 | Then an attempt should be made to gain an idea of his intellectual powers by asking easy questions:"How many shillings are there in a pound? |
29895 | Why do you not return? |
29895 | or"Are your neighbours worthless people? |
20811 | Know ye not that ye are the temple of God? 20811 After looking over the large gathering she solemnly said,What hath God wrought?" |
20811 | And what is the result? |
20811 | And what of the result? |
20811 | As an answer to the question asked at the meeting of 1874,"How can we arouse the young women to_ think_ as they never have upon this subject?" |
20811 | At the first meeting of the"State League,"in 1874, one of the topics for discussion was,"How can we work most effectually among the children?" |
20811 | Can domestic wines be made and used consistently by Christian women, or with safety to their families? |
20811 | Can we, as temperance women, use wine and cider for culinary purposes with consistency or safety? |
20811 | How can we make professing Christians feel their responsibilities? |
20811 | How can we work most effectually among the children? |
20811 | How should holly- tree inns or coffee- rooms be managed? |
20811 | How was this brought about? |
20811 | Is it a part of woman''s work in the temperance cause to attend to the enforcing of the license laws? |
20811 | Is it not encouraging intemperance? |
20811 | Should her life be spared, what blessings may we not hope for the cause through her consecration and ability? |
20811 | What is their history? |
20811 | Who more appropriately than she could call that convention to order? |
20811 | _ This brief History answers in part that oft- repeated question,"What is the Woman''s Christian Temperance Union doing?_" |
20811 | we can point with pride to our state president, and say, Where will you find_ her_ equal? |
18439 | Can you for the moment put yourselves into our place? 18439 Do you love mamma?" |
18439 | Where is the baby''s mouth? |
18439 | Where is the baby''s nose? |
18439 | HOW SHALL THE MOTHER BEGIN HER PART OF THE WORK? |
18439 | HOW SHALL THE MOTHER GET INTO COMMUNICATION WITH HER DEAF CHILD? |
18439 | Has he good sight, normal smell, taste, muscular sense, and memory? |
18439 | How often must the child hear"Mamma,""Look at mamma,""See, here is mamma,""Mamma is coming,""Mamma is here,""Where is mamma?" |
18439 | II HOW SHALL THE MOTHER BEGIN HER PART OF THE WORK? |
18439 | III HOW SHALL THE MOTHER GET INTO COMMUNICATION WITH HER DEAF CHILD? |
18439 | IV WHAT ABOUT THE BABY''S SPEECH? |
18439 | In what respects should the mother modify her treatment of the baby if she suspects that his hearing is defective? |
18439 | Is there any possibility of restoring it to normal acuteness, or of improving it, or of preventing any further impairment? |
18439 | Not a very satisfactory letter, do you say? |
18439 | She has him play hide and seek with another child, and she says,"Where is Tom?" |
18439 | To what extent is his hearing impaired? |
18439 | WHAT ABOUT THE BABY''S SPEECH? |
18439 | What is the use? |
18439 | When a mother first suspects that her child''s hearing is not perfectly normal, what should she do? |
22170 | What makes you think so? |
22170 | Are n''t you going to help to make my dream"come true"? |
22170 | Are we going to add the burden of dependence to the burden of darkness? |
22170 | Are we going to find employment for these returned heroes, or are we going to add yet another burden to their already heavy load? |
22170 | Did that man sell our goods with his eyes, or did he sell them by using his tongue and his personality to persuade customers to patronize us? |
22170 | I am so often asked by those who wish to volunteer in their country''s service,"What can I do to help in the re- education of the blinded soldier?" |
22170 | If so, what?" |
22170 | If we can not employ all these who are willing and able to work, how can we hope to employ an increased number later on? |
22170 | In California, the birth certificate asks these questions:"Was a prophylactic for ophthalmia neonatorum used? |
22170 | Let us ask ourselves what the blind can do, and then, how much of this are we permitting them to do? |
22170 | My first question, on meeting the Superintendent, was,"are you going to teach me to see?" |
22170 | One shows a man saying"good- bye"to his wife and five little ones, and underneath is written,"How could they do without you?" |
22170 | Shall our homes be permitted to disregard the rules of visual hygiene? |
22170 | Shall they not have a game which they_ can_ play? |
22170 | The next day, wishing to see how they had been impressed by what they saw, she asked, among other questions,"What do you remember about Aphrodite?" |
22170 | We meant to be very kind, and we thought every word we said was true, but was it true? |
22170 | What, then, is blindness? |
22170 | Why should they not be proud, when they feel that they are as capable of accomplishing certain things, of practicing certain trades as other men? |
43840 | For what purpose do you require it? |
43840 | ''What did you give him?'' |
43840 | ''What have you taken?'' |
43840 | But what rules the mind? |
43840 | He was at once asked,"What have you taken?" |
43840 | The coroner''s beadle went to the chemist and said:''How did you come to sell this man poison?'' |
43840 | The great point in the case was, did the tetanic symptoms, under which the deceased man died, depend on disease or poison? |
43840 | What magistrate would find or even venture to insinuate anything against this? |
17417 | A law to the violation of which in a vast class of instances-- the millions of instances of home brew-- the Government deliberately shuts its eyes? |
17417 | And is there not abundant evidence that the whole of this Maryland story is typical of what has been going on throughout the country? |
17417 | And what concern can be so intimate as that of the conduct of the individual citizen in the pursuit of his daily life? |
17417 | But what is left of the idea of respect for law? |
17417 | But what is to become of it if we are ready to surrender to the central government the control of our most intimate concerns? |
17417 | CHAPTER XI IS THERE ANY WAY OUT? |
17417 | If the laws against larceny, or arson, or burglary, or murder, were executed in this fashion, what standing would the law have in anybody''s mind? |
17417 | Is this not a fine exhibition of the nature of the League''s hold on legislation? |
17417 | Or a law against forgery if the legislators were in the frequent habit of passing forged checks? |
17417 | What degree of moral authority can the law be expected to have in these circumstances? |
17417 | prohibition law( or some similar percentage) what would be the result? |
16254 | 1894 24.76 1897 26.87 1898 29.42 1899 29.48 1900 31.54 1901 33.20 1902 35.19 Now who are the unfit? |
16254 | All our modern institutions are based on this sentiment, and what is the result? |
16254 | And if women can be sterilized by surgical interference, whence comes the necessity of sterilizing both? |
16254 | Are they more fertile than the fit? |
16254 | But if this man can take to himself a wife without taking to himself a family, what then? |
16254 | But she is barren, and why? |
16254 | But to what extent does this affect fertility? |
16254 | How shall population be so regulated as to established an equilibrium between the stability of the State, and the highest well- being of the citizens? |
16254 | In other words, is the decline in the birth- rate due to prevention in one class more than in another, and if so which? |
16254 | Is the desire uniform through all classes of Society, and is the practice of prevention uniform through all classes? |
16254 | It will of course be asked:--What about criminals and defective men? |
16254 | Now, what has brought about this change in the ratios of increase in population and in food respectively? |
16254 | What has happened? |
16254 | What hope is there of the drunkard curtailing his family by self- restraint? |
16254 | What is it? |
16254 | What is the alternative? |
16254 | When Christ gave_ his_ reply to the question,"Am I my brother''s keeper?" |
16254 | Would not all these women readily submit to sterilization? |
16254 | and do they propagate their kind? |
46435 | or"What do you know about detective work?" |
34563 | Dr. McLeod( a Commissioner).--You paid them the money to perjure themselves? 34563 ( 3) what is to be done with the clubs? 34563 ( 4) shalltied houses"be permitted? |
34563 | After a trial of forty years, has prohibition proved a success or a failure in Maine? |
34563 | Are publicans, when deprived of their licences through no fault of their own, entitled to compensation or not? |
34563 | Are the imagined interests of a small body of rich men to over- ride the welfare of the whole nation? |
34563 | But do those who so lightly quote this empty aphorism ever seriously resolve to persuade men to be sober by other means? |
34563 | Can legislation aid us in accomplishing this end, and if so in what way and to what extent? |
34563 | Can nothing be done? |
34563 | Has the monopoly law been a success? |
34563 | Is there no_ via media_? |
34563 | LICENSING BODIES.--Of whom should the licensing bodies consist? |
34563 | Shall we conquer, or is the wrong to triumph over us? |
34563 | The vote was taken on the single question:"Do you think the prohibition of the manufacture and sale of intoxicating liquor desirable? |
34563 | They are:( 1) compensation;( 2) of whom shall the licensing bodies consist? |
34563 | What were the teetotalers doing all this time? |
34563 | Where was the United Kingdom Alliance? |
34563 | Where were the hundred and one other bodies that had been clamouring for years for reform? |
34563 | Why not forget the past? |
34563 | Why rake up all these old mistakes? |
34563 | Why should the trade in intoxicants be placed under special restraints? |
34563 | [ 5] What was the cause of this change of sentiment? |
34563 | or are they content to let a smart phrase run glibly from their lips as an excuse for doing nothing? |
33479 | But why should he be ashamed? |
33479 | If this was our battle, if these were our ends, Which were our enemies, which were our friends? |
33479 | Why does n''t he go on? |
33479 | But the question arises, how successful are we in protecting ourselves at home? |
33479 | But what are moral scruples against cold facts-- that there''s money in the opium trade? |
33479 | But why, since it is so beneficial and so profitable, confine it to the downtrodden races of the world? |
33479 | How can we become truly united, however, when on such a great moral question as this we stand diametrically opposed? |
33479 | How then, does it happen that we in America know nothing about Great Britain''s Opium Monopoly? |
33479 | However, it is doubtless protected"benevolently"for what protectorate is anything but benevolent? |
33479 | If not to China, then where? |
33479 | Is it because the white race is worth preserving, worth protecting, and because subject nations are fair game for exploitation of any kind? |
33479 | Is there any reason for this discrimination? |
33479 | Query, who owns Persia? |
33479 | That the facts are new to us and come to us as a shock? |
33479 | The question arises, how do they obtain the drug? |
33479 | What per cent is that? |
33479 | Where do these vendors obtain their supplies? |
33479 | Where does this opium go-- who are the consumers? |
33479 | Who buys the opium at these government auctions, and what afterwards becomes of it? |
33479 | Why limit it to the despised races, who have not sense enough to govern themselves anyway? |
33479 | Why should he be ashamed?" |
33479 | Why should the benefits of opium be confined to Oriental races, and why should not the white race be given the same opportunities for indulgence? |
33479 | Will she establish opium shops, and opium divans, and reap half the costs of upkeep of these newly acquired states by means of this shameful traffic? |
33479 | Will she find these helpless millions ready for her opium trade? |
33479 | With Canada, a British province, to the north, and all Mexico on the south, what chance have we against such exposure? |
33479 | Would they have been so nearly ready had we continued to drug them as they had been drugged before we took possession? |
22034 | Shall not the judge of all the earth do right? |
22034 | ( 1) How does it appear to be the mind of God, that, in every Church, there should be recognized Elders? |
22034 | ( 1) How frequently ought the breaking of bread to be attended to? |
22034 | ( 2) How do such come into office? |
22034 | ( 2) What ought to be the character of the meeting at which the saints are assembled for the breaking of bread? |
22034 | ( 3) How may this appointment be made known to the individuals called to the office, and to those amongst whom they may be called to labour? |
22034 | ( 4) Is it incumbent upon the saints to acknowledge such and to submit to them in the Lord? |
22034 | And have I not reason, therefore, to thank God for this affliction? |
22034 | Are you in debt? |
22034 | Are you out of debt? |
22034 | Do I not even now see this affliction working for my good? |
22034 | Have you any present need for the Institution under your care? |
22034 | How can I sufficiently praise Him for this long- suffering? |
22034 | II.--Ought matters of discipline to be finally settled by the Elders in private, or in the presence of the Church, and as the act of the whole body? |
22034 | III.--When should Church acts( such as acts of reception, restoration, exclusion,& c.) be attended to? |
22034 | If it be asked, but why should I rise early? |
22034 | It may lastly be said, but how shall I set about rising early? |
22034 | It might be asked, how much time shall I allow myself for rest? |
22034 | Shall I not then praise my Father for such dealings with me? |
22034 | That many enemies would laugh, were the Lord to withhold supplies, and say, did we not foretell that this enthusiasm would come to nothing? |
22034 | The gentleman, turning to the matron, said,"Have you a good stock?" |
22034 | What hinders God, to make of one, so vile as I am, another Whitfield? |
22034 | What is to be done under these circumstances? |
22034 | You are dear to me; yea, so dear, that I desire to live and die with you, if our Lord permit; and why should I not tell you so by letter? |
46579 | How do you manage that? |
46579 | ***** Does the reader think that I have spun out this chapter too much? |
46579 | *****"Have you ever been threatened by the friends of criminals whom you have hanged?" |
46579 | Does he think that I have unnecessarily harrowed his feelings? |
46579 | Is any good purpose served by keeping such people for three weeks in agony? |
46579 | When they met on that fatal morning the brothers kissed each other, and, looking round, they enquired simultaneously,"where''s Hill?" |
17961 | Did God make fishes? |
17961 | God blessed them;and what right have we to make their little lives miserable? |
17961 | Ask them if they think you so silly as to believe that walking in the summer sunshine will make you feel dark and cold? |
17961 | But surely this ought to be enough; and you would not be the cruel wretch to add to his pains? |
17961 | But what changed the animals so sadly as they must have been changed, to become what some of them are now? |
17961 | Can you not fancy how he must have admired the noble and beautiful creatures as they meekly and lovingly came to him? |
17961 | Can you put it to pain? |
17961 | Do you think He will forgive you? |
17961 | Does any boy''s conscience smite him at my naming the insects? |
17961 | Does not this alarm you? |
17961 | God made the animals to be loving and confiding towards man; and if this lonely creature wants me to be a friend to her, why should I not? |
17961 | He shook his head, and said,"No;"and what do you think was the reason he gave? |
17961 | I said to myself,"Why should I drive her away? |
17961 | Is it generous? |
17961 | Is it manly? |
17961 | Is it what you think God will approve? |
17961 | Perhaps you will ask, Has the cockatoo learned to sing? |
17961 | Was it not a wonderful and a beautiful sight? |
17961 | Why does a horse go as fast as he can when he is cruelly whipped, and his poor mouth wounded by the hard bit? |
17961 | Why does chaining or tying up a dog make him savage? |
17961 | Why should you? |
17961 | Will it make you wiser, or better, or happier to feel that you are giving pain to a poor creature? |
17961 | Yet you would not say that the grapes made the vine, would you? |
17961 | [ Illustration] Have you a cow? |
43472 | Because the schooling of children out of the workhouse is neglected, is this a valid reason and excuse for equally neglecting those who are within it? |
43472 | If there are children of school age in it, is it wise to prevent the intervention of the Education Authority and its School Attendance Officer? |
43472 | If there are children of school age in it, is it wise to prevent the intervention of the Education Authority and its School Attendance Officer? |
43472 | If there is a mentally defective person in such a family, ought the Lunacy Authority to be kept out? |
43472 | If there is a mentally defective person in such a family, ought the Lunacy Authority to be kept out? |
43472 | Such cases have been marked with a"?" |
43472 | The argument used is,"The ratepayers do not take their children to the dentist, and why should we do so?" |
43472 | WHY HAVE GRANTS IN AID AT ALL? |
43472 | [ 203] From these we may infer that the Central Authority had adopted as its policy the erection of the same"low, cheap, homely(?) |
43472 | [ 508] Instructional letter to inspectors(?) |
43472 | of nitrogenous ingredients( per day? |
20379 | --But how would it be with you, dear reader, if you are unprepared, and should be taken out of the world? |
20379 | 13, 14, encourage us to ask with all boldness, for ourselves and others, both temporal and spiritual blessings? |
20379 | About four hours after, we were with a sister at Bishopsteignton, and she said to me,"Do you want any money?" |
20379 | And how did it end? |
20379 | For in the time of temptation, I have been repeatedly led to say: Should I thus sin? |
20379 | How did it turn out? |
20379 | How then could I be fit to teach others? |
20379 | I ought to have said to myself, how can an individual, so ignorant as you are, think about being a teacher to others? |
20379 | I was then asked by the sister who bad been baptized,"But have you been baptized?" |
20379 | Lord, when saw we Thee an hungered, and fed Thee? |
20379 | One morning I was in so wretched a state, that I said in my heart, what have I now gained by becoming a Christian? |
20379 | Shall I have enough myself the next month? |
20379 | She then replied,"Have you ever read the Scriptures, and prayed with reference to this subject?" |
20379 | What shall I drink?--and Wherewithal shall I be clothed? |
20379 | What wilt Thou have me to do, gracious Lord? |
20379 | When will God deliver me from this state?! |
20379 | Whilst I was writing, however, the thought occurred to me, Suppose this lady should not be a believer? |
20379 | Will she now suffer loss on account of it? |
20379 | Will she regret not having indulged her fancy in that instance? |
20379 | or thirsty, and gave Thee drink? |
27193 | Are all you boys feeling right? |
27193 | But why should that stop you? |
27193 | Do n''t you know that there are still hundreds of boys coming down the line wounded and broken? |
27193 | Do you really mean that, Jim? |
27193 | Do you smoke them? |
27193 | Liza,replied the first speaker''s companion, in a somewhat indignant voice,"Bill''s over there, ai n''t''e? |
27193 | Say,said one,"ai n''t it time that this war wuz over? |
27193 | Well, Rawlinson, and how are you getting along? 27193 Well,"said I,"will she shake hands now?" |
27193 | When? |
27193 | Why? |
27193 | Yes,he replied,"I should enjoy something to drink; but who will take me to your tea- room?" |
27193 | You are a soldier, are you not, Canada? |
27193 | But who are you?" |
27193 | CHAPTER IV BRAILLE I have often been asked,"What is Braille? |
27193 | Have you got a cigarette to give a fellow?" |
27193 | He answered:"Say, Digger, I''ve been taking some chances, have n''t I? |
27193 | He was most solicitous about the welfare of the"head- case,"and kept showering me with questions, such as:"Are you comfortable, Mac?" |
27193 | How do you like it?" |
27193 | How is the boy this morning?" |
27193 | I have heard some of the men of the other teams asking:"Why do they always pull us over? |
27193 | Is it raised letters?" |
27193 | Suddenly, from the direction of the door, a cheery voice exclaimed:"Are any new men here? |
27193 | The matron asked her, somewhat sternly,"Did you not hear that man calling?" |
27193 | Two queens in one afternoon is not bad going for an old Canuck, is it?" |
27193 | What need is there of the beautiful for those who are without eyes, or who have eyes that see not? |
27193 | What other educational establishment can boast such a record? |
27193 | When do they figure on letting you get away from here? |
27193 | When we met, I began our conversation with:"Well, kid, how are things?" |
27193 | Where''s Rawlinson?" |
27193 | Why do n''t they stop? |
34743 | I have a right to gamble; I have a right to be damned too, if I choose; whose business is it? |
34743 | And for what but this does the jaded gambler play? |
34743 | Are such men sent to the Capital only to practise debauchery? |
34743 | Are you as safe as they, when you are in the gulf- stream of perdition, and they on the shore? |
34743 | But a worse thief may meet me, decoy my steps, and by a greater dishonesty, filch ten thousand dollars,--and what then? |
34743 | But have you ever asked,_ how many_ have escaped? |
34743 | But on the wide question,_ how is it fair to win_--what law is there? |
34743 | But where is there a gambler''s code? |
34743 | Do we love our children, and yet let them walk in a den of vipers? |
34743 | Do you doubt it? |
34743 | Had a scorpion stung you, would it alleviate your pangs to reflect that you had only one chance in one hundred? |
34743 | Had you swallowed corrosive poison, would it ease your convulsions to think there was only one chance in fifty for you? |
34743 | May he not cheat in shuffling, and yet be in full orders and canonical? |
34743 | May he not discover his opponent''s hand by fraud? |
34743 | Shall such astounding iniquities be vomited out amidst us, and no man care? |
34743 | Shall there be even in the eye of religion no difference between the corrupter of youth and their guardian? |
34743 | What is the_ amusement_ for which you play but the_ excitement_ of the game? |
34743 | What says conscience? |
34743 | What says he to his conscience now? |
34743 | What then is this"_ only fault_?" |
34743 | What will shut a man out from a gambler''s club? |
34743 | Why is he here? |
34743 | Will man never learn that the way to hell is through the valley of DECEIT? |
34743 | You have nine hundred and ninety- nine chances_ against_ you, and one for you; and will you go on? |
34743 | only prudence between me and gain? |
46812 | At what cost to the ratepayers was this increased security obtained? |
46812 | Englishmen, will you put up with this? |
46812 | What arrangements did the country make to protect itself against the consequences of this accumulation of crime? |
46812 | What organization was provided for the enforcement of order, and for the protection of life and property? |
46812 | What plan could be more demoralizing than the one which sets the servant to spy on the master, the son to watch his father? |
13434 | ''"I am sometimes asked, What about those who have left me? |
13434 | ''Matter?'' |
13434 | ''Why do they not want families in Australia? |
13434 | But I repeat, let us halve the figures, let us even quarter them, which, as Euclid remarked, is absurd, and even then what are we to conclude? |
13434 | But on the path that he has chosen what is there for him to gain? |
13434 | Do you consider that now, after forty- five years of existence, it is, speaking generally, on the downward or on the upward grade? |
13434 | How is it done? |
13434 | How is this done? |
13434 | INTRODUCTORY WHAT IS THE SALVATION ARMY? |
13434 | If this question were put to the ordinary person of fashion or leisure, how would it be answered? |
13434 | If_ they_ have succeeded why should_ he_ fail? |
13434 | It can scarcely be otherwise, for what has the Army to offer them in place of their gaudy, glittering life of luxury and excitement? |
13434 | It could not be otherwise, for we are engaged in real warfare, and whoever heard of war without wounds and losses? |
13434 | MR. ROOSEVELT:''Why not make use of all this charitable energy, now often misdirected, for national ends?'' |
13434 | On his return, the old man exclaimed:''Oh, my darlings, whatever_ have_ you been doing?'' |
13434 | The question is, can the artificially created small holder, who must pay a rent of £ 4 the acre, attain to a like result? |
13434 | Thus a while ago the Army received a telegram from a German girl asking,''Can you help?'' |
13434 | What can I say of their histories? |
13434 | What information can you give me as to the position of the Army in its relations with other religious bodies? |
13434 | What is its comparative measure of success with each of these peoples, and what future is anticipated for it among them respectively? |
13434 | What would he then discover? |
13434 | Whenever a new development came under consideration, the question arose-- How is it to be financed? |
13434 | Where is the work advancing, where does it hang in the balance, and where is it being driven backwards? |
13434 | Why do not the writers of naturalistic novels study Salvation Army Shelters? |
13434 | Why not, indeed? |
13434 | Will not some rich and charitable person provide the £ 15,000 that are lacking? |
13434 | [ 4] What are these women doing? |
37097 | Does Drug and Alcohol Use Lead to Failure to Graduate from High School? |
37097 | CONTENTS Page INTRODUCTION iv WHAT CAN WE DO? |
37097 | Can school officials search student lockers? |
37097 | Can students be suspended or expelled from school for use, possession, or sale of drugs? |
37097 | Do school officials have to stop a search when they find the object of the search? |
37097 | Do school officials need a search warrant to conduct a search for drugs? |
37097 | Does Drug and Alcohol Use Lead to Failure to Graduate from High School? |
37097 | How extensive can a search be? |
37097 | Type What is What does it How is it called? |
37097 | Type What is What does it How is it called? |
37097 | Type What is What does it How is it called? |
37097 | Type What is What does it How is it called? |
37097 | Type What is What does it How is it called? |
37097 | Type What is What does it How is it called? |
37097 | Type What is What does it How is it called? |
37097 | Type What is What does it How is it called? |
37097 | WHAT CAN WE DO? |
37097 | What Federal procedural requirements apply to suspension or expulsion? |
37097 | What legal standard applies to school officials who search students and their possessions for drugs? |
37097 | it used? |
37097 | it used? |
37097 | it used? |
37097 | it used? |
37097 | it used? |
37097 | it used? |
37097 | it used? |
37097 | it used? |
37097 | look like? |
37097 | look like? |
37097 | look like? |
37097 | look like? |
37097 | look like? |
37097 | look like? |
37097 | look like? |
37097 | look like? |
43625 | But what''s the use of ordering it if you ca n''t eat it after all? |
43625 | How can it be remedied? |
43625 | How much is the veg''tubble soup? |
43625 | What keeps you so late now? |
43625 | And can this country afford to ignore the good example of these European laws which provide compensation for such victims of occupational diseases? |
43625 | Are n''t we neighbors?" |
43625 | As our work progressed this question came to me more and more insistently:"Why are these men and women dependents? |
43625 | Dutre, is that you? |
43625 | If neither revolution nor laws nor yet formal education can cure these root evils, is there no cure? |
43625 | Milton Smoot?" |
43625 | Receiving another negative, I enquired in surprise,"Why surely you are acquainted with the preachers of your town?" |
43625 | The board asked:"have you ever been in prison before?" |
43625 | What is the present situation? |
43625 | What, if anything, could be learned if they were permitted to tell their own stories of misfortune?" |
43625 | Where were the good people? |
43625 | Who dares fail to try? |
43625 | Who is the hostess, and who, at the close of the house''s festivities, speeds the parting guest? |
43625 | Who shall live up to the great trust? |
43625 | With this showing, the question naturally arises: Is there any connection between lack of education, child labor and the poorhouse? |
43625 | Would it not be much better plainly to include occupational diseases in the law? |
43625 | You know?" |
43625 | [ Illustration: QUARTERS OF VISITING NURSE]"What are you city people for, but to be skinned?" |
35650 | It may be also worthy of inquiry( add the Committee) whether the advantages looked for, from this establishment may not be dependent on its weakness? |
35650 | It may be fairly asked, in what manner a person so situated is to reimburse himself? |
35650 | What impression must these facts make on the intelligent mind!--will they not warrant the following conclusion? |
35650 | What must the profits be to afford such a profusion?] |
35650 | What therefore can rationally be opposed to such an arrangement? |
10580 | But if I am not cured of my lung trouble after three months? |
10580 | But if my inflammation is cured before that time? |
10580 | Again, are not many predisposed toward insanity without ever becoming insane? |
10580 | And if imprisonment for a time is to be the highest penalty, how many years shall it last--thirty, or twenty- five, or ten? |
10580 | And robbery and brigandage? |
10580 | But I met him with a smile and said to him kindly:"How are you?" |
10580 | But can we believe that the courageous work of a few public writers has touched the roots of the Camorra in this city? |
10580 | But how so? |
10580 | But the human spectator asks:"If the criminal should happen to be reformed before the expiration of his term, should he be retained in prison?" |
10580 | But what about involuntary crimes of omission? |
10580 | But what are those extenuating circumstances? |
10580 | But which is the swampy soil in which this social disease can spread and persist like leprosy in tin collective organism? |
10580 | Can it be said that he intended the first act? |
10580 | Family conditions? |
10580 | For instance, how can the industrialism of England in the nineteenth century be explained? |
10580 | For instance, is one who murders from motives of revenge a passionate criminal who must be excused? |
10580 | How many individuals do not suffer from tooth- ache, especially in the great cities? |
10580 | Is there anything that was not tried to suppress piracy? |
10580 | Now, who is there that thinks, when deliberating some action, what are the causes that determine his choice? |
10580 | One of them, pervading the overwhelming majority of individual consciences, asks: How is this? |
10580 | The lawyers, the judges, the officials of the police, ask themselves: What is the name of the crime committed by that man under such circumstances? |
10580 | The man improved, the epileptic fits ceased, his moral condition became as normal as before, and this bricklayer( how about the free will?) |
10580 | Then the human spectator says:"But suppose the criminal should not yet be fit for human society at the expiration of his term?" |
10580 | This is the same case as that of the imaginary physician who says:"You have heart trouble? |
10580 | Well, then, the problem for me is simply-- how big a dose of rhubarb decoction shall I give you?" |
10580 | What for? |
10580 | What, then, has the civilized world to offer in the way of remedies against criminality? |
10580 | Which is the greatest penalty proportional to the crime of patricide? |
10580 | Why did that man commit such a crime? |
10580 | You have heart trouble? |
12424 | Are you looking for jobs, my lads? |
12424 | Boys, where have you left your little sister? |
12424 | Did you think I did not recognize you? |
12424 | Got some money, lads, with which you can square your ride? |
12424 | Hello, Slippery, old boy, when did you find your way back to Chicago? |
12424 | Joe,the wounded fellow called again,"where are you, Joe?" |
12424 | Oh, is that what you wish to know, Slippery? 12424 Say, McDonald,"he hissed,"when did you make your getaway?" |
12424 | Say, fellow,Joe almost pleasantly asked the beggar,"who told you that my name is McDonald?" |
12424 | Slippery, old boy,now queried Boston Frank, not believing that such a dire calamity had overtaken them,"you are joking, are n''t you?" |
12424 | Slippery,Kansas Shorty addressed his pal,"what do you think of our lucky catch in the''Road Kid Line''? |
12424 | Trying to wiggle yourself out of your past, eh? |
12424 | Are they prospering?" |
12424 | Chagrined at what he thought to be an affront, he suddenly blurted out:"Mrs. McDonald, is there something about my face that interests you?" |
12424 | Have you heard from them lately, Mrs. McDonald? |
12424 | How dare you call me crazy? |
12424 | I, Kansas Shorty, the plinger?" |
12424 | Instead of an answer to his question the beggar straightened himself to his full height,"So you have not been home?" |
12424 | Look, he has just opened his eyes, and listen, can you not hear him faintly groan?" |
12424 | While they yet argued the point, the manager of the hotel, an oily- faced fellow, accosted them:"Strangers in Minneapolis, eh?" |
12424 | [ Illustration:"Say, friend,"pleaded the semi- maudlin beggar,"would you mind assisting a hungry fellow who has not eaten a square meal in a week?"] |
44552 | ''By different persons, do you say?'' |
44552 | And when was that? |
44552 | I think, Mr. Siemens, that you have had a long experience in connection with electricity? |
44552 | That is to say, he, too, is infallible? |
44552 | Then,said the wily advocate,"your son working on your system is as good as you are?" |
44552 | Well, now, I want you to tell me whether in the course of all your experience you have ever known electricity to be adulterated? |
44552 | Well, now, Mr. Netherclift, was there ever a case in which you and your son appeared on opposite sides? |
44552 | What dog? |
44552 | ''I do, Mr. Netherclift, and if you are ready for the hole, tell me-- were those six pieces of paper written by one hand about the same time?'' |
44552 | ( 2) Said:"What does all this mean?" |
44552 | ( 4) Said:"Hullo, what''s going on here"? |
44552 | ( 5) Said:"Who are these men?" |
44552 | An Irish counsel in a now forgotten case began his cross- examination of a handwriting expert with the curious question--"Where''s the dog?" |
44552 | Philip Booth denied the authenticity of the handwriting, and was then questioned further:--"Are they in the same ink?" |
44552 | Professor''s conduct:( 1) Said:"What''s all this?" |
44552 | Swift came the unanswerable retort,"How comes it then that two infallibles appeared on opposite sides?" |
44552 | The Clerk of the Crown asked her,"Frances Countess of Somerset, art thou guilty of the felony and murder, or not guilty?" |
44552 | The professor pretending to be alarmed jumped up from his chair and exclaimed,"Men, what are you up to here?" |
44552 | The terrible question was: By whose hand was it administered? |
44552 | What wo n''t a girl do for a man she loves? |
44552 | What, he asked, was the evidence of murder? |
44552 | _ The Judge._--But if it were written in her more sober style, what would you say then? |
44552 | _ The Judge._--Do you believe it to be her hand? |
27683 | What does the straight line mean to you? |
27683 | And who knows the hand, if not the lover? |
27683 | But who shall put into words limitless, visionless, silent void? |
27683 | But will you please tell us what idea you had of goodness and beauty when you were six years old?" |
27683 | By what half- development of human power has the left hand been neglected? |
27683 | From contrasts so irreconcilable can we fail to form an idea of beauty and know surely when we meet with loveliness? |
27683 | Has any chamber of the blind man''s brain been opened and found empty? |
27683 | Has any psychologist explored the mind of the sightless and been able to say,"There is no sensation here"? |
27683 | Has anything arisen to disprove the adequacy of correspondence? |
27683 | Hast thou entered into the treasures of the night? |
27683 | Hast thou seen Thought bloom in the blind child''s face? |
27683 | Hast thou seen his mind grow, Like the running dawn, to grasp The vision of the Master? |
27683 | Hath not my naked body felt the water sing When the sea hath enveloped it With rippling music? |
27683 | Have I not felt The lilt of waves beneath my boat, The flap of sail, The strain of mast, The wild rush Of the lightning- charged winds? |
27683 | Have I not smelt the swift, keen flight Of winged odours before the tempest? |
27683 | Have I not the same right to use these words in describing what I feel as you have in describing what you see? |
27683 | Have not my fingers split the sand On the sun- flooded beach? |
27683 | He made darkness his secret place; his pavilion round about him were dark waters and thick clouds of the skies"? |
27683 | How are we to know that they have ceased to exist for us? |
27683 | How can the world be shrivelled when this most profound, emotional sense, touch, is faithful to its service? |
27683 | If I had said"visit,"he would have asked no questions, yet what does"visit"mean but"see"(_ visitare_)? |
27683 | Is it not used in the great moments of swearing, blessing, cursing, smiting, agreeing, marrying, building, destroying? |
27683 | May I not understand the poet''s figure:"The green of spring overflows the earth like a tide"? |
27683 | May I not, then, be excused if this account of my sensations lacks precision? |
27683 | May I not, then, say:"Myriads of fireflies flit hither and thither in the dew- wet grass like little fluttering tapers"? |
27683 | The blind man of spirit faces the unknown and grapples with it, and what else does the world of seeing men do? |
27683 | The imp Curiosity pulled Memory by the sleeve and said,"Why do they run away? |
27683 | Then came Love, bearing in her hand The torch that is the light unto my feet, And softly spoke Love:"Hast thou Entered into the treasures of darkness? |
27683 | To escape this moralizing you should ask,"How does the straight line feel?" |
27683 | What ear hath heard the music of the spheres, the steps of time, the strokes of chance, the blows of death? |
27683 | What eye hath seen the glories of the New Jerusalem? |
27683 | What great invention has not existed in the inventor''s mind long before he gave it tangible shape? |
27683 | What ground have we for discarding light, sound, and colour as an integral part of our world? |
27683 | What is life to him? |
27683 | What would odours signify if they were not associated with the time of the year, the place I live in, and the people I know? |
27683 | When the Psalmist considers the heavens and the earth, he exclaims:"What is man, O Lord, that thou art mindful of him? |
27683 | Would they command Darwin from the grave and bid him blot out his geological time, give us back a paltry few thousand years? |
27683 | when will this city be finished? |
14963 | HOW DO THE BLIND SEE? |
14963 | A woman in the car, overcome by the unpleasant odor, exclaimed, in evident disgust:"Is that the way the Mormons smell?" |
14963 | And what nobler compliment could he have paid to our country and its institutions? |
14963 | Another question so often arising is, can the blind distinguish colors by the sense of feeling? |
14963 | Are you married? |
14963 | As soon as the door was closed, the mischievous urchin exclaimed,"Golly, boys, suppose I had n''t guessed right?" |
14963 | At the first lull in the sweet confusion I asked:"Who are you all?" |
14963 | Earth too replete with joy, too beautiful, For me, ingrate, that we must sever? |
14963 | He turned jocularly toward me, and asked:"Were you ever in love?" |
14963 | I quickly and inquiringly responded, you are perhaps a friend of my husband? |
14963 | I turn to man: can he but with me mourn? |
14963 | IS IT MORE TO LOSE THE EYES THAN THE EARS? |
14963 | Indeed, what shade of thought or feeling ever escapes us? |
14963 | O, whither shall I fly, this stroke to shun? |
14963 | One by one we are passing over, why should we hesitate? |
14963 | Or, like the Judas who his Lord betrayed, Sell soul and hope of Heaven for miser''s gold? |
14963 | Prime gift of God, that veil''st His sovereign throne, And dost of Him in sense remind me-- Blest light of Heaven, why hast thou from me flown? |
14963 | Say, which is best, true piety or gold? |
14963 | Seeing the movement, he asked:"Do you wish, to sell the book?" |
14963 | Shall we accept the sacrifice he made And enter in the Shepherd''s sheltering fold? |
14963 | That they from her must hide forever? |
14963 | The soldier dies surrounded; could he_ live Alone_ to suffer, and alone to strive?" |
14963 | The voice asked:"Were you ever in Michigan? |
14963 | Then said the maid, in voice so clear:"How did you know that I was here?" |
14963 | This metal worship or the living God? |
14963 | Thou''rt lovely, oh, so lovely, And yet how brief thy stay, Why is it all things beautiful Must droop and fade away? |
14963 | To these sad shades, why hast resigned me? |
14963 | We do not deal in such merchandise?" |
14963 | What craft of alchemy can bid defiance To time, and change; and for a single hour, Renew this phantom flower?" |
14963 | When I was almost well I one day said to him:"Doctor, what do I owe you?" |
14963 | Where turn me, this side death and heaven? |
14963 | what wonder- working, occult science Can from the ashes of our hearts Once more the rose of youth restore? |
14963 | what would you think?" |
14963 | where did you come from?" |
14963 | why should I with no one to care for? |
33586 | Tientsin dollar have got? |
33586 | And De Quincey''s words have come to me:"What was it that drove me into the habitual use of opium? |
33586 | And if they do not believe that our civilization is superior, how long do you suppose they will endure the treatment they receive from us? |
33586 | As friends of China, might not the ratepayers give their appeals a courteous consideration? |
33586 | But is Great Britain planning to help China? |
33586 | But there are large money interests which would suffer by such reforms, you say? |
33586 | But why? |
33586 | Can China hope to conquer the opium curse without the help of Great Britain? |
33586 | Chairman.--"What gave you that impression?" |
33586 | Chairman.--"When you use the words''forcing it upon them,''do you mean that they were not voluntary purchasers?" |
33586 | Does Japan think that opium is good for children? |
33586 | Does Japan think that opium is invaluable as a general household remedy? |
33586 | Even apart from moral considerations, bringing the matter down to a"practical"basis, why is this so? |
33586 | First, then: can China, single- handed, possibly succeed in this fight, now going on, against the slow paralysis of opium? |
33586 | Gladstone.--"How long ago have you told him that you were sure the thing could not go on?" |
33586 | Had there been, then, a change of heart in the directorate? |
33586 | How would you like to tackle a problem of this magnitude, as Yuan Shi K''ai and Tong Shao- i have done? |
33586 | If a choice between evils seemed necessary, was he to blame? |
33586 | If she was to be debauched whether or no, must she also be ruined financially? |
33586 | Misery-- blank desolation-- settled and abiding darkness----?" |
33586 | Now, to get down to cases, just what this Government Opium Monopoly is, and just how does it work? |
33586 | Now, why is the public opinion of China setting so strongly against opium? |
33586 | On what element in her population must China rely to put this huge reform into effect? |
33586 | Opium had ruled in Shansi: could they hope to depose it before the final havoc should be wrought? |
33586 | Suppose that Great Britain be called upon to make good her pledge? |
33586 | The next question would seem to be, if the Chinese are really trying to put down the opium traffic, how are they succeeding? |
33586 | Were they really arranging to plant less opium? |
33586 | What are they and why do they lie here in mid- channel, where commerce surges about them? |
33586 | What is Great Britain doing to help China? |
33586 | What is Great Britain doing to help her? |
33586 | What is the attitude of the Colonial government towards the opium question? |
33586 | What was China doing to protect herself from these aggressions? |
33586 | What would these British mothers say? |
33586 | When? |
33586 | Why not? |
33586 | Why not? |
33586 | Would it be easy to succeed? |
55285 | Oh, long life to your reverence,said the beggar,"who would I tell my lies to, except my clargy?" |
55285 | _ What Englishman could do this?_ With respect to loads on the head, the Irish surpass all others. |
50520 | But what have I done? |
50520 | Would it be a blessing or would it be a misfortune if he were to die? |
50520 | _ À me?_asked the astonished d''Ancre in imperfect French. |
50520 | ''What,''cried he,''is the frigate weary of carrying English colors? |
50520 | And does she come to surrender without a blow?'' |
50520 | But what can not necessity and cruelty make men do? |
50520 | The first sentinel cried,"Who goes there?" |
50520 | What had actually happened? |
46904 | The foreigner naturally asks: How do these people live? 46904 And who will blame him for so doing? 46904 But what would you otherwise? 46904 It may be asked, however, what is the practical effect of Labour House discipline on the after life of those who have experienced it? 46904 Now, as everyone in London requires a personal character, unless we have influence at our back what chance have we for anything but casual work? 46904 Passing over the humane aspect of the question, I would ask: What does this ghastly parody of family life mean? 46904 The further question follows: What part, then, might the existing workhouse continue to play in our Poor Law system? 46904 What can, what should, be done? 46904 What shall be done with him? 46904 Who shall wonder, then, that our past indulgent treatment of the vagrant has had the effect of perpetuating and multiplying this class? 46904 Why should the tramp have all the ease and the honest worker all the hardships of life? 37158 ( London, 8vo, 1883(?).) 37158 ( it is to- day, 0.02 per cent.!)? 37158 And are we to stop there? 37158 Are anæsthetics ever dreamt of there? 37158 But how does Vivisection come in here? 37158 But may inoculation be performed? 37158 CHAPTER VII ARE LAWS REGULATING VIVISECTION NECESSARY? 37158 Can it be wondered at that medical men, whose experience is so different to theirs, feel otherwise? 37158 Do you believe that Science has come to an end? 37158 Every time we propose to make an experiment, it is as though we put this question to ourselves: is this dog worth more than a man? 37158 Have experiments on animals advanced Therapeutics? 37158 IS VIVISECTION A BENEFIT TO ANIMALS AND MAN, AND JUSTIFIABLE? 37158 If now another horse has diphtheria, and you want to cure him quickly, what more natural than inject the serum of the horse who has just recovered? 37158 If pain is but an empty word, according to the celebrated phrase of Zeno, why not apply that fine maxim to the animal? 37158 In order to study a disease, have we the right to give that disease to an animal? 37158 Is it barbarous to attach more importance to the death of these men than to the death of the few dogs and mice that served to establish this law? 37158 Is it however, expedient to go further, and to prohibit or simply to regulate vivisection? 37158 Is it nothing to know how to restore to life the apparently drowned? 37158 Is it to prohibit all experiments on toxic actions? 37158 Is the law to indicate the kind of anæsthetic to be used, and the degree of anæsthesia to be attained? 37158 Is there no suffering in the slaughter- house? 37158 Is this a high morality? 37158 Is this a realisation of their duty as men? 37158 Is this what is called being inhuman? 37158 Let us suppose what is improbable, that is to say, that we have come to know all the laws of Nature, should we not immediately become all- powerful? 37158 May prolonged_ intoxication_ be caused? 37158 Moreover, how are the many possible conditions of an experiment to be precisely laid down? 37158 Once he is insensible he can not suffer; why hesitate, therefore, to perform prolonged experiments upon that insensible being? 37158 SHOULD EXPERIMENTS ON ANIMALS BE RESTRICTED OR ABOLISHED? 37158 Should they, however, be condemned by law? 37158 Should we not be the sovereign masters of disease and pain, perhaps of old age and death? 37158 That is something which may well confound us, is it not? 37158 The pathologists then advanced a step, and asked, Why should this antidote be used solely for animals when they have diphtheria? 37158 We may study the stars and the earth, electricity and heat, geography and history, and are we to be forbidden to study the functions of living matter? 37158 What conclusion is to be drawn from this fact? 37158 What doctor would hesitate to make a puncture in the skin of his patient for the injection of a solution of morphia? 37158 What would chemists say if it were maintained that chemical analysis was absurd because of the contradictions between chemists? 37158 Why should not the horse''s serum be beneficial to human beings when they are attacked with the same disease? 37158 Why should the law be substituted for the exigencies of science? 37158 Will it be claimed that the doctor has no need of a knowledge of physiology? 37158 or than a hundred men? 37158 or than the whole of humanity to come? 49964 What do you know of our clerk?" |
49964 | But what if there were no hirers? |
49964 | But where? |
49964 | Could he not be made in some measure to recoup the treasury for the outlay he occasioned? |
49964 | How was he to make the most of his advantages? |
49964 | Of what avail was it to prepare prisoners gradually for honest labour when there was no labour upon which they could be employed? |
49964 | Ten thousand, some said twelve thousand, had been accommodated within the walls-- surely there must be room there for several hundred convicts? |
49964 | Transportation had been abandoned and what had been given them in exchange? |
49964 | Was it strange that the public should complain of a system of penal repression which left them to the tender mercies of ruffians like these? |
49964 | What would be my attitude toward my charges? |
49964 | What, then, was to become of them? |
49964 | thank you,"she said coolly;"could n''t you make it thirty- one?" |
30230 | ''Could you tell me who they are?'' 30230 ''Have you burned any bodies here?'' |
30230 | ''What can I do for you, Clark?'' 30230 ''What is in there now?'' |
30230 | All right, Colonel; what is your list? |
30230 | And you have taken charge of these nurses? |
30230 | As to the report, have you not acknowledged the contributions to all those who have sent? |
30230 | Conductor, you had a hot box a few miles back; do n''t you think it should be looked to after passing Macclenny? |
30230 | Has any one complained? |
30230 | Lord bless your poor suffering soul, what difference does that make? 30230 Now, Colonel, when will you send for these supplies?" |
30230 | Then to whom would you report? |
30230 | Then, how can I get them? 30230 Wagner?" |
30230 | Would she like to return to the childhood home in Indiana? |
30230 | A message was received from General Shafter, who telegraphed from his headquarters;"The death rate at El Caney is terrible; can you send food?" |
30230 | And can true friendship be tested if not in the hour of misfortune?" |
30230 | Before we left her, we asked if she would name her house when it should be done? |
30230 | But the subject changed with"How many cases did you lose in this epidemic, Mammy?" |
30230 | Can I buy them from the Red Cross?" |
30230 | Could it be possible that we were to learn this anew? |
30230 | Did our commands, military or naval, hold men great enough of soul for such action? |
30230 | Did some one tell me? |
30230 | Have you a vacant cot?'' |
30230 | Holyland?" |
30230 | How deal ye with your servants? |
30230 | I wonder who it was that so continually warned me that night to keep away from that room, away from the cot, away from all connected with it? |
30230 | Some other thoughtful reader may pitifully ask, what became of these miles of wreckage and the dead on the Galveston seashore? |
30230 | Thanks to those good Samaritans, we dined and breakfasted on tinned beef, bread and coffee; and what more could good soldiers require? |
30230 | The custodian regarded me with a stare that plainly said,''Do you think I am doing this for amusement?'' |
30230 | The elements of earth and water had refused-- what remained but fire? |
30230 | There are eighteen on our list who left with you and Colonel Southmayd; where are your comrades?" |
30230 | Was this to remain so? |
30230 | Were men again to fall, and women weep? |
30230 | What did it tell? |
30230 | What greater justification could it have? |
30230 | What greater riches could it crave? |
30230 | What would be the result when found and met? |
30230 | Where were the Spanish ships? |
30230 | Where were we to break that Cuban wall and let us in? |
30230 | Who could long withstand this? |
30230 | Why were we there, if not to exercise judgment in the matter of relief? |
30230 | whar is de colonel? |
46746 | Are you a Dissenting minister? |
46746 | No sabbath- breaker? 46746 Not give clothes? |
46746 | S''help me, ai n''t it fine? |
46746 | The soldiers then? |
46746 | What are you doing here? |
46746 | What are you then? |
46746 | What do you know of our clerk? |
46746 | What have you got here? 46746 What, you not afraid let us go all by ourselves? |
46746 | Where is it? |
46746 | Who ever heard of a criminal being sentenced to catch the rheumatism or the typhus fever? |
46746 | Why should man confess to man? |
46746 | ''Did you not commit the fact? |
46746 | ''Do tell me, sir; I am informed I shall go down with great force; is it so?'' |
46746 | But what are the feelings of those who take part in it? |
46746 | But why should I repeat the whole? |
46746 | Friends interchanged greetings, and"How d''ye do, Sall?" |
46746 | Had you no concern therein? |
46746 | Howell asked indignantly of his judges,"Who will whip a clergyman?" |
46746 | May I speak to them? |
46746 | The witnesses against him all spoke the truth, he said; there was no case to make out; why waste money on lawyers for the defence? |
46746 | This man, May, asked the porter at King''s College if"he wanted anything?" |
46746 | Thou hast been a great sabbath- breaker in thy time I warrant thee? |
46746 | Were you not interested in the murder?'' |
46746 | What had become of the fellow? |
46746 | What happens? |
46746 | Where would be the use? |
46746 | Why does no one stir to help him? |
46746 | Why not move the city prison bodily into this more rural spot, with its purer air and greater breathing space? |
46746 | Why not relieve Newgate by drawing more largely upon the superior accommodation which Millbank offered? |
46746 | then thou hast been an abominable drunkard?" |
16606 | At present, those convicted for all offenses pass the day together? |
16606 | Be so good as to state, as nearly as you can, what proportion of the women, without your assistance, would be in a state of extreme want? |
16606 | By six feet? |
16606 | Can you state out of what number of convicts these have been in the course of a year? |
16606 | Do you believe men to be as much excluded from all communication with the women now as is possible in the present state of Newgate? |
16606 | Do you know anything of the room and accommodation for the women in 1815? |
16606 | Do you know whether there is any clothing allowed by the city? |
16606 | Has gaming entirely ceased? |
16606 | Has not her character been very materially changed since she has been under your care? |
16606 | Have you never had prisoners there who have suffered materially for want of clothing? |
16606 | How long had the woman been in jail? |
16606 | How many removals of female prisoners have you had in the last year, in Newgate; how many gone to Botany Bay? |
16606 | I must make an inquiry; is Maria Edgeworth here? 16606 In fact, has there been only one regular removal within the last year?" |
16606 | In the present arrangement is it not so with regard to the women? |
16606 | In what does the turnkey interfere now with the prison? |
16606 | Is that woman still in Newgate, whose husband was executed, and she herself condemned to death, having eight children? |
16606 | Not long; for we do not, since we have been there, suffer them to be a day without being clothed? |
16606 | Nothing but the morals of the Scripture,--the duties towards God and man? |
16606 | Shall it be read to you again? |
16606 | There is no regular clothing allowed? |
16606 | What is the average space allowed to each woman to lie upon, taking the average number in the prison? |
16606 | What reward, or hope of reward, do you hold out? |
16606 | What was it in 1817? |
16606 | When they come in they come naked, almost? |
16606 | Without inculcating any particular doctrine? |
16606 | You have confined yourself to reading the Scriptures, and pointing out generally the moral lessons that might be derived from them? |
16606 | Am I a happier or a better creature than I was this day twelvemonths? |
16606 | And where?" |
16606 | Could lasting good be effected there? |
16606 | Do you think that any reformation can be accomplished without employment?" |
16606 | Does it not recall the parting of Paul with the elders at Miletus? |
16606 | I said:"Is it sweet, my dear?" |
16606 | It may be asked how children came there? |
16606 | No doubt her feeling lay this way; but did it not give her and her example a wonderful influence? |
16606 | The Count read it, after which our aunt said,"Will the Prince and Princesses allow a short time for prayer?" |
16606 | The authors of_ The Jail Cradle, Who Rocks It?_ and_ In Prison and Out_, have dealt with the problem of juvenile crime-- and not in vain. |
16606 | The old cruel system drew forth many angry expressions from the poor lunatics:"Are we, then, wild beasts, to be gazed at?" |
16606 | Was it not the very secret of her power with the wretched and degraded prisoners? |
16606 | Was not Elizabeth Fry and her coadjutors doing a god- like work? |
16606 | What can be done with such but to deal stringently with them as with enemies against society? |
16606 | What can be said of such sights as these?... |
16606 | What pathos is there not here?" |
16606 | What was not said of me? |
16606 | What was not thought of me, may I not say, in public and in private, in innumerable publications? |
16606 | You applied to the Committee of the Court of Aldermen?" |
32609 | And you,I said,"why do n''t you go to school? |
32609 | He? |
32609 | I want ter know what yer call one of them fellers dat sets off picturs? |
32609 | It was a murderer who asked the question''Am I my brother''s keeper?'' 32609 Me?" |
32609 | Now, if I let you go, will you go right back? |
32609 | Pietro,I said, with a sudden yearning to know,"did you ever laugh?" |
32609 | Well, what was she to Kid? |
32609 | Well, where do you live? |
32609 | What do you desire to know about him? |
32609 | What is nerve? |
32609 | What kind of work do you do? |
32609 | Who is Kid? |
32609 | Who takes care of him? |
32609 | Whom do you mean? |
32609 | Why are you not in school? |
32609 | And does the event justify the high hopes of that home journey? |
32609 | And the girl that has come thus far with him? |
32609 | And where did he run so fast? |
32609 | Are we going backward or forward? |
32609 | But of her who goes his way with him-- it is not generally a long way for either-- what of her end? |
32609 | Did he have any home? |
32609 | Do n''t you know you have to?" |
32609 | Does any good result to the children? |
32609 | Fancy the_ Westminster Review_ or the_ Nineteenth Century_ breeding contention among the denizens of East London by any criticism of their ways? |
32609 | For whom did he shield the"posy"so eagerly, so faithfully, that ragged little wretch that was all mud and patches? |
32609 | Is it likely that any attempt to rob it of its few harmless joys should win them over? |
32609 | Is it not better that he should be here than on the street? |
32609 | Is it to be marvelled at, if the first impression of them is sometimes not favorable? |
32609 | It was thus interpreted to me by a girl from the basement, who had come in out of curiosity:"Are youse goin''to give us any money?" |
32609 | On the face of the ballot was the question to be decided:"Shall the school salute the Nation''s flag every day at the morning exercises?" |
32609 | One luckless chap forgot himself far enough to yank it one night, and immediately an angry cry went up from the gang,"Who pulled dat bell?" |
32609 | THE ITALIAN SLUM CHILDREN Who and where are the slum children of New York to- day? |
32609 | THE VERDICT OF THE POTTER''S FIELD Looking back now over the field we have traversed, what is the verdict? |
32609 | The idea of moving was preposterous; for what other landlord would take in a homeless family with ten children and no income? |
32609 | They said that they slept there, and as the men did, why should they not? |
32609 | This great mass of children-- did they all come from the street? |
32609 | Through its darkened windows what a review was the liberated spirit making of that sin- worn, wasted life, begun in innocence and wasted-- there? |
32609 | What are the causes of this? |
32609 | What did they see, those dead eyes? |
32609 | What if there be a thousand left? |
32609 | What is it to cheat?" |
32609 | What lad is there whose wayward spirit such kindness would not conquer in the end? |
32609 | What shall we do?" |
32609 | What would you? |
32609 | Why not lend such schools or class- rooms as are not used at night to boys''clubs that can show a responsible management, for their meetings? |
32609 | Why should they be? |
32609 | You know him? |
32609 | [ Illustration: SHINE, SIR?] |
32609 | _ He_ had to take the hard knocks always; why should not his horse? |
32609 | demanded the teacher;"what does it mean?" |
32609 | said the boy, surveying her with supreme contempt,"do n''t yer know yer own father''s trade?" |
32609 | said the other, who could,"he? |
32609 | where would you put him in a better place?" |
32609 | would you throw them all out of work?" |
52114 | Can I trust you to return if I give you permission to leave the prison for a time? |
52114 | Could this happen in any other city in Spain? 52114 Do you wish to see her in her last moments?" |
52114 | Who and what was the_ Cabo de Vara_? |
52114 | Who is the coachman on the box? 52114 Are their employers afraid of being robbed or murdered? 52114 Could they overcome the natural repugnance felt by honest and respectable people for those whom the law has condemned to live apart? 52114 Do God''s eyes not reach to the prisons of the Inquisition? 52114 Now, who in the name of wonder, was this alcaide? 52114 The cook in the kitchen? 52114 The nursemaid in charge of the children? 52114 Was I glad at my escape from this living tomb, or was I paralysed by fear, at the pile perhaps already hewn and stacked for my wretched body? 52114 Was it to give me strength to bear my torture? 52114 Who is the man who waits at table? 42830 Why ca n''t you promise it?" |
42830 | Will you make the same pledge about pool rooms,demanded the questioner quickly? |
42830 | :"If the hypothenuse of a right angle triangle is 35 feet and the base 21 feet, what is the altitude? |
42830 | :"What are the duties of Superintendent of Lamp Repairs? |
42830 | Another woman with whom the arrested woman was boarding asked,"What is the matter?" |
42830 | At 30 cents a square yard what is the cost of lining with metal a cubical room 13 feet long? |
42830 | But he was arrested by the Sheriff of Cook County, indicted by the grand jury because the police would not do it? |
42830 | But the pool rooms are running? |
42830 | But why tolerate the deliberate importation and cultivation of this strange oriental bestiality? |
42830 | Ca n''t you assist us in our troubles? |
42830 | Can any sprinter, carrying the same weights, surpass this achievement? |
42830 | Could not the police of the city of Chicago as readily have found these people who have been fined for gambling as the Sheriff? |
42830 | Did any of the 2,500 men ever report anything of that kind to you? |
42830 | Do these vicious vagabonds stand for the decency and intelligence of the party in Chicago?" |
42830 | Do you know of any pool rooms being conducted in this city during the months of October, November and December? |
42830 | Do you mean to say, as Chief of Police, with the men and money at your command, you ca n''t close the pool rooms? |
42830 | Do you say to this committee, that with 2,500 sworn men in this city you are powerless to stop the public running of pool rooms in this city? |
42830 | First, What sort of a Sheriff is he who will keep a man in jail, without a proper commitment? |
42830 | Having discovered them, their haunts, and their aids, if he does not already know of them, will he tolerate them any longer in this community? |
42830 | He then asked,"Did n''t you tell that to me?" |
42830 | How many lamps should a tinner complete in a day? |
42830 | How many pool rooms have you pulled, how many men have been arrested and convicted for pool selling since you have been chief? |
42830 | How many signs should an etcher complete in a day? |
42830 | If 24 gallons of water flow through a 2 inch pipe each minute how many gallons will flow through a 3 inch pipe under the same conditions? |
42830 | If a special assessment were levied and confirmed, what would your duty be to secure the erecting and lighting of the lamps? |
42830 | If it takes eight men five and one half days to make 100 lamps, how long will it take six men to make 350 lamps? |
42830 | If posts were to be erected how would you determine what class of posts would be required? |
42830 | Immediately he was asked,"Have you heard A. was arrested a number of times?" |
42830 | Is that the reason you wanted that stuff to go down there? |
42830 | Name the materials used in the construction of a street lamp? |
42830 | Name three essential qualifications requisite for a foreman?" |
42830 | On what part of the city property should those posts be set? |
42830 | One of the women asked,"What are you for?" |
42830 | The Chief stated the reporters were hounding him to death, when the woman asked him"why he did not show her statement?" |
42830 | They were giving the people a liberal government? |
42830 | Was there any complaint to you of that kind of thing being done? |
42830 | What do you do for your salary as Chief?" |
42830 | What experience have you had to qualify you for this position? |
42830 | What have you got against the people south of Jackson street? |
42830 | What is the capacity in gallons of a sphere 15 inches in diameter? |
42830 | What is the general duty of Superintendent of Lamp Repairs regarding repairs to lamps?" |
42830 | What is the length of the diameter of a circle whose area equals 1,386 square yards? |
42830 | What wonder that many believe the heart is rotten? |
42830 | Why should the police treat it so leniently? |
42830 | Will his continuous Superintendent of Police be further allowed to throw his kindly protection over them? |
42830 | You mean south of Jackson street? |
34112 | ''Are those black doors the cells?'' 34112 ''But suppose a man were here for a twelve- month? |
34112 | ''Did you mean to say anything, you young shaver?'' 34112 ''Do they never walk in the yard?'' |
34112 | ''Do you hear his worship ask if you''ve anything to say?'' 34112 ''Do you mean to say that in all that time he would never come out at that little iron door for exercise?'' |
34112 | ''Has the boy ever been here before?'' 34112 ''Have you anything to ask this witness, boy?'' |
34112 | ''Have you anything to say at all?'' 34112 ''Hold your tongue, will you?'' |
34112 | ''How long has he been here?'' 34112 ''I beg your pardon,''replied Mr. Pickwick,''what did you say? |
34112 | ''I''m an Englishman, ai n''t I?'' 34112 ''Now then, where are the witnesses?'' |
34112 | ''Oh, you know me, do you?'' 34112 ''Possible?'' |
34112 | ''Pray, why do they call this place the Tombs?'' 34112 ''Sometimes, I suppose?'' |
34112 | ''Well, I do n''t mind that; it''s only a twopence apiece more,''said Mr. Martin;''What do you say now? 34112 ''What is this?'' |
34112 | ''What will you take to be paid out?'' 34112 ''When do the prisoners take exercise?'' |
34112 | ''When is that?'' 34112 ''When will he be tried?'' |
34112 | ''Will you open one of the doors?'' 34112 ''Yes''"''Are they all full?'' |
34112 | ''Childbed?'' |
34112 | ''Do n''t?'' |
34112 | ''Live down there? |
34112 | ''Live down there?'' |
34112 | ''Lord, why did n''t you say at first that you was willing to come down handsome?''" |
34112 | ''My friend,''said Mr. Pickwick,''you do n''t really mean to say that human beings live down these wretched dungeons?'' |
34112 | ''The regular chummage is two- and- six; will you take three bob?'' |
34112 | ''What will you take to go out?'' |
34112 | ''Where are my privileges?'' |
34112 | ''Where are they? |
34112 | ''Would you like to hear it read?'' |
34112 | As to escaping, what chances were there of escape? |
34112 | As to fire in the prison, if one were to break out while he lay there? |
34112 | Fagin, Fagin, are you a man?'' |
34112 | For what offense can that lonely child, of ten or twelve years old, be shut up here? |
34112 | How did I know it? |
34112 | If it was not a trick to frighten him, and those were the real hours treading on each other''s heels, where would he be, when they came around again? |
34112 | It was very dark; why did n''t they bring a light? |
34112 | Oh, that boy? |
34112 | Shall we go in? |
34112 | This is rather hard treatment for a young witness, is it not? |
34112 | To everybody in succession Captain Hopkins said:''Have you read it?'' |
34112 | To everybody in succession Captain Porter said:''Would you like to hear it read?'' |
34112 | What availed the noise and bustle of cheerful morning, which penetrated even there, to him? |
34112 | What could he say or write of it that had not been said or written by him already? |
34112 | What right have they to butcher me?''" |
34112 | What says our conductor? |
34112 | What with motions for new trials, arrest of judgment and what not, a prisoner might be here for twelve months, I take it, might he not?'' |
34112 | Whether a prisoner could scale the walls with a cord and grapple? |
34112 | Why?'' |
34112 | Wot is this here business? |
34112 | replied Mr. Roker, with indignant astonishment;''why should n''t I?'' |
50558 | What are you waiting for? |
50558 | What do you want ten cents for? |
50558 | 97 A Game at Billiards 98 Thieves 101 Brief Authority 105[ Illustration]? |
50558 | After a while the stillness was broken by:"Got ten cents pardner?" |
50558 | But why is B alive? |
50558 | Did you ever keep house for friends gone away? |
50558 | I asked him after"what he thought about?" |
50558 | Man says:"Is Evelina here?" |
50558 | Smoke? |
50558 | Trainman interested:"Where''s she goin''?" |
50558 | Was it Providence? |
50558 | Well, we were getting wood and one of us came out of the night with a fellow walking behind, knife in hand( such a foolish thing; why not in front?) |
50558 | What kind of a cure is this? |
50558 | Why did he not? |
50558 | [ Illustration:"Marshals Them the Way That They Should Go?"] |
50558 | and perhaps A? |
50558 | where were they wounded?" |
1632 | ''Are the four women upstairs?'' |
1632 | ''But why should you marvel?'' |
1632 | ''Did you not see,''he cried to his companions,''how he robbed him with a grace?'' |
1632 | ''Is there anybody upstairs?'' |
1632 | ''What is the scaffold?'' |
1632 | ''Why,''she would ask in a fury of indignation,''why crouch over the fire with a pack of gossips, when the highway invites you to romance? |
1632 | 6):"Whosoever sheddeth Man''s Blood, by Man his Blood shall be shed"? |
1632 | And if an Eye be given for an Eye, a Tooth for a Tooth, how shall the Murderer escape with his dishonoured Life? |
1632 | And is not my soul hungry for gold and the Regicides''discomfiture?'' |
1632 | And my enemies-- are they not to- day writhing in distress? |
1632 | And then, what matters it how soon the end? |
1632 | And what inmate of Newgate ever forgot the afternoon of that glorious day( May the 24th, 1725)? |
1632 | And what is farce, but melodrama in a happier shape? |
1632 | And where are the heroes whose art was as glorious as their intrepidity? |
1632 | Are not Hind and Mull Sack worth a thousand Blueskins? |
1632 | At close quarters it is none too sure; and why give the alarm against yourself?'' |
1632 | Born with a consummate artistry tingling at his finger- tips, how should he escape the compulsion of a glorious destiny? |
1632 | But how should Catnach, were he alive to- day, compete with the Special Edition of an evening print? |
1632 | But the Marquise was rich, and when once her husband''s head were off, might not the Abbé reap his share of the gathered harvest? |
1632 | But what palliation shall you find for a rogue with so little pride in his art, that he exercised it''half loth, half consenting''? |
1632 | F.''''What do they stand for?'' |
1632 | Had he been gently guided at the outset, who knows but he might have lived out his life in respectable obscurity? |
1632 | He is traitor, schemer, spy; but is he an Abbé? |
1632 | How could anger prevail against this undying gaiety? |
1632 | How could he dance at a masquerade or court his Ellen with an empty pocket? |
1632 | How should a hero sink to oblivion who had chosen for himself so splendid a name as Sixteen- String Jack? |
1632 | If he had broken the Castle, why should he not also evade the gallows? |
1632 | Is it not wiser to respect''that deep intuition of oneness,''which Coleridge says is''at the bottom of our faults as well as our virtues?'' |
1632 | Light- limbed though I be, have I not forced the impregnable Castle itself? |
1632 | Moreover, was it not Solomon who wrote:"Men do not despise a thief, if he steal to satisfy his soul when he is hungry"? |
1632 | Now what should a man of courage do with eighteenpence? |
1632 | Or did he harbour the unjust suspicion that when the last descent was made upon him at the barber''s, Moll might have given a friendly warning? |
1632 | Said he to himself:''Am I not the most accomplished slip- string the world has known? |
1632 | So little did he fear death that,''What is hanging?'' |
1632 | Then, had he not celebrated in immortal verse his love for Miss Egerton, untimely drowned in the waters of the Boyne? |
1632 | To recognise that a fault in an honest man is a virtue in a scoundrel? |
1632 | Was ever such thrift in a thief? |
1632 | Was ever thief treated with so grave a consideration? |
1632 | Was it that the Roaring Girl was too anxious to take the credit of Hind''s success? |
1632 | Was it then strange that he triumphed as a man of fashionable and cultured leisure? |
1632 | What mattered it, if within the prison walls he dipped his nose more deeply into the punch- bowl than became a divine? |
1632 | When Smith complained that a respite of six weeks was of small account, Brodie exclaimed,''George, what would you and I give for six weeks longer? |
1632 | When an unnatural conflict set the whole country at loggerheads, what occasion was there for the honest prig? |
1632 | Who shall whisper that his style was the braver or the better suited to his sex? |
1632 | Who was he that he should yield in courtesy to the man in the vizard? |
1632 | Who, then, shall deny her manhood? |
1632 | Why does Euripides still throw a shadow upon the worthier poets of his time? |
1632 | Why does Shelley still claim a larger share of the world''s admiration than Keats, his indubitable superior? |
1632 | Why finger a distaff, when a quarterstaff comes more aptly to your hand?'' |
1632 | Why is Michael Angelo a loftier figure in the history of art than Donatello, the supreme sculptor of his time? |
1632 | Why then detract from a man''s legitimate glory? |
1632 | Why then should she fear the law, when the clerk of Newgate and Gregory the Hangman fought upon her side? |
1632 | Why, asked the men in possession, should this shrivelled stranger filch our privileges? |
1632 | Why, if the Abbé Bruneau doled out comfort and absolution at Entrammes-- why should he not enjoy at Laval the wilder joys of the flesh? |
1632 | Why, then, with no natural impulsion, did he risk the gallows? |
1632 | Would you have me lose my labour now?'' |
1632 | Would you read further? |
32033 | Do you mean you have no regard at all to the sufferings of the lower animals? |
32033 | What do you hope for or expect as the result of agitation in regard to vivisection? |
32033 | Would you then expect its restriction during the present century? |
32033 | ***** What then is the substance of the whole matter? |
32033 | Admit the value to the student, but what of the cost? |
32033 | And what, too, prevented that"wide range into therapeutics"necessary to make complete the list of benefits due to vivisection? |
32033 | And_ cui bono_? |
32033 | Are they founded in reality? |
32033 | At this day, it perhaps may be mentioned that the question--"Does Vivisection Pay?" |
32033 | But I can not help questioning in regard to these demonstrations,_ did they pay_? |
32033 | But has this hope been fulfilled? |
32033 | Can we trust the sensitiveness and conscience of every experimenter? |
32033 | DOES VIVISECTION PAY? |
32033 | Do humanity and science here indicate diverging roads? |
32033 | Do these conclusions affect the practice of vivisection in this country? |
32033 | Do we ask surgery? |
32033 | Does it at the same time destroy sensation, or is the creature conscious of every pang? |
32033 | Dr. Davy, of Guy''s, on the contrary, always gives chloroform, and finds it no impediment to successful demonstration, Is opium an anà ¦ sthetic? |
32033 | Has an infinite number of experiments enabled physiologists to determine for us the mere question of pain? |
32033 | Has he gained any clear and absolute knowledge? |
32033 | Have American students learned to witness, without protest, tortures at the sight of which English students would rebel? |
32033 | Have antidotes to poisons been discovered thereby? |
32033 | Have we drifted backward in humanity? |
32033 | If indispensable to the proper training of the surgeon, why are they condemned by Fergusson and Paget? |
32033 | If necessary to science, why viewed"with abhorrence"by the greatest of modern scientists? |
32033 | If no pain be felt, why is it worse to cut up a dog, than a sheep or an ox? |
32033 | If painful experiments are necessary for the education of the young physician, how happens it that Watson and Burroughs are ignorant of the fact? |
32033 | If requisite even to physiology, why denounced by the physiologists of Oxford and London? |
32033 | Is it, after all, true, that the absolute certainty of our most important deductions must remain forever hidden"unless the animal can speak"? |
32033 | Is not this a sentiment in which even science may fitly share? |
32033 | Is the gain worth this? |
32033 | Is there any difference in animals as regards susceptibility to pain? |
32033 | Nevertheless, is it not a mistake? |
32033 | Now is it anyway likely that either of these conditions would be observed?" |
32033 | Now, what are the facts? |
32033 | Now, what do English physiologists and vivisectors of the present day think of the repetition of this experiment solely as a class demonstration? |
32033 | Now, what has our inquirer learned by his appeal to science? |
32033 | Should we be found in all respects as sensitive as the English people? |
32033 | Surely somewhat about these subjects has been acquired otherwise than by experiments upon animals? |
32033 | There is_ always_ gain, always some aid to memory;--_but what of the cost?_[ A] See Appendix, page 83. |
32033 | Was Claude Bernard correct in this opinion as to the"empty hands?" |
32033 | Was the gain worth the cost? |
32033 | Was the gain worth the pain? |
32033 | Was this repetition of the experiment which I have described worth its cost? |
32033 | What are a"few"experiments? |
32033 | What are these restrictions? |
32033 | Who make this demand? |
32033 | Why, then, are they shown? |
32033 | Will any assistance to memory, counterweigh the annihilation or benumbing of the instinct of pity? |
32033 | Would indignation and protest be as quickly and spontaneously evoked among us by a cruel act? |
32033 | [ A] What are the effects here discernible of Bernard''s experiments upon diabetes? |
32033 | of Brown- Sequard''s upon epilepsy and paralysis? |
32033 | of Ferrier''s researches upon the functions of the brain? |
32033 | of Flint''s and Pavy''s on diseases of the liver? |
32033 | recently inquired a friend;"its legal abolition?" |
20497 | Ah, William, how did you find the lovely Clara this evening? |
20497 | Ah, how can I help it,replied Bucholz,"when everything seems to be turning against me?" |
20497 | But, tell me, William, how did this murder occur? |
20497 | Did you come alone? |
20497 | Do n''t you think I would suit you, Mr. Schulte? 20497 Do n''t you want somebody to take his place?" |
20497 | Do you know of any suspicious persons in the jail? |
20497 | Do you think if tramps had killed him, they would have left twenty thousand dollars upon his person? |
20497 | Gentlemen of the jury, have you determined upon your verdict? |
20497 | Gentlemen of the jury, how say you? 20497 Have you been long with him?" |
20497 | Have you seen a ghost? |
20497 | How did it happen? |
20497 | How would it do to get the axe from the barn? |
20497 | Is he not going with you? |
20497 | Nat Toner, what do you mean? |
20497 | Now, tell me, my friend, how many people ever saw this watch of Mr. Schulte? 20497 That is easily said,"replied Sommers, despondingly,"but if you did get out, where could you get the money?" |
20497 | Was that the wound that was made by the sharp edge of the axe? |
20497 | Well, how large was the other wound? |
20497 | What can they have against you any how? |
20497 | What has happened, William, what is the matter? |
20497 | What is the matter now? |
20497 | What is the matter, William? |
20497 | What is the reason? |
20497 | What will we do to have a good time? |
20497 | Where is Emerence? |
20497 | Where is Frank? |
20497 | Where is he now? |
20497 | Whereabouts in the barn? |
20497 | Which way are you going? |
20497 | Yes, but that will take a great deal of money, and where is that to come from? |
20497 | And then, perceiving the presence of Frank, he looked inquiringly at his friends, and added:"Whom have we here?" |
20497 | As Mr. Bollman received the money, he looked up quickly and inquired, in a quiet manner:"This money is not on the list, is it?" |
20497 | Besides, what has their moving got to do with us?" |
20497 | Bucholz looked troubled at this information, but, rousing himself, he inquired:"What kind of an axe did you get?" |
20497 | Bucholz stopped in his walk, and facing his companion asked in a manner that gave every evidence of insincerity,"Do you think that I killed him?" |
20497 | But how fared William Bucholz during the days that had intervened since his incarceration? |
20497 | But if, in the silence of that lonely evening, his hand had dealt the fatal blow, where was the instrument with which the deed was committed? |
20497 | Could Bucholz have imposed upon the credulity of Sommers and sent him upon this fool''s errand? |
20497 | Could a murderer, fresh from his bloody work, have done this? |
20497 | Could it be possible that they had been deceived-- that they were seeking for something which had no existence? |
20497 | Could it be that their intimacy had been noticed and reported, and that Mr. Olmstead would attempt to force him to divulge their secrets? |
20497 | Could it have been William Bucholz? |
20497 | Have they found the murderer of my brother? |
20497 | I wonder did it penetrate into the crime- stained heart of him who had laid this harmless old man low? |
20497 | Is she not at home?" |
20497 | Is the prisoner at the bar guilty or not guilty?" |
20497 | Oh, glittering stars, did no dark clouds intervene between thy merry twinklings and the dreadful scene below? |
20497 | Or could the detective have made a mistake in the location designated? |
20497 | Schulte?" |
20497 | Schulte?" |
20497 | The prisoner paid the strictest attention as the words were pronounced:--"How say you, prisoner at the bar; are you guilty or not guilty?" |
20497 | True to the Last$ 1 50 The Star and the Cloud 1 50 How Could He Help it? |
20497 | Was it even now ringing in his ears? |
20497 | What object could the State''s attorney have in sending for his friend? |
20497 | Where is the money which is supposed to have been upon the person of Henry Schulte at the time of his death? |
20497 | Where then was this large sum of money which had so mysteriously disappeared? |
20497 | Who can fathom the mind of the prisoner or conceive the myriad of vexing thoughts with which his brain is teeming? |
20497 | Who could have committed the deed and so successfully have escaped suspicion and detection? |
20497 | Who is the murderer? |
20497 | Who will go?" |
20497 | Would I not be a fool to kill him?" |
32534 | And did you have to take whisky? |
32534 | But how? |
32534 | Could he make a plume, too? |
32534 | Do you not see that you are barring the way with your scruples to the salvation you long for? 32534 Does it ever come here?" |
32534 | Has little Mike broken his neck? |
32534 | Is he that? 32534 Not work?" |
32534 | Oh, what is it? 32534 Oh,"he said,"is n''t he a rotter? |
32534 | The cook? |
32534 | Was there not one? 32534 Well, bub, ever see that before?" |
32534 | What do you think yourself, Karl? |
32534 | What have you to say to this? |
32534 | Where do you get it all? |
32534 | Who is he? |
32534 | Why, Jimmy? |
32534 | Will yez look at de kid? 32534 Would you not like me to find some work for you?" |
32534 | --_Current Literature._ Cloth, illustrated,$ 1.50 net; postage extra IS THERE A SANTA CLAUS? |
32534 | Ai n''t he a foine one?" |
32534 | And Murphy, says my carping friend, where does he come in? |
32534 | And he looked down and said:"Can you remember one thing you did for a human being without reward in your earth life?" |
32534 | And what did you?'' |
32534 | And who of her blood would ask for more? |
32534 | And who were these neighbors? |
32534 | Are any of the children dead?" |
32534 | At what? |
32534 | But the sun? |
32534 | DRIVEN FROM HOME"Doctor, what shall I do? |
32534 | Daily alarms brought from the relief party of hurrying mothers the unvarying cry,"Who''s got hurted? |
32534 | Did he tramp? |
32534 | Do n''t I know? |
32534 | Get me a job, will you?" |
32534 | Had he not said it to these men and they did not believe him? |
32534 | Have you anything to say why sentence should not be passed upon you?" |
32534 | He did not want to trouble me, but would I come and say good- by? |
32534 | He saw only the prison gates opening for him, and the gray walls shutting him out from his wife and little ones for-- how many Christmases was it? |
32534 | How should Gimpy know that he was at that moment leading another struggling soul by the hand toward the light that never dies? |
32534 | Is it Mike?" |
32534 | Is it not so with all of us? |
32534 | Laugh? |
32534 | Now did ye ever hear such a dern little fool?" |
32534 | Oh, Miss Kane,"he grieved,"why did you go for to get him? |
32534 | Once they were together, he would work, work, work-- and should they not make a living in the great, wealthy city? |
32534 | Out there upon the dark waters, in the storm, were they sailing now, and all the lights of the city swallowed up in gloom? |
32534 | Shall a man gather figs from thistles? |
32534 | She came over to the Settlement to consult our head worker as to the proprieties of the thing: should she wear mourning earrings in his memory? |
32534 | The boys? |
32534 | There was no trace of resentment in his retort:"Well, now, what would he have said if I''d took milk?" |
32534 | To face poverty as bitter there? |
32534 | Was it good for the boy to have that kind of a man in the house? |
32534 | What shall I do?" |
32534 | What should he have to say? |
32534 | What will the winter bring us? |
32534 | When she asked him why he did that, he put a question himself:"Where would a fellow beg if not among the poor?" |
32534 | When they wake once more, the flowers that now sleep snugly under their blanket of dead leaves, what shall we have to tell? |
32534 | Where do you suppose she scrubbed? |
32534 | Where is it?" |
32534 | Who knows? |
32534 | Will you not let them? |
32534 | Would you set an ass between me and the salvation of my people?" |
32534 | You must have come of good people; do n''t you want me to find them for you?" |
32534 | _ Have_ we got to take music lessons?" |
32534 | did you come back? |
38821 | And how about the schools for the good boys in your town? |
38821 | And you allow it to stay, and let this thing go on? |
38821 | Are not we young enough to work for him? |
38821 | Are they anything to be proud of? |
38821 | But why? |
38821 | But, my dear sir,he coughed diplomatically,"is n''t it rather unusual? |
38821 | Did you see the sink in that hall? |
38821 | Does it never come here? |
38821 | Vat means dot''cheese it''? |
38821 | Well,she said, when her inspection was finished,"he knocked her down, did n''t he?" |
38821 | What does he work at? |
38821 | Why, is it to- day? |
38821 | And how are we to go about solving his problem? |
38821 | And is there not proof of it? |
38821 | And upon this showing, who ought to be excluded, when it comes to that? |
38821 | As to this boss, of whom we hear so much, what manner of man is he? |
38821 | Avail? |
38821 | But suppose it had been, how much would it have appealed to them? |
38821 | But what was the use? |
38821 | D''ye think it is made to walk on?" |
38821 | Do you not fear danger from it in this country?" |
38821 | How did you see it?" |
38821 | How much of a problem is he? |
38821 | How much stock might he and his fellows be supposed to take in a movement that had such champions? |
38821 | If he accepted the standard, whose fault was it? |
38821 | If he had next been found ranting with anarchists against the social order, would you have blamed him? |
38821 | If it pleases the other man, what is it to him for whom he votes? |
38821 | If this one went astray with so much to pull him the right way, and but the single strand broken, what then of the other? |
38821 | In his life he supplied the answer to the sigh of dreamers in all days: when will the millennium come? |
38821 | It has made him happy, has it not? |
38821 | Just now the cashier of---- Bank told me that two other gentlemen-- gamblers? |
38821 | Nice friendly turn, was n''t it? |
38821 | Now if you ask me:"And what of it all? |
38821 | Or the boy, who may buy fireworks on the Fourth of July, but not set them off? |
38821 | Out of the debate of the question, Do we want boys who swear, steal, gamble, and smoke cigarettes? |
38821 | That is good enough reason for you, is n''t it?" |
38821 | The boy who is learning such lessons,--how is it with him? |
38821 | The eager haste, the frantic rush to see,--what does it not tell of these starved lives, of the quality of their aims and ambitions? |
38821 | The others got out; why not they? |
38821 | Was he not told by the agitators whom the police jailed at home that in a republic all men are made happy by means of the vote? |
38821 | Well, then? |
38821 | What does it avail?" |
38821 | What was it? |
38821 | What worker among the poor has not heard it? |
38821 | What, indeed, was there to say? |
38821 | Where were the Seven Dials of that day, and the men who gave it its bad name? |
38821 | Why do I tell you these things? |
38821 | Why not license the whole tenement, and with the money collected in the way of fees pay for the supervision of them by night and day? |
38821 | Why should it? |
38821 | Will it be on Pietro? |
38821 | With this bitter mockery of it that makes the slum, can it be that the warning is indeed for us? |
38821 | Would I shut out the newcomers? |
38821 | Would it seem to them common sense, or ca nt and humbug? |
38821 | Yes, the flat was to let; had she any children? |
38821 | Yet would you fear especial danger to our institutions, to our citizenship, from these four? |
38821 | You will go no further unless I leave it out? |
43238 | Sir,she said to me, after she had told them to sit down,"you will not mind our dispensing with ceremony for you? |
43238 | ''"But why did you go so often to La Voisin''s house?" |
43238 | ''"Do you know La Vigoureux?" |
43238 | ''"Do you know La Voisin?" |
43238 | ''"I do away with him? |
43238 | ''"Well, gentlemen, is that all you have to say to me?" |
43238 | ''"Why do you wish to do away with your husband?" |
43238 | ''Are not those who have driven me to death my enemies, and is it not a Christian sentiment to forgive them their rancour?'' |
43238 | ''But madam,''said Regnier,''surely you are not mixed up in this business?'' |
43238 | ''Did you know it would be a great crime to make the slightest addition to the facts which you have declared?'' |
43238 | ''Did you not know you were bound to tell, and that it would be a great crime to hide anything concerning this matter?'' |
43238 | ''How can you be easy in mind when you have been so often to the sorceress?'' |
43238 | ''How so, sir?'' |
43238 | ''How, sir? |
43238 | ''I am accused of having poisoned Saint- Laurent,''added Pennautier;''but has it been so much as proved that he died of poison? |
43238 | ''Is it rash,''observes Monsieur Loiseleur very justly,''to see in these headaches and faintnesses the effect of powders provided by La Voisin?'' |
43238 | ''Sir,''said the headsman,''is n''t it a fine stroke?'' |
43238 | ''What is it, madam? |
43238 | ''Why should I be?'' |
43238 | And if I had not been taken, what would my end have been? |
43238 | Are there not some so atrocious or so numerous that the Church can not remit them?'' |
43238 | But the lady seeing my confusion said:"What is the matter? |
43238 | Could one find such a saying in Roman history, or in Corneille? |
43238 | Do n''t you want to come?" |
43238 | Do you know that, humbled though I be by my hapless present state, yet I do not feel humble enough? |
43238 | Frankly, is this not giving to the text a signification which never entered into the mind of the physicians?'' |
43238 | Have they ever stopped anything?'' |
43238 | How am I to feed my family? |
43238 | How far had she pushed her crimes? |
43238 | How far had this terrible woman been to seek her accomplices? |
43238 | How shall I know whether I am in purgatory or hell?'' |
43238 | How was that silence explained? |
43238 | How, and by whom, was the haughty favourite led to the haunts of the witches? |
43238 | I pretended to be undoing my shoes, desiring to know how far the lady''s cruelty would go, and she said,"What is the matter with you? |
43238 | If I had died at Liége before my arrest, where should I be now? |
43238 | In the examination of July 12, 1680, we read:--''Why did you not sooner give information of these evil designs against the person of the king?'' |
43238 | Is it possible to derive any positive conclusions from them? |
43238 | Is it possible to imagine a more striking proof of the robust faith people then had in all these devilries? |
43238 | Moreover, had he not himself confessed that he was a disciple of Agrippa,''the greatest sorcerer that ever was''? |
43238 | Need anything be said of the manners of Monsieur? |
43238 | She interrupted him:''Sir, are there not some sins that are unpardonable in this world, either from their gravity or their number? |
43238 | Should I enter, or should I go away? |
43238 | THE DEATH OF''MADAME''[12] Who has not read Bossuet''s funeral oration on Henrietta Anne of England, Duchess of Orleans? |
43238 | Was it due to these revelations that, suddenly, the intentions of the court of Versailles underwent modification? |
43238 | Was this in order to make false_ louis d''or_, as historians have supposed? |
43238 | Were rank and name no longer a rampart high enough against the inquisitions of a lieutenant of police? |
43238 | What have I done that you want to have me murdered?" |
43238 | What passed in his soul, immured, for posterity as for his contemporaries, in that''terrible majesty''of which Saint- Simon speaks? |
43238 | What were the declarations of the witches arrested by La Reynie? |
43238 | What were these anxieties? |
43238 | Where could she have lived except on wild heaths-- the hapless wretch who was so hunted down, the accursed, proscribed, hated poisoner?'' |
43238 | Why did the poet, contrary to the wishes of the sick woman, prevent these women from attending her? |
43238 | You say nothing?'' |
53835 | A small boiled chicken and a glass of lemonade perhaps? |
53835 | After a slight dinner I suppose? |
53835 | How,replied the King,"can you thus decide without knowing the question?" |
53835 | I fear you are suffering from a bad cold? |
53835 | Indeed, and what might you have won? |
53835 | What are you doing now? |
53835 | What course did you take? |
53835 | What did you do there? |
53835 | What,cried the divine,"Mr. Nash in masquerade?" |
53835 | Will he be back on Monday, then? |
53835 | Will he be back to- morrow? |
53835 | A friend of his, very much surprised, called out to him,"What, Wilberforce, is that you?" |
53835 | As one of them said,"Who''d go to bed when Voltigeur''s won the St. Leger and the Cup?" |
53835 | Bewailing a run of ill- luck to a serious friend one day, the soldier in question said,"Is it not astonishing how I always lose?" |
53835 | How the devil would you ride?" |
53835 | Monseigneur, but what did you expect? |
53835 | Then turning to Monville he cried,"What do you think of such an infamy, Monville?" |
53835 | Was it an ordinary Club at which gambling was casually introduced, or was it substantially a gaming- house? |
53835 | What was the case with respect to gambling? |
53835 | Why should n''t I win the price of this parasol-- make my twenty marks and walk out?" |
53835 | in rapture cries;"Where?" |
53835 | the parrot would curtly answer,"Why, I do n''t know,""Middling,"or"What''s that to you?" |
38205 | ''Where you live, little girl?'' 38205 Billy? |
38205 | Did she ever ask you to call on her when she was well? |
38205 | Do you drink? |
38205 | Do you suppose you are the only man in the world who has that feeling? 38205 Do you think the girls always work under conditions that are easy?" |
38205 | Frank, would you marry a girl who sat in a man''s lap in a railroad train? |
38205 | Have you any right to intrude there when she is silent? 38205 Is n''t she pretty?" |
38205 | Molly, may I call on your mother? |
38205 | Must you keep the children out of the yard? |
38205 | Shall we close them? |
38205 | What would happen if your foreman would become arbitrary and cross? |
38205 | Where is your jacket? |
38205 | Who put up those pictures? |
38205 | Why did you not put him in the yard, where you could watch him, and where he could run about? |
38205 | Why do you not have the tub carried to the cellar? |
38205 | Can any one doubt the effect of this journey into the world, the first that hundreds of these girls had ever made? |
38205 | Could a stronger argument for domestic science teaching in our public schools be advanced? |
38205 | Do you believe I could have a birthday party here next week?" |
38205 | Do you know what I did? |
38205 | He stood in the door a minute; then he asked,''What''s the matter, Jennie?'' |
38205 | He take my arms, shove me back and say:''What the matter mit you? |
38205 | How can it be otherwise? |
38205 | How could the apathetic be awakened, the discouraged stimulated, the overworked rested and cheered? |
38205 | How many of them are conducted at the present with the same results? |
38205 | How much less in the house- mother whose hands must do all the work of the home? |
38205 | In a moment she continued:"Have n''t you seen it, that in every large family there is one who gets more and gives less than the others?" |
38205 | Is it any wonder he can control votes? |
38205 | Is it any wonder that the fight against this disease is again being waged in that family? |
38205 | Is it any wonder that the poor, ignorant, unequipped voter should curry favor, bow to him, acknowledge his supremacy even to the law? |
38205 | Is it any wonder that they never go beyond his care? |
38205 | Is it surprising that coal is bought by the pail by all the tenants? |
38205 | One is frequently reminded of the story of the woman whose moan when her baby died was:"What excuse can I give John now?" |
38205 | Pleasure? |
38205 | Raising her hands and face heavenward, she said solemnly:"O God, what have I done that you should be so good to me?" |
38205 | See?" |
38205 | Selfish? |
38205 | She ca n''t go this week; will yer let her go next? |
38205 | She entered the house reluctantly in response to the call,"Where is your jacket, Molly?" |
38205 | Sure, when Tammany''s in they''re all right; but when Tammany''s out, where are they? |
38205 | That the money should be lavishly used? |
38205 | That tubs are kept anywhere in their rooms where there is space? |
38205 | The clerk, on the last visit, evidently intending to be facetious, said:"Say, what''s the matter with those people taking baths in that cellar? |
38205 | The condition of the most uncared- for section gives the church''s answer to the question,"Am I my brother''s keeper?" |
38205 | The first strange boy was asked:"Have you paid your initiation fee?" |
38205 | They all do it, the women; but is n''t it awful?" |
38205 | They can come in, ca n''t they?" |
38205 | WHERE LIES THE RESPONSIBILITY? |
38205 | WHERE LIES THE RESPONSIBILITY? |
38205 | What could be done? |
38205 | What do they care who is at the head of the city government? |
38205 | What ideals of womanhood did this woman represent? |
38205 | What is there but a glass of beer? |
38205 | What was it? |
38205 | What was the estimate of life these mothers in the alley made? |
38205 | What was wrong? |
38205 | When able to speak, she would whisper:"What will become of them? |
38205 | Where is your mother? |
38205 | Whose fault is it? |
38205 | Why not she take that dress? |
38205 | Why? |
38205 | You crazy?''" |
44997 | What''s the use of your lyin''to me, yer little monkey? 44997 ***** And finally, the way? 44997 ***** What is Social Quarantine? 44997 ***** Why not profit by this experience in dealing with all questions of social and individual concern? 44997 --_Sarah B. Cooper, before the National Conference of Charities and Correction._ THE MENACE OF THE HAVE- TO- BE What are the Have- To- Be? 44997 Are we not agreed? 44997 As factors in society, what are we doing to prevent crime? 44997 At the same time came the disciples unto Jesus saying, Who is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven? 44997 By what process of education and development are they to be made valuable members of society? 44997 Do they cost too much? 44997 Even so it is not the will of your Father which is in heaven, that one of these little ones should perish? 44997 Fellow Citizens, do you not see and smell and feel the impurities in our social atmosphere? 44997 How could a perfect quarantine be established so that the wall of protection should be complete? 44997 How is the indictment met by facts? 44997 How shall they be looked after? 44997 How shall they be looked after? 44997 How would it be possible to draw a net around all of them so as to include this and every last one of them? 44997 Is it no small question, then,What shall we do with our children?" |
44997 | One report is as follows:"Doctor, will you please give, for publication, your ideas concerning the schools as you now understand the question?" |
44997 | QUARANTINE AGAINST MALADMINISTRATION"What shall we do for these children? |
44997 | SARAH B. COOPER"''Do the materialistic tendencies of the times weaken your church in America?'' |
44997 | Shall society do its duty to_ all_ of these or only such as chance has favored with superior parentage? |
44997 | The author had just completed his initial experiments, and had published the booklet"What Sense? |
44997 | The company will continue to publish this conspicuously, and why? |
44997 | The idea then seemed colossal, but our focalized anxiety to save the baby was equally strong; but, how could it be accomplished? |
44997 | What has woman to do with correction and punishment, if not to make them unnecessary by seeing that children are not bred to idleness and crime? |
44997 | What has woman to do with vexed economic questions, if not to rear the sons of productive toil and furnish an incentive to civilized living? |
44997 | What has woman to do with war if not to furnish brave soldiers and an incentive to heroism? |
44997 | What is the merit of the Cuban, or any foreign cause, compared with the moral influence of an army of neglected waifs at home? |
44997 | What said the great and good Teacher on this subject? |
44997 | What shall we do with these children? |
44997 | What would not the same method of character- building accomplish in the way of protection instead of correction? |
44997 | When gently entreated to know what he was doing, he snappishly replied:"Doing? |
44997 | Why not now? |
44997 | Women now enjoy complete equality in four, and partial political suffrage in twenty- three of the United(?) |
44997 | Would it not call for a cry of protest from the humanitarians? |
35040 | Are not some divisions harder to beat than others? |
35040 | Are there aristocrats and middle class people, for instance,a number of persons have said to me,"and does position count for much?" |
35040 | Are you going to look hard out West? |
35040 | Are you not at all to blame for your present condition? |
35040 | Bound West? |
35040 | Did you notice any one on the stairway? |
35040 | Do all the fellows come from around here? |
35040 | Do n''t the railroad people trouble you? |
35040 | Do n''t you have to make regular reports to any one? |
35040 | Do n''t you think you would probably be more successful if you raided them oftener? |
35040 | Do the police trouble you much? |
35040 | Do you ever shift to other roads? |
35040 | Do you see much of the detectives? |
35040 | Do you think the company wants it stopped? |
35040 | Does n''t the government get after you? |
35040 | Get up, will ye? |
35040 | Got much fall money? |
35040 | Got the hot- foot at the other camp, I guess? |
35040 | How did he learn to write? 35040 How did it happen?" |
35040 | How do you manage? |
35040 | How do you spend your time? |
35040 | How do you think things would go if you men were organised and had a chief? 35040 How long do you generally keep a job?" |
35040 | How many are in the push? |
35040 | How many tramps are riding trains? |
35040 | How much of a loaf do you have between jobs? |
35040 | How your cells? |
35040 | I''m your deef''n''dum''brother, see? 35040 Is there much robbing of cars going on?" |
35040 | On the road, Jack? |
35040 | Pan out pretty well? |
35040 | Peter- work,[2] o''course, what d''ye think? |
35040 | S''pose y''ai n''t got a piece o''wood with a little brimstone on the end of it, have ye? |
35040 | They''re not bad fellas, are they? |
35040 | Was he born that way? |
35040 | What do you do there? |
35040 | What do you think ought to be done to keep tramps off trains? |
35040 | What is the main graft? |
35040 | What kind of work is that? |
35040 | Who are they? |
35040 | Who first thought of organising the big push? |
35040 | Who is responsible for what you do? |
35040 | Why do n''t you try to break up the tramp camps? |
35040 | A question that I was continually putting to myself when meeting the"professional"was: What made him choose such a career? |
35040 | Ai n''t that right, eh?" |
35040 | Can he ever get well?" |
35040 | Have you no manners?" |
35040 | How long do you think I was paying him back? |
35040 | How many crooks get what they ought to in this country? |
35040 | I had hardly taken a seat on one of the ties, and said,"How are you?" |
35040 | Is it because they are ignorant of what goes on, or merely because they are indifferent? |
35040 | Is that Christianity? |
35040 | Is that the way religion is going to make you and me any better? |
35040 | Meanwhile, however, what has become of the protected thief? |
35040 | Moral issues have not been at stake; the thief has not stolen from the officer, and why should the latter not be friendly when they meet? |
35040 | Now, what''s it going to cost me?" |
35040 | One very well informed detective, for instance, said:"Do you mean the whole push, or just the A Number One guns? |
35040 | See?" |
35040 | See?" |
35040 | They went immediately to the cells we had chosen, and, seeing that our things were in them, said:"These your togs in here?" |
35040 | WHO CONSTITUTE OUR CRIMINAL CLASSES? |
35040 | Was it, or was n''t it, the intention that outcasts were to have religion? |
35040 | What are they to do? |
35040 | What the devil''ud become o''the world if we refused to work? |
35040 | Would better work be done?" |
35040 | Ye''ve got a match, ye say?" |
43986 | What could you do with a man who would do that? |
43986 | ( 1) Why did she steal? |
43986 | A place to sleep in, to afford shelter from the weather, to take food in? |
43986 | Are they? |
43986 | Are we to believe that this is because the punishment of the prisoners sent there has deterred them from committing offences? |
43986 | As canaries breed canaries do poets breed poets? |
43986 | At once we hear that they have done similar things; but if we are better than they, surely we must prove it by our actions? |
43986 | But is there any good purpose served by sending people to prison for a few days? |
43986 | But will the man whom you employ to do this laudable work not be a brute also? |
43986 | Can the State afford to allow them to set such an example? |
43986 | Does your official imprimatur remove the brutality of his act? |
43986 | He has behaved for three times that period at no expense to the public; why, then, should their hospitality be forced on him? |
43986 | He is responsible for education, for instance, but what can he know personally of the educational needs of a boy in the east end of Glasgow? |
43986 | He said,"Doctor, do I look unhappy?" |
43986 | He said,"What was I to do? |
43986 | Hell? |
43986 | How is this done? |
43986 | How then do these outbreaks originate, and what causes them to cease? |
43986 | If heredity accounts for his insanity what will account for his sanity? |
43986 | If she was not made better, did she become worse as a result of her treatment there? |
43986 | If they are the cause of the criminal act, how is it that they are admittedly present in others who are not criminals? |
43986 | If we are better than those whom we judge and condemn, why do we treat them as they have treated others? |
43986 | Is he fit to take care of himself and abstain from offending against the laws? |
43986 | It is certainly lurid; but where have they learned it? |
43986 | Know right from wrong? |
43986 | May this not afford a presumption that there is something wrong with the poorhouse? |
43986 | Noo, doctor, does ony sensible man believe in that nooadays? |
43986 | Precisely; but what kind of law is it that can reach only the poorer transgressor and allows the partner in profits to escape? |
43986 | Putting it another way, are there no cases in which this procedure could be adopted? |
43986 | Room for recreation or for quiet rest? |
43986 | That is to say, he will mainly depend on the report of the warder, for after all, does he not know most about the man? |
43986 | The losers are forgotten; and what do they matter anyway if_ we_ win? |
43986 | The poor can not afford to gamble and must be protected from themselves; but can anybody afford to gamble? |
43986 | The prisoner is told he is bad-- and he is; then he is sent-- to be made better? |
43986 | The proper attitude towards the untried prisoner is not that implied in the question"Why should he be allowed to do this?" |
43986 | The question is, Do we, who are so much wiser than they, show that wisdom in our treatment of them? |
43986 | The question is: Is the person by reason of mental defect unable to bear the stress of life under the social conditions in which he is placed? |
43986 | The question ought always to be"Why should he not be allowed to do what he wishes?" |
43986 | We are supposed to have travelled far from the mediæval brutality of prison life, but have the changes not been superficial rather than deep? |
43986 | We know that the boy''s Robin Hood or Dick Turpin never existed in fact; but if they exist in his fancy? |
43986 | Well, is he so bad as all that? |
43986 | What can be done with them? |
43986 | What do the girls learn, and what do the visitors teach? |
43986 | What effect, then, has imprisonment on those who undergo it? |
43986 | What else can the police do? |
43986 | What harm have they done? |
43986 | What? |
43986 | When the blow falls, if they have no resources what is to become of them? |
43986 | Where are the guardians to be found? |
43986 | Where did they get the drink? |
43986 | Why do they return? |
43986 | Why then had he attempted to kill himself? |
43986 | and( 2) Why did she break her bond? |
43986 | but, What are we doing, being what we are and where we are? |
13097 | A sentinel immediately came out, called out aloud,_ What, have you clapped fire to the train? |
13097 | At last, as they were going to be locked up;_ Pray_, says the woman, with a faint voice,_ Ca n''t you give me something like a poker? |
13097 | But hark ye, are you well acquainted with the men of quality''s families about Aberdeen? |
13097 | But what sort of a man was he?_ said she. |
13097 | Do n''t you remember a gentleman in red you spoke to here the other day? |
13097 | Do you think to gain a hundred or two by swearing our lives away? |
13097 | Have I not maintained you, and put it in your power to maintain your family? |
13097 | I do n''t know that I ever injured any of you? |
13097 | I have no way left to get anything to support us; what shall I do? |
13097 | If the Ordinary spoke to him of the affairs of the soul, Trippuck immediately cut him short with,_ D''ye believe I can obtain a pardon? |
13097 | Maybe there may_, said Cartwright,_ but what''s that to me? |
13097 | One asked him whether he liked the wife with three trades? |
13097 | She shed a few tears and said, what if he should want in Newgate? |
13097 | She went accordingly and brought the grave old man, who as soon as he came into the room said,_ Well, Mary, is this thy husband? |
13097 | That Hell is full of flames from material fire, and that this body of mine shall feel it? |
13097 | That our good God punishes souls for ever and ever? |
13097 | That the devil is a real thing? |
13097 | That''s a hard choice_, replied Dyer;_ but did you ever do anything of that kind? |
13097 | There Abraham visited her, and suspecting that she was with child, asked her very gravely and kindly whether it were so or not? |
13097 | Towers, with some ladies in a coach in Marlborough Street, he confessed, also that his companion called out to him,_ What, do they resist? |
13097 | Well, then_, says his tutor again,_ have you any pistols? |
13097 | Well, what say you, Sir?_ quoth the Justice to his brother magistrate. |
13097 | What have you three done?_ Under sentence of death he behaved himself with much courage, and yet with great penitence. |
13097 | When he had paid the reckoning, turning about,_ d''ye see, boys_, says he,_ how full my pockets are of money? |
13097 | When the woman of the house saw that I could neither stand nor speak, she asked them whether or no they had brought a dead man? |
13097 | Why should you insult me, therefore? |
13097 | Why, fool_, said the Colonel,_ dost thou not see the place covered with French? |
13097 | Will you please to tell it, madam?_ The lady accordingly did, and found there were forty- nine. |
13097 | Will you repay this my charity with robbing me of all I have? |
13097 | Yes_, replied Bailey,_ does he live hereabouts? |
13097 | _ And is this all?_ says the young fellow. |
13097 | _ But how will you know the body?_ added the Colonel. |
13097 | _ But, pray, Sir_, says Shaw, before he was taken out of the room;_ Why should not that French fellow suffer as well as we? |
13097 | _ Hark ye_, says Edward,_ you fellow, who have served your time to a thief- taker; what business might you have with me or my company? |
13097 | _ Here, sir_, says Wild,_ do you know this hopeful youth? |
13097 | _ I wonder, good people, what it is you would see? |
13097 | _ Now, Mr. Wild_, says I,_ what must you have for your trouble? |
13097 | _ Well then_, replied the stranger,_ do you know none of them who has a son about your age? |
13097 | _ Well_, said the woman_ have you courage enough to try, if I put you in the way? |
13097 | _ What is this outlandish man they talk of? |
13097 | _ You are going up to London?_ said Jones. |
13097 | to what purpose are the endeavours of others, where a man studies nothing so much as to compass his own ruin? |
13097 | would you have me believe all the strange notions that are taught by the parsons? |
55316 | How long has she been there? |
55316 | Where is your father? 55316 Where is your mother?" |
55316 | Who looks after you? |
55316 | And who can wonder? |
55316 | But because we can not do all we wish, are we to do nothing? |
55316 | But what does a day mean to this poor soul? |
55316 | But what does it all amount to? |
55316 | By long loud prayers in gorgeous temples said? |
55316 | By rich oblations on Thine altars laid? |
55316 | Going through these rooms we come to one in which a hole, as big as a man''s head, has been roughly covered, and how? |
55316 | Have you pitied the poor creatures who sleep under railway arches, in carts or casks, or under any shelter which they can find in the open air? |
55316 | How can they be expected to resist its temptations? |
55316 | If this is enough to arouse our indignation, what must be thought of the following? |
55316 | Is he in work?" |
55316 | Is no lifeboat to put out and no life- belt to be thrown because only half a dozen out of the perishing hundreds can be saved from the wreck? |
55316 | To such we can only say, Will you venture to come with us and see for yourselves the ghastly reality? |
55316 | Where, amongst the well- conditioned, can anything braver and kinder be found than this? |
55316 | Who can even imagine the suffering which lies behind a case like the following? |
55316 | Who can wonder that every evil flourishes in such hotbeds of vice and disease? |
55316 | Who can wonder that the public- house is"the Elysian field of the tired toiler?" |
55316 | Who can wonder that young girls wander off into a life of immorality, which promises release from such conditions? |
55316 | a gross is paid, the maker having to find his own fire for drying the boxes, and his own paste and string? |
60453 | And who was the other? |
60453 | Did you not know better than to call my mother a liar? 60453 What kind of work do you want, and where do you expect to find it?" |
60453 | Where are you going? |
60453 | ''Do you believe Jesse is dead?'' |
60453 | As we were arguing, the man in the slouch hat came over and said to me quietly,''Why do n''t you throw the d-- d yahoo out of the window?'' |
60453 | At this time, however, the assertions then made assume an interest which throws much light upon the problem,"Who committed the robbery?" |
60453 | Said he:"The bank is guarded; how is this?" |
60453 | Say, now, young fellow, have n''t you set out to locate the James Boys, whom you have found rather unexpectedly?" |
60453 | WHY DID SHEPHERD SHOOT JESSE JAMES? |
60453 | What have you got to say?" |
60453 | What tender reminiscences may have come to Jesse James then? |
60453 | When they entered the house the sheriff addressed Mrs. Berry and said:"Mrs. Berry, where is your husband?" |
60453 | Who can tell? |
60453 | Why should Jesse have entertained suspicions? |
60453 | Will you comply?" |
5888 | Are asset bubbles indeed inflationary and their bursting deflationary? |
5888 | Are we ready for a recurrence of 1929? |
5888 | Are you willing to lend to it?" |
5888 | Business as usual? |
5888 | Did all stocks collapse indiscriminately? |
5888 | Is a similar crash on the cards? |
5888 | Quo Vadis, Money Laundering? |
5888 | The question is: Who received these commissions? |
5888 | Was this money repatriated to the country in the form of dividends?" |
5888 | Were stocks overvalued prior to the crash? |
5888 | What is Being Done? |
5888 | What is Money Laundering? |
5888 | What to do? |
5888 | Why is it a Problem? |
5888 | Why is this negative? |
5888 | Will a stock market crash, should it happen, be followed by another"Great Depression"? |
50772 | ''But you get a good salary,''said Mr. Armour,''do n''t you?'' 50772 ''Indeed,''replied Mr. Armour;''and who is the man?'' |
50772 | ''What are you doing here, sir?'' 50772 ''What kind of a paper?'' |
50772 | How do you contrive to have your horses so gentle? |
50772 | If this is done from affection, is it not misguided affection? 50772 Well, Leland,"said his mother,"what do you wish me to do?" |
50772 | Why should men leave great fortunes to their children? |
50772 | ''Who knows what may come of that visit?'' |
50772 | ''Who,''it said,''shall cook our food and mend our clothes if the girls are to be taught philosophy and astronomy?'' |
50772 | ''Why, have you finished that already?'' |
50772 | --"Madam,"he replied, with a courtly bow,"did you ever know a mother who could forget the names of her children? |
50772 | And could I complain?" |
50772 | And what of Thomas Guy, whose example led to Matthew Vassar''s noble gift while the latter was alive? |
50772 | Dare you cast your eyes upon my daughter, who will inherit my riches? |
50772 | Did we, or did we not, use them to help our fellow- man? |
50772 | Have you a mill like this? |
50772 | Have you a single penny in your purse?" |
50772 | He did not greet him, nor welcome him, nor congratulate him, but, shaking his angry hand, cried,''What for you not go to Mocha, sir?'' |
50772 | How can I forget them?" |
50772 | How can we help to secure such homes? |
50772 | How much do you owe?'' |
50772 | It would be interesting to know if the lad ever dreamed then of being perhaps the richest man in America? |
50772 | Mr. Holloway had worked untiringly; he had not spent his money in extravagant living; and now, how should he use it for the best good of his country? |
50772 | The king was indignant, and exclaimed,"Does the fellow mean to laugh at my guards?" |
50772 | The question will be, What did we do with our treasures? |
50772 | To this, exception was taken; and Dr. Seelye was frequently asked,"What use have young women of Greek?" |
50772 | To what other uses should Mr. Holloway put his large fortune? |
50772 | What better way to spend an evening than in listening to such lectures? |
50772 | What better way to use one''s money than in laying the foundation of intelligent and good citizenship in childhood and youth? |
50772 | What shall be the result for good many centuries from now? |
50772 | What was to be done? |
50772 | Who knows? |
50772 | Who knows? |
50772 | Who shall estimate the power and value of such a gift to the people as that of John Lowell, Jr.? |
50772 | Whose heart hath ne''er within him burned As home his footsteps he hath turned From wandering on a foreign strand?" |
50772 | Will it be said that this or that man has accumulated great treasures? |
50772 | a painter burlesque a soldier? |
31721 | About midnight she said:''Art thou weary, art thou weary?'' 31721 And pray, why not?" |
31721 | Did you, Mary? 31721 How do you know when it is full?" |
31721 | Well, Mary, what was it? |
31721 | What did_ you_ do? |
31721 | What_ did_ he do? |
31721 | Where is she? |
31721 | Which would you rather do, work or beg? |
31721 | Why, I''d rather work, but how can I get work; or, if I get it, how can I do it? 31721 Would it not be wonderful,"she said to the present writer in the early summer of 1884,"if I should recover?" |
31721 | ''s have told Mr. W. that they will keep their acquaintance with him for our sakes, so that he will not be quite deserted; are not you glad of it? |
31721 | A beautiful life and helpful; for who need despair where she overcame and gained so great a victory? |
31721 | A childhood of much suffering was inevitable-- and then? |
31721 | And art thou ten years old? |
31721 | And where can I sell it, if I work at home without orders?" |
31721 | And who the cup prepared Him, And who the poison gave? |
31721 | Are such dreams thine? |
31721 | Bessie stamped with anger, and turned upon him a little blind passionate face:"Why did you do it? |
31721 | But do blind people wish to work, or would they not rather beg? |
31721 | But what is joy or living, What treachery or death, When all His work, His striving, Seems hanging on His breath? |
31721 | Can He then feel no sadness, When heart and hope give way? |
31721 | Did some memory of sight revisit her in dreams? |
31721 | Do you think you shall come here soon? |
31721 | Does Mr. Lowe think so? |
31721 | Does that consideration strike your mind? |
31721 | Had she"beautiful intuitions"as to sight? |
31721 | Hath life for Him no gladness, No joy the light of day? |
31721 | Have you any word for me, A word I fain would hear? |
31721 | How do you think I am to get on here all by myself? |
31721 | If such a one could pray for the death of a blind child, what would the poor do? |
31721 | If your grandpapa does not think it too large and would let it go to Culham, should you object? |
31721 | In every letter she requests information on this point:"Can the workpeople still read Braille''s type?" |
31721 | In later times, if any one spoke of violins or violinists, she would say"Ah, do you remember_ My Beautiful Lady_?" |
31721 | Is it so, that we need not go till after Easter? |
31721 | Is it true that those little three- cornered things in the pink room with the china on them were washhand stands? |
31721 | Is there some power whose sovereign will Bids you such silence keep? |
31721 | May not a large proportion of the able- bodied blind be rendered thoroughly self- supporting? |
31721 | Mrs. Swainson was present at the removal of both her parents: but was not all this of God''s appointment? |
31721 | Oh can it stand without Him, That work but just begun? |
31721 | Oh mark that night of sorrow, That agony of prayer; No friend can watch till morrow His grief to soothe and share; Oh where shall He find comfort? |
31721 | Oh sleep, where art thou? |
31721 | Oh wherefore doth His spirit Such bitter conflict know? |
31721 | Or art thou friendless and alone, Hast none in whom thou canst confide? |
31721 | Pray, why do none of you little pusses write to me? |
31721 | She seemed unable to endure the shock of this sudden blow, and at first could only lie and moan,"Oh, why was she taken and I left?" |
31721 | Should the education and training of the blind be to any extent provided for from the rates or other State sources, and, if so, to what extent? |
31721 | Silence for a few moments, and then peeping over the banisters the youth said in an urgent whisper,"Is he gone, is he gone?" |
31721 | The following pretty lines have been preserved amongst Bessie''s papers:-- Will you please tell me very truly what you think of this little poem? |
31721 | Their living do you wish that they should earn, Instead of crying"Pity the poor Blind?" |
31721 | There is a third and quicker way, she is told, but how except through fingers and ears can she realise it? |
31721 | This is the way to do business, is it not? |
31721 | This will be something like-- won''t it? |
31721 | WHAT IS SYMPATHY? |
31721 | We can picture to ourselves the butler''s"Do you wish to see the Vice- Chancellor, sir?" |
31721 | What is being done industrially for the blind, and in what ways? |
31721 | What little girl would not be proud of such homage from a"High Master of St. Paul''s,"and so dear a friend? |
31721 | What more can be done through existing agencies? |
31721 | What sins, what crimes could merit Such deep and awful woe? |
31721 | What tell they in those murmurs low, Under the rising moon? |
31721 | When we ask Him to guide us day by day, may we not leave it to Him how He guides us? |
31721 | Why art thou full of anxious fear How thou shalt be sustain''d and fed? |
31721 | Why should she not do this? |
31721 | Why shouldst thou fear, if God be on thy side, Man''s cruel anger, or malicious pride? |
31721 | Will you ask Miss Lander to send word where she left her Punch and Judy? |
31721 | Would you mention any you think advisable? |
31721 | Ye sounds of day, why all so still, And hushed as if in sleep? |
31721 | You will think of me then, wo n''t you? |
31721 | [ Inquiries about friends follow, and then:] Question upon question; but no matter, answer another, who sent me the violets? |
31721 | and what did you think about it?" |
31721 | wherefore dost thou leave me? |
46846 | Are you ill, my beloved? 46846 But the private carriage, the horse, the silver- mounted harness, the luxury of the whole turn- out?" |
46846 | Field- Marshal? 46846 Has he enormous pay or a private fortune?" |
46846 | How can you do that? |
46846 | May I see it? |
46846 | Ten thousand francs lost? 46846 This lady''s? |
46846 | What proof can you give me,asked the War Minister,"of this extraordinary statement?" |
46846 | What wine is that over yonder? |
46846 | Which Schmidt? |
46846 | Who are you, then? |
46846 | Who is it? |
46846 | Why should he not have been found guilty? |
46846 | ''Who were his friends, now?'' |
46846 | A judge was summoned to interrogate him, and asked,"Who struck you?" |
46846 | But how was I to take him? |
46846 | Clearly there had been a crime, but who were the guilty parties? |
46846 | Could he now be permitted, even if he wished, to swear away the life of another man for the same offence? |
46846 | Could such wrong be done to a young and vigorous man without some sort of struggle that would leave its traces on himself and in the scene around? |
46846 | Do you know Hebrew?" |
46846 | Giles then said,"But you are not going to London, are you?" |
46846 | HOAG OR PARKER? |
46846 | Her muff, moreover, was found in the water; why should she have retained that to the last? |
46846 | How and when had the change been effected? |
46846 | How could she have substituted the large for the small? |
46846 | I''d go for one, but which? |
46846 | Might not someone else have made the change? |
46846 | Pinkerton seemed to understand, and the other suddenly asked,"Do you ever deal, any?" |
46846 | Prince Gortschakoff? |
46846 | Surely you know me?" |
46846 | The Surrey jailer, Ives by name, asked him,"Can not this be''stashed''?" |
46846 | The thief would probably try to make tracks out of the country as soon as he could; but which way? |
46846 | Then one of my men came in to say that Burbidge had been seen taking a ticket-- to London? |
46846 | Todleben?" |
46846 | Was it all a fraud? |
46846 | Was it likely that a family party collected round the supper- table would take one of their number downstairs and hang him? |
46846 | What could have been the writer''s object in fabricating it? |
46846 | What could the accused say to rebut such seemingly overwhelming evidence? |
46846 | What had become of the saddle- bags in which the murdered man had carried his cash? |
46846 | What if Marie Capelle( Lafarge) had had something to do with this theft? |
46846 | When reproached with this questionable practice, de Sartines defended it by asking,"Where should I find honest folk who would agree to do such work?" |
46846 | Where had she been all this time? |
46846 | Who had died, if not she? |
46846 | Who shall say what their fate might have been? |
46846 | Why should not suspicion be laid at the door of the Blue Dragoon? |
46846 | Why? |
46846 | Will you, and can you, trust me with a little arsenic? |
46846 | Yet more, Anna Brun, having seen Marie Lafarge mix powder as before in her husband''s drink, heard him cry out,"What have you given me? |
46846 | [ Illustration: CAN THE LAW REACH HIM? |
46846 | who might this be?'' |
13509 | Philadelphia, Sept. 6th, 1876._How was this memorial received? |
13509 | The question was constantly asked:''Will the women of a conservative city of one hundred and fifty thousand go upon the street as a praying- band?'' 13509 Who hath woe? |
13509 | *** If, then, alcohol enfeebles the reason, what part of the mental constitution does it exalt and excite? |
13509 | And to whom and to what class of citizens does the State accord, under license, the privilege of making gain out of the people''s loss? |
13509 | And what have they done for the prevention and cure of drunkenness? |
13509 | Are men ever really saved from its curse? |
13509 | But what farther, in connection with this subject, are we told by statistics? |
13509 | But what if it works evil and only evil in the State? |
13509 | But why present farther testimony? |
13509 | CAN PROHIBITORY LAWS BE ENFORCED? |
13509 | Can a pint of coffee, with sugar, milk and a two- ounce roll of bread, be furnished for five cents and leave any margin for profit? |
13509 | Can prohibitory laws be enforced, and will they cure the evil of drunkenness? |
13509 | Channing,"is the great essential evil of intemperance? |
13509 | Do they disturb the brain when they come in contact with its substance; and deteriorate it if the contact be long continued? |
13509 | Does this fruit of the liquor traffic establish its right to existence and to the protection of law? |
13509 | Entire prohibition of the sale of intoxicating drinks? |
13509 | For great benefactors to whom the nation owes a debt of gratitude? |
13509 | For men who are engaged in great industrial or commercial enterprises? |
13509 | For whom are the houses of the poor made poorer; and the supply of bread diminished? |
13509 | For whom is every interest in the nation taxed and every industry hurt? |
13509 | Here is our subject, how shall we save him? |
13509 | How improved? |
13509 | If salvation were of grace alone, as so many teach in this Gospel temperance work, what need of"sword,"or"armor,"or a"lamp unto the feet?" |
13509 | If this were all the cost? |
13509 | Is it better in New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Cincinnati, Chicago or any other of our large cities? |
13509 | Is it, then, any wonder that so much poverty and suffering are to be found among them? |
13509 | Is not the evidence complete? |
13509 | Is not this a great gain? |
13509 | Is prohibition right in the abstract as a legislative measure? |
13509 | Is there any other means of cure for national drunkenness? |
13509 | Is there any remedy short of Prohibition? |
13509 | Is there, in fact, any cure for the dreadful malady of drunkenness? |
13509 | Is this an argument against the enactment of laws to protect the people from great wrongs-- especially the weaker and more helpless ones? |
13509 | Is this disease, or vice, or sin, or crime of intemperance-- call it by what name you will-- increasing or diminishing? |
13509 | Nay, considering your duties and your obligations, have you any right to run these risks? |
13509 | Promoters of education? |
13509 | Send me to a reformatory? |
13509 | Text- Book of Temperance,''etc., followed later by''Bacchus Dethroned,''''The Medical Use of Alcohol,''''Is Alcohol a Necessary of Life?'' |
13509 | That alcohol is not a food in any sense, has been fully shown; and now, WHAT IS ITS VALUE AS A MEDICINE? |
13509 | The question next to be considered is, Can prohibitory laws be enforced? |
13509 | Then I asked myself, What had I lost by it? |
13509 | They had His grace in their hearts-- had been"saved"through prayer and faith-- and would He not care for, protect and defend them? |
13509 | Think of it, all ye who dally with the treacherous cup; are not the risks you are running too great? |
13509 | Think you that this mechanism is left uncontrolled? |
13509 | To what extent, then, are the State and local unions looking after the children? |
13509 | What are the agencies of repression at work; how effective are they, and what is each doing? |
13509 | What had I gained? |
13509 | What had I obtained by it? |
13509 | What is the reason of that flushing of the countenance? |
13509 | What need we further to show the destructive action on the human mind? |
13509 | What shall it be? |
13509 | What then? |
13509 | What then? |
13509 | What was the tax on tea to this? |
13509 | What, then, is being done in this work of healing and saving? |
13509 | What, then, is the result of experiments in this direction? |
13509 | Who and what are these men?--this great privileged class? |
13509 | and if so, will they remove from the people the curse of drunkenness? |
13509 | and, if so, how is it done, and what are the agencies employed? |
13509 | leaders in the great march of civilization? |
13509 | who hath babblings? |
13509 | who hath contentions? |
13509 | who hath sorrow? |
13509 | who hath wounds without cause? |
13509 | who hath, redness of eyes? |
9406 | GOVERNMENT BY THE BREWERS? |
9406 | Has it not frequently been said that the"dough bags"of the brewers control the courts and influence their decisions? |
9406 | If the brewers are sincere in their promise to divorce beer from whiskey, why have they not closed their own whiskey stores? |
9406 | Is it surprising that the public is clamoring for the complete elimination of the breweries? |
9406 | WHAT IS BEER? |
9406 | What is beer? |
9406 | What is there to prevent it? |
9406 | Why have they not forbidden the sale of whiskey in all saloons? |
9406 | Why have they not placed a ban upon the sale of whiskey in all the saloons which they own and operate themselves? |
9406 | Will the brewers continue their policy of defying the people until nation- wide prohibition will put a stop to these drunken orgies? |
39999 | ''And Osea is not a desert island?'' 39999 ''And you anticipate a commercial success for your philanthropic investment?'' |
39999 | ''And you anticipate much good from the acquisition of Osea?'' 39999 ''Does it really hold five thousand people?'' |
39999 | ''Have you commenced to build yet?'' 39999 ''How do you reach it?'' |
39999 | ''Is it?'' 39999 ''Will it be populated entirely by invalids and inebriates?'' |
39999 | I wonder if your tom- cat is very spiritual? |
39999 | LICENSED-- TO DO WHAT? 39999 My good woman,"said Mr. Charrington,"why do n''t you open the window?" |
39999 | We ask: Is strong drink going to be sold or not, and is the Palace to be opened on the Lord''s Day? 39999 What are you in for?" |
39999 | Who''s your friend? |
39999 | ''No,''was the reply;''does he work on the bank, or in the pit?'' |
39999 | 2, are you ready?'' |
39999 | Ai n''t they tight, sir? |
39999 | And what was the occasion which brought such an enormous crowd together? |
39999 | Be that as it may, who shall laugh or sneer at an earnest and well- meant effort to engage the thoughts of the passer- by? |
39999 | Bright and''appy, ai n''t we, guv''nor? |
39999 | But, as a recognition of his self- sacrifice and devotion, surely some public acknowledgment from the throne would be a very proper thing? |
39999 | Did he not declare on oath that he was not easily shocked? |
39999 | Did these exist in former times? |
39999 | Did you not hear them? |
39999 | Do I understand you to ask the committee to say that they were prostitutes because they walked in twos? |
39999 | Does the man not know his betters? |
39999 | For many years I have been in the habit of coming to Whitechapel, and many people say to me,''Why do you go to Whitechapel so often?'' |
39999 | For what? |
39999 | Has total abstinence any effect in diminishing working energy? |
39999 | He was soon acquainted with their mission--"Would he kindly allow a bill or two to be placed upon his counter?" |
39999 | How many others are there who have made this Great Acceptance? |
39999 | How shall the sufferings of the poor of the East End of London be alleviated?" |
39999 | I was just off when Mr. Kerwin tapped me on the shoulder, and taking hold of my arm said,''Are you safe for eternity?'' |
39999 | If a member of the committee says he has been there, and has seen fifty or sixty prostitutes, you would say he was a liar? |
39999 | May we not have a hall to accommodate them? |
39999 | Mr. Charrington was praying, and in the course of the prayer he said,"Where will these spend their eternity?" |
39999 | Mr. Charrington: Did other people show by their behaviour that they were disgusted? |
39999 | Mr. Charrington: Have you not evidence that they said they were disgusted? |
39999 | Mr. Charrington:"Is this place to be opened on Sunday or not?" |
39999 | Mr. Nicholson or Mr. Sargent could do him justice, and, in passing, I would ask why there is no authentic portrait of value? |
39999 | Of Mr. Charrington''s private loss what can I say here? |
39999 | One day I said to one of them''Tommy, do you know I have been converted?'' |
39999 | Ought you not to consider seriously what your duty is? |
39999 | Perhaps you are content with giving annual subscriptions and occasional donations and taking a weekly class? |
39999 | Said the Brewer to the Bishop,''Nay, that really is not true; Who told you such a story? |
39999 | The silence, the huge arc of sky, the life- giving breezes, the perfect and tranquil beauty-- what more can the heart of man desire? |
39999 | We say( and with perfect truth)''I wish I had Miss MacWhirter''s signature to a cheque for five thousand pounds''.... Is it so, or is it not so?" |
39999 | Well, what did Mr. Messenger do? |
39999 | What has been the result? |
39999 | What is responsible? |
39999 | What sort of young man was this who started out upon life with such a record? |
39999 | What spell was there over them all that they pressed onward in phalanx after phalanx to the doors of Exeter Hall? |
39999 | Who fills his pocket with the sale Of porter, beer, and generous ale, Which crowd the workhouse and the gaol? |
39999 | Who fills our slums with waifs and strays? |
39999 | Who havoc with our nation plays, And brings disgrace on all our ways? |
39999 | Who is it bosses all the show, As through this curious world we go, And dominates both high and low? |
39999 | Who is responsible? |
39999 | Who of us can say that in our youth we turned away from all this world has to offer and renounced enormous fortune and high place? |
39999 | Who to the heathen far away, Send Christian men to preach and pray, And bring them to a brighter day? |
39999 | Who, when aloud the poor have cried, And poverty is raging wide, Has means of charity supplied? |
39999 | Why not give yourselves-- money, time, and all-- to the foreign field? |
39999 | You remember--"And behold, one came and said unto him, Good Master, what good thing shall I do that I may have eternal life?" |
39999 | she asked, looking at the heavy foam of the frothing stout;''is this Messenger''s Entire?'' |
39999 | the most famous caricaturist perhaps that England has ever known? |
40881 | ''Is that true, Master?'' 40881 ''My God, my God,''"sang Teddy in the recitative of Bach''s Passion music,"''why hast Thou forsaken Me?'' |
40881 | And''ow about the father? 40881 Anything to say?" |
40881 | But why were n''t you married, Pennyloaf? 40881 Do n''t you understand it? |
40881 | Do you think I''d care? 40881 Do you think the lady will have me, ma''am? |
40881 | Fy Nuw, fy Nuw, paham y''m gadewaist? |
40881 | Has he come? |
40881 | Has mother come? |
40881 | Have all your husbands run away and left you? |
40881 | How are you? |
40881 | How do you keep so young? |
40881 | If she is blind and deaf and dumb, how does she manage to complain? |
40881 | Is this the house? 40881 It is a dreadful place; why should I be kept here? |
40881 | Just try one, Mabel darling; do n''t you know me, dear? |
40881 | Must you be going? 40881 Perhaps,"she asked presently,"you are going to adopt this baby? |
40881 | Pretty little thing, ai n''t she? 40881 She looks as if she ought not to be here?" |
40881 | Well, I''ve got my aunt''s marriage lines; does n''t that prove it? 40881 Where does your mother live?" |
40881 | Where''s London? |
40881 | Why are you here, duckies? 40881 Wo n''t the father of your child do anything for you?" |
40881 | Yes, I''eard that from Mrs. James, but why did n''t you have the sense to say as you were a widow? |
40881 | You''ve left your good place, Esther, all for me? |
40881 | ''Cos why? |
40881 | ''Is that the law of England?'' |
40881 | A DAUGHTER OF THE STATE Quis est homo, qui non fleret? |
40881 | And do I get enough to live on? |
40881 | And then,''I says,''if my husband made me a Frenchy, ai n''t I English again by my sons? |
40881 | Been abroad, have you? |
40881 | But I thank you, lady, all the same, and will you allow me to pay your fare for coming down to speak for me?" |
40881 | But must I go with the police to the court all alone amongst a lot of men? |
40881 | But please tell me first, do you hold with keeping a vow?" |
40881 | But which way?" |
40881 | Ca n''t you get me out, ma''am? |
40881 | Could n''t talk English? |
40881 | Coverture? |
40881 | Did you see my poor girl to- day? |
40881 | Did you''ear about Mrs. Moore? |
40881 | Do n''t you know Old Blowy, ma''am--''im as had the good luck to ride at Balaclava? |
40881 | Father run away and left you all starving?" |
40881 | How could I get on? |
40881 | How did she get here?" |
40881 | I wonder which of us will have the conviction and energy to cane boys at eighty- two? |
40881 | IN THE PHTHISIS WARD Why, O my God, hast Thou forsaken Me? |
40881 | If I had sixpence of my own do you think I''d stay in this wicked Bastille, ordered about by the ladies of the bar? |
40881 | Is there no balm in Gilead; is there no physician there? |
40881 | Is there no mercy in heaven?" |
40881 | Matron says I''ve no clothes, does she?--and after the beautiful dress as I came up to see my poor sister with? |
40881 | O Father, shall it be That she abides when Thou forsakest Me? |
40881 | Oh, ma''am, do you think as my sin will be forgiven? |
40881 | Stands to reason I was born afore I was christened; they could n''t put the cross on my forehead, now could they, till my face was out in the world? |
40881 | What do you know of workhouses? |
40881 | What do you mean, lass?" |
40881 | What do you think of that for a saucy girl? |
40881 | What have we to do with harvest festivals?" |
40881 | What was the matter with the women that they seemed to have lost the will to live? |
40881 | When the nurse brought him his breakfast he raised his head eagerly:"Has mother come?" |
40881 | Why am I in the workhouse, then? |
40881 | Why should five years out of my seventy- two change me into a Frenchy? |
40881 | Wo n''t one of the nurses come with me, or will you?" |
40881 | Would I be a good girl and not run away if you get me a place? |
40881 | Would he like prayers read? |
40881 | Yes, I know what I am talking about-- didn''t I spend nearly every Sunday afternoon for nigh on twenty years at Colney Hatch? |
40881 | Yes, Matron says it is a disgrace for a strong girl to be on the rates, but what am I to do? |
40881 | You remember Mrs. Hall, who died here last week? |
40881 | You''re from Yorkshire, I reckon?" |
40881 | came the shrill voice of Daisy Crabtree;"what''s up now? |
40881 | cried the old man, and I recognized the cry from the Cross,"My God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me?" |
40881 | why then is not the health of the daughter of my people recovered? |
45349 | And the money? |
45349 | But what about money? |
45349 | Did n''t she write and tell you what happened? |
45349 | Did she keep that appointment? |
45349 | Do you know that I can import bacon, for which the people of Berlin pay eight shillings a pound for less than a shilling a pound? 45349 Do you know that he is one of the greatest swindlers in London? |
45349 | Excuse me,he said politely, one hand in his pocket wherein lay an important legal document,"but are you Mrs. Catherine Wilson?" |
45349 | Frau Kupfer, you say, can turn it into forty thousand within three months? 45349 I presume you have heard of my uncle, Mr. Andrew Carnegie?" |
45349 | I suppose you think that because I am an unprotected woman trying to earn an honest living that you can bluff me? 45349 Is our friend going to be married too?" |
45349 | Murder? |
45349 | My dearest one, what is the matter with the old woman? 45349 Oh, monsieur,"she exclaimed, with a piteous expression,"how shall I break the news? |
45349 | She is English then? |
45349 | Then this Mr. Greenacre will be unable to help us to trace her movements last Christmas Eve? |
45349 | Unhappy? |
45349 | What do you want with me? |
45349 | What have you been doing to my brother Peter? |
45349 | What was she doing at Rugby? 45349 What was the name of the man?" |
45349 | Where can I meet this delightful lady? |
45349 | Who are you, and what''s inside your parcels? |
45349 | Whose murder? |
45349 | Why should anyone know? |
45349 | Wo n''t you let me help you? 45349 You do n''t object to me, I suppose?" |
45349 | You wo n''t tell your friends, will you? 45349 Your Royal Highness----""My name is Franz-- to my friends,"he said, looking at her steadily,"and we are friends, are we not?" |
45349 | All I want to know is when we can be married? |
45349 | But could he hold his creditors back until the old lady died? |
45349 | But what was? |
45349 | But who was the master? |
45349 | But who was to kill him? |
45349 | Ca n''t you send four or five pairs of children''s socks with the bottle? |
45349 | Can it be that this feeling will return to me? |
45349 | Could it be possible? |
45349 | Could n''t you send me some by parcel post to the railway station of Ain- Fezza? |
45349 | Did a particular job require the services of an expert burglar or forger? |
45349 | Did you get the photograph? |
45349 | Does crime pay? |
45349 | Had he not the evidence of his own senses that she was devoted to him and to their little boy and girl? |
45349 | Had his wife paid all the money away? |
45349 | Hamilton?" |
45349 | Have I ever hesitated before anything except the desertion of my children? |
45349 | How could he manage that? |
45349 | How had she escaped? |
45349 | If he was, surely one of his gang would betray him? |
45349 | Stahl?" |
45349 | Was not his wife the most religious woman in Oran? |
45349 | Was she ill? |
45349 | Was the girl fooling him? |
45349 | Was there a bank official to be bribed or a skeleton key to be made? |
45349 | What had happened? |
45349 | What part did she take in the conversation that led up to the double murder? |
45349 | What was the use of twenty thousand pounds to a man who wanted five times that amount, and who could obtain it by waiting a few days? |
45349 | What would he say if I told him, and my assistants confirmed me, that you''d been keeping clandestine appointments with a lover? |
45349 | What would her brother and his family say now? |
45349 | What would his friends think of him? |
45349 | What''ll the neighbours say if they find a woman screaming outside your house on Christmas Eve? |
45349 | Where could he raise ten thousand francs? |
45349 | Where was Miss Northcliffe? |
45349 | Who was the mysterious girl heavily veiled? |
45349 | Who was the mysterious person who had walked about Bodasse''s room, and who had come every night to light the candle? |
45349 | Why not let me help?" |
45349 | Why not pay that long- promised visit to your aunt in Marseilles? |
45349 | Why should n''t I have some of the profits too?" |
12027 | And, if each was born with a certain"will"or the capacity to make a certain"will", who then is responsible for the result? |
12027 | But does punishing A keep B from the commission of crime? |
12027 | But does this bring us nearer to the light? |
12027 | But how? |
12027 | Can crime be cured? |
12027 | Can the conclusion be evaded that individually and collectively we constantly teeter on the brink of a precipice? |
12027 | Can we imagine men, through government, forcibly experimenting with each other? |
12027 | Divine justice says of the tree that brings forth such grapes of Sodom,"Cut it down, why cumbereth it the ground?" |
12027 | Does it then follow that no one shall be restrained from freedom on account of either his actions or his nature? |
12027 | How many accidents has he had which luckily were slight but which easily might have caused his destruction? |
12027 | How many hair- breadth escapes has he met? |
12027 | How many temptations to violate the law has one just missed by a lucky accident? |
12027 | How many times has a previous experience, education, or a friend at the right time saved him from destruction? |
12027 | How often has he done some act that would have led to degradation had it been known? |
12027 | How would he have man changed? |
12027 | IS CRIME INCREASING? |
12027 | If not, can it be wiped out and how? |
12027 | If such is done of"disease,"why not of"crime"? |
12027 | Irrespective of its effect on the criminal, what is the effect on the victim of the criminal? |
12027 | Is heredity responsible? |
12027 | Is it not plain that in America it has assumed the form of an obsession, biting us high and low, until we reek of it? |
12027 | Is it outside of the other manifestations of life? |
12027 | Is the number of criminal convictions growing, and if so why? |
12027 | Is there anything unreasonable in all of this? |
12027 | Is there no place between six months in jail and a year in jail? |
12027 | Is there, then, nothing in the basis of right and wrong that answers to the common conception of these words? |
12027 | It is perhaps equally true that few if any are of value, for when value is considered we are met with the question:"Value to whom, or for what?" |
12027 | It manifestly is not a distinct faculty of the mind, and if it were, would it be more reliable than the other faculties? |
12027 | It may have been a motive that was ideal, but the question involved is, did he violate the law? |
12027 | Or, does the word"will"mean anything, as usually applied? |
12027 | Or, what was to be done and how? |
12027 | REMEDIES INDEX CRIME ITS CAUSE AND TREATMENT I WHAT IS CRIME? |
12027 | Still less does he ask:"Has he a father or mother, a wife or children, brothers or sisters, and how are these affected by his deed?" |
12027 | The command,"Thou shalt not kill,"seems plain, but does even this furnish an infallible rule of conduct? |
12027 | The question is often asked, Is crime increasing? |
12027 | The real question of importance is: What shall be done? |
12027 | To what effect is the storing of knowledge in the brain of the child, except that it may be taught to avoid the wrong and to do the right? |
12027 | WHAT IS CRIME? |
12027 | Was it the"will"that caused one to be the"captain of his soul"? |
12027 | Was it then his environment? |
12027 | What can be done? |
12027 | What duties does each citizen owe society? |
12027 | What else can he do? |
12027 | What have reason and human experience to say on the subject? |
12027 | What is conscience? |
12027 | What obligations does the public owe the criminal? |
12027 | What qualities are desirable for the human race? |
12027 | What reason has the world to believe that conscience is a correct guide to right and wrong? |
12027 | What rights has the criminal? |
12027 | What rights have the public? |
12027 | What should be done to meet these new conditions? |
12027 | What then is the"will"and who gave the weak will to one and the strong will to another? |
12027 | Wherefore should the nations[ Gentiles] say, Where is their[ the Jews''] God? |
12027 | Who are the people with the breadth and tolerance and infinite wisdom, in whose hands it would be safe to place the remodeling of man? |
12027 | Who could prophesy what man would be like when he should be made over in the likeness of something else? |
12027 | Who is the perfect one that should be willing to punish vengefully his fellow- man? |
12027 | Who would settle the kind of man that was to be evolved or the specific changes that would be required? |
12027 | Why did he not stop here, or go there; why did he do this or why did he not do that? |
12027 | Why did he not take this short step? |
12027 | Why did he not think of this or think of that? |
12027 | Why did one fail where the other conquered? |
12027 | Why else should children be trained with so much care? |
12027 | Why not eleven days? |
12027 | Why not forty days? |
12027 | Why not four months or five, or eight or nine or ten months? |
12027 | Why not seventy days? |
12027 | Why not twenty- four days? |
12027 | Why should so much pains be taken in forming habits? |
12027 | Why should they be taught what is right and what is wrong? |
12027 | Will hangings and life sentences stop them? |
12027 | Would he breed for art and civilization or would he breed for strength and physical endurance? |
12027 | Would he experiment for more intellect, or a bigger and stronger physique? |
12027 | XVIII IS CRIME INCREASING? |
21285 | ''Are you trying to find the man who committed the assault?'' 21285 ''Did you tell Jane Fay, at church, that you did not know who assaulted you?'' |
21285 | ''Do you know Frank Brady?'' 21285 Again, this''believer in fair play,''in speaking of Mr. Smith, says:"''Did his person bear evidence of murderous assault? |
21285 | And because he does this should he be reviled, and persecuted, and driven out of business? 21285 We would repeat the question asked,''What were the detectives seeking?'' |
21285 | What have we seen in the courts during the past week? 21285 What is the nature of the crime charged against Howarth? |
21285 | What is the reason of this? 21285 Would_ The Spectator_ permit us to clear the issue? |
21285 | Admitting the truth of Kelly''s story, is he less guilty because he had confederates? |
21285 | And because he does this, should he be reviled, and prosecuted, and driven out of his business?'' |
21285 | And what reason has Fair Play for doubting the testimony of Mr. Smith himself, even if there were no other proof? |
21285 | And why, having such an advantage over his victim, did he begin at once to pound his head? |
21285 | Are we going back to such a state of things? |
21285 | Are we sleeping on guard? |
21285 | Because they are the most law- abiding and influential section of the community? |
21285 | But what is there incredible in this? |
21285 | But when the liquor element complains, what then? |
21285 | But why are these matters brought before the public now? |
21285 | Did he not know there was a temperance community in Canada who would, at least, enquire into the case of a persecuted brother? |
21285 | Did his person bear evidence of murderous assault? |
21285 | Did his person bear evidence of the murderous assault? |
21285 | Did the jury fear that they, too, might be exposed to a sudden attack of lead pipe?'' |
21285 | Does it mean to disable him? |
21285 | First, I should like to ask what is meant by poisoning the public mind? |
21285 | First, how can temperance work"antagonize the interests of the Company?" |
21285 | Has it come to such a pass that law and justice are becoming a mockery? |
21285 | He asks, Who saw the assault? |
21285 | How is it that for so much lighter crimes, so much heavier sentence is often pronounced? |
21285 | If Mr. Smith had been killed I wonder if they would have got two months? |
21285 | If he simply intended to"lick"Mr. Smith, why did he attempt it in such an unfair and cowardly way? |
21285 | If it can demand the entire time of their men on or off duty, may it not next demand the service of the men at the ballot box? |
21285 | In the history of this country did you ever hear of anything more shameful? |
21285 | Is he liable to a severe punishment? |
21285 | Is it because the people are afraid of the liquor men? |
21285 | Is it because they find too many sympathizers at home? |
21285 | Is it grave or trifling? |
21285 | Is it not interfering with the liberty of the British subject? |
21285 | Is it that they are paralyzed with surprise and horror for the time being? |
21285 | Is_ The Spectator_ prepared to defend such tyranny, and, yes, we will say it-- treason to the State?" |
21285 | Mr. Editor, what are the temperance people doing? |
21285 | Must every self- supporting man be a slave? |
21285 | Of what? |
21285 | Second, how can temperance work"create feeling between the Company and its patrons?" |
21285 | Shall it not be so in this case? |
21285 | Shall we make our laws to please, or to restrain and punish such men? |
21285 | Smith?" |
21285 | Surely not all the patrons of the Canadian Pacific Railway are wholesale and illicit liquor sellers? |
21285 | The Dominion Alliance asks why this should be so? |
21285 | The following is a part of the cross- examination as reported in the_ Witness_:"''Do you know Peter McGettrick, of Richford?'' |
21285 | Then what were the detectives seeking?--what were they after? |
21285 | They seem to think it impossible that"respectable(?)" |
21285 | What cares the liquor seller who suffers while he thrives? |
21285 | What does that mean? |
21285 | What is our plain duty in the case? |
21285 | What is the nature of the evidence offered by the prosecution, and the probability of a conviction? |
21285 | What right has the citizen that the Canadian Pacific Railway may not require him to give up to serve its ends? |
21285 | While in Montreal he was interviewed,--and by whom?--the Crown prosecutor? |
21285 | Who before ever heard of a man being sentenced and executed and then the evidence of his guilt hunted up? |
21285 | Who is initiated into the mysteries of the language? |
21285 | Who is safe in the discharge of his duty and in the performance of the God- given work to which every Christian man is called? |
21285 | Who saw Hooper try to drown his wife? |
21285 | Who witnessed the assault on Smith? |
21285 | Who witnessed the assault on Smith? |
21285 | Why did he, when the object of his assault was asleep, attack him with a weapon which might cause death? |
21285 | Why is it that he has not yet fully recovered from the effects of this assault? |
21285 | Why was I not allowed a hearing by the officers of the Company? |
21285 | Why? |
21285 | Why? |
21285 | Wilson?'' |
21285 | Would Fair Play wish to be patted in the same way, being retained in a prison cell, knowing not what punishment may await him? |
21285 | Would they have dismissed Mr. Smith? |
21285 | or does it mean to kill him? |
56728 | Are you a picaroon? |
56728 | Have you mother, sister, wife, or children? |
56728 | I mean who is that dirty bum who just came in? |
56728 | What can I do for you? |
56728 | What can we do to help them? |
56728 | What did the judge hand yeh? |
56728 | What do you mean? |
56728 | What for? |
56728 | Whatcheh in fer? |
56728 | Where do you think you are? 56728 A keeper silences me with a gruff, impatient voice:Where in hell do you think I can get it?" |
56728 | Are you his wife?" |
56728 | As soon as I approached him he turned around sharply and shouted:"What the h---- do_ you_ want?" |
56728 | At the Waldorf- Astoria? |
56728 | He wrings his hands in despair and moans:"Why did they not let me die in peace?" |
56728 | How does it come that they pick Popes from among the wops, I wonder?" |
56728 | I looked at him puzzled and asked:"Dress him up in his striped suit?" |
56728 | Is not suffering the greatest of all tests, necessary, purifying and regenerating? |
56728 | Is this really the Inferno or only the last Judgment, I ask myself? |
56728 | Once inadvertently I asked him:"What do you do outside for a living, Ed?" |
56728 | One"sky pilot"comes only during the lunch hour and, walking to the busy table, invariably asks:"Well, boys, how goes it?" |
56728 | See?" |
56728 | Some of the passages read thus:"I love you, I love you, where did youse put the tobacco?" |
56728 | Sometimes a laggard insists on finishing his washing; and then an angry voice assails him rudely:"Come on, you God damn bum, did n''t yeh hear me? |
56728 | Soon four convicts came into the room; one, a gangster, with a broken nose, and beady, black eyes, asked me:"Where is the stiff?" |
56728 | The keeper spoke:"Who is that dirty bum?" |
56728 | The warden asked her:"What do you want to see him for? |
56728 | When I suggested that as he was the warden he could make and unmake the rules, he did not answer, but asked irrelevantly how I liked his hotel? |
56728 | Where do you t''ink you are? |
56728 | Why not wait patiently and courageously for the day of reckoning, worthy of the gods on Olympus? |
56728 | Why should my trained mind crumble like a match box and be destroyed under physical torture, mental distress and moral humiliation? |
56728 | Why this unseemly desire to swat as insignificant a gnat as I? |
56728 | Will you please bring me a spoon?" |
56728 | You get me?" |
56728 | but always:"How long must you serve?" |
29841 | And he asked his father, How long is it ago since this came unto him? 29841 And how shall they preach except they be sent? |
29841 | And the Lord said unto him, Who hath made man''s mouth? 29841 Do you know Grammar, Geography, Bible, Arithmetic, Astronomy, and Dictionary? |
29841 | He answereth him, and saith, O faithless generation, how long shall I be with you? 29841 How must I do this?" |
29841 | Not Bob King? |
29841 | Oh,said the waiter,"do n''t you know? |
29841 | Weel, Margaret, how is Tammas? |
29841 | What country are you from? |
29841 | What do you consider the best thing you have been taught, since coming to the Deaf and Dumb Institution? |
29841 | What do you think was the reason that some fretted? |
29841 | What is God? |
29841 | What is eternity? |
29841 | What is happiness? |
29841 | What is hope? |
29841 | What is the difference between hope and desire? |
29841 | What is time? |
29841 | What man can pause, and charge the senseless dust With fraud, or subtlety, or aught unjust? 29841 Will you sign your name to all this?" |
29841 | A little Irish girl was then asked"How do you hope to be saved?" |
29841 | A stranger asked Massieu,"What difference do you think there is between God and nature?" |
29841 | After William had been at school for some years he was taken seriously ill, and he was asked if he were afraid to die? |
29841 | An orphan now, alone and poor, Homeless, and deaf and dumb; Oh, who will help some christian friends, To make for her a home? |
29841 | Another party asked him whether he made any distinction between a conqueror and a hero? |
29841 | Are you born again?" |
29841 | Before the world was made, how was God eternal? |
29841 | Bernard Grimshaw, a little deaf and dumb boy, lay seriously ill in the sick ward of an Institution, and was asked,"Would you be afraid to die?" |
29841 | But how was it with the child? |
29841 | DO THE DEAF& DUMB THINK THEMSELVES UNHAPPY? |
29841 | Did you ever see the deaf and dumb in London? |
29841 | Do the angels know when the last day will come? |
29841 | Do you know, are there houses in the moon which people inhabit? |
29841 | Do you think the dwellers in the moon have got the sin as well as ourselves? |
29841 | He asked again,"Sir, will you be good enough to tell me what time it is? |
29841 | He said unto me,"Will you love God, and why?" |
29841 | He said,"Will you love God, and why?" |
29841 | How do you know the scriptures to be the word of God? |
29841 | How few can conscientiously declare Their acts have been as honourably fair? |
29841 | How? |
29841 | In answer to the question"What does the Bible say about the righteous?" |
29841 | In answer to the question"Who made the world?" |
29841 | Lucien Buonaparte once asked Massieu,"What is laziness or idleness?" |
29841 | Mr. Chorlton, the Liberal solicitor: What can I do( laughter)? |
29841 | Mr. X. lost his temper, and burst forth with"What in the name of goodness is the matter?" |
29841 | Must I remain shut up in darkness and silence as long as I live?" |
29841 | One day he wrote the question,''What does God do with the sins of the people who believe in Him?'' |
29841 | One of the speakers called attention to a bright looking little fellow, and asked the audience if they knew him? |
29841 | She put her hands on it, and asked"Is this the Bible?" |
29841 | Should they pray? |
29841 | The boys were surprised, and stared at each other for some time; at last one of them said,"Oh, ai n''t he got mighty proud?" |
29841 | The chairman patted the boy on the head, and asked,"Why do you think the Earl of Shaftesbury is the greatest living statesman?" |
29841 | The deceptive and acute question,"Does God reason?" |
29841 | The gentleman then asked her what work she would like to do on leaving school? |
29841 | The last question proposed was"How can you show your love to Jesus?" |
29841 | The minister then asked,"Will you write a sentence for me to read to poor sinners, from a dumb man that can not speak?" |
29841 | The minister was not quite satisfied with the answer, and therefore he asked,"When were you made a''new creature,''and how?" |
29841 | The minister wrote:"My dear friend, have you found the Lord Jesus Christ to be precious to your soul? |
29841 | The question is frequently asked,"Is there a greater mortality among the deaf mutes than there is among the total population?" |
29841 | The question was put on the blackboard,"Who is the greatest living statesman of Great Britain?" |
29841 | The second question was"Who are sinners?" |
29841 | The teacher asked,"What have you been doing?" |
29841 | Then he said to me"Will you buy some?" |
29841 | To another little girl the question put was,"Did you observe any difference in the behaviour of the people present at the meeting?" |
29841 | Two deaf and dumb scholars of the late Abbé Siccard were asked-- Do the deaf and dumb think themselves unhappy? |
29841 | Was he cured? |
29841 | Was he happy? |
29841 | Was his coming so far any use? |
29841 | Was this poor deaf and dumb lad right? |
29841 | Were there any angels before the world was made? |
29841 | What could they do for him but pray? |
29841 | What profession are you of? |
29841 | What would any of us be without education? |
29841 | Where were you born? |
29841 | Who was he?" |
29841 | Will there be a new world when this is burnt up? |
29841 | Would you like to correspond with me? |
29841 | Would you like to see me at Claremont? |
29841 | [ Illustration: The Manual Alphabet] In reply to a question"What is the number of words a good hand speaker can make or say in one minute?" |
29841 | have not I the Lord?" |
29841 | how long shall I suffer you? |
29841 | or who maketh the dumb, or deaf, or seeing, or the blind? |
29841 | said she,"shall I never see the light of day, or hear a human voice? |
58176 | Catch me? |
58176 | Do you think you are going to chapel without a shirt? |
58176 | How often am I out in the rain? |
58176 | Is that what I am going to get? |
58176 | Not often,I said;"Why, what do you want to know that for?" |
58176 | What are you looking for? |
58176 | What do you want? |
58176 | Where abouts? |
58176 | Another Sunday a man came out of an hotel, and this constable went up to him and said:"You''ve been drinking, have n''t you?" |
58176 | But what did these men care? |
58176 | But what does it all matter now? |
58176 | Did any of the tyrants ever derive any benefit by hounding down and torturing their fellow men? |
58176 | Did you get tea and sugar in the road party?" |
58176 | He gave him another lash and said,"There, does that please you?" |
58176 | Here a constable came up to me and inquired where I had come from, and"Was I free?" |
58176 | I at once undertook the contract, proceeded up to Polly, and, pointing to Sarah, said:"She pretends to be a great friend of yours, does n''t she?" |
58176 | Let me see, how many more has she got besides you, Harry?" |
58176 | Proceeding further the overseer pulled another fellow up--"And what was your occupation at home, and how came you to be sent out here?" |
58176 | Shortly afterwards he said to me,"Do you ever kill snakes?" |
58176 | Still these officials went to Church, offered up prayer(?) |
58176 | The P. M.:"I thought so; you get so much a day for bossing the men?" |
58176 | The boss met me on the way up, and asked,"Where are you going to?" |
58176 | The overseer came out, and seeing the pot, asked,"What the devil did you bring that for?" |
58176 | The third day he went up to the overseer and said:"Do you expect me to work after the flogging I got yesterday?" |
58176 | Then they said to Teddy,"Have you got any more for to- morrow, Ted? |
58176 | Then they used to say to him,"Have you got any cabbage or spuds to sell, Teddy? |
58176 | Then, turning to the notorious H----, he said;"You are a prisoner yourself, I suppose?" |
58176 | They were not specs very long; it was soon discernible that they were boats, but who were the occupants? |
58176 | They were questioned,"What have you to say?" |
58176 | Two blind men were brought before him one day on a small charge, and he asked,"What have you two to say for yourselves?" |
58176 | Walking about in chains was hard enough work without carrying hand- carts full of earth, and who could bring themselves to obey flash"specials?" |
58176 | What have I done?" |
58176 | When did you leave the Settlement?" |
58176 | While the second thief was in the act, however, of getting his pig, Tom sat up amongst them, and said,"How many more of you are coming to- night?" |
58176 | Whom do you think can drink that milk?" |
58176 | asked the manager,"can I do anything for you?" |
58176 | how are you getting on?" |
58176 | how much longer is that old wretch going to live?" |
58176 | said one of them to her playmates,"what are those little dots out on the sea?" |
58176 | what did you get sent out for?" |
28632 | But,as an ex- member of the Justice Department said to me,"do you know what the wretch has done?" |
28632 | Will it lesson crime and promote honesty, thrift and loyalty? |
28632 | Will it make the people better citizens? |
28632 | :--will the suffering that he will have to undergo be sufficient to accord with the enormity of the crime he committed? |
28632 | A perverted will? |
28632 | Again, what is more common than to find intellectual ability running in families? |
28632 | Are these charitable efforts to be regarded as profane interference with the sacred decrees of Nature? |
28632 | B- Does it excite and sustain interest? |
28632 | Because these weak, if left unaided, would perish, is that to say that Nature has decreed that they should die? |
28632 | But if the"Jukes"were at all reproductive what is the difference between them and other cases of criminals? |
28632 | But when we speak to them of peace do they not make them ready to battle? |
28632 | C- Are the objects made useful? |
28632 | Can it be at once declared to be the influence of heredity? |
28632 | Concerning this man''s progeny, what have we to fear? |
28632 | D- Does it give a respect for rough work? |
28632 | Do they threaten to overwhelm? |
28632 | E- Does it train in order and exactness? |
28632 | F- Does it allow cleanliness and neatness? |
28632 | For what is happiness? |
28632 | G- Does it cultivate the sense of form? |
28632 | H- Is it beneficial from an hygienic point of view? |
28632 | Has Dr Chapple considered this fact? |
28632 | Has its influence been restricted to this system, or has it invaded the moral sphere? |
28632 | How can this be done, since it would mean the destruction of evil and the powers of evil? |
28632 | How is it done? |
28632 | How many children will say"I love history but I detest dates"? |
28632 | However can a man be expected to reform who is held up to the ridicule of felons? |
28632 | I- Does it allow methodical arrangement? |
28632 | If they would be better out of the way might they not be left to decide that matter for themselves? |
28632 | Is he right? |
28632 | Is heredity the cause, and if so, has it invaded the moral sphere? |
28632 | Is it not a question whether marriage becomes a necessity when children are to be avoided? |
28632 | Is not this a substantial gain which the bearing of the burden of the weak has brought to man? |
28632 | Is the criminal incorrigible? |
28632 | It is not an absolute cause in itself; but, strictly speaking, may we call any cause absolute? |
28632 | J- Does it teach dexterity of hand? |
28632 | Key: A- Does it accord with children''s capability? |
28632 | Nine children, some( how many?) |
28632 | Or can it ever be ascertained that a certain given ancestry will certainly produce criminals? |
28632 | Scientific methods require, however, that we should study the criminal and ask ourselves"what is he?" |
28632 | Sloyd Carpentry|Yes|Yes|Yes? |
28632 | The children''s conduct is immoral, for no amount of argument can determine drunkenness to be anything else: but are the children themselves immoral? |
28632 | The popular comment is no doubt--"what else do you expect? |
28632 | Their right to fall may be denied, but whose right was it to trample on them? |
28632 | What are the steps which it must take? |
28632 | What are we doing? |
28632 | What are we to do? |
28632 | What does Nature say of these that they do not live, they can not live, or they must not live? |
28632 | What family is this? |
28632 | What is it? |
28632 | What is this influence? |
28632 | What purpose is thus served? |
28632 | What value are the dates? |
28632 | What, then it may be asked, are the causes that produce this anti- social being? |
28632 | What, we ask was inherited? |
28632 | When it is said that the average of life is 32 years, and that the month least(? |
28632 | Where is his wife? |
28632 | Why should a man who has lost self- respect be continually reminded of it? |
28632 | Why? |
28632 | Why? |
28632 | and"of what forces is he the product?" |
28632 | of reforms among criminals be valued at? |
28632 | |Hardly|quite No)| Carving in Wood|Yes? |
28632 | |No& yes|No& yes|No|Yes|||| Yes||| Bookbinding|No|No& yes|Tolerably|Hardly|Tolerably|||||| Yes| Card- board Work|Yes& no|Yes? |
28632 | |No|No? |
28632 | |No|No|No|No Straw Plaiting|No& yes|No? |
28632 | |No|Yes|No Brush Making|Yes|No|No|No|No House Painting|No|No|No|No|No Fretwork|Yes|No& yes|No|No& yes|No||||| Bookbinding|Yes? |
28632 | |No|Yes|No? |
28632 | |Perhaps|Tolerably||||| Card- board Work|Yes|Yes? |
28632 | |Tolerably| House Painting|No|No|Yes& no|Yes|No| Fretwork|Yes? |
28632 | |Yes& no|Perhaps|No Basket Making|Yes? |
28632 | |Yes?? |
28632 | |Yes?? |
28632 | |Yes|No|very high| Sloyd Carpentry|Yes|Yes|Yes|Yes? |
28632 | |Yes|Yes Smith''s Work|No|No? |
28632 | |Yes|Yes& no|Yes| Brush Making|No? |
28632 | |Yes|Yes? |
28632 | |Yes|Yes||||| Turnery|Yes? |
28632 | |Yes||||||partly( not| Turnery|No|Yes|Yes? |
47201 | Do n''t you want to see a man killed? |
47201 | I heard he had made that charge against me to you and threatened my life-- is this true? |
47201 | I may then presume by your_ silence_ that it is true what I have asked you about? |
47201 | Tell me truly, did he make that charge against me? |
47201 | That man a murderer? |
47201 | --=Nassau Literary Magazine, Princeton.== Cloth, Price, Postpaid,$ 1.00.= PRAY YOU, SIR, WHOSE DAUGHTER? |
47201 | About an hour later he drank a bottle of Brown''s Bitters, and said to a bystander:''Did you hear about the old man mashing my mouth?'' |
47201 | And now, perhaps, you are ready to ask what it was all about? |
47201 | Can you make the public believe that you were acting in good faith? |
47201 | Exaggeration? |
47201 | Had Judge Lilly been correctly informed? |
47201 | Have we exaggerated in the telling of this story? |
47201 | How we jostle each other so as not to lose a glimpse of misery or death? |
47201 | IS THIS YOUR SON, MY LORD? |
47201 | If the authorities did not dare molest them, who should? |
47201 | Is it a wonder that Attorney- General Hardin stigmatized the whole machinery of justice in the county as"rotten"? |
47201 | Is it a wonder that crime was rampant and of daily occurrence? |
47201 | Is it a wonder that outraged manhood at last took the law in its own hand and annihilated the outlaws? |
47201 | Is it any wonder, then, that in such times and under such conditions preaching respect for law is breath wasted? |
47201 | Is it not strange how morbidly curious most of us are? |
47201 | Is it that the savage of the stone age is not yet dead? |
47201 | Life''s cheap, is n''t it? |
47201 | Of what use is any history but to record past events that future generations might take lessons therefrom and be guided thereby? |
47201 | On arriving at the jail at Winchester, Bowling presented his order, which was signed(?) |
47201 | On the second night of the Court, the acting judge was shot but not wounded(?) |
47201 | Reverting again to the murder lust: What is it''s origin? |
47201 | Reverting to the circumstance which completed the breach between French and Eversole: A certain friend(?) |
47201 | That the veneer of civilization has in all those thousands of years not become thick enough to prevent its wearing off so readily? |
47201 | The clans, disbanded(?) |
47201 | The question was asked in whispers--"Where will it all end?" |
47201 | They realized their power to destroy each other in the courts, but would not the destroyer himself be destroyed? |
47201 | This view has been adopted by other writers and sociologists as furnishing the solution of the riddle: What is the cause of these feuds? |
47201 | Was it possible that in this land of the free and the brave the proportion of brave men stood fifteen to one thousand cowards? |
47201 | What did they fear? |
47201 | What had the authorities been doing during this period of quasi warfare? |
47201 | What inspires it? |
47201 | What is an oath to such depraved creatures? |
47201 | What is loyalty? |
47201 | What is true Americanism? |
47201 | What keeps it aflame? |
47201 | When is a citizen loyal to his country? |
47201 | When we finish we may say, not,''Is This Your Son, My Lord?'' |
47201 | Where a people supinely lay upon their backs and permit anarchy, are they longer entitled to the citizenship of a great state and of a greater nation? |
47201 | Where was the prisoner? |
47201 | Why did you make such a proposition to me at the time you did? |
47201 | Why do they stand idly by instead of rising in their might and punish? |
47201 | Why is it that one courageous blue- coat policeman can scatter a crowd? |
47201 | Why is it, then, that since the good citizens are in the majority, they are willing to submit to terrorization by a few? |
47201 | Why not? |
47201 | Why should they? |
47201 | Why were they absent? |
47201 | Will she dare to go to them? |
47201 | Will they spare him? |
47201 | You ask why I throw"the whole responsibility"of making an application for troops upon you? |
47201 | but''Is it I?''" |
47201 | did n''t he bellow like a bull when that shot hit him?" |
1318 | Do you see that thing there? |
1318 | Have you any decayed teeth? |
1318 | Have you ever had the chicken- pox? |
1318 | Have you ever had the itch? |
1318 | Have you ever had the measles? |
1318 | Have you ever had the mumps? |
1318 | Have you ever had the thresh? |
1318 | Have you ever lost any teeth? |
1318 | Have you ever mined any? |
1318 | How did you happen to get caught? |
1318 | How long a term have you? |
1318 | How long are you in for? |
1318 | I suppose when your time is up you will hunt her up and fit up another suite of rooms, wo n''t you? |
1318 | Reynolds, what is the matter with him? |
1318 | Shall I give him John Robinson''s clothes? |
1318 | The old fashioned seven year kind? 1318 Well,"said I,"if this coal is about ready to drop, had I not better get out of here into the entry, so that I may be out of danger?" |
1318 | What are you going to do, Doc.,said I,"when you get out of this place?" |
1318 | What became of the tramps that came so near being compelled to suffer the penalty of your crime? |
1318 | What became of the woman? |
1318 | What did you do with them after you had stolen them? |
1318 | What did you do with your money, John? |
1318 | What kind? |
1318 | 3? |
1318 | After all, is not this contract system a regular jobbing business? |
1318 | After he had gone and my room- mate and myself were left alone, about the first question that George asked me was,"How long have you got?" |
1318 | Although in the garb of a felon, was not the vote I received a grand vindication? |
1318 | And what does the State do to put him on his feet or to give him a chance? |
1318 | Are these boys and young men not worth saving? |
1318 | But how can they accomplish this? |
1318 | By the way,"he continued,"are you alive at the present moment after all that you have suffered?" |
1318 | Can he ever be a man among men who has for a time been numbered with the debased of earth? |
1318 | Coming in contact with hardened and vicious criminals, what hope is there for getting these boys into the paths of honesty and uprightness? |
1318 | He then looked at me over the top of his spectacles, and, in a rather doubting manner, said,"and you really have had all these diseases? |
1318 | His next question was,"Are you a sound man?" |
1318 | How can one commit the crime of forgery who can not write? |
1318 | How long were you in prison, and what was your offense?" |
1318 | How was I to secure this? |
1318 | However deplorable the condition of these men while in prison, is it much better when they regain their freedom? |
1318 | I reached out my hand to him, and said:"Charley D----, do n''t you know me? |
1318 | I said to him,"John, tell me how many horses you have stolen during the time you have been engaged in that line of business?" |
1318 | I said,"Bob, is there anything I can do for you? |
1318 | I was never in such a place before, and I said:"George, had I not better get out of this place? |
1318 | If this be the real and true condition of affairs, what can be done to change them? |
1318 | Is it possible for him to be clothed in the garments of respectability who once has been attired in the habiliments of disgrace? |
1318 | Is the penitentiary the proper place to send those youthful offenders? |
1318 | Is there any hope for the ex- convict? |
1318 | Is this boy guilty? |
1318 | Now what does he mean by that?" |
1318 | Reader, did God listen to the wails of that poor heart- stricken prisoner? |
1318 | Reader, how would you like to dine in this condition? |
1318 | Reader, is it not a sad thought that these four young men, brothers, should spend ten of the best years of their lives in a prison? |
1318 | Reader, what do you suppose was the object this convict had in view in thus feigning death? |
1318 | Reader, what would you have done? |
1318 | Reynolds, is this you?" |
1318 | The main question is: Was he in the penitentiary? |
1318 | The question:"What shall I do in the future?" |
1318 | This farmer, like all the rest, put the question,"For whom did you last work?" |
1318 | We have controlled them, and have maintained a discipline second to none in the country, How did we accomplish this? |
1318 | What can be done to lessen this fearful increase of crime? |
1318 | What can be done to snatch them from a career of crime, and to save them from becoming miserable wrecks? |
1318 | What can they accomplish in so short a time? |
1318 | What could I do with five dollars, in the way of assisting me in getting another financial foot- hold in life? |
1318 | What did he hope to gain thereby? |
1318 | What else could I do? |
1318 | What frail mortal of passing time would dare lift up his hand and say, this poor wanderer is forgotten of his God? |
1318 | What was your life''s mission? |
1318 | What, then, are the remedies, as far as the prison system is concerned? |
1318 | Who can say these boys are vicious and hardened criminals? |
1318 | Who of us dare excommunicate him? |
1318 | Who was the monster that had committed this terrible and atrocious act? |
1318 | Who will employ a convict? |
1318 | Who will give him work to do? |
1318 | Who will lend him a helping hand in his struggle to regain a foothold in the outside world? |
1318 | Why are they so docile? |
1318 | Why is it they do not make a rush for liberty whenever an opportunity presents itself? |
1318 | Why was it that I was the only one sent to the penitentiary when there was the secretary, treasurer, and six directors equally as guilty as myself? |
1318 | Why was this? |
1318 | Will you do this for me? |
1318 | Would it not be better to give these boys a term in the county jails, or in some reformatory, instead of sending them to a penitentiary? |
1318 | You would decline his services, and who could blame you? |
1318 | Young man, as you read the history of this convict, can you not persuade yourself to let whisky and cards alone for the future? |
1318 | Young man, as you read this, had you not better make up your mind to go rather slow in pouring whisky down your throat in future? |
1318 | and who am I, anyway?" |
1318 | did you ever behold such a sight? |
1318 | is such a human being entitled to the endearing term?) |
26522 | And the eunuch said, See, here is water: what doth hinder me to be baptized? 26522 He that spared not His own Son, but delivered Him up for us all, how shall He not with Him also freely give us all things?" |
26522 | How do you live? |
26522 | Know ye not that so many of us as were baptized into Jesus Christ were baptized into His death? 26522 Said I not unto thee, that, if thou wouldest believe, thou shouldest see the glory of God?" |
26522 | Shall not the judge of all the earth do right? |
26522 | The Lord Jesus,she said,"has given His last drop of blood for me, and should I not give Him this hundred pounds?" |
26522 | What do you gain by it? |
26522 | Who pays you for this? |
26522 | Why do you hold meetings? |
26522 | Will not the best way of replying to this question be to let him speak for himself? 26522 You? |
26522 | ( 2)_ How do such come into office?__ Ans._ By the appointment of the Holy Ghost, Acts xx. |
26522 | ( 4)_ Is it incumbent upon the saints to acknowledge such and to submit to them in the Lord?__ Ans._ Yes. |
26522 | 13, 14, encourage us to ask with all boldness, for ourselves and others, both temporal and spiritual blessings? |
26522 | And if this were God''s work, was He not bound to care for His own work? |
26522 | And was not all this deliberately planned and carried on for His own glory? |
26522 | And what is love? |
26522 | And what is_ cross_-bearing? |
26522 | And why was it not burnt? |
26522 | And would He suffer His own glory to be dimmed? |
26522 | At last we reach the_ turning- point_ in the psalm: he asks as he reviews former experiences, WHERE IS THE DIFFERENCE? |
26522 | But here is the Spirit''s own inspired utterance, and, if the praying be moulded on the model of His teaching, how can we go astray? |
26522 | Can the rod lift itself, or the saw move itself, or the hammer deal its own blow, or the sword make its own thrust? |
26522 | Could God ever dishonour such trust? |
26522 | Could not something be done to meet the temporal and spiritual wants of this class of very poor children? |
26522 | Dear reader, do you know the living God? |
26522 | Did not that ornament in the Lord''s sight appear as of great price? |
26522 | For example, what have we found to be the initial step and stage in George Muller''s spiritual history? |
26522 | For in the time of temptation, I have been repeatedly led to say: Should I thus sin? |
26522 | He expected them, for if there were no crises and critical emergencies how could there be critical deliverances? |
26522 | He had often sought God and been heard and helped, and why not now? |
26522 | How can I get over the plain word of the Lord, which is to the contrary, even if the first four points could be satisfactorily settled? |
26522 | How can such use of God''s word fail to help and strengthen spiritual life? |
26522 | How did Christ come to the cross? |
26522 | IS THE CHANGE IN GOD OR IN ME? |
26522 | Is He, in Jesus, your Father? |
26522 | Is it not rather His will that my means should be spent in another way? |
26522 | Is it possible that there are any modern disciples who"reject the commandment of God that they may keep their own tradition"? |
26522 | Is it really a good cause in which I am called upon to become surety? |
26522 | Meanwhile how could three hundred children, some of them very young and tender, be kept warm? |
26522 | That many enemies would laugh, were the Lord to withhold supplies, and say, did we not foretell that this enthusiasm would come to nothing? |
26522 | The evening that he arrived he said, What opportunity is there here for services for the Lord? |
26522 | These were_ His_ orphans, for had He not declared Himself the Father of the fatherless? |
26522 | Those suggestive words of Christ to Nathanael have often prompted like larger expectations:"Believest thou? |
26522 | Was it God''s wings that folded over him, after all his vain flight away from the true nest where the divine Eagle flutters over His young? |
26522 | Was it not this very passage in this inspired book that suggested, perhaps, the name of this journal:_"The Lord''s dealings with George Muller"_? |
26522 | Was not the work, with its vast correspondence and responsibility, already sufficiently great? |
26522 | What is the conclusion, the practical lesson? |
26522 | What medium or channel of approach could so insure in the praying soul both an acceptable frame and language taught of the Holy Spirit? |
26522 | What obliges the person, who wishes me to become surety for him, to need a surety? |
26522 | When, one day, over four pounds came in, the thought occurred to Mr. Muller,"Why not lay aside three pounds against the coming need?" |
26522 | Who can read the story of that score of years and yet talk of piety as the product of evolution? |
26522 | Why should it be so often said, and sometimes with a measure of ground, or even much ground:"Believers are bad servants, bad tradesmen, bad masters"? |
26522 | Would God''s goodness and mercy fail? |
26522 | Would he be going''beyond his measure,''spiritually, or naturally? |
26522 | Yet for man''s sake what did he do? |
17917 | And do you know what, bogus is? |
17917 | And he talked about me, did he? |
17917 | Are you certain of that? |
17917 | Green, how often have you seen him,continued the colonel,"and where, since you have been in the city? |
17917 | Green,said she,"has old Cunningham been about here to- day?" |
17917 | Halloo,said I,"what upon earth have you here?" |
17917 | He did not manifest such a determination, did he, when you met him? |
17917 | He told you, he never had any dealings with me? 17917 I should like to see the widow,"said I;"will you introduce me?" |
17917 | I suppose, then, colonel,said I,"he intends furnishing you with bail, does he not?" |
17917 | To whom have you paid your dues? 17917 Well,"said he,"what have you done then with those five one- hundred- dollar notes given you by one of the assistant attorneys of my brother?" |
17917 | What evidence have you that such are the facts? |
17917 | What have you had taken? |
17917 | What have you here? |
17917 | What,said he,"bogus?" |
17917 | Where had I been all night, and what had detained me from my meals the day before? |
17917 | Where were you initiated? 17917 Who lives here?" |
17917 | Who will you sue? |
17917 | Why? |
17917 | A drunkard could not drink without disturbing other people-- why not make his a Penitentiary offence? |
17917 | Again he interrogated me:"Do you not recollect him?" |
17917 | Also, do you not recollect his telling about their lynching him; about the cords cutting his arms? |
17917 | Also, is this not, I ask, the trick of a perfect black- leg? |
17917 | And why did punishment and penitentiaries do so little in their reformation? |
17917 | And why? |
17917 | At about twelve o''clock, one of the company said,"Well, boys, now is the time; what are we here for?" |
17917 | At the conclusion of the meeting, upon Mr. Freeman submitting to the audience the question--"Have I sustained my position?" |
17917 | But could this make the gambler an honest man, because other men were rogues? |
17917 | But if justice be the end of the law, why should the communications of a prisoner to his counsel be held sacred? |
17917 | Can it be possible that any person will be found to patronize lotteries, after considering these facts? |
17917 | Can you not assist me in my wretchedness?" |
17917 | Did I not commence at Huntsville, in the year 1832, and trace him to November, 1835, at the mouth of the Ohio, with the Texas troops? |
17917 | Did he not say he cut the entrails out to prevent their rising? |
17917 | Did not Wyatt confess in his presence the murder of individuals besides Tucker, on the Mississippi? |
17917 | Do you not recollect that you and myself talked the same over at your house? |
17917 | Do you not recollect when I talked about the Tucker, or flat- boat murder, he told how they cut out the entrails, to prevent the body from rising? |
17917 | Freeman?" |
17917 | Green''s_ lecture, not mine, and why? |
17917 | Having known how some of these prizes have sometimes been obtained, will it be too much to suppose that others are obtained in like manner? |
17917 | He had bought on credit; would his pitiful story satisfy his creditors? |
17917 | He inquired if I had heard any news, or seen any of the Lawrenceburgh citizens; and if so, had his name been mentioned? |
17917 | He laughed, and said he was the guilty one, or something amounting to the same? |
17917 | He then wished to know, who had spoken evil of him? |
17917 | He was asked,"Is it a fact, that he is dead?" |
17917 | How could it be otherwise? |
17917 | How many combinations of 3 numbers can be taken out of 40 numbers? |
17917 | How many combinations of 3 numbers can be taken out of 60 numbers? |
17917 | How many combinations of 3 numbers can be taken out of 70 numbers? |
17917 | How many combinations of 3 numbers can be taken out of 78 numbers? |
17917 | How should a part be missing and not the whole? |
17917 | I asked him how he meant to go? |
17917 | I asked him if he ever knew one by the name of Green? |
17917 | I asked him if he knew many gamblers? |
17917 | I asked him if he was intimate with Green? |
17917 | I asked his name? |
17917 | I asked if I favoured him? |
17917 | I then asked him, what else they had laid to my charge? |
17917 | I took this opportunity to ask Cunningham, what title this society had assumed; whether they were Masons or Odd Fellows? |
17917 | If gambling was right-- why, Mr. Green would ask-- did the former speaker persuade young men not to come into gambling- houses? |
17917 | If the case be undefensible otherwise, why should it be defended, unless it be to give a fee to the lawyer, at the expense of justice? |
17917 | In behalf of our Maker, in behalf of humanity, in behalf of all that is noble and virtuous, I beseech you to TURN,_ why will ye die_? |
17917 | In reply, I asked the colonel"Why they should accuse me of acting so base a part?" |
17917 | Intoxication, brought on by the ill- starred luck of the ruined gamester? |
17917 | It is an ancient order, of a religious(?) |
17917 | It may be asked why I did not make this revelation before, as far as I had knowledge, or what is the occasion of the present exposition? |
17917 | Now how was the ruin of this once respectable family accomplished? |
17917 | Now, I should like to know Mr. Green''s motive for calling a_ debate_ a_ lecture_? |
17917 | Now, let me ask, where are their 30,316 prizes to come from? |
17917 | Poor fellow, what can he do? |
17917 | Seeing me, he turned back and said, as I passed out to meet him,"Well, Green, what do you think of the widow?" |
17917 | The Grand Master, or Grand as he is called, then asks the following questions:"How long have you been a member? |
17917 | The silence was broken by the child, who stood rocking the cradle, and who said,"This is a bad place, ai n''t it, Ma? |
17917 | Then, what guaranty have we that the numbers entitled to the above pitiful prizes were sold? |
17917 | Were they formed in good policy or not? |
17917 | Were they merely drawn along by the contagion of ill- example, or were there more potent influences at work in their destruction? |
17917 | What could he do? |
17917 | What destroyed_ Charles James Fox_, as a statesman? |
17917 | What did you think of that?" |
17917 | When the young man is ruined, what do the gamblers do for him? |
17917 | Why did the fate of the elder not deter the younger from crime? |
17917 | Why did you not object to them before? |
17917 | Why did you not tell me so before they were published? |
17917 | Why has not Mr. Morrill published, together with his contradiction, my reply to his note of July 10th? |
17917 | Why not call things by their right names? |
17917 | Why should he live a curse to the earth-- a destroyer of his kind-- a blot upon creation-- a dishonour to his Maker? |
17917 | Why should they become my enemies? |
17917 | Would it not be better to take the upper part of the Museum building? |
17917 | Would the world know who this man is? |
17917 | Would you believe it, sir? |
17917 | Wyatt asked me if they permitted such men to vote? |
17917 | You heard that Madam Brown had lost a certain package of papers, letters, or the like, did you not?" |
17917 | You say, colonel, then, I actually met him yesterday?" |
17917 | _ Gambling!_ What brought the brilliant_ Sheridan_ to the grave? |
17917 | _ Moderator._ Are there any gentlemen here who are dissatisfied with the decision? |
17917 | _ Voice._ Were not the lectures given by Mr. Green? |
17917 | and well may it be asked, whom has it ever made more diligent in business, more contented, and respectable, and happy? |
45640 | But if he enriches the English language? |
45640 | Ca n''t you hear the beggars? |
45640 | Did n''t I see you go upstairs at noon? |
45640 | Did you meet a gentleman on your way? |
45640 | Do n''t you? |
45640 | I did,said I;"and what of that?" |
45640 | Is that all the stock you have? |
45640 | Look here,said he,"do you mean to tell me that you are looking for work?" |
45640 | Now,said Curly Jack, as we were leaving--"now, are you satisfied? |
45640 | There,said he, with deep disgust;"do you call these men good beggars? |
45640 | What difference can they make? |
45640 | What do you want me to write about? |
45640 | What have you got to do with the light? |
45640 | What luck, Jack? |
45640 | What were you selling? |
45640 | What''s the matter? |
45640 | What''s the matter? |
45640 | Where''s Brum? |
45640 | Whose teapot is this? |
45640 | Why do n''t you go to bed? |
45640 | Will you give me sixpence for it? |
45640 | Will you write me a letter? |
45640 | ''Are you sure that you can walk there without assistance?'' |
45640 | ''How far are you going?'' |
45640 | After he had sufficiently recovered his breath he looked towards me and said:''Are you hurt, my poor man?'' |
45640 | Again, what led his feet direct to that room-- one of a hundred-- and whispered in his ear,"This is his bed"? |
45640 | All eyes turned towards him, and who do you think Algernon Dudley was? |
45640 | And if a man is not to believe both eyes and ears, then what is he to believe?" |
45640 | And what do you think this Cockney had the impudence to say to Brum? |
45640 | As I was about to leave, she said:"Would you like to have something to eat?" |
45640 | Being curious to know what was around this bend, I advanced, and what do you think I saw? |
45640 | Did I know it now? |
45640 | Did n''t I see you this morning holding the skipping- rope for some girls?" |
45640 | Did you pick it up?" |
45640 | For all that we can not allow this poor wretch to suffer; but what, in the name of goodness, can we do? |
45640 | For instance, one day a poor simple fellow asked the following question:"Is it right to post a letter to- day that was written yesterday?" |
45640 | He speaks familiarly to all men that approach, and some of them say,"Going to have one?" |
45640 | His companions laugh heartily at this, to imagine the Kid at work, and Philadelphia Baldy enquires philosophically,"What is work, boys?" |
45640 | I thought you were going home?" |
45640 | If I do, what for? |
45640 | If we give him twenty pounds, what will he do with it? |
45640 | In the first place, why should they mark houses? |
45640 | It was near seven o''clock in the evening when he came into the kitchen for the fifth time and cried--"Is Algernon Dudley here?" |
45640 | Many an honest man has fits, the rivers give up a number of suicides, and with regard to the child losing money-- was there ever a child that did not? |
45640 | More chicken?" |
45640 | Now it so happened that a few moments later this man was pouring out tea, when all at once there was a loud cry of"Whose herring is this?" |
45640 | Now, what could a man do against these blind, desperate young bullies? |
45640 | Now, what do you think of that? |
45640 | Now, what happens to shame this true beggar, and to spoil him in the act of earning a livelihood? |
45640 | Seeing nothing unusual in this, I said,"What''s the matter?" |
45640 | The Irishman had scarcely opened his mouth when the man that answered the door shouted,"What, you big, able- bodied rascal? |
45640 | The clerk got the letter and, glancing at the envelope, made his usual enquiry,"Your Christian name?" |
45640 | Then I question myself--"Shall I get up? |
45640 | Then I sleep again and wake the second time, and ask this question again--"Shall I get up?" |
45640 | Then what wonder that such a man should become an eyesore to all classes of men? |
45640 | Therefore, if his thought had been truly expressed, it would have been,"Who are you?" |
45640 | Therefore, when he returned and Tim asked,"What luck, Pat?" |
45640 | What chance has a beggar, be he ever so good, against these people? |
45640 | What did Chicago Fatty do when he visited Liverpool on a cattle- boat? |
45640 | What is it? |
45640 | What must have been this man''s thoughts, who had only just left a good home? |
45640 | What was Johnson''s opinion of the town? |
45640 | When I met a man the other day in Fleet Street, I touched him lightly on the shoulder and said,"Have a drink?" |
45640 | When a beggar asks another if a certain town is good, the former is asked,"What is your lay?" |
45640 | Who could insult this man with a common penny? |
45640 | Who has not seen them? |
45640 | Why do n''t you return to begging?" |
45640 | Will he open a fish shop or buy a milk round? |
45640 | he cried in amazement;"what: not in the cooler?" |
45640 | he shouted;"did n''t I see you playing ball with the children all day yesterday, only a few yards from here? |
45640 | he shouted;"did n''t I tell you to cover that light?" |
45640 | mate; what''s yer luck?" |
45640 | or,"It depends on your lay"; meaning:"What do you do-- sell, sing, or go in for downright begging?" |
45640 | what are you doing here? |
17762 | And the girl,asked Manning,"what became of her?" |
17762 | Are you quite sure about that? |
17762 | Are you sure about this? |
17762 | Ca n''t you introduce me? |
17762 | Can I do anything for you this morning? |
17762 | Can you describe him? |
17762 | Can you tell me the name of this hackman? |
17762 | Can you tell the spot where you disposed of this sack? |
17762 | Did Mr. Pearson recognize you on that occasion? |
17762 | Did Mr. Pearson tell you who he was, or explain his presence there at that time? |
17762 | Did he mention any particular point on the railroad that he wanted a ticket for? |
17762 | Did he say what he intended doing there, or whether he was going on out to Denver? |
17762 | Did he say who assisted him in this robbery? |
17762 | Did her husband go away, too? |
17762 | Did his wife go with him? |
17762 | Do the people in the house know where he is? |
17762 | Do you feel confident that you would be able to identify him, if you were to see him again? |
17762 | Do you know Tod? |
17762 | Do you know her? |
17762 | Do you know whether he is in town now? |
17762 | Do you know which way he was going? |
17762 | Do you know which way he went? |
17762 | Do you know who the man was that he went away with? |
17762 | Do you think these stage robbers, as a rule, are disposed to kill anybody? |
17762 | Does she think they have anything to do with her? |
17762 | Ever had any adventure with them yourself? |
17762 | Excuse me,interrupted the detective,"but were you present at the time the robbery occurred?" |
17762 | Has he been here recently? |
17762 | Have they separated? |
17762 | Have you any idea where he was going? |
17762 | Have you any idea which way he went? |
17762 | Have you ever been bothered with robbers or highwaymen along this route? |
17762 | Have you had breakfast, sir? 17762 Have you said anything to Mr. Pearson about this?" |
17762 | He appeared to be doubtful, and simply said,''Is that so?'' |
17762 | How did you extricate yourself from this dilemma? |
17762 | How long did Duncan remain in town at that time? |
17762 | How long did he stay here? |
17762 | How much money did Duncan have at that time? |
17762 | How so? |
17762 | I may say, however, that the man we came for was William R. Amos; do you know anything about such a person? |
17762 | In what respect? |
17762 | Is Edwards stopping here now? |
17762 | Is Mr. Edwards residing with you? |
17762 | Let us hear it, wo n''t you? |
17762 | May I ask who you were waiting to meet? |
17762 | Mr. Pearson,inquired the detective, after the young man had concluded,"do you remember having seen either of those men before?" |
17762 | Now tell us how much money you took from the bank, and how it was divided? |
17762 | Now, what do you desire first? |
17762 | Surely, you have no reference to my friend, Newton Edwards? |
17762 | That''s the case with most of you, is n''t it? |
17762 | That''s very strange, is n''t it? |
17762 | Well, has he been here within two weeks? |
17762 | Well, he was on quite a spree, I believe-- and so he went to Des Moines, did he? |
17762 | Well, sir, what can I do for you to- day? |
17762 | What became of the other two? |
17762 | What do you mean? |
17762 | What do you mean? |
17762 | What do you mean? |
17762 | What do you think of this? |
17762 | What has become of the young lady? |
17762 | What is it? |
17762 | What kind of a suit did he get? |
17762 | What makes you think so? |
17762 | What makes you think so? |
17762 | What would you have done if they had made the attempt? |
17762 | What''s his first name-- Bob? |
17762 | When did you see them together again? |
17762 | Where are we going? |
17762 | Where did you and Duncan separate after the robbery? |
17762 | Where is Mr. Duncan now, do you know? |
17762 | Which one of the men attacked you? |
17762 | Who have you got? |
17762 | Who was this man whom you procured to help you? |
17762 | Why should he seek to conceal this? |
17762 | Will you be kind enough to inform me,said Robert, when this was completed,"how you come to have so much money about you?" |
17762 | Would you object to giving me a small piece of it as a sample? 17762 Would you object to telling me what they are?" |
17762 | You are making an early start, I see; are you busy? |
17762 | You are quite sure about this? |
17762 | 1 50 How Could He Help it? |
17762 | After he had finished, William inquired:"Was there no other sack or sacks than those you have mentioned as being in the valise when you threw it away? |
17762 | After he had finished, he turned to me, and laughingly said:"''The devil himself would n''t know me in this rig, would he?'' |
17762 | After sitting quietly smoking for a few moments, he turned to Robert and asked:"Mr. Pinkerton, how did you discover that I was in McDonald?" |
17762 | At length he turned to Robert and asked:"Will I be able to escape if I tell what I know?" |
17762 | But we are looking for a young man who was here a few days ago, and perhaps you can help us?" |
17762 | Can we go somewhere where we will not be interrupted?" |
17762 | Could it be possible that the honest- faced miner had played him false, and designedly thrown him off the scent? |
17762 | Did you not dispose of some before you parted with the satchel? |
17762 | Do you know anything about him?" |
17762 | Gross?" |
17762 | Has Mary Crilly captivated your senses?" |
17762 | I suppose your fire department here is composed entirely of volunteers?" |
17762 | Kimball$ 1 75 Beatrice Cenci-- From the Italian 1 50 Was He Successful? |
17762 | Mechanically Duncan did as he was directed, and then turning to Manning, he inquired in a low, suppressed tone:"What do you want me for?" |
17762 | Might not the saloon- keeper at Bozeman have given him the proper direction of Duncan''s flight toward the Yellowstone park? |
17762 | Stepping quietly up to the young man, the detective said, carelessly:"Your name is Bob King, I believe?" |
17762 | The face of the little tailor was again wreathed in smiles, as he delightedly inquired:"Do you mean Duncan, the traveling man from Des Moines?" |
17762 | The others had now come forward, and as soon as he could recover from his astonishment, the old farmer cried out:"What does this mean?" |
17762 | Where was he now? |
17762 | Why, what''s the matter?" |
17762 | and was he not now miles away from all pursuit, and perhaps by this time fully aware that he was being followed? |
17762 | exclaimed Mr. Silby, starting to his feet, and with a tremor in his voice, which told of inward agitation;"you do not mean that you suspect Eugene?" |
17762 | said the lady,"this gentleman, I think, was in the same business, and perhaps he may be the one you knew?" |
22148 | 1, The first thing which the believer, who is in such difficulties, has to ask himself is, Am I in a calling in which I can abide with God? |
22148 | 30, 31, it is written:"Sirs, what must I do to be saved? |
22148 | And do you really lean upon me, the living God, in your service here? |
22148 | And how should our Father do otherwise? |
22148 | And since He has not, is it not a plain indication that, for the present, I should remain a journeyman,( or shopman, or clerk, as the case may be)?" |
22148 | And what was it that gave me peace? |
22148 | And who at present belonged to our number? |
22148 | And why? |
22148 | Are the things of God, the honour of His name, the welfare of His Church, the conversion of sinners, and the profit of your own soul, your chief aim? |
22148 | But if we do not believe that God will help us, could we be at peace? |
22148 | But is this indeed the spirit in which the children of God generally are engaged in their calling? |
22148 | But perhaps it may be stated: Why do you not take the bread on credit? |
22148 | But what did the Lord do? |
22148 | But what is the right way of looking at the matter? |
22148 | But what was the result? |
22148 | By what passages, then, for instance, may I make out that I am a child of God, or born again? |
22148 | Dear Reader, does your soul long to be rich towards God, to lay up treasures in heaven? |
22148 | Dear reader, do you know the living God? |
22148 | Do I depend upon Him alone for the salvation of my soul? |
22148 | Do I expect forgiveness for my sins on account of living a better life in future? |
22148 | Do I take Him to be the one whom God declares Him to be, i. e. His beloved Son in whom He is well pleased? |
22148 | Do I trust in my own exertions for salvation? |
22148 | Do you make it your primary business, your first great concern to seek the kingdom of God and His righteousness? |
22148 | Have I to wait till I feel that they are forgiven, before I may take comfort concerning this matter? |
22148 | How are the means to come? |
22148 | How are we justified, or constituted just ones, before God? |
22148 | How can I get over the plain word of the Lord, which is to the contrary, even if the first four points could be satisfactorily settled? |
22148 | How may I know that I am one of the elect? |
22148 | How may I know that I shall be saved? |
22148 | How may I know that my sins are forgiven? |
22148 | How may the case be altered for the better? |
22148 | How shall I do when sickness befalls my family, or when other trials productive of expense come upon me, if I do not make provision for such seasons? |
22148 | How will the offerings come in? |
22148 | If the latter be the case, then, though you may have all the necessaries of life, yet could you be surprised if you had them not? |
22148 | Is He, in Jesus, your Father? |
22148 | Is it not rather His will that my means should be spent in another way? |
22148 | Is it really a good cause in which I am called upon to become surety? |
22148 | It might also be said by a brother whose earnings are small, should I also give according to my earnings? |
22148 | Need such parents despair? |
22148 | Now what is the food for the inner man? |
22148 | Now, suppose our expenses are week after week, 30l., 40l., 50l., or 60l.? |
22148 | Or does your business, or your family, or your own temporal concerns, in some shape or other primarily occupy your attention? |
22148 | Or, do I depend only upon this, that Jesus died upon the cross to save sinners-- and that Jesus fulfilled the law of God to make sinners righteous? |
22148 | Or, must I wait till I have in some powerful way a portion of the word of God applied to my mind, to assure me of it? |
22148 | The last words of which I spoke were:"Said I not unto thee, that, if thou wouldest believe, thou shouldest see the glory of God?" |
22148 | The point is simply this: Do I confess with my mouth the Lord Jesus? |
22148 | The question here again is simply this, Have I received the Lord Jesus, i.e., Do I believe in His name? |
22148 | The question here again is: Do I believe in the Lord Jesus? |
22148 | The question may be asked even now,"Are these the only labourers?" |
22148 | The question therefore simply is this: Do I believe in the Lord Jesus? |
22148 | The questions therefore to be put to ourselves are simply these: Do I walk in utter carelessness? |
22148 | The tenth part, or the fifth part, or the third part, or one- half, or more? |
22148 | Under other circumstances the question would have naturally arisen in my mind, And what will you do for support, if the boxes are removed? |
22148 | What does it matter, whether you pay immediately for it, or at the end of the month, or the quarter, or the half- year? |
22148 | What is now to be done? |
22148 | What is to be done in such a case? |
22148 | What obliges the person who wishes me to become surety for him, to need a surety? |
22148 | What shall we do now? |
22148 | What then is to be done? |
22148 | Where should the heart of the disciple of the Lord Jesus be, but in heaven? |
22148 | Why am I engaged in this trade or profession? |
22148 | Why does this post- office- order not come a few days sooner or later? |
22148 | Why should it be so often said, and sometimes with a measure of ground, or even much ground:"Believers are bad servants, bad tradesmen, bad masters?" |
22148 | Will any come in? |
22148 | Will it be the least particle of uneasiness to their minds, or will their children be the worse for it? |
22148 | Yet do all the children of God give even the tenth part of what the Lord gives them? |
22148 | You ask, How may I, a true believer, have my faith strengthened? |
22148 | or, What shall we drink? |
22148 | or, Wherewithal shall we be clothed? |
22148 | what would become of us and our wives and children? |
6868 | Mrs. C. then will you? |
6868 | Will some one start the tune? 6868 Will you let me see your book?" |
6868 | As he spends his evenings in our homes, those evenings that would otherwise be very dreary, what will the home do for him? |
6868 | As the president asked,"Is there any objection to the minutes?" |
6868 | Dear, young ladies, will you not give to the temperance cause a little of the time which sometimes hangs heavily on your hands? |
6868 | For years women had asked, as Paul had asked,"Lord, what wilt thou have me to do?" |
6868 | Here, the sadness, the weariness, the discouragement, the"Why, Lord?" |
6868 | Mrs. C. looked around, waited a minute, and then asked,"Is it common or long meter?" |
6868 | Mrs. C. will you?" |
6868 | Paul- like, before God, and asks:"Lord, what wilt Thou have_ me_ to do?" |
6868 | Q-- How shall we raise money for our work? |
6868 | Q.--Can ladies be received into our society without signing the pledge? |
6868 | Q.--How shall we distribute Literature? |
6868 | Q.--How shall we help in Scott Act work? |
6868 | Q.--Shall accounts be paid without the sanction of the Union? |
6868 | Q.--Should the executive of a local Union arrange and finally decide matters without consulting the Union? |
6868 | Q.--What is done with the money? |
6868 | Q.--When scientific temperance instruction is introduced into the public schools, what remains for the committee on that subject to do? |
6868 | Q.--Why should it exist? |
6868 | Q.--Why should our Union be auxiliary to the Provincial Union? |
6868 | Taking a hymn book, she asked,"What had we better sing, Mrs. B., have you any choice?" |
6868 | Then three more strolled in leisurely, one saying,"Oh, Mrs. A., is this meeting at three or half past? |
6868 | We are going to have some readings from Dickens and we need your help; you will join, wo n''t you?" |
6868 | What shall our influence be upon them? |
6868 | When His ringers guide to the mark, what can the arrow do but fulfil its mission? |
6868 | Will you not consecrate to its service a portion of the talent with which God has endowed you? |
6868 | Will you not help us with your means? |
6868 | _ Was it all a dream?_ A DREAM. |
6868 | _ Was this, too, only a dream?_ CHAPTER XI. |
6868 | _ nobody_ here? |
6868 | and"How?" |
20245 | Are your bankers still Messrs. Stuckey and Co. of Bristol, and are their hankers still Messrs. Robarts and Co. of London? 20245 What is a Christian?" |
20245 | 20 � 23? |
20245 | 3, Am I not undertaking too much for my bodily strength and mental powers, by thinking about another Orphan- House? |
20245 | 4, Am I not going beyond the measure of my faith in thinking about enlarging the work so as to double or treble it? |
20245 | 5, Is not this a delusion of Satan, an attempt to cast me down altogether from my sphere of usefulness, by making me go beyond my measure? |
20245 | 6, Is it not also, perhaps, a snare to puff me up, by attempting to build a very large Orphan- House? |
20245 | And how did we get them? |
20245 | And what provision is there in the way of Orphan establishments, it may be asked? |
20245 | And why not? |
20245 | Are not ten pounds, thus received out of the hands of our Heavenly Father, as the result of faith in God, most precious? |
20245 | Are you prepared for eternity? |
20245 | But how does it work, when we thus anticipate God, by going our own way? |
20245 | But what was to be done under these circumstances? |
20245 | But why not, you may say, dear reader? |
20245 | Could it be otherwise? |
20245 | Do I serve God for nought? |
20245 | Do you not also see again the hand of God so manifestly stretched out on our behalf this day Dec. 9th? |
20245 | Do you not discern His hand, dear reader, in this instance? |
20245 | Do you not find it a trying life, and are you not tired of it?" |
20245 | Do you not perceive that my fellow- labourers and myself do not wait upon the Lord in vain? |
20245 | Do you not see how precious it is to have God to go to, and to find Him ever willing to help those who trust in Him, wherever they be? |
20245 | Do you not see that it is not in vain, to make known our requests to the Lord, and to come to Him for everything? |
20245 | Do you really believe in Jesus? |
20245 | Do you verily depend upon Him alone for the salvation of your soul? |
20245 | Does He not, however, tell me by all this: Go forward, my servant, and I will help thee? |
20245 | Does it, or does it not? |
20245 | Does not the Lord tell me by this, that He will provide another home for Orphans? |
20245 | Does the Lord love you less than He loves us? |
20245 | Does your heart praise the Lord for His goodness to us? |
20245 | Esteemed reader, what do you think of this? |
20245 | Had I other friends, from whom to expect the large sum which will be needed to accomplish this? |
20245 | Have I then been boasting in God in vain? |
20245 | He then said:"Who has allowed you to distribute these books?" |
20245 | How can Thy servant know Thy will in this matter? |
20245 | How long we may have the opportunity to work for the Lord, who can tell? |
20245 | How then could I be tired of carrying on the work of God on such principles as I do? |
20245 | How, then, could it be otherwise, but that sooner or later there should come showers of blessing? |
20245 | Is it not a pleasant thing, in the end, even for this life, really to trust in God? |
20245 | Is it not a privilege to be allowed to obtain future good out of present expending? |
20245 | Is it not an honour to help such brethren? |
20245 | Is it not like"tempting God,"to think of building another Orphan- House for seven hundred more orphans? |
20245 | Is it not manifest how precious it is to carry on God''s work in this way, even with regard to the obtaining of means? |
20245 | Is it not manifest that it is most precious, in every way, to depend upon God? |
20245 | Is it not, dear reader, a precious thing to trust in the Lord? |
20245 | Is not human reason confounded by such instances? |
20245 | Is not the hand of God most manifest in such cases? |
20245 | Is not this a plain proof that God is both able and willing to help simply in answer to prayer? |
20245 | May I not well trust in the Lord, for what is yet needed for the Building Fund? |
20245 | May you not do, what we do, under your trials? |
20245 | My dear Christian reader, will you not try this way? |
20245 | Now, dear reader, did the Lord help this time also? |
20245 | Now, looking at it naturally, where is this great sum to come from? |
20245 | Or are we better than you? |
20245 | Or, when unbelief said, How will you be able to support a thousand Orphans? |
20245 | Perhaps the reader may ask: What has been the result of this labour in Germany? |
20245 | Some readers may say, And what use was made of the money which was received in this way? |
20245 | Suppose now, you were even to succeed in getting this large Orphan House built, how will you be able to provide for 700 other Orphans? |
20245 | Unbelief, which said, what will you do with so little as 134l.? |
20245 | Well, the Father in heaven said, as it were, by this His dispensation, Art thou willing to give up this child to me? |
20245 | What could I say against this? |
20245 | What is it that I do? |
20245 | When first converted, I should have said, What harm can there be to take some of the money, which has been put by for the Building Fund? |
20245 | Whither shall I send it?" |
20245 | Will not you also seek to trust in Him, and depend on Him alone in all your everyday''s concerns, and in all spiritual matters too? |
20245 | Will she need such ornaments before her Lord? |
20245 | Will she regret having given them for His work? |
20245 | Will she regret the gift now? |
20245 | Will you not do this, my dear brethren in Christ? |
20245 | Will you not have still greater trials of faith? |
20245 | Will you not, dear reader, taste and see that the Lord is good, and that it is a blessed thing to put our trust in Him? |
20245 | Would it not be going beyond my measure naturally with reference to mental and bodily strength? |
20245 | Would not this be going beyond my measure spiritually? |
20245 | [ Do not all these objections only hold good, I said to myself, if I were needlessly to set about building? |
20245 | does your heart admire the hand of God in these instances? |
20245 | for the Orphans, from a distance of 3,000 miles? |
20245 | from this Christian brother at Madras? |
20245 | remain? |
43379 | Are they dead? |
43379 | Bemis-- yes, that''s my name, and you are an officer come for me? |
43379 | But have you another one? 43379 But where is my brother-- where is George?" |
43379 | Did he have any money? |
43379 | Do you want to see our warrant now? |
43379 | Have you got another pistol? |
43379 | Hello, Clarke,was Woodruff''s exclamation,"what are you doing here?" |
43379 | How did you get on? |
43379 | I am dying, do n''t you see? |
43379 | Me? |
43379 | Mean? 43379 My God, what-- what is this? |
43379 | Now, what do you want? |
43379 | Oh, it''s irons you have, is it? |
43379 | Oh, you are? |
43379 | Oh, you do, eh? 43379 Sam Woodruff, do you wish to say anything?" |
43379 | Shall I shoot the s---- of a b----? |
43379 | The next question is, shall he be hanged when taken out? |
43379 | The question before you,rang out the voice of the speaker,"is, shall Musgrove be taken out of jail?" |
43379 | What are you doing here? |
43379 | What do you want? |
43379 | What does it mean? |
43379 | What for? |
43379 | What is wanted? |
43379 | What were your plans? |
43379 | What''s up? |
43379 | Where did he get it? |
43379 | Where did this blood come from? |
43379 | Where is Sanford? |
43379 | Where''s Griswold? |
43379 | Where''s Sanford? |
43379 | Where''s your warrant? |
43379 | Which way did he go? |
43379 | Who are you? |
43379 | Who''s here? |
43379 | Will you pledge your word of honor for yourself and men that you will not touch the keys if I get them? |
43379 | Will you put it down now? |
43379 | Will you stand a raise? |
43379 | With whose permission? |
43379 | Wo n''t you surrender? |
43379 | You ca n''t, eh? |
43379 | Your name Jerome? |
43379 | A charitable society? |
43379 | A moment''s silence, after he had taken his seat, and then Mrs. Hayward said:"Minnie, is that the man?" |
43379 | Ai n''t she dead?" |
43379 | And did they find that contentment of mind which they had hoped would come after getting rid of the corpse of their late friend? |
43379 | Arnold replied:"You know something about the Bloodworth murder committed in Leadville?" |
43379 | But how were the others to be secured? |
43379 | But were they happy? |
43379 | But what of the$ 100,000? |
43379 | But where to find him? |
43379 | But where was the man who had wronged her? |
43379 | But whither had they gone? |
43379 | Detective Smith:"Judge, wo n''t you order the sheriff to arrest him till we take out the necessary papers?" |
43379 | Did n''t I tell you if you did n''t get out of this country, and keep out, I would overtake you? |
43379 | Do n''t you see he''s got the drop on us? |
43379 | Do you understand?" |
43379 | Eyeing Mr. Smith for a few minutes, he said:"Ai n''t your name William Johnson?" |
43379 | Foulk sang out in a rage,"What do you want?" |
43379 | Guess, old man, you''re a little off, ai n''t you? |
43379 | Have n''t I been as good as my word? |
43379 | He always does, does n''t he?" |
43379 | He then asked the barkeeper:"Did you ever kill a man?" |
43379 | In response to a sally from him came the cheerful proposition from Duggan to Franklin:"Let''s plant the d-- d old snoozer-- what d''ye say?" |
43379 | Laying hand upon the shoulder of the prisoner, Boyd said:"Well, Woodruff, what can I do for you?" |
43379 | Lightly they''ll talk of the deed that is done, And wonder,"Who was it that hung him?" |
43379 | May I say my prayers?" |
43379 | Now, ca n''t you promise to help him to get out of here, or something of the sort, and persuade him to tell us where to find the treasure? |
43379 | Receiving no reply he turned to the horrified bride and asked:"Are you this man''s wife?" |
43379 | Redfield went to the door and asked,"Who''s there?" |
43379 | Saeger?" |
43379 | She asked:''Where are they?'' |
43379 | Some one hallooed to Musgrove and inquired:"Where are the rest of your gang?" |
43379 | Strange, is n''t it, how all these scoundrels meet their just deserts? |
43379 | The rope with which O''Neal was hanged-- where did that come from? |
43379 | Then Boyd said:"Is that all I can do for you, Sam?" |
43379 | There was a momentary silence, when Cook, addressing Johnson, said:"You surrender, do you?" |
43379 | To whom should this work be entrusted? |
43379 | Turning to the man whom he was told was the party sought, he asked:"Are you the proprietor?" |
43379 | Wall said as we approached,''What have I done?'' |
43379 | What could better serve to show the complete system upon which the Rocky Mountain Detective Association is organized? |
43379 | What d''you take us for? |
43379 | What does it mean?" |
43379 | What shall we do with him? |
43379 | What sort of a game are you giving us? |
43379 | Where are you taking me?" |
43379 | Where''s my gun? |
43379 | While he was examining the bodies the coroner was hailed by the vigilantes with:"What are you doing?" |
43379 | While on their way to this point they met two men, one of whom said to the other as they passed:"What do these s-- s of b-- s of officers want? |
43379 | While there a man entered the office, and walking to Bernheim, said loudly:"How is wife number two?" |
43379 | Who knows? |
43379 | do n''t you remember what I did for you once?" |
56112 | And you want me to tell the story? |
56112 | Anton,I said,"how would you like to take a steamer and go on the lake with me to see the World''s Fair from the water?" |
56112 | But what of yourself? |
56112 | Did you ever make a full statement in court? |
56112 | Do you know Wilson? |
56112 | Do_ you_ know Wilson? |
56112 | Have any of your''habituals''permanently reformed? |
56112 | Shall I ever forget Jean Valjean, the galley slave; or Cosette? 56112 So the straight story never came out at any of the trials?" |
56112 | Tell me,I said,"what is your thought of heaven, now that it is so near? |
56112 | When I read that,said Alfred,"I stopped and asked myself:''Have I been living for the good of all?'' |
56112 | Will the governor grant or refuse my petition? |
56112 | With the last line of your letter I close,''write soon, will you not?'' |
56112 | ''Learnin''and educatin''? |
56112 | (?) |
56112 | And in answer to his question,"What shall I do?" |
56112 | And what of Dick Mallory''s own life after his release from prison? |
56112 | And what of the women sent to prison in this State? |
56112 | Are our church memberships altogether free from these defects? |
56112 | As the man was leaving he asked:"Could you give me one or two newspapers?" |
56112 | But was not Robert Louis Stevenson right in his belief that all our moral failures do not lessen the value of our good qualities and our good deeds? |
56112 | Ca n''t he see what_ I_ am? |
56112 | Ca n''t he_ see_ what he''ll come to if he does n''t brace up? |
56112 | Do we ever realize our ideals?" |
56112 | Do we not love that which seems to us good and hate the apparent evil? |
56112 | He was all animation for the rest of the time, eagerly drinking in the joy of sympathetic companionship.--What greater joy does life give? |
56112 | If God knew or cared, how could he have let it all happen? |
56112 | Is n''t there something in the Bible to the effect that"spirit beareth witness unto spirit"? |
56112 | My cousin would say,''It''s schoolin''ye want is it? |
56112 | My father said:"Yes, but what would you have to say to a prisoner?" |
56112 | Now, as to the results of those severe punishments and rigid repressive methods: were the criminals reformed? |
56112 | Shall I succeed in my dream? |
56112 | Shall we never escape from that terrible idea of the moral necessity of expiation, even at the cost of another? |
56112 | Something struck me when I saw him; I said to myself,''I am crippled but I might be like this poor dog some day; who can tell? |
56112 | Then he turned his great black velvet eyes upon me and said only:"You mean to do me some harm?" |
56112 | Two questions arose in my mind: Was it only"the fool"who had made a clean breast of the case? |
56112 | Very quietly our visit began; but when Johnson was quite at his ease, I asked:"Has anything been done about your case since I saw you last?" |
56112 | Was society protected? |
56112 | Was the man dying of homesickness for the lost plane of life? |
56112 | What do you expect?" |
56112 | What were the fruits of our prisons and reformatories? |
56112 | What would you like me to do for these boys?" |
56112 | When I told her all of my past she said,''And so you were afraid I would think the less of you? |
56112 | Who can fathom the heights and depths, the mysterious complexities of Rossman''s nature? |
56112 | With all our imperfections, is not human nature sound at heart? |
56112 | _ August 6, 1914._ THE MAN BEHIND THE BARS CHAPTER I I have often been asked:"How did you come to be interested in prisoners in the first place?" |
45502 | S''ppose your wifee bad, you no lickee her? |
45502 | Take them? |
45502 | To what,I asked,"do you attribute it?" |
45502 | Well, where do you go to school, then? |
45502 | When shall we find time to learn? |
45502 | Where do you buy your bread? |
45502 | Why, do n''t you know,he said,"that house is the Dirty Spoon? |
45502 | Almost one might be persuaded by such facts as these-- and they are everyday facts, not fancy-- to retort: what more natural? |
45502 | And how much the rent? |
45502 | But how? |
45502 | But is the knowledge reassuring? |
45502 | Can they not? |
45502 | Close? |
45502 | Did ever heathen cruelty invent a more fiendish plot than the one written down between the lines of this legal paper? |
45502 | Do you wonder the name does not attract them to the churches? |
45502 | Does she come home for dinner? |
45502 | Fifty? |
45502 | Forty then? |
45502 | Has it nothing to suggest the man with the knife? |
45502 | How do they do it? |
45502 | How many colored carpenters or masons has anyone seen at work in New York? |
45502 | How many people sleep here? |
45502 | How much do they earn? |
45502 | How should she? |
45502 | If the mud and the dirt are easily reflected in their lives, what wonder? |
45502 | If this is true from a purely economic point of view, what then of the outlook from the Christian standpoint? |
45502 | If we can not keep the baby, need we complain-- such as we?" |
45502 | In the light of what we have seen, does not the question arise: what sort of creature, then, this of the tenement? |
45502 | In twenty years what has been done in New York to solve the tenement- house problem? |
45502 | Is it only in our fancy that the sardonic leer on the stone faces seems to list that way? |
45502 | It will buy anything in Chinatown, Joss himself included, as indeed, why should it not? |
45502 | Of the outlook, what? |
45502 | Or is it an introspective grin? |
45502 | Pleasure? |
45502 | Say rather: where are they not? |
45502 | Sing at my coffin:''Where does the soul find a home and rest?''" |
45502 | Sixty? |
45502 | Suppose we look into one? |
45502 | That short hacking cough, that tiny, helpless wail-- what do they mean? |
45502 | The examination went on after this fashion:"Where do you go to church, my boy?" |
45502 | The question crowded on at once,''where shall the money come from?'' |
45502 | The question is asked daily from the teacher''s desk:"What must I do to be healthy?" |
45502 | The question: A bite of what? |
45502 | The rest? |
45502 | The stranger who enters through the crooked approach is received with sudden silence, a sullen stare, and an angry"Vat you vant?" |
45502 | The thought: how were they ever to be got out? |
45502 | This one, with its shabby front and poorly patched roof, what glowing firesides, what happy children may it once have owned? |
45502 | To- day, what is a tenement? |
45502 | What are you going to do about it? |
45502 | What can the moralist or scientist do by way of resuscitation? |
45502 | What did he say?" |
45502 | What does the baker take him for? |
45502 | What of dinner? |
45502 | What sort of an answer, think you, would come from these tenements to the question"Is life worth living?" |
45502 | What would you have? |
45502 | What would you have? |
45502 | What, indeed, was there to say? |
45502 | What, not forty? |
45502 | What, then, are the bald facts with which we have to deal in New York? |
45502 | Whence these tramps, and why the tramping? |
45502 | Whence this army of homeless boys? |
45502 | Where are the tenements of to- day? |
45502 | Where have they gone to, the old inhabitants? |
45502 | Which shall it be? |
45502 | Why complete the sketch? |
45502 | Why suspenders, is the puzzle, and where do they all go to? |
45502 | Will he give eighty cents? |
45502 | With our enormously swelling population held in this galling bondage, will that answer always be given? |
45502 | and of whose making? |
45502 | how my heart grows weary, far from----""Who is she, doctor?" |
45502 | were they heard at all in the discussion? |
44043 | And so Chook Aloong is an opium smoker? |
44043 | Are all these men dying from opium smoking? |
44043 | But where are all the people who are suffering from opium smoking? |
44043 | But where are the smokers? |
44043 | Do many people smoke? |
44043 | Do you sell much? |
44043 | Oh, is not this a terrible thing? |
44043 | What for,said he,"you say my no talkee lie? |
44043 | You say they are good, respectable men? |
44043 | Against whom and against what is all this outcry? |
44043 | And for whom pray would this sacrifice be made? |
44043 | And what fault can be found with the merchants? |
44043 | Are these Chinese converts the class of the Chinese from which truth is to be gleaned? |
44043 | As he leaves he asks his guide,"Does the keeper of the opium shop expect a gratuity?" |
44043 | As to the tincture of opium( commonly called laudanum),_ that_ might certainly intoxicate, if a man could bear to take enough of it; but why? |
44043 | But even admitting, for argument''s sake, that smuggling in its ordinary acceptation did, in fact, exist, how does the matter stand? |
44043 | But how is it that such divergent opinions can exist between Englishmen living in China and certain Englishmen here at home? |
44043 | But what does Sir Robert Hart, with all his official information, say? |
44043 | But what if it be a mere figment of the imagination, and absolutely devoid, as Dr. Medhurst says, of a semblance of truth? |
44043 | By what right could the English Government or any other Government do such things? |
44043 | Can he believe that human nature in China is different to what it is in Europe? |
44043 | Could any evidence against the allegations of the Anti- Opium Society be stronger than this? |
44043 | Could anything be more disingenuous than this? |
44043 | Could the force of folly or fanaticism go further than that? |
44043 | Does Mr. Storrs Turner consider those gentlemen worthy of credit? |
44043 | Does it not strike His Lordship how absurd is such an antithesis as pleasure and death? |
44043 | Does not that form the strongest possible evidence that the Chinese are an extremely steady and abstemious race? |
44043 | Drink vely bad for Inglismen; what for you do n''t go home and teach them to be soba, plaupa men?" |
44043 | Here I would first inquire-- what is the poppy? |
44043 | How many times has it happened that the consuls have had discussions with the Chinese governors respecting these receiving ships? |
44043 | I admit that opium is in itself a poison, but let me ask what changes does not fire produce in the various substances which it consumes? |
44043 | I do not believe there is any solid truth in this assertion; but if there is, what does the fact prove? |
44043 | I should like to ask Mr. Storrs Turner were the medical and other gentlemen then present Englishmen or foreigners? |
44043 | If that is not what is wished, what is? |
44043 | Is it honest or just to place the civilized, wise, and educated Chinese in the same category with the barbarous natives of Central Africa? |
44043 | Is it not the Chinese who go out of their ports to the"Receiving Ships"to fetch it? |
44043 | Is the Chinese nation composed of children, or of savages who do not know right from wrong? |
44043 | Is the testimony of such people of the slightest value? |
44043 | Is this patriotic or proper on the part of this Anti- Opium Society? |
44043 | Now did anyone ever hear of such an extraordinary explanation of De Quincey''s motives in publishing that volume? |
44043 | Now why have not these merchants ever complained that commerce has suffered from the opium traffic? |
44043 | Now, is that a fair parallel? |
44043 | Now, why are England and Englishmen thought so well of by the Chinese? |
44043 | Now, why is this belief so prevalent? |
44043 | Should the Company prohibit the culture of the drug in order to allow other nations to derive the emoluments arising from it? |
44043 | Should we then have the Chinese the hard- working, industrious, thrifty, frugal people that we find them? |
44043 | Storrs Turner, who is himself no mean Chinese scholar, to mislead his readers by making use of so forced and inapplicable a comparison? |
44043 | Take him to the Tung- Wah and to an opium shop, you savee?" |
44043 | The great subject on his mind is opium, so he comes to the point at once, and asks,"Is there much opium smoked in the colony?" |
44043 | The whole affair is just as defensible a proceeding as that of some tenth- rate dauber who, having copied(?) |
44043 | They say,"We do not protect these ships; why do you not drive them away?" |
44043 | This is it:-- They[ the missionaries] secure some adherence to the Christian religion, no doubt, but what is the value of the Christianity? |
44043 | To reduce the quantity of opium smoked in China? |
44043 | Was he right or wrong in doing so? |
44043 | What do you mean, then, by trying to make Christians of us?" |
44043 | What was the celebrated saying of Prince Kung to the British Ambassador? |
44043 | What, then, is the fair conclusion to draw from such a state of things? |
44043 | What, then, may I ask, is the reproach constantly hurled at the East India Company? |
44043 | Whence, then, comes the great bulk of the drug to satisfy all these smokers? |
44043 | Why does he not apply the same rule to the one as to the other? |
44043 | Why, then, does not the Government of China suppress the cultivation of the poppy there? |
44043 | Why, then, is it not grown here? |
44043 | Why? |
44043 | Yet these are the people whom Mr. Storrs Turner would put in the same category as the savages of Africa? |
44043 | Yet what are the present plans of this pragmatical body? |
44043 | is that the way?" |
13172 | ''Phoney''paper, was n''t it? |
13172 | And what did_ you_ do? |
13172 | And what was Vito''s address at Yonkers? |
13172 | Are you Antonio Strollo? |
13172 | Borrow from whom? |
13172 | But how can I mail myself a letter to 100 West One Hundredth Street_ when I do n''t live there_? |
13172 | But how does the one who lays down the check identify himself? 13172 But suppose we lost?" |
13172 | But why do you suppose be did it? |
13172 | Can we not get some food? |
13172 | Can you not see the waves, and observe him falling down the hole? |
13172 | Could n''t you smuggle some into the Tombs for him? |
13172 | Did n''t I give you six hours to fly the coop? 13172 Do n''t you know that the trust companies do it themselves all the time? |
13172 | Do you know Antonio Torsielli? |
13172 | Do you know what they have got Jim for? |
13172 | Do you think he will be able to go down town next week? |
13172 | Does M''sieu''care to see the photographs of my family? 13172 Forgive him? |
13172 | Gang? |
13172 | How are you, John? |
13172 | How did he come to do such a foolish thing as to offer to go on the bail bond of a perfect stranger? 13172 How did this happen?" |
13172 | How is he to- day? |
13172 | Is that the street number of a house or a post- office number? |
13172 | Is this Yonkers? |
13172 | Look,cried Petrosini;"is that the man?" |
13172 | Me? |
13172 | Say, Counsellor, what sort of a''con''was he throwin''into you? |
13172 | Say,said O''Toole,"you do n''t mean you swallowed that, do you? |
13172 | The reporters arc bothering you, are they? |
13172 | Toni,she said at length,"why do you not go? |
13172 | Was he sent to prison? |
13172 | What are you doing here in New York? |
13172 | What do you mean? |
13172 | What do you think I am, anyhow? |
13172 | What gang? 13172 What''s the matter with you? |
13172 | Where do you get''em? |
13172 | Who are you? |
13172 | Who is he? 13172 Who? |
13172 | Why did you accompany him to New York? |
13172 | Why do n''t you borrow a couple of bonds? |
13172 | Why, who did his nibs tell you he was? |
13172 | Will you come to New York to identify the body? |
13172 | Would M''sieu''care to see the album of the Tessier properties? 13172 You see it is quite embarrassing, because legally I have never been married at all, have I?" |
13172 | You think Mr. Rice will be able to go down Monday morning? |
13172 | A mistake? |
13172 | A second time the detective had made a lucky hit, for Mrs. Parker suddenly laid aside all pretense and asked:"Do you want to make a lot of money?" |
13172 | And finally, why did Patrick prepare a forged cremation letter for the destruction of the body? |
13172 | And who were Keilly and O''Rourke, and all the rest-- Colliton, Garretson, Bolte and Freeman? |
13172 | And who''s this woman?" |
13172 | And who, for that matter, was Hubert? |
13172 | And would he care to hear the story? |
13172 | As they reached the tree the stranger had stepped forward and said to Torsielli:"Who are you?" |
13172 | But how to get the two thousand five hundred dollars necessary to start in business? |
13172 | Did Jones kill him by means of chloroform? |
13172 | Did Patrick conspire with Jones to murder Rice? |
13172 | Did ever a lawyer have such a piece of luck? |
13172 | Did he die naturally? |
13172 | Did n''t old---- dump a lot of rotten stuff on you? |
13172 | Do you know what the feller did? |
13172 | Do you know?" |
13172 | Does M''sieu''have doubts? |
13172 | Douglas?" |
13172 | Felix?--Yes? |
13172 | First: What proof is there that murder was committed? |
13172 | For did he not almost have five hundred million dollars-- two and a half_ milliards_ of francs-- in his very hands? |
13172 | Had n''t Mr. McPherson some little paper-- a letter, a bill, a receipt or a check, to show that he was really in the employ of the Western Union? |
13172 | Had not the Court of Appeals itself recognized their profession? |
13172 | Have you any money?" |
13172 | He naïvely inquired why, if all these things were so, Nelson and his friend were not already yet millionaires two or three times? |
13172 | How can he go to Tuxpan or to the city of Coney Island? |
13172 | How could anybody fail to be happy who saw so much money lying around loose everywhere? |
13172 | If Patrick was not implicated in the killing, what motive had Jones to commit the deed? |
13172 | If so, was it, as he claims, at the instigation of Albert T. Patrick? |
13172 | If the thing was n''t all right, did Watts suppose that he, Col. Robert A. Ammon, would be connected with it? |
13172 | If they ask how was he dressed? |
13172 | In different names and addresses on different days? |
13172 | Is M''sieu''tired? |
13172 | Is one to be blamed that one is fooled? |
13172 | M''sieu''perhaps has a cigarette? |
13172 | M''sieu''will observe that I am accused of the crime of-- what is it called in English? |
13172 | MONSIEUR: Will you be so gracious as to extend to the undersigned the courtesy of a private interview in your office? |
13172 | May I speak confidentially? |
13172 | Me? |
13172 | No? |
13172 | Perhaps I would like to see a newspaper clipping? |
13172 | Perhaps M''sieu''has the papers? |
13172 | Reader, how say you? |
13172 | Second: What proof is there that Patrick directed the murder? |
13172 | The name, too, did not have the customary Tombs sound-- De Nevers? |
13172 | These last had to be reached by post, a most annoyingly slow means of communication--_mais que voulez- vous_? |
13172 | Was he alive or dead? |
13172 | Was his death caused by any further act of the conspirators? |
13172 | Was it necessary to be introduced to the cashier? |
13172 | Was there ever such a plethora of easy money? |
13172 | What corroboration is there of Jones''s story that he killed Rice under Patrick''s direction? |
13172 | What do you suppose, now? |
13172 | What good could it do him? |
13172 | Where could Vito be? |
13172 | Where? |
13172 | Who, for example, to begin at the beginning, was Charles A. Clark, and why should he be deeding away Ebbe Petersen''s property? |
13172 | Why did not Toni come back with him? |
13172 | Why do n''t you get even? |
13172 | Why should they? |
13172 | Will you find out if he left any money?" |
13172 | Would he take the bet? |
13172 | Yes? |
13172 | Yet how could he marry when he could hardly earn enough to support his mother and himself? |
13172 | You want letters of identification? |
13172 | _ Did_ Jones murder Rice? |
13172 | _ Hein_? |
13172 | he inquired nonchalantly,"what can I do for you?" |
13172 | was she herself the grandniece of Jean Tessier? |
49853 | ''A little way out, yes; but how are we to get to and fro with the work when it''s done? |
49853 | ''All_ you''ve_ got, my dear? |
49853 | ''And where did you get them?'' |
49853 | ''And your granny keeps you now?'' |
49853 | ''But have n''t you spoken to the landlord about it?'' |
49853 | ''Come through?'' |
49853 | ''Dead?'' |
49853 | ''Eaten your cake yet?'' |
49853 | ''Great God, what will become of us now?'' |
49853 | ''Had no breakfast to- day, Annie?'' |
49853 | ''He''s on the Surrey, is he?'' |
49853 | ''Heard it?'' |
49853 | ''How do the poor amuse themselves?'' |
49853 | ''How do you do when you''re stone broke?'' |
49853 | ''I see,''says the chairman;''and Thomas and Charles are giving you their money, eh? |
49853 | ''I''m a pretty sight now, ai n''t I, gintlemen dear?'' |
49853 | ''Is it a large bootmaker''s?'' |
49853 | ''Molly, ye young varmint, where are ye?'' |
49853 | ''Oh, you''ve come for her, eh? |
49853 | ''Sitifkit? |
49853 | ''Then why not move?'' |
49853 | ''There, Molly, ye young varmint, show yourself to their honours, will ye?'' |
49853 | ''What are you going to do with it?'' |
49853 | ''What bizerness''as he to summings me,''she says, pointing to the officer,''just cus my boy ai n''t bin fur a week? |
49853 | ''What do we want?'' |
49853 | ''What is your sweetheart?'' |
49853 | ''What''s the matter with her?'' |
49853 | ''Where does he work-- at what firm?'' |
49853 | ''Where''s my husband? |
49853 | ''Where''s the doctor''s certificate that she''s too ill to attend?'' |
49853 | ''Where''s your husband?'' |
49853 | ''Why?'' |
49853 | ''Yes-- didn''t I say so?'' |
49853 | ''You have six children?'' |
49853 | A child''s voice answers,''What is it?'' |
49853 | And why? |
49853 | Are we to wait for a revolution before we rescue the poor from the clutches of their oppressors? |
49853 | Are we to wait for the cholera or the plague before we remedy a condition of things which sanitarily is without parallel in civilized countries? |
49853 | But is it a cause which is more beyond remedy than are any of the others? |
49853 | But where else are the dislodged poor with large families to go? |
49853 | Can you wonder that the gaudy gin- palaces, with their light and their glitter, are crowded? |
49853 | D''ye think I ai n''t got anything to do without a- trapesin''down here a- losin''my work? |
49853 | Do you know why? |
49853 | Drink is the curse of these communities; but how is it to be wondered at? |
49853 | How are the evils of overcrowding-- how are the present miseries of the poor to be removed? |
49853 | How could these men get from the suburbs at such an hour, and how could they afford the daily railway fare? |
49853 | I wonder, if the mother dies and the father gets a long term of imprisonment, what the fate of the family will be? |
49853 | If I was you dare n''t treat me like it, you dare n''t; it''s only because I''m----''''My good woman, will you allow me to say one word?'' |
49853 | In what way can the social status of the labouring classes be permanently raised? |
49853 | Is it not time that the long- promised era of domestic legislation gave some faint streaks of dawn in the parliamentary sky? |
49853 | It is quite right that he should, but what is the result? |
49853 | Loafers and criminals? |
49853 | Poor labourers? |
49853 | Sober-- God help them!--how could they be aught but wretched? |
49853 | The police? |
49853 | There ai n''t a night passes as there ai n''t a fight in the passage or a drunken row; but why should I interfere? |
49853 | There is a penalty for packing cattle too closely together; why should there be none for improperly packing men and women and children? |
49853 | These boys, Thomas and Charles, who have been absent for three weeks, are your brothers, I suppose?'' |
49853 | What are their thoughts as they turn away? |
49853 | What are they to do? |
49853 | What chance under such circumstances has a vestry- appointed officer of doing his duty in a thorough and efficient manner? |
49853 | What did they mean by it? |
49853 | What sort of trouble?'' |
49853 | What will be the result? |
49853 | What would the others show, had we the same opportunity of knowing their customers? |
49853 | What''s the reason?'' |
49853 | Where''s your father?'' |
49853 | While supply so enormously exceeds demand, how can any market be in a healthy condition? |
49853 | Whither? |
49853 | Who are we? |
49853 | Who are we? |
49853 | Why do not the women refuse? |
49853 | ``` Why pay a doctor, or in hospital lie for months,``` When this ointment will cure you by only applying it once? |
49853 | and that''s all you''ve got?'' |
49853 | d''ye think I''ve got time to go a- gettin''sitifkits-- not me-- ain''t my word good ernuff?'' |
49853 | says she, purple with passion,''you want to summon him, do you? |
49853 | wot''s the use? |
33431 | ''Are you a Catholic?'' 33431 ''But you do not wish to stay in prison?'' |
33431 | ''But, do you know him? 33431 ''Have you been long here?'' |
33431 | ''Here''s a boy what wants to go to Michi_gan_, sir; ca n''t you take him with us?'' 33431 ''She is a beggar, then?'' |
33431 | ''Well, how is she doing now?'' 33431 ''What do you mean?'' |
33431 | ''What other things?'' 33431 But how will it be if you do n''t go, boys? |
33431 | Did ye ever see a cow run_ away_ from a haystack? |
33431 | My dear friend, can you expect boys to be perfect at once? 33431 Well, now, suppose we have a night- school, and learn to write-- what do you say, boys?". |
33431 | Were they right to say that those children belonged to them when they had despised them even to the point of abandoning them to death? |
33431 | What the devil are you looking at me in that way for? |
33431 | What''s broke loose now? |
33431 | Where is your_ mother_, I say? 33431 Why are you here?'' |
33431 | Wo n''t the boy ran away? |
33431 | ''Do you think I can go, sir?'' |
33431 | ''Have you ever been to school, or Sunday School?'' |
33431 | ''Poor fellow,''said some one,''how did you get your living?'' |
33431 | ''What''s that, mister?'' |
33431 | ''Where are your father and mother, my boy?'' |
33431 | ''Where are your other relatives or friends?'' |
33431 | ''Where did you stay?'' |
33431 | ''Would they git schoolin'', sir?'' |
33431 | ''Yes, and wo n''t we_ sell_ some, too?'' |
33431 | ''_''Ah, fellers,_ ai n''t_ that the country tho''--won''t we have nice things to eat?'' |
33431 | ''_''But, where do you stay?'' |
33431 | ''_''Mister, do they make mushmillons in Michi_gan? |
33431 | --by endowment from the State or by private and annual assistance? |
33431 | Again, do you inquire if he is beloved At home? |
33431 | An important question often comes up in regard to our charitable associations:"How shall they best be supported?" |
33431 | And, now, sir( almost fiercely), ca n''t you get me out of this? |
33431 | And, when the children were placed, how were their interests to be watched over, and acts of oppression or hard dealing prevented or punished? |
33431 | At day- break they began to inquire,''Where be we?'' |
33431 | But what can I do, sir?'' |
33431 | But what is the experience of Asylums? |
33431 | But, in looking at the matter soberly, and without pugnacity, does spiritual religion lose anything by giving up these exercises? |
33431 | Ca n''t ye do somethin''?'' |
33431 | Can we not satisfy it innocently? |
33431 | Could ye help us? |
33431 | Did n''t you ever pelt the cattle when you were a boy?" |
33431 | Do you ask if he is a good boy? |
33431 | Do you pay their fare to their new home, and are there any other particulars about which parties would wish to be informed? |
33431 | Do you want to be gentlemen and independent citizens? |
33431 | Do you want to be newsboys always, and shoeblacks, and timber- merchants in a small way by sellin''matches? |
33431 | Do you want to be rowdies, and loafers, and shoulder- hitters? |
33431 | Grasping the boy by the shoulder,"Where''s your mother, I say?" |
33431 | HOW BEST TO GIVE ALMS? |
33431 | HOW SHALL CRIMINAL CHILDREN BE TREATED? |
33431 | HOW SHALL CRIMINAL CHILDREN BE TREATED? |
33431 | Has crime increased with them? |
33431 | Have you others whom you wish to place in situations which we could assure you would be good? |
33431 | How can the children be saved at a moderate expense? |
33431 | How were places to be found? |
33431 | How were the demand and supply for children''s labor to be connected? |
33431 | How were the right employers to be selected? |
33431 | How would_ you_ feel happiest?" |
33431 | If the taste for them were formed, would it not expel the appetite for whisky and brandy, or at least, in the coming generation, form a new habit? |
33431 | If this was the right scheme, why had it not been tried long ago in our cities or in England? |
33431 | John Cochrane out of the window, or rolled the Mayor down- stairs? |
33431 | Mister, be they any sich in Michi_gan?_ Then I''m in for_ that_ place-- three cheers for Michi_gan! |
33431 | Mr. S. felt for him, and said,''Where do you live, my boy?'' |
33431 | Once little Annie was found waiting with her broom in a bitter storm of sleet and hail on a corner, and the teacher asked her why she was there? |
33431 | One beautiful day he went on a spree, and he came home and told me where''s yer mother? |
33431 | One of the mysterious things about this Boys''Hotel is, what becomes of the large numbers that enter it? |
33431 | Or--"My boys, what is the great end of man? |
33431 | Or--"My_ dear_ boys, when your father and your mother forsake you,_ who_ will take you up?" |
33431 | SHOULD LICENSES BE ALLOWED? |
33431 | Several changes of fortune of this kind have made it quite a natural question, when I visit Mrs. Hurley''s School,"What about the heiresses?" |
33431 | She listened, and after a little while, said, in broken English''Do n''t you think better for poor little girls to die than live?'' |
33431 | The next day I and my father went to get some clothes I left there, and the lady would n''t give them up; and what could we do? |
33431 | The only question with the governing power is,"Does it do a work of public value not done by public institutions?" |
33431 | Thus, an old boon companion meets him in the street:"Why, Orful, what the h-- ll''s this about your bein''converted?" |
33431 | Thus--"In this parable, my dear boys, of the Pharisee and the publican, what is meant by the''publican?''" |
33431 | WHAT SHALL BE DONE WITH FOUNDLINGS? |
33431 | WHAT SHALL BE DONE WITH FOUNDLINGS? |
33431 | We must draw a line; but where? |
33431 | Were they to be indentured, or not? |
33431 | What becomes of the other seven thousand? |
33431 | What can be done for them? |
33431 | What can the poor do? |
33431 | What could he expect in the way of reform in such a case? |
33431 | What else was to be looked for? |
33431 | What have other States done in the matter? |
33431 | What, then, is to be done for these unfortunate foundlings? |
33431 | What, then, is to be done to remedy this terrible evil? |
33431 | When is he happiest? |
33431 | Where do you live? |
33431 | Where do you live? |
33431 | Where''s your father?" |
33431 | Why am I so? |
33431 | Why do n''t you save your money? |
33431 | Why do n''t you show yourself?'' |
33431 | Why much suffer, if good God?'' |
33431 | Why should he be anything but a garroter and thief?" |
33431 | Why should it be increased and established by legal recognition? |
33431 | Why was I ever born? |
33431 | Why we came there for her? |
33431 | Why will our benevolent ladies and gentlemen keep up the old monastic ideas of the necessity of herding these unfortunate children in one building? |
33431 | You feller without no boots, how would you like a new pair, eh? |
33431 | [ Illustration:"PLEASE SIR, MAY I HAVE A BED?" |
33431 | and why she did not go home? |
33431 | can ye help her? |
33431 | said some one,''had you forgotten your mother? |
33431 | what''s up?" |
33431 | will ye not list to the gintleman? |
45234 | Did you send him with these clothes to a customer? |
45234 | Foolish little stream,the critic might have said,"what are you singing about so joyously? |
45234 | Had he had bad news? |
45234 | Have you all the servants you need? |
45234 | Is it true that-------- went to your place and became honest? |
45234 | Is this man in your employ? |
45234 | It is just a little over two years ago since I left''college''and what has that two years wrought in my life? 45234 Prison, prison, is it always and forever to be prison?" |
45234 | What are you doing? |
45234 | What are you going to investigate? |
45234 | What have you got under your arm? |
45234 | ''What then?'' |
45234 | 273 After Prison What? |
45234 | A League member overhearing, said,"Why do n''t you write and tell the Little Mother?" |
45234 | And why should this work be any other than a great and lasting success? |
45234 | Are we not taught that habit is second nature, and what is the habit in which these men have been drilled for years in some of our prisons? |
45234 | Are you dreaming of ships you would carry, of the long miles you would travel, of the great ocean upon whose breast you would cast yourself? |
45234 | As she pressed her tiny babe to her heart she said,"What am I to do? |
45234 | But the boy turning on him( and there was much truth in his answer) said,"When I was sick and hungry, who cared? |
45234 | But what has made him so? |
45234 | But what of those who have no home, no friends, no place to turn? |
45234 | Can anything be imagined more utterly contradictory to the teaching concerning the Almighty power of divine grace? |
45234 | Constantly I am asked,"But how can you talk to these men; what can you say; how do you touch or appeal to such an audience?" |
45234 | Could it be? |
45234 | DOES IT PAY? |
45234 | Did n''t we, Johnny?" |
45234 | Did not the Good Shepherd say He would leave the ninety and nine to seek for the one straying sheep? |
45234 | Did she know about Santa Claus? |
45234 | Do the Christian people and philanthropists of our land feel their responsibility to these men? |
45234 | Do the people who use it ever stop to think that the wound is as deep and the term as odious as that of"convict"to the man who has been in prison? |
45234 | Do you know what the lock- step is and does? |
45234 | Do you tell of the thirsty you are going to cool, of the wilderness that shall blossom at your touch, of the great valleys you are going to fertilize? |
45234 | Does he find some ill- smelling building with whitewashed walls that remind him of the place he has just left, abundance of advice and nothing to eat? |
45234 | Does not this show how truly they appreciate our plans and schemes and efforts for their future? |
45234 | Does the world say this is exaggerated? |
45234 | Finding no answer, he repeated his question, adding,"Trying to be honest, are you? |
45234 | Free; but where could I go? |
45234 | Give them advice, bid them trust in God? |
45234 | Has not the sword of justice once been raised over him, setting him aloof from his fellows? |
45234 | Has this been done? |
45234 | He saw that he could not work on at that job much longer and if he broke down, what then? |
45234 | He was thoroughly tired of prison, there was no doubt of that, but could there be any other life for him? |
45234 | How can I describe what followed and the sight that greeted me? |
45234 | How should we like such an experience? |
45234 | I have written much of our"boys"but what of our"girls"? |
45234 | If there is no home for these who are homeless, where are they to go? |
45234 | In every enterprise that represents expenditure of money, time or energy, the question naturally asked by the practical business man is,"Does it pay?" |
45234 | Is it a wonder my heart was deeply touched? |
45234 | Is it a wonder that tears rose more readily to my eyes than words to my lips, and that it was hard for me to control either thoughts or voice? |
45234 | Is it any wonder? |
45234 | Is it not very dreadful to have to come into contact with them?" |
45234 | Is there any hope for me?" |
45234 | Is this fair? |
45234 | It is easy to say, let the man work, but where shall he find occupation; who wants the man who can give no clear account of himself? |
45234 | It was just a week before her discharge that she held my hand tight in hers in the prison office and pleaded,"Little Mother, may I come to you? |
45234 | Need I tell you of that weary search? |
45234 | On the other hand, is it wise to ask business men to take men whom we have not tested and of whom we know nothing? |
45234 | She said,"What do you think my boy did? |
45234 | The crime was a terrible one, it is true, but is a woman quite responsible in the first hours of shame- shadowed motherhood? |
45234 | Then what of speech? |
45234 | Then with indescribable pathos he turned and said,"Do you think there is any hope for me?" |
45234 | These are stories of mothers; what of the wives and little children? |
45234 | They did a lasting work, but should not their example have been followed by tens of thousands in that land? |
45234 | To my surprise I was met at cell after cell with the question,"Have you read, Little Mother, what Professor---- said about us?" |
45234 | Was it not natural to foresee that they would turn in their difficulty to those who had been their friends in prison? |
45234 | We tried to make it as clear as possible and at last as we repeated slowly,"What did you do in prison?" |
45234 | Were it not for this, what heart should we have in dealing with those who have made trial of other help and strength and found it to fail them? |
45234 | What are our prisons for, if not for reform? |
45234 | What could we say to them unless we believed that the Voice that said of old,"Be thou clean,"could say it as truly to- day? |
45234 | What do the children in our Sunday- schools or the congregations gathered in our churches know of the need behind prison walls? |
45234 | What has he to show for thirty- five years of service? |
45234 | What is that but the result of long silence? |
45234 | What then were we to do? |
45234 | When I heard of the long imprisonment, I asked the question,"And what of the man?" |
45234 | When I lay dying on the common, who was it stretched out a helping hand, who paid my doctor''s bill and who nursed me? |
45234 | When I was trying to be honest, who helped me? |
45234 | Where can he go? |
45234 | Where has any large offering ever been taken for this cause? |
45234 | Where have I met you before?" |
45234 | Who has ever thought of leaving a generous legacy for the redemption of these men? |
45234 | Who was I, to receive such marks of love and honor? |
45234 | Why should the world ask it? |
45234 | Why? |
45234 | Would Mrs.---- therefore look to her gems and precious stones? |
45234 | Would you credit it? |
45234 | Would you like to know what the magistrate who last sentenced me said about me? |
45234 | XIII DOES IT PAY? |
45234 | mamma, where is papa?'' |
488 | Ask a woman with five children to marry me-- a woman I do n''t love? |
488 | Did n''t Helene say to you that Perrotte would never recover? |
488 | Did you attach a certain idea to the confidence about retiring? |
488 | Do you think I''m poisoning you? |
488 | How''s this? |
488 | I do n''t know quite how to express myself, but surely what I have done is quite the common thing? 488 Innocent of what?" |
488 | Qu''est- ce que c''est l''arsenic? 488 The bouillon she gave you did you no harm?" |
488 | Was n''t the accused jealous of Perrotte-- that good- looking girl who gave you so much of her favour? |
488 | What shall we do, Mrs Oliphant? |
488 | Whence,demanded the acte d''accusation,"came all those riches, if they were not the price of his share in the crime?" |
488 | Who ever heard of tablecloths for the servants? |
488 | Why does n''t she come forward? |
488 | You''re never going to dismiss me for that young girl? |
488 | ''And what can they charge you with?'' |
488 | ( 2) Did Lacoste become violently sick immediately on his return from the fair? |
488 | ( 3) Did Lacoste suffer from the ailments attributed to him by his wife, and was he in the habit of dosing himself? |
488 | ( 4) Did Meilhan receive money from Mme Lacoste, and, particularly, did she propose to allow him the supposed annuity? |
488 | And being confuted in that, what might he have said that would not be attributed to rancour on his part? |
488 | And how had he managed to collect the 800 odd francs that were found in his lodgings? |
488 | And the white powder-- did it also come from Seglien? |
488 | And to whom, having turned to pretty Anne, was she likely to be led but again to the wizard of Lambeth? |
488 | And will you obstruct the honour of it by putting her away before the people rise out of their beds? |
488 | Art thou guilty of this felony and murder or not guilty?" |
488 | At what time had Boursier intended making the trip? |
488 | But is she in fact more dangerous, more deadly as a criminal, than the male? |
488 | But where in all that bed of disintegrating chalk was the flint from which he might have evoked a spark? |
488 | But why should we be more shocked by the commission of a crime by a woman than by a man-- even the cruellest of crimes? |
488 | Dangerous? |
488 | Did Rochester know of the springe set to catch Overbury? |
488 | Did the Mayor know Castera to be all right? |
488 | Had you or had you not any white powder at Losmine? |
488 | Helene Jegado, have you anything to say upon the application of the penalty? |
488 | How deeply was she implicated? |
488 | How had he contrived to save, as he said, 3000 francs? |
488 | How much farther-- or how much better-- would Sophie Dawes have fared had her manners been less at the mercy of her temper? |
488 | How shall I shut the door?'' |
488 | How, then, could he possibly be in a position to lend Mme Lacoste 2000 francs? |
488 | If Frances Howard was a virgin, what reason was there for fearing anything Overbury might have said? |
488 | If Perrotte Mace did not get the poison from her-- from whom, then? |
488 | Knave or fool-- what does it matter when either is submerged in the coward? |
488 | Knave or fool-- what does it matter? |
488 | Mme Rachel, in the middle of the nineteenth century, founded her fortunes as a beauty specialist(?) |
488 | Moreover, does n''t our word expressing cruelty for cruelty''s sake derive from the name of a man-- the Marquis de Sade? |
488 | Says I,''What would you advise me to do with it?'' |
488 | Says he,''Who is there to swear against you?'' |
488 | The Court:"Johnson, were those her words:''This is the money and bag that I took''?" |
488 | The answer to the latter accusation, says my same authority, may take the form of a question: WHOM DID LUCRETIA POISON? |
488 | The indictment was read to her, and at its end came the question:"Frances Howard, Countess of Somerset, how sayest thou? |
488 | The points mainly at issue were as follows:( 1) Did Meilhan have a chance of giving Lacoste a drink at the fair? |
488 | The question was, how had it got there? |
488 | The song, called Petition d''un voleur a un roi son voisin, has this final stanza:"Sire, oserais- je reclamer? |
488 | Was it for social advancement that she murdered husbands and children? |
488 | Was it not you that gave it her, Helene?" |
488 | Was it quite certain that arsenic could not get into the human body save by ingestion, that it could not exist in the human body normally? |
488 | Was n''t it in your possession during the time you were in Seglien? |
488 | Was she a''climber''in that sphere of society in which she moved? |
488 | What can I do that will save you, my poor Perrotte?" |
488 | What could the Greek say in justification of such conduct? |
488 | What document was expected to be discovered in the search? |
488 | What enemy had he made? |
488 | What interest had the girl in cutting off their lives?" |
488 | What powder would one prescribe for fever? |
488 | What vengeance had he incurred? |
488 | What was that powder? |
488 | What was this I was about to do-- disgrace a woman on a mere suspicion? |
488 | What were you doing with the saffron? |
488 | What, asked Meilhan, would M. le Maire do in his place? |
488 | When did you first have it? |
488 | When you came back, did Helene take good care of you?" |
488 | Where was the speculative marriage on the part of Euphemie that the prosecution talked about? |
488 | Who administered that arsenic, the existence of which was so shrewdly foreseen by the witness? |
488 | Who gave her the arsenic? |
488 | Who knew what the science of to- morrow would say? |
488 | Who likelier to be a witness to such a will than the Prince''s chaplain? |
488 | Who was the poisoner if not she, Helene Jegado? |
488 | Who was to benefit by the first will? |
488 | Why did you say yesterday that nothing was ever found in your luggage? |
488 | Why didn t you say so at the beginning, instead of waiting until you are confounded by the witness? |
488 | Why should it be shocking should she even surpass the male? |
488 | Why should she murder a fine merchant like Boursier for a doubtful quantity like Kostolo? |
488 | [ To Dr Toussaint] What would the powder be, monsieur? |
488 | [ To Helene] Do you know? |
40122 | And what are you doing here? |
40122 | Bill Bailey? 40122 How much do you reckon the bed and food is worth?" |
40122 | Then they can tell you''ve been in the workhouse? |
40122 | Then you think they make something out of you? |
40122 | What about prison fare? |
40122 | What about relieving officers? |
40122 | What about the bath? |
40122 | What about the tasks set? |
40122 | What am I to do if I can not get work? |
40122 | What would become of the pigs? |
40122 | What''s his name? |
40122 | When they says,''Any questions to ask the officer?'' 40122 Why do n''t you speak to me, Mary?" |
40122 | [ 147]And what about the work?" |
40122 | ''What for?'' |
40122 | ''What''s his name?'' |
40122 | ''What''s the matter?'' |
40122 | ''What''s up?'' |
40122 | ''What''s your name?'' |
40122 | ''Where is he?'' |
40122 | ''Where''s Bill Bailey?'' |
40122 | ''Who''s done this?'' |
40122 | ***** But for them? |
40122 | A man who"keeps"(?) |
40122 | And what about the woman? |
40122 | Are they forced into the common lodging- houses-- or worse? |
40122 | Besides, what about early admission? |
40122 | But how much should I be forced to tell? |
40122 | But what about the destitute pedestrian? |
40122 | Can all our Homes and Shelters together prevent many from drifting"on the streets"? |
40122 | Can we not have an Army Women''s Shelter or its equivalent in every large town? |
40122 | Could the deep- seated religious sentiments of the human soul choose better expression? |
40122 | Do we not need a national provision for migration and temporary destitution among women? |
40122 | Do you know I could give you three months for it? |
40122 | Do you know what oakum is? |
40122 | Do you wonder at our_ national tramp manufactories_? |
40122 | Every facility should be given him, but where is there an employer who will start men in the middle of the day when discharged from casual wards? |
40122 | For if a woman"can not get work,"where is she to go? |
40122 | For this the ratepayers think they would have to do a day''s work-- but do they? |
40122 | For what reason should he be so treated as to make him prefer the shelter of a barn or rick? |
40122 | Has not the disintegration of the home proceeded very far? |
40122 | Have they been more successful than ourselves? |
40122 | He only asked,"how many?" |
40122 | How can one of this class possibly avoid spreading contagion under such bad sanitary conditions? |
40122 | How can we face these problems? |
40122 | How is it that such a need has arisen? |
40122 | How must we face such grave national issues? |
40122 | How would he fare in a common lodging house? |
40122 | How would she fare in a common lodging house? |
40122 | I gave particulars which were true, and in answer to the question,"Have you been here before?" |
40122 | I says,''Did n''t you tell me to stay where I was and not let the officers see me?'' |
40122 | If a woman is not the carefully- guarded inmate of a sheltering home, on whom devolves the duty of caring for her? |
40122 | If it can not be obtained, what is he to do? |
40122 | If she pays this should not it entitle her to a place which is clean, where she can keep herself clean, and can_ keep her self- respect_? |
40122 | If so, why? |
40122 | If the unfortunate applicant stated the facts in a meek and ordinary voice, this official asked,"Have you been here before?" |
40122 | Is a man after doing twenty miles fit for work? |
40122 | Is any comment needed? |
40122 | Is it any wonder that such places are hot- beds of disease? |
40122 | Is it fair to dub him a_ tramp_? |
40122 | Is it not almost inevitable that she should sink? |
40122 | Is it not desirable that these our struggling sisters should live under the conditions that will preserve for them some sort of a"home"feeling? |
40122 | Is it not evident that we should make provision for such a certain need? |
40122 | Is there any reason why they should not, when for the rich the hotel has replaced the inn? |
40122 | Is there even at the back an_ organised_ system, seeking victims and preying on them? |
40122 | Is this the treatment England gives in Christ''s name to His destitute poor? |
40122 | Is this to be deplored or hastened? |
40122 | Just before we went upstairs a man in the inner room propounded the question,"Who was Adam''s father?" |
40122 | Now supposing small- pox broke out in a place having such a tramp ward, who would be to blame? |
40122 | Now under these circumstances if disease breaks out who is to blame? |
40122 | Now, how does it work out? |
40122 | Or was it possible that the Guardians were mistaken in thinking provision had been made? |
40122 | Prison? |
40122 | Shall I picture my brave little friend and companion, who worked on hour after hour with a splitting headache caused by a sleepless night? |
40122 | She said when she joined me, piteously,"Do I look like a prostitute?" |
40122 | She said,"I suppose you have been round the town?" |
40122 | Should we give in, and go to our friends a day earlier? |
40122 | Should we go to another workhouse? |
40122 | Should we try a night in the open? |
40122 | Sin? |
40122 | Some young ladies passed through and said,"Who is she?" |
40122 | The last article gone, cleanliness lost, clothing dilapidated or dirty-- what then? |
40122 | The question, To what circumstances and surroundings will a respectable destitute woman drift if without employment? |
40122 | The river? |
40122 | Their faces are set in the grey dawn-- whither? |
40122 | Those in this lodging- house were not so badly off, but why? |
40122 | Was it ignorance or prejudice on their part? |
40122 | What about a mid- day meal? |
40122 | What about my poor sisters? |
40122 | What about the deserted wife? |
40122 | What can the widow do? |
40122 | What could we have done? |
40122 | What do they do in the morning? |
40122 | What is she to do? |
40122 | What is the consequence? |
40122 | What is the result of all this increase of migration? |
40122 | What might happen to a single woman alone with such men? |
40122 | What must have been the conditions for women in a town of this size before the erection of the Army Shelter some four years ago? |
40122 | What questions would they ask? |
40122 | What was she to do meanwhile? |
40122 | What wonder that the poor soul, desperate at losing all that makes life worth having, easily yields to the man ever ready to"treat"her? |
40122 | What would she be at the end? |
40122 | What''s the odds? |
40122 | What_ artificial_ conditions of man''s making are pressing on those young lives, snapping them off from true use to rottenness and decay? |
40122 | When shall we apply common sense to the daily matters of town life? |
40122 | When will the long torture of the ages end, and men care for the poor? |
40122 | Where do they sleep? |
40122 | Whither? |
40122 | Who knows how a tramp feels, save God? |
40122 | Who would knowingly employ them? |
40122 | Why do they not grow healthily? |
40122 | Women''s lodging- houses-- and what can be more needful for the morals of the community? |
40122 | Would it be possible to escape personal interrogation? |
40122 | Yet how else can a destitute girl get her living without a friend? |
40122 | Your clothes may be good and clean and free from vermin when you undress, but what will they be like in the morning? |
40122 | [ 154] Why should they go there? |
40122 | [ 93] Do I exaggerate? |
40122 | do n''t you know? |
40122 | per week for bare shelter? |
466 | How do you feel now? |
466 | How many hearts? |
466 | ''Are you so?'' |
466 | ''Come, Mash- tub,''said Brummell, who was the_ caster_,''what do you_ set?_''''Twenty- five guineas,''answered the Alderman. |
466 | ''How,''said the king,''can you decide before you know the question?'' |
466 | ''Oh, you did, sir?'' |
466 | ''Take it?'' |
466 | ''The gamblers having staked their money on either of the colours, the dealer asks,"_ Votre jeu est- il fait?_""Is your game made?" |
466 | ''The gamblers having staked their money on either of the colours, the dealer asks,"_ Votre jeu est- il fait?_""Is your game made?" |
466 | ''The possession of_ MY_ daughter?'' |
466 | ''Then Duryodhana was filled with wrath, and he cried out to his servant:--"What waste of words is this? |
466 | ''What devil tempted me to my undoing?... |
466 | ''What does that matter? |
466 | ''What has happened? |
466 | ''What kind of_ SUGAR- PLUMS_ are these?'' |
466 | ''What mean you?'' |
466 | ''What mean you?'' |
466 | ''What now?'' |
466 | ''Who shall guard me against the recurrence of such conduct?'' |
466 | ''Why did this exemplary parent die poor? |
466 | ''You''ll pay, will you?'' |
466 | A friend, who knew my inexperience, and regarded me as a victim decked out for sacrifice, called to me--"What, Wilberforce, is that you?" |
466 | A lady( who else could have thought of such a device? |
466 | A pretty bit of red ribbon to hang about your neck; and that satisfies you, does it? |
466 | And Draupadi was astonished at these words, and exceedingly wroth, and she replied:--"Whose slave was I that I could be gambled away? |
466 | And who is such a senseless fool as to gamble away his own wife?" |
466 | And you never afterwards,''said I,''ascertained what became of it? |
466 | At the butcher''s shop, the owner, in his apron and sleeves, stoutly refused his vote, except on one condition--"Would her Grace give him a kiss?" |
466 | Besides, had he not received 30 guineas from their friend? |
466 | But Vidura cried out against him with a loud voice, and said:--"What wickedness is this? |
466 | But you refuse my challenge?'' |
466 | But,_ Quis custodiet custodes?_ Hesse- Darmstadt has guaranteed the"administration of Hesse- Hombourg, but who is to guarantee Hesse- Darmstadt? |
466 | But,_ Quis custodiet custodes?_ Hesse- Darmstadt has guaranteed the"administration of Hesse- Hombourg, but who is to guarantee Hesse- Darmstadt? |
466 | Can I say that I am stronger than you, in more critical circumstances? |
466 | Can there be a greater penalty for unbridled licentiousness? |
466 | Clarke asked the witness if he thought the person who lost his money was rich? |
466 | Could it be Mrs Disbrowe? |
466 | Do not keep me in suspense? |
466 | Do you understand me now?'' |
466 | For why should this practice be a lawful practice of Germany and of no other country in Europe? |
466 | Have not the gambling propensities of our forefathers influenced the present generation?.... |
466 | He then said--''Well, gentlemen, will you make it up amongst you?'' |
466 | He was not at all ashamed, but rather gloried in being able to describe himself as a fool, as he does in his verses to Mrs Crewe:--"Is''t reason? |
466 | How can you vex your brethren thus? |
466 | If we consider the question in other points of view, have there been, proportionally, fewer celebrated women than illustrious men? |
466 | Is it not also questionable policy to enforce every law merely because it is a law, unless its breach is productive of serious evil to the community? |
466 | Is it not mere madness to lose one hundred thousand sestertii and refuse a garment to a slave perishing with cold? |
466 | Is''t ambition that fills up each chink in my heart, Nor allows any softer sensation a part? |
466 | Lord Montford, in the gaming phrase, asked him what he would do or what he would not do, to get home? |
466 | Need I add that our old friend the irrepressible"''Arry"is ever foremost in these gentlemanlike demonstrations? |
466 | No; that my whole life will belie; For, who so at variance as reason and I? |
466 | On perceiving his friend''s surprise, Fox exclaimed,''What would you have me do? |
466 | One of the losers overhearing what was said, exclaimed,''How''s that-- you had no money when you began to play?'' |
466 | Sometimes she explains herself plainly:--''You believe that everybody plays as honestly as yourself? |
466 | The proposer asked O''Kelly where lay his_ ESTATES_ to answer for the amount if he lost?'' |
466 | The reader will probably ask-- what next will gamblers think of betting on? |
466 | Then Yudhishthira said,--"What manner of game is this, where one man throws and another lays the stakes?" |
466 | They met at the appointed hour in Chelsea Fields, when Chevalier said to his adversary--''Pray, sir, for what do we fight?'' |
466 | WAS THE DUKE OF WELLINGTON A GAMESTER? |
466 | Well might the Emperor Justinian exclaim,--''Can we call_ PLAY_ that which causes crime? |
466 | Were you my preserver?'' |
466 | What can be done? |
466 | What do you think they will give me, Sir Philip?'' |
466 | What had become of him? |
466 | What ill company do I keep? |
466 | What is the consequence? |
466 | When did he abandon the allurements of a patrician circle? |
466 | Whence spring the difficulties which every succeeding day increases? |
466 | Who cared more for his country''s honour? |
466 | Who loved his country more than Cato? |
466 | Why are they continually hunted by their creditors? |
466 | Why are they obliged continually to rack their invention in order to save appearances? |
466 | Why not in France, in Spain, in Italy, in the Northern States, in Great Britain itself? |
466 | Will any gentleman set on the whole? |
466 | Will this mode of education rear up heroes, to lead forth our armies, or to conduct our fleets to victory? |
466 | Will you agree to it?'' |
466 | Will you order a woman who is of noble birth, and the wife of your own kinsman, to become a household slave? |
466 | Without YOU, my dear wife, what would have become of me? |
466 | Without your virtues what would we be? |
466 | Would not a man laugh to hear any one of his species complaining that life is short?'' |
466 | exclaimed the planter;''do you think I would marry my daughter to a beggar? |
466 | fewer great queens than truly great kings? |
466 | is that fair woman a mother? |
466 | or,"_ Votre jeu est- il piet?_""Is your game ready?" |
466 | or,"_ Votre jeu est- il piet?_""Is your game ready?" |
466 | rejoined the former,''do n''t you remember when we used to meet at certain parties at Bath many years ago?'' |
466 | said the former;''Very well--800 dollars-- is''t a bargain?'' |
28228 | And how about the schools for the good boys in your town? |
28228 | And you allow it to stay, and let this thing go on? |
28228 | Are not we young enough to work for him? |
28228 | Are they anything to be proud of? |
28228 | But why? |
28228 | But, my dear sir,he coughed diplomatically,"is n''t it rather unusual? |
28228 | But,said the nurse, doubtfully,"is it a good thing for your boy to have that man in the house?" |
28228 | Did you see the sink in that hall? |
28228 | Does it never come here? |
28228 | Du den, vat? |
28228 | Jim? |
28228 | Koch? |
28228 | Mother, why do n''t you speak to me? 28228 Oh, that is Mr. Riis''s bird,"said that lady, sparring for time;"a friend gave it to him--""Where you take him?" |
28228 | Vat means dot''cheese it''? |
28228 | Well,she said, when her inspection was finished,"he knocked her down, did n''t he?" |
28228 | What does he work at? |
28228 | Where you get that bird? |
28228 | Where--? |
28228 | Why, is it to- day? |
28228 | ''You do n''t answer? |
28228 | About once a week I am asked: Would I shut out any, and whom and how and why? |
28228 | And how are we to go about solving it? |
28228 | And is there not proof of it? |
28228 | And these, why do they come with their strange tongues-- for gold?" |
28228 | And to what in such men is one to appeal in the interests of civic betterment? |
28228 | And upon this showing, who ought to be excluded, when it comes to that? |
28228 | And when the little Italian asks, with shining eyes,"Which side were we on?" |
28228 | And why is it? |
28228 | As to this boss, of whom we hear so much, what manner of man is he? |
28228 | Avail? |
28228 | But a brass band now? |
28228 | But is it that? |
28228 | But suppose it had been, how much would it have appealed to them? |
28228 | But what was the use? |
28228 | But you did n''t, did you?" |
28228 | CHAPTER VIII ON WHOM SHALL WE SHUT THE DOOR? |
28228 | Childish, is it? |
28228 | D''ye think it is made to walk on?" |
28228 | Do you not fear danger from it in this country?" |
28228 | Do you see how the whole battle with the slum is fought out in and around the public school? |
28228 | Experimenting with the school? |
28228 | How can the one who hardly knows what a home means be expected to have any pride or interest in his home in the larger sense: the city? |
28228 | How did you see it?" |
28228 | How much of a problem is he? |
28228 | If he accepted the standard, whose fault was it? |
28228 | If he had next been found ranting with anarchists against the social order, would you have blamed him? |
28228 | If it pleases the other man, what is it to him for whom he votes? |
28228 | If that be the most a Christian civilization has been able to do for the neighbor till now, who shall say that it is not also the greatest? |
28228 | If this one went astray with so much to pull him the right way and but the single strand broken, what then of the other? |
28228 | In a copy of_ Charities_ which just now came in( did I not say that it goes that way all the time?) |
28228 | In fifty years how will it be? |
28228 | In his life he supplied the answer to the sigh of dreamers in all days: when will the millennium come? |
28228 | Indeed, why should it not? |
28228 | Is n''t it enough to make a man believe the millennium has come, to find that there is at last some one who knows? |
28228 | It has made him happy, has it not? |
28228 | Just now the cashier of---- Bank told me that two other gentlemen-- gamblers? |
28228 | Might get one that drinks? |
28228 | Mills of these helpless ones? |
28228 | Nice friendly turn, was n''t it? |
28228 | Now if you ask me:"And what of it all? |
28228 | On whom shall we shut the Door? |
28228 | One reads with a grim smile of the hold- ups of old:"''Where do you come from?'' |
28228 | Only, why is the dead- line hallowed? |
28228 | Or is there but one Mills? |
28228 | Or the boy, who may buy fireworks on the Fourth of July, but not set them off? |
28228 | Out of the debate of the question, Do we want boys who swear, steal, gamble, and smoke cigarettes? |
28228 | Say, where do you hang out?'' |
28228 | Starve? |
28228 | That is good enough reason for you, is n''t it?" |
28228 | The boy who is learning such lessons,--how is it with him? |
28228 | The eager haste, the frantic rush to see,--what does it not tell of these starved lives, of the quality of their aims and ambitions? |
28228 | The others got out; why not they? |
28228 | The question is, are they beyond our control? |
28228 | Was he not told by the agitators whom the police jailed at home that in a republic all men are made happy by means of the vote? |
28228 | Well, then? |
28228 | Well, what of it? |
28228 | What became of the people who were dispossessed? |
28228 | What can we do to relieve it? |
28228 | What claim have they to stand in the gap? |
28228 | What does it avail?" |
28228 | What else have we been doing the last half- dozen years or more, and what splendid results have we not to show for it? |
28228 | What matter? |
28228 | What then? |
28228 | What was it like? |
28228 | What was it? |
28228 | What were they to him except the means of keeping it up? |
28228 | What woman would not? |
28228 | What worker among the poor has not heard it? |
28228 | What, indeed, was there to say? |
28228 | Where was the Seven Dials of that day, and the men who gave it its bad name? |
28228 | Who shall say they are not good enough for him? |
28228 | Why can we not do the same? |
28228 | Why do I tell you these things? |
28228 | Why not on a stranger''s roof? |
28228 | Why should it not have the same effect on others? |
28228 | Why should it? |
28228 | Why should they not be used by the people Sunday and week- day and day and night, for whatever will serve their ends-- if the janitor has a fit? |
28228 | Will it be on Pietro? |
28228 | With this bitter mockery of it that makes the slum, can it be that the warning is indeed for us? |
28228 | Would I come and see her before I went away? |
28228 | Would it seem to them common sense, or ca nt and humbug? |
28228 | Yes, the flat was to let; had she any children? |
28228 | Yet would you fear especial danger to our institutions, to our citizenship, from those four? |
28228 | Yet would you have had her different? |
28228 | You will go no further unless I leave it out? |
28228 | [ 22] Does any one ask yet why we fight the slum in Berlin and New York? |
28228 | [ Illustration:"Are we not young enough to work for him?"] |
28228 | _ Parbleu!_ must one not work? |
28228 | he( policeman?) |
28228 | who can doubt that the lesson has sunk into a heart that will thenceforward beat more loyally for the city of his home? |
44164 | All right,rebuts Thief,"but why ring all of the solemn bells on the retailers? |
44164 | What,the criminological tyro would ask,"is the remedy"? |
44164 | Also, Cain''s reply,"Am I my brother''s keeper?" |
44164 | And if he will have it so, why babble about"disarmament"and"waves"of crime? |
44164 | And why not, when you cut to the heart of it? |
44164 | As a dealer in the world''s mart can you return an honest answer? |
44164 | Bogy said,''I am Bogy; have you never heard of me?'' |
44164 | Boiled to the bone, force is all one in principle, so why don kid gloves in doing your bit for yourself? |
44164 | But why the apparent diversion from the text? |
44164 | Can any man answer unqualifiedly, and if he can not, just why exclude the psychic from the possibilities? |
44164 | Concerning the primary proposition, say as to how many times in your adult life you have been obliged to put up your fists in self defense? |
44164 | Consider such circumstances and say how many"plants"they should"tend"during the daylight of their prison day? |
44164 | Could anything be farther from that for which the average taxpayer means his money shall be expended? |
44164 | Crime? |
44164 | Did they or did they not play the game as I played it, until consumers got after them with buying strikes, and the cry of stop thief? |
44164 | Did they or did they not?" |
44164 | Do hopples employed in effecting change in the original, instinctive gait of a mare from trot to pace, alone account for change of gait? |
44164 | Do n''t a lot of so- called"highbrows"do the same and go to the head of the social class? |
44164 | Essentially how much have they, taking into account their blood and bringing- up, and the blood and bringing- up of the average criminal? |
44164 | Far from being fed up with bestial exhibitions(?) |
44164 | Have you ever, really, thought it all over? |
44164 | How are we to get the down- to- the- ground work of the land done without the aid of such? |
44164 | How can legal punishment punish, if only about five shots in the hundred of it hit so as to hurt? |
44164 | How many besides those who make a''soft''living at it, and those who first gouged and got theirs?" |
44164 | How repress the criminal by bidding for him, and how deter him through laying odds in his favor that are close to prohibitive as against society? |
44164 | How"train criminologists,"other than through their intimate contact with criminals? |
44164 | Hyperbolic rot? |
44164 | If morbidly by"psychic contagion"is admitted, why refuse pre- natal impressions of psychic origin? |
44164 | If the instinct to play a base horn, why not the instinct to play a base part? |
44164 | If they did, what had they on"the imprisoned felon of the stripe in question"? |
44164 | Is it, then, that the State itself is in appreciable degree responsible for its criminals of all grades and types? |
44164 | Is n''t it true that most of the worth- while things men have done, have been done against grain that howled betimes for easier going? |
44164 | Just why did beer poison Bogy''s life? |
44164 | Make prison life for such men dully automatic, comparatively, under an industrial drive? |
44164 | May such an one be held safe either to help frame or interpret the laws of his land, on which the oncoming generations of American youth must guide? |
44164 | Pretty picture in so far as painted, is n''t it, with which to stir the imagination and ambitions of your boy? |
44164 | Reinstate the mechanism and the spirit of the"hell holes of Egypt"? |
44164 | Result? |
44164 | Result? |
44164 | Result? |
44164 | Save their women, and say how much the minds of honorables of that kidney have"on"the criminal mind? |
44164 | Surely, all of that does not come under the heading of"reflex action"; and if it does, what of it? |
44164 | The remedies? |
44164 | Well, then, since bidding for crime and compromising with criminals wo n''t do, what''s the answer? |
44164 | Well, then, what are the corporal and semi- corporal disciplinary tools to be employed on the job? |
44164 | Well,"did they or did they not"? |
44164 | Were they trained criminologists skilled to decide questions of crime and punishment? |
44164 | What did they do to each other when diving foreign exchange upheaved home values? |
44164 | What did they do to every body for long months after prices should have dropped pretty close to their normal level? |
44164 | What expect other than that certain types of men will gladly dare issues written to their hands, hearts, and natural predilections? |
44164 | What his instruments to hand? |
44164 | What is the last power of the protoplasmic germ, and what is the last influence from which it derives that power? |
44164 | What made the intrinsic difference in mental bent and physical outlook as between Webster and Hayne? |
44164 | What the deterrence in a comparatively short prison term that leaves the prisoner with a firm grip on his bundle of loot? |
44164 | What''s the answer, if not transmitted instinct, and who is to draw the boundary line thereof? |
44164 | What''s to be done about it, and how is it to be done? |
44164 | What''s to be done about it? |
44164 | What? |
44164 | Who does not know the legal trimmer whose best hold is debasement of the trademark of his craft? |
44164 | Why not go after what you want with the like of the mailed fist, and let it go at that? |
44164 | Why not sound the curfew on a batch of the big bandits, and land them where you land hard- pressed''pickers''?" |
44164 | Why not, when the testimony of his retainers is accepted at its face value in our courts of law? |
44164 | Why not? |
44164 | Why place embargo on preparedness to earn an honest living, and at the same time make unblushing bid for the murderous parasite? |
44164 | Why put a premium on activities, pursuing which in free life first made a brutal drone- sport of a lad, then headed him for bolts and bars? |
44164 | Why roam for similes that seem so far removed from consideration of the psychology of American criminals? |
44164 | Why take the punishment? |
44164 | Why would n''t such go after what they want with murderous tools? |
44164 | Why, if the physical is final? |
44164 | Why, on the one hand, tempt cupidity, and on the other hand, tax honesty? |
44164 | Why, when the hopples are removed, does she not revert to the trot? |
44164 | Why, with mixture of those breeds, mixture of manners? |
44164 | Why? |
44164 | Why? |
44164 | Why? |
44164 | Will they not? |
44164 | You do n''t believe it? |
44164 | _ Please_: why so many criminal rounders in and out of your prison houses?" |
44164 | replies our man, and adds:"But how many are rendering that kind of service? |
57026 | As the guard''s van got opposite me I caught sight of the guard, who shouted,''What''s the matter?'' 57026 What do I mean?" |
57026 | What on earth do you mean by shooting in that way? |
57026 | What on earth is the matter with you? |
57026 | Why should I? 57026 A voice cried out,What shall I do with the horses?" |
57026 | Aaron answered the knock, and said,''Who''s there?'' |
57026 | Aaron said,"What do you wish me to do? |
57026 | Aaron said,"Who is that?" |
57026 | And what were the police doing? |
57026 | Before he started off after his cattle, I said to him,"Are you sure you have got enough money to pay your way?" |
57026 | Do you see that fire in the distance?" |
57026 | He appeared rather anxious, and said,"Is there any news of the Kellys?" |
57026 | He at once entered into conversation with her, and said,"My good woman, are there any snakes about here?" |
57026 | He looked at me and said,"How did you get this into your possession?" |
57026 | He replied,"No; who is he?" |
57026 | He replied,"What is the meaning of all the activity that has taken place among the police to- day in different parts of the district?" |
57026 | He said,"Do you mean it?" |
57026 | He said,"Shall I follow them?" |
57026 | He said,"What do you mean?" |
57026 | He said,"What shall we do?" |
57026 | He then said,''Where are you going?'' |
57026 | His first words to me were,"Did I not tell you they would stick up a bank in New South Wales?" |
57026 | How came it that four men should have been able for two years to carry on their career of crime unchecked? |
57026 | I asked Aaron what he thought best to be done? |
57026 | I asked him how he would like the reward disposed of, supposing he got it? |
57026 | I asked him why he had left one constable behind at Aaron''s house? |
57026 | I asked,"Where?" |
57026 | I called out to him,"Are you drawing off a jug for some old woman at this hour of the night?" |
57026 | I drove past the hotel to the crossing, and, seeing Mr. Stanistreet, asked him,''What''s the matter?'' |
57026 | I had hardly given these orders, when I heard the sentry placed at the back of the platform call out,"Who goes there?" |
57026 | I knocked, and a man inside called out,"Who''s there?" |
57026 | I replied,"I have no objection, but where shall we keep it?" |
57026 | I said to her,"Where is your husband?" |
57026 | I said to him,"I suppose you will be very sorry when they are captured?" |
57026 | I said,"Did you get her on the square?" |
57026 | I said,"Do n''t you funk it?" |
57026 | I said,"Do n''t you know me?" |
57026 | I said,"Donald, what makes you laugh?" |
57026 | I said,"Have you any strangers in your house?" |
57026 | I said,"How do you know?" |
57026 | I said,"How long ago?" |
57026 | I said,"Is there no other way you can get down?" |
57026 | I said,"Never mind, read it to me; and who is it from?" |
57026 | I said,"No; why do you ask?" |
57026 | I said,"Well, what is to be done now?" |
57026 | I said,"What do you mean?" |
57026 | I said,"What is the matter?" |
57026 | I said,"What you''mell?" |
57026 | I said,"Who is it?" |
57026 | I said,"Who took him away?" |
57026 | I said,"Why not?" |
57026 | I said,"Why, what has he been doing to you?" |
57026 | I said--"What is the matter? |
57026 | I then said to Donald,"Can you see any smoke?" |
57026 | Inspector Sadleir here remarked,"You wanted then to kill the people in the train?" |
57026 | Is it anything in particular? |
57026 | Kelly replied,"I have a cheque of Mr. Macauley''s to change; will you please cash it?" |
57026 | Kelly then said,"I have a statement here which contains a little part of my life, and I want it published by Mr. Gill, will you take it?" |
57026 | Lawless followed him, and when he got near, the man called out,"Is that you, Steve?" |
57026 | Lawless said,"Who did you take me for?" |
57026 | Macauley without dismounting said,"What is the good of your sticking up the station? |
57026 | Mrs. Sherritt came to the door when the dogs barked, and called out,"Is that you, Jack?" |
57026 | My daughter then asked,''Joe, why did you shoot Aaron?'' |
57026 | My first question was,"Have you arrested the offender?" |
57026 | On his arrival, I met him near the house, and directly I approached him he sheered off from me, and said,"Who are you?" |
57026 | Our first greeting was,"What luck have you had?" |
57026 | She said,"Who could have put the police into that camp in the mountains but you?" |
57026 | The constable said,"What is it?" |
57026 | The detective said,"He has sold us; who is this coming towards us?" |
57026 | The first words he said were,"What police are you, and how did you get up here?" |
57026 | Then I heard one of the ladies calling out,"Who is that at the window?" |
57026 | They came up to him, and said,"Have you seen a man riding a roan horse?" |
57026 | They sent to Gill''s house, and saw his wife; Kelly said to her,"Where is your husband?" |
57026 | When he heard my voice, he replied,"Is that you, Mr. Hare? |
57026 | When outside Byrne asked me,''Is there a window in front of the house?'' |
57026 | When the door was burst in I asked,''What is that for?'' |
57026 | When the three arrived at Aaron''s house Wicks knocked at the door; Aaron said,"Who is there?" |
57026 | Why do n''t the police use bullets instead of duck- shot? |
57026 | Would they not have tried to kill me?" |
57026 | and who are those?'' |
57026 | or''Who are you?'' |
57026 | you are the school- master here, are you? |
15803 | (_ a_) Fits or Convulsions in Childhood, Epilepsy, St. Vitus Dance, or other nervous diseases? |
15803 | (_ b_) Mental and bodily state of near relations same as above? |
15803 | 74 To what conclusions do the statistics contained in this table point? |
15803 | A Beggar? |
15803 | A Pauper? |
15803 | Abode? |
15803 | Abode? |
15803 | Age, and state of Health? |
15803 | Age? |
15803 | Alive or Dead? |
15803 | And how can that which is condemned by the experience of ordinary life become useful on the day some tribunal pronounces a sentence of imprisonment? |
15803 | Any imprisoned? |
15803 | Are there any social habits which will account for it? |
15803 | But how is it to be improved when the tendencies of industrialism are to degrade the women who stand by nature at the head of it? |
15803 | But is it a fact that destitution in the sense we have been using the word is the cause of all these offences? |
15803 | But, in spite of the favourable position in which women stand, as far as work is concerned in America and Australia, what do we find? |
15803 | By others? |
15803 | By parents? |
15803 | Cause of death? |
15803 | Character? |
15803 | Confirmed, or not? |
15803 | Country? |
15803 | County? |
15803 | Date? |
15803 | Destitute? |
15803 | Do we find that there is no such thing as a fallen class in Melbourne and New York? |
15803 | Does he differ from his fellows in height and weight? |
15803 | Does he possess a peculiar conformation of skull and brain? |
15803 | Does the information furnished by these statistics stand alone, or is it supported by the result of investigations conducted in a different field? |
15803 | Does this difference manifest itself in the statistics of crime? |
15803 | Drunken or other? |
15803 | Habits? |
15803 | Has the criminal any bodily and mental characteristics which differentiate him from the ordinary man? |
15803 | How are these causes to be got rid of or neutralised? |
15803 | How large a proportion of the criminal population is made up of the middle and upper classes? |
15803 | How many dead? |
15803 | How many dead? |
15803 | How many of them has turned out( a) satisfactory,( b) unsatisfactory,( c) re- convicted? |
15803 | How many? |
15803 | If Children; How many? |
15803 | If it was a question of making these men good scholars, good workmen, good soldiers, should we accept the method of prolonged cellular isolation? |
15803 | If the proportion is so high at the end of two years, what will it amount to at the end of five? |
15803 | Imprisoned, or not? |
15803 | Imprisoned, or not? |
15803 | Imprisoned? |
15803 | In Local Prisons? |
15803 | In Penal Servitude? |
15803 | In a public institution? |
15803 | In such circumstances what is to be done? |
15803 | In these circumstances what is to be done? |
15803 | In what way does a rise in temperature act on the individual so as to make him less capable of resisting the criminal impulse? |
15803 | In what way is this manifest tendency to be accounted for? |
15803 | Indolent? |
15803 | Insanity? |
15803 | Is England an exception to the rest of the world with respect to crime? |
15803 | Is England in a better position in this respect than these two countries? |
15803 | Is any serious amount of crime due to the desperation of people in a position such as this? |
15803 | Is he anomalous in face and feature, in intellect, in will, in feeling? |
15803 | Is it economic, social, or climatic? |
15803 | Is it economic? |
15803 | Is it not the case that some races are inherently more prone to crime than others? |
15803 | Is it the end of punishment to act as a deterrent? |
15803 | Is its total volume increasing or decreasing in the principal civilised countries of the world? |
15803 | Is not this to place him outside the conditions of existence, and to unteach him that liberty for which we pretend he is being prepared?... |
15803 | Is this the condition of things in England at the present day? |
15803 | Knowledge, Extent of? |
15803 | Legitimate? |
15803 | Maiden name of wife? |
15803 | Mental Capacity? |
15803 | Name? |
15803 | Name? |
15803 | Nevertheless, on examining the criminal statistics of the colony of Victoria, what do we find? |
15803 | Occupation? |
15803 | Occupation? |
15803 | Of what Disease? |
15803 | On what ground is this considerable increase of homicide to be accounted for, except on the ground of climate? |
15803 | Or is the blame to be laid equally on the shoulders of both? |
15803 | Other Punishments? |
15803 | Place? |
15803 | Religious belief? |
15803 | School attendance, regular or not? |
15803 | Scrofula? |
15803 | Seeing, then, that the total amount of crime is regularly growing, how is the decrease in the daily average of persons in prison to be accounted for? |
15803 | Served Apprenticeship, or not? |
15803 | Suicide? |
15803 | Suicide? |
15803 | Temperament? |
15803 | Temperate, or not? |
15803 | Temperate, or not? |
15803 | The Home good, or bad? |
15803 | The second is, to what extent are begging and theft the results of destitution? |
15803 | To what cause is this vast difference in favour of India to be attributed? |
15803 | Tuberculosis? |
15803 | Was it destitution arising from want of employment which led them to break the law? |
15803 | Were Parents related? |
15803 | What are the chief causes which have made him such? |
15803 | What are the practical conclusions to be deduced from this study of the relations between temperature and crime? |
15803 | What are they to do but beg or steal? |
15803 | What does such a comparison reveal? |
15803 | What does this condition of things serve to show? |
15803 | What is punishment as applied to crime? |
15803 | What is the cause of this state of warfare within society? |
15803 | What is the effect of this or that kind of punishment? |
15803 | What is the final result at which we then arrive with respect to the percentage of persons forced by the action of destitution into the army of crime? |
15803 | What is the import of these statistics? |
15803 | What is the period of the year we should expect most crime to be committed if poverty is at the root of it? |
15803 | What is this permanent cause? |
15803 | What is to be done with offenders when their term of punishment has expired? |
15803 | What proportion of the total volume of crime is due to these two offense? |
15803 | What then are the international statistics of theft, and what is the relative wealth of the several countries from which these statistics are drawn? |
15803 | What trade? |
15803 | What would the dockers say if one of these establishments was instituted by the municipality for the loading and unloading of ships? |
15803 | What, indeed, is the use of higher wages to a certain section of the members of Trades- Unions? |
15803 | When these statistics are placed side by side with our own what do we find? |
15803 | Wherein does the Local Prison system as worked by this staff differ from the system in operation in convict prisons? |
15803 | Whether served? |
15803 | Which of the combatants is to blame? |
15803 | Why does London enjoy such an evil pre- eminence in this matter? |
15803 | Will not difference of race suffice to account for it? |
15803 | With or Without? |
15803 | and of what diseases? |
15803 | and where? |
15803 | or illegitimate? |
101 | And how can I reach you? |
101 | Are they gon na feed us? |
101 | Are you a police officer, sir? |
101 | Are you familiar with Bellcore Technical Reference Document TR- TSY-000350? |
101 | Big guy, heavyset? |
101 | But is n''t this what you said was basically what appeared in Phrack? |
101 | But you are a` Phoenix Resident?'' |
101 | Did you hear what Godwin said about INSTRUMENTALITY OF A CRIME? |
101 | Excuse me? |
101 | How about if you take copies of the data? |
101 | Oh, did you know so- and- so? |
101 | Really? 101 Really? |
101 | Somebody broke in to your computer, huh? |
101 | Sort of like the Bell System buying Western Union? |
101 | Taiwan and Ireland? |
101 | What is your name, sir? |
101 | What kind do you WISH you had? |
101 | What kind of computer do you have? |
101 | Why did you say I was` quaint?'' |
101 | Yeah? |
101 | Yes? |
101 | You guys crash here a lot? |
101 | You know who works in that building over there? |
101 | You''re going to put a TEENAGER in charge of a federal security BBS? |
101 | .was THAT the problem? |
101 | Access- code theft? |
101 | And if it''s money, then why are n''t they free to compete for it? |
101 | And just how widespread was this sort of thing? |
101 | And was it possible? |
101 | And what about a certain stolen E911 Document, that posed a direct threat to the police emergency lines? |
101 | Are TAIWAN and IRELAND really in the forefront of this stuff? |
101 | Breaking into ATM bank machines? |
101 | But can they do it, in the real world? |
101 | By what right?" |
101 | Computer intrusions? |
101 | Consider this: if"hacking"is supposed to be so serious and real- life and dangerous, then how come NINE- YEAR- OLD KIDS have computers and modems? |
101 | Could he take the charts out in the street and show them to anybody,"without violating some proprietary notion that BellSouth has?" |
101 | Did n''t he have to go to the bathroom? |
101 | Did n''t he know Terminus? |
101 | Did you ever hack into a system? |
101 | Did"Sundevil"send''em reeling back in confusion? |
101 | Do n''t they already have their own generators in this eight- story monster? |
101 | Do we add ID? |
101 | Do we add new protocol? |
101 | EVEN THE 911 SERVICE? |
101 | Exactly what bits of knowledge in the Document were, in fact, unknown to the public? |
101 | Fear? |
101 | For example, what happened when the subscriber dialed 911? |
101 | Gas utilities? |
101 | Had n''t Neidorf removed much of this? |
101 | He had lost some computers in an ongoing investigation-- so what? |
101 | How come nobody can come up with four lousy grand so this woman can do her job? |
101 | How dare this near- criminal dictate what is or is n''t"acceptable"behavior from AT&T? |
101 | How do you keep people disposable, yet assure their awestruck respect for your property? |
101 | How had"misguided teenagers"managed to alarm the United States Secret Service? |
101 | How much does he actually have, then? |
101 | How painful, to be restricted to boards in one''s own AREA CODE-- what the heck is an"area code"anyway, and what makes it so special? |
101 | How will they be regarded, by the mouse- whizzing masters of cyberspace? |
101 | How will those currently enjoying America''s digital bounty regard, and treat, all this teeming refuse yearning to breathe free? |
101 | How''d he get in? |
101 | If a tree falls in the forest and nobody hears it, how much is the noise worth? |
101 | If it''s"service,"why are n''t they treated like a public service? |
101 | If there were hackers into BellSouth switching- stations, then how come nothing had happened? |
101 | Indifference? |
101 | Is it-- credit card fraud? |
101 | Is posting digital booty of this sort supposed to be protected by the First Amendment? |
101 | Kids: this one is all yours, all right? |
101 | Locations of E911 computers? |
101 | My immediate reaction is a strong rush of indignant pity: WHY DOESN''T SOMEBODY BUY THIS WOMAN HER AMIGA?! |
101 | Need advice? |
101 | Need training? |
101 | Neighborhood watch? |
101 | OF COURSE they spy on Madonna''s phone calls-- I mean, WOULDN''T YOU? |
101 | Ongoing maintenance subcommittees? |
101 | Or are they only dreaming? |
101 | Or were they best defined as TRESPASSERS, a very common teenage misdemeanor? |
101 | Phone numbers for telco personnel? |
101 | Phone- phreaking? |
101 | Police watch television, listen to radio, read newspapers and magazines; why should the new medium of boards be different? |
101 | Pornographic bulletin boards? |
101 | Records tampering? |
101 | Right? |
101 | Satellite TV piracy? |
101 | Should they be sternly treated as potential AGENTS OF ESPIONAGE, or perhaps as INDUSTRIAL SPIES? |
101 | So what happens to the telephone companies? |
101 | So: from the law''s point of view, why risk missing anything? |
101 | Software piracy? |
101 | Software viruses? |
101 | Some journo had asked him:"Would you describe these people as GENIUSES?" |
101 | Some kind of vigilante group? |
101 | Theft of cable service? |
101 | There''s a case on record of a single question--"How''d you do it?" |
101 | UNUSUAL PROBLEMS WITH HER PHONE? |
101 | Waltz? |
101 | Was hacking FRAUD? |
101 | Was hacking THEFT OF SERVICE? |
101 | Was it some kind of automatic keyboard- whacking device that could actually type code? |
101 | Water utilities? |
101 | Were they PUBLIC INFORMATION, these charts, all about PSAPs, ALIs, nodes, local end switches? |
101 | Were they VOYEURS, snoops, invaders of privacy? |
101 | Were they dangerous? |
101 | Were they just BROWSERS, harmless intellectual explorers? |
101 | Were they"mischievous?" |
101 | Whaddya gon na do? |
101 | What are we to make of this? |
101 | What did they want? |
101 | What distinguishes it from a standard board? |
101 | What does an underground board look like? |
101 | What exactly HAVE you"stolen,"anyway? |
101 | What happened to backups? |
101 | What if the computer is the instrumentality of a crime? |
101 | What on earth do they expect these dual guests to do with each other? |
101 | What other group of criminals, she asks rhetorically, publishes newsletters and holds conventions? |
101 | What were computer- intruding hackers, anyway-- how should society, and the law, best define their actions? |
101 | What will computer crime look like in ten years? |
101 | What''s to be done with these people, in the bright new shiny electroworld? |
101 | Where had they come from? |
101 | Who WERE they? |
101 | Who knows what they''re up to, in Oregon or Alaska or Florida or California? |
101 | Who remembers the name of the SECOND head of the Secret Service? |
101 | Who were these"underground groups"and"high- tech operators?" |
101 | Who? |
101 | Whom did it hurt, really? |
101 | Why did Prophet do this? |
101 | Why did the alarm systems blare automatically, without any human being noticing? |
101 | Why does this Nice Lady hang out with these unsavory characters? |
101 | Why had those New York switching systems simply run out of power? |
101 | Why should he be? |
101 | Will it get better? |
101 | Will it have Phrack on it? |
101 | With contempt? |
101 | Would my computer be seized by the Secret Service? |
101 | Would n''t that spell the doom of AT&T as an institution? |
101 | You BOUGHT it?" |
101 | or is it Organized Against Crime Threat? |
1688 | ''Ow did I like it? 1688 A man of business you are, eh? |
1688 | A vycytion, eh? 1688 After you have been out all night in the streets,"I asked,"what do you do in the morning for something to eat?" |
1688 | An''get fourteen days? |
1688 | And how did you like the procession, mate? |
1688 | And what''s the result? 1688 And which son is this?" |
1688 | Anything to say? |
1688 | Are they men? |
1688 | But how long does the rush season last, in which you receive this high wage of thirty bob? |
1688 | But look you,said he to me,"wot''ll''appen to''er if I do n''t py up the ten shillings? |
1688 | But suppose, after you''ve had your night''s sleep, you refuse to pick oakum, or break stones, or do any work at all? |
1688 | But wot''s the haddress, sir? |
1688 | But''ow about the wife an''kiddies? |
1688 | But''ow about this''ere cheap immigration? |
1688 | Can yer give us a job, governor? |
1688 | Can you tell me the way to Wapping? |
1688 | Cawn yer let me''ave somethin''for this, daughter? 1688 Did n''t you know you had to stay for services?" |
1688 | Do you mean to say that I ca n''t get out of here? |
1688 | Do you twig? |
1688 | Do you want to stay? |
1688 | Have you ever taken a vacation? |
1688 | How about the wife and kiddies of the man who works cheaper than you and gets your job? 1688 How about tobacco?" |
1688 | How long have you been here? |
1688 | How much for a room? |
1688 | How much will you give me for them? |
1688 | How much? |
1688 | How tall are you? |
1688 | I say,he said,"wot plyce yer wanter go?" |
1688 | Milk and sugar, I suppose, and a silver spoon? |
1688 | Oh, why did you bring me here? |
1688 | Some mug left it on the table when he went out, eh, do n''t you think? |
1688 | That you will keep me here against my will? |
1688 | The Jews of Whitechapel, say, a- cutting our throats right along? |
1688 | Then what? |
1688 | Then what? |
1688 | Thirteen years, sir; an''do n''t you think you''ll fancy the lodgin''? |
1688 | What do you expect to do in the end? |
1688 | What does he say, constable? |
1688 | What does he say? |
1688 | What will you have? |
1688 | What? |
1688 | Where''d you find it? |
1688 | Where, sir? |
1688 | Why did n''t you ask the woman for food? |
1688 | Why did you not get under the water and make an end of it, instead of giving us all this trouble and bother? |
1688 | Will the bloke bother with a fellow now? |
1688 | Won''tcher py me? |
1688 | Worked yer way over on a cattle boat? |
1688 | Wot''s yer game, eh? 1688 Wot''s yer gyme?" |
1688 | Wot? |
1688 | Yes? |
1688 | Yes? |
1688 | Yes? |
1688 | You''ave business, eh? |
1688 | You''ll be hin hagain to''ave a look? |
1688 | ''''Ere,''sez''e,''wot you doin''''ere?'' |
1688 | ''What is it that I''m wantun?'' |
1688 | A bullet was"''andier,"but how under the sun was he to get hold of a revolver? |
1688 | Ah, where were they not? |
1688 | An''fer w''y? |
1688 | An''out I goes, but I sez,''Think I want ter pinch[ steal] the bleedin''bridge?''" |
1688 | And besides, it was Sunday, and why should even a starving man look for work on Sunday? |
1688 | And if it is not their intention to deprive them of sleep, why do n''t they let them sleep earlier in the night? |
1688 | And if the officer has not too much, can the pauper be properly fed on less than half the amount?" |
1688 | And she was his sister? |
1688 | And who shall blame them? |
1688 | Back from a voyage, sir?" |
1688 | But now the query became,"Walk or ride?" |
1688 | But what of the daughters? |
1688 | CHAPTER IV-- A MAN AND THE ABYSS"I say, can you let a lodging?" |
1688 | Could this be the room I had rented for six shillings a week? |
1688 | Did I know the rounds yet? |
1688 | Eh? |
1688 | Fierce, was n''t it? |
1688 | For instance, has Civilisation bettered the lot of man? |
1688 | For was there not that wonderful thing, a breakfast, awaiting us? |
1688 | He has no money for beer, and his lair is only for sleeping purposes, so what else remains for him to do? |
1688 | How about his wife and kiddies? |
1688 | I suppose people looking for work almost worry you to death?" |
1688 | I wonder if God hears them? |
1688 | If it is their intention to deprive them of sleep, why do they let them sleep after five in the morning? |
1688 | If the pauper has ample food, why does the officer have more? |
1688 | Is the picture overdrawn? |
1688 | Is this a singular case? |
1688 | Kids? |
1688 | No sleep all night, nothin''to eat, what shape am I in the mornin''to look for work? |
1688 | S''pose I do get into the casual ward? |
1688 | S''pose I look for a job? |
1688 | Seafarin''chap, eh? |
1688 | Sir George Blank, eh? |
1688 | So the question re- shapes itself:_ Has Civilisation bettered the lot of the average man_? |
1688 | T''make you mis''rable? |
1688 | The question naturally arises, How do_ they_ live? |
1688 | The thing happens, the father is struck down, and what then? |
1688 | Then why do they do it? |
1688 | Then wot did you come''ere for?" |
1688 | Then, there''s the other wimmen,''ow do they treat a pore stoker with a few shillin''s in''is trouseys? |
1688 | Thou that wast his Republic, Wilt thou clasp their knees? |
1688 | Voices begin to go up the scale, something like this:-"Yes?" |
1688 | Was I looking for work? |
1688 | What chance does that give me to look for a job? |
1688 | What chance does that give me to look for work? |
1688 | What could the woman do? |
1688 | What then? |
1688 | What was the matter with me hanging on and waiting for Buffalo Bill? |
1688 | What was to be done? |
1688 | What was to be done? |
1688 | When before I inquired the way of a policeman, I was usually asked,"Bus or''ansom, sir?" |
1688 | Where should they go? |
1688 | Where was I hanging out? |
1688 | Where were the children? |
1688 | Why were nine out of ten of them asleep or trying to sleep? |
1688 | Wilt thou endure forever, O Milton''s England, these? |
1688 | Wot do you work at? |
1688 | Wot for? |
1688 | Wot''s a man like me want o''wimmen, eh? |
1688 | Wot''s she goin''to do, eh? |
1688 | Wot''s she goin''to do?" |
1688 | Wotcher say?" |
1688 | for the likes o''me? |
59621 | A false name, is it? |
59621 | And where do you get the money to pay all of them? |
59621 | But how am I going to get experience if some of you chaps do n''t give me a chance? |
59621 | But what do I get for running errands for you? |
59621 | But, Doctor,I said,"you would n''t have Sophie Lyons be anything but a lady, would you?" |
59621 | Did n''t you see this happen? |
59621 | Do n''t you know there''s nothing that inspires people''s confidence like old men? 59621 Do you think this would be a good idea?" |
59621 | Gosh all hemlock, who are you? |
59621 | Have you nothing better than these? |
59621 | Heard the news? |
59621 | How do you do? |
59621 | How do you make that out? |
59621 | If these men can make a good living robbing banks,thought Raymond,"why ca n''t I?" |
59621 | Is this where that woman is? |
59621 | Mamma,he sobbed,"I heard something about you which makes me feel awful bad, but I know it is n''t true, is it, mamma?" |
59621 | Mamma,she was saying;"why does n''t Sophie bring the rest of my dinner?" |
59621 | Money? |
59621 | My darling,I said,"do n''t you want to kiss your own mother?" |
59621 | Oh, is that it? |
59621 | So you tried to save Charlie Steele''s life, did you? |
59621 | Tell me, child, what is it? |
59621 | Then I may really have the practice? |
59621 | Well, where is my little girl? 59621 What name did you give when you were caught in a disreputable house?" |
59621 | What on earth is that bell ringing for? |
59621 | What''s the news of Kate? |
59621 | When are you going home? |
59621 | Why do you hire such old men? |
59621 | Why,asked Grady, his eyes aflame with sudden suspicion,"what''s the matter?" |
59621 | You know how hard it is for a man or woman to secure permanent work after leaving prison? 59621 You mean, rob a bank, do n''t you?" |
59621 | You own a cottage at 51 Twenty- third Street? |
59621 | After another long wait Doyle came out again and said:"Are you still there? |
59621 | Agreeable? |
59621 | And what did I have to show for all the nervous strain, all the suffering and hardship I underwent during that week? |
59621 | At last I was at the end of my resources-- should I lose my little home and my children, or should I go back once more, just once more to my old life? |
59621 | But criminals often escape from prison, it is urged-- what then? |
59621 | But how to lure the cashier out of the bank? |
59621 | But my home and my little ones, dearer to me than life, what was to become of them? |
59621 | But was this woman exceptionally unlucky? |
59621 | But what benefit does he get out of this easily acquired wealth? |
59621 | But what did"Sheeney Mike"gain by all this? |
59621 | But what had we gained by our escape? |
59621 | CHAPTER IV WOMEN CRIMINALS OF EXTRAORDINARY ABILITY WITH WHOM I WAS IN PARTNERSHIP Sophie Lyons, bank president-- can you imagine it? |
59621 | Ca n''t the lady arrange to step inside for a minute? |
59621 | Can you wonder why I have learned the lesson that crime does not pay? |
59621 | Could it be recovered? |
59621 | Could"Red"Leary attend to these two matters? |
59621 | Did crime pay Harry Raymond? |
59621 | Did this remarkable man find that crime paid in the long run? |
59621 | Did you know the late Sir Edward, doctor?" |
59621 | Do n''t you like this street any more?" |
59621 | Do you know what that is? |
59621 | Does crime pay? |
59621 | From a neighboring cell the two men arrested earlier in the day called out:"Hello, Sophie, how did you get in?" |
59621 | How dare you give us an assumed name and impose on us in this manner? |
59621 | How did she get it? |
59621 | How was it stolen? |
59621 | I cried between the kisses, with which I fairly smothered the astonished old man;"where in the world did you come from?" |
59621 | I was about to escape when a redfaced woman arrived and shouted:"You hussy, what do you mean by hugging my husband?" |
59621 | I was, therefore, greatly surprised when she stepped up to me and called me by name:"Why, Sophie Lyons, how do you do?" |
59621 | I wondered what could have caused the poor boy to speak that way, so I patted him on the back and said:"Why, what is the matter, dearie? |
59621 | I''m only a poor old woman and I want you to give me your advice?" |
59621 | If crime does not pay for the really great criminals, how can the small criminals have any hope? |
59621 | In the old days you used to have all the money you needed-- why do n''t you use your wits and get some now?" |
59621 | Is that agreeable, doctor?" |
59621 | May I ask if it is still for sale?" |
59621 | On my account I did not care-- but what would become of my children? |
59621 | The leader will say to him:"When are you going home, Jack?" |
59621 | They took Marsh and Bullard out, but what was gained? |
59621 | Was there no way to escape from my wretched career? |
59621 | What could be the meaning of all these visits from physicians? |
59621 | What do you want? |
59621 | What had we gained? |
59621 | What on earth could the president of a bank want of a bank robber? |
59621 | What would you do with a stolen watch which bore, deeply engraved on the back, the name and address of its rightful owner? |
59621 | Who stole this masterpiece? |
59621 | Will any reader who has reviewed with me the lives of the famous criminals recounted above dispute my assertion that, truly, CRIME DOES NOT PAY? |
59621 | Would I better do it? |
59621 | Would the cashier be good enough to step outside and discuss a little matter of business with a lady who was unable to leave her carriage? |
59621 | Yet what did all his cleverness avail this prince of"sneaks"? |
59621 | said one;"do you live here?" |
29797 | Am I under a system of especial surveillance? |
29797 | At what are our rulers aiming? |
29797 | But do not the rules require the warden to assemble the females as well as males in the chapel Sabbath mornings for worship? |
29797 | How about commencing the school in the chapel? |
29797 | A post- mortem examination was had, at which one asked,"What was the matter with the man?" |
29797 | Again, where was that place of quarreling? |
29797 | And are not some of our jails themselves nuisances, a disgrace to the State? |
29797 | And what shall be done for those children coming up in idleness, ignorance and vagrancy? |
29797 | And where was the quarreling? |
29797 | And which do you prefer? |
29797 | And why not this result? |
29797 | Ask him,"How many are 8 and 2?" |
29797 | But are not just such traits found in the world all about us? |
29797 | But does not the announcement itself show an aggravated wrong to the prisoners, or a false representation? |
29797 | But one asks,"Do you think it possible to reform all, or a large proportion of prisoners?" |
29797 | But one queries,"Why was the warden determined that you should not see the men coming out?" |
29797 | But the reader will ask,"Did not this warden allow the men who chose, to take anything extra?" |
29797 | But what could have impelled the assertors to such a course? |
29797 | But what is its full import? |
29797 | But what of the effects upon the inmates thus left with so much idle time on their hands? |
29797 | But what shall we believe? |
29797 | But what shall we say of this course of condemning a man unheard, and on ex parte assertions? |
29797 | But what shall we think of the assertion that"the food should be so prepared that it shall be a punishment to the men to eat it?" |
29797 | But what was her gain? |
29797 | But why purchase these potatoes"not fit to be put into the human stomach"? |
29797 | But why pursue this dark recital? |
29797 | But why the difference between the second and third years with the fewer men and alleged healthy state? |
29797 | But, in my astonishment at reading, I would inquire,"Have I fallen into a general confusion of names? |
29797 | Can it be possible, that one in New Hampshire, at this late day, uttered a sentiment like that? |
29797 | Could that be any extenuation of their wrong? |
29797 | Do any wonder that the committee should be satisfied with such showing, if looking to nothing but to the dollars and cents? |
29797 | Do you prefer manhood- producing with its benign effects, or money- making attended with the blighting of the higher aspirations of the soul? |
29797 | Does it pay thus to cut off educational and moral privileges and share such results? |
29797 | Does not this look to the need of a classification, in these institutions, that we now have not? |
29797 | Had it really befallen me as it befel the man going down from Jerusalem to Jericho? |
29797 | Had that really been the case, why did not the guard go among the men and endeavor to still them? |
29797 | He fishes out his potatoes and pares them; but where shall he put the parings, dripping as they are? |
29797 | He would still engage in prayer,--"Lord, have mercy on my soul; Lord, why wo n''t they come and do something for my relief?" |
29797 | How can we reconcile this? |
29797 | How could my management in these things cause the Governor such trouble and anxiety? |
29797 | How could they, in justice to their dignity, submit to this? |
29797 | How long shall such things be in our prison? |
29797 | How long shall the light of science, of morality and of pure religion be virtually shut out from that abode? |
29797 | How long will the people see this class making criminals of our sons and brothers, yea, of our daughters and sisters too, and remain inactive? |
29797 | How would this be employed? |
29797 | I could but ask myself,"Why are things thus?" |
29797 | I now turned to the deputy as usual previously, and asked,"Will you please furnish me with a list of those going out this month?" |
29797 | I replied,"Do n''t you understand what all this is for? |
29797 | If such a man be placed in so responsible a position, what may we expect? |
29797 | If this is not so, which right is cut off or curtailed? |
29797 | If we were not appointed to do just the things we did, for what were we, pray? |
29797 | If, at every opportunity, he would defame the character of another, could I rationally suppose that mine would be any safer in his hands? |
29797 | Indeed, would not the labors of such men of straw be bad? |
29797 | Is black indeed white?" |
29797 | Is it any wonder that such people disbelieve in prison reform? |
29797 | Is not the writer here a little muddled? |
29797 | Is that the part of honorable dealing? |
29797 | Marked anxiety was depicted upon all their countenances; and who would wonder? |
29797 | Now, if they would treat me and others thus, what would they do to the prisoners? |
29797 | Now, why not govern yourself, no matter what they say? |
29797 | Now, will you not try this course?" |
29797 | Oh,_ is n''t_ it good?" |
29797 | One exclaimed,"_ Did n''t_ we have a good dinner, to- day? |
29797 | Or are we to understand that they are purposely using the whitewash their predecessors left? |
29797 | Or was it indicative of a shortening of our religious privileges? |
29797 | Or would they rather sacrifice the character and reputation of an innocent man, who had labored as best he could for the good of the institution? |
29797 | Or, admitting the deputy''s statement to be true, did that help the matter for him in the least? |
29797 | Or, will it fall upon the crushing, cruel, vindictive course, the process of making them more debased, sordid, revengeful? |
29797 | QUESTION: Ought prisoners on reconviction to be subjected to more severe disciplinary treatment than on the first sentence? |
29797 | The next winter, however, I said to a man who was leaving,"You fare better over there this year than last, do you not? |
29797 | The question has more than once been asked,"Is it possible that he can be so befogged?" |
29797 | The question would be,"Is this cutting off a part of the proposed correction of prison abuses?" |
29797 | Then how shall he wash his knife, fork and spoon? |
29797 | Then the question would arise, Is it right to leave those who have appeared so earnest to improve and reform? |
29797 | Then what of the third? |
29797 | True, and what was that treatment in reality? |
29797 | Was it a slur on our previous religious efforts? |
29797 | Was not that cool? |
29797 | Were they unwilling to put it out squarely that they had made a political foot- ball of the prison? |
29797 | Were those peculiarities? |
29797 | What an hour before us? |
29797 | What are the proper means of reform? |
29797 | What could they do in the matter? |
29797 | What did the assertion mean? |
29797 | What duties does the State take upon herself in thus imprisoning? |
29797 | What has become of straightforward dealing? |
29797 | What is the object of imprisoning? |
29797 | What is the true method of managing penal institutions?" |
29797 | What kind of prison officers are essential? |
29797 | What matter if the warden does think as you suppose? |
29797 | What rights does the State take from the criminal in imprisoning? |
29797 | What rights remain to the imprisoned? |
29797 | What shall we think concerning the judgment of those writers? |
29797 | What then must be the character of the prison management? |
29797 | What were they? |
29797 | What, then, shall we believe? |
29797 | When found they time for all this? |
29797 | Where are there more wicked wretches than some outside the prison, who have"put on the livery of heaven to serve the devil in?" |
29797 | Where did they obtain that information? |
29797 | Where is that trait once called honor among men? |
29797 | Where is the truth? |
29797 | Who has the right to imprison and assign the terms and conditions to the imprisoned? |
29797 | Who tells the truth? |
29797 | Why did they not have the parties face to face, and thus learn the truth? |
29797 | Why do not the very stones cry out? |
29797 | Why go to Sylver''s cell and expend his efforts there? |
29797 | Why not arrange for those who will not reform, as some will not, to serve in prison for life, thus freeing society of their depradations? |
29797 | Why not change our system of imprisoning and put it fully on that of reform? |
29797 | Why not have some sort of industries connected with these places? |
29797 | Why not let the men eat at tables the same as the women, and have some decency about the matter? |
29797 | Why not put out the sentiment squarely that reform moves have no place in the prison? |
29797 | Why not? |
29797 | Why not? |
29797 | Why this, if good fare would be an inducement to return? |
29797 | Will it go on thus till the story of Hierocles about the man''s horse shall be verified in our prison? |
29797 | Will not ministers of religion and of law, merchants and artisans, all those in the various industries of life, men and women come to the help? |
29797 | Will you not study the questions carefully and act? |
29797 | Would not that have been compassion in comparison with what they did? |
29797 | Would the utterer of that sentiment have sanctioned the idea of leaving the prison doors all unlocked and unbolted for one night? |
29797 | You are kept warmer, are you not?" |
29797 | and where is the law that does it? |
29797 | or, if the other, what of their character as to truth and veracity? |
35783 | A_ lily- white benjamin_--is it not so? |
35783 | About_ what_? |
35783 | And how have you got your living since? |
35783 | And now, Sir,said the gentleman, when he had told his story thus far--"and now, Sir, what do you suppose was the cause of all this misery?" |
35783 | And pray how old may your mother be? |
35783 | And pray what are you? |
35783 | And pray what is a_ bob_? |
35783 | And pray what is''_ inching_ it_ backert_?'' |
35783 | And pray what song was he singing? |
35783 | And pray, Sir,asked the magistrate,"did he, in effect,''_ bundle_''you down stairs?" |
35783 | And pray, what is become of the''gentle Desdemona?'' |
35783 | And pray, where did you bring these clothes from, and to whom do they belong? |
35783 | And pray,asked the magistrate,"did you give the servant the shilling you had promised him?" |
35783 | And what would you have done with it if you had found it? |
35783 | Are you sure it was not on_ your head_ when the ball was fired at it? |
35783 | Are you the man that poked your stick in my eye? |
35783 | Aye, but then_ you_ wo n''t be there, I suppose, will you? |
35783 | Burn, do you know anything of this business? |
35783 | But how came you to alarm these honest people in the way you have done? |
35783 | But what has all this to do with the stolen linen? |
35783 | Could you walk steadily? |
35783 | Did she_ abuse_ you? |
35783 | Do you think I''m a coal porter, or a ploughman? 35783 Does she grieve much?" |
35783 | Had you any ground for the charge you made against this young gentleman? |
35783 | Have you any witness? |
35783 | How came this hole in your hat? |
35783 | Is it the bit o''linen your honour''s_ spaking_ about? |
35783 | Is it true, O''Connor, that you really do sleep whilst on duty? |
35783 | Is it what I would have done with it, your honour asks? |
35783 | Is it_ that time_, your honour? |
35783 | Is she very disconsolate under her bereavement? |
35783 | Is she very handsome? |
35783 | Of what age is the lady? |
35783 | Perhaps you did not go along quietly? |
35783 | Pray, Sir,said Mr. Minshull,"will you give me leave to ask whether you were ever confined?" |
35783 | Then what makes you go there so often?--What-- have-- you-- got in your head, Molly? |
35783 | Then why do you let her drink? |
35783 | Very good, Misther Hogan; and ye see I would n''t be telling a lie for the matter-- why should I? |
35783 | Very well, then,continued he--"will I get lave to spake, your honour?" |
35783 | WHERE SHALL I SLEEP? |
35783 | Well, Sir, and what of that? |
35783 | What am I brought here for? 35783 What are you? |
35783 | What are you? |
35783 | What do you mean by that-- you scoundrel? |
35783 | What is your name, friend? |
35783 | What the devil do you bring me such an infernal quantity for? |
35783 | What_ can_ you be doing up stairs so much, Molly? |
35783 | Where is he, then? |
35783 | Who gave it to him, your worship? |
35783 | Why did he strike you? |
35783 | Why do you walk without your breeches, my honest friend? |
35783 | Will he? |
35783 | Will you give me your word of honour that you will pay it in a week? |
35783 | You did!--and pray how did you come by it? |
35783 | Your name, I believe Miss, is_ Drusilla_----, and you are lately arrived from----? |
35783 | _ Honour_ is all my eye,said the gentle Juliana Shum?" |
35783 | _ Miss_ Eliza Pritchard and_ Miss_ Hannah Maria Bagwell, what have you to say for yourselves? |
35783 | _ Who!_--who has taken her? |
35783 | _ Your_ seat, Sir? |
35783 | ''And pray, Mr. Clancey,''said I,''would you have the goodness to make me sixpenn''orth of brandy and water, warm, with a little sugar in it?'' |
35783 | ''And what would ye be after, Misther Hogan?'' |
35783 | ''Did ever any body see such a handsome un?'' |
35783 | ''What ring?'' |
35783 | --"And pray may I ask what occupation you follow-- Miss Julia Legge?" |
35783 | --"What the devil do you want here?" |
35783 | --pledge your_ honour_ indeed!--will you pledge a_ sovereign_?" |
35783 | And Misther Hogan sat down by the fire mighty quiet--''And what do I owe you, Misthress O''Reilly,''says he--''for the rint?'' |
35783 | And when I waked up, says I to me--''how comed I here,''says I,''in my own bed,''says I,''before dark?'' |
35783 | Burn? |
35783 | But I thought I could n''t in conscience ax less?" |
35783 | But I thought to myself, thinks I, your honour, sure and what would I do with two ould women at one and the same time? |
35783 | But what was all that to John Brown? |
35783 | But"who can control his fate?" |
35783 | Can any one imagine a sharper operation than this must have been? |
35783 | Did ever anybody see sich a picture?'' |
35783 | Flament would run away--"Then why did you threaten that he would?" |
35783 | Freshfield?" |
35783 | His worship having first ordered Mr. Joseph Arnold to be placed at the bar, asked him what he had to say for himself? |
35783 | How could she put her nose in your mouth?" |
35783 | Leonard?" |
35783 | Mahoney?" |
35783 | Mr. Freshfield replied,"Who, I? |
35783 | Put the_ blunt_ at Hankey''s, to be safe--''cause would n''t be done, and then lost the cheque!--that''s a rum go-- isn''t it, your worship?" |
35783 | Sullivan.--"Misthress Sullivan, had you any more of it to say?" |
35783 | Sullivan?" |
35783 | The General--"_Confined!_ for what would I be confined?" |
35783 | The magistrate asked Tom Nagle--"Is it true that you were drunk at the time?" |
35783 | The magistrate now asked Miss Susanna what_ she_ had to say to it? |
35783 | There will be nobody there who knows_ me_; and what_ strangers_ will listen to a poor old broken- hearted fellow, who ca n''t speak for crying?" |
35783 | Tom Nagle,''says he,''what shall I give you for the rum?'' |
35783 | Well, what was to be done now? |
35783 | Well, what was to be done now? |
35783 | What could be more annoying than this? |
35783 | What have I done? |
35783 | What is it I would n''t do for she? |
35783 | What was to be done? |
35783 | What was to be done? |
35783 | What was to be said for it? |
35783 | Wolf?" |
35783 | _ Voilà!_"It was very evident that beneath his black handkerchief he had a dreadful black eye, and the magistrate asked how he came by it? |
35783 | _ this_ lady,"said his worship;"and what may_ your_ name be, Miss?" |
35783 | and I went to her place-- that''s in Bainbridge- street, your honour;''and Misthress Casey,''says I,''where''s me_ ring_?'' |
35783 | asked his worship;"what have you to say about the piece of linen?" |
35783 | asked the magistrate.--"Who was it gave this paper to the man at the bar?" |
35783 | but would you be kind enough to get us half- a- gallon of mild beer, in this''ere can?" |
35783 | cried Mr. Bob Briggs,"is that the way to treat a_ gentleman_?" |
35783 | do you carry your bread and cheese in your hat?" |
35783 | exclaimed Mr. Highflyer,"what the devil do I care whose house it is? |
35783 | how dare you insult a lady?" |
35783 | or are you afraid she should attempt to take away your life?" |
35783 | or what can one single arm do against a dozen? |
35783 | said the magistrate,"why how old are_ you_?" |
35783 | said the magistrate--"have you a wife of your own?" |
35783 | said the magistrate;"and pray may I ask what trade your lordship follows?" |
35783 | says I to myself,''and what will I do now?''" |
35783 | says I,''how did you come by it?'' |
35783 | says she.--''Thank ye, Misthress Casey,''says I.--''Take_ that_ for yerself, Mrs. O''Leary,''says she"--"And what was_ that_?" |
35783 | vat? |
35783 | what do you mean by dunkies?" |
35783 | what is your trade?" |
35783 | where are you going?" |
35783 | which way does the bull run now?'' |
35783 | who doth know the bent of woman''s phantasy?" |
35783 | will you have a mouthful?" |
51004 | And that is all there is to it? |
51004 | And the directions back to the Colony? |
51004 | And you have worked like the other men and paid by your labor for what you received? |
51004 | Are you faint? |
51004 | But did you know I was married? |
51004 | Can it be they have never watched the coming of the first robin, and do not know that he ushers in the new regime of promise and prosperity? 51004 Could n''t you earn that much?" |
51004 | Did you learn the trade in prison? |
51004 | Did you use your usual''blush and stammer''method to solicit this pastry? |
51004 | Do I not do my work? |
51004 | Do n''t you know where to look for it? |
51004 | Do you believe in the Great Spirit and the Happy Hunting Grounds? |
51004 | Does n''t the Bible say,''Answer a fool according to his folly?'' |
51004 | Find what, Fritz? 51004 For fear I''ll steal from you?" |
51004 | Go in to that farmhouse, please,I said to my companion, pointing to a cheerful looking home a short distance from the road,"and inquire the way?" |
51004 | Has she gone? |
51004 | Has the charity association decided to help you? |
51004 | Have you and this boy been friends a long time? 51004 He is what?" |
51004 | I will go gladly,said Fritz;"when do you want me?" |
51004 | I wonder if Richelieu, after all, lost his Friar Philip? |
51004 | If you were in my place you would give yourself up? |
51004 | Is every one well? |
51004 | Is it true,I asked,"that you stammered and blushed when our friend offered you roast beef and potatoes?" |
51004 | It is a Monastery-- a Monastery of Vagabondia,he said,"and why not? |
51004 | It is good pie, is n''t it? |
51004 | It is what? |
51004 | Mr. Floyd, you know that wooden box that''Whiskers''brought with him? |
51004 | Naturally you did not confide in the lady who sent you, that you had freighted it through most States as far as the railroads go? |
51004 | So I ca n''t stay? |
51004 | So it really is n''t an illuminated balloon? |
51004 | So you brought him out with you? |
51004 | So you have sold your razor? |
51004 | So you plan to live like an honest man? |
51004 | Tell me,I said,"did they teach you a trade at Elmira?" |
51004 | The cause? |
51004 | The direction? |
51004 | Then you were not afraid of the misdemeanor charge? |
51004 | Three years in prison? |
51004 | What could ever cause a man to get into such a condition? |
51004 | What did you say? |
51004 | What do any of you know of the Stars? |
51004 | What do you mean, not only your friend told me that you had served a term, but you told me yourself? |
51004 | What do you mean? |
51004 | What have you done? |
51004 | What have you there? |
51004 | What is it? |
51004 | What is the trouble, Fritz? |
51004 | What was that? |
51004 | What would you do? |
51004 | What, a boy like yourself married? |
51004 | When did you arrive in America? |
51004 | Where are you from? |
51004 | Where is the bicycle now? |
51004 | Where is the money you got for it? |
51004 | Where? |
51004 | Who''s the man who wrote The opera, Pinafore? |
51004 | Who? |
51004 | Why did you bring him out with you? |
51004 | Why did you bring out a man like that? |
51004 | Why? |
51004 | Will you promise never to speak to me or anyone of your past life? |
51004 | Yes,she answered,"but why have you never written all these years? |
51004 | Yes? |
51004 | You are a student of astronomy? |
51004 | You think he would take me back? |
51004 | You, a cook? |
51004 | *****"What can you ever do to help poor Little Jean?" |
51004 | --_Bible._ Edison''s Evening Star_ Hamlet_:"Ay, marry, why was he sent into England?" |
51004 | --_Richelieu._ The Passing of Sullivan"What''s the name that grows Upon you more and more?" |
51004 | --and,''Teacher, how do you shave the upper lip without cutting it?'' |
51004 | And yet since many prayers are lies, why may not some lies be prayers? |
51004 | But, pardon me, have you not a saying that''Beggars must not be choosers?''" |
51004 | Ca n''t you see it is your ideals that enslave or make you free? |
51004 | Ca n''t you see you are free?" |
51004 | Confession may help to advance a man spiritually, but to a man living on the material plane, would you advise it?" |
51004 | Did you ever sense hatred-- pure hatred? |
51004 | Do you see it?" |
51004 | Does it seem quite generous of your social workers to be so insistent?... |
51004 | Floyd?" |
51004 | Had he ever read La Salle, the anarchist? |
51004 | He gave me a sly, shrewd glance, and then, confident that he was understood, he said simply,"Indeed?" |
51004 | He is good looking, is n''t he?" |
51004 | He should have been reprimanded for his impudence, but I simply asked,"Where?" |
51004 | One of the boys asked the Chairman-- another boy-- if they would have the Debate, now that the Baby was gone? |
51004 | Or, in his travels, had he ever seen that little pamphlet entitled,"Dynamite as a Revolutionary Agency?" |
51004 | Tell me have I made good to you?" |
51004 | Then after a moment he asked:"Do you know what Mother used to put into the beans when she burned them to take out the smoky taste?" |
51004 | What are you doing here?" |
51004 | What can you do for him?" |
51004 | What have you lost?" |
51004 | What is it holds a man like me? |
51004 | What is it holds a man? |
51004 | What man half ill with worry cares to listen to some ambitious pupil say,''Teacher, shall I shave the right side of his face up, or shave it down?'' |
51004 | When we have won I want you to share the credit with me-- you will remain, will you not?" |
51004 | Where did you meet him?" |
51004 | Who cares about the detailed account of all the happenings along the path we have traveled? |
51004 | [ Illustration] IN THE WORLD OF WANDERLUST"To stand in true relations with men in a false age, is worth a fit of insanity, is it not?" |
51004 | _ Hamlet_:"Why?" |
51004 | and,''Teacher, if I do cut it, shall I disinfect it with carbolic or peroxide before I put on the new skin?'' |
51004 | why should n''t a man, even a homeless man, have his Monastery, if you please, where he can forget his past and live cleanly? |
43064 | And first, why was there a confession? |
43064 | By Mr. Hirsch: What time do you say it was, Mr. Thomas? |
43064 | By Mr. Thomas: He should be asked,"Can you now form an opinion assuming all these facts?"... |
43064 | By the Court: I think it should conform now to the language of the statute, should n''t it? |
43064 | By the Court: Was that indicated by the last part of it? |
43064 | Did Jean Gianini know the quality of his act? |
43064 | Did Pennington know the quality of his act? |
43064 | Did Tronson know the nature and quality of his act? |
43064 | Did he know the quality of his act? |
43064 | Did you ever see a thousand dollar bill?" |
43064 | Do you know the name of the store? |
43064 | Do you want to make any statement about this shooting affair? |
43064 | First, why does it seem absurd to call Jean Gianini an imbecile? |
43064 | For example, at one time he said, referring to the deed,"You would not think anybody could do a deed like that so quick, would you?" |
43064 | George stooped over and whispered to me,"Where is the blackjack?" |
43064 | Hardly any of the persons with whom he has talked of this crime has failed to ask the question,"Was there any sexual offense in the matter?" |
43064 | He also said,"Gillette got the chair, did n''t he?" |
43064 | He turned part way around, threw up his arm, and said,"Hey, what are you doing?" |
43064 | How does suggestion work? |
43064 | I said,"Did he?" |
43064 | I said,"What do you mean?" |
43064 | I says,"What? |
43064 | If the writer understands these terms, the first may be translated into the expression,"Does he know what he is doing?" |
43064 | If we take the latter view, the question still remains, What shall be done with these criminal imbeciles? |
43064 | Is Jean Gianini an imbecile? |
43064 | Is he able to pick them out? |
43064 | Is his knowledge as well as his experience confined to the medium and low grades, which every one meets? |
43064 | It may further be asked: How does the fact that the boy has not succeeded in school affect his examination by the Binet test? |
43064 | Kill him?" |
43064 | Let us turn now to the other part of the legal phrase,"Does such a person know the nature and quality of his act?" |
43064 | Pennington asks,"What do you mean?" |
43064 | Shall we learn the lesson and take care of the other Fred Tronsons who are now in our public schools and on our streets? |
43064 | She says,"You are going to be a man, are n''t you?" |
43064 | The real problem is: Has he had experience with this high- grade type? |
43064 | Then he stopped-- and said as though to himself--"Which side is his heart on?" |
43064 | What did you intend to do with it? |
43064 | What figures ought a thousand dollar bill have on it?" |
43064 | What is an imbecile? |
43064 | What is the difference between the two men? |
43064 | When Roland at one time almost takes fright and asks,"Do you mean kill him?" |
43064 | When this confession was read to the jury, Tronson leaned over and asked the clergyman,"Well, what do you think of it?" |
43064 | Why does it indicate a weak mind and how does it affect our ideas of responsibility? |
43064 | Why not? |
43064 | Why then did he consent to begin the matter which George was to finish? |
43064 | Will he resist the suggestion? |
43064 | Will you give me the section, please? |
43064 | _ A._ This second- hand gun? |
43064 | _ A._ Would you repeat it? |
43064 | _ Q._ After you got over to Portland what car did you take then? |
43064 | _ Q._ After you got to Vancouver where did you go? |
43064 | _ Q._ After you made up your mind to do that, what did you do? |
43064 | _ Q._ After you thought she was dead and that you had completed your job, where did you go? |
43064 | _ Q._ All loaded and ready for action? |
43064 | _ Q._ At a second- hand store? |
43064 | _ Q._ Did she run around the house? |
43064 | _ Q._ Did you buy that at the same time you bought the other gun? |
43064 | _ Q._ Did you ever drink liquor to the extent of getting drunk? |
43064 | _ Q._ Did you feel pretty nervous, knowing that you killed her? |
43064 | _ Q._ Did you have in mind to shoot any one else? |
43064 | _ Q._ Did you have the gun in your hand at that time? |
43064 | _ Q._ Did you intend to come back? |
43064 | _ Q._ Did you know her folks? |
43064 | _ Q._ Did you know that the last bullet struck her? |
43064 | _ Q._ Did you load both of them? |
43064 | _ Q._ Did you read the papers at Vancouver? |
43064 | _ Q._ Did you run after her? |
43064 | _ Q._ Did you see her get off the car? |
43064 | _ Q._ Did you see in the papers that Miss Ulrich was dead? |
43064 | _ Q._ Did you speak to her when she got off? |
43064 | _ Q._ Did you take both of these guns with you? |
43064 | _ Q._ Did you think there was somebody else interfering to keep her from marrying you? |
43064 | _ Q._ Do I understand that you went to Vancouver and got this gun and then came over to Portland, and did the shooting? |
43064 | _ Q._ Do I understand you to say that you bought this to kill her with? |
43064 | _ Q._ For what purpose did you get it? |
43064 | _ Q._ Had you ever kept company with her? |
43064 | _ Q._ Had you ever visited at the house? |
43064 | _ Q._ Have you got the conclusion, the concluding portion of my question in mind? |
43064 | _ Q._ How far out First Street did you go? |
43064 | _ Q._ How far was her house from the car? |
43064 | _ Q._ How long before you did the shooting did you get this gun? |
43064 | _ Q._ How long did you wait out there before you saw Miss Ulrich? |
43064 | _ Q._ How long have you lived in Portland? |
43064 | _ Q._ How many after that? |
43064 | _ Q._ How many shots did you fire? |
43064 | _ Q._ How old are you? |
43064 | _ Q._ If the new gun did n''t work, that would? |
43064 | _ Q._ Just what did you say to her? |
43064 | _ Q._ Out in South Portland? |
43064 | _ Q._ Stayed all night in Vancouver? |
43064 | _ Q._ That is, you dropped that after all the bullets were fired out? |
43064 | _ Q._ That was last August? |
43064 | _ Q._ This gun marked"Exhibit A,"here, is that the gun you shot her with? |
43064 | _ Q._ This gun that you used to do the shooting, was this gun( marked"Exhibit A") the new gun numbered 5308( handing it to him for inspection)? |
43064 | _ Q._ Was that what made you decide to kill her? |
43064 | _ Q._ Was there any one else got off the car at that place? |
43064 | _ Q._ Well, can you determine from this question an opinion as an expert? |
43064 | _ Q._ What car did she get off? |
43064 | _ Q._ What did they do with you? |
43064 | _ Q._ What did you do next? |
43064 | _ Q._ What did you have in mind when you bought this? |
43064 | _ Q._ What door did she go in? |
43064 | _ Q._ What have you been doing? |
43064 | _ Q._ What is your opinion? |
43064 | _ Q._ What kind of a gun was it? |
43064 | _ Q._ What time did you get over to Portland from Vancouver? |
43064 | _ Q._ What time did you leave town here to go out to the scene of the shooting? |
43064 | _ Q._ What time was it when she got off the car? |
43064 | _ Q._ When did you commence shooting? |
43064 | _ Q._ When did you first load the guns and prepare to do the shooting? |
43064 | _ Q._ When did you make up your mind to do that? |
43064 | _ Q._ When did you make up your mind to get these guns-- on the day of the killing? |
43064 | _ Q._ When you came over from Vancouver, did you have the guns loaded? |
43064 | _ Q._ When you read in the papers that you had killed her, did you feel satisfied? |
43064 | _ Q._ Where did you buy this gun? |
43064 | _ Q._ Where did you get that gun? |
43064 | _ Q._ Where did you get the gun at Vancouver? |
43064 | _ Q._ Where did you get the guns? |
43064 | _ Q._ Where did you get this other gun? |
43064 | _ Q._ Where did you go when you left Vancouver? |
43064 | _ Q._ Where did you go? |
43064 | _ Q._ Where did you stay out there until she came along? |
43064 | _ Q._ Which one did you drop? |
43064 | _ Q._ Which way did you go out? |
43064 | _ Q._ Why did you feel that you had to do it? |
43064 | _ Q._ Why did you keep going the other way? |
43064 | _ Q._ Why did you run away? |
43064 | _ Q._ You did n''t leave or did n''t stop shooting until you thought she was dead? |
43064 | _ Q._ You got the guns with the idea that if she refused to marry you why, then, you would kill her? |
43064 | _ Q._ You knew at the time what you were doing,--what you were getting the guns for? |
43064 | _ Q._ You knew it would be wrong to kill her? |
43064 | _ Q._ You knew she was engaged to marry another fellow? |
43064 | _ Q._ You knew that it was wrong to kill her, did n''t you? |
43064 | _ Q._ You knew what you were doing at that time? |
43064 | _ Q._ You knew where Miss Ulrich lived, did you? |
43064 | _ Q._ You never went to her home? |
43064 | _ Q._ You realized that fact at the time? |
43064 | _ Q._ You went out there for the purpose of killing her if she did n''t accede to your wishes? |
43064 | _ Q._ You were arrested on that charge? |
43064 | _ Q._ You were in possession of your senses and you knew it was wrong to kill her? |
43064 | _ Q._ You were n''t worrying so much about her as you were afraid somebody might do you an injury? |
43064 | _ Q._ Your opinion, Doctor? |
43064 | _ Question._ What is your name? |
58576 | Are you an officer? |
58576 | Are you and the sheriff getting your part of it? |
58576 | Do you know what I thought of when I hesitated? |
58576 | Do you think you can succeed in doing it, Tom? |
58576 | Do you think,I then said to Smith,"that you would know this man, Solomon, if you should see him again?" |
58576 | Does Dr. Smith know you? |
58576 | Have you any charges against him at headquarters? |
58576 | How are you going to get out? |
58576 | How are you going to go about it, Tom? |
58576 | How can you do it, Tom? |
58576 | I am John B. Sweeney,he said,"What do you want with me?" |
58576 | Is that all Reedy said? |
58576 | Is that you, Frank? |
58576 | Lumas,I said,"who were the two men who robbed your car?" |
58576 | Was his master''s name Perry? |
58576 | What can you suggest? |
58576 | What did you come here for? |
58576 | What for? |
58576 | What is this for? |
58576 | What other stock have you on your person which was sent over to the auction store by mistake? |
58576 | What''s up? |
58576 | Where did you see him? |
58576 | Where is Erfert now? |
58576 | Where is Erfert? |
58576 | Who is in there? |
58576 | Whom have you caught? |
58576 | Why did n''t you tell me this in the first place? |
58576 | Why,I said,"What happened at Catholicsburg?" |
58576 | 4?" |
58576 | After I had seated myself and lighted a cigar the colonel said to me,"Tom, why did you ask those boys to bring that trunk here to your office?" |
58576 | Am I right?" |
58576 | By whom are you employed? |
58576 | Continuing, Watts said,"Did you notice when you told me to throw up my hands, that I hesitated for a second?" |
58576 | Counsel for the defense asked,"You know that it was a forgery and forgery is a crime under the law?" |
58576 | Did you know it to be a forgery? |
58576 | Dingfelter was asked by Attorney McDonald the following questions: Question: What is your name? |
58576 | Do n''t you see what you have done?" |
58576 | Do you know the defendant in this case( pointing to Maxwell)? |
58576 | Erfert replied,"What does he want to see me for?" |
58576 | Furlong?" |
58576 | He eyed me closely for a while and finally said,"Where do you work?" |
58576 | He laughed and replied,"What the h-- l do you think I would be doing with this gun if it were not loaded?" |
58576 | He said in an undertone,"What do you think of her?" |
58576 | He said,"Who are you and what do you want?" |
58576 | He then remarked,"How did you get hurt?" |
58576 | He then said,"Tom, do you think you could recognize this man from the description I have given you?" |
58576 | He then said,"You know Kittie, do n''t you?" |
58576 | He then said,"You say you are a deputy sheriff? |
58576 | He''s acting as a sort of body- servant to his master, who has an office in that building on Commerce St."I then asked,"What is his name?" |
58576 | How old are you? |
58576 | How''ve you been?" |
58576 | I answered him by saying,"I beg your pardon, Mr. Sweeney, but is that gun loaded that you have pointed at me?" |
58576 | I answered that I had, and then he said,"Where did you get this check?" |
58576 | I asked,"Mac, what do you mean?" |
58576 | I greeted him and asked him to be seated, and then said,"Mac, what is the matter?" |
58576 | I said to Davis,"Will you go with Brewer and get that money and turn it over to him, intact?" |
58576 | I said,"That''s all right, but tell me which one of those houses do you live in?" |
58576 | I said,"What do you want him arrested for?" |
58576 | I said,"Why did n''t you do it?" |
58576 | I then said to her,"Is your father home now?" |
58576 | I then said,"Are you the gunsmith?" |
58576 | I then said,"Do you think that Reedy noticed your excitement when he made the suggestion to you?" |
58576 | Is this report true?" |
58576 | Miles asked,"Does Mr. William Nickolson know you?" |
58576 | Miles, deceased, and did you not write this will for him?" |
58576 | Mr. Hoxie read them and then looked up at the Governor and said,"Governor, what do you think of this matter?" |
58576 | Question: Then you stole this check from Dr. Smith''s office? |
58576 | She smiled and said,"Oh, do you know Uncle Charlie?" |
58576 | Smith?" |
58576 | So you came down here to get me yourself? |
58576 | The attorney said,"Then you have had a great deal of experience?" |
58576 | The counsel for the defense then said,"You know that you were violating the law by having this check made out as you did, did you not?" |
58576 | Then turning to Mr. Dingfelter I asked,"Where did you get this check?" |
58576 | Then you do not know whether the check was a forgery or not? |
58576 | Was Mr. Furlong there? |
58576 | Watts then said,"You saw that fellow with the red hair, did you?" |
58576 | Well, do n''t deputy sheriffs have to give bond for the careful performance of their duties?" |
58576 | Well, you have n''t any papers for my arrest, have you?" |
58576 | Were you a prisoner in the jail? |
58576 | What in the world are you doing down here?" |
58576 | What is in them?" |
58576 | What is your business? |
58576 | What were you charged with? |
58576 | When and where were you arrested? |
58576 | When she appeared he said to her,"Kittie, you remember Mr. Furlong, do n''t you? |
58576 | When we were seated in my private room, I said to Erfert,"Fred, what have you in those two packages?" |
58576 | Where did you first become acquainted with him? |
58576 | Where did you get this check? |
58576 | Where were you born? |
58576 | While Collins was inside the store examining the vegetables I said to the girl,"Why, hello, sis, where is your uncle Charlie now?" |
58576 | Who filled out this check and signed Dr. Smith''s name to it? |
58576 | Why did Furlong arrest you? |
58576 | Why did the teller cause your arrest? |
58576 | Why do you want to know this?" |
58576 | Why, you know Dr. Smith''s signature?" |
58576 | [ Illustration:"Oh, do you know Uncle Charlie?"] |
58576 | [ Illustration:"Where is this man''s money?"] |
531 | I say, my pretty girl, have n''t you some very old wine in your cellar? |
531 | Who''s to pay? 531 ''And do you generally win? 531 ''Are you at play now?'' 531 ''At play? 531 ''At what game, pray, sir?'' 531 ''But will you give me leave to examine your present dress? 531 ''Do you play for anything?'' 531 ''Gentlemen?'' 531 ''How do you manage to pay it? 531 ''How has the chance stood since we met before?'' 531 ''How much have you lost?'' 531 ''How much have you won?'' 531 ''How so?'' 531 ''Indeed? 531 ''Is that all?'' 531 ''My friend,''said he to the latter,''where are the quarters of the Guards now- a- days?'' 531 ''Now here is a pack of cards,''he said;''there seems to be nothing remarkable about it, does there?'' 531 ''Reader, art thou of my own sex? 531 ''Then you wo n''t lend me a couple of pounds?'' 531 ''What security will you give me?'' 531 ''What, then,''says a writer at the time,''are the consequences? 531 ''When you win or lose, how do you settle accounts?'' 531 ''Who wins?'' 531 ''Why sell it?'' 531 ''Why, surely, you wo n''t refuse me a couple of sovereigns, after having lost so much?'' 531 ''You have a COW in your paddock, have n''t you? 531 ( 4)''How shalt THOU to Caesar''s hall repair? 531 Art thou a man? 531 As soon as he entered he exclaimed,''Well, I am filled, my pockets are full of gold, and here goes, ODDS OR EVEN?'' 531 But when had been marked upon his brow this harrowing care? 531 But whose fortune have I ruined?--whom undone? 531 Did he despair at this hideous catastrophe? 531 Did he tear his hair-- rush out of the room-- blow his brains out or drown himself? 531 Do n''t you recollect him now?'' 531 Do n''t you remember what she said about two constables beingafter you"?'' |
531 | Do you understand me? |
531 | Does God take your money?'' |
531 | GENEROSITY(?) |
531 | HOW MANY GAMESTERS LIVE BY PLAY? |
531 | How are you to be paid?'' |
531 | How is it possible, therefore, that C and D should ever win a game without permission? |
531 | I request you to say now what I hold? |
531 | I request you to say quickly what I hold? |
531 | I request you to say what I hold? |
531 | I request you to say, reply, what I hold? |
531 | I think, Simpson, I dropped a note here last night-- did you see it? |
531 | In the midst of his excessive grief, H-- e said,''You have a HORSE, what is it worth?'' |
531 | Instantly, what I have in my hand? |
531 | It is of no use now that the horse and cow are gone-- what is that worth?'' |
531 | O my dear wife, is not anything better than seeing me conveyed to Tyburn? |
531 | OF WHAT TRADE IS A GAMING- HOUSE KEEPER? |
531 | Oh, where? |
531 | Or could he not make up his accounts properly?'' |
531 | Or would Lord de Ros have refused it if he had been the intended victim of a conspiracy? |
531 | Or, if I hide a half- penny under a hat, and I know what it is, have you not as good a chance to guess right, as if it were tossed up? |
531 | Pray, how stands your game now?'' |
531 | Quick, the hour? |
531 | Reader, art thou a woman? |
531 | Say and name what I hold? |
531 | Say and try to say what I hold? |
531 | Say now what I hold? |
531 | Say quickly what I hold? |
531 | Say what I hold? |
531 | Say, reply, what I hold? |
531 | Shall every man playe his twelve- pence while an apple roste in the fire, and then we will drincke and departe?" |
531 | Tell me and try to say what I hold? |
531 | Tell me now what I hold? |
531 | Tell me quickly what I hold? |
531 | Tell me what I hold? |
531 | Tell me, reply, what I hold? |
531 | The afflicted Job asks--''Can a man fill his belly with the east wind?'' |
531 | The learned counsel continued:--''A small boiled chicken and a glass of lemonade, perhaps?'' |
531 | Then speaketh the thirde to the honeste man that thought not to play:--"What? |
531 | Then the counsel said,''I suppose you take but a slight dinner?'' |
531 | To my great astonishment, a person who I supposed was a proprietor, boasted the impenetrability of HIS house, and on what ground, think you? |
531 | Was ever poor animal subjected to such indignity? |
531 | Was he dead or not? |
531 | Were any of these base enough to put their hands in and help themselves? |
531 | What rack exceeds the torture of an excited brain and an exhausted body? |
531 | What''s that worth?'' |
531 | Which? |
531 | Why do n''t you bet him?'' |
531 | Will you play your twelve- pence?" |
531 | With whom? |
531 | Would a little coterie, who lived by gambling, have made this offer? |
531 | how camest thou in hither, not having on a wedding garment?'' |
531 | said the caliph,''do n''t you see I am on the point of giving checkmate?'' |
531 | what is this?'' |
446 | But who,she asked indignantly,"is to look after my Georges?" |
446 | Do you know you''re rather like him? |
446 | Do you pity me? 446 Dr. Webster, are you ready for me to- night?" |
446 | In England,he said,"when a witness is called, he is asked''What have you seen?'' |
446 | Is this,asked M. Roussel,"a document wrested by surprise from a weak man, extorted by trickery? |
446 | Knowing me as you do,he said,"can you imagine me killing little and innocent children, especially without any motive?" |
446 | Now, what was the motive of this horrible crime? |
446 | Take me away from here? |
446 | There are grounds for a successful appeal,he wrote,"I am pretty certain that my sentence will be commuted.... You ask me what I do? |
446 | Was there ever such a nurse as I am? |
446 | Well, my old friend Peace,he said as he entered the cell,"how are you to- day?" |
446 | Well,asked his wife,"did you have a good day?" |
446 | What have you got there? |
446 | What more could, be said? |
446 | What? |
446 | Where did they find him? 446 Who are you? |
446 | Who,he asks in a splendid burst of feigned horror,"can be wise, amazed, temperate and furious, loyal and natural in a moment?" |
446 | Why go to Paris for the poison? |
446 | Why, when first asked if you had received anything from Auguste, did you say you had received nothing? |
446 | Why,he asked the woman,"did you commit this horrible murder, decoy your lover to his death?" |
446 | Why,pursued the President,"should you not have admitted at once a fact that went to prove your own good faith? |
446 | Why? |
446 | You may not have known you were inebriated? |
446 | You mean, then,said the widow,"that you will soon be beyond the reach of want?" |
446 | You wish me,she asked,"to betray my husband?" |
446 | You''re thinking of your present position? |
446 | An act of pure wanton devilry? |
446 | And such recognition occurring in the course of a chance encounter in the darkness, that fruitful mother of error? |
446 | And the wife what of her share in the business? |
446 | And when in Paris, why go to two chemists?" |
446 | Are you sorry for me? |
446 | As to the latter, what evidence was there to show that it had been made on the night of the murder? |
446 | Asked by the sheriff whether he was to understand from some of his expressions that he contemplated an attempt at suicide,"Why should I?" |
446 | But by whom had the crime been committed? |
446 | But how to get it there? |
446 | But what had become of this couple, in what street, in what house in Paris had the crime been committed? |
446 | But what of that? |
446 | But who were their murderers? |
446 | Could a person be reasonably asked to explain how they came where they did? |
446 | Could they be accounted for in no other reasonable way than that the clothes had been worn by the murderer of the Dewars? |
446 | Did Fenayrou know of this intrigue or not? |
446 | Did Lebret, as a fact, receive the 100,000 francs? |
446 | Did he refuse to believe in his wife''s guilt? |
446 | Did they find the whole body? |
446 | Did you come across him? |
446 | Do you think there will be an investigation?" |
446 | Durand? |
446 | Durand? |
446 | Fenayrou asked abruptly:"Do you think my husband guilty?" |
446 | Had Aubert consented to return them, would he have saved his life? |
446 | Had Mama better send for Nancy? |
446 | Had she also come to hate Aubert? |
446 | Had the looked- for opportunity arrived? |
446 | How came it to be so heated? |
446 | How does Peace answer to the definition? |
446 | How far was the story told by Auguste, and repeated in somewhat different shape by Castaing to other persons, true? |
446 | How many murders are there that the world has never heard of, and never will? |
446 | How should I not hold in affectionate remembrance one who has done everything for me? |
446 | How was he to pass the night? |
446 | How was it his assailant had got away so quickly by the open gate? |
446 | How was that to be secured? |
446 | How, he asked Derues, had he found the 100,000 livres to buy Buisson- Souef, he who had not a halfpenny a short time ago? |
446 | I suppose Wharton( their baby brother) walks by this time, do n''t he? |
446 | I''d bring him up to the room, and just as he was beginning to enjoy himself say,''Would you like to see a bailiff?'' |
446 | If Hippolyte had made such a will, did he destroy it before his death? |
446 | In a house in Cumberland Street, a young married couple and their little baby were cruelly murdered and un{sic}{an??} |
446 | In a house in Cumberland Street, a young married couple and their little baby were cruelly murdered and un{sic}{an??} |
446 | Indeed, how could it be otherwise? |
446 | Is he not acting in the full exercise of his faculties? |
446 | Is it necessary to ask it of anatomy or physiology? |
446 | Is that the behaviour of a woman who represents herself to have been the timid slave of her husband? |
446 | Now, where are they?" |
446 | Of what use to her was a lover, however generous and faithful, who was free to take her up and lay her aside at will? |
446 | Or did she seek to expiate her guilt by assisting her husband in the punishment of her seducer? |
446 | Or was it not perhaps that you had been in the habit of rendering somewhat dubious services to some of your promiscuous clients? |
446 | Percillie have for accusing you?" |
446 | President: I, whose duty it is to interrogate you, look you in the face and repeat my question: Was Gaudry at your house at half- past ten that night? |
446 | President: Is that really the case? |
446 | President: Was Gaudry at your house while you were at the ball? |
446 | President: You hear her, Gaudry? |
446 | Some act of poisoning, or abortion, in which you had been concerned? |
446 | Taking the Crown evidence, at its strongest, there was a missing link; did the evidence of the bloodstains supply it? |
446 | The man left the ranks and, coming up to the constable, asked earnestly,"What do you want me for?" |
446 | The spots are marked with?? |
446 | The spots are marked with?? |
446 | To Derues there was now one pressing and immediate problem to be solved-- how to keep Buisson- Souef as his own without paying for it? |
446 | To whom could he turn? |
446 | Was Aubert possessed of some knowledge concerning the Fenayrous that placed them at his mercy? |
446 | Was ever such a contradictory fellow? |
446 | Was it the act of a tiger broken loose on the community? |
446 | Was it the robbery of Dewar''s paltry wages? |
446 | Was the mysterious visitor, the disturber of the peace of Blackheath, at his burglarious employment? |
446 | Was the prime motive of the murder the recovery and destruction of these letters? |
446 | Were you in Paris at the time of the murder?" |
446 | Were you out? |
446 | What are you going to do to- day, gentlemen? |
446 | What can we know of the hundred spites and jealousies or other causes of malice which might have caused the crime? |
446 | What could be more satisfactory? |
446 | What could he do? |
446 | What for?" |
446 | What further resource was open to him? |
446 | What had become of Howard? |
446 | What sort of a woman are you? |
446 | What then? |
446 | What to do with the body? |
446 | What was the meaning of her visit to the Charonne Cemetery? |
446 | What was the name and address of her reputed brother? |
446 | What was the purpose of the murderer? |
446 | What was to be done? |
446 | What will they do? |
446 | What will they think of me? |
446 | What''s your address?" |
446 | Where are they? |
446 | Where did you get the information?" |
446 | Why dissipate our strength by fighting among ourselves? |
446 | Why had Auguste Ballet, after his brother''s death, such urgent need of 100,000 francs? |
446 | Why had she insisted on her lover going to the ball? |
446 | Why study copies of nature when you can look at such a remarkable original as I?" |
446 | You have said your wife acted as your slave-- was it not the other way about? |
446 | You have the power of attorney-- you will give it to me?" |
446 | de Lamotte disappear, why should he not make her reappear? |
446 | or was there some more reasonable explanation of this most atrocious crime?" |
49545 | But suppose I get faint on the street? |
49545 | Does your tongue bother you in any way? |
49545 | In view of this whole,he asks himself,"what notes come next?" |
49545 | Is your mind more or less active than usual? |
49545 | Is your skin drier or moister than usual? |
49545 | Oh,she said, with immense relief in her voice,"is that all? |
49545 | What do you think,we must constantly be asking him,"is the best way out of this our difficulty?" |
49545 | Why did you leave your first job? |
49545 | You do not cough? |
49545 | You never spit blood? |
49545 | ( Anything the matter here? |
49545 | (_ a_) Is it hygienic? |
49545 | (_ b_) Is it as inexpensive as can be obtained with due consideration of health, decency, distance from work, from friends, from amusements? |
49545 | (_ c_) Is it large enough to safeguard the decencies of family life? |
49545 | ), and the nature of the industrial process( speeding up?) |
49545 | A cobbler is working on his shoe: in view of what he has already done upon that shoe, what shall he do next? |
49545 | All that death, that suffering, that destruction, are we worth all that? |
49545 | Am I not going crazy?" |
49545 | Another criterion, more subtle and not quite so useful, is this,"Do you feel the pain more when you are quiet or when you are moving about?" |
49545 | Anybody who does much talking is asked a good many times,"Wo n''t you please come round this evening and just give us a little inspiration?" |
49545 | Anybody who has got to a certain point in his profession says,"In view of my successes and my failures thus far, what is the next thing for me to do?" |
49545 | Anything the matter there?) |
49545 | Are we perfectly sure that we have found the place where the Lord intended us to work? |
49545 | As we go down the bill of fare of a restaurant, we say,"In view of what I have eaten, what next?" |
49545 | But we may ask,"If this is true, where do medicine and surgery come in? |
49545 | But we must ask now,_ what part_? |
49545 | CHAPTER IX THE MOTIVE OF SOCIAL WORK What is the_ motive_ of social work? |
49545 | Can we do anything about it? |
49545 | Do we depend on one person, or one particular kind of entertainment or stimulation? |
49545 | How are these needs found? |
49545 | How does one learn to think? |
49545 | If so, what troubles have you had?" |
49545 | If so, where? |
49545 | In such cases I have found it most effective to say,"Well, suppose you do-- what harm will it do?" |
49545 | Is it nothing worse than that? |
49545 | Is sickness, childbirth, alcoholism, injury a factor? |
49545 | Is there any family history of tuberculosis, pleurisy, insanity, epilepsy, feeble- mindedness? |
49545 | Is there really any good reason for this? |
49545 | Is_ ignorance_ a factor? |
49545 | Is_ shiftlessness_ in this particular case a factor, and how? |
49545 | More important is the question,"Is it dry or productive of sputum?" |
49545 | Of miscarriages or of"scrofulous"children and"blood diseases"? |
49545 | One can also measure its_ severity_ by the question,"Does it keep you awake?" |
49545 | One would go on to ask,"Do you feel warmer or colder than usual this winter?" |
49545 | Or can we find our food in any of a vast number of places and persons which in the natural order are fairly sure to be available? |
49545 | Or in the absence of all finite persons can we find our food in God? |
49545 | People often say,"Shall I take exercise?" |
49545 | The knee ought to be kept quiet, but for how long? |
49545 | The only question is, On what do we depend? |
49545 | The question_ How long?_ is vastly the most important one about cough. |
49545 | The way to avoid this is to put our questions in the negative:"You have no headache at all, have you?" |
49545 | The whole science of logic is the science of seeing truly: in view of certain premises, what is next? |
49545 | Then what moves? |
49545 | Then,"The expression of your face is not notably changed, is it, so that your friends comment on it?" |
49545 | Thus these events turn out to have a good deal of law and reason, a good deal in the history of the individual( alcoholism? |
49545 | We ask him then,"When did you first have it?" |
49545 | We ask,"Does it compel you to lose sleep?" |
49545 | We ask,"Does it prevent work?" |
49545 | We have come through the world''s most gigantic war: in view of this, what next? |
49545 | We have with Stevenson the duty of happiness:"If I have faltered more or less In my great task of happiness,"--What are we to do? |
49545 | We may relieve, yes; but have we constructed? |
49545 | What could it be? |
49545 | What does that mean? |
49545 | What economic and moral high- water marks and low- water marks can we trace in the past history? |
49545 | What is he? |
49545 | What is to take its place? |
49545 | What is to take the place of drugs in dispensary treatment? |
49545 | What previous hard times? |
49545 | What should we be without those? |
49545 | What shred of personality would remain? |
49545 | What will keep it going? |
49545 | When a boy is ready to choose a profession, does he look around him, study the alternatives, and select one? |
49545 | When a man prays he says to himself,"In view of my sins and of God, what next?" |
49545 | When a patient complains of pain, vertigo, nausea, we first ask ourselves,"What disease has he got?" |
49545 | When are we perfectly sure that we may safely give morphine? |
49545 | When can we give money without doing harm? |
49545 | When people ask,"What form of exercise shall I take?" |
49545 | When? |
49545 | Where did it come from? |
49545 | Where did that come from? |
49545 | Where did the clouds get it? |
49545 | Where did the seas get it? |
49545 | Where did they get it? |
49545 | Where does he begin and these tumultuous energies stop? |
49545 | Why did the patient come to us to- day? |
49545 | Why did they come? |
49545 | Why do I take so trivial and specific a case as this? |
49545 | Why do they ever interfere if nature is so very wise?" |
49545 | Why do we do it? |
49545 | Why has such an army of new assistants been called into existence? |
49545 | Why is it worth while? |
49545 | Why should I be tired to- day?" |
49545 | Will it not be easier for you, as well as for them, that they should know at once? |
49545 | Would my friend mind moving on to the next visit? |
49545 | You are concealing it from them, are you not? |
49545 | _ Pain: How aggravated? |
49545 | _ Pain: How bad?_ That is a very difficult question to get the answer to. |
49545 | _ Pain: How long?_ For a day, a month, a year, six years? |
49545 | _ Pain: How long?_ For a day, a month, a year, six years? |
49545 | _ Pain: Where?_ Patients rarely come to a doctor for a single_ point_. |
49545 | _ Past history_ After getting the patient''s present symptoms, one should ask,"Were you ever sick_ previous to this illness_? |
49545 | and then,"How much of the time-- half the time, a quarter of the time, for one day a week or one day a month?" |
49545 | and to some extent by the question,"Does it prevent work?" |
49545 | we ask, and,"Why did you leave the second one?" |
6802 | But why do I talk of death, That phantom of grisly bone? 6802 But,"the critic says,"why do n''t you name these firms, and put them in the pillory of public contempt?" |
6802 | Face to face with shame and insult Since she drew her baby breath, Were it strange to find her knocking At the cruel door of death? 6802 A wise writer has said recently:''Often you do n''t need to say to a man,_ Why_ do you do so?" |
6802 | And the sabbath, that we may set forth wheat, making the ephah small, and the shekel great, and falsifying the balances by deceit? |
6802 | Are there no slaves except those who, like the African thirty years ago, are bought and sold at the auction block? |
6802 | Are you justified, as a Christian minister, in creating a prejudice and arousing malignant passion by the use of the term"_ slave_?" |
6802 | Are you wearing one of the shirts she finished? |
6802 | As to the second part of the question,"Is no work better than some work?" |
6802 | But how long can we expect that to last if the dominion of the sweater is to spread in our midst? |
6802 | But is_ Italy_ to be the standard of our American civilization? |
6802 | But what shall we do with these multitudes of foreigners who are already living in our midst? |
6802 | CONSCIENCE: What is the price of a senatorship to- day? |
6802 | CONSCIENCE: Where can I find white- haired workingmen? |
6802 | Can you defend or justify this term under the conditions as they are stated in the printed report of your sermon? |
6802 | Can you defend or justify this term, under the conditions that are reported, as they are stated in the printed report of your sermon? |
6802 | Can you make men free by constitution simply? |
6802 | Did one ever hear of such luxuries in a factory of any sort? |
6802 | Dives, oh, can not you hear, For the music and dance of your high land, The moaning of misery drear That comes from the desolate island? |
6802 | Do you ask why they do not hunt for something better? |
6802 | Do you say that they must live somewhere, and that there must be such places for such people? |
6802 | Does not true charity consist in refusing to give alms to those who can or may support themselves? |
6802 | Does not true charity consist in refusing to give alms to those who can, or may, support themselves? |
6802 | Fellow- citizens, what do you think of this? |
6802 | How can accessions be prevented? |
6802 | How could it be otherwise? |
6802 | How do you justify the term"_ white slave_"when applied to the persons whose condition you describe? |
6802 | If a burglary has been committed in town, do you keep silent until you are prepared to name the burglar and publicly indict him for trial? |
6802 | If her work is worth more than she gets, can she not get it? |
6802 | If that is not slavery, what is it? |
6802 | If this is not white slavery, what is it? |
6802 | If we do not approve these worshippers, what shall we say of ourselves for permitting this state of things to come to pass? |
6802 | In the meantime most of us are asking,"What is the way out?" |
6802 | In the ninth question our critic says:"If her work is worth more than she gets, can she not get it? |
6802 | Is it better for her to_ try to support her children_ under existing conditions_ than to go to the almshouse_? |
6802 | Is it better for her to_ try to support her children_, under existing conditions, than to go to the almshouse?" |
6802 | Is it better to give alms to these people, in their attic, or to give alms to them under the conditions of the almshouse? |
6802 | Is it better to give alms to those people in their attic, or to give alms to them under the conditions of the almshouse? |
6802 | Is that better than_ some_ work? |
6802 | Is that better than_ some_ work?" |
6802 | Is_ no_ roof better than_ some kind_ of a roof? |
6802 | Is_ no_ roof better than_ some_ kind of a roof? |
6802 | Is_ no_ work better than_ some_ work? |
6802 | Is_ no_ work better than_ some_ work? |
6802 | Is_ no_ work better than_ some_ work?" |
6802 | Is_ some_ work_ here_ better than_ no_ work in_ Italy_? |
6802 | Is_ some_ work_ here_ better than_ no_ work in_ Italy_?" |
6802 | It might be dishonor, but it was certainly food and warmth for the children, and what did it matter? |
6802 | May I, without being considered a croaker, say that almost the same amount of spiritual power goes to waste in our average church life? |
6802 | My critic''s first question is,"How do you justify the term''white slave''when applied to the persons whose condition you describe?" |
6802 | My labor never flags; And what are its wages? |
6802 | Nobody ever caring Whether she stood or fell, And men( are they men?) |
6802 | O proud and prosperous city, How long will you let him wait? |
6802 | Perhaps you say these people are not appreciative, are not refined, do not have fine feelings-- how do you know that? |
6802 | Shall not the land tremble for this, and every one mourn that dwelleth therein?... |
6802 | Shall we go back to Italy for a model? |
6802 | Shall we look to the sweater, the chattel- mortgage shark, the lecherous merchant, to reform themselves? |
6802 | Suppose we refuse to trust her to make pants-- is_ no_ work better than_ some_ work?" |
6802 | Suppose we refuse to trust her to make pants? |
6802 | That we may buy the poor for silver, and the needy for a pair of shoes; yea, and sell the refuse of the wheat?" |
6802 | The question,''Am I my brother''s keeper?'' |
6802 | The room is intolerably dirty; but how can you have the heart to blame her? |
6802 | True, it is not pleasant to consider these distressing matters; but is it the business of the Christian to avoid that which is unpleasant? |
6802 | Under what authority does the slave- master force this woman to render her labor for all that it is worth? |
6802 | Under what authority does the slave- master force this woman to render her labor for all that it is worth?" |
6802 | Well, you ask, how can it be made better? |
6802 | Well, you ask, what is the remedy for all this? |
6802 | Were it strange if she should parley With the great arch fiend of sin?" |
6802 | What can a poor, half- broken- down mother, with three little babies, do hunting work? |
6802 | What course would be most sure to pauperize them utterly?" |
6802 | What is the good of doing this? |
6802 | What of it? |
6802 | What of your neighbors who perish? |
6802 | What will you do when you have destroyed the house and done away with the sweater? |
6802 | What will you do when you have destroyed the house and done away with the sweater?" |
6802 | What wonder? |
6802 | Which course would be most sure to pauperize them utterly? |
6802 | Who among our rich men will lead off in some grand crusade of this sort? |
6802 | Who will pay the rent, furnish them food, and care for the children while she makes her search? |
6802 | Will not a great many of your audience say it is only a pleasing fancy of a reporter''s imagination?" |
58799 | Ai n''t you afraid of being took? |
58799 | Am I? |
58799 | Any parcels? |
58799 | Are you a trooper? |
58799 | Are you an officer? |
58799 | But what do you want? |
58799 | But,cried Mr. Rees,"how are we to get home?" |
58799 | Did you ever hear of Jackey Jackey? |
58799 | Do you know who we are? |
58799 | Has your mate gone for the crushers? |
58799 | How many inches? 58799 Hulloa,"cried Moonlite,"where are you going with that pistol?" |
58799 | Is he at home? |
58799 | Married? |
58799 | Take care I do n''t find you out in a lie,cried Ford;"where''s your money?" |
58799 | Then,said Mr. Rees,"why not take it here and let us go on?" |
58799 | Well,replied Conway,"why did n''t he keep out of our road? |
58799 | What can I do? |
58799 | What do you call this? 58799 What do you carry that for?" |
58799 | What for? |
58799 | What for? |
58799 | What for? |
58799 | What if I was? 58799 What right,"he demanded of the delinquent,"have you to drink wine? |
58799 | What the---- do you want? |
58799 | What''s that to you? |
58799 | What''s the good of your sticking up the station? |
58799 | What''s the good? |
58799 | What''s the good? |
58799 | Where''s the rest? 58799 Where''s your pistols?" |
58799 | Where? |
58799 | Which are the bushrangers? |
58799 | Who are you? 58799 Who the---- are you?" |
58799 | Will you come out and surrender? |
58799 | Will you, by G--? |
58799 | Yes, of course, God help them,replied Ned,"they''d have got shot, but would n''t they have shot me if they could?" |
58799 | You have n''t shot him? |
58799 | After hanging for several minutes Ah Wee was let down and asked whether he"saveed now?" |
58799 | Another of the bushrangers asked:"Will you stand up and fight me if I give you a pistol?" |
58799 | Barnes?" |
58799 | Bourke jumped up from the table, as if in a passion, and cried"Do you doubt my word? |
58799 | Brady walked to the sideboard, filled a glass with rum, and asked the man whether he could drink that? |
58799 | Did you measure it?" |
58799 | Do you know who I am?" |
58799 | Do you not know, you rascal, that when you were convicted you forfeited all rights?" |
58799 | Do you want to insult me?" |
58799 | For instance, a blackfellow met Alexander Sinclair, near Killoshiel, and enquired how far it was to Bathurst? |
58799 | Garrett?" |
58799 | Hall said"What''s the good? |
58799 | He asked the man if he could do anything for him? |
58799 | He began to examine the revolvers, when William Benyon said,"Surely you do n''t mean to shoot us?" |
58799 | He called Hart up and asked indignantly,"What right has a thing like you to rob a clergyman?" |
58799 | He called out,''Pierce, will you see me murdered?'' |
58799 | He gave a loud howl on being thus rudely awakened, and then asked,"Who are you?" |
58799 | He seemed very excited, saying to Mr. Newton"Oh, what shall I do?" |
58799 | He swore at the servant, and asked him in an indignant tone,"Is that a proper thing for gentlemen to drink out of? |
58799 | He went to the door and asked,"Who''s there?" |
58799 | I should like to know if Mr. Pottinger would do so? |
58799 | Johnstone?" |
58799 | Malone however prudently declined, saying,"What could we do with our hands tied behind us? |
58799 | Morgan followed them, shouting,"You---- wretches, do you want to give me away?" |
58799 | Mr. Aitcheson asked Melville what he wanted? |
58799 | Mr. Bisdee asked him"Why not as good for blackfellow as for whitefellow?" |
58799 | Mr. Hazleton exclaimed"Who did this?" |
58799 | Mr. Macpherson asked him what had induced him to lead such a life? |
58799 | Mr. Stephens jumped up, exclaiming"Hullo, what''s up now?" |
58799 | Near the inn he came upon the bushranger, who exclaimed,"Hulloa, come after me?" |
58799 | On December 18th, 1852, he rode up to a sheep station near Wardy Yallock and asked Mr. Wilson, the overseer, who was the owner? |
58799 | On Dr. Browne coming to the door he was bailed up, and Ford asked him"How much money have you got?" |
58799 | On leaving the store they met Charles Nash in the street, and Clarke greeted him with"Hullo, Charlie, back from the Bega races?" |
58799 | One of these men asked,"Is this the butcher''s shop?" |
58799 | One of us must leave-- which shall it be?'' |
58799 | People talked of little else for days, and everywhere the question was asked,"What next?" |
58799 | Presently she asked the constable,"Have you got a warrant?" |
58799 | Scott took out his watch and asked"Eleven?" |
58799 | Stephen Benyon picked up the gun and Peisley said, laughing,"Why, you''re not going to shoot me, are you?" |
58799 | Sullivan asked whether the body was to be buried? |
58799 | Tarleton, who took a seat next to Constable Richards, whispered,"I can knock Hart down, shall I?" |
58799 | The bushranger fell, crying"Why did n''t you challenge me?" |
58799 | The man looked at him and replied,"Oh, you''re one of the---- wretches looking for bushrangers, are you?" |
58799 | Then he asked her"Can you go faster now?" |
58799 | Then he said that he had heard music as he approached the house, and he asked which of the ladies played? |
58799 | Thinking they were poachers after his deer, he reined his horse in and cried,"What are you doing here, you rascals?" |
58799 | Two of them were called up at about four a.m. to bale the boat out, and Jones asked William Harper, one of the sailors, if he could navigate? |
58799 | What do you want?" |
58799 | What do you want?" |
58799 | What else could I do?" |
58799 | What is it to you?" |
58799 | What''s your names?" |
58799 | When Jackey Jackey came rushing towards him, Smith cried out in a piteous tone,"For God''s sake do n''t hurt me, Jackey? |
58799 | When asked what they had to say in defence, one of the prisoners asked the Judge whether he thought they were crows? |
58799 | When he had finished he asked"How much?" |
58799 | When ordered to bail up, E. Cummins, the driver, enquired"What for?" |
58799 | When they reached the door of the large room Dan Kelly inquired,"Where''s Tarleton?" |
58799 | Where are you bound for?" |
58799 | Where is it?" |
58799 | Where''s the priest?" |
58799 | Why did n''t the---- fool surrender?" |
58799 | Will it be believed hereafter, that this was allowed to be carried on in the nineteenth century? |
58799 | Will that satisfy you?" |
58799 | Will you come quietly?" |
58799 | Will you favour the company with a reel?" |
58799 | Will you take your place?" |
58799 | Wright then went to the kitchen, pushed the door open, and asked where Foley was? |
58799 | are you going to kill my husband?" |
58799 | why do n''t you open the door?" |
40078 | ''Will,''says Tooth, looking at us with the swate exprission of a fly- cop who''s had his leather reefed,''what th''divil do ye two want?'' 40078 And Josiah,"my mother was wo nt to say,"where is he?" |
40078 | And how long have you been here? |
40078 | And so, Split,said I,"you too got your bit through Tooth?" |
40078 | And the little Englishman,I asked,"the one who really caused the entire trouble-- where is he?" |
40078 | And the price? |
40078 | And then? |
40078 | And was this, too, understood by the gang? |
40078 | And what are your pleasures? |
40078 | And what happened next? |
40078 | And what have you in mind as a topic for a thesis? |
40078 | And what is it that you want? |
40078 | Battle of Santiago? |
40078 | But how about the percentage? |
40078 | But how was I to know? |
40078 | Ca n''t you put me next? |
40078 | Came round the Cape? |
40078 | Can you imagine yourself doing such dreadful things when you get your senses back and are able to think clearly? |
40078 | Could n''t even look back to see where I''d fallen, huh? |
40078 | Did I? 40078 Did she see you?" |
40078 | Did you receive an announcement of your indictment on a criminal charge? |
40078 | Do you drink? |
40078 | Doing what? |
40078 | Have your efforts brought you a single thing that is of real value to you? |
40078 | How about the time and strength that you have wasted in securing-- what? |
40078 | How about them now? |
40078 | How comes it,Maria exclaimed,"that I see so many emperors this morning?" |
40078 | How is it all going to end? |
40078 | How is the wire game in New York? |
40078 | How long ago since all this happened? |
40078 | If you do n''t know me, my good man,she remarked, quietly,"I suppose you have heard of my husband?" |
40078 | Josiah, this time you mean it, do n''t you? |
40078 | Look at my new Lincoln and Bennett, will you? |
40078 | Mamebarely deigned to look at me, remarking proudly:"You do n''t suppose that I am one of those girls that always mind, do you?" |
40078 | Me betters, huh? |
40078 | Meaning? |
40078 | Not dressed yet to go ashore? |
40078 | Now, madam,said the detective, brusquely,"is there anybody here whom you think lifted your purse? |
40078 | Out at the Philippines? |
40078 | Rolled up where? |
40078 | Roped together? |
40078 | Say, have you got anything on? |
40078 | Say, mate, what''s the chanst for a cup o''coffee? |
40078 | Strange motion, is n''t it? |
40078 | We? |
40078 | Well? |
40078 | What else? |
40078 | What is the lay work? |
40078 | What next and why? |
40078 | What shall I write? |
40078 | Where did you get those duds? |
40078 | Where''s your good news? |
40078 | Who is there? |
40078 | Why not proceed as far as possible under the cover of night,I reasoned,"and_ then_ leave the rig somewhere in good hands?" |
40078 | Why, where is it, Josiah? |
40078 | Yes? |
40078 | You goin''as a passer? |
40078 | You in here alone? |
40078 | You sure? |
40078 | _ You_ here? |
40078 | After a pause,"What are the other pleasures?" |
40078 | Ai n''t such a bad looker, is he? |
40078 | And now what?" |
40078 | And why not? |
40078 | And why? |
40078 | Are you a woman- hater?" |
40078 | At such junctures, do what I would, there came the insistent queries:"Well, and what have you gotten in return for it all?" |
40078 | Besides, what chance would my old clothes have in a competitive contest with those of my rival? |
40078 | But what did I learn about those negroes? |
40078 | But what else was there to entitle me to matriculation? |
40078 | But what is to be said about my friend, the_ facchino_, and the Maffia and the Camorra? |
40078 | But what will it cost?" |
40078 | But where are they now? |
40078 | By rights the arrest should never have taken place, but what do rights count for in Russia? |
40078 | Ca n''t you clean up some?" |
40078 | Ca n''t you help me out a little-- five cents''ll do?" |
40078 | Can you explain it?" |
40078 | Good thing you an''her never went to housekeeping-- ain''t it?" |
40078 | Have you not duties toward your wife and children to observe? |
40078 | He believed in it, in himself and in his mother; why should he not become a good American? |
40078 | He rubbed it on my nose, saying:"_ Vasch? |
40078 | He said:"Well, what do you think it will be worth?" |
40078 | He said:"Why,_ signor_, did you not observe? |
40078 | How could this be proved? |
40078 | How did you make out?" |
40078 | How do you feel about the matter?" |
40078 | I had become a little mixed in understanding the Count, and said something like this:"And the miracles you consider so illuminating?" |
40078 | I said to Sambo:"What in the world is the meaning of all this?" |
40078 | I said to him:"What do you think that will be worth?" |
40078 | I said to one of my_ facchino_ friends:"Can you not make me acquainted with some friend in the Maffia Society?" |
40078 | I suppose you know how to proceed?" |
40078 | I was not present when the question was put to him, but one who was present told me that Kuropatkin replied:"What''s the use? |
40078 | I wonder whether the asthmatic little steamer that used to run from the Riva to San Nicoletto is still afloat? |
40078 | If it were n''t true,_ what''s to keep them from squealing every time they get arrested_?" |
40078 | If we had ever met-- but what''s the use of"if- ing"any more than"perhapsing"? |
40078 | In my case, what happened? |
40078 | Is it your right to sneak away from all this just to make yourself look and sound consistent? |
40078 | Is the coal- passer''s life to be spent entirely in the bunkers? |
40078 | Is there anything in the English language that can beat that? |
40078 | Just a log like that-- that is no crime, is it?" |
40078 | Meester Fleent,"he exclaimed as I got off the train and greeted him,"have you brought me news from Prince Chilkoff?" |
40078 | Mucha good news, what?" |
40078 | Now, what were the facts as I learned to know them as a boy? |
40078 | Now, whence came this strange passion, for such it was, found in milder form probably in all boys and in some girls, but uncommonly lodged in me? |
40078 | Now, why was I so perverse and pig- headed in this matter, when I, myself, the fever having subsided, suffered real remorse after each trip? |
40078 | On one occasion he came to me and said:"_ Signor_, will you not accompany me on a journey to the fine lace and glasshouses in Venice?" |
40078 | Once, as he was walking with a friend in the streets of New York, he said suddenly:"Do you know, I wonder what it is like to chase a man? |
40078 | Pretty soon a person of unquestionable importance in his own tramp line, said to me:"Have you a match?" |
40078 | Such church instruction as I could stand was also found in this fold-- or shall I say party? |
40078 | That was good enough, was n''t it?" |
40078 | The Lake Shore gang consisted of the following types: the desperate laboring man(?) |
40078 | The good_ Hausfrau_ said:"Well, you must excuse us down in this country of--_Ja, Sie kennen das Vieh, nicht wahr_?" |
40078 | The petitioner was a well- set- up, firm- built Englishman, clean- shaven, aged twenty- five, who said to me:"I beg your pardon?" |
40078 | The police force said:"Who is this young fellow out here looking us up?" |
40078 | The sailor was in the midst of the battle of Santiago when Flynt smiled and said quietly:"Have you seen the Lake Shore push yet?" |
40078 | They came to the door in a body when I was brought back, demanding in a chorus:"How much, Kid?" |
40078 | Understand? |
40078 | Vasch?_"( Yours? |
40078 | Vasch?_"( Yours? |
40078 | Was he telling the truth or not? |
40078 | We called our waiter and said to him:"Where is that umbrella?" |
40078 | We have been friendly together, have we not?" |
40078 | We were to land at Leith from New Castle, anyhow, so why not see Edinburgh, whether we were real tramps or not? |
40078 | What boy is as clever as his sister, when it comes to acting? |
40078 | What did he do? |
40078 | What did the militia do during all this unfortunate experience? |
40078 | What else? |
40078 | What is it to be?" |
40078 | What should I do? |
40078 | What the deuce is the matter with my clothes? |
40078 | What was the use o''gettin''off when I saw''t you was all to the good? |
40078 | What''s the matter with you? |
40078 | What, indeed, has all the turmoil below been suffered for if not to allow such indulgence on land? |
40078 | Where did you do your time?" |
40078 | Where did you get your duds?" |
40078 | Who can explain the hidden springs of the human mentality? |
40078 | Who could expect such people to be upright in everything? |
40078 | Whom did I find that knew me? |
40078 | Why increase the criminal copy in the papers which must go into our homes? |
40078 | Why not suppress as much as possible all reference to what is criminal and sinful?" |
40078 | Why not, indeed? |
40078 | Why? |
40078 | Will you not come as my guest to- night at one of our gondolier''s restaurants, where I will spend every one of those nine_ lire_ on a good dinner?" |
40078 | With my friend the question was,"What story shall I tell?" |
40078 | Yours?) |
40078 | _ But you ca n''t get a line in your newspaper that''s going to queer me._ See? |
39370 | By what spirit,I often asked,"was this ruin made? |
39370 | Certainly,replied they,"but nobody cares for us, and where can_ we_ expect to find a friend?" |
39370 | I must? |
39370 | You are in want of clothes; would you not be pleased if some one came to relieve your misery? |
39370 | --Reader, have you ever read Howard''s Prisons of Europe? |
39370 | And are not_ State Prisons_ within the whole world? |
39370 | And if to these be added the crime of being accessary to his death I would ask what can be wanting to cap the climax of his iniquity? |
39370 | And were they always admitted when they did come? |
39370 | And what is the testimony of the Records of the Prison? |
39370 | And where in the universe can they behold a more true and dreadful representation of the''house of wo and pain,''than is constantly before their eyes? |
39370 | And who were the first to espouse the cause of Christ, after his resurrection? |
39370 | Are not the tender mercies of the wicked cruel? |
39370 | As he entered the hall, Burnham was brought out of his cell, and laid on the floor before him.--"Is he dead?" |
39370 | As he went about doing good, who followed most cheerfully in his train? |
39370 | But did they? |
39370 | But if Fane''s throwing a stone at him was crime enough to deserve death, why did he not deal out the same punishment to Higgins? |
39370 | But if it be true, as is reported, that the Warden treated him with such cruel and shameful indignity, what shall be said of_ him_? |
39370 | But if this was the spirit of the_ priest_, what might not have been expected of the_ people_? |
39370 | But remember that the work is God''s, and is any thing too hard for an almighty arm to accomplish? |
39370 | But the_ past_--''tis past_ for ever_!-- Yet, if suffer''d still to live, Will the friends of Jesus_ never_, My repented deeds_ forgive_?" |
39370 | But what are laws to tyrants? |
39370 | But why have the benevolent and christian spirits of every age laboured in vain, and spent their strength for naught? |
39370 | By how mean a motive is human nature capable of being influenced? |
39370 | Can such cruelty on any person do him any good? |
39370 | Can that man be worthy of any office, who can stoop to such criminal meanness? |
39370 | Christians, will you be consistent? |
39370 | Did he not confer the boon of pardon and salvation on a dying_ thief_? |
39370 | From such a place then, who could hope to see a man go forth reformed, except from bad to worse? |
39370 | How are they treated? |
39370 | How can I, honour''d Mother, Whose mem''ry I adore, Endure the thought, so painful, Of seeing you no more? |
39370 | How can they call that a good religion, which does not exert sufficient influence over its votaries to make them even_ consistent_? |
39370 | How do_ you_ treat them? |
39370 | How have I been treated? |
39370 | How inconsistent, then, must such conduct be? |
39370 | How infernal must be the nature of that man who can wantonly crucify the holy sympathies of a trembling sufferer? |
39370 | I do not say that such_ was_ the case, but if it was not, I should like to know why they were let out of the room, when their plot was so well known? |
39370 | If God is not more merciful than man, what will become of us? |
39370 | If He wills, who or what can hinder? |
39370 | If it_ was_, on what account? |
39370 | If the decision of a high court is not final, where is the security of any man who happens to be accused? |
39370 | If you are a christian, what then? |
39370 | In its idolatrous devotion to self, how reckless of consequences? |
39370 | Is it a crime deserving of punishment for a man to say,"I have done more than I meant to,"when he had done his full task, and done it well? |
39370 | Is not his situation almost an excuse for any thing he may do? |
39370 | Is that man fit for any office in a humane Institution who could thus forget his kindred nature, and plant with thorns the death- bed of a brother? |
39370 | Is this a crime? |
39370 | Is this a fair specimen of religious conduct? |
39370 | Is this religion? |
39370 | Is this the meaning of that divine command which requires all men, and christians_ especially_, to do as they would be done by? |
39370 | Is this the spirit of the prayer--"forgive_ as_ WE_ forgive_?" |
39370 | Is this"_ not_ mentioning to the penitent sinner the sins that he hath committed?" |
39370 | Is this_ brotherly love_? |
39370 | It is said that the laws of America are written with mercy; but are they not often executed in blood? |
39370 | It is very convenient to have this, when no better can be found; but where is the necessity to torture a man because he is sick, and ingenious? |
39370 | Ministers of the everlasting gospel, are your garments clean? |
39370 | Missionary, Tract, Bible and Prison Discipline Societies, how stands your accounts? |
39370 | Now, what just cause had they to array themselves against that individual? |
39370 | Ought such personal feelings to be indulged towards a prostrate victim? |
39370 | Rather did they not destroy the chapel to prevent their coming? |
39370 | Rather who does not shun them?--insult them?--spurn them from his door?--force them to die in innocence or live by crime? |
39370 | Rather would not such treatment have the effect, even on a saint, to make him a sinner? |
39370 | Reader, what think you of this? |
39370 | Such was Nero once, but what was his character afterwards? |
39370 | There are_ exceptions_, but who knows, where to make them? |
39370 | There was a remarkable expression in his countenance, and he was asked if the bell should be rung to call the keeper? |
39370 | These are as imperishable as his nature, and who that ever had a heart could touch lightly the sacred ark of his happiness? |
39370 | True, they_ are_ sinners, and experience has taught them that they_ need not_ expect much tenderness; but, Christians, what is_ your duty_ to them? |
39370 | Under similar circumstances, who that has not the lovely principles of the gospel in his soul, would act very differently? |
39370 | Was he not a good preacher? |
39370 | Was it right to treat a prisoner, who had always behaved well, in such a manner as this? |
39370 | Was not one of his most faithful friends, while he abode on earth, she out of whom he had cast_ seven devils_? |
39370 | Was the guard in any danger of personal violence? |
39370 | Was there any danger of his escaping? |
39370 | We have fallen and how can we rise? |
39370 | What could an_ angel_ do in his circumstances? |
39370 | What did he do for him? |
39370 | What evil had he done, that they should treat him thus? |
39370 | What excuse is there for those who reported him? |
39370 | What hope can we cherish of ever regaining the confidence of our fellow men? |
39370 | What interest has any one of us beyond these walls? |
39370 | What man of ordinary feelings would have treated his dog, as the Warden treated Ellis? |
39370 | What more can I do? |
39370 | What then could he do? |
39370 | What, then, is the testimony of the superintendent of this Prison, on this vastly important and interesting subject? |
39370 | What, then, rendered it his duty to kill his prisoner? |
39370 | What_ can_ he do? |
39370 | Where else under heaven can we look but to_ you_? |
39370 | Where, I ask, is the mercy of a penitentiary, which treats its subjects thus? |
39370 | Where, in all history, can an instance be found of a single reformation from guilt, by any other than gentle and clement means? |
39370 | Who can endure forever an hourly crucifixion on the contempt and derision of the whole world? |
39370 | Who dares confront these charges? |
39370 | Who is that furious and determined individual, commissioned by the chief priests, and, Jehu like, speeding his way to Damascus? |
39370 | Who then can bear on an already"wounded spirit,"the mountain of universal insult and scorn? |
39370 | Who then dares to point to any individuals, or to any class of fallen man and say--_There is no hope in their case_? |
39370 | Who were the criminal cause of this young man''s death? |
39370 | Who will bring us the messages of salvation, if_ you_ refuse? |
39370 | Who will pity us, if_ you_ will not? |
39370 | Who wipes their tears? |
39370 | Whom then would they have? |
39370 | Why are our prisons such scenes of cruelty and such schools of crime? |
39370 | Why did not the fingers appear, and trace his doom upon the wall? |
39370 | Why should I wish to live? |
39370 | Why then was he not the man? |
39370 | Why was he styled the friend of sinners? |
39370 | Why? |
39370 | Will God suffer you to go unpunished for thus trampling on His authority, and abusing your fellow man? |
39370 | With such records as these in the books which will be opened in"that day for which all other days were made,"who would be willing to go to judgment? |
39370 | Would Lucifer himself have treated even a young_ christian_ so? |
39370 | Would not a little attention to the wants of the neighborhood have been at least_ excused_? |
39370 | You that kneel at the altar of Jesus, and commemorate his dying love, are you innocent? |
39370 | _ Publicans and sinners._ Who were the most remarkable subjects of his saving power? |
39370 | _ Why_ was he not the man for that place? |
39370 | and are not their_ neglected_ and_ despised inmates_ included in the whole creation? |
39370 | and how could they obtain him? |
39370 | and was he not admitted to be pious? |
39370 | and, also, why Fane, who was the least outrageous of the four, should have been shot, and no attempt made on any of the others? |
39370 | especially after he explained by saying,"I have wove more than I thought I had"? |
39370 | especially when the government authorised him to? |
39370 | had he not learning and talent adequate to the claims of the place? |
39370 | is it not enough to murder him, must his body be disturbed and given to the doctors?" |
39370 | speaking of the crowded state of the night rooms, said, how can you expect reformation, under such circumstances? |
39370 | what had Godfrey done? |
39370 | when, enchanting goddess, Shall I return to thee? |
39370 | where is your heart, if you have any? |
39370 | who gives them a kind look or a civil word? |
39370 | who gives them a shelter from the rude storms of winter? |
39370 | who leads them into the vineyard in the morning and gives them a penny at night? |
39370 | why did he declare the object of his mission to be to call sinners to repentance? |
45169 | Always say to the dip who says he wants to square it; Well, what''s your other graft? |
45169 | And so you married him? |
45169 | Any good Molls now? 45169 Are you hurt?" |
45169 | Billy,I continued,"how long have you been in stir?" |
45169 | Billy,I proceeded,"what would you do if you were on the outside and she was in prison for six years?" |
45169 | By whom? |
45169 | Do n''t you remember Jimmy the Kid, ten years ago, in the sixth? |
45169 | Do you believe in hell? |
45169 | Doctor,I continued,"do you believe that a man can be a respectable physician and still be insane?" |
45169 | Had n''t I earned it? |
45169 | How is graft? |
45169 | How is it, Bob,I said to him,"that you are not so good as you were?" |
45169 | How is it,I said,"that I am not sent back to stir?" |
45169 | How was it? |
45169 | How''s graft, Mike? |
45169 | In the city? |
45169 | Is it something good? |
45169 | Jim Lennon? |
45169 | Jimmy, is it true, that you are pipes( crazy)? 45169 Lucy?" |
45169 | Mamie? |
45169 | Surely,I remarked,"you do n''t believe half what insane men tell you, do you? |
45169 | Swedish Emmy? |
45169 | Well? |
45169 | What are you up to? |
45169 | What are you working at? |
45169 | What are_ you_ doing, Joe? |
45169 | What do you mean? |
45169 | What do you mean? |
45169 | What makes you look so glum? |
45169 | What was the rap, Mike? |
45169 | What''s in it? |
45169 | Where have you been? |
45169 | Who''s dead? |
45169 | Why do n''t we like the books we liked when we were boys? 45169 Why do n''t you give up the booze?" |
45169 | Why would a woman take to him( a sober, respectable man but lacking in temperament) unless she wanted a good home? |
45169 | You are not positive, are you? |
45169 | You still love me? |
45169 | You want to know what put me on the bum? |
45169 | ''Ow to''Ell am I better off here? |
45169 | After a short talk, I said:"Where''s Sheenie Annie?" |
45169 | Because I do n''t wear a Piccadilly collar?" |
45169 | But as bad luck would have it, a negro coachman, standing in the street by the pavement, got next, and said to me,"What are you doing there?" |
45169 | But how about young Hope''s wrecked life? |
45169 | But the big lunatic changed his note, smiled and said:"Say, Charley, have you got any marbles?" |
45169 | But what have I done? |
45169 | But where was I to find a friend? |
45169 | But who would take it? |
45169 | Can I trust you with them? |
45169 | Can you blame the judge? |
45169 | Did n''t you get anything?" |
45169 | Did you ever wear a collar and tie in the old country?" |
45169 | Do you know the weak spots of this dump?" |
45169 | Does not everyone know that the men who do society the greatest injury have never done time; in fact, may never have broken any laws? |
45169 | Does that huzzy look anything like me?" |
45169 | Have you given up smoking, too?" |
45169 | He began to abuse the States, and I said:"You duffer, did you ever see such pretty girls as here? |
45169 | He had heard what I said and he joined in:"You know why I got the tenth of a century? |
45169 | He said:"How do you know?" |
45169 | He turned to the ward doctor and asked:"What is this mans condition?" |
45169 | How could I bear it? |
45169 | How could I send it to them, for the keeper was not"next"to the Underground? |
45169 | How in the name of common sense, then, could Sterling, or I, or any other grafter expect otherwise than to be traduced? |
45169 | How is it I never got a long bit?" |
45169 | Hyde_?" |
45169 | I asked,"attendants or patients?" |
45169 | I grabbed her by the arm and exclaimed:"Who is it that is circulating these d---- stories about me?" |
45169 | I had just struck a match, when I heard a female voice say,"What are you doing there?" |
45169 | I had known him in the old days, and he asked:"What are you doing?" |
45169 | I had made a break, for he said, quickly:"Why? |
45169 | I heard a patient about to be beaten by four attendants cry out:"My God, you wo n''t murder me?" |
45169 | I once met Kate, one of them, and said, with a smile:"Did you hear about the Kid''s latest? |
45169 | I replied to her:"Madam, why do you lace tight and indulge in social dissipation even after you know it is bad for the health? |
45169 | I told him she was still waiting, and he said:"Why does n''t she visit me then?" |
45169 | I told them a little about New York State penitentiaries, and then Ted said to Denver Red:"What do you think of the big fellow?" |
45169 | I would board a car with a couple of newspapers, would say,"News, boss?" |
45169 | If I ai nt as prosperous as I was once, why not dream I''m a millionaire?" |
45169 | If a man is religious, why should he not drop it on Jesus? |
45169 | In the first place, there is very little chance of a come- back, for who will believe men who have ever been shut up in an insane asylum? |
45169 | In the name of humanity and science what can society expect from a man who has spent a number of years in such surroundings? |
45169 | Indeed, do you think that well- known guns could graft with impunity unless they had some one right? |
45169 | Indeed, why should n''t these attendants be brutal? |
45169 | Is it because you have no imagination? |
45169 | Is it the contrast between Good and Evil, or is it because the ne''er- do- well has a stronger character and more magnetic force? |
45169 | Is n''t it likely that if a man had a large income he would never go to prison? |
45169 | It is not of course common, to find a thief who is an honest man; but is there very often an honest man anywhere, in the world of graft or out of it? |
45169 | It was my pride to buy them things-- clothes, pins, and to take them on excursions; for was I not a rising"gun,"with money in my pocket? |
45169 | Johnny grew very pale as Mamie said the last words; and when she stopped speaking, he said quietly:"And you did it?" |
45169 | Like the New York police he was hot after the stuff, but who can blame him? |
45169 | Mack sent for F----''s superior, the captain, and the following dialogue took place:_ Captain_: What do you want? |
45169 | My only excuse to myself was: Human nature is weak, ai n''t it? |
45169 | No? |
45169 | One day he said to me,"Why do n''t you get your change outside? |
45169 | One day, George, the roustabout, said to me:"Kid, do you want to go row- boating with us?" |
45169 | One would ask,"Who''s dead?" |
45169 | Patsy noticed I was quiet and unusually gloomy, and asked:"What''s the matter? |
45169 | Pointing to her daughters she continued:"What must my children think of such an impersonation? |
45169 | She might have been fined, and why should n''t I have the money, rather than the magistrate? |
45169 | Soon after I was transferred from Sing Sing to Auburn, a friend came to me and said:"Jimmy, are you on either of the shoe- shop galleries? |
45169 | That nearly knocked F---- down, but he and Mack took a car, and he said to the latter:"In the name of everything how did you hypnotize the old man?" |
45169 | The most progressive people in her set believed in"getting on"in any way, and how could Mamie be expected to form a social morality for herself? |
45169 | The public may say I was surely an incorrigible and ought to have been shut up anyway for safe keeping, but are they right if they say so? |
45169 | Then I turned to the Commissioner and said:"Do you know what constitutes a cure in this place and in Matteawan?" |
45169 | Then, turning to me, Mull asked:"Jim, do n''t you think that if everything was square and on the level we''d stand a better chance?" |
45169 | There is a big difference between that and twenty, ai nt it?" |
45169 | They were not able to show me anything that was worth while; they could not deliver the goods, so what was the use of talking? |
45169 | This was too much for Mickey, who said:"Why do n''t you talk United States and not be springing whole leaves out of a dictionary?" |
45169 | Was I insane? |
45169 | Was Voltaire delusional? |
45169 | Was it a combination of these things? |
45169 | Was it a premonition? |
45169 | Was it my reading of the great authors, and my becoming acquainted with the beautiful thoughts of the great men of the world? |
45169 | Was it sympathy? |
45169 | Was it the confinement in a mad- house, where I daily saw old pals of mine become drivelling idiots? |
45169 | Was it the terrible years I spent in prison? |
45169 | What boy with an ounce of thick blood in his body could refuse to go with a girl to the Island? |
45169 | What chance has the convict, confined in a dark cell for years, to keep his senses? |
45169 | What is more entertaining than a little scandal, especially when it does n''t hit home? |
45169 | What is that, after all, but the realization that your way of life is ruining you even to the very foundation of your nature? |
45169 | What is the matter with him? |
45169 | What the---- did you come here for? |
45169 | What was it? |
45169 | What woman could help liking Steerforth? |
45169 | When old friends and relatives look at me askance I say to myself:"How can I prove to them that I am not the same as I was in the past?" |
45169 | Who could blame her? |
45169 | Who could entirely resist the pleadings of a pretty woman with large black eyes? |
45169 | Who would think that an Isaacs would supersede a Finnigan? |
45169 | Why did n''t he bite me? |
45169 | Why did n''t you stop off at Buffalo?" |
45169 | Why did they send me to the mad- house? |
45169 | Why do n''t you go to sea?" |
45169 | Why do n''t you have him arrested for bigamy?" |
45169 | Why do n''t you practice what you spout? |
45169 | Why object to the girl of sixteen reading such books and not to the woman of thirty- five? |
45169 | Why was I put in the Pipe House? |
45169 | Why, therefore, is not life far stronger than a narcotic?" |
45169 | Will you mind them for me, until things quiet down?" |
45169 | Wo n''t we, dear?" |
45169 | _ Au Revoir._''You ask me what became of my sister- in- law? |
45169 | _ Captain_: How long would it take you to get it? |
45169 | _ Captain_: Was I ever known to go back on my word? |
45169 | _ Mack_: It''s a sure turn- out? |
45169 | _ Mickey_:"Ah, wat''s the matter wid Tammany? |
45169 | _ Mickey_:"I did n''t, eh? |
45169 | _ Mull_:"How many times, Mickey, have you been in stir?" |
45169 | and the answer was,"Why not? |
45169 | and then he''d put the question he had asked a hundred times before:"Who med( made) you?" |
45169 | he asked,"better than the copper?" |
45169 | the Big One said,"that you happened to get your fingers into that man''s pocket?" |
27288 | _ Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right?_must be the stay of the believer at such a time, and, by grace, it is my stay now. |
27288 | About four hours after, a sister said to me,"Do you want any money?" |
27288 | Am I not going beyond the measure of my faith in thinking about enlarging the work so as to double or treble it? |
27288 | Am I not undertaking too much for my bodily strength and my mental powers, by thinking about another Orphan House? |
27288 | And how is it now? |
27288 | And how should our Father do otherwise? |
27288 | And since he has not, is it not a plain indication that for the present I should remain a journeyman( or shopman, or clerk, as the case may be)?" |
27288 | And what was it that gave me peace? |
27288 | And why not? |
27288 | And why? |
27288 | Are the things of God, the honor of his name, the welfare of his church, the conversion of sinners, and the profit of your own soul, your chief aim? |
27288 | Are you in debt? |
27288 | Are you out of debt? |
27288 | But how does it work, when we thus anticipate God, by going our own way? |
27288 | But how were we to obtain warmth? |
27288 | But is this indeed the spirit in which children of God generally are engaged in their calling? |
27288 | But perhaps it may be asked, Why do you not take the bread on credit? |
27288 | But what did the Lord do? |
27288 | But what is the result? |
27288 | But what is the right way of looking at the matter? |
27288 | But what was the result? |
27288 | But what was to be done under these circumstances? |
27288 | But what was to be done? |
27288 | But_ if we do not believe_ that God will help us, could we be at peace? |
27288 | Can it be that God has made such promises as these to me, and to such men as I am? |
27288 | Dear reader, does your soul long to be rich towards God, to lay up treasures in heaven? |
27288 | Do I serve God for naught? |
27288 | Do not men believe that God means what he appears plainly to have asserted? |
27288 | Do you make it your primary business, your first great concern, to seek the kingdom of God and his righteousness? |
27288 | Do you really believe in Jesus? |
27288 | Do you verily depend upon him alone for the salvation of your soul? |
27288 | Does he not, however, tell me by all this, Go forward, my servant, and I will help thee? |
27288 | Has it ever occurred to the reader that the Lord only can preserve any one engaged in business from making bad debts? |
27288 | Have I been boasting in God in vain? |
27288 | Have you any_ present_ need for the Institution under your care? |
27288 | He can not doubt that God has in a remarkable manner, at various times, answered his prayers; why should he not always answer them? |
27288 | He sums up the whole in this remarkable language:--"And what shall I say more? |
27288 | How can I get over the plain word of the Lord, which is to the contrary, even if the first four points could be satisfactorily settled? |
27288 | How can we sufficiently praise the Lord for still continuing to use us in his service? |
27288 | How may the case be altered for the better? |
27288 | How shall I do when sickness befalls my family, or when other trials productive of expense come upon me, if I do not make provision for such seasons? |
27288 | How then could I be tired of carrying on the work of God on such principles as I do? |
27288 | How would we decide if a similar case should occur in physics? |
27288 | If an invaluable treasure is here reserved for the believer, he asks, why should I not receive my portion of it? |
27288 | If it be asked, But why should I rise early? |
27288 | If the latter be the case, then, though you may have all the necessaries of life, yet could you be surprised if you had them not? |
27288 | In a universe governed by moral law, why should not moral laws take precedence of all others? |
27288 | Is it not also, perhaps, a snare to puff me up, in attempting to build a very large Orphan House? |
27288 | Is it not an honor to help such brethren? |
27288 | Is it not like"tempting God,"to think of building another Orphan House for seven hundred more orphans? |
27288 | Is it not manifest how precious it is to carry on God''s work in this way, even with regard to the obtaining of means? |
27288 | Is it not manifest that it is most precious in every way to depend upon God? |
27288 | Is it not rather his will that my means should be spent in another way? |
27288 | Is it really a good cause in which I am called upon to become surety? |
27288 | Is not human reason confounded by such instances? |
27288 | Is not this a delusion of Satan, an attempt to cast me down altogether from my sphere of usefulness, by making me to go beyond my measure? |
27288 | Is not this a plain proof that God is both able and willing to help simply in answer to prayer? |
27288 | Is prayer really a power with God, or is it merely an expedient by which our own piety may be cultivated? |
27288 | It may lastly be said, But how shall I set about rising early? |
27288 | It might also be said by a brother whose earnings are small, should_ I_ also give according to my earnings? |
27288 | It might be asked, How much shall I give of my income? |
27288 | It might be asked, How much time shall I allow myself for rest? |
27288 | Lord, how can thy servant know thy will in this matter? |
27288 | May I not well trust in the Lord for what is yet needed for the building fund? |
27288 | My soul laid hold on that word,"Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right?" |
27288 | Need such parents despair? |
27288 | Now what is the food for the inner man? |
27288 | Now, looking at it naturally, where is this great sum to come from? |
27288 | Now, ought not the saints in our day also to act according to this word? |
27288 | Or does your business, or your family, or your own temporal concerns, in some shape or other_ primarily_ occupy your attention? |
27288 | Perhaps the reader may ask, What has been the result of this labor in Germany? |
27288 | Shall I have enough myself the next month? |
27288 | Suppose, now, you were even to succeed in getting this large Orphan House built, how will you be able to provide for seven hundred other orphans? |
27288 | That many enemies would laugh, were the Lord to withhold supplies, and say, Did we not foretell that this enthusiasm would come to nothing? |
27288 | The gentleman, turning to the matron, said,"Have you a good stock?" |
27288 | The last words on which I spoke were,"Said I not unto thee that if thou wouldest believe thou shouldest see the glory of God?" |
27288 | The tenth part, or the fifth part, or the third part, or one half, or more? |
27288 | This second point, then, Why do I carry on this business? |
27288 | To whom did I make known our wants, except to those who are closely connected with the work? |
27288 | Well, the Father in heaven said, as it were, by this his dispensation, Art thou willing to give up this child to me? |
27288 | Were these promises limited to prophetical or apostolical times; or have they been left as a legacy to all believers until the end shall come? |
27288 | What could I say against this? |
27288 | What does it matter whether you pay immediately for it, or at the end of the month, or the quarter, or the half year? |
27288 | What is meant by the prayer of faith? |
27288 | What is now to be done? |
27288 | What is the limit within which they may be safely received as a ground of practical reliance? |
27288 | What is the significance of the passages both in the New Testament and the Old which refer to it? |
27288 | What is to be done in such a case? |
27288 | What is to be done under these circumstances? |
27288 | What obliges the person who wishes me to become surety for him to need a surety? |
27288 | What then was to be done? |
27288 | What was to be done? |
27288 | What, then, are the conditions of this remarkable experiment, if such we may call it? |
27288 | When I was first converted, I should have said, What harm can there be to take some of the money which has been put by for the building fund? |
27288 | When it is therefore asked, How shall these facts be accounted for? |
27288 | Where should the heart of the disciple of the Lord Jesus be, but in heaven? |
27288 | Why am I engaged in this trade or profession? |
27288 | Why does this post- office order not come a few days sooner or later? |
27288 | Why is it, then, that this whole range of revealed truth has so generally been looked upon as an unknown and unexplored region? |
27288 | Why should not his prayers be always of the same character? |
27288 | Why should we deny that there is a power in prayer to which we have not commonly attained? |
27288 | Why should we limit either the goodness or the power of God by our own knowledge of what we call the laws of nature? |
27288 | Why should we not admit that"there are more things in heaven and earth than are dreamed of in our philosophy"? |
27288 | Will it be the least particle of uneasiness to their minds, or will their children be the worse for it? |
27288 | Will you not have still greater trials of faith? |
27288 | Wilt thou be pleased to teach him? |
27288 | Would it not be going beyond my measure_ naturally_, with reference to mental and bodily strength? |
27288 | Would not this be going beyond my measure_ spiritually_? |
27288 | Yet do all the children of God give even the_ tenth_ part of what the Lord gives them? |
27288 | You ask, How may I, a true believer, have my faith strengthened? |
27288 | You see I do not care about you, and how are you able to continue to be so kind to me, and thus to serve me?" |
27288 | [ Do not all these objections only hold good, I said to myself, if I were_ needlessly_ to set about building? |
27288 | and why should not the believer always draw near to God in full confidence that he will do as he has said? |
27288 | as the things which you purchase are needful? |
27288 | or, What shall we drink? |
27288 | or, Wherewithal shall we be clothed? |
27288 | or, if we believe that he means it, do we fear the charge of fanaticism if we openly avow that we take him at his word? |
27288 | we inquire, to what known law can they be referred? |
44202 | And you have taken charge of these nurses? |
44202 | Conductor, you had a hot box a few miles back; do n''t you think it should be looked to after passing MacClenny? |
44202 | Had he a family; did they want food, or clothing? 44202 Is dat all?" |
44202 | Of what? |
44202 | On Change,like the price of wheat on the market? |
44202 | Well,said Miss Barton,"do you think you could not raise seeds enough from those onions?" |
44202 | What do you go for? |
44202 | Will you not tell her? |
44202 | Would she like to return to the childhood home in Indiana? |
44202 | Would you ladies take the agency of the Red Cross to deliver supplies to these people? |
44202 | Yes, is n''t it enough? |
44202 | --What had I done? |
44202 | Again I would say that to those taking the first lessons in army life, all these things seem incomprehensible, to say the least, and"Who''s to blame?" |
44202 | Among these hard facts appears a conscientious theorist and asks, Is not war a great sin and wrong? |
44202 | And these were the women who went to the war: The women of question; what_ did_ they go for? |
44202 | And weary eyes grew brighter then, and fainting hearts grew strong, And hope was mingled in the cry,"How long, oh Lord, how long?" |
44202 | And what did they know about_ war_, anyway? |
44202 | And what would they do if war came again? |
44202 | And when can true friendship be tested if not in the hour of misfortune? |
44202 | Are we not to be run out and wait aside and salute with dipping colors while the great battleships come up with music and banners and lead the way? |
44202 | Before us now lie the problems of the future, and the question is: How shall we meet them? |
44202 | But is man doing this work alone? |
44202 | But the subject changed with"How many cases did you lose in this epidemic, Mammy?" |
44202 | But what had stirred America up and set it, apparently, against us? |
44202 | But what need to tell? |
44202 | But where should they look? |
44202 | Can you not help me out with this?" |
44202 | Can you send doctors with medicines from Harpoot? |
44202 | Can you send food?" |
44202 | Can you wonder that so many poor creatures were drowned or that anything was saved at all? |
44202 | Could I be permitted to ask to see them under flag of truce? |
44202 | Could anything appeal more piteously; could it be more pathetic? |
44202 | Could it be possible that we were to learn this anew? |
44202 | Could this be secured within two or three months from men not experienced in war? |
44202 | Could you telegraph her?'' |
44202 | Courage, hope, enterprise to bestir themselves, where will they come from? |
44202 | Did our commands, military or naval, hold men great enough of soul for such action? |
44202 | Did some one tell me? |
44202 | Do we even want to recall them? |
44202 | Do we need to live them over? |
44202 | Do you want additional nurses? |
44202 | For what, indeed, was it laboring? |
44202 | Had anything been worse than this? |
44202 | Had he little children?" |
44202 | Had the nation gone mad, or what_ had_ happened to it? |
44202 | Has that any significance or any connection with philanthropy? |
44202 | Holyland?" |
44202 | How shall I describe our daily work? |
44202 | How shall we thank Miss Clara Barton and the Red Cross for the help they have given us? |
44202 | How was it to be done? |
44202 | How was this to be done? |
44202 | I attempted to write the real state of things to you; but of what use? |
44202 | I did not at once recall him, but among his first remarks were,"You have been at the front?" |
44202 | I had still the courage to persevere, and added,"What would you have me do, if I could do it?" |
44202 | If a parasite, drawing sustenance from others? |
44202 | If in any way it has disappointed the expectations of the country or the people? |
44202 | If it has been a costly adjunct to the government? |
44202 | If it has been an idle body? |
44202 | If it has found favor with the people it has gone to aid? |
44202 | If it has gained or lost in public estimation? |
44202 | If it has given cause to the government to regret its admission? |
44202 | If it has promised and not performed? |
44202 | If it has sustained its national standing in good repute with the affiliating nations of the world? |
44202 | If its work has been actual, or merely appeared upon paper? |
44202 | In regard to the good accomplished by the Red Cross( a question so often asked), can more be said than this? |
44202 | In what minds did it originate? |
44202 | Inquiry showed them to cost$ 5.00 per barrel, and was it any wonder they did not eat them? |
44202 | Is n''t it encouraging a bad principle; would n''t it be better to do away with all war? |
44202 | Is the Red Cross a humanitarian organization? |
44202 | It was at one of these meetings the fact had been presented that the prime problem was"How to feed 30,000 people with$ 30,000 for one year?" |
44202 | Just how far was the American Government disposed to accept the services of this society? |
44202 | No purpose of our own? |
44202 | No regular hours? |
44202 | No routine-- no system? |
44202 | One of the first questions Count Tolstoi asked was,"What do you think of most? |
44202 | One of the nurses(? |
44202 | Ought we to provide for it, to make it easy, to lessen its horrors, to mitigate its sufferings? |
44202 | Painless either to the victim or the nation? |
44202 | Said an old aunty to a lady friend of mine:"Has yer children, honey?" |
44202 | Shall we not in this way encourage rulers and peoples to engage in war for slight and fancied grievances? |
44202 | Should not the executive officer in every large hospital be selected somewhat with reference to his business capacity? |
44202 | Tell her the error? |
44202 | The great query which confronts us, and often with a tinge of seeming reproach, is:"Why is so little known of your organization? |
44202 | The query is, could not this mortality be reduced by the plan suggested? |
44202 | The question has often been asked:"While America was so active in this charity, what was the government of Russia doing for its unfortunates?" |
44202 | The relief societies going to pieces, and turning sad glances here? |
44202 | The women who went to the field, you say, The_ women_ who went to the field; and pray What did they go for?--just to be in the way? |
44202 | There are eighteen on our list who left with you and Colonel Southmayd; where are your comrades?" |
44202 | There is no room for comment, only who is lost, who has escaped, and what can be done for them? |
44202 | They had provided for two and could only get trace of one; where was the other? |
44202 | They would scream at the sight of a gun, do n''t you see? |
44202 | To the question so frequently and kindly asked of us,"Did you have money enough, or were you embarrassed in your operations by want of funds?" |
44202 | To what did America object, and how could these objections be overcome? |
44202 | To whom is this movement due? |
44202 | WHAT IS THE SIGNIFICANCE OF THE RED CROSS IN ITS RELATION TO PHILANTHROPY? |
44202 | Was it painless? |
44202 | Was not this a call for the Red Cross? |
44202 | Was this a country to reject a treaty for the help of wounded soldiers? |
44202 | Was this all there was of us? |
44202 | Was this people to decline a humanity in war? |
44202 | Was this to remain so? |
44202 | We were met with this unanswerable reply:"Who would pay for them?" |
44202 | Were men again to fall, and women weep? |
44202 | Were these the women and men to stand aloof and consider? |
44202 | What amount do you consider necessary?" |
44202 | What could be done? |
44202 | What could it mean? |
44202 | What could they_ do_?--of what_ use_ could they be? |
44202 | What did this nation do during eighty agonizing and memorable days but to watch the effects of one bullet wound? |
44202 | What have we in readiness to meet these emergencies save the good heart of our people and their impulsive, generous gifts? |
44202 | What is the significance of the Red Cross? |
44202 | What mischief have they been devising in secret?" |
44202 | What more could such a woman wish? |
44202 | What shall I say of it? |
44202 | What should one do but to ask counsel of all within reach? |
44202 | What subjects occupied my mind most when going to sleep?" |
44202 | What was it expected to do or how to do it? |
44202 | What was to become of the little waifs of the wind, rain and high tide? |
44202 | What, then, was this conference, whose magic wand had, so to speak, electrified all nations? |
44202 | When will the need for this help end? |
44202 | Where could help come from? |
44202 | Where shall we find something published about it?" |
44202 | Where were the Spanish fleets? |
44202 | Who instituted it? |
44202 | Why is it not written up, and circulated among the people for general information? |
44202 | Why to Smyrna, then to Alexandretta, points where nothing is the matter and no help needed? |
44202 | Will he glance at the boats on the great western flood, At Pittsburg and Shiloh, did they faint at the blood? |
44202 | Will history write us blameless? |
44202 | Will it not be said of us that we completed the scheme of extermination commenced by Weyler? |
44202 | Will not the world hold us accountable? |
44202 | Will not this meet your wishes even better than recommended in your cablegram yesterday? |
44202 | Will some soldier tell us of one he saw run? |
44202 | Would it be asking too much for you to go to Havana to superintend the distribution of these stores under the law? |
44202 | Would it be out of place for me to urge the good people who read this report to remember this when sending to the next field? |
44202 | Would n''t peace societies be better? |
44202 | and what would be the result when found and met? |
44202 | and where were we to break that Cuban wall and let us in? |
44202 | p. 515 happened[ to] it? |
44202 | the list grows apace, as they come at the call: Did these women quail at the sight of a gun? |
44202 | whar is de Colonel? |
44202 | where did they not? |
44202 | where is it? |
55668 | ''Billy, would a little money be of any avail?'' 55668 ''Then, what other business were you thinking of?" |
55668 | ''What other matter, sir?'' 55668 A mouchard?" |
55668 | And afterwards? |
55668 | And that did not lead you to any decided course? |
55668 | And what is the exact meaning of that word? |
55668 | And what prevents you? |
55668 | And when shall I commence? |
55668 | And whilst you were taking your coffee, what passed there? 55668 And why should not I go to Paris, Madeleine?" |
55668 | And why the devil did you not try to get out of your difficulties? 55668 And why,"enquired Mrs. West,"did you send to me for one hundred and forty pounds? |
55668 | And you have seen nothing, heard nothing worthy of your attention and mine? |
55668 | Are you guilty or not guilty? |
55668 | Are you guilty or not guilty? |
55668 | As to me, as to me? |
55668 | But what did she say? |
55668 | But,rejoined the other,"how could I ensure the reception of a word into general use? |
55668 | Could there be a memorial got up in his favor? |
55668 | Could you untwist it, and tell us what it is about? |
55668 | Did you know that I was minister? |
55668 | Have you arranged to see him again? |
55668 | Have you discovered some conspiracy, to be thus almost beside yourself? |
55668 | Have you not issued your orders to your citizen Desmarest? |
55668 | How can you know anything about it? |
55668 | Is he young? 55668 Is it possible?" |
55668 | It was a simple, plain story, and indeed I told him that I was a clergyman, that----"You told him that you had been a clergyman?" |
55668 | May I presume, to ask where Mademoiselle resides? |
55668 | Musha, who is papa? |
55668 | Then,observed Daly,"why do you not make a word and send it into circulation? |
55668 | Well, that is the minister''s intention and mine; have you settled your game of chess? 55668 What are you doing, you unfortunate child?" |
55668 | What do they depend on? |
55668 | What do you mean? |
55668 | What good angel has led me to these worthy people? |
55668 | What occupation do you think that you have at the ministry of police? |
55668 | Why, what is your objection? |
55668 | Would you wish to undertake so long a journey, Michel? |
55668 | You have just left the minister? |
55668 | Your parish was in Burgundy, I believe? |
55668 | ''Shall we never be free from vice and its consequences, sin and sorrow, crime and punishment?'' |
55668 | ( Could I have taken it home with me by mistake?)" |
55668 | And macadamize the dirty spies In the Lower Castle Yard? |
55668 | Are you aware that he went to Paris in quest of employment? |
55668 | As he passed through the dock, he was eagerly interrogated by the other prisoners--"What have you got?" |
55668 | As long as I choose to employ you, what has Desmarest to say about it?" |
55668 | At length he said--''Have you the money?'' |
55668 | At the fourth or fifth repetition of this expression, Michel raised his head--"Why so, my dear sister?" |
55668 | Besides where were they to find Helene? |
55668 | But where to go? |
55668 | But, Dick, why have you chatted so long on this and other subjects this evening without offering a single wager? |
55668 | Can my utmost tenderness ever repay him for the loss incident to this disclosure? |
55668 | Can you make out so much?" |
55668 | Dear niece, are you aware that you are now in the Parc- aux- Cerfs? |
55668 | Did you scale the prison wall? |
55668 | From moors whereon the plovers stray, Or groves wherein the ringdove coos? |
55668 | Have I not already suffered enough to justify the clemency which I implore?" |
55668 | Have you again met your garde du corps?" |
55668 | He added--"Just put my initials, M. W. Is it not very curious, Mr. West, that our initials are the same?" |
55668 | He asked me,"Would I take a covered car?" |
55668 | He is minister-- minister of, what shall I term it? |
55668 | He proceeded,"Which of you struck the poor woman who saw the murder, for screaming?" |
55668 | He then asked,"Which of you cut the traces?" |
55668 | His first animadversions Were on the paving stones, Why should you send your cash to Wales, To Taffy or to Jones? |
55668 | How was he to banish him from a family of which he had so long been a cherished member? |
55668 | I asked him"from what part of the house was it thrown?" |
55668 | I have heard the late Judge Halliburton( Sam Slick the clock- maker) say, that he asked a carman what was the reason for building the Martello towers? |
55668 | I subsequently was informed that during his confinement the man whom he had robbed(?) |
55668 | In a few minutes, he inquired in an undertone,"Is there any old offender on the calendar?" |
55668 | Is it the minister''s intention that you are to correspond directly with him or with me?" |
55668 | It has been asked, Did the hero of the tale keep his very existence concealed so long, and why? |
55668 | It is as follows:--"Musha, Dan, who let you out? |
55668 | Katey Doyle, do you know what? |
55668 | Late in the afternoon Mr. West went home, and having dined, was asked by his wife,"What second- hand plate was it that you bought to- day?" |
55668 | Moreover, how could I expose you, lonely and unprotected? |
55668 | Mr. Cox, is it not a blessing from God that we have now got a magistrate_ who has a garden of his own_?" |
55668 | Now that we have made a clear breast to each other, what course shall we take to keep the money safe?" |
55668 | Now, Alderman, what say you to taking my word or winning my money?" |
55668 | Of what minister was he the protegè? |
55668 | Or fairy flax from fenny fields, Or plume from warrior''s helmet? |
55668 | Or manhood''s locks, or maiden''s hair, Wafted by breeze through village street? |
55668 | Says the T. B. C. For you''re up to any crime, Says the T. B. C. There were locks both great and small, Did you dare to pick them all? |
55668 | Says the T. B. C. Through the chimney did you climb? |
55668 | She asked how much did he demand? |
55668 | So have you got a dhrop at all? |
55668 | The Judge made the order sought, saying, in a playful tone,"Is Mr. Porter engaged in this Ballyporeen case?" |
55668 | The captain accosted the carman--"Will you take one hundred pounds?" |
55668 | Then she immediately added,"But have you put your address, to receive the answer?" |
55668 | WHO BLEW UP KING WILLIAM? |
55668 | WHO SHOT HER? |
55668 | Was it a feather dropt away From some wild bird of varied hues? |
55668 | Was it a flow''r with tints array''d Such as the vernal suns bestow, Richer than monarch e''er display''d, Was it a fragrant flowret? |
55668 | Was it a precious talisman, Whose magic tracings doth unfold A right by which its bearer can Claim and obtain the treasured gold? |
55668 | Was it only to- day you ascertained your function?" |
55668 | Was it the down the thistle yields, That sails through air like drifting snow? |
55668 | Well, your former garde du corps?" |
55668 | Well?" |
55668 | What business had he to save the Major?" |
55668 | What has he done to deserve that?" |
55668 | What have you done these four days past?" |
55668 | What sort of man was this fellow?" |
55668 | What was to be done? |
55668 | When I was giving him the document, I said,"Now, Hanbidge, might I ask you who threw the bottle?" |
55668 | Where was he? |
55668 | Where were the helpless creatures to find subsistence? |
55668 | Who could the individual have been, thus designated as old, wrinkled, unsparkling, and inexpressive? |
55668 | Who detains you there? |
55668 | Who had recommended him? |
55668 | Why can not we see it on the Irish soil? |
55668 | Why is it utterly prohibited here? |
55668 | Why not lay down, throughout the town, Your Irish granite hard? |
55668 | Why? |
55668 | Will that suffice?" |
55668 | Will you lend me whatever you can spare, and thus save my credit with my guests?" |
55668 | Will you let the poor Crown prosecutor off for half- a- sovereign?" |
55668 | cried the good pastor, his eyes sparkling with joy;"but,"added he,"perhaps the parish will be given to another?" |
55668 | did you not know it? |
55668 | did you not remark three young fellows who were talking just beside you, whose table was next to yours?" |
55668 | exclaimed the astonished old man,"Is it with Luke White, my oldest, my most valued friend, you have been?" |
55668 | explained the astonished jarvey;"is it joking you are? |
55668 | my niece,"said the priest, in a voice almost choked with grief,"how could you presume to dispose of your life?" |
55668 | said Desmarest, who at that time was specially looking after the Royalists;"but at least you know his name?" |
55668 | said he;"wherefore do you wish Paris to be nearer?" |
55668 | sixty or eighty leagues, what is that distance to a good walker? |
55668 | what now?" |
55668 | where have you spent the last month?" |
55668 | where the devil have I thrust it? |
55668 | wherefore? |
55668 | who says a word about your returning money, you fool? |
46585 | At what time this morning will you take your departure? |
46585 | But wherefore fasten''d? 46585 Have you a watch?" |
46585 | Here too is a human skull produced, which is fractured; but was this the cause, or was it the consequence, of death? 46585 How long a time first?" |
46585 | How long did Carrots live with you? |
46585 | How long was that before your death? |
46585 | How was the poison administered, in beer or in purl? |
46585 | I would beg to know( he continued) what course it was possible for me, after receiving this letter, to pursue? 46585 Is there, gentlemen, any comparison between the enormity of these two offenders? |
46585 | The officers are waiting for you,said the sheriffs;"can anything be done for you before you quit this world?" |
46585 | What do I mane? |
46585 | What do you mean? |
46585 | What would have been said, what believed, if this had been an accident to the bones in question? 46585 Why not?" |
46585 | Why then, mysterious Providence, pursued With such unfeeling ardour? 46585 You knew they were for the purpose of overturning the constitution of the country? |
46585 | ''For what to do?'' |
46585 | ''Madam,''says he,''you want a parson?'' |
46585 | ''To buy meat and drink, to be sure: do n''t you perceive I''m to be kept alive?'' |
46585 | ''What do you want with it?'' |
46585 | --''Doth not Mr. Rushworth know it?'' |
46585 | --''Who are you?'' |
46585 | After they had been all sitting together, Carter called Chater out, and demanded to know where Diamond, one of those suspected of the robbery, was? |
46585 | And thou, dear Kitty, peerless maid, Do thou a pensive ear incline; For canst thou weep at every woe, And pity every''plaint, but mine? |
46585 | And who, that once begins a career of vice, can say to himself,"Thus far will I go, and no farther?" |
46585 | Brought to the bar, and sentenced from the bench, Only for ravishing a country wench? |
46585 | But how far must this argument go? |
46585 | But what remained? |
46585 | But what was the return for the lenity of the governor? |
46585 | But what would be thought of a prosecution commenced against any one seen last with Thompson? |
46585 | But what, it might be said, was all this to the prisoner at the bar? |
46585 | But, being true, ought not I to have been redressed? |
46585 | By the indulgence of the government of this country, the subsisting law was to continue; the question was, What was that subsisting law? |
46585 | Can you conceive any condition more horrible than mine? |
46585 | He afterwards exhibited great composure, and when he came to the gallows, he asked whether that"was the tree he was to die on?" |
46585 | He asked the deceased if he knew of any one who could owe him a grudge? |
46585 | He asked''What is that?'' |
46585 | He came into the room where Sir Theodosius lay, and said to her,"What do you want?" |
46585 | He had before declared that he could not distinguish the real offender, and what better opportunity had been since afforded him? |
46585 | He happened once to omit to take it; upon which Mr. Donellan said,"Why do n''t you set it in your outer room? |
46585 | He inquired what it was? |
46585 | He replied,"Here I am; what do you want with me?" |
46585 | He then inquired whether she had anything to say why judgment should not be pronounced against her? |
46585 | He then, after rinsing it, emptied it in some dirty water that was in a wash- hand basin; and on his doing so she said,"What are you at? |
46585 | Holloway, just before the murder, called me out from the Turk''s Head, and asked me if I had any objection to be in a good thing? |
46585 | How assume such an exalted motive, and meditate the introduction of a power which has been the enemy of freedom in every part of the globe? |
46585 | I am not afraid; why should you be so?" |
46585 | I asked her"What milk?" |
46585 | I asked who was to go with us? |
46585 | I might ask, where was the generous and powerful hand that was ever stretched forth to rescue George Barrington from infamy? |
46585 | I then went into the kitchen, and called Henry, who said''What is the matter?'' |
46585 | If his majesty''s government thus refused me redress, what must be my next step? |
46585 | If it was violence, was that violence before or after death? |
46585 | If they are not referred to that branch of the legislature, to whose consideration then ought they to be submitted? |
46585 | Immediately after she was gone out, Mrs. King, hearing the tread of somebody in the parlour, called out,"Who is there?" |
46585 | In answer to the question,"What to judge of deathe, I pray you?" |
46585 | Is it, then, to be supposed, that I would be slow to make the same sacrifice to my native land? |
46585 | It is possible, indeed, it may; but is there any certain known criterion which incontestably distinguishes the sex in human bones? |
46585 | Let it be considered, my lord, whether the ascertaining of this point ought not to precede any attempt to identify them? |
46585 | Loud cries of"Shut the door-- let no one out,"were heard immediately after the shot was fired, and several persons exclaimed,"Where''s the murderer?" |
46585 | Mr. Newland was sent for, and asked whether any of the exchequer bills could, by possibility, get into the market again from the Bank? |
46585 | My lord, must some of the living, if it promotes some interest, be made answerable for all the bones that earth has concealed and chance exposed? |
46585 | On the magistrate''s rapping, the woman asked,"Who is there?" |
46585 | On this, she let him in, and asked him what he had to say to her? |
46585 | Prisoner.--Is it my age you mean? |
46585 | Reviewing the conduct of France to other countries, could we expect better towards us? |
46585 | Shall men of honour meet no more respect? |
46585 | Shall their diversions thus by laws be check''d? |
46585 | She asked him"Where the bottle was?" |
46585 | She then, as well as she was able, being almost stunned, called to her sister to make haste, adding,"Do n''t you see the wretch behind us?" |
46585 | She was frightened and asked,"Who was there?" |
46585 | Shelton.--What is your age? |
46585 | Shelton.--You have been convicted of robbery; what have you to say why sentence of death shall not be passed upon you, according to law? |
46585 | So baffled( he pursued), what could a man do? |
46585 | Still no one came, and a watchman coming up at the moment inquired what she was doing there? |
46585 | Suppose, for instance, the charge I brought could have been proved to be erroneous, should not I have been called to a severe account for my conduct? |
46585 | The clergyman said to him,"You admit you attended meetings?" |
46585 | The dying penitent, now three score years and ten, casting his languid eyes upon Ross, said,''Can it be you who raised my fortune-- who saved my life? |
46585 | The first contained reasons for his attempt upon his life, and was as follows:--"What am I better than my fathers? |
46585 | The jury having found him guilty, the prisoner was asked what he had to say for himself, why sentence of death should not be passed according to law? |
46585 | The latter, on entering the door of the house, hearing several of the spectators ask eagerly,"Which is Lord Balmerino?" |
46585 | The papers are to be given to me after the trial, but how can that avail me for my defence? |
46585 | The prisoner asked whether his counsel had nothing to urge in his defence? |
46585 | The prisoner then requested Mr. Smith would answer him one question--"My friends say I am out of my senses; is it your opinion that I am so?" |
46585 | The question was, whether at the time the murder was perpetrated he possessed sufficient sense to distinguish between right and wrong? |
46585 | The witness asked,"Whom he meant by themselves?" |
46585 | The witness said,"For God''s sake, captain, who could do it?" |
46585 | Then casting his eyes on a Jew, whose name was Deveries,''Apropos, sir,''said he,''wo n''t you please to pay me the ten shillings you owe me?'' |
46585 | They do n''t take me for the monster who is advertised?" |
46585 | They then passed on to an ante room, when the governor asked"whether it was a fine morning?" |
46585 | To the question"What reason he had why judgment and sentence of death should not be passed on him?" |
46585 | To this Sir John Coventry, one of the members, by way of reply, asked"Whether the king''s pleasure lay among the men or among the women players?" |
46585 | Travelling through his whole life, what ground could they adduce for such a plea? |
46585 | Two hours elapsed, however, before anything was seen of him, and then he came to the garret window and called out,"How is Johnson?" |
46585 | Were there no fowls in the house? |
46585 | What conclusion could they draw in favour of the idea which had been suggested? |
46585 | When the indictment was read, the usual question,"Guilty, or not guilty?" |
46585 | While the watchman was gone for the liquor, Williams took up the chisel, and said,"D-- n my eyes, where did you get this chisel?" |
46585 | Who does not shudder at the idea? |
46585 | Witness asked if it was loaded? |
46585 | Witness then said to the prisoner,"You have another pistol?" |
46585 | and might not a place where bones lay be mentioned by a person by chance as well as found by a labourer by chance? |
46585 | or is it more criminal accidentally to name where bones lie than accidentally to find where they lie? |
46585 | related by a gentleman who was counsel for the crown? |
46585 | says she, horribly frighted, fearing it was a madhouse:''what has the Doctor to do with me?'' |
46585 | was it owing to violence, or was it the effect of natural decay? |
46585 | what is this?" |
46585 | what satisfaction can I make to the afflicted family of my master and mistress, whom without any provocation I so barbarously murdered? |
46585 | what shall I do? |
46585 | what shall I do?" |
46585 | what''s that?'' |
35686 | A misunderstanding about what? |
35686 | Ai n''t you''fraid you''ll be caught? |
35686 | Am I under arrest? |
35686 | Am I under arrest? |
35686 | Are they then such remarkable lions? |
35686 | As usual, you will not have many social events of any consequence after Lent, I presume? |
35686 | But can we make him give up his plunder? |
35686 | But could you have disposed of the bonds without being suspected? |
35686 | But how did you induce him to surrender this money and property? |
35686 | But we do n''t have either in this country,said Mrs. Sanford;"and now, suppose you had a large sum of money, what would you do with it?" |
35686 | But who is going to pay me for the use of my steamer all day? |
35686 | But why should he want me to lose money? |
35686 | Ca n''t you wait until to- morrow? |
35686 | Could n''t we get it away from him and forge his name to it? |
35686 | Course I will; did n''t you ever see a( hic) bond b''fore? |
35686 | Did n''t you see that piece in the paper yesterday? |
35686 | Did you ever own any? |
35686 | Did you have a partner in this affair? |
35686 | Did you know that he had all that money with him? |
35686 | Did you say you wanted to sell one? |
35686 | Do n''t you know of any wealthy fellow who carries considerable money about with him? |
35686 | Do n''t you know that we ca n''t stay here all night? |
35686 | Do n''t you think a policeman is good enough to marry? |
35686 | Do you know what those are? |
35686 | Do you mean that you have been gambling again? |
35686 | Do you propose to take any steps against her? |
35686 | Does he ever drink? |
35686 | Does your head ache? |
35686 | Good morning,he said to Salter, with a haughty nod;"is Don Juan at home?" |
35686 | Had n''t you any friends here who would have helped you? |
35686 | Have you ever had any work to do in this city? |
35686 | Have you known her long? |
35686 | Have you seen that fellow that was here last night? |
35686 | How about the Donna? |
35686 | How can you do that? |
35686 | How did you enjoy yourself yesterday evening? |
35686 | How did you happen to leave your husband? |
35686 | How do you feel this morning? |
35686 | How have you been betting? |
35686 | How large a sum has he in his possession now? |
35686 | How much would you need for that purpose? |
35686 | How so? |
35686 | How so? |
35686 | How so? |
35686 | How would it do to suggest to the proprietor of the gambling rooms that it would be doubly for his interest to fleece this man? 35686 How would it sound if any one should hear me?" |
35686 | I know you could; but what good would it do you? 35686 I mean, that you wo n''t give me away to the police?" |
35686 | I never yet went back on any one who did the fair thing by me; and I know you will do that, wo n''t you? |
35686 | I suppose they had fully arranged everything before you were sent for? |
35686 | I suppose you must have been very warm friends,said Newton,"or he would not now be so ready to assist you?" |
35686 | I think you were very lucky in having played elsewhere,replied the Don;"but what''s the matter with you? |
35686 | I wonder how she would have retaliated upon me if I had struck her name off my list to- night? 35686 If people suspect her of improper intimacy with McIntyre, why do they admit her to their houses?" |
35686 | If that be the case, why not arrest him now and get the advices from London afterward? |
35686 | Indeed, Pietro, you shock me,replied the Don, sympathetically;"shall I order some breakfast for you?" |
35686 | Is he a Southerner too? |
35686 | Is that the only reason why you dislike to see him, Señor Morito? |
35686 | Is that worth fifty dollars? |
35686 | Jack Ingham? |
35686 | Monsieur Lesparre,said the Don, as they lounged back in luxuriant easy- chairs,"what do you think of my suggestion at dinner? |
35686 | No, I did not know it until afterward,she replied;"why do you ask?" |
35686 | No, I do not,he replied;"what are they?" |
35686 | No, indeed; how was it? |
35686 | No,replied Bernardi,"I have very few; why do you ask?" |
35686 | No; how did you recover it? |
35686 | Now you will be flush for a long time, wo n''t you? |
35686 | Pardon me,I interrupted;"was the Don married?" |
35686 | Shall you permit me to be treated in this manner? |
35686 | So you are still successful? |
35686 | Suppose, however,said the Minister,"that he should refuse all terms, and determine to fight it out?" |
35686 | Then I_ am_ a prisoner? |
35686 | Then what are you asking me for? |
35686 | Then you arrest me? |
35686 | Well, I shall remember in future to call you''Don Pedro''; but what can you do for me in the way of money and clothes? |
35686 | Well, Mr. Mather----"Why do you address me always so formally? 35686 Well, Mr. Pinkerton,"said Judge Key,"what do you think of this affair? |
35686 | Well, Pietro, have you decided how soon you will be ready to leave town? |
35686 | Well, Pietro,began the Don,"where are you from? |
35686 | Well, how is the Don dressed, then? |
35686 | Well, suppose you should lose them,she queried;"could any one who found them make use of them without being discovered?" |
35686 | What are you going to do here? |
35686 | What are you going to do with all that? |
35686 | What business were you in there? |
35686 | What do you care about my drinking? |
35686 | What do you know about water? |
35686 | What do you mean by addressing me in this manner? |
35686 | What do you mean by refusing to take us on board? |
35686 | What do you mean? |
35686 | What do you mean? |
35686 | What do you want to drink? |
35686 | What is your business? |
35686 | What is your hurry? |
35686 | What kind of a raise? |
35686 | What night? |
35686 | What was her name? |
35686 | What was the matter with him? |
35686 | What''s that? |
35686 | When are you to give your answer? |
35686 | Where are you playing? |
35686 | Where in the devil is the Don? |
35686 | Whereabouts? |
35686 | Who the devil are you, anyhow? |
35686 | Who was that man you were playing cards with the other night? |
35686 | Who was that person, Don Pedro? |
35686 | Why ca n''t you hold it yourself? |
35686 | Why did n''t you hit her with the poker? |
35686 | Why did you leave Louisville? |
35686 | Why did you not tell me about this? 35686 Why do you ask? |
35686 | Why not? 35686 Why not?" |
35686 | Why should I be arrested? |
35686 | Why, are n''t they married? |
35686 | Why, where did you get all that money? |
35686 | Will you guarantee that it is good and all right? |
35686 | Will you, really? 35686 Wo n''t you call me Henry when we have an occasional_ tête- à- tête_?" |
35686 | Would he go, do you think, if he should lose all he has? |
35686 | Would it not be possible to frighten him into telling all he knows of Don Pedro? |
35686 | Would n''t his friends catch you if they had the numbers of the bonds? |
35686 | Yes, that may have been true heretofore, but how do I know where Don Pedro is? |
35686 | Yes; I recollect having seen her with you once in New Orleans,replied Newton, on a venture;"is she dead?" |
35686 | You are not in good spirits to- day, Donna Lucia? |
35686 | You can go to the bank to- morrow and get the coupons cashed for me, ca n''t you? |
35686 | You do n''t suspect that I had any hand in it, I hope? |
35686 | Your friend would not care to have you talk about his past history, I suppose? |
35686 | After asking Ingham his name, the captain said:"Where were you last Saturday night?" |
35686 | Am I right? |
35686 | As she had been so successful in her encounter with Trafton, might she not be glad to carry out the same scheme again? |
35686 | But, even suppose that such testimony were admissible, can you produce any witness to his crimes in other countries? |
35686 | By the way, how did you happen to find me?" |
35686 | By the way, where is your present señorita? |
35686 | Can you not call me Henry?" |
35686 | Has any crime been perpetrated, and, if so, what? |
35686 | Has he been here looking for me?" |
35686 | Have n''t I told you about that?" |
35686 | How can I sufficiently thank you?" |
35686 | How can they be taken? |
35686 | How could it be done most effectually? |
35686 | How much do you want?" |
35686 | I asked,"or do people run after them simply because they are rich foreigners?" |
35686 | I do n''t know any one of that name; do I, Lesparre?" |
35686 | I immediately replied, also by a cipher dispatch, as follows:"Are you sure it is Levi Farrington? |
35686 | I may call to see you occasionally?" |
35686 | If she were so willing to act as an accomplice in one crime, why not in another? |
35686 | Indeed, admitting again that these crimes were proven, can we establish the identity of Don Pedro P. L. de Morito as the perpetrator of those crimes? |
35686 | Ingham?" |
35686 | Is she as handsome as the other was?" |
35686 | Is there not something said in the invitations about appearing in masks, Don Pedro?" |
35686 | No, sir; we have not a single witness; I ask you as a lawyer, Judge Key, am I not right?" |
35686 | Now, what evidence could we bring to substantiate the accusation? |
35686 | Pinkerton?" |
35686 | Shall I arrest them? |
35686 | So you can have the money ready to- morrow?" |
35686 | Suppose we issue invitations for three weeks from to- day?" |
35686 | The matter of time, place, and means employed must then be carefully noted, and finally we come to consider: 1. Who are the criminals? |
35686 | This action still further prejudiced Salter against him, and he said:"Perhaps you mean Monsieur Lesparre, who is a guest of my employer?" |
35686 | This seems quite like old times, does n''t it? |
35686 | Turning to the sergeant, the captain said:"How long would it take you to bring that man on here, sergeant?" |
35686 | Wan''to play?" |
35686 | Was he a South American, like myself?" |
35686 | Wha''you say? |
35686 | What are they like? |
35686 | What authority have you for arresting me in my own house?" |
35686 | What do you say?" |
35686 | What do you think of the plan, Monsieur Lesparre?" |
35686 | What do you want? |
35686 | What is the reason for your question?" |
35686 | What makes you look at me so strangely?" |
35686 | What say you, Madame Sevier?" |
35686 | What should you think, Madame Sevier, of such a request?" |
35686 | What was the object sought thereby? |
35686 | What would be my duties?" |
35686 | When the documents had all been signed, I said:"José Gomez, you fully understand the meaning of this paper?" |
35686 | Where are they now? |
35686 | Why are you so anxious to get rid of me?" |
35686 | Why ca n''t you stop drinking for a month or two?" |
35686 | Why should I want you to lose? |
35686 | Will three thousand dollars be enough?" |
35686 | Will you believe it? |
35686 | Wo n''t you please tell me how she is dressed?" |
35686 | You are acquainted with Senator Muirhead, Judge?" |
35686 | You are n''t afraid of anything, are you?" |
35686 | You goin''ter gimme a( hic) chance t''win it back?" |
35686 | You have certainly been as fortunate as I have been the reverse; do you make much by gambling?" |
35686 | You have not been fortunate, it is evident; but how did it happen?" |
35686 | You know Mr. Crapmel? |
35686 | You wo n''t go back on me, will you?" |
35686 | [ Illustration:_"What do you mean by refusing to take us on board?" |
35686 | by the way,"she exclaimed, suddenly,"did I tell you that I got back my watch?" |
35686 | ejaculated Bernardi;"why did he want to clean me out?" |
35686 | have n''t you seen him to speak to since the_ fête_ commenced?" |
35686 | is that all there is of it?" |
35686 | or are you really married as you said? |
35686 | she exclaimed;"is it thus that you show your discretion? |
35686 | that was a speculation that paid well, eh?" |
35686 | very true; where is he, George? |
35686 | would you dare?" |
59654 | Are they not as pretty? |
59654 | And how is this to be done? |
59654 | And if some of you went there to give what little of leisure, what little of strength, you have to spare, would your own neighbourhood suffer? |
59654 | And is our money doing any good? |
59654 | And yet the problem has become appalling, gigantic: viewed in its entirety, it might make us almost tremble? |
59654 | Are the old words,"Bear ye one another''s burdens,"to pass away with the day of coal- tickets? |
59654 | Are there no eternal laws binding us to charitable spirit and deed? |
59654 | Are there no improved public- houses, no improved theatres, no better machinery for collecting savings, which we may establish and give our money to? |
59654 | Are there no men of leisure, with intellect and heart, who will come forward? |
59654 | Are there no places to plant with trees, no buildings to erect, no libraries to found, no scholarships to endow? |
59654 | Are there no voices still speaking in our hearts the old commandment,"Love one another?" |
59654 | Are they, too, valueless because so nameless? |
59654 | Are those who own estates to have their gardens, and the people to have none? |
59654 | Are we as a nation to have any flower- garden at all? |
59654 | Are we going to look out and up, but never down? |
59654 | Are we in turn never to be pioneers? |
59654 | Are we not most likely to be away? |
59654 | Because we went in and gave those boots, because others like us gave coal- tickets and soup- tickets last winter, what may not turn up? |
59654 | But do we not owe this to the efforts of a body of men in earlier time who were content to lose money in experiments and example? |
59654 | But how do the better ones feel it? |
59654 | But is it not strange to take away free enjoyment from many, and to offer in exchange, at any money payment, a privilege to the few? |
59654 | But, I ask, where are the donors? |
59654 | Can there be energy, independence, vigour, healthy activity among them? |
59654 | Can we afford it? |
59654 | Can you give him a little pause, a little more room, especially this sultry summer afternoon? |
59654 | Did you ever see the district-- the family-- the individual that was richer for this repeated alms- giving? |
59654 | Do they not lead him to trust to them, to spend up to the last penny what he earns, and hope for help when work slackens or altogether fails? |
59654 | Do they not often succeed worse? |
59654 | Do they not scorn them, and desire to be seen to benefit nothing by them? |
59654 | Do they succeed better than the clergy and the visitors? |
59654 | Do we care to set aside ground for it, or will we have beet- root and cabbages only? |
59654 | Do you know what I mean? |
59654 | Do you realise how limited is our notion of it now, and what it has brought us to? |
59654 | Do you think that, be our earnings much or little, that kind of help would be likely to be helpful? |
59654 | Does he try, cost what it may, to provide for sickness, for times when trade is dull and employment scarce? |
59654 | Does this imply no duty? |
59654 | For what is it that we look forward to as our people gradually improve? |
59654 | Has it ever been powerful, even for outside good, to be recipients? |
59654 | Have any of you influence with them, or can anything be done? |
59654 | Have most gentlemen any idea how much this work needs doing in the poor districts of London? |
59654 | Have n''t I myself such a body of fellow- workers as makes me hardly know how to be thankful enough? |
59654 | Have n''t your gifts absolutely tended to alienate them from churches and chapels? |
59654 | Have the words,"Ye are members one of another,"ceased to be true because our tract and dole distribution has broken down? |
59654 | Have we no bright flowers to take to the people, no books to lend, no sweet sympathy and young brightness to carry among them? |
59654 | Have we not a most distinct place among the poor, if this be so? |
59654 | Have you asked yourselves whether your presence, your companionship, is needed there? |
59654 | I do n''t like to be enjoying myself at garden- parties with my wife and daughter and not consider my poorer neighbours"? |
59654 | I wonder whether you have among you instances of the solitary, inexperienced district visitor, and can feel for her difficulties? |
59654 | If the allotments are not made now we may still hope for them in the future; but if we lose our open spaces now, shall we ever recover them? |
59654 | If the question, Who is my neighbour? |
59654 | In other words, is all the land, so far as the people are concerned, from sea to sea, to be used for corn- growing, or building over only? |
59654 | Is it best to let the largest possible amount of it in allotments to the poor? |
59654 | Is it best to parcel it out amongst various owners, and increase the building or corn- growing area? |
59654 | Is it impossible, I would ask lawyers and statesmen, to recognise this right as a legal one acquired by custom, and not to be taken away? |
59654 | Is it not pleasant to think of the children having those words to read-- painted in pretty colours, too-- rather than looking at a blank wall? |
59654 | Is it the children whose parents take them to the sea, or the country, or the Continent, when the summer sun makes London unbearable? |
59654 | Is not our very presence a help to them? |
59654 | Is the bed better covered in the long run for the lent blankets, or the children better fed for the free distribution of soup? |
59654 | Is the influence of such doles so healthy that we should wish to see them taking the place of a Common right over a little bit of English soil? |
59654 | Is the influence of the rich and powerful so slight that we should let it be thus silently strengthened? |
59654 | Is there only land enough for exercise near the big city, or can we have any for beauty far away from it? |
59654 | Is this the lesson our workmen are to learn? |
59654 | Is your bright young presence not asked for by the gray, monotonous, slowly- ebbing life of those wards? |
59654 | It may be there are a few spaces unbuilt over close by, but who will open the gates for them, plant a few flowers, put a few seats? |
59654 | It seems almost incredible, does it not? |
59654 | Let us imagine that in another case we give to a man whose income is small; what is the effect on his character of these irregular doles? |
59654 | My friends, who made it different? |
59654 | Now, have you ever paused to think what Londoners would do without this holiday, or what it would be without these open spaces? |
59654 | On whom does the continuous watchfulness devolve at best? |
59654 | Or is it not rather the tiny child of the hard- working widow, whose frail form seems almost to grow smaller year by year instead of larger? |
59654 | Or is it, as of old, to go forth and gather in the feeble, the out- of- the- way, the poor? |
59654 | Ought we not to be accumulating those memories which will give us a place near them as real friends if the time of loss and trial comes? |
59654 | Respect its claims; but are there no times when it may be worth while to make a change in work, even if it cause one to see less of friends? |
59654 | Shall we doubt it? |
59654 | Should not the few spaces be available for these latter to the very utmost of your power? |
59654 | Should we stand by, we who ought to see farther, and let them part with what ought to be a possession to the many in the future? |
59654 | Specially what is the duty of those of us who are, in any sense of the word, trustees of charitable funds? |
59654 | The clergy? |
59654 | The district visitors? |
59654 | What can they do? |
59654 | What form, then, shall our charity take in the immediate future? |
59654 | What is our duty with regard to it? |
59654 | What is to be the ultimate object of your decisions respecting relief? |
59654 | What kind of homes they make? |
59654 | What ought its decision to be, having in view the future life of the nation as well as the present one? |
59654 | What sort of human beings live and die there? |
59654 | Where are the representatives of the various relieving agencies? |
59654 | Whether the little children want your teaching? |
59654 | Whether your gentleness, your refinement, your gaiety, your beauty, are wanted there? |
59654 | Why should the lord absorb to himself alone the"unearned increment of the land?" |
59654 | Why, then, am I here? |
59654 | With the small holdings, is there to pass away from our people the sense that they have any share in the soil of their native England? |
59654 | With these forms are we to let charity itself pass? |
59654 | Yet though we have by our gifts encouraged him in not making the effort to do this, are we quite sure to be at hand when the need comes? |
59654 | You who are merchants''wives and daughters, nay, even those of you who buy the merchants''goods, have the dock- labourers no claims upon you? |
59654 | or, if any, how many and how pretty may they be? |
22155 | Are you crazy? |
22155 | Are you sure,said she,"that the letter is in your husband''s handwriting?" |
22155 | Are you the agent of Jones''s Express? |
22155 | Are you, indeed? |
22155 | Barkeeper, you haf any lager got? 22155 Bin sellin''niggers, eh?" |
22155 | But what have I done? |
22155 | But what makes him charge me with receiving improper attentions from De Forest? 22155 By- the- by,"asked White,"does he ever go to see the fancy girls?" |
22155 | Certainly,exclaimed White;"do you think I am a fool? |
22155 | Could you not manage to have the money exchanged for me without my being known in the transaction? |
22155 | Do you wish to buy any books? |
22155 | Give me a ride? |
22155 | Going out to Jenkintown? |
22155 | Has n''t she? 22155 Have yer lost summat?" |
22155 | Have you been far South? |
22155 | How dare you talk to me in this way? |
22155 | How do you do, boys? |
22155 | How will you do that? |
22155 | Hush,White would whisper,"how many times must I tell you that walls may have ears?" |
22155 | I have not thought of it, have you? |
22155 | Josh., have you been moving the money? |
22155 | Mrs. Maroney,said he,"will you come to the garden this evening?" |
22155 | Mudder Beenk''s? |
22155 | No, do n''t go yet; have a little brandy? 22155 O ladies, what''s the matter? |
22155 | Porter? 22155 So soon?" |
22155 | There must be something up,thought he,"or she would not be in such a hurry to get home; what can it be?" |
22155 | Wal stranger, whar yar bound? |
22155 | Wal, stranger, whar yar bound? |
22155 | Well, let''s go there; will you? |
22155 | Whar are yar gwine? 22155 What are his prospects for getting out?" |
22155 | What brought that Madam Imbert here to- night? 22155 What do you say to Jackson, Mississippi? |
22155 | What do you suppose I could be doing at your house? |
22155 | What do you think of it? |
22155 | What do you want me to undertake? |
22155 | What have I done to deserve arrest? |
22155 | What kind of money was it the company lost? |
22155 | What sort of a man is he? |
22155 | What''s that? |
22155 | What''s the matter, White? 22155 What''s the matter? |
22155 | When do you expect the man who exchanges your money? 22155 Where have you been all this time? |
22155 | Where is Stemples? |
22155 | Where were you? |
22155 | Where? |
22155 | Who are his friends? |
22155 | Who said you had? |
22155 | Who said you had? |
22155 | Who vas das? |
22155 | Who''s there? |
22155 | Why not? |
22155 | Why, what do you mean? |
22155 | Will you? |
22155 | Yes, but suppose she wo n''t give up the money? 22155 Yes, indeed? |
22155 | Yes, yes,said she,"but who knows White? |
22155 | You ca n''t tell who the spies are here,White would reply,"do you see those prisoners? |
22155 | You have heard of Sanford? 22155 ''What do I know about White?'' 22155 A smart, shrewd fellow who would pick up a money package if he saw it lying handy, and dispose of it? |
22155 | Ai n''t you going to drink up?" |
22155 | Are yar a through passenger, or whar are yar gwine?" |
22155 | Are you playing false to me? |
22155 | Are you such a fool as not to know he is a tool of the Adams, and that you are acting with him? |
22155 | As he and White were walking in the hall, he said to White:"White, I wonder if it would not be a good move to try some game in my case? |
22155 | But if we made the attempt and failed, what would be the consequences? |
22155 | But see here, do n''t you think it best to get some of the stolen money to use in this case?" |
22155 | But what class was he to mix with? |
22155 | But what good would it do? |
22155 | But what had they been doing at Alderman Williams''s? |
22155 | But what would it be? |
22155 | But what_ did he wish_? |
22155 | But which one? |
22155 | Ca n''t you find some way to get into the cellar? |
22155 | Come and have a drink?" |
22155 | Come and have something?" |
22155 | Could it be possible that the company had suspicions of the trunk and were holding it as a bait to draw me out? |
22155 | Could you not get him here at once? |
22155 | Did he want a man to mix with the rough element, or to pass among gentlemen? |
22155 | Did n''t she rave though?" |
22155 | Did you get your money changed?" |
22155 | Do n''t you know?" |
22155 | Do n''t you see?" |
22155 | Do n''t you think you could manage to get possession of it? |
22155 | Do you know that De Forest is a very fine fellow? |
22155 | Do you know this Cox? |
22155 | Do you love me? |
22155 | Do you?" |
22155 | Does Chase board at the Exchange?" |
22155 | Have you received a package for--------?" |
22155 | He had displayed consummate ability in every movement he had so far made, and was it at all likely that he had lost his cunning? |
22155 | He knew that he could get plenty of carriages in a few minutes, but by that time where would Maroney be? |
22155 | He met me in Philadelphia a day or two after and said with much feeling:"Why, Pinkerton, why_ do_ you keep watch of such a woman? |
22155 | He whispered to Shanks:"What the d----l is the matter with Maroney? |
22155 | Hellow, Josh., that you?" |
22155 | How had they settled that? |
22155 | I then said:"You remember Jules Imbert, of Bills of Exchange notoriety?" |
22155 | If I were checking off packages of such large amounts I think I should be likely to look at them, do n''t you? |
22155 | If we were to get an impression of the lock Shanks could have them made, could n''t he?" |
22155 | If you are in trouble and feel the need of a friend, why not rely on me? |
22155 | In five or ten minutes, who should come along and meet him but Mrs. Maroney, shadowed by Green? |
22155 | Is n''t it strange, White, that I have taken such a liking to you? |
22155 | It is rather late for you to be out, is it not?" |
22155 | It was indeed a beautiful scene, and who could more thoroughly appreciate the beautiful than Simon? |
22155 | It was the season of love, and who could be more completely"in season"than was De Forest? |
22155 | It will never do for me to return without Mr. Suggs; what will my niggers think of it? |
22155 | Let me see, who was it her sister married down South? |
22155 | Maroney would remark,"But no one heard?" |
22155 | Mine frient,"continued he, turning to the hackman,"your peesness ish goot? |
22155 | Nein? |
22155 | No?" |
22155 | Now what am I to do? |
22155 | Now, White, who do you think stole the fifty thousand dollars?" |
22155 | One day Maroney said to White,"I''m tired, let''s take a turn in the hall?" |
22155 | One day Mrs. Maroney said to Madam Imbert:"Would n''t you like to go out west somewhere and settle down for a while?" |
22155 | One day he said:"White, I wonder if the Express Company would not settle the matter with me? |
22155 | She has a sister there, has n''t she?" |
22155 | She rose and closed the door, and then burst out with,"Why, Madam Imbert, have you ever heard of so foolish a man as my husband? |
22155 | She suddenly turned to Madam Imbert and asked:"Would you be willing to run away with me? |
22155 | Strange indeed, thought Roch, what can he want with that old trunk? |
22155 | Suppose White gets the money; how do I know but that he will run away with it and leave us to suffer without getting any of the benefit? |
22155 | The German took in all that was going on, but who cared for him? |
22155 | The moments seemed to have turned to hours; when would they ever reach the city? |
22155 | The question now arose: What shall we do with Maroney? |
22155 | The question now was How can I find the money? |
22155 | The two negroes at once recognized each other, and Roch, in his broken way, said:"Vel, poys, vat vill you haf?" |
22155 | The widow now interposed, and in plaintive tone said,"But, sir, what am I to do? |
22155 | Then, pointing to some dirt on the Madam''s dress-- which had come from the cellar-- she exclaimed:"What''s that on your dress?" |
22155 | There was no denying but that something had happened to give him more courage, and it flashed through my mind: Has he got the money? |
22155 | They made several trips, conversing on general topics, when Maroney lowered his voice and said:"White, could n''t you and I get out of this jail?" |
22155 | Was any one with you, down here, while sister was putting the children to bed?" |
22155 | Were you ever in Chicago, Madam Imbert?" |
22155 | What answer should I make to the dispatch? |
22155 | What could be more natural than his selecting her and pouring into her ear the details of his crime? |
22155 | What could we do? |
22155 | What did Cox know about suffering, or of the steps her husband found it necessary to take in order to effect his release? |
22155 | What do you do with your money, Madam Imbert?" |
22155 | What do you say to going down to the restaurant with me, and having some oysters and a bottle of champagne to wash them down?" |
22155 | What does it matter? |
22155 | What does it mean? |
22155 | What made you go up stairs and leave her here all alone?" |
22155 | What must I do? |
22155 | What was he doing here?" |
22155 | What will not money do in this country? |
22155 | What would have been Maroney''s feelings if he could have seen his wife and her gay cavalier? |
22155 | What would have been his feelings if he could have looked through about a mile of brick and mortar to where White was snoring in bed? |
22155 | What would he now not have given to be back in his old position, free from the taint of crime, free to do as he wished? |
22155 | When I came to her she eagerly asked:"Is the money all right?" |
22155 | When can you send him?" |
22155 | Where did you hide it?" |
22155 | Where is she going?" |
22155 | White casually said:"What sort of a man is Chase? |
22155 | White scanned its contents, and said:"I suppose this is sufficient, but the question still remains: will she obey it? |
22155 | Who can it be that is writing these reports from Jenkintown?" |
22155 | Who could be a safer person than his mistress? |
22155 | Who could have spread the news? |
22155 | Who is this man you have with you? |
22155 | Who knows where De Forest comes from? |
22155 | Why are you so foolish? |
22155 | Why could he not trust White to help him? |
22155 | Why did he not write and consult me on the subject? |
22155 | Why have you never told me about this man? |
22155 | Why is Maroney held a prisoner in the North, when he should be tried before a jury of his fellow Southerners? |
22155 | Why would it not be a good plan to go to some place in the South? |
22155 | Will you?" |
22155 | Wo n''t it be a good joke when McGibony nabs him and finds the money on his person? |
22155 | Wo n''t you stay down and watch the house, while I put the children to bed? |
22155 | Wonder what she''ll do thar, wid no niggers to confusticate? |
22155 | Would you have stolen it if you had been in my place?" |
22155 | You are a keen fellow; ca n''t you help me when you get out? |
22155 | You could then find your friend, and he would be willing to exchange the money for two or three thousand dollars-- wouldn''t he? |
22155 | You know the old saying:''Walls have ears?''" |
22155 | You may be of great use to me, will you help me if you can?" |
22155 | You must wait here; do n''t you know you should not leave the house unguarded at this time?" |
22155 | are you sick?" |
22155 | do n''t you call that a splendid cigar?" |
22155 | do you see any one coming?" |
22155 | exclaimed the barkeeper, turning hastily around,"a rat?" |
22155 | hav yer?" |
22155 | have you bad news?" |
22155 | have you?" |
22155 | muttered Maroney, as the thought flashed through his mind,"can he really suspect me of having stolen the money?" |
22155 | said he;"would you trust such matters on paper? |
22155 | said the driver, in a patronizing tone,"yar parspectin'', are yar?" |
22155 | well, how do you know but that some of them are spies? |
22155 | what will the Adams Express say then? |
22155 | what''s the matter, Tom?" |
22155 | where does he come from? |
22155 | who is he?" |
22155 | yelled the deputy;"do n''t you know you are interfering with an officer of the law?" |
22155 | yelled up from the cellar:"That you, Rivers? |
22155 | you have found them out, have you?" |
22155 | you here? |
1420 | A juror:''Are questions put which might upset a proud respectable old couple when they ask for relief?'' 1420 All alone?" |
1420 | And do you like English Literature? |
1420 | And you pushed her about Herne Bay, and took her on the sands in it? |
1420 | And your sister, how long has she been paralysed? |
1420 | Anything else? |
1420 | Austin? |
1420 | But how do you get her down these interminable stairs? |
1420 | But where are the candles? |
1420 | Can she wash and dress herself, do her hair, and make herself as clean and tidy as she is? |
1420 | Can you give us the''Village Schoolmaster''? |
1420 | Can you tell us, Ancient Stone, has there been an onward march of good since that day? 1420 Come,"I said,"tell me what you earned last week, and how many hours you worked?" |
1420 | Did n''t I tell you that I had saved some, and was drawing it? 1420 Did their parents leave any money?" |
1420 | Did you take the bath- chair with you? |
1420 | Does she ever go out? |
1420 | Ever been in prison? |
1420 | Have you ever read Carlyle''s FRENCH REVOLUTION? |
1420 | How about poetry, what poets do you like? |
1420 | How do you do your washing? |
1420 | How do you prove that? |
1420 | How is that? |
1420 | How long have we lived together, did you ask? 1420 How long have you lived in the top of this four- storey house?" |
1420 | How long have you worked at umbrella covering? |
1420 | How many sold other things in the streets before leaving school? |
1420 | How much butter do you allow yourselves during the week? |
1420 | My dear Holmes,he would say,"why do you break your heart about me? |
1420 | Nagging,did I hear some one say? |
1420 | Never mind looking at the other, it does not matter, does it? |
1420 | Now let us talk: about dramatists; you have read Shakespeare? |
1420 | Now tell me how much rent do you pay for these two rooms? |
1420 | Now tell me,I said,"have you ever had a holiday?" |
1420 | Of course she does; do n''t I take her out in the bath- chair behind you? |
1420 | Of course we did; how could she go without it? |
1420 | So after the double funeral they came to live with you? |
1420 | So they owed nothing? |
1420 | The coroner:''How old was the youth?'' 1420 What did you work at?" |
1420 | What do you think about? |
1420 | What for? |
1420 | What hymn shall we have? |
1420 | What novelist do you like bestThe answer came prompt and decisive:"Dickens,""Why?" |
1420 | What of Wordsworth, Tennyson and Browning? |
1420 | What was he going to do? |
1420 | What will you do when you have drawn all your savings? |
1420 | Where did you get the pretty bits of china from? |
1420 | Where did you get your shells? |
1420 | Where is your grotto? |
1420 | Where was the''Deserted Village''? |
1420 | Which do you like best? |
1420 | Which of his books do you like best? |
1420 | Why do you like them? |
1420 | Why? |
1420 | Yes, but why do people give you money; what do grottos commemorate, do n''t you know? |
1420 | You had not got any lodging money to- night.? |
1420 | After dropping his letter in the pillar- box, he was surprised to hear a voice say,"Will you kindly show me the way to Bridlington?" |
1420 | Am I wrong when I say that the State has been too ready, too prompt in sending the youths of the ignorant poor to prison? |
1420 | And why? |
1420 | Are there none among the company whom sheer misfortune has brought down into this underworld? |
1420 | Are they downhearted? |
1420 | Are they peevish? |
1420 | Are they really helped, and is their position really improved by this kind of charity? |
1420 | Are they? |
1420 | Are we much better, wiser, happier and stronger than the dusky generations that have passed away?" |
1420 | Are we to go on far ever with our present method of dealing with those who have been denied wisdom and stature? |
1420 | Aye, that it does, for what would the poor weary women and men of London''s underworld do without it? |
1420 | But has a bona- fide effort been made in this direction? |
1420 | But if their petty offences can be expunged by the payment of a few shillings, why not give them a little time to pay those fines? |
1420 | But if we drive people out of these places, where will they go? |
1420 | But we''girls''are left, and now we are getting old-- sixty- five-- isn''t it terrible? |
1420 | But what about killing mind, soul, heart, aspirations and every quality that goes to make up a man? |
1420 | But what can be said about, and what new condemnation can be passed upon, the marriage of feeble- minded, feeble- bodied, homeless wanderers? |
1420 | But what if there had been no Singholm to look forward to year by year? |
1420 | But what of Tom, Dick and Harry, who have just commenced work; what of them? |
1420 | But what of the young people of whom there ought to be hope? |
1420 | But what of their future? |
1420 | But what will Sally settle down to? |
1420 | But when we read of accidents and of surgical operations, does our imagination lead us to ask: What about the future of the sufferers? |
1420 | But who is going to call order out of this horrid chaos? |
1420 | But who is to pay? |
1420 | But why are they true? |
1420 | But why imprison at all for such cases? |
1420 | But will they have that opportunity? |
1420 | Can any language beat that for lucidity and pathos? |
1420 | Can any life be more pitiable? |
1420 | Can any one call the dead to life? |
1420 | Can any one convert cold flesh into warm pulsing life? |
1420 | Can no arrangement be made with our colonies for the reception and training of these young fellows? |
1420 | Can you imagine what they are likely to be? |
1420 | Church Lads''Brigade with bishops for patrons, did I hear some one say? |
1420 | Could any one ever suggest a more disastrous course than this? |
1420 | Dare we think of it? |
1420 | Did you ever see anything like this march of disabled men from the gloom of the underworld? |
1420 | Do you ask the cause? |
1420 | Do you doubt it? |
1420 | Does not the girl contribute to her mother''s exchequer? |
1420 | Does not the youth give his mother ten shillings weekly? |
1420 | Does your sister have anything from the parish?" |
1420 | Have you ever noticed how pretty the healthy children of the very poor are? |
1420 | How are we going to prevent it in the future? |
1420 | How can cleanliness and self- respect survive? |
1420 | How can it profit either the State or the woman? |
1420 | How can my widow friends, who are unceasingly at work, have either the time, opportunity or knowledge to find proper openings for their children? |
1420 | How can poor people leave any money? |
1420 | How can vigorous manhood or pure womanhood come out of them? |
1420 | How comes it that they are so ready to receive as a matter of course the doles of food provided for them? |
1420 | How did they live? |
1420 | How? |
1420 | I am sixty- five, is n''t it terrible? |
1420 | I ask, who can fulfil all their duties and remain"spick- and- span"? |
1420 | I called them to silence, and said,"Can any one tell me why you build grottos?" |
1420 | I looked at a poor half- paralysed boy with sharp face and said,"Well, my boy, you ought to know; do you go to Sunday School?" |
1420 | I looked at the dozen umbrellas before me, and said,"What do you get for covering these?" |
1420 | If colonial governments wisely refuse our inferior youths, is it not unwise for our own Government to neglect them? |
1420 | If the child is born a monstrosity, though not an idiot, who compensates for that? |
1420 | If the poor must be located near the sky, how is it that"lifts"can not be provided for them? |
1420 | In the British Empire is there no idle land that calls for men and culture? |
1420 | In the cells I had a few moments''conversation with her, but all I could get from her was the pitiful moan,"Why did n''t they let me die? |
1420 | Is Wells''prophecy to come true; will the one race become uncanny, loathsome abortions with clammy touch and eyes that can not face the light? |
1420 | Is crushed womanhood to produce human automatic machines? |
1420 | Is it impossible, I would ask, for our Government to take up this matter in a really great way? |
1420 | Is there to be no provision for them? |
1420 | Is this kind of life to be permitted? |
1420 | It''s an exciting game, but it is gambling nevertheless; why do not the police interfere? |
1420 | Mr. Holmes, do n''t you know me?" |
1420 | Need we continue? |
1420 | Now we come to a youth of eighteen; he seems afraid, and looks at us with suspicious eyes; what is he doing here? |
1420 | Of course I took them; what else could I do? |
1420 | Or is civilisation generally to pay the penalty for all this grinding of human flesh and blood? |
1420 | Ought we to expect, have we any right to expect, manhood and womanhood born and bred under such conditions to be other than blighted? |
1420 | Presently I said,"However do you spend it?" |
1420 | Send them to the workhouse? |
1420 | Shall we look in at a house that I know only too well? |
1420 | Shall we pay another visit to that underworld room? |
1420 | Shall we ultimately evolve a people that require no sleep, that can not sleep if they would? |
1420 | Some people say to me,''Why do n''t you go into the workhouse or the infirmary?'' |
1420 | They can afford a night or two a week at a music- hall; why did they not get married before? |
1420 | This was a staggerer, but I suggested:"What about Kipling?" |
1420 | Thus the grimy old shoemaker spoke, but I continued:"What about the present- day poets?" |
1420 | To my final question:"How many of you have met me in other prisons?" |
1420 | To- morrow they will in quiet streets be whining out"Oh, where is my boy to- night?" |
1420 | Turning to the little cripple, I said,"Did you ask your teacher?" |
1420 | We asked ourselves whether it was possible that anything decent, virtuous or intelligent could live under such conditions? |
1420 | We ought to be ashamed of it, I suppose, but we are not, are we, dear? |
1420 | We suddenly put the question,"How long have you lived in lodging- houses?" |
1420 | What are the offences of these boys? |
1420 | What are they to do? |
1420 | What are we doing with this burden in the present? |
1420 | What can life be worth if it be only self- centred? |
1420 | What chance in life is there for a youth of twenty who loses an arm or leg? |
1420 | What compensations do they get for all the suffering and privations they undergo? |
1420 | What do they lose? |
1420 | What do we see? |
1420 | What eventuates? |
1420 | What good can possibly come either to the State or to the youthful offender? |
1420 | What is life worth? |
1420 | What is that little undiscovered something that determines their lives and drives them from respectable society? |
1420 | What matter though some of them are a bit frowsy and not over- clean? |
1420 | What of them? |
1420 | What sense, decency, or profit can there possibly be in committing women to prison, even for drunkenness, for three, five or seven days? |
1420 | What would the sick and suffering be without it? |
1420 | Where do its temporary inhabitants go? |
1420 | Where do you find prettier faces, more sparkling eyes and eager expressions? |
1420 | Where do you find such beautiful curly hair as they possess? |
1420 | Who are these miserables? |
1420 | Who are what they are, but whose disabilities can not be charged upon themselves, and for whom there is no place other than prison or workhouse? |
1420 | Who can be surprised that"many drift into lives of hopeless uselessness"? |
1420 | Who can describe the life, speech, actions and atmosphere of such places? |
1420 | Who can enumerate the thousands that have breathed the fetid air of the miserable dwelling- places in our slums? |
1420 | Who can say? |
1420 | Who can understand the intricacies of"hop- scotch"or the fascination of"tod"? |
1420 | Who can wonder that others"are driven to wrong"? |
1420 | Who can wonder that some of them"are made bitter by misfortune"? |
1420 | Who dare describe the exact life and doings of four families living in a little house intended for one family? |
1420 | Who dare picture how they live and sleep, as they lie, unripe sex with sex, for mutual taint? |
1420 | Who does not feel and hear the"call of the wild"? |
1420 | Who in this rich, industrial England wants such service as he can render? |
1420 | Who requires their service? |
1420 | Who would believe that Adullam Street is a veritable Tom Tiddler''s Ground? |
1420 | Why can we not differentiate according to their tastes and gifts? |
1420 | Why does this list grow? |
1420 | Why may not she become a wife and spend her own earnings? |
1420 | Why not give it to a wife? |
1420 | Why was it that these fellows failed, and were content to fail in life? |
1420 | Why? |
1420 | Why? |
1420 | Why? |
1420 | Will the other become pretty human butterflies? |
1420 | Would I receive a sum of money on his account and arrange for him to leave England? |
1420 | Would any one believe that a colony of the submerged could prove a source of wealth? |
1420 | have they ascended to the seventh heaven of the new paradise? |
1420 | how long are these"lazar houses"to stand with open door waiting to receive, swallow, transform and eject young humanity? |
1420 | or"Will you meet me at the Fountain?" |
1420 | rather, is it not unjust? |
1420 | she said,"the landlady will hear you; do n''t tell anybody, is n''t it awful? |
1420 | those below and those above? |
1420 | why did n''t they let me die?" |
46595 | By what means were these fearful atrocities perpetrated? |
46595 | Did you ever, upon any occasion, sell a body or bodies to any other lecturer in this place? |
46595 | Did you receive any encouragement to commit or persevere in committing these atrocities? |
46595 | Had you any accomplices? |
46595 | How many persons have you murdered, or been concerned in murdering, during that time? 46595 In what place were these murders generally committed?" |
46595 | In what way? |
46595 | Now, Burke, answer me this question: were you tutored or instructed, or did you receive hints from any one, as to the mode of committing murder? |
46595 | To whom were the bodies so murdered sold? |
46595 | Under these circumstances, gentlemen, if the prisoner is accountable for his acts, will you say whether there is any reasonable doubt of his guilt? 46595 What do you want it for?" |
46595 | Where is that wood? |
46595 | You have been a resurrectionist( as it is called), I understand? |
46595 | ''Do you?'' |
46595 | ''I have,''replied I;''and what then?'' |
46595 | ''Pray, my dear,''said I,''can I have a bed here to- night?'' |
46595 | ''That''s who?'' |
46595 | ''Then, perhaps, you''ll take me in for the night?'' |
46595 | --"Not so many; not so many; I assure you,""How many?" |
46595 | 2, Betty; and you, William, take the gentleman''s order for dinner? |
46595 | A conspiracy that was, but where? |
46595 | A smirking chap soon entered, and casting a look at my bag, and then at me, asked me what I wanted? |
46595 | After having committed the murder, the next question was, what was to be done with the body? |
46595 | After he had been thus secured, he said,"Wilt thou allow me to wear my gloves?" |
46595 | Am I not justified in saying, that you might come to the conclusion that all the circumstances stated might be true, and yet I be innocent? |
46595 | And I wish to ax you if I did n''t say,''Will you have me, money or no money?''" |
46595 | And how are those facts to be proved? |
46595 | And how was it received? |
46595 | Are you satisfied with what you have got? |
46595 | As for Munday, the man who swore that I had a long sword, with a pair of pistols in my girdle, who is he? |
46595 | Before Hunton left the room, he said to Mr. Moline,"Thou will not leave me, friend?" |
46595 | Burke, who was anxiously watching his opportunity, then said to Hare,"Shall I do it now?" |
46595 | But in what manner have I been guilty of high treason? |
46595 | But please you, my lord, what could I do with it if I had it? |
46595 | But what the devil did you let Probert stop drinking at his d-- d public- houses for, when you knew what was to be done?'' |
46595 | By that he meant, were they provided with all legal and constitutional appliances, wherewith to bring these cursed profit- mongers to their senses? |
46595 | By the Court: Do you plead"Guilty,"or"Not guilty?" |
46595 | Can there, however, be a doubt that the pistols were loaded? |
46595 | Cope,"could you have bled yourself?" |
46595 | Cotton?" |
46595 | Did he then attempt to escape? |
46595 | Elizabeth Russell asked her what she wanted at the druggists''? |
46595 | Have you anything more to say?" |
46595 | He answered that he did not want anything particularly, but inquired what he had got? |
46595 | He asked Williams what he knew about it? |
46595 | He asked me, if the body had risen? |
46595 | He asked,''How are the teeth?'' |
46595 | He had now an important question to ask them; were they up to the mark? |
46595 | He passed through all the ranks, and the second time stopped, and taking Haggart''s hand, said,"Do you know me, David?" |
46595 | He replied,"Why, what could cause you to dream?" |
46595 | He returned into the house, exclaiming to the men who were there,"Now, am I not your Saviour?" |
46595 | He said,''Do n''t you remember me? |
46595 | He said,''I must put you upon your oath; if you divulge, and I am taken up and punished, the others will soon do for you; are you agreeable?'' |
46595 | He said,''Will you promise me never to split, or to divulge, or to make it known?'' |
46595 | He then said,''I think I shall go down to your cottage to- night; are you going down?'' |
46595 | He used some soothing expressions, and going as far as his chains would permit, said,"Mary, will you not shake hands with me?" |
46595 | He was asked whether he would sign the statement? |
46595 | He was immediately taken into custody, and taken to the station- house, where he voluntarily put the question,''Is the Queen hurt?'' |
46595 | He was then asked how long he had been engaged in this murderous traffic? |
46595 | How was the act itself committed? |
46595 | However painful the consideration may be, does it not necessarily follow that the first count of the indictment is completely proved? |
46595 | Hunt said,''Thurtell, where could you pass me?'' |
46595 | I appeal to any man, whether it is upon such evidence that the life of an innocent man is to be sacrificed? |
46595 | I asked Colonel Brereton if he thought that a symptom of good- humour on the part of the people out of doors? |
46595 | I asked where were the means to carry his project into effect? |
46595 | I asked why she was sitting there? |
46595 | I had a smock frock on, and May asked where I had bought it? |
46595 | I have been some hundreds of miles since I saw thee; but what is travelling in labour or anxiety, compared to the fear that thou shalt suffer? |
46595 | I hope you have not killed the man?'' |
46595 | I may be asked why, if innocent of the crime imputed to me, I felt it necessary to give those answers? |
46595 | I now became perfectly outrageous, and demanded of the policeman if he took me for a felon? |
46595 | I now come to the second question, Whether the prisoner was accountable for his actions at the time when the offence was committed? |
46595 | I rather think it was Hunt who next spoke; he asked,''Has he( Holding) got money?'' |
46595 | I remember the terms of it:"Will you do all that lies in your power, even to the loss of your own life, and the shedding of the blood of the tyrants?" |
46595 | I said,''Richard, how can a man bind his own hands and eyes?'' |
46595 | I was highly irritated, and asked her, if she was to go on this way before marriage, what was I to expect after? |
46595 | I would ask, has any person identified me but the officers? |
46595 | If I ask myself what commandment have I transgressed? |
46595 | If their object was justice alone, why not bring Edwards as a witness, if not as an accomplice? |
46595 | If your lordships assume this, sitting in judgment, why not the King''s Bench? |
46595 | If, unfortunately, death had ensued, would not this have been a case of murder? |
46595 | If, when I enjoyed a good character in the eyes of men, I was an abomination in the sight of God, what am I now before the Eternal? |
46595 | Might he not well have dreaded his destruction by a mob inflamed and excited against the perpetrator of an attack so dreadful upon our young Queen? |
46595 | Mr. Burbidge asked how he could think of such a horrible mode of disposing of the body? |
46595 | Mr. Burbidge asked when he burned it? |
46595 | Mr. Burbidge asked, if his story were true, how he could explain the circumstance of no remains of the bones of the skull or trunk being found? |
46595 | Mr. Hill asked us how a cut which was on the forehead came? |
46595 | Mr. Hill looked at it, and asked what it died of? |
46595 | Mr. Partridge came, and asked what the subject was? |
46595 | Mr. Phillips: Seeing, as you express it, that it was a wound dangerous to life, did you not wish for further assistance? |
46595 | Mr. Russell:''But, Williams, have you told me all?" |
46595 | My wife said to him,''Richard, is it early, or late?'' |
46595 | Now if you ask,''What shall we do?'' |
46595 | Now is this probable? |
46595 | Now, are you sure as how he saw the dockyments?" |
46595 | Now, the people may ask, What are the means left? |
46595 | Oh, what a Judas I have been!--of what sins have I not been guilty? |
46595 | On making this discovery, he instantly exclaimed,"You villains, where and how did you get this body?" |
46595 | On the night before Christmas- day, Greenacre called upon Mrs. Davis, and inquired whether she had seen anything of Hannah Brown? |
46595 | On the prisoner being asked whether he was"Guilty?" |
46595 | On this being brought in, I put the old question,''Can I be accommodated with a bed?'' |
46595 | Peddie asked if I had seen Turner? |
46595 | Pray, tell me who are doomed to die with me?" |
46595 | Prisoner:"Gentlemen, when I come out again, will any of my wives have a claim upon me?" |
46595 | Serjeant Arabin:"No doubt of it; you took it away, and can you prove where''tis buried?" |
46595 | She exclaimed,"Good God, what have I done?" |
46595 | Some discovered sorrow, and some terror; but whose could equal his own? |
46595 | Taylor:"Why you see, my lord, I suppose it''s in the ground, for what else would you do with it? |
46595 | That person at first was believed to be the offender by the parties around, who said,''You confounded rascal, how dare you shoot at our Queen?'' |
46595 | The boy said to the deceased,"Who are those men?" |
46595 | The clerk then asked,"How say you, James Thomas Earl of Cardigan, are you guilty or not?" |
46595 | The clerk--"How will you be tried, my lord?" |
46595 | The coroner inquired on what grounds they found their verdict? |
46595 | The following day the solicitor of the prisoner called upon Mr. Henson, and asked if Mr. Astley would give 10_s._ in the pound for the bills? |
46595 | The last thing he said to Mr. Harris was,"Shall I see you in the morning?" |
46595 | The man said,"Why, you murderous villain, you have got a woman there; are you going to kill her?" |
46595 | The next house I approached looked clean and cheerful; and seeing the waiter standing at the door, I civilly asked him if they took in travellers? |
46595 | The policeman, who seemed a decent fellow of his sort, begged of me not to be violent; he believed, he said, I had a carpet- bag? |
46595 | The prisoner answered,"What was I to do with it, sir? |
46595 | The prophet says,''And if the people inquire, What shall we do? |
46595 | The unfortunate man scarcely moved; but Muller, terrified beyond measure, exclaimed,"Mate, what are you doing?" |
46595 | Then, turning to the witness, he said,"Are you sure that you yourself saw the will?" |
46595 | Thurtell inquired-- Where was Hunt, had he been left behind? |
46595 | Upon hearing the cell- door open at so extraordinary an hour, he turned round slowly, and said,"Well, I suppose I know the news thou bringest?" |
46595 | Was this the fact? |
46595 | We have read of the agonies of the rack, but who shall describe the agonies of remorse? |
46595 | Well, then, my lord, you see he gets worse, and he axed me to take him to the hospital; and did n''t I take him?" |
46595 | Were they thirty in all?" |
46595 | What are we to do, then? |
46595 | What are we to do? |
46595 | What conclusion then must be drawn from this if the witnesses speak the truth? |
46595 | What punishment do I now deserve? |
46595 | What was that plan? |
46595 | What, but insanity, could be inferred from these circumstances? |
46595 | What, then, was my motive for murdering of her? |
46595 | Where could he hide his head? |
46595 | Who, we ask, could have been produced as a witness to fix any crime upon him? |
46595 | Why so? |
46595 | Will my learned friend say that it was a private object the prisoner sought to obtain? |
46595 | Will you take a glass of ale?" |
46595 | With considerable violence of tone and manner, the prisoner asked,"How the devil he could answer, if they all badgered him with questions?" |
46595 | With whom, now that Burke was gone, could he associate? |
46595 | but she shrunk back, saying,"Oh, no, no; how can I touch you?" |
46595 | does that mean me?" |
46595 | if they do so, why not the quarter sessions? |
46595 | roared I with indignation;''what have you to say to me?'' |
46595 | said he,''whose is this here carpet- bag?'' |
46595 | what do you do here?'' |
46595 | where is Hunt?'' |
46595 | whither shall we go? |
46595 | who are you? |
46595 | why not commissioners of oyer and terminer? |
21284 | And what is''jumping''and''jilting?'' |
21284 | But why not go to the workhouse? |
21284 | D''ye see that bone in the wrist? 21284 Did they not send you abroad, then?" |
21284 | Did you enjoy your health before you got into prison? |
21284 | Did you get your sentence there? |
21284 | Did you holloa when you were bashed? |
21284 | Do n''t you know that yet? 21284 Do they all get eight marks a day at Chatham?" |
21284 | Do you never think of trying to make money at work? |
21284 | Do you remember''Big Croppy?'' |
21284 | Do you think you could cure yourself? |
21284 | Do you think you could have opened the safe? 21284 During your first''legging''I suppose you had been among the boys at the Isle of Wight?" |
21284 | Harry,I asked,"what''s that''bloke''[6] here for, who occupies the end bed?" |
21284 | Have you been to Spike Island, Pat? |
21284 | Have you been to the public works? |
21284 | Have you done your separates in the''bank? |
21284 | Have you ever been flogged? |
21284 | Have you heard what the director did when he was down on Saturday? |
21284 | Here comes Pat.--Well, Pat, have you heard that Larry and Tim have gone to chokey? |
21284 | How did you get on with the food yourself? |
21284 | How did you like Australia? |
21284 | How did you like it? |
21284 | How did you like them? |
21284 | How did you lose your remission? |
21284 | How did you manage to cure him so speedily? |
21284 | How do they call it a''grey,''I wonder? |
21284 | How do you know I am dying? 21284 How do you know he is innocent?" |
21284 | How long does he generally remain out of prison? |
21284 | How long has he been in prison? |
21284 | How long have you been unwell? |
21284 | How long have you done? |
21284 | How long was your last sentence? |
21284 | How long were you at the Moor, Dick? |
21284 | How long were you detained waiting trial? |
21284 | How long were you out this last time? |
21284 | How many robberies may you have committed? |
21284 | How many years did you have to do? |
21284 | How much could you do with? |
21284 | How much do you suppose? |
21284 | How old are you? |
21284 | How old were you when you got into trouble first? |
21284 | How would you carry your gold watch if you had one? |
21284 | I am afraid that game would be above my abilities? |
21284 | I am afraid you will find it difficult to make a living at hawking? |
21284 | I am hard up for snout,said Ned,"can you give us a bit, Pat? |
21284 | I do n''t mind, but how are you to get it sent to me? |
21284 | I have heard you speak of''hoisting,''how do you go about that? |
21284 | I think most of the Isle of Wight boys get into prison again? 21284 I understand there was a great many unnatural crimes committed at Bermuda?" |
21284 | I understand, most of these large robberies are''put up''jobs, like the one you have mentioned? |
21284 | If you had a safe where would you place it to be most secure? |
21284 | Is that a good game, do you think? |
21284 | Look at Napoleon III.,said my friend,"he is an ex- convict, and do his words fall lightly on the public ear?" |
21284 | Look at this classification, and these marks and badges,said Dick,"why, is n''t it scandalous the way the public are gulled? |
21284 | Now, tell me; do you never think seriously about your evil ways? 21284 Suppose I were to offer you 20_l._ to be flogged, would you accept the money and take the flogging?" |
21284 | Suppose they should flog you next time? |
21284 | That seems a very low price to get for a good gold watch? |
21284 | The flogging has made your health bad, I suppose? |
21284 | Then a bashing, as you call it, would not frighten you from committing a crime? |
21284 | Then do you intend to go thieving and robbing again? |
21284 | Then there is''twisting''and''fencing?'' |
21284 | Then you do n''t think flogging did you any good at all? |
21284 | Two pounds a day would do if it could be got regularly, but I suspect there are not many who make that? |
21284 | Well, Dick, how are you? |
21284 | Well, what news have you brought from Millbank? |
21284 | Well, you promised to give me a little bit of your history this morning, are you ready to begin? |
21284 | Were you ever flogged before? |
21284 | Were you ever flogged? |
21284 | What are his offences usually? |
21284 | What are you here for this time? |
21284 | What are''fins?'' |
21284 | What did you do outside? |
21284 | What diseases were you most successful with? |
21284 | What do they charge for sovereigns, for instance? |
21284 | What do you call a''shallow- bloke?'' |
21284 | What do you get for a watch, usually? |
21284 | What do you intend doing when you get out this time? |
21284 | What do you intend to do when you get out this time? |
21284 | What do you mean by''lob- sneaking,''and''Peter- screwing? |
21284 | What do you mean by''snow- dropping?'' |
21284 | What do you object to in the Church of England? |
21284 | What do you think of the cold- water system and homoeopathy? |
21284 | What does it matter,they would say to each other,"how we walk? |
21284 | What effect had the flogging on your conduct? |
21284 | What has caused this fresh order? |
21284 | What have you got this time? |
21284 | What is the matter with you? |
21284 | What is the matter with you? |
21284 | What is your sentence? |
21284 | What o''clock is it, Pat; d''ye see the clock there? |
21284 | What religion do you profess now? |
21284 | What sentence did you then receive? |
21284 | What sort of a doctor is this you have got here? 21284 What sort of place is it, and what about this Irish system?" |
21284 | What sort of treatment did you get? |
21284 | What was his opinion? |
21284 | What was the largest you ever got? |
21284 | What was your first sentence? |
21284 | What was your next sentence? |
21284 | What will you do when you get out of prison? |
21284 | What''s your sentence? |
21284 | When did you begin to steal first? |
21284 | Where is he? |
21284 | Where were you bashed? |
21284 | Which of them have you tried? |
21284 | Who do you mean by mumpers and shallow- blokes? |
21284 | Who is it that writes the article? |
21284 | Who''ll employ you, do you think? |
21284 | Why did you not remain in London when you went out last? |
21284 | Why does he not go to the poorhouse? |
21284 | Why, he''s a big fellow? |
21284 | Why, that would be worse than the slave trade,said Ned,"and would n''t there be a nice crop of murders there? |
21284 | Would the chance of getting another flogging not deter you from committing another crime? |
21284 | Yes,replied Pat;"but what screw reported Tim?" |
21284 | You appear to be consumptive? |
21284 | You belong to London, I suppose? |
21284 | You got a free pardon, I suppose? |
21284 | You mean that the garotters have spoiled your trade by making people more guarded? |
21284 | You say you have been flogged three times: how did you like it? |
21284 | You will be very fortunate,I said,"if you get the customary remission after this affair, I fear they will punish you?" |
21284 | ''Church- rates,''says he,''what have I to do with church- rates? |
21284 | And what would be his condition and prospects? |
21284 | Another case--"How long have you been ailing?" |
21284 | Another case--"Well, what''s your sentence?" |
21284 | Are all these just judges;--or is only one of them just? |
21284 | Before going in he took them out of his pocket, and what do you think they did? |
21284 | But how feed him? |
21284 | But what does so- called justice now demand in such cases? |
21284 | But what is the fate of the many so situated, with no friends to help them, save the workhouse or the prison once again? |
21284 | But what''s the good of making me work for years, at work that will not be of any use to me when I get out? |
21284 | D''ye think that would stop them? |
21284 | Do they think it punishes us?" |
21284 | Do you know that Lafferty and Badger are going to be sent to New Orleans, by the Catholic Aid Society?" |
21284 | Do you see that little old man with a cough on him? |
21284 | Do you wonder if some choose the latter?... |
21284 | Does capital punishment deter men from committing murder more effectually than perpetual imprisonment would? |
21284 | Finding my companion so communicative I continued my enquiries, and asked him,"What young fellows are these in the next cell?" |
21284 | Have you any message for me to carry out?" |
21284 | Have you anything more to tell me about yourself? |
21284 | Have you heard what Larry and Tim have got this morning? |
21284 | Have you never thought seriously about changing your mode of life when you get out of prison again? |
21284 | He was a fool to let the''screw''see he had the''snout;''but what was Tim''s offence?" |
21284 | How can they expect a fellow to reform when they rob us of our food and show us a bad example?" |
21284 | I asked him why he did not wait for the final answer to his petition before exposing his scheme? |
21284 | I have only learnt one trade, there are only a very few men in that trade, they wo n''t employ me; then what am I to do? |
21284 | I met many such men in prison, and I used to ask them how much money they would take to do my sentence in addition to their own? |
21284 | I remember asking whether he preferred a sentence of seven years''penal servitude, or three years in Coldbath Fields? |
21284 | I say, what day do you go home?" |
21284 | I shall see big Davey, perhaps, but do n''t you think''highflying''would suit me better, although I know little about it?" |
21284 | I wonder what they mean by all these changes of dress? |
21284 | If I can get it honestly, good and well; if not I''ll steal: why should a man starve in a Christian country?" |
21284 | If it was a bad thing why was it continued so long? |
21284 | If the experiment succeeded, who may estimate its value to him who was the subject of it? |
21284 | If they want to keep us out of prison why do n''t they get work for us that we can earn a proper living at?" |
21284 | Is n''t it a---- shame the way the head blokes go on? |
21284 | Is n''t that a pretty thing? |
21284 | Is not this amazing folly? |
21284 | Is there any''snout''knocking about? |
21284 | It is n''t likely; and as for the workhouse, I shall never go to it as long as I can be fed in prison, with the chance always of keeping out of both?" |
21284 | It was disgusting,''pon my word; and do you know what the authorities called it when cases were brought before them?" |
21284 | Oh, have you read that article in one of the periodicals about the Andaman Islands?" |
21284 | Shut up any such man for seven years in a place where the only men of his own age are city- bred thieves, and what can be expected of him? |
21284 | Starve in a Christian country? |
21284 | The last time I''d a drop o''rum in me, do you know what I did? |
21284 | The question may very naturally be asked-- Why could not our prison officials have done the same? |
21284 | The''toff''that owned the''wedge''made a dreadful song about it next day, and him wallowing in wealth, what do you think of that? |
21284 | Then again, do those in a good position in society require more warning than those who have no character or position to lose? |
21284 | These questions would constantly suggest themselves to me:"Could I ever have been a Christian?" |
21284 | Well, I''ll come up and see fair play, and while you''re at the fists I''ll leave my tog and take his, d''ye twig?'' |
21284 | What a nice easy way of earning a thousand a year the director has?" |
21284 | What did he mean by that?" |
21284 | What does it matter whether our neck- ties be once or twice round? |
21284 | What good is this humbugging system going to do us? |
21284 | What good will all this humbugging do us? |
21284 | What sort of''screws''have you here?" |
21284 | What will he-- what can he do, when liberated? |
21284 | What''s that?" |
21284 | When the collector got the account, he said,''How''s this? |
21284 | Why do n''t they find us work and try to keep us out of prison?" |
21284 | Why do n''t they teach us to get an honest living and show us a good example? |
21284 | Why do we in the one case brand the offender with the mark of Cain, and in the other cover with a golden veil both sin and sinner? |
21284 | Why should they not all be treated alike? |
21284 | Why, how old are you?" |
21284 | You have seen those blokes at fairs and races, throwing up coppers, or playing at pitch and toss? |
21284 | You know if it were not for the flats, how could the sharps live? |
21284 | and which is he? |
21284 | and"What will the enemies of Christianity think and say about my fall?" |
21284 | crikey,"cried Pat,"here''s a new screw come; what has he been, I wonder?" |
21284 | now do you think that the mere chance of the lash would hinder these men from attempting to get hold of a few hundred pounds''worth of jewellery? |
21284 | pretty well, Ned, how''s yourself?" |
21284 | what do you want?" |
21284 | what will Lafferty do there?" |
21284 | why not at all, of course; who would like a flogging?" |
21284 | why not let us judge for ourselves? |
21284 | why, all convicts have n''t life sentences, and does he think that they would remain out there and do as he liked after their time was up? |
13365 | ''Pleasant fires and merry evenings,''say you? |
13365 | But surely the Irish rose for freedom in 1641? |
13365 | Do you think, sir, that Highflyer could not have given Stonemason three stone and a beating? |
13365 | Going to Goodwood? |
13365 | How could a youngster keep out of the swim? |
13365 | I did n''t see you at Lady Blank''s on Tuesday? |
13365 | Who can it be? |
13365 | Your lordship knows what kleptomania is? |
13365 | --that means,"What odds are you prepared to lay against the mare named Flora?" |
13365 | --the flash of the naked swords, and rolling flame and smoke? |
13365 | A grain of common sense would have made them ask,"Why do these shrewd, hard men seem so certain that our favourite must lose? |
13365 | A mocking critic may point to the Bond Street lounger and ask,"What are the net use and purport of that being''s existence? |
13365 | A perfectly fresh mind, when brought to bear on the"Society"phenomenon, asks,"What are these people? |
13365 | A thousand souls, we said? |
13365 | After witnessing that lordly spectacle, who can wonder at Zoroaster? |
13365 | Again, what are the net use and purport of his existence?" |
13365 | An argumentative person may stop us here and ask,"Are you of opinion that it is possible to abolish warfare?" |
13365 | And how much does your day of Paradise cost you? |
13365 | And now the famous Russian''s question comes up: What shall we do? |
13365 | And now what about the thirteen boats for a thousand people? |
13365 | And now what is passing on the farther side of that door which closes the lane? |
13365 | And what is going on at the closed end of that blind lane? |
13365 | And what is it all about? |
13365 | And what is the life- history of the jockey? |
13365 | And why? |
13365 | And why? |
13365 | And yet such men hang on at their dreary toil; and who can ever hear them complain, save in their semi- humorous letters to friends at home? |
13365 | Are any of them really happy?" |
13365 | Are not many of us above him?" |
13365 | Are our few dead not to be considered because they were few? |
13365 | Are there not songs too? |
13365 | Are these the things to interest any manly man who is free to act for himself? |
13365 | Are they in the wrong? |
13365 | Are they the kind of persons who risk thousands in hard cash unless they know particularly well what they are doing? |
13365 | As to feathered pets, who has not suffered from parrots? |
13365 | But is there not a little flaw somewhere? |
13365 | But surely the bundle of threads and the moth were as much connected as the body and the soul? |
13365 | But the child of nature asks in wild bewilderment,"Where on earth does the human companionship come in?" |
13365 | But the poor noodle who can hardly afford to pay his fare and hotel bill-- why should he meddle with horses? |
13365 | But what are these desert sounds and sights for the laboriously- cultured officer? |
13365 | But what can be said of the beings who crowd the betting- ring? |
13365 | But what means has he of knowing the speed of B? |
13365 | But who first invented the pet- dog? |
13365 | But, if a pretty verse- maker is privileged to be an undutiful son, what becomes of all our old notions? |
13365 | Can any one fancy Walter Scott cheating a miserable little girl of sixteen into marriage, and then leaving her, only to many a female philosopher? |
13365 | Can he really sympathize with the fallen? |
13365 | Can it be that we associate the long decline of the year with the dark closing of life? |
13365 | Can that be beaten for utter lucidity and directness? |
13365 | Can we imagine an old- world stonemason like Hugh Miller begging coppers from a farmer on whose steading he happened to be employed? |
13365 | Can you have a better tip than that?" |
13365 | Can you retrieve those nights? |
13365 | Could he avoid the fell horror against which he warned others? |
13365 | Cruel? |
13365 | Did Mr. Blank frighten him then-- the darling?" |
13365 | Did one man warn the victim? |
13365 | Did they go out like the Thousand of Marsala and pit themselves against odds of five and six to one? |
13365 | Did they show any chivalry? |
13365 | Do those grinning, superlatively insolent cynics really represent the mighty Mother of Nations? |
13365 | Does he gain health? |
13365 | Does he hear any wisdom? |
13365 | Does he not fulfil a law of our nature? |
13365 | Does it, or does it not, make my saying about the soul seem reasonable? |
13365 | Does not the very gold and red of the leaves hint to us that the sweet sad time will return again and find us maybe riper? |
13365 | Does the youth make friends? |
13365 | Even then we may pick our pleasures discreetly, if we dwell in the country, while, as for the town, are there not pleasant fires and merry evenings? |
13365 | For instance, we might say,"Do you ever speak of being free from good health, or free from a good character, or free from prosperity?" |
13365 | Has any one ever fairly tried to face the problem of degradation? |
13365 | Has any one ever yet considered the spiritual significance of slang? |
13365 | Have you given yourself the trouble to do more than preach? |
13365 | Have you had a look at him?" |
13365 | He is there to be plundered; it is his mission in life to lose, or how could the bookmakers maintain their mansions and carriages? |
13365 | How can it exist? |
13365 | How could the doomed country resist? |
13365 | How did our grandfathers take holiday? |
13365 | How did the wild folk rise? |
13365 | How is the breed of horses directly improved by that kind of sport? |
13365 | How many brave men make their bargain in youth and stand to it gallantly unto the end? |
13365 | How many ladies consider what the curt word"wounded"means? |
13365 | How many other ineffable days and nights have I known? |
13365 | How should they, unhappy long- eared creatures that they were? |
13365 | How_ can_ he know where to aim his persuasions with most effect? |
13365 | I feel impelled to reply,"What do you know about it? |
13365 | I have been for a year, on and off, among a large circle of fellows whom I really liked; and what was their staple talk? |
13365 | I modestly said,"Do you think he is big enough?" |
13365 | If I, practically, back South- Eastern Railway shares to rise, who blames me if I sell when my property has increased in value by one- eighth? |
13365 | Is any war little to a man who loses his life in it? |
13365 | Is he not flesh and blood like us? |
13365 | Is it not a wonder that we can pick out a single honest man from their midst? |
13365 | Is it not an old story? |
13365 | Is it not enough to make the women of our sober sensible race declare for ever against the flaunting stay- at- homes who would egg us on to war? |
13365 | Is it not possible to gamble without making God''s creatures undergo torture? |
13365 | Is it to some Land of Beulah, where they may gambol unrestrained on pleasant hills? |
13365 | Is it worth while? |
13365 | Is that grim sedate man right when he says that women are the moving influence that drives men to such carnage? |
13365 | Is that useless luxury? |
13365 | Is their conversation at all charming? |
13365 | Is there any gain-- mental, muscular, or nervous-- from this unhappy pursuit? |
13365 | Is there any rational man breathing who would scruple to accept profit from the rise of a stock or share? |
13365 | Is there anything noble about them? |
13365 | Is there one of us who can say that he never lost a day amid this too brief, too joyous, too entrancing term of existence? |
13365 | Is this indeed humanity-- these butchers''shambles? |
13365 | It may be asked,"How do these silly creatures who bet manage to obtain any idea of a horse?" |
13365 | Let me ask, What are the real feelings of a householder who is requested to hand out a present to a turncock or dustman whom he has never seen? |
13365 | Mark that I do not speak of the"slavery"of the cat-- for who ever knew a cat to do anything against its will? |
13365 | May we not trust that a time will come when nations will see on a sudden the blank folly of making war? |
13365 | Now I ask any man and brother, or lady and sister, is a St. Bernard a legitimate pet in the proper sense of the word? |
13365 | Now I ask any rational man who may have been tempted to bet, Is it worth while? |
13365 | Now how does such a man come to be tramping aimlessly on a public road? |
13365 | Now is it not marvellous that, while the murderers were free, they were poverty- stricken and most wretched? |
13365 | Now what does this gallows- bird tell us? |
13365 | Now, is it not marvellous? |
13365 | Oh, heavens, what scene is this? |
13365 | Once I said to a nice lad,"Do none of your set ever read anything?" |
13365 | Once more, who supplies the means? |
13365 | Once more-- how does the faded military person come to be on the roads? |
13365 | Say that the stud is a useless luxury: but then, what about the daubs for which plutocrats pay thousands of guineas? |
13365 | Should I be wrong if I said that the contrast rouses me to indignation and even horror? |
13365 | So the low clear talk goes, till at last with a savage yell of rage a voice comes from the other vessel--"Where you coming to?" |
13365 | Space will be as nothing to the soul-- can we not even now transport ourselves in an instant beyond the sun? |
13365 | Surely there is no irreverence in saying that the Master walks the waters to this day? |
13365 | The brilliant man left the company, and one sham- languid person said to a sham- aristocratic person,"Who is that?" |
13365 | The fly enters the den and asks the spider,"What price Flora?" |
13365 | They contrive to buy jockeys, stablemen, veterinary surgeons-- indeed, who can tell whom they do_ not_ subsidize? |
13365 | Unhappy shriekers, whither do they fancy they are bound? |
13365 | We suppose that people must have something to be fond of; but why should any one be fond of a pug that is too unwieldy to move faster than a hedgehog? |
13365 | Well, when I came home and went about among the clubs, the fellows used to say to me,''What was this affair of yours up in the hills? |
13365 | What are Hanley and St. Helen''s and the lower parts of Manchester like? |
13365 | What are they all but idlers pure and simple? |
13365 | What are they particularly fitted for? |
13365 | What can a bright lad learn there? |
13365 | What can be done? |
13365 | What could it be that forced the slumbering man to believe himself to be in full activity? |
13365 | What do I advise? |
13365 | What has happened in the doleful spring of this year? |
13365 | What have they done? |
13365 | What is Oldham like on a blistering midsummer day? |
13365 | What is a little war? |
13365 | What is it to them that the seaside landlady crouches awaiting her prey? |
13365 | What is it to them that''Arry is preparing to make night hideous? |
13365 | What is the difference between cat and hare? |
13365 | What is the net result or purpose of the whole display? |
13365 | What is the source of that tender solemn melancholy that comes on us all as we feel the glad year dying? |
13365 | What is the use of wearing out nerve and brain on pondering an infinite maze of uncertainties? |
13365 | What manliness can there be in watching a poor baby- colt flogged along by a dwarf? |
13365 | What shall we say of the cunning cat- like Charles Greville, who crept on tiptoe through the world, observing and recording the littleness of men? |
13365 | What will be the effect of the general introduction of this delightful weapon? |
13365 | When the street orator yells,"Who is our ruler? |
13365 | Whence then comes the money which enables them to live in riotous profusion? |
13365 | Where are the glib parasites who came to fawn on the poor dolt? |
13365 | Where are the persons who sold him useless horses? |
13365 | Where are the swarms of begging dandies who clustered around him? |
13365 | Where does the fun come in for the onlookers? |
13365 | Where will next year''s autumn find us? |
13365 | Who can blame the multitudes of Muscovites who sealed their wild protest with their blood? |
13365 | Who can forget Lydgate in"Middlemarch"? |
13365 | Who can remember that story about Theodore Hook and the orange? |
13365 | Who ever accused him of incompetence? |
13365 | Who ever heard of a worker-- a real toiler-- becoming degraded? |
13365 | Who is the poet who talks of"drawing a thread of honey through your heart"? |
13365 | Who is your jockey now and who is your master?" |
13365 | Who then shall sneer at the dandy? |
13365 | Who was the most powerful man in England in Queen Anne''s day? |
13365 | Who-- ah, who guides that flight? |
13365 | Why blame him? |
13365 | Why do n''t you leave it alone?" |
13365 | Why does n''t he keep away?" |
13365 | Why forget essential business only in order to attack a class of plutocrats whom we have made, and whom our society worships with odious grovellings? |
13365 | Why have not our moral novelists spoken the plain truth about these things? |
13365 | Why is he in this plight? |
13365 | Why not abuse the gentry who buy copper to catch the rise of the market? |
13365 | Why not abuse the whole of the thousands of men who make the City lively for six days of the week? |
13365 | Why should we be called churlish? |
13365 | Why? |
13365 | Why? |
13365 | Will the memories be wholly pleasant? |
13365 | Wilt thou be gone now-- and whither? |
13365 | Women, what do you think of that for Englishmen''s pastime? |
13365 | Would any mother like to see her favourite among that hateful crowd? |
13365 | Would it not be better to cease babbling of equality altogether, and to try to accept the laws of life with some submission? |
13365 | Would you wantonly advocate war? |
13365 | Yes-- but how was the recognition of equality enforced? |
13365 | Your clerk, shopman, butcher, baker, barber-- especially the barber-- ask their companions,"What have you done on the Lincoln?" |
13365 | or"How do you stand for the Two Thousand?" |
13365 | was n''t I chippy this morning? |
40036 | Ai n''t you somethin''dead fine? 40036 And you, Slim?" |
40036 | Are there many tramps in Russia? |
40036 | Are you a sailor, a workman, an American, or what? |
40036 | Are you willin''to be searched? |
40036 | But where are you going to ride? |
40036 | But, Fatty, what does that matter? |
40036 | Ca n''t I enhale cig''rettes any more? 40036 Cigarette,"he said,"have you been a- doin''time? |
40036 | D''you mind tellin''what''s the main gag in Glasgow just now, for raisin''money? |
40036 | D''you think I''ll make it go? |
40036 | D''you want t''insult me? |
40036 | Did n''t I do that well? |
40036 | Do you mean to say that you''ve left good homes behind you, and are over here simply to study tramps? 40036 Does n''t Mark Twain always smoke one o''them pipes?" |
40036 | Ez long ez yer happy, eh? 40036 How is it, Judy, that you are in Scotland, then?" |
40036 | How''ll a piece o''chicken taste, eh? |
40036 | I say, granddad, get me a light, will you? 40036 I''m jus''as cute as they is, ai n''t I? |
40036 | Is Glasgow a good town for moochin''? |
40036 | Is this thing for a finish? |
40036 | Listenin''? |
40036 | Mean to tell me that you''s forgotten how you did me''n''Curly with yer rotten fifty cents? 40036 Now, kid, d''you know what I wants you to do?" |
40036 | Pounds his ear[ sleeps] like a baby, do n''t he? |
40036 | Purty kid, ai n''t he? |
40036 | Say, Red, has you gone bughouse? 40036 See here, kid,"--and there was a firmer tone in his voice,--"we ai n''t foolin''now-- understan''? |
40036 | See here, kid,I heard him saying;"what''s you learnt since I''ve had you-- en''thing?" |
40036 | See that, Cig? |
40036 | Shall I holler? |
40036 | W''y, Bud, have you gone bughouse? 40036 W''y, yes,"Slim replied;"that young feller right back o''ye leaves ter- morrer: ai n''t that right, Cigarette?" |
40036 | Wall, how long d''y''u''spect to stay there? |
40036 | Well, can you take me home''n''feed me? |
40036 | Well, darn it, Red, ai n''t that enough fer a prushun? 40036 Well, do you mean to say that you own this place, and no one can come in who is not of your choosing?" |
40036 | Well, how much? 40036 Well, now, Bud, d''you''member the time when I took thirty days fer you down in Alabama so that you could go off''n''cure yer diseases? |
40036 | Well, say; can''cher gimme a cigar? |
40036 | Well, then, I knows that cuss- word you taught me-- that long one, you know; that''s six, ai n''t it? 40036 Well, what of that, Fatty?" |
40036 | Well, what of that? |
40036 | Well, you old hoosier, you, can you gimme some apple- butter? |
40036 | What Cigarette? |
40036 | What are the police doing with them? |
40036 | What are you doing around here, Billy? |
40036 | What d''you mean? |
40036 | What d''you want? 40036 What government is that in?" |
40036 | What''s that got to do with this circus? |
40036 | What''s your name? |
40036 | Where are you travelin''to? |
40036 | Where you goin''? |
40036 | Who you callin''fools? |
40036 | Why is that? |
40036 | Why is this? 40036 Why not?" |
40036 | Why not? |
40036 | Why, Red,I asked,"how did this happen? |
40036 | Why, don''cher know that''e ai n''t o''our class? 40036 Why, you''re not going to smoke here?" |
40036 | Would you''do''me if you had a chance? |
40036 | Writin''yer will, are ye, Cigarette? |
40036 | Wy, don''cher know them steers is right under us? |
40036 | Y''all right? |
40036 | You know where the Horn is right''nough, do n''t you? 40036 You pull out at seven, do you?" |
40036 | You sure that''s all, kid? |
40036 | You''re a Yank, ai n''t you? |
40036 | You''re goin''to tramp it, are n''t you? |
40036 | [ 2] I wonder what has become of that little baby for whom I sat the night out? 40036 ''Do n''t leave the old gal, will yer, blokey?'' 40036 ''I say, blokey, kin yer tell me when the flyin''mail passes through these yere parts? 40036 ''Member how we worked it, do n''t cher-- how I walked in to see you to let you walk out in my togs? 40036 ''n''kin ye tell me ef I kin make the flyin''mail?'' 40036 (Hast thou found it?") |
40036 | ("What are you hawking?") |
40036 | ***** Can the tramps be driven off the railroads? |
40036 | After Rochester, what you got? |
40036 | Ai n''t got any objections, have you?" |
40036 | Ai n''t that it?" |
40036 | Ai n''t that purty good? |
40036 | Ai n''t them the words?" |
40036 | Ain''cher be''n tellin''me fer the las''year? |
40036 | Ain''cher got no sense? |
40036 | Ain''cher never heard o''steers hookin''a bloke before? |
40036 | An''ev''ry night she fixes up his bed,''n''''f anybody knocks she always asks,''Is that you, Jamie?'' |
40036 | Another companion said:"Why should I work, when I can beg more than I can possibly earn? |
40036 | Beefsteak''n''''taters''n''a little pie--''ll that do?" |
40036 | Bummin''does seem to kill us lads, do n''t it? |
40036 | But how''s a man goin''to sing after he''s mooched and walked all day, I should like to know? |
40036 | But look at this arm,"--pushing back his sleeve from the emaciated hand,--"that crucifix ai n''t changed, is it? |
40036 | But what can they do when they find a bloke paradin''the streets with a jag on? |
40036 | But what is this fashion? |
40036 | But you ca n''t kick him-- he''s too purty; ai n''t he?" |
40036 | Caan''t you get it yerself? |
40036 | Can he be held definitely answerable for his evil- doing, or is he morally insane and unable to distinguish between right and wrong? |
40036 | Can you take it out, d''you think?" |
40036 | Charley noticed this, and his first greeting was,"Shall I get you a new pair of shoes?" |
40036 | Course I did n''t wanter say very much, I was so jagged, but I said enough, anyhow-- see? |
40036 | D''you know''i m? |
40036 | D''you only want to chew? |
40036 | Did Bud croak down in Texas, dead sartain?" |
40036 | Did n''t I git you out o''bein''pinched the other day?" |
40036 | Did you ever in your life see such badly faked bums? |
40036 | Do n''t cher know that I''m Slim? |
40036 | Do n''t chu know old Tom?'' |
40036 | Do n''t you know that I am a woman? |
40036 | Do n''t you think so?" |
40036 | Do n''t you want boodle, booze, togs, and a good livin''? |
40036 | Don''cher know nothin''? |
40036 | Eh?" |
40036 | For instance, what sort of place is this we''re in now?" |
40036 | Funny, ai n''t it? |
40036 | Guess y''ai n''t forgotten that, have you?" |
40036 | Has I got to ferget them, too?" |
40036 | Have you got any money?" |
40036 | Have you no mother or sisters? |
40036 | He advised us not to go by daylight, and asked,"Does you blokes know the rules out at Mary''s? |
40036 | He called me out,''n''says,''Red, wanter buy a kid?'' |
40036 | He recognized Bud immediately, walked up to him as to an old pal, and said,"Well, Bud, old socks, how are you? |
40036 | He simply says:"Why do n''t they get out o''those blasted holes and come over here? |
40036 | He was a big fella,''n''that prob''ly swelled his head-- see? |
40036 | How d''you think I''d like it?" |
40036 | How do they know that he has not some object in view in telling them what he does? |
40036 | How''s that fer a ghost- story, eh? |
40036 | How''s that for bein''bughouse[ crazy], eh? |
40036 | I beg''xac''ly five bob in eight hours; an''ef I begged twenty- four hours,''ow much''d that be?" |
40036 | I found one in a main street, and introduced myself thus:"I say, Jack, can you tell us where the moochers hang out in these parts?" |
40036 | I knocked,''n''in a minnit I heerd some one sayin'',''Is that you, Jamie?'' |
40036 | I lied, did n''t I? |
40036 | I said:"How can you tell?" |
40036 | I say, air yer right k''rect that the flyin''mail comes through these yere parts?'' |
40036 | I was immediately asked:"Wo kommst Du her? |
40036 | I wonder whether there are still men in Hoboland who remember that interesting little fellow called"the Cheyenne Baby"? |
40036 | I''m comin''back to you, ai n''t I?" |
40036 | I''ve got a lot to tell you,''n''a big job fer you, too;''ll you come? |
40036 | I''ve heard thet it''s real good; but how d''you do it?" |
40036 | If you remonstrate with them, they reply:"W''y, you do n''t think we''ve been slavin''all this while fer nothing do you? |
40036 | Is n''t that so?" |
40036 | It was something like this:"I say, boss, can''cher gimme the price of a meal?" |
40036 | Listenin''? |
40036 | Listenin''?" |
40036 | Listenin''?" |
40036 | Looked''s if the whole world was there-- see? |
40036 | Must the moral nurse and physician be chosen for his ability to control votes, or to treat his patients with skilled attention and consideration? |
40036 | No objections, have you?" |
40036 | Not many callin''s has them good points-- see? |
40036 | Nothing like taking your time, brother, is there?" |
40036 | Now d''you know me?" |
40036 | Now, wha''cher goin''to be, arteest or bankrupt?" |
40036 | Now, what does he find to satisfy this rapacious craving? |
40036 | Now,''ll you promise?" |
40036 | Oh, yes,''n''I knows that other cuss- word that that parson told us was never forgiven-- remember, do n''t you? |
40036 | On meeting one another, they ask:"What''s your spiel?" |
40036 | Red said I could smoke, did n''t''e-- h''m? |
40036 | Red said''t was, anyhow,''n''he oughter know, ought n''t he? |
40036 | Regularly he would plant himself before me in waiter fashion, and say:"Well, Cig''rette, what''s it to be? |
40036 | S''pose you did n''t expect to see me again? |
40036 | See here, pop; what date is to- day? |
40036 | See them hay- boxes over there on the corner o''the car?" |
40036 | See? |
40036 | See? |
40036 | See? |
40036 | See? |
40036 | She put''er old bony han''s on me shoulders,''n''stuck''er old phiz clos''t ter mine,''n''said,''Who be ye, anyhow? |
40036 | She would clutch a man by the coat- sleeve, and tragically exclaim:"How dare you cast me off? |
40036 | She''ll kick''bout my smoking too; but I''ve got her there, ai n''t I? |
40036 | Sounds funny, do n''t it? |
40036 | Sullivan?" |
40036 | Suppose I''d gone crazy; w''y, I could''a''sued the county for damages, could n''t I? |
40036 | That''s the way she got her monikey[12]-see? |
40036 | The St. Petersburg street- gamins have a way of crying out,"Nachel li?" |
40036 | The tramp is a specialist; so why not leave specialists to deal with him? |
40036 | Then I asked,''Mary, ain''cher recognizin''common peoples any more? |
40036 | Then another said:"Say, was that old feller any relation o''yourn? |
40036 | Then, you see, she ca n''t jaw''bout my not bein''square, can she? |
40036 | This I acknowledged, at the same time asking,"Why?" |
40036 | This made me angry, and I turned on the men, and said:"What right have you fellows to treat me this way? |
40036 | W''y, what''s wrong, Cig? |
40036 | Was hast Du für Geschäft?" |
40036 | Well, you see that kid over there; purty, ai n''t he?" |
40036 | Well,''ll you promise?" |
40036 | Wha''does you plead-- guilty or not guilty?" |
40036 | What cher knockin''me about that way for?" |
40036 | What could be more genuinely, deliciously German? |
40036 | What d''you say?" |
40036 | What else d''ye''xpect us to do? |
40036 | What good will it ever do you?" |
40036 | What''s the matter uv my phiz, anyhow?" |
40036 | What''s the matter?" |
40036 | Where d''y''u come from? |
40036 | Where did you get yer white colors?" |
40036 | Where''d you come from?" |
40036 | Who be ye? |
40036 | Who is he? |
40036 | Why? |
40036 | Why? |
40036 | Wo n''t that be a good scheme? |
40036 | Wo willst Du him? |
40036 | Would n''t I be a great steer, eh?" |
40036 | Would n''t the blokes laugh, though, if they''d hear it? |
40036 | Would n''t you rather die?" |
40036 | Would you treat them as you are treating me?" |
40036 | Wy, you little beggar, have you forgotten the time we nearly croaked in that box- car jus''out of Austin-- have you forgotten that?" |
40036 | Ye''ll always be''It''if ye do n''t do something like that;''n''there ai n''t no fun in that, is there?" |
40036 | Yer bound fer York, ai n''t you, Cig? |
40036 | Yer goin''home now, ain''cher?" |
40036 | You slept out-- why do n''t you say so? |
45306 | About the James boys? |
45306 | Cabin or steerage? |
45306 | Can you blame me for trying to make a stake? |
45306 | Did you ever read the life of the James boys, Billy? |
45306 | Do n''t you think that would be a fair divvy? |
45306 | Do the Britishers, of course; what else? |
45306 | Do you know anything about grammar, geography or composition? |
45306 | Do you want a ticket? |
45306 | Do? |
45306 | Ever herd cattle? |
45306 | Fine and dandy; ever been there? |
45306 | Got any money or tickets? |
45306 | He wanted me to go in, did n''t he, whether I wanted to or not? |
45306 | Hello, pardner; how''s tricks? |
45306 | Hi, Billy,exclaimed I,"look at them yellow balls hanging on the trees, will you? |
45306 | Ho, yer a Yankee, then? |
45306 | How are we going to put in the day, Windy? |
45306 | How cheap? |
45306 | How could you write a book if you do n''t know anything about grammar? |
45306 | How do others cross it; ca n''t I ride over in a boat? |
45306 | How many copies will you want? |
45306 | How many pages will the book contain? |
45306 | How much money have you got, Billy? |
45306 | If he thinks anything of me do n''t you think he''ll come back to me? |
45306 | It''s in the fo''-castle,says Jack, with a wink at his mates;"do you want it?" |
45306 | Kin you ride? |
45306 | Lemme see, now; what''ll I tackle? |
45306 | Look at all this array, Windy,said I to myself;"where are you going to get off at? |
45306 | Look at that; call them trifles? |
45306 | Looking for a job, cully? |
45306 | Maybe you think I ai n''t got any? |
45306 | Me? 45306 My card? |
45306 | No, I never did? 45306 O, Mary, when shall we return Sic pleasure to renew?" |
45306 | Of course you can but it will cost you lots of money, and where are you going to get it? |
45306 | Oh, that''s the game, is it? 45306 Oh, that''s the ticket, is it? |
45306 | Oh, that''s what you''re after, is it? 45306 Oh, you are, are you?" |
45306 | Oh, you do, eh? 45306 One of two must still obey, Nancy, Nancy; Is it man or woman, say? |
45306 | Say Billy,remarked I with my mouth full of bread,"get on to the orange trees, will you?" |
45306 | Sleep over nothing,quickly retorted I;"am I the first man who ever wrote a book?" |
45306 | So you''re going to write a book, eh? |
45306 | Suppose we put it in sight- seeing? |
45306 | The h---- he wo n''t,responded I, angrily;"that''s what he''s paid for, is n''t it?" |
45306 | The hell you are,profanely responded Billy;"what are you going to do with it after it is written down?" |
45306 | The hell you did; how''s things out that way? |
45306 | They talk English over there, do n''t they? 45306 To''Frisco?" |
45306 | Trifles, are they? |
45306 | What air ye going to do in Glesgie? |
45306 | What are you going to do about it, Billy? |
45306 | What are you going to do with all the money you make out of that book of yourn? |
45306 | What are you riding on? |
45306 | What can I do for you? |
45306 | What do you think of''Frisco, Windy? |
45306 | What do you want to see him about? 45306 What do you want to see him about?" |
45306 | What does she mean by that? |
45306 | What kind do you like? |
45306 | What kind of a book is it you''ve written? 45306 What kind of meat?" |
45306 | What size do you wear? |
45306 | What will ye be doin''in Glasgie? |
45306 | What you doin''dar? |
45306 | What you fellers doin''there? |
45306 | What''ll it be tonight; a ten- cent show or Chinatown once more? |
45306 | What''s the fare? |
45306 | What''s the fare? |
45306 | What''s the harm, Billy? |
45306 | What''s the matter with earning it or getting a job on a steamer; did n''t you do it? |
45306 | What''s the matter? |
45306 | What''s the name of the ship I''m going to sail on? |
45306 | What''s the use trying''em on? |
45306 | What''s tickling you, Billy? |
45306 | What''s yer trade? |
45306 | When? |
45306 | Where to? |
45306 | Where to? |
45306 | Where you bound for? |
45306 | Where''d ye come from, the noo? |
45306 | Where''d you come from? |
45306 | Where''d you do your herding? |
45306 | Where''ll we go this evening? |
45306 | Where''s that? |
45306 | Where? |
45306 | Which bank will you put your money in? |
45306 | Which boss? |
45306 | Who gets all the money from the sale of the book? |
45306 | Who says you have n''t? 45306 Who, me?" |
45306 | Why do n''t he write to me? |
45306 | Why do n''t you get married and find out? |
45306 | Why do n''t you go on deck if you want to be sick? |
45306 | Will you please let me have your card? |
45306 | Will you please write your name and the nature of your business on this tablet? 45306 You are, hey? |
45306 | You do n''t like der style? |
45306 | You do n''t like''em? |
45306 | You sabee cookee? |
45306 | You say I ca n''t beat my way in the old country, Billy; why not? |
45306 | You say I ca n''t beat my way when I get across to Europe; why not? |
45306 | You say, Billy,continued I,"that the ways of the people are different over there; in what way?" |
45306 | _ You_ write a book? 45306 After exchanging airy compliments and discussing the weather a bit, the gentleman remarked_ en passant_,You have written a book?" |
45306 | After you get the book printed who''s going to sell it for you; going around peddling it?" |
45306 | And another thing, there are no brake- beams on the other side, no blind baggage and no bumpers, so where are you going to ride? |
45306 | Are you going to go in opposition to them?" |
45306 | Are you looking for a job?" |
45306 | As I stood in front of the Cunard line office a young fellow stepped up to me and asked:"Say, mister, are you thinking of going to Yurrup?" |
45306 | As I was poor, that swell neighborhood was no place for me, but where was I to find a poorer locality? |
45306 | Be lots of champagne flowing about that time, eh?" |
45306 | But what was the use of thinking or worrying? |
45306 | Ca n''t I talk English?" |
45306 | Call that music? |
45306 | Can you blame a rich old Mormon for having a big bunch of wives if he can support them? |
45306 | Did I see the Falls? |
45306 | Did I? |
45306 | Did he need polish to make him shine? |
45306 | Did n''t I have some money in my inside pocket? |
45306 | Did our Washy need a sponsor? |
45306 | Did you ever watch a calf when it sucks its mother, how it makes a grab for a teat, rest awhile, then make another grab? |
45306 | Do n''t you believe me? |
45306 | Do n''t you think that would do for a starter?" |
45306 | Do you want to know the honest truth? |
45306 | Even had I been armed what could I have done against seven men in close quarters? |
45306 | From my accent she gathered that I was a foreigner for she asked at once:"Yer a furriner, ai n''t ye?" |
45306 | Graham?" |
45306 | Have n''t I got as good a right to write a book as anyone else?" |
45306 | Have you read Irving''s Astoria, a true and lifelike history of the Northwest? |
45306 | He figured it out this way:"Suppose the book fails, where do I get off at? |
45306 | He puts up the dough and what do you put up?" |
45306 | Here lies Johnny Pidgeon; What was his religion? |
45306 | History, travel, poetry, novel or what?" |
45306 | How many ships do tip over? |
45306 | How or where will I begin to describe these things? |
45306 | I believe the son- in- law is inclined to be facetious, but is he_ just_ to his immortal father- in- law? |
45306 | I did n''t think it was any of his business, so I said:"What do you want to know for?" |
45306 | I hated to die so young, but what''s the odds? |
45306 | I remained standing there, whereupon the sober one got angry and turned on me with the remark:"Did yer never see ah lassie fou?" |
45306 | I was for moving on, but Billy said,"What''s the harm? |
45306 | I was on deck waiting to see the storm out, for what was the use going below and being drowned there? |
45306 | I wonder would they appreciate it if I showed them a few samples? |
45306 | In the first place there are no railroad trains running across to Europe, so how are you going to cross the little duck pond; swim across?" |
45306 | It is entitled:"Will ye go to the Highlands, Leezie Lindsay?" |
45306 | Look abroad through Nature''s range-- Nature''s mighty law is change; Ladies, would it not be strange, Man should then a monster prove? |
45306 | Maybe I did n''t applaud? |
45306 | Maybe you''ll drive tandem and handle the ribbons yourself?" |
45306 | Nay, withal, was he not a right brave and strong man according to his kind? |
45306 | Nothing more nor less than--"Where, oh where has my little dog gone, Where, oh where can he be? |
45306 | O Mary, canst thou wreck his peace, Wha for thy sake wad gladly die; Or canst thou break that heart of his Whose only faut is loving thee? |
45306 | O, CAN YE SEW CUSHIONS? |
45306 | O, can ye sew cushions and can ye sew sheets, And can ye sing bal- lu- loo when the bairn greets? |
45306 | O, what would I do wi''you? |
45306 | Say, pardner, pinch me, will you? |
45306 | See what kids read, will you? |
45306 | Should auld acquaintance be forgot And days o''auld lang syne? |
45306 | Should auld acquaintance be forgot, And never brought to min''? |
45306 | That''s a good argument, ai n''t it? |
45306 | The Bible says they can have all the wives they want, but the United States law says they ca n''t have''em, so what are the poor fellows to do? |
45306 | They were having a whole lot of fun at my expense but I never said another word, for what was the use? |
45306 | Was I happy after I bought the ticket? |
45306 | Was Shakespeare appreciated in his generation? |
45306 | Was any truly great man? |
45306 | Was it his thoughts or their setting that captivated people? |
45306 | Was n''t his genius just as great before he struck society? |
45306 | Was there anything ever written more sad, pathetic and sweet? |
45306 | Wha can fill a coward''s grave? |
45306 | Wha sae base as be a slave? |
45306 | Wha will be a traitor knave? |
45306 | What could I say? |
45306 | What did the lady take me for; a Chinaman, to put me in a china closet? |
45306 | What do you say; shall I give you a ticket?" |
45306 | What do you want my card for?" |
45306 | What dost thou in that mansion fair? |
45306 | What tune do you think these Highlanders were playing as they marched along? |
45306 | What was the next event on the program? |
45306 | What will you do?" |
45306 | What''s the dif? |
45306 | What''s the use of trying? |
45306 | When Burnsie came out he was mad clear through and this is what he wrote: Was e''er puir poet sae befitted? |
45306 | Where can we get anything to eat?" |
45306 | Where do you want to go?" |
45306 | Where was a fellow to ride when he was beating his way? |
45306 | While I stood gazing and deliberating a young girl with a shawl around her shoulders came up to me and addressed me:"Hoo air ye?" |
45306 | While eating it, the door slid back quietly, and who do you think entered it? |
45306 | Who can tell? |
45306 | Who were they?" |
45306 | Why were we born poor? |
45306 | Why would n''t it be, when suckers by the million flock there every year from all over the world? |
45306 | Why, then, ask of silly man To oppose great Nature''s plan? |
45306 | Why? |
45306 | Will another like him arise? |
45306 | Will wonders never cease? |
45306 | Will ye go to the Hielands, Leezie Lindsay, My pride and my darling to be? |
45306 | Will ye go to the Hielands, Leezie Lindsay, Will ye go to the Hielands wi''me? |
45306 | With his hair cut short and his tail cut long, Where, oh where can he be?" |
45306 | Wonder if they were pirates? |
45306 | Wonder what they are?" |
45306 | Would Sir Walter have been less great had he sprung from common stock or would Robbie have been greater had he been blue- blooded? |
45306 | Ye see yon birkie, ca''d a lord, Wha''struts and stares and a''that? |
45306 | You do n''t believe me? |
45306 | You want to add another book to this little pile, do you? |
45306 | are these your pranks, To murder men and gi''e God thanks? |
45306 | art thou not ashamed To doat upon a feature? |
45306 | exclaimed the old gent;"what''s de matter with''em?" |
45306 | or his Rip Van Winkle, or his sketches, the Alhambra, etc.? |
2397 | Can flies know not to bite? |
2397 | Did father shoot him? |
2397 | Did you ever see God? |
2397 | Flies bite-- why? |
2397 | Has it feet? 2397 Have I done anything wrong? |
2397 | How do the blind girls know what to say with their mouths? 2397 How does Mother Nature take care of the flowers?" |
2397 | How does carpenter know to build house? |
2397 | Is this not love? |
2397 | Is this not love? |
2397 | Mother,accompanied by an inquiring look, means,"Were is mother?" |
2397 | Then why did He let little sister fall this morning, and hurt her head so badly? |
2397 | Were did I come from? |
2397 | What colour is think? |
2397 | What is it? |
2397 | What is love? |
2397 | What will you do with the dollar? |
2397 | What would you like, then? |
2397 | Where did He get the soil, and the water, and the seeds, and the first animals? |
2397 | Where did Leila get new baby? 2397 Where is God?" |
2397 | Who made tree grow in house? 2397 Who put chickens in eggs?" |
2397 | Why did father kill sheep? |
2397 | Why is Viney black? |
2397 | Why should I treat these questions differently? |
2397 | Will you go with me and find Viney? |
2397 | when? |
2397 | why? |
2397 | ( puppies)"Why is Elizabeth Evelyn''s sister?" |
2397 | ... Have you seen Kipling''s"Dreaming True,"or"Kitchener''s School?" |
2397 | ... So you read about our class luncheon in the papers? |
2397 | A little French boy will say, Parlez- vous Francais? |
2397 | A moment after she said,"Will you please go first and tell me all about it?" |
2397 | A queer name, is it not? |
2397 | After seeing the chicken come out of the egg, she asked:"Did baby pig grow in egg? |
2397 | After talking about the various things that carpenters make, she asked me,"Did carpenter make me?" |
2397 | Again I asked my teacher,"Is this not love?" |
2397 | Again and again I ask impatiently,"Why concern myself with these explanations and hypotheses?" |
2397 | Am I not very fortunate? |
2397 | And yet how could it possibly have happened? |
2397 | Are we not? |
2397 | Are you not very, very happy? |
2397 | Are you very glad that you could make so many happy? |
2397 | Are you very lonely and sad now? |
2397 | Are you very sad for Edith and me? |
2397 | Are you very, very happy because you can make so many people happy? |
2397 | As soon as I had recovered from my panic sufficiently to say anything, I demanded:"Who put salt in the water?" |
2397 | As we were passing a large globe a short time after she had written the questions, she stopped before it and asked,"Who made the REAL world?" |
2397 | At another time she asked,"Do you not think we would be very much happier always, if we did not have to die?" |
2397 | At another time she asked,"What is a soul?" |
2397 | But I can not imagine who made Mother Nature, can you? |
2397 | But do you not think that God is happy too because you are happy? |
2397 | But how shall I speak of the glories I have since discovered in the Bible? |
2397 | But where is it now? |
2397 | But why should not the friends of the blind assist The Great Round World, if necessary? |
2397 | Can Harry float and swim? |
2397 | Can it walk? |
2397 | Can you see leaves and ferns and bark on the coal? |
2397 | Can you tell me in what paper the article appeared accusing Helen of plagiarism, and giving passages from both stories? |
2397 | Could there be anything more dramatic than the scene in which Esther stands before her wicked lord? |
2397 | Did I tell you in my last letter that I had a new dress, a real party dress with low neck and short sleeves and quite a train? |
2397 | Did Leila tell doctor to get very small new baby? |
2397 | Did you have a pleasant Christmas? |
2397 | Did you know that the blind children are going to have their commencement exercises in Tremont Temple, next Tuesday afternoon? |
2397 | Do deaf children ever learn to speak?" |
2397 | Do they miss their mistress very much? |
2397 | Do you know, I can not help feeling sorry for these trees with all their fashionable airs? |
2397 | Do you like my day- dream? |
2397 | Do you like to look out of your window, and see little stars? |
2397 | Do you like to ride? |
2397 | Do you realize that this is the last letter I shall write to you for a long, long time? |
2397 | Do you remember Dr. Garcelon, who was Governor of Maine several years ago? |
2397 | Do you remember what a happy time we had last Christmas? |
2397 | Do you think Mrs. Spaulding would help me, if I wrote to her? |
2397 | Do you think poor Jakey loved his Father in heaven more because his other father was unkind to him? |
2397 | Do you think the lovely moon was glad that I could speak to her? |
2397 | Does it seem long to you? |
2397 | Does n''t it seem strange that Mr. Anagnos never referred to this interview? |
2397 | Editor of the Boston Herald: My Dear Mr. Holmes:--Will you kindly print in the Herald, the enclosed list? |
2397 | Even to- day, when Miss Keller strikes off a fine phrase, Miss Sullivan says in humorous despair,"I wonder where she got that?" |
2397 | Finding no trace of the cracker there, she pointed to my stomach and spelled"eat,"meaning,"Did you eat it?" |
2397 | Have you ever been at Dr. Crouter''s Institution? |
2397 | Have you read the beautiful poem,"Waiting"? |
2397 | Helen felt the change in her mother''s movements instantly, and asked,"What are we afraid of?" |
2397 | Helen felt the heat and asked,"Did the sun fall?" |
2397 | Here are some of them:"What did God make the new worlds out of?" |
2397 | His methods had probably died with him; and if they had not, how was a little girl in a far- off town in Alabama to receive the benefit of them? |
2397 | How did God tell people that his home was in heaven? |
2397 | How did doctor know where to find baby? |
2397 | How do you like this type- written letter? |
2397 | How is Dick? |
2397 | How is dear little sister? |
2397 | How shall I write of my mother? |
2397 | How would you like that? |
2397 | Huss? |
2397 | I am constantly asked the question,"How did you teach her the meaning of words expressive of intellectual and moral qualities?" |
2397 | I am made of flesh and blood and bone, am I not?" |
2397 | I asked myself,"How does a normal child learn language?" |
2397 | I feel ashamed sometimes, when I make that eloquent man say what sounds absurd or insipid; but how is a school- girl to interpret such genius? |
2397 | I have often been asked,"Do not people bore you?" |
2397 | I love Mark Twain-- who does not? |
2397 | I said,"Will you tell Viney you are very sorry you scratched and kicked her?" |
2397 | I said:"Why do you write those sentences on the board? |
2397 | I should like very much to see you to- day Is the sun very hot in Boston now? |
2397 | I smelt the violets in her hand and asked, half in words, half in signs, a question which meant,"Is love the sweetness of flowers?" |
2397 | I suppose you feel so, too, when you gaze up to the stars in the stillness of the night, do you not?... |
2397 | I then asked her,"Can you think of your soul as separate from your body?" |
2397 | I told her that her hair was brown, and she asked,"Is brown very pretty?" |
2397 | I wonder if you would like to have me tell you a pretty dream which I had a long time ago when I was a very little child? |
2397 | If Helen asked,"Where is mother now?" |
2397 | If I say,"Where is baby''s other ear?" |
2397 | If I say,"Where is the little rogue?" |
2397 | If my little sister comes to Boston next June, will you let me bring her to see you? |
2397 | If she was eating some candy, I said:"Will Helen please give teacher some candy?" |
2397 | Is bug very happy?" |
2397 | Is it blind?" |
2397 | Is it not a beautiful plan? |
2397 | Is it not a pitiful story? |
2397 | Is it not true, then, that my life with all its limitations touches at many points the life of the World Beautiful? |
2397 | Is it possible for the College to accommodate itself to these unprecedented conditions, so as to enable me to pursue my studies at Radcliffe? |
2397 | Is n''t that fine? |
2397 | It is always:"Oh, Miss Sullivan, please come and tell us what Helen means,"or"Miss Sullivan, wo n''t you please explain this to Helen? |
2397 | It is"what?" |
2397 | It seems almost too good to be true, does it not? |
2397 | May I read the book called the Bible? |
2397 | May I? |
2397 | May we go? |
2397 | Mrs. Keller took the baby in her arms, and when we had succeeded in pacifying her, I asked Helen,"What did you do to baby?" |
2397 | My first question was,"Where is Helen?" |
2397 | Need I tell you that I was more than delighted to hear that you are really interested in the"tea"? |
2397 | Of this report Miss Sullivan wrote in a letter dated October 30, 1887:"Have you seen the paper I wrote for the''report''? |
2397 | Of what use would they and their drumsticks be? |
2397 | One day she asked,"Does God take care of us all the time?" |
2397 | One of the ministers wished me to ask Helen,"What do ministers do?" |
2397 | Sept. 1888 My dear Miss Moore Are you very glad to receive a nice letter from your darling little friend? |
2397 | Shall you be very glad to see my teacher next Thursday? |
2397 | She asked the other day,"Who made all things and Boston?" |
2397 | She asked:"Where is heaven, and what is it like? |
2397 | She said:"Can bug know about naughty girl? |
2397 | She then asked,"Who made God?" |
2397 | She was quiet for a moment, and then asked, with spirit:"How do you know that I can not understand? |
2397 | Sometime will they have very well eyes? |
2397 | Sometime will you please come to Alabama and visit me? |
2397 | Soon the dismal night would come-- and was the doll to sit up in the tree all night, and by herself? |
2397 | Tell me truly, do you think me as bad as that? |
2397 | The agitation which I felt evidently produced a perceptible physical change; for Helen asked, excitedly,"What do you see?" |
2397 | The doctor says her mind is too active; but how are we to keep her from thinking? |
2397 | The knowledge does n''t make life any sweeter or happier, does it? |
2397 | The other day Helen came across the word grandfather in a little story and asked her mother,"Where is grandfather?" |
2397 | The other day she asked,"What do my eyes do?" |
2397 | The sigh of Rip as he murmurs,"Is a man so soon forgotten when he is gone?" |
2397 | The sun and the air are God''s free gifts to all we say, but are they so? |
2397 | The"why?" |
2397 | They are always asking:"What does this beauty or that music mean to you? |
2397 | True, single words do suggest and express ideas; the child may say simply"mamma"when he means"Where is mamma?" |
2397 | Turning to my friend, she asked,"Did you cry loud for poor little Florence?" |
2397 | Was it bread that I wanted? |
2397 | Was that not lovely? |
2397 | Was that not very kind? |
2397 | Were n''t we very fortunate? |
2397 | What are boys doing now? |
2397 | What did I do when I was six years old? |
2397 | What do they mean to you?" |
2397 | What if a ray of light should flash through the darkened chambers of my soul? |
2397 | What if in my waking hours a sound should ring through the silent halls of hearing? |
2397 | What if physical conditions have built up high walls about us? |
2397 | What is little boy''s name? |
2397 | What makes the sun hot? |
2397 | What secret power, I wonder, caused this blossoming miracle? |
2397 | What was the book you sent me for my birthday? |
2397 | What was the egg before it was an egg? |
2397 | What was the name of the little boy who fell in love with the beautiful star? |
2397 | What will he play? |
2397 | What would happen, do you think, if some one should try to measure our intelligence by our ability to define the commonest words we use? |
2397 | When I told her that Mildred''s eyes were blue, she asked,"Are they like wee skies?" |
2397 | When asked if she would not like to live ALWAYS in a beautiful country called heaven, her first question was,"Where is heaven?" |
2397 | When friends have told her of the great happiness which awaits her in another life, she instantly asked:"How do you know, if you have not been dead?" |
2397 | When she felt a bas- relief of dancing girls she asked,"Where are the singers?" |
2397 | When she felt the maps and blackboards she asked,"Do men go to school?" |
2397 | When she referred to our conversation again, it was to ask,"Why did not Jesus go away, so that His enemies could not find Him?" |
2397 | When told recently that Hungarians were born musicians, she asked in surprise,"Do they sing when they are born?" |
2397 | Where are many shells?" |
2397 | Where did doctor find Guy and Prince?" |
2397 | Where is he going? |
2397 | Where was I before I came to mother? |
2397 | Who could have dreamed that such beauty lurked in the dark earth, was latent in the tiny seed we planted? |
2397 | Who made the earth and the seas, and everything? |
2397 | Who put her in big hole?" |
2397 | Who put many things on tree?" |
2397 | Who was he and what did he do? |
2397 | Why can not we know as much about heaven as we do about foreign countries?" |
2397 | Why did you ask me?" |
2397 | Why do you not teach me to talk like them? |
2397 | Why does not the earth fall, it is so very large and heavy? |
2397 | Why does the dear Father in heaven think it best for us to have very great sorrow sometimes? |
2397 | Why not, says Miss Sullivan, make a language lesson out of what they were interested in? |
2397 | Why, for instance, does he take the trouble to ascribe motives to me that I never dreamed of? |
2397 | Why? |
2397 | Will you give her yours?" |
2397 | Will you please ask my father to come to train to meet teacher and me? |
2397 | Will you please come to see me soon and take me to the theater? |
2397 | Will you please send it to me? |
2397 | Will you please tell Harry to write me a very long letter soon? |
2397 | Words are the mind''s wings, are they not? |
2397 | Would n''t the children understand if you talked to them about Helen?" |
2397 | Would not it be lovely if Mrs. Pratt could meet us there? |
2397 | Would the bow- and- string tension of life snap? |
2397 | Would the heart, overweighted with sudden joy, stop beating for very excess of happiness? |
2397 | Would you like to see darling little Mildred? |
2397 | You fish out all manner of odds and ends of knowledge-- revolutions, schisms, massacres, systems of government; but Huss-- where is he? |
2397 | and"Where shall I go when I die?" |
2397 | especially"why?" |
47445 | ''Want to set my barn afire with your old pipe, do you?'' 47445 ''When did you get out of jail?'' |
47445 | And you do n''t mind, honey? |
47445 | But I''m afraid it looks like imposing on your good nature just a little? |
47445 | But do n''t you think this is ever so much nicer? |
47445 | Can I make my son or daughter learn Yiddish? |
47445 | Did you ever know a man named Gunther? |
47445 | Do you know that a few men, comparatively, have almost changed the nature of the country and village population? 47445 Does anybody look in my pockets nights?" |
47445 | Gentlemen,said the judge, turning toward the jury,"have you agreed upon a verdict?" |
47445 | Guarantee it? 47445 HOLY MOSES"RISES? |
47445 | Have you agreed upon a verdict? |
47445 | Have you got any idea of how the professional conducts himself on the road? 47445 I do n''t like to presume on your good nature, but I know you wo n''t object to a small box of candy?" |
47445 | I have married two wives; what will happen? |
47445 | I''m a perfect lady, ai n''t I, Honey? |
47445 | Is that your staple article of diet? |
47445 | Is the Stool Pigeon in? |
47445 | Old man, do n''t you know it''s Thanksgivin''day? 47445 Say, now,"continued the man,"can you name me one single newspaper in the state of New York that felt sure of Roosevelt''s election as governor? |
47445 | Shall I be a conductor? |
47445 | Shall I be a lady- figure? |
47445 | Shall I be a street cleaner? |
47445 | Shall I be an actor? |
47445 | Shall I be married in court? |
47445 | Shall I buy the goods? |
47445 | Shall I sue my partner? |
47445 | Shall I take my husband into the store as a partner? |
47445 | Shall I take my wife into the store as a partner? |
47445 | Shall my children play with Christians? |
47445 | Shall we have our cigars and coffee here or in th''drawin''room? |
47445 | Suppose I pay for the article instead of the newspaper? |
47445 | Very plausible, but where are these guarantee companies? |
47445 | What are you going to do about it? |
47445 | What is the explanation? 47445 What would be the broker''s fee?" |
47445 | What''s it for? |
47445 | What? |
47445 | Where did he get it? |
47445 | Who are they? |
47445 | Why do n''t I give it up and settle down in city or village and become a respectable member of the community? |
47445 | Why is a sailor a sailor? 47445 Will my partner sue me?" |
47445 | Will the bank fail? |
47445 | Will the landlord put me out? |
47445 | Wot''s de matter wit''fixin''one up on meself? 47445 Yes-- what of it?" |
47445 | You got what you asked for, did n''t you? |
47445 | You remember the speech of Mark Anthony,he said;"how he produced a tremendous effect with the robe of the great CÃ ¦ sar? |
47445 | You wo n''t mind, honey, if I take a pie home, will you? |
47445 | ''Are any of these concerns promising dividends of 50 per cent and such to be depended on''?" |
47445 | 11:20 a. m.: Said he:"Where is my sin? |
47445 | ARE WE FOLLOWING ROME TO THE PIT? |
47445 | ARE YOU A GRAFTER? |
47445 | And did you ever see the same small boy walking half the distance to get a newspaper for his father? |
47445 | And is it right to thus lure children when adults know that their pennies more than pay for what they get-- premiums and all? |
47445 | And what does it mean? |
47445 | And what is the penalty? |
47445 | And what of the love attachment? |
47445 | And, in turn, how many steps are these cigar machines removed from those in the saloons? |
47445 | Are we allowing the moral tone of society to sink? |
47445 | Are we going the way of Greece and Rome? |
47445 | Are you certain that you are not training a criminal, beginning with him at two years old? |
47445 | Art thou thy brother''s keeper? |
47445 | At early manhood''s gate; Your future lies in your own hand-- Will it be low or great? |
47445 | But for all purposes of publicity have not these refusals to answer carried light enough? |
47445 | But how was the money to be raised? |
47445 | But what of the little gamins that throng Chicago''s streets? |
47445 | But who shall say what another six months may bring forth? |
47445 | But why confine this plan, admirable and satisfactory as it is, to tramps? |
47445 | But would the engineer see the signal in time, or would the rain which was beating down in torrents prevent the engineer from seeing the signal? |
47445 | Ca n''t you buy better linen than that?" |
47445 | Can I forgive you? |
47445 | Can not the same results be accomplished with the human being? |
47445 | Can there be any doubt these are used when concerns devote their entire time to manufacturing them and can get such high prices? |
47445 | Can there be anything worse than holding out love potions to married women to compel other women''s husbands to love them? |
47445 | Color of eyes? |
47445 | Color of hair? |
47445 | Complexion? |
47445 | Could anything shout forth the tremendous energy of the man in any plainer terms? |
47445 | Detective Wooldridge replied,"Do you remember Admiral George Dewey at Manila Bay who told Captain Gridley to fire when he got ready?" |
47445 | Did I succeed? |
47445 | Did you ever feel like jumpin''from de bridge fur lack of a stingy little dime fur booze?" |
47445 | Did you ever see a small boy walking ahead of a band, with the music playing? |
47445 | Did you ever see the game? |
47445 | Dig down under the"guarantee"of the company which asks you to invest your savings and what do you find? |
47445 | Do any of the pictures we have submitted to you suit, and will you marry? |
47445 | Do n''t you hear the bells ringin''? |
47445 | Do n''t you see that makes your stock as solid as a government bond? |
47445 | Do our educational methods do as much for our children? |
47445 | Do the big fish bite? |
47445 | Do you reckon I''d dine alone on a day like this? |
47445 | Do you use tobacco or liquor? |
47445 | Do you want me to tell you the five reasons why?" |
47445 | Do you wonder I''m what I am?" |
47445 | Does Dr. B---- cure cancer? |
47445 | Does James Johnson wish to sell his stock at a substantial advance? |
47445 | Even when Guerin followed her to California she dared to wire Mike:"Web Guerin is coming; fear I shall be compromised; shall I come back?" |
47445 | Extent of education: common, high school or university? |
47445 | Get all able- bodied convicts into road- making for a single generation, and what would result? |
47445 | Hain''t it a country out in Asia some place?" |
47445 | Have you learned the old saying of pearls before swine? |
47445 | He has been cured? |
47445 | He went through it like an old goat through a cracker barrel, but he did n''t find anything-- see? |
47445 | How do safe burglars get their tools? |
47445 | How do you like this celery? |
47445 | How is it out in the country? |
47445 | How is it possible for a man or woman to lead an upright, useful life after they once come under the ban of the law? |
47445 | How many of these operations were actually necessary? |
47445 | How many people die from wholly unnecessary operations? |
47445 | How much real estate do you own? |
47445 | How shall he meet and battle with the great world of commerce and labor after twenty years of this? |
47445 | I save such people money, do n''t I? |
47445 | If not, where is the weakness? |
47445 | If we secured you a wife worth$ 250,000 would you be willing to pay us a small commission for our trouble? |
47445 | In what way is this make- believe fitting him for liberty? |
47445 | Income per year? |
47445 | Is he liar, thief-- perhaps of insane ego as he was when he first toddled from his mother''s arms? |
47445 | Is it any wonder, then, that the city brings forth an appalling annual crop of criminals? |
47445 | Is it remorse for a crime, or longing and grief for a dead admirer? |
47445 | Is it right to get something for which no return of money or labor is given? |
47445 | Is not the child as responsive? |
47445 | Is such a life worth living? |
47445 | Is that an alluring spectacle? |
47445 | Is there a menace in the rapid increase of wealth in the United States? |
47445 | Is this the proper training to give children? |
47445 | Is this thy mission in this place-- This idleness which brings disdain? |
47445 | It might be asked in the light of the above exposà © s of so- called specialists, are there no honest ones? |
47445 | Life would be one long, sweet song if everyone paid for goods as soon as they were ordered, would n''t it?" |
47445 | Look at this balance?" |
47445 | MARRIED TWO WIVES; WHAT WILL HAPPEN? |
47445 | Makes you open your eyes, does n''t it? |
47445 | Manufacturer, what arrangements have you made to guarantee your capital stock?" |
47445 | Men have come to us, desperate, despairing men, crying:"For God''s sake, what are we to do? |
47445 | Mills said to Miss Headley, after meeting her the second time:"How anxious are you to marry me? |
47445 | NAW-- WHAT WAS IT? |
47445 | Nationality? |
47445 | No? |
47445 | Or is it despair for a wasted life, a hopeless future, a thousand lost opportunities? |
47445 | Profession? |
47445 | Q. Circumference of chest? |
47445 | Q. Circumference of head( just above ears)? |
47445 | Q. Circumference of neck? |
47445 | Q. Circumference of waist? |
47445 | Should he steal an ax, shovel, plow, sheep, calf or break into the house and steal a watch or clothes, what is he going to do with his plunder? |
47445 | Suppose he did die worth a million dollars, whom will it benefit? |
47445 | That means an hour and a half, and when I thank the farmer for his generosity and get ready to go on, he says:"''Goin'', eh? |
47445 | The cover of the pamphlet bears the assurance:"Are your interests protected? |
47445 | The first question in the fortune tellers book under"Travel and Letters"is,"Where did my husband elope to?" |
47445 | Then he continued:"Does anybody ever see Arthur Meeker take a cab to ride a few blocks? |
47445 | Those who are in doubt about work have many questions to select from, the list starting off like this:"Shall I be a letter carrier?" |
47445 | To illustrate, take this group of questions under the general classifications"Home and Children":"Can I learn English?" |
47445 | Under what possible circumstances could he use it in any legitimate way? |
47445 | Under"Business"some of the questions are:"Shall I remain a peddler or keep a store?" |
47445 | Under"Love and Marriage"are these questions, among many others:"Is my bride''s dowry as big as she says it is?" |
47445 | Under"Luck and Losses"are:"Was I robbed by friends or strangers?" |
47445 | WHAT WILL WE DO WITH THE VAGRANT AND TRAMP? |
47445 | WIFE OR GALLOWS? |
47445 | Weight? |
47445 | What are the elements in its life that breed criminals? |
47445 | What are you doing with your child''s sense of right and wrong? |
47445 | What became of those pearls of mine? |
47445 | What causes thousands of young boys to take up a criminal life? |
47445 | What good will it do? |
47445 | What is my name? |
47445 | What is the matter with Chicago? |
47445 | What is your boy at six years of age? |
47445 | What language do you speak? |
47445 | What must we do to change conditions? |
47445 | What possible benefit can be suggested to offset the evils which we have spoken of? |
47445 | What was to be done to bring the train to a stop so that they could board it? |
47445 | What yer got in there?'' |
47445 | When did I start? |
47445 | When have I heard that word before? |
47445 | Where born? |
47445 | Where can we go and what can we do?" |
47445 | Who would emulate it? |
47445 | Why am I a tramp? |
47445 | Why did the men who worked this scheme to steal the moral support of the big trust company go to so great pains to get it? |
47445 | Why haggard thus thy fair, young face With vigils, passions, aimed at gain? |
47445 | Why is a tramp a tramp? |
47445 | Why not extend it so as to include criminals? |
47445 | Why not reorganize a system of confinement in such a way as to compel criminals to support themselves? |
47445 | Why not use the same precaution when buying stock? |
47445 | Why should a man like that be allowed to carry a pistol at all? |
47445 | Why should we permit men to manufacture and sell instruments of crime-- weapons which are designed for no other purpose? |
47445 | Why? |
47445 | Why? |
47445 | Why? |
47445 | Why? |
47445 | Will he be a better citizen, a more loving father or husband or son, when he is released? |
47445 | Will they find any such glorious end? |
47445 | Will you apologize?" |
47445 | [ Illustration: Can a Man or Woman Know Each Other Before Marriage? |
47445 | [ Illustration: DID YA SEEN IT HEN? |
47445 | [ Illustration: Do they think about us at home? |
47445 | [ Illustration: Raggles--"Why did yer refuse what she offered yer?" |
47445 | [ Illustration: WHICH ROAD SHALL HE TAKE? |
47445 | [ Illustration: WHO SAID I LOST TWENTY DOLLARS?] |
47445 | [ Illustration: What Are YOU Going to Do About It?] |
47445 | [ Illustration: With some of the water out of her food, All profits milked out, too, With little to eat and going dry, What is the poor beast to do?] |
47445 | [ Illustration:"WHEN DID YOU GET OUT OF JAIL?" |
47445 | says the victim,"and I give you fifty dollars, would n''t that repay you for your trouble in writing the article?" |
33255 | And you really think the men would take an interest, and make such a thing go? |
33255 | Are you asleep yet, Tom? |
33255 | Are you sure you''d better do this? |
33255 | Brown, do n''t you know that you must n''t leave your place without permission? |
33255 | But do n''t you see, Tom, that they could n''t do that without putting the whole thing on the bum, and depriving the rest of us of our privileges? 33255 But how about your clothes? |
33255 | By the way, Tom, did you go up to that Bertillon room? |
33255 | Ca n''t you give instructions to all the officers to say nothing about it outside? |
33255 | Captain,I say, politely,"what was that noise I heard a short while ago?" |
33255 | Come to let you out; and you did n''t go? 33255 Did I? |
33255 | Did n''t you really know, or would n''t you be a stool- pigeon? |
33255 | Did you hear anything last night, Tom? |
33255 | Do I understand that you refuse to work? |
33255 | Do you know how men feel when they leave such a place as this? |
33255 | Do you mean the jail? |
33255 | Do you still refuse to work? |
33255 | Good morning, Thomas, how did you get through the night? |
33255 | Has he gone? |
33255 | Have n''t the men done fine? 33255 Hey, Tom, did you know a fellow committed suicide in your cell once?" |
33255 | How are you feeling, Tom? |
33255 | How are you feeling? |
33255 | How did it happen? |
33255 | How did you sleep? |
33255 | How do the men treat you? |
33255 | How do you feel? 33255 How do you like your job?" |
33255 | How many bottoms do you two men make a day? |
33255 | How many fellows are there in here? |
33255 | I do n''t see any bed; how can there be any bedbugs? |
33255 | I wonder who those guys are, rubbering around? |
33255 | In Heaven''s name, P. K., what is Sunday? 33255 Is a whistling prisoner worse than a whistling girl?" |
33255 | Is it good- bye, now, Tom? |
33255 | Is this Thomas Brown? |
33255 | No, did he? |
33255 | Now how about the jail? 33255 Now what in thunder do you mean by that?" |
33255 | Say, would you mind if I called you by your first name? |
33255 | Shave, Brown? |
33255 | Tea, Tommy? |
33255 | Then you think that if the right men were trusted they could take care of the bad ones? |
33255 | Was it so very bad? |
33255 | Was n''t there another fellow here, a chap named Lavinsky, who was brought down on Wednesday evening? |
33255 | Well, Brown, how did you enjoy your dinner, good? |
33255 | Well, Brown, how did you get by last night? |
33255 | Well, Brown, how did you like bucket duty? |
33255 | Well, Mr. Brown, how do you feel to- day? |
33255 | Well, Tom, how did you enjoy your dinner? |
33255 | Well, did you ever see anything so raw as that? |
33255 | Well, how are you coming on? |
33255 | Well, how in the devil did you get that? |
33255 | Well, old pal, how are you feeling to- day? |
33255 | Well, that would all be first rate,is my interested comment;"but how about the discipline? |
33255 | Well, what had better be done? |
33255 | Were you measured and photographed, and all that? |
33255 | What about that poor fellow they dragged down to the jail night before last? |
33255 | What am I going to do now? |
33255 | What are you going to do? |
33255 | What can you tell me about it? |
33255 | What did you tell him? |
33255 | What do you mean? |
33255 | What have you to say for yourself? |
33255 | What is the use,I say to all of them,"of letting your tempers get the better of you when it hurts nobody but yourselves?" |
33255 | What made you think of that? |
33255 | What sort of a fellow was he? |
33255 | What''s the matter, Tom? |
33255 | What''s the matter? |
33255 | What''s the matter? |
33255 | Where do you come from? |
33255 | Who is that? |
33255 | Who was that? 33255 Why not?" |
33255 | Would there be a job for a bricklayer around here? |
33255 | Yes, but how? |
33255 | You still feel, then, as if you wanted to try the jail? |
33255 | [ 11]Do you really think, Jack, that the Superintendent and the Warden could trust you fellows out in the yard on Sunday afternoons in summer?" |
33255 | ------------------------------------------------------------------------ CHAPTER XV CUI BONO? |
33255 | Ai n''t the keeper enough? |
33255 | Am I going mad? |
33255 | And are not falsehood and hypocrisy always hateful? |
33255 | And as they undoubtedly possess that power, he is always fearful that they may use it, for are they not dangerous"criminals"? |
33255 | And if I am almost stifling with anger at the outrage, what must those men feel who are really suffering? |
33255 | And is it not the better side that is the more important for us to consider? |
33255 | And now the next question is: what can be done with this knowledge? |
33255 | And now---- Can the world hold any tragedy more terrible than this? |
33255 | And these are mighty fine qualities outside prison; why then are they not equally fine inside? |
33255 | And, if so, how do you propose to be sent?" |
33255 | And, if they do not look with favor upon my action, in what way will their resentment be shown? |
33255 | Andy, of course, felt badly, but used to come back with a"What''s biting you people, anyway? |
33255 | Are not truth and courage and devotion to be welcomed wherever found? |
33255 | Are they not worth saving? |
33255 | Are they specimens of"the criminal"we have had pictured to us in so many works on"Penology"? |
33255 | Are we to see the efforts of your Commission defeated at this time? |
33255 | Are you awake?" |
33255 | Are you still determined to go there? |
33255 | As I leave the prison again, there ring in my ears the questions: What has happened? |
33255 | As we go along the gallery the man just behind me whispers,"Well, Tom, how do you like it?" |
33255 | Because why? |
33255 | Before the morning is over George, the trusty, comes along saying:"Shave, Jack?" |
33255 | But again, how is it possible to hear them so far away, shut in as we are by stone walls and iron doors? |
33255 | But again, why worry? |
33255 | But at the present moment what am I to do? |
33255 | But look here,"I continue,"I''m making no kick, and I''m perfectly satisfied where I am; but what was the reason for the change of plan? |
33255 | But what do these poor fellows do after marching through the yard in a real drenching shower? |
33255 | But why worry? |
33255 | But, although they may form the toughest bunch in prison, they evidently have their better side also, and is that not just as real as the worse side? |
33255 | But, say, what''re you in for?" |
33255 | CUI BONO? |
33255 | Ca n''t you let him have some more?" |
33255 | Could each company have a convict officer, a lieutenant to assist the regular captain?" |
33255 | Did you think I was n''t wise? |
33255 | Did you? |
33255 | Do n''t you believe it?" |
33255 | Do n''t you understand that I''m a convict?" |
33255 | Do n''t you want me to fix it so that you can get a decent suit?" |
33255 | Do you think God approves of your infernal jail? |
33255 | Do you think the crooks will all recognize me as one of themselves?" |
33255 | Do you want to know my name? |
33255 | Down there the inmate officers are appointed by the prison authorities, are n''t they? |
33255 | For what, I wonder? |
33255 | Funny name for an Irishman, ai n''t it? |
33255 | Give these forces free play, and who knows what the result may be? |
33255 | Has that boy no good in him worth developing? |
33255 | Have you anything but the prison suit you get on your discharge?" |
33255 | He had to put his waste somewhere, so why not use the rivers? |
33255 | He''s all right, ai n''t he? |
33255 | How am I going to get an honest job? |
33255 | How are you feeling now?" |
33255 | How are you standing it?" |
33255 | How can I not speak of them? |
33255 | How can I preach resignation and patience against this dark background of horror? |
33255 | How can I send it? |
33255 | How can I speak of these things? |
33255 | How can I trust myself to say anything? |
33255 | How can I urge good conduct, when my whole soul cries out in revolt? |
33255 | How can it be utilized for the state? |
33255 | How could he have? |
33255 | How did you do it?" |
33255 | How do they ever stand it? |
33255 | How do they ever stand it? |
33255 | How does any man remain sane, I wonder, caged in this stone grave day after day, night after night? |
33255 | How in the world am I ever to speak to those men in chapel? |
33255 | How in the world do they bear it-- the men who look forward to long years of imprisonment? |
33255 | How many more men like Jim are there in prison? |
33255 | How many prisoners have you had out on the roads? |
33255 | How much of a chance have I to get an honest job? |
33255 | How would you manage?" |
33255 | I guess they knew you was comin'', did n''t they? |
33255 | I must not speak of the jail; but how can I help speaking of it? |
33255 | I understand that the form this took was something of this sort:"If you want to kill me, why do n''t you do it at once, and not torture me to death?" |
33255 | If he is found out in a lie he is punished-- but how often is he found out? |
33255 | If such a sense of responsibility could be developed while in prison, would it not greatly help in a man''s conduct after his release? |
33255 | If you feel that you can make good-- why? |
33255 | If you use the jail with its dark cells and bread and water for whispering in the shop, what have you left when a man tries to murder his keeper?" |
33255 | Is it any wonder that he feels gloomy? |
33255 | Is it merely prejudice that makes me think that letter an exceptionally charming one? |
33255 | Is it possible that I am being made the victim of a clever system of deception? |
33255 | Is n''t it the Lord''s Day? |
33255 | Is that guy, Tom Osborne, workin''there yet?" |
33255 | Is there any possible connection between these two facts? |
33255 | Is this Prison System anything but organized lunacy? |
33255 | Is this to be crushed and turned to despair? |
33255 | It is all very well to look forward to that landmark, but what after that? |
33255 | It said quite plainly,"How do you do?" |
33255 | It suddenly occurs to me that this audience is no longer gray; why did I ever think it so? |
33255 | Jack Murphy, when I talked with him about it to- day, said,"What good would it do you, to go and work in a shop where you ca n''t talk? |
33255 | Jack continues,"Does he think he can put that over on us?" |
33255 | Just explain to the P. K., will you? |
33255 | Must we not find some way in which the good there is in these broken lives can be repaired and made useful to society? |
33255 | Nobody can eat this slag, can they?" |
33255 | Now how long do you say you want to stay there?" |
33255 | Now the question in mind is,"Did Jack give him that broom to clean out the shop, or did he mean the whole place needed a cleaning out?" |
33255 | Now, that''s what I do n''t call honest, do you?" |
33255 | Number One, did you ever have the blues-- real, dark, deep indigo, bluey blues? |
33255 | Of course, now that you are free, you will be in for your knocks as an ex- con and all that, but why worry? |
33255 | Oh, what in Hell shall I do?" |
33255 | Oh, why do n''t they come?" |
33255 | Or why not let out only those men who have a good conduct bar? |
33255 | Say, Tom, do you think I can get a job, here in Auburn? |
33255 | Seems as if they did n''t want you to make our acquaintance, do n''t it?" |
33255 | Shall I go back to my cell or shall I spend the night down here? |
33255 | So the company I am in is the one I have been dreading, is it? |
33255 | Someone sung in a low tone that old time melody,"O what has changed them?" |
33255 | That is all very well; but why was the night officer lurking in the dark behind the Warden? |
33255 | The hash is better than that which we had for breakfast on-- Wednesday, was it? |
33255 | The hour is about-- but why attempt to specify the exact time? |
33255 | Then why, in Heaven''s name, do you exhaust your severest punishment on trivial offences? |
33255 | Then, as if the idea of sociability had suggested it,"Any bedbugs yet?" |
33255 | This is the place where I had expected to meet the violent and dangerous criminals; but what do I find? |
33255 | To which side, the better or the worse, does the Prison System now appeal? |
33255 | To- night''s paper?" |
33255 | We put''em in on Sunday; why should n''t we take''em out?" |
33255 | Well, Dan,"he adds, turning to Grant,"is everything perfectly clear?" |
33255 | Well, then, they''ll have your picture in the rogues''gallery, wo n''t they, along with the rest of us?" |
33255 | What about those bad actors who do n''t know how to behave? |
33255 | What are men made of who can treat human beings like that? |
33255 | What can I do? |
33255 | What can anyone do? |
33255 | What can be the explanation of it all? |
33255 | What can it be? |
33255 | What can it be?" |
33255 | What can one do except to humble oneself before such a spirit of self- sacrifice? |
33255 | What course did the System take in dealing with that suffering human being? |
33255 | What did the convicts think of it all? |
33255 | What did they want?" |
33255 | What did you tell''em?" |
33255 | What do you say to that?" |
33255 | What do you say, boys, to a nice, juicy beefsteak with fried potatoes?" |
33255 | What do you think they wanted to do with Abey and me?" |
33255 | What does it all mean? |
33255 | What does it all mean? |
33255 | What had the prison done to aid him in developing strength of character? |
33255 | What has become of the man? |
33255 | What in Heaven''s name can I say? |
33255 | What is it that has happened? |
33255 | What manner of man is this?''" |
33255 | What next? |
33255 | What of the ten- hour night ahead of me? |
33255 | What shall I do? |
33255 | What shall we do to him for violating the rules and smashing our system?" |
33255 | What shall we talk about?" |
33255 | What transformation has taken place? |
33255 | What will they be like at close range? |
33255 | What would you say now to a nice, thick, juicy steak with fried potatoes?" |
33255 | What''s he doin''now?" |
33255 | What''s he paid for? |
33255 | What''s the matter?" |
33255 | When Charley Murphy was wiping his beezer on the bar towel and asking,"Wot''ll youse guys have next?" |
33255 | When I am called up to the platform, as I soon shall be, what shall I say to these men? |
33255 | When shall I be placed with that tough bunch?" |
33255 | Where did I leave my umber- rella?" |
33255 | Where shall I be at this time to- morrow, I wonder? |
33255 | Which does it encourage and develop? |
33255 | Which shall it be? |
33255 | Why did n''t the P. K. put me where we had decided? |
33255 | Why indeed? |
33255 | Wo n''t they quarrel and fight and try to escape?" |
33255 | Would it not be well to find out about it?" |
33255 | Would you let everybody out into the yard? |
33255 | You ca n''t ask the officers to give up their day off, and you do n''t think the men could be trusted by themselves, do you?" |
33255 | You do n''t mean to say that you''re the guy?" |
33255 | You know matches are pretty scarce here, do n''t you? |
33255 | and incidentally to help these men who need help so badly? |
33255 | how long are you goin''to be here?" |
29569 | About the operation? |
29569 | And did you send for Pearl Bryan then? |
29569 | And do you deny, in the presence of the corpse, that you killed her? |
29569 | And how was the affair planned? |
29569 | And to shield who? |
29569 | And you knew this? |
29569 | Are you afraid of getting lynched? |
29569 | At that time you thought you would accompany her? |
29569 | But you met the girl at the depot when she came to Cincinnati? |
29569 | Can you account for Jackson and Walling the night preceding the finding of the body? |
29569 | Can you say whether or not the cuts on her hand were recently inflicted? |
29569 | Can you say whether the head was cut off before or after death? 29569 Did Jackson act queer that night?" |
29569 | Did Jackson order any drinks? |
29569 | Did he bring a satchel with him on Saturday night? |
29569 | Did he dictate it? |
29569 | Did he give it to her? |
29569 | Did he mention the name of the doctor? |
29569 | Did he tell any one else that? |
29569 | Did n''t you leave one over at Legner''s saloon Saturday, and a different one Monday? |
29569 | Did n''t you take an interest in the murder when you read of Greencastle being the probable home of the murdered girl? |
29569 | Did n''t you take it away Monday morning and leave another? |
29569 | Did n''t you think the girl would be heard from? |
29569 | Did she ever live out? |
29569 | Did she seem pleased? |
29569 | Did the Sheriff tell you that? |
29569 | Did the girl know of that at that time? |
29569 | Did the plan suit you? |
29569 | Did you come from Greencastle? |
29569 | Did you ever correspond with Pearl Bryan? |
29569 | Did you ever go out with her? |
29569 | Did you have a long talk with the girl? |
29569 | Did you have any other business at the train? |
29569 | Did you have anything to do with the woman down at Greencastle? |
29569 | Did you have it with you in the evening? |
29569 | Did you know for what purpose? |
29569 | Did you know that she had been betrayed? |
29569 | Did you make any other examination? |
29569 | Did you meet any one else you knew? |
29569 | Did you meet any one else you knew? |
29569 | Did you notice any other cut? |
29569 | Did you observe no cut on the thumb? |
29569 | Did you read of the girl probably being from Greencastle? |
29569 | Did you read of the murder? |
29569 | Did you receive any letters from Jackson about the condition of Miss Bryan? |
29569 | Did you see him any more that night? |
29569 | Did you take it away the same day? |
29569 | Did you write a letter to Wood advising him to give her---- of----? |
29569 | Did your roommate? |
29569 | Do n''t you know it is blood? |
29569 | Do you fear being mobbed over there? |
29569 | Do you know Pearl Bryan? |
29569 | Do you know Walling? |
29569 | Do you know William Wood? |
29569 | Do you know of any other men she kept company with? |
29569 | Do you know that he sent the letter? |
29569 | Do you know that it is the body of Pearl Bryan? |
29569 | Do you know where he was going to take her? |
29569 | Do you know where the operation was performed? |
29569 | Do you know who it is? |
29569 | Do you know who the lady was? |
29569 | Do you remember leaving a valise in Legner''s saloon last Saturday night? |
29569 | Do you think he did that? |
29569 | Do you think the murdered girl is Pearl Bryan? |
29569 | Does she live at home? |
29569 | Does your family visit the Bryans? |
29569 | Ever see a picture of him? |
29569 | Ever since January 22? |
29569 | Ever stay there over night? |
29569 | For what purpose? |
29569 | Has Jackson or Walling made any statements in your presence concerning the crime? |
29569 | Has it been returned? |
29569 | Have you any other evidence? |
29569 | Have you discovered by what means she came to her death? |
29569 | Have you seen her since? |
29569 | Have you seen him since? |
29569 | Have you talked about the murder? |
29569 | He will substantiate your statement then? |
29569 | He''s putting it all on me now, is he? 29569 How about Saturday evening?" |
29569 | How about Thursday night? |
29569 | How did he do it? |
29569 | How did she find that out? |
29569 | How did you come to room together here? |
29569 | How did you come to take that valise to the saloon? |
29569 | How did you find that out? |
29569 | How did you happen to take it out Saturday night? |
29569 | How do you account for the condition of your trousers, which have been found and are now in the possession of the authorities? |
29569 | How far was it from your room? |
29569 | How long have you been at the dental college? |
29569 | How old are you? |
29569 | How old are you? |
29569 | How, and where was she killed? |
29569 | I will ask you if, in your opinion( you have described the condition of the body), whether or not the head was cut off at that place? |
29569 | Is n''t that the valise in which you carried the head? |
29569 | Is that right? |
29569 | Is that the face of a criminal? 29569 Is this Mayor Caldwell?" |
29569 | It looks like blood? |
29569 | Jackson did you kill this woman? |
29569 | Jackson, do you recognize the corpse? |
29569 | Married or single? |
29569 | Must I tell about this? |
29569 | Never saw him? |
29569 | Now, why did you write that letter? |
29569 | Oh, my God, what will my poor mother say? |
29569 | Old or new number? |
29569 | Please state if on February 1 you saw the headless body of a woman on the premises of John Lock, in the Highlands? |
29569 | See any one else? |
29569 | She was not a farmhand? |
29569 | State from your examination to your best knowledge and belief who committed the crime? |
29569 | Strap or handbag? |
29569 | Then Bert means Miss Bryan? |
29569 | Then Miss Bryan left on the same train that your father came home on? |
29569 | Then you know more about the crime than you have admitted? |
29569 | Very well? |
29569 | Walling did you kill this woman? |
29569 | Was Jackson as merry as usual? |
29569 | Was Wood supposed to be Miss Bryan''s sweetheart? |
29569 | Was he in your saloon on Friday night last? |
29569 | Was it heavy? |
29569 | Was she of a quiet disposition? |
29569 | Was the head in the lot? |
29569 | Was the letter you received from Jackson the only way that you knew that the girl had been betrayed? |
29569 | Was your roommate there? |
29569 | Well, now, did you do it or did Jackson? 29569 Well, then, where is the head?" |
29569 | Well, what became of the head? 29569 Well, who did?" |
29569 | Were you friends? |
29569 | Were you in Newport lately? |
29569 | Were you in Wallingford''s saloon with Jackson and a girl last Friday night? |
29569 | Were you over in Cincinnati before? |
29569 | What arrangement did Jackson say he had made when he wrote to you? |
29569 | What day was that? |
29569 | What did he say? |
29569 | What did he say? |
29569 | What did he tell you had become of the head? |
29569 | What did he want with it? |
29569 | What did it consist of? |
29569 | What did you do with it? |
29569 | What did you do with the clothing? |
29569 | What did you do with them? |
29569 | What did you do? |
29569 | What did you leave it in Kugel''s saloon for? |
29569 | What did you say to that? |
29569 | What did you tell her? |
29569 | What do her parents do? |
29569 | What do you mean by throwing it overboard? |
29569 | What do you mean? |
29569 | What do you think became of her jacket? |
29569 | What do you think became of it? |
29569 | What do you think he did with the head? |
29569 | What does that signature, the letter D., mean? |
29569 | What else did he say? |
29569 | What evidence have you to submit in identifying the body? |
29569 | What fingers? |
29569 | What have you found to lead you to that belief? |
29569 | What have you to say to that? |
29569 | What have you to say to the telegram? |
29569 | What is Hackelman''s first name? |
29569 | What is his business? |
29569 | What is in there? |
29569 | What is it stained with? |
29569 | What is it? |
29569 | What is your name? |
29569 | What is your occupation? |
29569 | What is your roommate''s name? |
29569 | What kind of a looking girl is Pearl? |
29569 | What kind of valise was it? |
29569 | What makes you think so? |
29569 | What plea will you enter next Monday? |
29569 | What plea will you enter? |
29569 | What reason have you for this belief? |
29569 | What time did he get home that night? |
29569 | What time did you go to your room? |
29569 | What time was that? |
29569 | What was in it first? |
29569 | What was in it? |
29569 | What were you so anxious to get rid of them for? |
29569 | What will she weigh? |
29569 | What''s the charge against this man? |
29569 | When did he kill her? |
29569 | When did you see Jackson last? |
29569 | When was Miss Bryan up to Cincinnati? |
29569 | When? |
29569 | When? |
29569 | Where are they? |
29569 | Where did Jackson go when he left Greencastle? |
29569 | Where did that blood come from? |
29569 | Where did you eat? |
29569 | Where did you get it? |
29569 | Where did you go in the evening? |
29569 | Where did you go? |
29569 | Where did you last see her? |
29569 | Where did you last see her? |
29569 | Where did you see him? |
29569 | Where do you live? |
29569 | Where do you live? |
29569 | Where do you think he was on the Wednesday night before the murder? |
29569 | Where do you think it is buried? |
29569 | Where does he live? |
29569 | Where else have you roomed? |
29569 | Where had your father been? |
29569 | Where is it now? |
29569 | Where is your home? |
29569 | Where on Richmond Street? |
29569 | Where then? |
29569 | Where were you Thursday night? |
29569 | Where were you born? |
29569 | Where were you going when you were arrested? |
29569 | Where were you? |
29569 | Where you intimate with the girl? |
29569 | Where you with him very long? |
29569 | Whereabouts? |
29569 | Who did kill her? |
29569 | Who do you think murdered the girl? |
29569 | Who is meant by Bert? |
29569 | Who then? |
29569 | Who took supper with you Friday evening? |
29569 | Who was she? |
29569 | Who was the girl whom you were with? |
29569 | Who was with you? |
29569 | Whose clothing was it? |
29569 | Whose coat is it? |
29569 | Why are you so sure of the night? |
29569 | Why did you change your mind? |
29569 | Why did you do that? |
29569 | Why did you leave the valise at the saloon? |
29569 | Why did you pass the house and look up at it? |
29569 | Why did you put it there? |
29569 | Why did you tell Wood to be careful what he wrote? |
29569 | Why did you want to get rid of it? |
29569 | Why do n''t you tell the truth about this? |
29569 | Why do n''t you tell? 29569 Why should he be arrested?" |
29569 | Why? |
29569 | Will you explain to the jury whether the cuts on the fingers were made before death? |
29569 | Would you recognize it if you did? |
29569 | Would you recognize that picture if you were to see it? |
29569 | You are also known as Dusty? |
29569 | You had two valises, did n''t you? |
29569 | You have not been home to- day? |
29569 | You knew Pearl Bryan? |
29569 | You left the lady this evening and went to supper, and then walked around town? |
29569 | You say there was nothing in the valise? |
29569 | You took a great deal of interest in the case, did you not? |
29569 | You were in the habit of paying your respects to her? |
29569 | About two o''clock Jackson entered into a conversation with the turnkey in which almost his first question was:"Has n''t Walling been arrested yet?" |
29569 | After what I have related Colonel Deitsch asked:"Where is Pearl Bryan?" |
29569 | Colonel Deitsch at this point reviewed the evidence against the prisoner and the Greencastle part of it, and said:"And you did n''t inquire about it?" |
29569 | He read it carefully, and then said:"Oh my God, what will my poor mother say?" |
29569 | He sat on the settee, and I asked,"Where is Pearl Bryan?" |
29569 | He says to me,"What shall I do?" |
29569 | How can I think otherwise when an authority like Sheriff Plummer told me that if we were taken over to Newport the people there would lynch us sure?" |
29569 | I asked the question,"Do you know where Pearl Bryan is?" |
29569 | I says,"Do you ask me the question?" |
29569 | Mrs. Stanley sobbing heavily cried:"Mr. Jackson, I come to you and ask where is my sister''s head?" |
29569 | Not a word was said until Chief Deitsch, at the other end asked:"Walling do you recognize the corpse?" |
29569 | Or, if death resulted from the severance?" |
29569 | Says I,"Did you observe anything unusual?" |
29569 | The Sheriff called the names of the jurors summoned for duty, and these having been disposed of the Judge asked:"Is the Commonwealth ready?" |
29569 | The examination was as follows:"What is your name?" |
29569 | The questions and answers were as follows:"What is your name?" |
29569 | Thomas?" |
29569 | WAS IT FATE OR WAS IT DESTINE? |
29569 | Walling finally said:"Why do n''t you tell where the head is, Jackson? |
29569 | Walling says,''Jackson, why do n''t you tell him where those things are, you might just as well do it now as any time?'' |
29569 | Was it cruel fate which led pure, beautiful, innocent and attractive Pearl Bryan into the toils of such a fiend in human shape? |
29569 | When he had traversed part of the square Detective Bulmer stepped up to him, saying:"Your name is Jackson, is n''t it?" |
29569 | Where were you last Friday evening?" |
29569 | Whereupon Walling says,''No, you know that you killed her; and why do n''t you tell where her head is?'' |
29569 | Who was the murdered woman and who could have committed the horrible atrocity? |
29569 | Wo n''t you please tell me, I beg of you?" |
29569 | what is this for?" |
45412 | Afraid of what? |
45412 | And are they absolutely free? |
45412 | And has yo''honest nowhah er to sleep? |
45412 | And what do they pay? |
45412 | And what do you do? |
45412 | And what is he in there for? |
45412 | Are you hungry? |
45412 | Are you out of a job, too? |
45412 | But what of Deer Island? |
45412 | Ca n''t I go out and get something for you? |
45412 | Ca n''t you see? 45412 Can a man with no crime but poverty go there and get work, and be paid for it?" |
45412 | Can you direct me to the round- house? |
45412 | Can you show a fellow where he can lie down? |
45412 | Could I get anything to eat before going to bed? |
45412 | Dell me, vhere I find me a lawyer? |
45412 | Do they steal those little things because they are hungry? |
45412 | Do you mean the State of New York, or a personal experience with John Barleycorn? 45412 Do you pay the fare there?" |
45412 | Do you think it''s a tramp''s? |
45412 | Gad,he said, as he eyed me closely,"how many baths do you take a day?" |
45412 | Got any money? |
45412 | Have they a Free Municipal Emergency Home in this city? |
45412 | Have we been up here four hours? 45412 Have you a card?" |
45412 | Have you a railroad ticket? |
45412 | Have you any money? |
45412 | He has just gone,was the answer,"but what do you want of him?" |
45412 | How about the state of intoxication? |
45412 | How do you get there? |
45412 | How long are they kept in there? |
45412 | How many times have I got to tell you fellows to get out of here? 45412 I am a lawyer,"I responded;"what is the trouble?" |
45412 | I do, where is it, and what is it? |
45412 | I suppose I could run away if I had the strength,I continued,"and if I did, what then?" |
45412 | If he is dead, what then? |
45412 | If you''re sick why do n''t you go to the hospital? |
45412 | Is my pay assured when my work is done? |
45412 | Is the American police system brutal toward the homeless out- of- work man? |
45412 | Is there a law in Massachusetts allowing a man to be condemned and thrust into a dungeon for ten days for a petty offense like this? |
45412 | Is this true? |
45412 | Is yo''sho''nuff broke? |
45412 | It is a rich man''s club, is n''t it? 45412 Ma, can you give this hungry man something to eat?" |
45412 | That would be begging, would n''t it? 45412 Was it not in the city jail?" |
45412 | Well, what are you doing here? |
45412 | Were there no means of rescue provided for such an emergency? |
45412 | Whah yo''from? |
45412 | What are the sleeping accommodations like? |
45412 | What are you doing here? |
45412 | What do they steal? |
45412 | What do you do for a living? |
45412 | What do you do for something to eat when you get really hungry? |
45412 | What do you pay? |
45412 | What is he in there for? |
45412 | What is the fare to the camp? |
45412 | What is the pay? |
45412 | What is your business? 45412 What kind of work do you do?" |
45412 | What of the impostor at the Municipal Emergency Home? |
45412 | What of the impostor at the Municipal Emergency Home? |
45412 | What was the matter with him? |
45412 | What''s de matter wid Cleveland? 45412 What?" |
45412 | When did you get into town? 45412 Where are you going?" |
45412 | Where can a fellow that''s broke find a''flop?'' |
45412 | Where did you sleep the night before I met you? |
45412 | Where is that nigger? |
45412 | Where is that? |
45412 | Where would you have me go? |
45412 | Who are you? |
45412 | Why did n''t you leave after you had worked for your bed and breakfast? |
45412 | Why do n''t you go to the public bath? |
45412 | Why, what''s the matter? |
45412 | Will they help me? |
45412 | Will you give me enough to get something to eat? |
45412 | Will you give me the privilege of working for something to eat? |
45412 | You are up against it, too, are you, Jack? 45412 You will board me, I suppose?" |
45412 | ''Turnkey,''he said, politely removing his cap,''will you have the kindness to admit me and give me lodging for the night?'' |
45412 | A fellow with balloons on his legs and a cane? |
45412 | Abruptly a man''s voice asked from within,"Are you willing to work for it?" |
45412 | After a brief external examination he asked the question,"Why are you a hobo?" |
45412 | After the train started the brakeman came back over the train and seeing me, asked,"Where are you going?" |
45412 | Apparently satisfied, he said,"What wages do you want?" |
45412 | Are there any basic rules which will help to solve the problem of mitigating the economic worth of the temporary dependent? |
45412 | Are we, all of us, quite sure that we have not, during some period of our lives, appeared true and genuine when false? |
45412 | Are you a railroad man?" |
45412 | As I was leaving I said to a boy about fifteen years of age,"Are you going now?" |
45412 | As he came over near me I said to him,"Man, what is the matter?" |
45412 | As he was leaving I said,"Is it time to quit?" |
45412 | At this the Matron said,''Are you an officer or a prisoner here? |
45412 | Back into the banquet hall? |
45412 | Before he had spoken, I asked,"Do you want help?" |
45412 | Besides, that place is for sick men, is n''t it? |
45412 | Brown?" |
45412 | But did I want work, and would I work for him? |
45412 | But what did they care? |
45412 | But what made it such? |
45412 | But what of that? |
45412 | CHAPTER X PHILADELPHIA''S"BROTHERLY LOVE""_ Hast thou Virtue? |
45412 | CHAPTER XXX MILWAUKEE-- WILL THE PHILOSOPHY OF SOCIALISM END POVERTY? |
45412 | Ca n''t you see this feller ai n''t no mission stiff?" |
45412 | Ca n''t you work for what you eat? |
45412 | Can Boston allow New York to excel it in caring for it shelterless workers? |
45412 | Can I do something for you for a little to eat?" |
45412 | Can such a rich city as Kansas City afford with impunity to neglect its duty to its"hewers of wood and drawers of water?" |
45412 | Can you tell a fellow where he can find a job?" |
45412 | Cleveland all gone to--?" |
45412 | Could I work on Sunday? |
45412 | Did you ever pick pickles? |
45412 | Did you have any supper to- night?" |
45412 | Did you?" |
45412 | Do you see?" |
45412 | Do you want it?" |
45412 | Do you want one or two?" |
45412 | Do you want work?" |
45412 | Does Philadelphia need a Municipal Emergency Home? |
45412 | Fathers and mothers throughout America, what if it had been_ your_ boy in Spokane that night, without money and without a home? |
45412 | Feel my pulse, is n''t it jumping to beat the devil?" |
45412 | Finally he asked:"What do you want?" |
45412 | From noon on Saturday to nine on Monday, is it not possible that some needy one in distress may need help? |
45412 | Had I not honorably paid my way from Cleveland to Cincinnati instead of trespassing on the property of a mighty railroad company? |
45412 | Had he been kind to someone; in return, had this match- safe been given to him? |
45412 | Had he told me the truth or a lie? |
45412 | Has Salt Lake City abolished any of the social evils that pauperize her people? |
45412 | Has she created a public bath, an emergency hospital, a free employment bureau? |
45412 | Has she driven out the corrupt political machine? |
45412 | Has she established a municipal building to offer to temporarily homeless people shelter and food as a safeguard against the jail? |
45412 | He asked,"Have n''t you the price of a bed?" |
45412 | He came up to me and said roughly,"Who are you, anyway? |
45412 | He is Sleeping on a Bed of Refuse Thrown from a Stable, with an Old Man Lying near Him_]"How do they feed you?" |
45412 | He looked at me in astonishment and said,"Do you think I would go there? |
45412 | He looked at me very earnestly, and said,"Do you think there will be a thing done about it?" |
45412 | He looked up at a coat and hat which hung by the door, and asked me, with an innocent look:"Whose hat is that?" |
45412 | He saw us at work and called from two car- lengths away,"Are they all right, boys?" |
45412 | How are you?" |
45412 | How are you?" |
45412 | How could I get back? |
45412 | How will I get me something to eat?" |
45412 | I am trying to sleep?" |
45412 | I approached an officer and asked him,"Can you tell a fellow where he can get a free bed?" |
45412 | I asked him,"What is the show for getting a free bed?" |
45412 | I asked of the first policeman I met where I could get a free bed, and he looked at me seemingly in surprise and said,"A free bed?" |
45412 | I asked,"Do they charge for a bed there?" |
45412 | I asked,"How long?" |
45412 | I asked,"Is there not a place in the city where a man can work for his supper, bed, and breakfast?" |
45412 | I could not but ask, surprisedly,"What is more beautiful than a cultivated vineyard, or a farm supporting an American home?" |
45412 | I demanded of the man,"Why do you arrest me? |
45412 | I do n''t know what prompted me to do so, but I stepped up to him and inquired,"Do you know where a fellow can get a job?" |
45412 | I hear the cry,"Where can we get the money?" |
45412 | I heard a man say to the one next to him,"Do you think this place will be pulled to- night?" |
45412 | I held mine waiting for an excuse to give it to him, and soon he asked me,"Are n''t you going to eat yours?" |
45412 | I laughingly said,"What''s the matter with going down to the''Island''?" |
45412 | I said to a boy who sat on my right,"How do you feel this morning?" |
45412 | I said to him,"Go to the public bath,"and he asked with an expectant look on his face,"Where is it?" |
45412 | I said to myself,"what ails that old bell ringer? |
45412 | I said to one intelligent looking man who was working in the garden,"It helps a fellow to come down here, does n''t it?" |
45412 | I said to one of them,"What are we going to do for a bed?" |
45412 | I said to the attendant,"What is that for?" |
45412 | I said to the elder boy( for they were only boys),"What is the matter with the kid?" |
45412 | I said to the man on my right:"Did you have any supper to- night?" |
45412 | I said,"What is the matter, boy?" |
45412 | I spent my last thirty cents this morning for a breakfast, and what do you think I got for it? |
45412 | I stepped up to him, and touching him, said,"Why do n''t you lie down on the bench and sleep; you would rest so much more comfortably?" |
45412 | I suppose he thought it a fair exchange since he had been compelled to leave his own in the office, and who will say it was not? |
45412 | I then asked,"Can you tell a fellow who is broke where he can get a free bed?" |
45412 | I then asked,"If I were of an eligible age and you should give me work, what do you pay?" |
45412 | I turned and said to the Irishman in a tentative way,"Where can a fellow find a job?" |
45412 | I was set to washing, and I asked the"boss"attendant,"How long will I have to work?" |
45412 | I went to him and asked:"What is the matter?" |
45412 | I wish all San Antonio could have seen the look of anticipated pleasure on that boy''s face when he asked eagerly,"Where is it?" |
45412 | I wonder why he called me"friend"? |
45412 | I wondered if they were there to watch us, and I said to one boy in a tentative way,"What''s the matter of us making a sneak?" |
45412 | I would, perhaps, be regarded as a dead- beat, but what of that? |
45412 | If this is all true, do you wonder at it? |
45412 | Imperfect and incomplete as its experimental beginning may be, who can deny the awakening of a perfect aim toward a perfect end? |
45412 | In reply to my question,"Why?" |
45412 | Innocent of who they were and why they were there, I stepped up to an attendant at the desk, saying,"Would you give a man who is broke a bed?" |
45412 | Instead of replying, he said,"What do you want to know for?" |
45412 | Is he stone deaf or gone mad? |
45412 | Is it any marvel that another man was found dead, hanging in an orchard, or that another was killed by an automobile, in the darkness of the night? |
45412 | Is it any wonder that many thousands of dollars''worth of property are destroyed by fire in one night? |
45412 | Is there not someone to arrest him?" |
45412 | Just drop in on a coal special?" |
45412 | Just then a young man hurrying along asked, as he passed me,"Are you looking for work?" |
45412 | Just then the son rode up on his spinning wheel and asked,"What did you quit for?" |
45412 | Must I beg, after all? |
45412 | My first impulse was to get out of the place, but where would I go? |
45412 | On this day, if they had found one man of character strong enough to accept and follow the beautiful Christ Life, was it not worth while? |
45412 | Seeking to draw him out, I asked as if I sought to have him treat,"Have you the price of a beer?" |
45412 | So I said,"Lodgers are often forced into the bull- pen, too, are they not?" |
45412 | Stepping up to a stoker at work near the entrance, I asked:"Can you show a fellow where he can find a place to lie down out of the cold?" |
45412 | Stepping up to him I said in a tentative way,"Have a drink?" |
45412 | Stepping up to the young fellow, he put his arm about his shoulder and said,"What would you do with the dime if I gave it to you?" |
45412 | The Boy Is"Broke"But Not Willing to Give Up_]"You look strong and well,"I said to him,"why must you beg? |
45412 | The astonished editor replied,"Why, would you destroy the scenery of our American Rhine?" |
45412 | The following are the most frequently asked:"Is not drink the principal cause of destitution?" |
45412 | The hint of the law for decency and order at that station, came to me with the question,"Why did n''t you take that train?" |
45412 | The lady inquired with interest,"Would you work for an hour for a cup of coffee and a piece of bread? |
45412 | The moment I joined them, one inquired,"Yo''all had breakfast?" |
45412 | The remedy? |
45412 | The woman then snatched up a pen and asked,"Were you ever here before? |
45412 | The young man remarked:"Do you see those two young women? |
45412 | Then I asked,"Where is the lodgers''cell?" |
45412 | Then a hollow- eyed, thin- handed man on my left said,"Are you going to eat yours?" |
45412 | Then he continued,"Where are you going to sleep to- night?" |
45412 | Then the Spokane officer said to me,"Who are you, anyway?" |
45412 | Then with sudden digression, I said,"Where can a fellow get a bed and something to eat if he''s broke?" |
45412 | Therefore I have not only asked"Why?" |
45412 | They seemed to be surprised that I was sober, and said,"Brown, how can you associate with these men and not drink?" |
45412 | This would be a fine place to rest, would n''t it? |
45412 | This"guardian of the peace"of Houston, in a most overbearing manner asked me:"Where are you from?" |
45412 | Turning to him in a casual way, I said,"Where can a fellow find work?" |
45412 | Under what more convincing and truthful conditions could I find need in Memphis for the erection and maintenance of a Municipal Emergency Home? |
45412 | Was it any wonder? |
45412 | What business was it of his why I wanted to know? |
45412 | What can I do for you?" |
45412 | What can I do? |
45412 | What do you do?" |
45412 | What do you think of that? |
45412 | What greater examples of the virtues of character can we find anywhere than in the police? |
45412 | What is a man in this condition to do? |
45412 | What is the matter, want a place to sleep?" |
45412 | What is the price we pay? |
45412 | What is your business?" |
45412 | What right had he to question what I wanted to know for? |
45412 | What will I do for supper and breakfast?" |
45412 | What will you?" |
45412 | When I had eaten I asked,"Now what can I do for you?" |
45412 | When he is no longer small enough to be a newsboy and must do the work of an able- bodied man, what then?) |
45412 | Where are you going?" |
45412 | Where do you live? |
45412 | Where were you born? |
45412 | While waiting in the woodyard for breakfast, I jokingly said, as we looked at the wood,"What''s the matter of getting out of here? |
45412 | Who would believe this story of a destitute old floatsam cast up from the wreckage of America''s temple of Elegance? |
45412 | Why are our hospitals, almshouses, our jails, and our prisons crowded to overflowing? |
45412 | Why do n''t they go onto the land?" |
45412 | Why is crime rampant in our cities? |
45412 | Why not? |
45412 | Why was it? |
45412 | Why? |
45412 | Will the work be hard?" |
45412 | Yet I have found it( who can deny it?) |
45412 | and the other answered,"Why, no; what makes you think so?" |
45412 | as he looked down at his soiled and ragged clothes; and another just as happy replied,"What do ye tink dey want? |
45412 | p. 245["flop"/''flop?''"] |
45412 | p. 92 floatsam_ sic._ p. 115 lantine_ sic._''Latrine''? |
8406 | Am I my brother''s keeper? |
8406 | Any statement you would like to make? |
8406 | For God''s sake, wo n''t you let me write her just one letter? |
8406 | Have you had anything to eat? |
8406 | How long are you kept there? |
8406 | How''re you feeling, Joe? |
8406 | I would n''t lie to you, Mr. Hawthorne-- what would be the use? 8406 Is all well?" |
8406 | Open that door, why do n''t you? |
8406 | What is this for? |
8406 | What makes you so fond of that animal? |
8406 | Who''s that called me a----? |
8406 | --"No complaints?" |
8406 | A man wicked enough to steal or murder is wicked enough to lie, and is not the malicious motive of the lie apparent?" |
8406 | After four months you''re eligible for parole on a year and a day''s sentence, ai n''t yer? |
8406 | Ai n''t I good for ten of yer?" |
8406 | And for such as prove incorrigible, or are criminal degenerates, ought not pathological care, instead of penal slavery, to be provided? |
8406 | And what did the wall cost? |
8406 | And what happens if our man pleads guilty? |
8406 | And what is the fruit of it? |
8406 | And what other punishment for them than imprisonment is there or can there be? |
8406 | And what right to privacy, you ask, has a prisoner? |
8406 | And which of us who has not been a convict in prison has the right to declare that prison is the"desert"of any man? |
8406 | Are such conditions as I have described general? |
8406 | Are we to end by discovering that everybody is a criminal, and ripe for jail? |
8406 | Are we to leave criminals to their liberty among the community? |
8406 | Besides, what has a man in jail to do with time? |
8406 | But can I pretend to solve the age- long problem of the right handling of crime in the community? |
8406 | But can a world be called civilized that is satisfied with that arraignment? |
8406 | But can we afford to trust ex- convicts? |
8406 | But do I forget the many indulgences given to prisoners-- and so profusely celebrated in every mention publicly made of Atlanta Penitentiary? |
8406 | But does the Department of Justice countenance such diversions? |
8406 | But finance is not the whole story; what about morality? |
8406 | But if a life sentence for a guilty man be intolerable, what shall be said if he were guiltless? |
8406 | But if the world could hear those footfalls, and interpret their significance, how long would prisons last? |
8406 | But if there are to be no prisons, what shall we do to be saved from crime? |
8406 | But may not the prisoners complain to the committees or inspectors, appointed precisely to enquire into and relieve abuses of this sort? |
8406 | But take the case of a prisoner who had no confederates-- how does the board deal with him? |
8406 | But was he capable of no other employment? |
8406 | But was the disgrace ours and theirs? |
8406 | But what can be expected of men in the position of guards of a prison? |
8406 | But what crimes? |
8406 | But what of my fellow prisoners? |
8406 | But when her time comes, with what face, on what plea, shall she ask forgiveness? |
8406 | But why, in that case, are the gates into the yard locked, and the man with the rifle provided? |
8406 | By what right do you look down upon him? |
8406 | Can brotherly companionship and trust reform them? |
8406 | Can it be, I asked myself, that this extravagant idleness is forced upon the prisoners as part, and not the least evil part of their punishment? |
8406 | Can such things be? |
8406 | Could any inspiration or procedure be more insecure? |
8406 | Could you ever forget it? |
8406 | Death would be welcome; the infliction of it can find forgiveness; but how can we forgive the infliction of death- in- life? |
8406 | Did it ever occur to you that you merited torture and death for it? |
8406 | Did you ever think what a prison would be if there was any common sense aim in anything? |
8406 | Do miracles occur in jails, after having been so long discontinued elsewhere? |
8406 | Do some of the above statements appear extreme? |
8406 | Do you say that none of this was your doing? |
8406 | Does it not prove a need yet more urgent to be up and at them? |
8406 | Finally, we would be confronted with the question, What is to be done about it? |
8406 | For why should we honest people waste our good money and precious sympathy on a convict? |
8406 | Go back yet another step if you will, and consider the inspectors and detectives who gathered the complaints against you-- is the beginning with them? |
8406 | Government of the people by lawyers, for lawyers; did they know what they were doing? |
8406 | Had I been born and bred as he was, what would I be? |
8406 | Had his conviction been unjust, and was he raging impotently against injustice? |
8406 | Had it been your brother, father, son, or yourself, would you employ such language? |
8406 | Has he not already robbed us enough? |
8406 | Has not enough been said during the trial of the past four months, and in vain? |
8406 | Has your career, in short, been absolutely blameless during the whole course of your life? |
8406 | Have I any last words for the world which I am leaving? |
8406 | Have you not imagination enough to put yourself for a moment in the predicament of the prisoner? |
8406 | He had vowed to be good, but could he keep the vow, when"the boys got round him"? |
8406 | He then begins to see the whole matter in its general relations; what use was served? |
8406 | He was the answer to the question,"_ Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?_"--"Who shall watch the watchman?" |
8406 | How came such a monster to exist? |
8406 | How can God forgive it, this profane meddling with sacred and fathomless life? |
8406 | How is the public to know? |
8406 | How long would it take to do that stunt in New York?" |
8406 | How many years must he endure-- how many centuries? |
8406 | How would you have felt in such a case? |
8406 | I then named a certain benefactor of the prisoners outside the prison, and asked if he would do it for that person? |
8406 | If it were incomparable before, why or how better it? |
8406 | If so--_what_? |
8406 | If the neighbors-- the community-- loses nothing by this system, and if the convicts gain by it, why should it not be made the general practise? |
8406 | If they go to ruin, is not the parole board responsible? |
8406 | If you found that you were taking bichlorid of mercury by mistake for a sleeping draught, would you go on taking it? |
8406 | If you outlive your undeserved sentence, will you ever resolve to make good again? |
8406 | In that world, he had doubtless not done the best he might, but which of us can say he himself has done that? |
8406 | Infinite mercy may find means to compensate him for what we robbed him of; but what can it do with us, the robbers? |
8406 | Is faith in human justice promoted by such things? |
8406 | Is it because it would imply something human still lingering in convicts? |
8406 | Is it conceivable that these statements were really given out by him? |
8406 | Is it not true that you were arrested in this or that year for this or that offense? |
8406 | Is life so endured_ life_--the sacred Creative gift, imparted to all things, conscious or unconscious, without restriction? |
8406 | Is not their conviction prison enough for most of them? |
8406 | Is society protected? |
8406 | Is the thing true, or not true? |
8406 | Is there any answer to that? |
8406 | Is this an imaginative sketch-- or colored a little-- or a good deal? |
8406 | It desires to be informed what you were doing in such and such a place, in such and such a year? |
8406 | Last July, a justice of a State Supreme Court sentenced Thomas Baker, little more than a child, to fifteen years in jail for-- what? |
8406 | May we not surmise that they are motived by some personal grudge? |
8406 | Maybe; but what would be the use? |
8406 | Might he not have been given the relief of a change? |
8406 | Moreover, on what grounds does society claim protection against evils for which its own constitution and administration are responsible? |
8406 | Moreover, there are the steel and stone jail buildings themselves, which cost much in money and more in graft; what shall be done with them? |
8406 | Must we not keep a strict eye on them? |
8406 | New evidence of what? |
8406 | No tortures? |
8406 | Of what avail to answer? |
8406 | On the other hand, who shall blame the convict if he accedes to the bargain? |
8406 | One of the men shouted out to him, forgetting decorum in the desperate hurry of the moment,"Why do n''t you open the door, you------------?" |
8406 | Or are we content to accept the spy system in toto, cost what it may? |
8406 | Or is it the result of ignorance, incompetence, or indifference on the part of those appointed and paid to take care of men sentenced to"hard labor"? |
8406 | Pardon for what? |
8406 | Perjury is wrong no doubt; but, were you who read this placed in that predicament, which horn of the dilemma would you select? |
8406 | Politics sits on the bench and argues through the mouth of the public prosecutor; is justice safe in their keeping? |
8406 | Shall I declaim of injustice, outrage, perjury? |
8406 | Shall I threaten revenge, or entreat mercy? |
8406 | Shall we be driven to rash measures by the objurgations of an ex- convict? |
8406 | Shall we be more fastidious than God? |
8406 | Shall we believe that this man''s professions of a change of heart are genuine? |
8406 | Shall we build more prisons, enact more laws? |
8406 | Shall we not pause a moment over the bodies of this mother and her son, over this frenzied murder and suicide? |
8406 | She, following the example of God, chastens in love; but what do we chasten in? |
8406 | Stand on your rights, demand a full and fair trial, prove your innocence, and be acquitted without a stain on your character? |
8406 | That fallacy I shall consider hereafter; the question of the moment is the reporters''--"Have you any statement to make?" |
8406 | The greatest happiness of the greatest number?--Are we so happy, then? |
8406 | The guard, who was of a humorous turn, replied, smiling,"Well, you use tobacco, do n''t you?" |
8406 | The prison authorities call that economy, may be; what do you call it?" |
8406 | The procession becomes ever more crowded; when is it to stop? |
8406 | The question is, can the jail system prevent it? |
8406 | The reply is a sneer:"What are you going to do about it?" |
8406 | The sister had done wrong; the brother had lost his temper; in what family has not such an outbreak occurred? |
8406 | The usual words were,"How''re you feeling?" |
8406 | The wardens and guards, too-- all the fantastic appanages of these institutions-- are they to be cast incontinently upon a frigid world? |
8406 | Their appointment is left to the political machine, which hands it out on the principle of what is he, or was he worth to us? |
8406 | This writer''s statements seem a trifle emphatic, do they not? |
8406 | To what end shall we cut the cancer out of the body politic, if it sprout again in a more vital spot? |
8406 | To what end? |
8406 | Upon what plea are these conditions established? |
8406 | Upon what plea can such an act be construed as justice? |
8406 | Was his wife dying, his children abandoned? |
8406 | Was it a dream, or would some cosmic cataclysm occur in season to prevent it? |
8406 | Was that the reality? |
8406 | Well, what do you think he was doing? |
8406 | Were you ever angry with a relative or with any other person, and did you express your anger to him in words? |
8406 | What can be the matter? |
8406 | What d''yer know about that? |
8406 | What difference can it make to a convict if the guard, or any other passer- by, watches him while he uses them? |
8406 | What do you say?" |
8406 | What do you think of that?" |
8406 | What do you think you would do in such circumstances?--write to the President, or to some Senator or Congressman? |
8406 | What else is there to be tried? |
8406 | What for? |
8406 | What had I to do with"pardons"? |
8406 | What has put that fear in him? |
8406 | What have most convicts to live for? |
8406 | What if the bread be uneatable, the coffee undrinkable, and the tobacco unsmokable? |
8406 | What is any one of us in himself? |
8406 | What is guilt? |
8406 | What is his business? |
8406 | What is it? |
8406 | What right had I to call him unfit for my companionship? |
8406 | What shall happen if prisons are done away with? |
8406 | What was he thinking about? |
8406 | What was it now? |
8406 | What was the matter now? |
8406 | What was the reason of this? |
8406 | What will be his adventures? |
8406 | What would freedom mean for him now, with no one in the world to go to or to be with? |
8406 | What would you advise to check law breaking? |
8406 | What would you do? |
8406 | What, then, must the reality of it be? |
8406 | Who is fit to stand before it?" |
8406 | Who is to know, or to tell? |
8406 | Who shall have the immortal credit of abolishing prisons-- ourselves, or our posterity? |
8406 | Who was he-- or, better, who had he been? |
8406 | Who was he? |
8406 | Why do n''t you write a piece in our paper about the aimlessness of prison work? |
8406 | Why not, at least, have turned them into veal? |
8406 | Why refuse it then? |
8406 | Why, for instance, should special emphasis be laid upon the injunction to rest one''s shoes against the bars of the door upon retiring? |
8406 | Will He accept the plea that we did it"for the protection of society?--for the man''s own good?--or a warning to others?" |
8406 | Will prison reform him? |
8406 | Will they rob and murder their hosts? |
8406 | Would it not be prudent to take all this with a grain of salt? |
8406 | Would you behave like Christ upon the Cross, or like an ordinary man? |
8406 | Would you feel like that? |
8406 | Would you not rather say,"If the whole truth were known, this could not have happened?" |
8406 | XII THE PRISON SILENCE How many convicts, during the past twenty years, have served their terms and been released? |
8406 | XVI IF NOT PRISONS-- WHAT? |
8406 | Yes: but is society protected by prisons? |
8406 | and who can forecast the ruin of anarchy? |
8406 | and would you not be ready, for that official''s sake, to hate mankind, and to curse God and die? |
8406 | and yet what does the public know of the real inside of prisons? |
8406 | awaken the country to these iniquities? |
8406 | have we not heard an old adage--"No thief e''er felt the halter draw with good opinion of the law?" |
8406 | or because it is feared that convicts taught to act in unison by military drill would combine more readily for mutiny? |
8406 | or would you clamor for an antidote, waylay doctors for help, and disturb the discreet serenity of hospitals for succor? |
8406 | or,"How''re they comin''?" |
8406 | that old numskull be the mouthpiece of Jehovah?" |
8406 | who can compensate them, and how can the injury done them be forgiven? |
8406 | who is the better for it? |
44273 | Allen, did you do it? |
44273 | And be up all the same at four next morning? |
44273 | And you wo n''t now? 44273 Annie O''Brien, will you be patient to- night, and make no complaints?" |
44273 | Are you afraid of her? |
44273 | Are you afraid of him? |
44273 | Are you hungry enough to eat that meat after it has been in your stocking, and on this floor? |
44273 | Are you in earnest? |
44273 | Ca n''t they jump over that? |
44273 | Ca n''t you go over to the wash- room, and set the women to work, when they go out from breakfast? 44273 Callahan, I turned the key on you in solitary, and kept you there,--why are you not angry with me?" |
44273 | Callahan, what is that dirt on your cheek and neck? |
44273 | Callahan, you know it is against the rules to talk when you are coming in; you wo n''t do it again? |
44273 | Did he approve of it? |
44273 | Did you come here to treat me? |
44273 | Did you ever get a promise from her to do better? |
44273 | Did you ever get caught before? |
44273 | Did you ever try to do it, Callahan? |
44273 | Did you have any difficulty last night? |
44273 | Did you say it at last? |
44273 | Did your husband know what you were doing? |
44273 | Do n''t they know where you are now? |
44273 | Do n''t you all feel ashamed of what you have done,I asked,"when you think of it?" |
44273 | Do the Master''s wife and daughters get up at four the next morning, after sitting up so late, and go to work? |
44273 | Do you know her? |
44273 | Do you know that you are snoring so loud that the women ca n''t sleep? 44273 Do you like that woman?" |
44273 | Do you mean to say that you like to add to the hard lot of those poor creatures by that dreadful punishment of solitary? |
44273 | Do you mean to say, Lissett, that they can have a man brought down here a prisoner, because they want a carpenter? |
44273 | Do you see what examples you are setting them? 44273 Do you think you would enjoy a house bought with money got in that way?" |
44273 | Does he turn against you now? |
44273 | Does that make them any more comfortable for the prisoners? 44273 Every day?" |
44273 | Girls, did you ever hear of One who said,''Love your enemies, bless them that curse you''? |
44273 | Has she been doing embroidery all of the time for three years? |
44273 | Has the order for me to be on duty in the prison at meal time, been approved by the Board? |
44273 | He knows that? |
44273 | He may not ask you to now; if he does, you will be submissive and perfectly respectful? |
44273 | He must have his own duties to attend to-- how can he perform hers? 44273 How about the other?" |
44273 | How came you to do such a thing? |
44273 | How can they expect me to be in two different places at the same time? |
44273 | How did she do it? |
44273 | How did you know that I was thinking? |
44273 | How do you dare to stand there and answer me in that way? 44273 How long has the present Master had charge here?" |
44273 | How long have you been here, granny? |
44273 | How many children have you, Allen? |
44273 | How many of you are there that can do such work? |
44273 | How will that spite the ones that sent you here? |
44273 | I think you must have had something before you took the pint of beer and the gallon measure? |
44273 | If I could not keep my own temper when I am annoyed, how could I teach you to keep yours? |
44273 | If she is subdued and promises to do better, is not that enough? |
44273 | If the whitening will dry there, why not here? |
44273 | If the wife is Head Matron, has she not her duties to do in the morning as well as we? 44273 If you reported me, would n''t you tell me what it was for?" |
44273 | If you was going to punish me just as you were a mind to, for speaking on the walk, would you shut me up here two days and two nights for it? |
44273 | In doing that, who do you think you will spite? |
44273 | In the morning, when the Deputy comes around, will you tell him that you will try to govern your temper? |
44273 | In the morning? |
44273 | Is n''t it so? |
44273 | Is that the way you do when you get angry? |
44273 | Is this all the room, and are these all the comforts we are to have? |
44273 | It is a rule, is it, that the prisoners are not to be left alone a moment at night, after they are locked in? |
44273 | Let me have Callahan? |
44273 | Maggie Murray, do you mean to say that you saw the Master pull Ida Jones along the walk, by the hair of her head, and kick her as he pulled her? 44273 Maggie, why do n''t you sweep so that Berry can white- wash?" |
44273 | May be; but how are you going to help that? 44273 Now, Annie, you say that you wish to govern your temper, and that you will try?" |
44273 | O''Brien, are you not ashamed to get so angry with that poor, foolish, half- crazed McMullins? |
44273 | O''Brien, will you get a bucket of coal? 44273 O''Sullivan, will you bring up a bucket of coal?" |
44273 | O, Annie, how can you stand there, and tell this over? 44273 On your cheek and neck?" |
44273 | Perhaps not; but how do you know that you are to stay here two days and two nights? |
44273 | Shall I give her her bread and water to- night? |
44273 | Shall I have time to do it? |
44273 | Sorry for what,--that you made disturbance, or that I found you out? |
44273 | That is you, is it, Kate Connolly? |
44273 | Then how am I to leave the prison, go across the kitchen, and pass out my keys? 44273 Then why do you stand at the window so much to watch?" |
44273 | Then why does she not come and teach me to manage my department, and see that I do my duty? 44273 Then, how am I to learn my duties, and get definite orders for the regulation of my work? |
44273 | Was it for the second offense? 44273 Was n''t it your pepper and salt that was strewed on the shop- floor to- day?" |
44273 | Was that you, Mary McCullum? |
44273 | Was you here, O''Brien? |
44273 | What are you here for, Nellie? |
44273 | What are you here for, granny? |
44273 | What are you in here again for so soon, Callahan? 44273 What are you in here for, Sarah?" |
44273 | What are you thinking of? |
44273 | What brought you in here, Mary? |
44273 | What clothes? |
44273 | What did he do it for? |
44273 | What did the saloon man want you taken up for? |
44273 | What did you come in here for McMullins? |
44273 | What did you come in here for, Allen? |
44273 | What did you do with the money? |
44273 | What did you intend to do with your money? |
44273 | What do you mean by that? |
44273 | What do you stay here for; you do n''t seem fit for such work, and you might earn a great deal more outside, and not work so hard? |
44273 | What do you think of your behavior yesterday? |
44273 | What for? |
44273 | What is the matter here? |
44273 | What is the matter with your coffee? |
44273 | What is the matter with your stocking, Bridget? |
44273 | What is the matter, sir? 44273 What is the matter?" |
44273 | What kind of a character? |
44273 | What kind of a wife were you, McMullins? |
44273 | What kind of behavior is this, Annie O''Brien? |
44273 | What time have I then? |
44273 | What time is it, if you please, ma''am? |
44273 | What way did he come in? |
44273 | When shall I sleep? |
44273 | When she was in here before, she was in the kitchen four months, without being locked up, was n''t she? 44273 When the Deputy comes around, if he says anything to you, will you tell him you are ashamed of yourself, and resolved to do better?" |
44273 | When you have been here before, and been punished, you have behaved very badly, have you not? |
44273 | Where are we going? |
44273 | Where do they think you are? |
44273 | Where is she? 44273 Where is yours?" |
44273 | Who are you doing this for? |
44273 | Who caught you? |
44273 | Who did you put it away for? |
44273 | Who is it? 44273 Who is to be judge of when you deserve it? |
44273 | Who put him up to it? |
44273 | Who? |
44273 | Why did n''t he take care of you himself, after bringing that trouble upon you? |
44273 | Why did n''t you wait and see if you were going to be locked up, and tell the Master how it was, before you took up a chair to strike him down? |
44273 | Why must I be up an hour later than the rest to receive the keys? |
44273 | Why would n''t you go? 44273 Why?" |
44273 | Will the one who did it be honest enough to own it; or will she be mean enough to let me lay the blame on some one else? 44273 Will you give it to the woman in the shop who fainted this morning because she had no breakfast?" |
44273 | Will you please give me a drink of water? |
44273 | Will you tell him so? |
44273 | Will you tell me who did it? |
44273 | Wo n''t you find out? 44273 Women are a great deal alike, are they not?" |
44273 | Would n''t it make you angry, and would n''t you strike back if any one struck you in the face? |
44273 | Would n''t it make your blood boil to have any one slap you in the face? |
44273 | Would n''t that be better than constantly punishing? 44273 Would you care if they blamed me, Annie?" |
44273 | Would you work the women in that way if you were Master here? |
44273 | Yes, and an organ? |
44273 | You are not willing to get up and unlock any longer in the morning, you say? |
44273 | You consider them a very intelligent body of men, do you not? |
44273 | You have a hired choir? |
44273 | You have been here before, havn''t you? |
44273 | You knew it was wrong when you took the money and used it? |
44273 | You thought I was a stranger and would n''t know them, did you? |
44273 | You was thinking what a wicked wretch I am? |
44273 | You will come round when it is time to give her food? |
44273 | You wish to understand my disposition, do you? 44273 You wo n''t punish her for doing what you would do yourself?" |
44273 | After she had looked into her room, and seen that her bed was gone, she turned to me, and asked,--"What was my bed taken out for?" |
44273 | And day after day, as I saw them go breakfastless to their work, I wished,--was it wrong? |
44273 | And ought she not to see that the other officers are not worked like that? |
44273 | And where are the men that make these women what they are? |
44273 | Are they not in every prison in the land? |
44273 | As I was waiting upon her to her room, I asked her,--"Why had you rather go into solitary than sleep on the bars?" |
44273 | But how can the Master attend to his own duties and those of the Head Matron too?" |
44273 | Ca n''t you let them off with a reproof this time?" |
44273 | Can it be a human being? |
44273 | Can such discipline soften the heart, and turn its stern purposes to commit crime into the ways of virtue? |
44273 | Can they not do that on regular visiting days? |
44273 | Deputy?" |
44273 | Did n''t I say that I deserved it? |
44273 | Did n''t I tell you to report me when I was locked up? |
44273 | Did n''t you send me away on purpose?" |
44273 | Did you do it, Annie O''Brien?" |
44273 | Do I not have patience with you? |
44273 | Do n''t you feel better, yourself, for doing what is right?" |
44273 | Do n''t you suppose I want them drest up as nice when they go to school, and look like other children? |
44273 | Do n''t you suppose we''ve got human feelings? |
44273 | Do n''t you think they ought to be punished?" |
44273 | Do not the ladies of the United States need to be reminded that the Greeks are at their door? |
44273 | Do they get used to them so as to be comfortable?" |
44273 | Do you know who reported me, and what my bed is taken out for?" |
44273 | Do you love Hardhack?" |
44273 | Do you think he will? |
44273 | Do you think it''ll ever cure''em to put a drunkard over''em?" |
44273 | Does He punish all offenders with the same unmitigated rigor? |
44273 | Does it conduce to reformation? |
44273 | Does not the mother- heart melt within you in pity for those children when they come to find out that their mother is a thief? |
44273 | Does such correction of convicts tend to arouse better purposes in their hearts than those which brought them into prison? |
44273 | For the last time the steam woman asked,--"It is five yet, ma''am?" |
44273 | For two weeks before it was due, the question was continually asked me,--"Is it next Wednesday, or a week from next Wednesday, that is visiting day? |
44273 | Had she been admonished once?" |
44273 | Has she been"admonished?" |
44273 | Have the Board of Directors approved both those rules?" |
44273 | Have you any printed directions?" |
44273 | He came hurrying up to me, and asked--"Why is this?" |
44273 | He did not speak for a moment, and I, to relieve the embarrassment, asked,--"Does the place look to suit you?" |
44273 | How can I report you?" |
44273 | How can I show my gratitude? |
44273 | How can one person teach another to control his temper when he is ignorant of the way, and does not practice the government of his own? |
44273 | How does the Great Lawgiver treat His convicts? |
44273 | How long can any constitution bear such a strain? |
44273 | I am sorry for you, O''Brien; but you do n''t wish McMullins to remain, in solitary because you must, do you?" |
44273 | I could not help questioning, Ought not the girl to be told what she is punished for? |
44273 | I had asked,"Shall their whole task be exacted of them?" |
44273 | I held my breath as I asked,--"What was all that done for?" |
44273 | I hushed the noise, and asked,--"To whom does the cloth belong?" |
44273 | I said to myself-- Is this a woman''s work? |
44273 | I sprang from my bed, ran to the door, and called,--"What is the matter?" |
44273 | I sprang to the rail and called,--"What is the matter?" |
44273 | I took it out and inquired,--"Whose bone is this?" |
44273 | I took it up into the kitchen, and asked,--"Who hid this meat away on the top of the bread cupboard in the cellar?" |
44273 | I turned to one of the other women and asked:"What are you in here for, O''Sullivan?" |
44273 | I''m not a prisoner; but I always feel uncomfortable where he is, do n''t you?" |
44273 | If I were to get angry and scold, of what use would it be for me to reprove you?" |
44273 | If that were a good rule for the inferior officers and prisoners, why might it not apply with propriety to the Head Matron and Master? |
44273 | If there is a Head Matron, and she is paid for doing the duties of one, why does she not perform them? |
44273 | If woman were to help make the laws, could she remedy this state of things,--would she? |
44273 | If you worked as I do, and was real hungry, and saw the meat, would n''t you take it?" |
44273 | In working for the elevation of everybody''s children are we not benefiting our own? |
44273 | Is it anybody that we know?" |
44273 | Is it intended to deter the vicious from continuing in crime? |
44273 | Is it my anger that seeks revenge for the annoyance they are inflicting? |
44273 | Is it not proper that their conduct should be looked after by the people as much as that of any other government official? |
44273 | Is n''t it better to err on the side of mercy than on that of severity? |
44273 | Is one kind of punishment the only cure for disobedience? |
44273 | Is she enrolled head officer of this prison merely to obtain the salary? |
44273 | Is that fact a conviction in every other case where he may have difficulty with another person? |
44273 | Is there a bath- room that we can use? |
44273 | Is there no Head Matron, no superior officer in the women''s prison to whom I can go?" |
44273 | Is there no help for this state of things, that the weak suffer for the sins of the strong? |
44273 | Look here, do you blame me for being mad?" |
44273 | Look here, would n''t it make you mad to be locked up when you was n''t to blame? |
44273 | Many a time I called,--"McMullins, are you well?" |
44273 | Now, girls, will you promise not to hide things away, and try to cheat me any more?" |
44273 | Ought the punishment of criminals, who have been tried, convicted, and sentenced publicly, to be conducted in secret? |
44273 | Shall I bind it up for you?" |
44273 | She asked,--"Is it right to keep me in here, and let McMullins sleep in her bed?" |
44273 | She came up to me and asked:--"Why did n''t you get me punished? |
44273 | She looked steadily at me for a moment; then, lowered her voice, and asked,--"Do you mean to say that you did n''t know that my bed was out?" |
44273 | She turned to me, and answered, but pleasantly,--"Ca n''t the Deputy take care of me?" |
44273 | Should it not be mitigated by mercy, or changed in character according to the circumstances, or the peculiar disposition of the offender? |
44273 | Should such a criminal go unpunished? |
44273 | Supervisor of what? |
44273 | The next morning, when I went to give her bread and water, she asked me,--"Do you know what I am in here for?" |
44273 | The order to work over hours was submitted to the Board for approval last night, was it not?" |
44273 | The question suggested itself to me-- If you get them punished unjustly who will avenge them? |
44273 | Then, ought it not to be adapted to the crime, and administered by those who are free from the same faults? |
44273 | To settle the difficulty I asked the Deputy, when he came round,--"who should bring up the coal for Allen?" |
44273 | Was I in one of the prisons of the Inquisition, hearing a description of their tortures? |
44273 | Was it strange, with this opportunity placed in their way, that they should help themselves to the meat which had been divided to the others? |
44273 | Was n''t it a long sintence for a pint of beer, and a gallon measure?" |
44273 | Was n''t it too bad to give me the making of a year in here for jist a pint of beer and a gallon measure? |
44273 | Was that noblest, best of woman''s instincts to destroy that woman''s human life, and ruin her soul? |
44273 | Were those shrieking wails from some prisoner confined in the dungeon vaults below the prison, insane or dying? |
44273 | What did you do with what you took?" |
44273 | What does he do?" |
44273 | What is that but stealing?" |
44273 | What keeps my children from such a fate? |
44273 | What moved it? |
44273 | What time have I to go out?" |
44273 | What would tempt you to strike me?" |
44273 | When I gave her the bread and water, she said to me,--"Look here, now, do n''t you think they ought to tell me what I am punished for?" |
44273 | When the Deputy came in, on his morning rounds, I asked him,--"Is the Master''s wife Head Matron here?" |
44273 | When the Deputy came round I asked,--"Is Mary Muran in solitary for mimicking me?" |
44273 | Where does the praise of God come in? |
44273 | Why do you hurt my feelings by asking me?" |
44273 | Why is that distinction made?" |
44273 | Why is that?" |
44273 | Why should not a prisoner''s testimony be taken in a matter where he is concerned? |
44273 | Why? |
44273 | Will you behave yourself now?" |
44273 | Will you get me out?" |
44273 | Will you heed me?" |
44273 | Will you let me try her, if you please? |
44273 | Wo n''t you ask Hardhack?" |
44273 | Wo n''t you let them off this time?" |
44273 | Wo n''t you tell her to sweep so I can white- wash?" |
44273 | Wo n''t you try to do better, Callahan?" |
44273 | Would n''t I make her suffer back again? |
44273 | Would n''t it have been better for you to earn an honest living?" |
44273 | Would n''t you like to see''em both locked up?" |
44273 | Would she take her husband, father, brother from his home to the Penitentiary? |
44273 | Would you allow one of your male officers to keep the men who are under another officer dirty and ragged, out of sheer malice, or for any reason?" |
44273 | You do not intend to treat me any better than you do any one else?" |
44273 | You will do as I wish in future, pleasantly, will you?" |
44273 | You wo n''t punish her this time, will you? |
44273 | are we to sleep in the prison?" |
44273 | asked Maggie;"when Ida Jones was pulled into the hospital by the hair of her head?" |
44273 | have n''t you promised to be a good woman when you are with me?" |
44273 | he asked in his jolly way;"who is cut to pieces?" |
44273 | pray what is the matter?" |
44273 | then you do n''t deserve a very good place, do you?" |
44273 | will you be gentle and patient while you are here with me?" |
44273 | would you shut me up here for speaking on the walk?" |
55847 | And sometimes you allow poor women to have coal on credit, and you lose in that way? |
55847 | And sometimes you get a tenant that does not pay up? |
55847 | And when your daughter goes out, she will wear them-- in fact, you want a pair between you? |
55847 | And you want a pair that will fit either of you? |
55847 | Any other of your children paint? |
55847 | Are n''t you going to make the fire up for yourself? 55847 Burglary?" |
55847 | But how do you get them all to this size and colour? |
55847 | But what good is it now? |
55847 | But you lose your tenant sometimes, and the rooms are empty? |
55847 | Did you get what suited you? |
55847 | Did you have buttons or lace- up? |
55847 | Did you know they had''come down''in life? |
55847 | Do they often have letters? |
55847 | Do you buy cinders by weight or measure? |
55847 | Do you earn any money? |
55847 | Do you ever buy a hundredweight of coal? |
55847 | Do you get full weight from the trolly- man? |
55847 | Do you know what''s in these boxes? |
55847 | Do you know, sir, that you are speaking to an officer''s daughter? 55847 Do you see that quite half is dirt?" |
55847 | Does he go to a school of art? |
55847 | Fetch a policeman, will you? 55847 Fit you all right?" |
55847 | Got all your conduct marks? |
55847 | Have you a mother? |
55847 | Have you any framed pictures? |
55847 | Have you any sons and daughters? 55847 Have you brought my rent?" |
55847 | How are you going to live? |
55847 | How can he do machining if he goes out painting every day? |
55847 | How did you get my address? |
55847 | How do I know you have been in prison? |
55847 | How is it,I was asked by a critical lady,"that your poor women let their dresses drag on the pavement and crossings? |
55847 | How long has he been dead? |
55847 | How long has he lain like this? |
55847 | How long have you been a widow? |
55847 | How long have you been in? |
55847 | How long have you lived here? |
55847 | How long have you lived in this house? |
55847 | How long is it since you had a new pair of boots? |
55847 | How many do they receive a week? |
55847 | How many fires can you light with your farthing bundle of wood? |
55847 | How many fires will your cinders make? |
55847 | How many more? |
55847 | How much coal do you give for a penny? |
55847 | How much did you have altogether? |
55847 | How much do you give for a quarter? |
55847 | How much do you give for a ton? |
55847 | How much have you got here? |
55847 | How much money did you get by it? |
55847 | How much rent do you pay? |
55847 | How much rent do you pay? |
55847 | How much will that cost? |
55847 | How old is he? |
55847 | How tall? |
55847 | I ca n''t help that, can I? 55847 I suppose he has some framed pictures now?" |
55847 | I suppose he will not have a fresh supply in till he has cleared the last? |
55847 | I suppose you alter your plan of your building sometimes? |
55847 | I suppose you have not restored it? |
55847 | I wonder why He does that? |
55847 | In what way do you want me to help you? |
55847 | Is your father alive? |
55847 | John, can you come down and attend to the shop? |
55847 | Not half a dollar? |
55847 | Now, tell me truly as you would a friend, what do you think about them? |
55847 | Now, tell me, where do they live? |
55847 | Of what use would they be? 55847 Oh, it is you, Downy, is it?" |
55847 | Oh,he said,"you noticed it, did you? |
55847 | Please, sir, can my daughter try them on? |
55847 | Potatoes? |
55847 | Shall you see them to- day? |
55847 | Tell me,I said to the widow,"how long have you lived in your present house?" |
55847 | Then when you go out you will wear them? |
55847 | They had a letter this morning? |
55847 | They work for you: why should they give you money? |
55847 | Well, old man, how are you? |
55847 | Well, what do you want? 55847 Well, what of that?" |
55847 | What are you for? |
55847 | What are you for? |
55847 | What are you in for? |
55847 | What can he prove? |
55847 | What did he say to you? |
55847 | What did he say? |
55847 | What did you write to Lady---- for? 55847 What do you mean by that?" |
55847 | What do you mean, sir? 55847 What do you think?" |
55847 | What does he do? |
55847 | What does he work at? |
55847 | What for? |
55847 | What have you done with it? |
55847 | What have you got in these boxes? |
55847 | What have you here? |
55847 | What is he doing now? |
55847 | What is it? |
55847 | What is that to you? |
55847 | What is your weight? |
55847 | What rent did you pay when you first came here? |
55847 | What rent do you pay? |
55847 | What size do you take? |
55847 | What was that? |
55847 | What was your husband? |
55847 | What young Brown? |
55847 | Whatever have you got there, hanging from the ceiling? |
55847 | When did they come in? |
55847 | When did you come out? |
55847 | Where are you living? |
55847 | Where did they sleep last night? |
55847 | Where has he gone to- day? |
55847 | Who is your landlord? |
55847 | Who is your witness? |
55847 | Who sleeps in that bed with him? |
55847 | Who sleeps in the kitchen? |
55847 | Why did you take them in? |
55847 | Why do n''t you go somewhere else? |
55847 | Why should I help you? 55847 Why, did n''t you speak to us like a man last Sunday?" |
55847 | Why? |
55847 | Why? |
55847 | Wo n''t you help me to get away from London? |
55847 | Would you help them if you could? |
55847 | Yes, sir; is it not a deep snow? |
55847 | You do n''t mean to say that, after speaking to us like a man, you wo n''t give me any money? |
55847 | You saved nothing for your lodging? |
55847 | You were a bank clerk, then? |
55847 | You wo n''t tell, will you? 55847 ''Has he given you notice?'' 55847 ''Yes; but how can I go just now? 55847 After the court was over he said to me:You thought me very ill- tempered this morning?" |
55847 | And when the mothers of those girls die, and a family of young children is left behind, what then? |
55847 | Are penniless, ignorant, and often gross young people to be engineered into promiscuous marriage without a protest? |
55847 | Are the poor to have no guidance? |
55847 | Are these and suchlike arrangements good enough for the poor? |
55847 | Are we to accept the principle that punishment must be in inverse ratio to the seriousness of the offence? |
55847 | As I stood over her, she looked up and said:"Are you Mr. Holmes? |
55847 | Brown?" |
55847 | But married men began to ask,"Why can not we have separation orders against habitually drunken wives?" |
55847 | But ought they to suffice in these enlightened days? |
55847 | But supposing the sea be decided upon, in what capacity are they to go? |
55847 | But what avails intermittent wood- chopping? |
55847 | But what becomes of this life? |
55847 | Can an irregular supply of envelope- addressing, continued for a few weeks, be considered work? |
55847 | Can not they influence her?" |
55847 | Can we expect them to exhibit the rarer qualities of human nature? |
55847 | Cure them of animal passion elemental in its intensity? |
55847 | Cure them of diseased minds and disordered brains, by keeping them for two or three years without drink? |
55847 | Did n''t you hear them?" |
55847 | Do people drink less? |
55847 | Do you say we are dirty? |
55847 | Does a lust for blood accompany an excess of the other passion in a woman of her temperament and characteristics? |
55847 | Had her wardrobe been sold to a dealer? |
55847 | Had the West End lady died? |
55847 | Have you no thought for them? |
55847 | He then left us, muttering as he went:"I wonder what he''s for?" |
55847 | Help to have us put out, would you? |
55847 | Here again I am tempted to philosophic inquiry, or to engage in some attempt to answer the question-- Are we as a nation becoming more dishonest? |
55847 | Holmes?" |
55847 | How are they to pay their rent if yours remains unpaid? |
55847 | How came it about that, after such a splendid beginning, they had come to such a deplorable end? |
55847 | How can I get rid of them? |
55847 | How can anyone help them when they are so deceitful? |
55847 | How can healthy, virtuous, and orderly children come from such unions? |
55847 | How many times have you picked up the pennies? |
55847 | How much did they give you this morning?" |
55847 | How much have you got left?" |
55847 | How old are you?" |
55847 | I accompanied them into the streets, and said to the old woman:"Where are you going to live?" |
55847 | I ask, Is not a procedure of this kind a grave misuse of the power of the courts? |
55847 | I did so, and she carefully closed the door, and then burst out:"What can I do with them? |
55847 | I said to him:"Tell me why you did this cruel deed?" |
55847 | I said,"You came out of prison a week ago, and paid a deposit on your room?" |
55847 | I said--"burglary? |
55847 | I saw sensual enjoyment written very largely about his lips and eyes; but I repeated his words,"A high old time?" |
55847 | I shook hands with him, and said:"What are you doing here?" |
55847 | I was speaking a short time ago to a young man whom I knew had been several times in prison, and asked him:"What are you in for this time?" |
55847 | If rogues are to be imprisoned at all, by what process of reasoning can it be argued that she ought to go free? |
55847 | If their teeth are not good, what does it matter? |
55847 | In one of my conversations with the brother, I suddenly asked him:"Have any of your relations been detained in lunatic asylums?" |
55847 | Is it any wonder that the children born of her have poor bodies and strange minds? |
55847 | Is it fair to place on a young and inexperienced girl the onus of deciding whether or not her would- be murderer shall be punished? |
55847 | Is the widespread evil that attaches to wholesale"separation"of no consequence? |
55847 | Is there any justice about it? |
55847 | Looking up sharply, he said:"No, He would have made me bigger, would n''t He? |
55847 | Moreover, if these"young gentry"are to be consigned in wholesale fashion to prison, will it lessen the evil? |
55847 | Of course not; what decent husband could? |
55847 | Of what use is casual bill- distributing? |
55847 | On what principle can she be called a first offender? |
55847 | Perhaps so; but what are the poor to drink? |
55847 | Ragged, are we? |
55847 | Shall we deny these youths the greatest blessing given to humanity-- discipline? |
55847 | She held it up, and tried to look at it; but she was not satisfied, for she said to her daughter, who was standing by:"Jane, is this a sovereign?" |
55847 | Sir, are you going?" |
55847 | The one cry, the one plea of all the poor who are to be ejected is:"Where are we to go? |
55847 | Then, as an afterthought, he said:"What''s the time?" |
55847 | Then, turning to me, he said half defiantly:"I suppose I can take her back home if I like?" |
55847 | To the elder one I said:"What are you going to do to bring a little grist to this mill?" |
55847 | To the younger one I said:"What are you going to do to help the finances?" |
55847 | To what class do they belong? |
55847 | To what, then, shall it be attributed? |
55847 | To- night I was a bit angry, and said,"Oh, is it you again? |
55847 | Was he a boy at all? |
55847 | Was there ever seen that which could eclipse these three old women in the art and virtue of saving? |
55847 | We shall be ill.""Have they paid you any rent?" |
55847 | What are my wife and children to do?" |
55847 | What can I do?'' |
55847 | What can be done for, or with, such women? |
55847 | What can be expected but ribaldry, indecency, disorder, and violence? |
55847 | What can big lads of this description do in such surroundings? |
55847 | What can such youths do? |
55847 | What could the Governor do with him? |
55847 | What did it all mean? |
55847 | What did it matter? |
55847 | What else could I do? |
55847 | What has happened to the old convict? |
55847 | What is the matter with them? |
55847 | What more pitiful sight can be imagined than the removal? |
55847 | What of the offspring that issue from these homes and these neighbourhoods? |
55847 | What place is there in strenuous life for such young fellows? |
55847 | What right have you to submit your children to the care of an abandoned woman? |
55847 | What will be the effect of a judgment like this? |
55847 | Whatever shall we do?" |
55847 | Where am I to live, then?" |
55847 | Where are the greasy, drunken old solicitors that haunted the precincts of police- courts twenty- five years ago? |
55847 | Where are the reddened faces that told of protracted debauch? |
55847 | Where are the"blue- bottle"noses now? |
55847 | Where could they put it all? |
55847 | Which will was to stand? |
55847 | Who can excel the people of our slums in true heroism? |
55847 | Who can reform them? |
55847 | Who can rescue them? |
55847 | Who can tell the anxiety that came upon Hettie in the expenditure of that money, while consumption increased its hold upon her? |
55847 | Who can tell the story of her brave life? |
55847 | Who cares? |
55847 | Who else could have done so much for them? |
55847 | Who told you we got drunk? |
55847 | Who would be nurse for the young man when the old man was gone? |
55847 | Why are they different from women generally? |
55847 | Why did you come so early? |
55847 | Why did you cut your bread in that way?" |
55847 | Why do n''t you go and do the work?" |
55847 | Will it be believed? |
55847 | Will you have one?" |
55847 | Will you kindly lend me the letter, that I may show it to my friend?" |
55847 | Would I excuse her? |
55847 | Would the methodical thrift of the old women give way in the face of such a temptation? |
55847 | Would the old man''s sentence expire before the young man died? |
55847 | Would the young man die before the old man''s time was up? |
55847 | and why has it caused the prisoner to commit a certain action? |
55847 | by volume, who would be a penny the worse? |
55847 | how many times have you put them down again? |
55847 | is that your name?" |
55847 | is there a stronger, more tragical, temptation than yours? |
43466 | ''A live mouse? 43466 ''Have you many mice?'' |
43466 | But does not the free will come in when I decide whether to do good or bad things? |
43466 | But,the penal moralist will demand,"if you propose to abolish blame and punishment, what do you propose to put in their place?" |
43466 | Do you mean to say that tramp could not help doing that? 43466 Do you understand it? |
43466 | I know--how do I know anything? |
43466 | What? 43466 A Mrs. Manningdying game"--alas, is not that the foiled potentiality of a kind of heroine too? |
43466 | A genius is a"sport"; and the question we are to answer here is: How does heredity account for genius? |
43466 | All his family for a hundred generations back certified as having united"the manners of a marquis and the morals of a Methodist"? |
43466 | And God is"The First Great Cause,"and how then can God justly punish any of His creatures for being as He created them? |
43466 | And how can we expect the badly bred, badly trained, badly taught degenerate to succeed like the well- bred, well- trained, and well- taught hero? |
43466 | And how can we say of John Smith that he is"good"or"bad"? |
43466 | And how should they know, when their teachers in the church do not know? |
43466 | And if a child gets bad training, how can free will save it? |
43466 | And if he only bears prickles or poison, who is to blame? |
43466 | And if men are"persuaded"to try, and succeed, to whom is the victory due? |
43466 | And is it not clear that they are held to be good because they are felt to be unselfish? |
43466 | And now what do we mean by the words"good"and"bad,""moral"and"immoral"? |
43466 | And we? |
43466 | And what is that persuasion, but a part of their environment? |
43466 | And what is this charge of audacity which Dr. Aked brings against me for denying sin? |
43466 | And what makes one man a sportsman and another a humanitarian? |
43466 | And what pleasures have these people: what culture and beauty in their lives? |
43466 | And when the doctrine of hell- fire was first assailed, what did the Dr. Akeds of the time declare? |
43466 | And which is the better, to go back for a dozen generations blaming parents, or to begin now and teach and save the children? |
43466 | And who in a game of whist would blame his partner for holding no trumps in his hand? |
43466 | And why did he want to be safe? |
43466 | And would he have been to blame? |
43466 | And, when the change came, what was it that brought that change about? |
43466 | Are facts true? |
43466 | Are the wise men of all ages agreed that the possession of great wealth is a good environment? |
43466 | Are we never to deviate from the beliefs of our forefathers, be the evidence against those beliefs never so strong? |
43466 | Are you men? |
43466 | As for the children-- why do not their parents take care of them? |
43466 | As we do not blame a man for being born with red or black hair, why should we blame him for being born with strong passions or base desires? |
43466 | Because it can not Why does a French peasant never speak English? |
43466 | But are we to suppose that the first speech would discourage a boy who wanted to be a painter? |
43466 | But did he? |
43466 | But do we take any the less trouble to fight against diphtheria? |
43466 | But he would have a conscience? |
43466 | But is it any use? |
43466 | But to drive our fellow- creatures into disgrace and crime beyond redemption, and then to hate them or to hang them; is that just? |
43466 | But what causes him to wish? |
43466 | But what had free will to do with it? |
43466 | But what of Dick, the healthy baby? |
43466 | But what of the other victims of heredity: the criminal, or immoral"degenerate"? |
43466 | But what of the variation amongst brothers and sisters? |
43466 | But what settles the choice? |
43466 | But who did say anything so silly? |
43466 | But, it may be asked, how do you account for a man doing the thing he does not wish to do? |
43466 | But, my Christian friends, how do you find your system work? |
43466 | But, someone asks,"where was his pride; where was his sense of duty; where was his manhood?" |
43466 | CHAPTER FOUR-- THE BEGINNINGS OF MORALS WHAT do we mean by the words"sin"and"vice,"and"crime"? |
43466 | CHAPTER SIX-- ENVIRONMENT WHAT is environment? |
43466 | CHAPTER THIRTEEN-- THE FAILURE OF PUNISHMENT DOES it do a man any good to hang him? |
43466 | CHAPTER THREE-- WHERE DO OUR NATURES COME FROM? |
43466 | CHAPTER TWELVE-- GUILTY OR NOT GUILTY? |
43466 | Can He not give man the power to create actions as God creates stars? |
43466 | Can He, in short, create a kind of little God-- an"imago Dei?" |
43466 | Can he bear wheat or roses? |
43466 | Can not I please myself whether I drink or refrain from drinking?" |
43466 | Can not a man be honest if he choose?" |
43466 | Can social systems sin against man?" |
43466 | Can we blame it for having no purple nor white beads in its composition? |
43466 | Can we blame this"child"bottle for being made up of red, blue, black, and yellow? |
43466 | Deprive virtue of its"dare nots,"and how many"would nots"and"should nots"might survive? |
43466 | Did he ever do any work? |
43466 | Did he make no dangerous friendships? |
43466 | Did he read no bad books? |
43466 | Did his father watch over him, or let him run wild? |
43466 | Did his mother nurse him, or neglect him? |
43466 | Do I speak truth, or falsehood? |
43466 | Do we blame"the vegetable bacillus"? |
43466 | Do you know Thomas Carlyle''s burning words concerning these tragic fates? |
43466 | Do you mean to say I can not be good if I try?" |
43466 | Do you mean to say he is not to be punished?" |
43466 | Do you mean to say he is not to blame? |
43466 | Does John deserve censure, and do his brothers deserve praise? |
43466 | Does it do us any good to hang him? |
43466 | Does it ever set him wheeling clay up a plank? |
43466 | Does it tend to the moral elevation of a man to be like the"Chough"in Shakespeare,"spacious in the possession of dirt"? |
43466 | Does not common experience support the charge? |
43466 | Does not that show free will?" |
43466 | Dr. Lydston, in_ The Diseases of Society_, says: The prospective criminal once born, what does society do to prevent his becoming a criminal? |
43466 | GUILTY OR NOT GUILTY? |
43466 | Gentlemen of the jury, is it nothing to you? |
43466 | Has it not been often so? |
43466 | Has it not been often so? |
43466 | Has society not injured him? |
43466 | Have law and morality not injured him? |
43466 | He can give His force; can He give a little of his sovereignty? |
43466 | Here is a rough sketch of the women in the East End slums: WOMEN IN THE METROPOLIS OF THE WORLD"Have you any reverence for womanhood? |
43466 | Here is one reply given by an angry witness: Do you think it womanly work to push with a twenty- foot pole a boat laden with 30 tons of coal? |
43466 | Hitherto all the love, all the honours, all the applause of this? |
43466 | How Does Heredity Make Genius? |
43466 | How can God blame man for the effects of which God is the cause? |
43466 | How could there be white or purple beads in this bottle, when there were no white nor purple beads in the bottles from which it was filled? |
43466 | How do cattle- breeders improve their stock? |
43466 | How does he know that whisky is dangerous? |
43466 | How is he to"overcome his environment and become good"? |
43466 | How is it mediocrity does sometimes beget genius? |
43466 | How is it that genius does not always beget genius? |
43466 | How is it that genius does not always beget genius? |
43466 | How is it that mediocrity breeds genius? |
43466 | How many men have been hanged or sent to prison who ought to have been sent to lunatic asylums? |
43466 | How was it that his will to fish changed to his will not to fish? |
43466 | How was it that same manhood now served to raise him above the environment? |
43466 | How was that theory met by the Dr. Akeds of the time? |
43466 | How will he decide? |
43466 | How, then, came he to reform his life, and to write his wonderful book? |
43466 | How, then, can God justly blame man for the acts that reason or power"creates"? |
43466 | How, then, can he be blamed if his ancestors give to him a bad heredity, or if his fellow- creatures give to him a bad environment? |
43466 | How, then, can it be just to blame him for being that which he_ must_ be? |
43466 | How, then, can we believe that free will is outside and superior to heredity and environment? |
43466 | How, then, can we believe that man is to blame for being that which he is? |
43466 | How, then, shall knowledge increase or progress be possible? |
43466 | I appeal to your justice, to your pity--( A voice: How much pity had he for the child?) |
43466 | If God can do all things, can He not make man free? |
43466 | If environment can not permanently improve the breed, is that any reason for making the worst, instead of the best, of the breed we now possess? |
43466 | If the will is free, how can we be sure, before a test arises, how the will must act? |
43466 | If you sow hate can you reap love? |
43466 | If you sow tares, can you reap wheat? |
43466 | If you sow wrong can you reap right? |
43466 | If you teach and practise knavery, can you ask for purity and virtue? |
43466 | In how many cases are the poor features battered, and the poor skins bruised? |
43466 | Is Dulcett''s fine musical ear due to any merit of Dulcett''s? |
43466 | Is Mr. Chesterton in a position to inform us that his bold bad peer is not a degenerate? |
43466 | Is Mr. Chesterton sure that he has not inherited a degenerate nature from diseased or vicious ancestors? |
43466 | Is any human being in the wide world edified or bettered when a man is hanged? |
43466 | Is it Jarman''s fault that he has no gift? |
43466 | Is it any answer to tell me that I am presumptuous in opposing the beliefs of great men past and present? |
43466 | Is it any wonder that such men, to repeat Mr. Chesterton''s poetical simile,"put forth sins like scarlet flowers in summer"? |
43466 | Is it any_ use_ hanging men? |
43466 | Is it because he would like another cigarette, but would not like another glass of whisky? |
43466 | Is it necessary for me to answer the charge of presumption brought against me by Dr. Aked? |
43466 | Is it not better to teach and to train each generation well, than to teach and train them ill? |
43466 | Is it not clear that these acts are approved and held good? |
43466 | Is it not due to the"persuasion"? |
43466 | Is it not evident that you must have some good in you if you wish to try? |
43466 | Is it not so, men and women? |
43466 | Is it not so? |
43466 | Is it not the same with personal as with racial traits? |
43466 | Is it reasonable to blame the one for not being like the other? |
43466 | Is it strange that some of our descendants should have what Winwood Reade called"tailed minds"? |
43466 | Is logic true? |
43466 | Is not that so? |
43466 | Is not this, to our own knowledge, the kind of thing that happens to us all, in all kinds of self- training, whether it be muscular, mental, or moral? |
43466 | Is the bundle of God''s making responsible for the failure of the power God made and sent to manage it? |
43466 | Is the skinful of propensities created and put together by God responsible for the proportion of good and evil powers it comprises? |
43466 | Is there a man in court can deny one statement I have made? |
43466 | Is there a man in court can impeach my reasoning, or disprove my facts? |
43466 | Is there any proof that Handel''s mother had not a good musical ear? |
43466 | Is there any proof that she had not, lying dormant, some special gift for music, inherited from some ancestor? |
43466 | Is there any quality of body or of mind that has not been_ inevitably_ evolved in man by the working of God''s laws? |
43466 | Is there anything illogical in that? |
43466 | Is there no sympathy with this unhappy victim of atavism, or of society? |
43466 | It is a pretty picture, is it not? |
43466 | It is the soul, then, that is responsible, is it? |
43466 | Men and women, is it not true? |
43466 | Men and women, is it not true? |
43466 | Mr. Blatchford, being anxious to fight against the doctrine of sin, builds a fatalist rampart, looks over the top, and says:"Can man sin against God? |
43466 | NOW, WHAT DO WE MEAN BY"HEREDITY"? |
43466 | No consumption? |
43466 | No diseases contracted through immorality or vice? |
43466 | No drunkenness? |
43466 | No gout? |
43466 | No insanity in the family? |
43466 | Now, how does the man decide whether or not he shall fire? |
43466 | Now, what does all this show? |
43466 | O, what say we, Cholera Doctors? |
43466 | Of how many towns and villages in Europe and America might the same be said? |
43466 | Of how many women are these terrible descriptions true? |
43466 | On what does his decision depend? |
43466 | Or do they not rather teach that luxury and wealth are dangerous to their possessor? |
43466 | Or how can it be blamed for being bad? |
43466 | Or should we take the sailor''s success as a matter of course, and give our pity to the landsman? |
43466 | Ought we to be surprised that the continual struggle for the mastery amongst so many alien natures leads to unlooked- for and unwished- for results? |
43466 | Practically nothing.... What is the remedy at present in vogue? |
43466 | Presumptuous to deny what great men in the past believed? |
43466 | Prove it? |
43466 | Shall we blame a mongrel born of curs of low degree''because he is not a bulldog? |
43466 | Should we blame a bramble for yielding no strawberries, or a privet bush for bearing no chrysanthemums? |
43466 | Should we blame a rose tree for running wild in a jungle, or for languishing in the shadow of great elms? |
43466 | THE BEGINNINGS OF MORALS In the Buddhist"Kathâ Sarit Sâgara"it is written:"Why should we cling to this perishable body? |
43466 | TO WHAT DOES ALL THIS EVIDENCE TEND? |
43466 | Take the case of a council, a cabinet, a regiment, composed of antagonistic natures; what happens? |
43466 | Talk about the trouble of bringing up children: what is that to the trouble of educating one''s ancestors? |
43466 | The kleptomaniac may be the most troublesome to the community; but is he more wicked than the others? |
43466 | Then how is it his brothers do not drink? |
43466 | There remains unaccounted for-- what? |
43466 | They have no taste for anything higher? |
43466 | This being so-- and we all know that it is so-- what becomes of the sovereignty of the will? |
43466 | This:"Were they ever so anxious to''improve their minds,''what leisure have they, what opportunity? |
43466 | To loathe and punish the victims of society, and never lift a hand against the wrongs that are their ruin, is that reasonable? |
43466 | To what extent was he free? |
43466 | WHAT HAD FREE WILL TO DO WITH IT? |
43466 | WHERE DID MORALS COME FROM? |
43466 | WHERE DO OUR NATURES COME FROM? |
43466 | Was Lady Macbeth free to choose? |
43466 | Was Macbeth free to choose? |
43466 | We can tame wild beasts, and why not wild men? |
43466 | We have hundreds of religions in the world; but how many teachers of true morality? |
43466 | We walk round behind him and say:"Can man sin against man? |
43466 | Well, my friends, how do we feel about a shark? |
43466 | Were his companions all men and women of virtue and good sense? |
43466 | What are the qualities that go to the making of a great composer? |
43466 | What are"morals"? |
43466 | What causes me to try? |
43466 | What causes the fluctuations? |
43466 | What causes these two free wills to will so differently? |
43466 | What do these gibes mean? |
43466 | What follows? |
43466 | What for?'' |
43466 | What goes on in his mind? |
43466 | What had changed the free will of Hicks from a will to work to a will to loaf? |
43466 | What has changed this man''s free will to work into a free will to avoid work? |
43466 | What is conscience? |
43466 | What is his defence? |
43466 | What is it most men strive for? |
43466 | What is it tells him he did wrong? |
43466 | What is it? |
43466 | What is reflex action? |
43466 | What is the cause of crime? |
43466 | What is the cause of ignorance? |
43466 | What is the cause of poverty? |
43466 | What is the common assay for moral gold? |
43466 | What is the lesson of Buddha, and of the Indian, Persian, and Greek moralists? |
43466 | What is there in that paragraph that is inconsistent with my belief? |
43466 | What is this"mysterious"double- self? |
43466 | What is"psychic atavism"? |
43466 | What kind of environment, what land of stamina can they give their children? |
43466 | What kind of reasoning can we expect from men who have been taught that it is wicked to think? |
43466 | What knowledge? |
43466 | What made one do what the other refused to do? |
43466 | What makes me wish? |
43466 | What manner of man would he have been? |
43466 | What says the man in the street? |
43466 | What were his parents like? |
43466 | What would they do, these women, were it not for the Devil''s usury of peace-- the gin? |
43466 | Whence did he derive that defect of ear? |
43466 | Whence, then, did Handel get his musical genius? |
43466 | Where was the"still small voice,"the"divine guide to right conduct"? |
43466 | Which is the more rational? |
43466 | Which of us can assess his debt to such men as Shakespeare, Dante, Shelley, Dickens, and Carlyle? |
43466 | Which of us does not admire and honour an innocent, graceful, and charming girl? |
43466 | Which of you has spoken a word or lifted a hand to prevent this wholesale wrong? |
43466 | Who amongst us has not fought with wild beasts-- not at Ephesus, but in his own heart? |
43466 | Who amongst us is so pure and exalted that he has never been conscious of the bestial taint? |
43466 | Who is answerable for a thing that is caused: he who causes it, or he who does not cause it? |
43466 | Who shall be punished for the crimes of the law and of society against him? |
43466 | Who would be readier to stab a rival, an English curate, or a Spanish smuggler? |
43466 | Who would more willingly return a blow, an Irish soldier, or an English Quaker? |
43466 | Who, then, is responsible for good and evil? |
43466 | Why did he work? |
43466 | Why does Dulcett play the violin so well? |
43466 | Why does Jarman play the violin so evilly? |
43466 | Why does an apple tree never bear bananas? |
43466 | Why does he succeed? |
43466 | Why does not Jones the engineer write poetry? |
43466 | Why does not Robinson the musical composer invent a flying machine? |
43466 | Why does not Smith of the Stock Exchange paint pictures? |
43466 | Why has conscience thus changed its tone with me? |
43466 | Why is John a drunkard? |
43466 | Why is an English labourer deficient in the manners of polite society? |
43466 | Why not? |
43466 | Why? |
43466 | Why? |
43466 | Why? |
43466 | Why? |
43466 | Why? |
43466 | Will He punish or reward us, then, for the acts of His agents: the agents He made and controlled? |
43466 | Will any man on the jury say me nay? |
43466 | Would he grow up with the ideas of to- day, or with the ideas of those who taught and trained him? |
43466 | Would it have been his fault that he had never heard good counsel, but had been drilled and trained to evil? |
43466 | Would it have been his fault that he was born amongst thieves? |
43466 | Would not the effects be very different? |
43466 | Would proper teaching have made a Jarman a proper player? |
43466 | Would such books, so read, make no impression upon his impressionable mind? |
43466 | Would that affect him naught? |
43466 | Would the fierce religious atmosphere of Cromwellian camps have no effect upon his sensitive and imaginative nature? |
43466 | You are not going to tell me that I am answerable or blame- able for the nature of matter and force, nor for the operations of God''s laws, are you? |
43466 | You who are so anxious to punish crime, what are you doing to prevent it? |
43466 | _ But what causes him to choose?_ That is the pivot upon which the whole discussion turns. |
43466 | _ Quite_ sure that his failure was not due to bad environment instead of to bad heredity? |
43466 | _ Quite_ sure the noble was_ not_ a degenerate? |
43466 | _ Why?_ Because it is_ poison_. |
43466 | and the tramp, and the harlot, and the sot; how were_ they_ brought up, and had they anything to love? |
43466 | do you mean to say-?" |
43466 | this suggest the wonderful possibilities of variation and atavism? |
41720 | Ai n''t no telephone in Heaven? |
41720 | Bill, did the warden come up here? 41720 But are you not employed by some religious sect?" |
41720 | But, madam, where are you going? |
41720 | But,she said, turning to a reporter,"what can I do in one conversation? |
41720 | Experiences? |
41720 | Girls, shall I pray for you when far away? 41720 Has there been any change since I was here last year?" |
41720 | Have you a mother? |
41720 | How far have you traveled? |
41720 | Is there anything too hard for the Lord? |
41720 | Lady, is you a preacher? 41720 Lord, who shall abide in thy tabernacle? |
41720 | May I write and tell her you are sick? 41720 O sinner turn, why will ye die? |
41720 | O ye of little faith, wherefore didst thou doubt? |
41720 | Oh, is that so? |
41720 | On what ground do you want a pass? |
41720 | Prisoner at the bar, have you anything to say why sentence of death should not be passed upon you? |
41720 | Sing us one more,the captain begged, The soldier bent his head, Then glancing round, with smiling lips,"You''ll join with me?" |
41720 | Then why do you keep him here? |
41720 | Then,he said,"I will have to send you to jail, or what will you do?" |
41720 | Think you that the Great Judge will hold me-- the poor, weak, helpless victim-- alone responsible for the murder of my wife? 41720 Thou hast written well of me,"said the Vision to the great teacher of Aquinum,"what reward dost thou desire?" |
41720 | Twenty- thirty- four? |
41720 | Under whose guidance do you work? |
41720 | Up there? 41720 What can I do-- what can I do? |
41720 | What do you want? |
41720 | What shall I do with them? |
41720 | What was the matter with you the first time? |
41720 | What''s the use? 41720 When?" |
41720 | Where,he inquired,"Who did such a thing?" |
41720 | Who Will Man the Life Boat? |
41720 | Who is your captain now? |
41720 | Why does He let me stay here and die if He loves me? |
41720 | Why, Harriet,he exclaimed,"what is the matter?" |
41720 | Why, Tommy, my boy, what is it? |
41720 | Will you meet me in Heaven? |
41720 | ''Twas the same wayward girl from the bowery, Who a life of adventure had led; Did the parson then laugh at her downfall? |
41720 | A few years since, on arriving in Omaha after returning from the East, I telephoned the jailer at the county jail:"Can I have a meeting?" |
41720 | A lady passenger spoke to me saying,"How could you sleep during that wreck?" |
41720 | Again she asked,"Have you ever been a Christian?" |
41720 | Again you asked,"Have you ever been one?" |
41720 | All eyes were fixed upon me, and I asked,"Is there one Christian here? |
41720 | All its dangers braving, precious souls to save? |
41720 | An answering whisper came,"Friendless, with Jesus for your friend? |
41720 | And has He not told us,"Greater works than these shall ye do because I go unto my Father?" |
41720 | And now shall I turn back? |
41720 | And shall I fear to own His Cause?" |
41720 | And that there is hope in Christ for them if they will repent and confess their sin to Him? |
41720 | And then he said,"Do you remember the man and woman you saw yesterday in the guard- room talking?" |
41720 | And this case is only one of many; and where shall we draw the line? |
41720 | Are we seeking to reach the people? |
41720 | Are we willing that such a class of men not only hold such an enormous power, but add to it indefinitely? |
41720 | Are you going to remain here over another Sunday, and if so, will you be out again or do you go to the Military Prison? |
41720 | Arriving at the jail the kind jailor was shocked to see me in the officer''s charge, and said,"You are not a prisoner?" |
41720 | As I looked at him he said, with a smile,"Did you think it was one of the boys whom the superintendent had sent for you?" |
41720 | At the close of the meeting the evangelist said,"Sister, how did it happen that I met you just as I did this morning?" |
41720 | Both principle and policy declare this course is wise; Then why longer act the fool and wisdom''s voice despise? |
41720 | Brother, is n''t there in your breast at times an awful aching void? |
41720 | But I hear some one who never gave these things a thought say: How is this to be done? |
41720 | But I know if I should take my own life that it would be a terrible sin; but how can I help thinking such things in a place like this? |
41720 | But how could I go? |
41720 | But what did this hero say when asked,"Why did you insist on this other man''s ascending?" |
41720 | But, how should I get back to the camp? |
41720 | Can I be lonely, mother, dear, When thy pure spirit is so near? |
41720 | Can I live and know that you died upon the gallows?" |
41720 | Can innocence, then, guilty be? |
41720 | Can these men be transformed by the power of the Gospel? |
41720 | Can we not let poor fallen human beings see that we do care for them? |
41720 | Can we poor mortals ever forget our sorrow? |
41720 | Can you believe that I stayed to that after- meeting when every nerve in my body thrilled to get up and run out of the chapel? |
41720 | Can you find none for those now suffering for the same? |
41720 | Could I leave that great crowd of lost women to go on in their awful career without at least one manifesting a desire for a better life? |
41720 | Could it be possible? |
41720 | Could not many a man be saved by being put on probation from the start, who otherwise would be in great danger of being lost? |
41720 | Could perfect innocence endure without a shudder all that is detestable in human ingratitude and human rage? |
41720 | Could you say about when it will be ready? |
41720 | Dear Mother, will you pray for me? |
41720 | Dear reader, are you prepared to do that? |
41720 | Dear reader, do you ever think of the hardships and dangers through which these railroad men must pass? |
41720 | Did He not come"to seek and to save that which was lost?" |
41720 | Did I say"alone?" |
41720 | Did not the angels weep o''er the scene? |
41720 | Did you ask me where? |
41720 | Did you pray for money?" |
41720 | Do I not know their faults? |
41720 | Do pray for me, wo n''t you, that the Lord may lead me into all His will? |
41720 | Do punishments deter men from crime? |
41720 | Do the universal customs of the times foster and beget much of the crime committed? |
41720 | Do they not confess to me their guilt? |
41720 | Do you ask what is the secret of her success? |
41720 | Do you know that every drunkard uses tobacco? |
41720 | Do you need some tracts or papers? |
41720 | Do you not feel the chill? |
41720 | Do you realize how much a busy man needs the prayers of God''s people? |
41720 | Do you think that it was the fear of death, and that that was sufficient to shake to its utmost center the pure and innocent soul of the Son of Man? |
41720 | Does it not rise to the surface at times and overwhelm us, so that nothing but the soothing presence of Jesus can comfort us? |
41720 | Does the discipline of prisons have anything to do with the commission of offenses by convicts when released? |
41720 | Does war beget murder elsewhere? |
41720 | Even as he had clambered up the stairs a guard had cried,"shall I shoot?" |
41720 | Finally I said,"Can you take us to the depot?" |
41720 | Friendless? |
41720 | Glancing over them she exclaimed,"Is it possible? |
41720 | H.?" |
41720 | Have we tried by example and precept to show the criminals that we were really their friends and sincerely cared for their souls? |
41720 | Have we won them to a better life and to good citizenship? |
41720 | Have ye been in the wild waste places, Where the lost and wandering stray? |
41720 | Have ye looked for my sheep in the desert, For those who have missed their way? |
41720 | Have ye trodden the lonely highway, The foul and the darksome street? |
41720 | Have ye wept with the broken- hearted In their agony of woe? |
41720 | Have you any Christian papers and tracts that you would please send to me? |
41720 | Have you heard from her yet? |
41720 | Have you heard that our dear Chaplain''s helpmeet has recently taken this journey? |
41720 | He came forward and extended his hand cordially, saying,"Do n''t you know me, Mother?" |
41720 | He replied:"Sister Wheaton, have you prayed about it?" |
41720 | He said,"Will you give bail for your good behavior?" |
41720 | Helpless? |
41720 | His wife would not consent to entertain me, and I answered,"Where shall I go? |
41720 | How act upon them? |
41720 | How are you to command the respect of those under you? |
41720 | How are you to proceed? |
41720 | How can I live my sentence out in this way? |
41720 | How can any man have the heart not to believe the Bible and rest his case upon the bosom of the good Lord who died for us? |
41720 | How could I eat, when all these prisoners need the gospel so much?" |
41720 | How could I meet them at the Judgment? |
41720 | How could it be done? |
41720 | How could they? |
41720 | How gain mastery over them? |
41720 | How is it that friends are so often denied the privilege of seeing those that are under death sentence or those who are sick and dying? |
41720 | How long, O Lord, how long must such things be in a Christian land? |
41720 | How many girls and boys are sacrificed yearly to fill the saloonkeepers''coffers and fill up hell? |
41720 | How many inmates of our prisons have the gospel presented to them? |
41720 | How many of you are living in lasciviousness, the sin that''s hidden but that God sees? |
41720 | How many of you will pray for_ us_ as we cross the ocean again to go to our own land? |
41720 | How move their hearts? |
41720 | How much more so under other circumstances? |
41720 | How shall we keep pace in penal improvements with the great material progress of the outside world? |
41720 | How then can I write? |
41720 | Hurriedly I said to her,"Do you want to go to Europe?" |
41720 | I am sure she wants to know about you?" |
41720 | I asked all who wanted to be saved to raise their hands; then said,"Will you not give your hearts to God now?" |
41720 | I asked my guide,"Is there not one Christian here in these mountains?" |
41720 | I asked,"How much is this?" |
41720 | I asked,"Is there one Christian here among you prisoners?" |
41720 | I clasped her hand, hardened by work, and said,"Will you pray for me, sister?" |
41720 | I had only talked a few minutes when the proprietor came in and asked,"Are you a customer here?" |
41720 | I had only time to say,"Will you sing?" |
41720 | I knew the Lord had sent me, and how could I meet Him at the Judgment and tell Him I had failed? |
41720 | I longed to be dead, but one night the thought came:"Suppose you were dead, what then? |
41720 | I looked at the man and he said:"Do n''t you know me, mother?" |
41720 | I said of one of the girls to the matron,"This girl looks like a good Christian-- who is she?" |
41720 | I said that I did not and he then asked,"What is your work?" |
41720 | I said to them,"What have you in that box?" |
41720 | I said,"For the sake of young men which you now employ to control and guard these women, wo n''t you do this?" |
41720 | I said,"Is n''t this Defiance?" |
41720 | I said,"O, boys, CAN''T I RIDE THAT MULE?" |
41720 | I said,"Please let me get my shawl, and will you please let me ask one of the ladies at the mission to go with me?" |
41720 | I said,"What can you eat?" |
41720 | I said,"What will it all amount to-- I a friendless prisoner, doomed for life?" |
41720 | I said,"Where?" |
41720 | I said,"Where?" |
41720 | I said,"Will you not send an officer to show us the way to our lodging, as you have arrested us without a cause and it is late at night?" |
41720 | I said,"You are an officer, are you not?" |
41720 | I say to you, is this not enough to satisfy the most bitter feelings of any avowed enemy? |
41720 | I stood trembling and thought,"Must I stand all alone here with no one to pray for me, or encourage me in my labor for the Master?" |
41720 | I was in Philadelphia walking along the street praying--"O Lord, where next-- what wilt Thou have me to do?" |
41720 | I was sure God had sent us, and said:"Will you permit us to see the men in their cells?" |
41720 | I wept and prayed most of the night and cried,"Oh God, can you let me fail now?" |
41720 | Idle? |
41720 | If any one will pray for us, wo n''t you raise your hand?" |
41720 | If prisons are supposed to be erected for the purpose of reformation, why not make them in reality what they are intended to be? |
41720 | If so, raise your hands?" |
41720 | If ten years is not sufficient punishment to make man control himself in future, why not be merciful and kill him at once? |
41720 | In my very darkest moments Would you know what comforts me? |
41720 | In terror I cried:"O, what shall I do? |
41720 | In the language of Socrates,"Why should we who are never angry at an ill- conditioned body, always be angry with an ill- conditioned soul?" |
41720 | In the tender voice of the Holy Spirit came these words:"Can you give up all and follow me? |
41720 | Is He not at the Father''s right hand, interceding for us and for the souls to whom He sends us? |
41720 | Is anything too hard for the Lord? |
41720 | Is humanity wholly dead? |
41720 | Is it because I have sinned so much? |
41720 | Is it not enough that he has lost home, friends, wife, children and happiness at one false move? |
41720 | Is not that precious news? |
41720 | Is social vengeance a failure, and are other means necessary to prevent crime? |
41720 | It is very simple, my dear sister, is it not? |
41720 | It must be expected that some will fall again; but why should the many suffer for the few? |
41720 | It was late and as we came down the mountain side I saw a light at a little distance, and I said,"Where is that light?" |
41720 | It''s curious, is n''t it, chaplain, what a twelve months may bring? |
41720 | Jerusalem, my happy home, When shall I come to thee; When shall my sorrows have an end? |
41720 | Joyful? |
41720 | Just then a well- dressed old gentleman spoke to me and said,"Do you belong to the Salvation Army?" |
41720 | Just where to draw the line, and how to enforce discipline? |
41720 | Kindly, tenderly I talked to them, thinking to myself, what if it were my boy, now safe in Heaven? |
41720 | Lowry._] Lonely? |
41720 | Many like him are saying:"Am I my brother''s keeper?" |
41720 | Men and women who will place in the hand of the prisoner the Bible, in exchange for the revolver, dagger and bottle? |
41720 | Mother Prindle, who was with me said,"Do you know Mother Wheaton?" |
41720 | Mother, why do I get scared? |
41720 | Must death overtake me here? |
41720 | My Dear Friend: Do you think we have forgotten you? |
41720 | My brethren, My friends, My disciples, Can ye dare to follow me? |
41720 | My dear and only child, will God and man have mercy on him? |
41720 | Need I say that my cry was not in vain? |
41720 | No wonder we often hear the cry go up from some poor wounded or crushed heart saying: O, God, is there no mercy left in man? |
41720 | O brother, sister, have we had charity that suffereth long and is kind? |
41720 | O faithless one, is there anything too hard for the Lord? |
41720 | O if I would die now what would become of me? |
41720 | O my God, will you not help me to provide a home for such as these? |
41720 | O thou of little faith, wherefore did''st thou doubt? |
41720 | Oh, God, how long shall the cry of the prisoner be heard? |
41720 | One of them replied,"Yes, why not now?" |
41720 | Only trust Him, He will save you-- Ca n''t you hear His sweet voice call? |
41720 | Our Saviour''s last act of mercy and forgiving love was shown toward a prisoner and shall we imitate His example, or shall we not? |
41720 | Please, wo n''t you let me go?" |
41720 | Reader, did it pay? |
41720 | Reader, is there not a sympathetic chord in your heart for these poor unfortunates? |
41720 | Reader, think you this man was any more a criminal at heart than thousands who move among men honored and respected? |
41720 | Relatives asked me,"Who told you?" |
41720 | Revenge? |
41720 | Saddened? |
41720 | Say, George, when you go back, will you tell the warden Riley''s coming up to call on him?" |
41720 | Set up your scaffold- altars in our land, And, consecrators of Law''s darkest crime, Urge to its loathsome work the hangman''s hand? |
41720 | Shall it be yours to touch that vibrant chord And share the honor of the great reward? |
41720 | She said,"How do you know?" |
41720 | She said,"Will you meet me in Heaven?" |
41720 | Should not the pardoning power be exercised frequently before the convicted man ever reaches the prison at all? |
41720 | Sister Wheaton, wo n''t you come with me to church?" |
41720 | Sister, am I right or wrong? |
41720 | Sisters, brothers, are you and I clear? |
41720 | So I said,"Can I come and see you again?" |
41720 | Some one asked the question,"What is the best thing that can be said of a friend?" |
41720 | Staggering back he exclaimed,"My----, where did you get those things?" |
41720 | The girl herself replied,"Do n''t you know me, mother?" |
41720 | The governor looked doubtful, mused a few minutes and said,"You will go back on the river and be a mate again, I suppose?" |
41720 | The man with whom I had been speaking looked on surprised and said,"Who was that man?" |
41720 | The music comes winding through the corridors of the prison and in all dark wards the whisper is heard:"What''s that? |
41720 | The officer said,"Are you making all of this ado and trouble?" |
41720 | The question is often asked me,"How did you become interested in this work, and learn to understand the needs of the prisoner?" |
41720 | The rails may be all right, the bridge may be safe; but who knows?" |
41720 | The sister whispered and asked,"Did you hear that sound?" |
41720 | The spirit of a man will sustain his_ infirmity_, but a wounded or broken spirit who can bear?" |
41720 | The text comes to me so forcibly,''What, could ye not watch with me one hour?'' |
41720 | The unusual sound brought the keeper, who asked,"What is the matter with you?" |
41720 | Then I said,"Girls, wo n''t you pray?" |
41720 | Then sweetly rose the singer''s voice Amid unwonted calm,"Am I a soldier of the Cross, A follower of the Lamb? |
41720 | Then with all these sacred memories Welling in these hearts of ours, Who in all this land of sunshine Could forbid this gift of flowers? |
41720 | There are children, bright and gay, Now at school and now at play; Why do playmates push them off, Only at their tears to scoff? |
41720 | Think you I''m lonely, mother, dear, When Jesus thus is ever near? |
41720 | Think you that such things as these do not cry to God for vengeance? |
41720 | This lady turned her face to the News emissaries and inquired in a sweet silvery tone:"Going to church, brothers?" |
41720 | Thy joys, when shall I see? |
41720 | Tired? |
41720 | Up there?" |
41720 | Upon the pedestal of the statue were these words,"What shall the harvest be?" |
41720 | WILL IT PAY? |
41720 | Waiting? |
41720 | Was he guilty? |
41720 | We may overpower them, but do we conquer them? |
41720 | We''ve a Home for Prodigal Daughters, Our Saviour says gather them in; Will you help rescue these dear ones-- Who have fallen in paths of sin? |
41720 | What advantage will you give to the men who are striving to obey rules, and do what is right? |
41720 | What always leads a man to destruction and crime? |
41720 | What are we trying to do to lend a hand of relief? |
41720 | What can I do when my time expires? |
41720 | What could the harvest be? |
41720 | What do we see? |
41720 | What have I to hope for? |
41720 | What if your wife were that poor boy''s mother? |
41720 | What if''t were your son instead of another? |
41720 | What is the meaning, my beloved sister, of this scene for us? |
41720 | What kind of a state of affairs is this? |
41720 | What led me to do it? |
41720 | What object have I? |
41720 | What use in saying the Lord''s prayer-- Forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us? |
41720 | What was the cause of the sad plight of this family? |
41720 | What was the cause of this midnight hour? |
41720 | What will we find them? |
41720 | What would have become of me had God deferred this discipline? |
41720 | What''s that?" |
41720 | What, no? |
41720 | What_ could_ we do? |
41720 | When I entered the office the kind official said,"What can I do for you, Mother?" |
41720 | When I had related the facts he said,"Who dare refuse you holding meetings in that prison camp? |
41720 | When I reached the place I sat down behind the door and cried and thought, what shall I do? |
41720 | When I said"No,"he answered:"Do n''t you know your boy?" |
41720 | When are you coming this way again? |
41720 | When before the white throne of His Judgment you stand,"What have you to answer?" |
41720 | When once in doors I saw a piano, and said,"Which one of you ladies will play a piece on the piano? |
41720 | When the book is opened and we hear the words:"I was sick and in prison, and ye visited me not,"what are we going to answer? |
41720 | Where is Tommy?" |
41720 | Where is she? |
41720 | Where next? |
41720 | Where now his footsteps turn? |
41720 | Where should he go? |
41720 | Who among you will give ear to this? |
41720 | Who can tell? |
41720 | Who cares for me? |
41720 | Who is responsible for the sin and crime and suffering? |
41720 | Who is responsible? |
41720 | Who is to blame for this? |
41720 | Who shall dwell in thy holy hill? |
41720 | Who told that conductor to telegraph to headquarters to get a permit to stop the train for me? |
41720 | Who tries to save mothers''girls as well as mothers''boys, husbands and wives? |
41720 | Who votes to put down the saloons? |
41720 | Who will answer in the day of Judgment for that man''s life and death? |
41720 | Who will be willing to answer at the bar of God for that soul? |
41720 | Who will hearken and hear for the time to come?" |
41720 | Who will help to rescue dying souls to- day? |
41720 | Who will man the life- boat, who the storm will brave? |
41720 | Who will man the life- boat, who will breast the wave? |
41720 | Who will man the life- boat, who will launch away? |
41720 | Who''ll help me? |
41720 | Why are they shunned, each one and all? |
41720 | Why did you not fulfill your promise to me about transferring those women from the stockades to the prison here at the capital? |
41720 | Why do I sometimes stray from his love? |
41720 | Why do they want it? |
41720 | Why is this failure? |
41720 | Why not stop that which sends our young men by the thousands to a drunkard''s or a criminal''s grave? |
41720 | Why not, then, look after them? |
41720 | Why should it not be so? |
41720 | Why should not that gracious dew fall even now and always for all of us upon the fields of life? |
41720 | Why will people indulge in strong drink, when God has said no drunkard shall inherit the kingdom of heaven? |
41720 | Will we not arise and shine for God as we have never done before? |
41720 | Will you kindly look at it before I leave?" |
41720 | Will you not try and live so you will meet me in heaven? |
41720 | Will you please be seated?" |
41720 | Will you please send us the hymns called"Tell of the Unclouded Day"and the one called"When the Pearly Gates Unfold"? |
41720 | Will you trust me with these till I return?" |
41720 | Will you wish to have his blood on your hands When before the great throne you each shall stand? |
41720 | Will you, as Christians, let him die believing the word Christianity a mockery? |
41720 | Will your mother''s prayers be answered? |
41720 | Wo n''t somebody help my poor mother?" |
41720 | Wo n''t they be thrown down in hell? |
41720 | Would I come? |
41720 | Would I not have gone on in sin until too late, even had I been sent here for a short term of years? |
41720 | Would you be at rest?" |
41720 | Yes, and his soul? |
41720 | You look tired and hungry"--and was n''t I? |
41720 | You remember the Chinaman who was cook for the Warden? |
41720 | You remember, do n''t you? |
41720 | You shook hands with me and asked,"Are you a Christian?" |
41720 | [ TUNE,"ARE YOU WITHIN THE FOLD TONIGHT?"] |
41720 | _ Wo n''t you sing for me?_"So I sang for him, and he requested me not to talk to him then. |
41720 | has anything happened?" |
41720 | know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost which is in you?" |
41720 | little they know what reform is, for where on earth does one need the Spirit that reforms more than in prison? |
41720 | what? |
20222 | And in that case the experimenter has to depend solely, not upon the attendant, but upon the accuracy of his apparatus? 20222 Are there any means, other than the cries or struggles of the animal, by which you can tell whether the anaesthetic is passing off?" |
20222 | But it would be diminished if the animal was absolutely anaesthetized? |
20222 | But might not the public be more satisfied if a layman-- a Member of Parliament, for example-- had the right of entry on presenting his card? |
20222 | Can you dare to question the purity of our motives, the unselfishness of our aims, the mild and humane methods of our experimentation? 20222 Do you mean to the advanced lectures or to the laboratory?" |
20222 | I can go and see them? 20222 I mean to an operation IN THE LABORATORY: say a Member of Parliament or anyone whose position is assured?" |
20222 | IT IS A RISE OF BLOOD- PRESSURE, is it not? |
20222 | In point of fact, are ANY steps taken with a view of preventing it? |
20222 | Is it an herb? |
20222 | Is it necessary or justifiable for the general purposes of science, and, if so, under what limitations? |
20222 | Is, then, the present law reasonable? 20222 NOT TO WITNESS ANY OPERATION?" |
20222 | Now, what is that work in the present instance? 20222 Sit idly by, and let these poor fellows suffer torments, because if we tried various drugs we were` experimenting''on human beings?" |
20222 | That is all you could say? |
20222 | That is to say, it would put an end to the usual signs of the animal not being properly under anaesthesia? |
20222 | The object of giving curare is to stop all reflex movements...."It would stop all struggling, would it not? |
20222 | There is NOTHING to prevent it? |
20222 | WOULD PAIN CAUSE AN INCREASE OF BLOOD- PRESSURE? |
20222 | Were they justifiable, in your opinion? |
20222 | Were they, in your opinion, valuable experiments? |
20222 | What is it? |
20222 | What is the object of giving curare when you are going to give an anaesthetic? |
20222 | You do not know that? |
20222 | You have told us,said Mr. Tomkinson,"that any medical man, on presenting his card, can obtain admission at once to a laboratory?" |
20222 | [ 1] Does this conclusion bear out the contention that animal suffering in the laboratory is a MYTH? 20222 [ 2] Why was this recommendation made, if the use of CURARE is never associated with painful experimentation? |
20222 | AN ETHICAL PROBLEM CHAPTER I WHAT IS VIVISECTION? |
20222 | ARE THERE NO MEANS WHEREBY WE CAN TELL WHETHER THE ANIMAL IS SUFFERING what one of the Royal Commission called"a nightmare of suffering"? |
20222 | Admitting the existence of the wrong, what can we do to promote reform? |
20222 | And before whom does he speak? |
20222 | And even if an experiment implied danger, might there not be sufficient compensation for all risks? |
20222 | And of the Future, what are the probabilities for which we may hope? |
20222 | And the lesson? |
20222 | And what were these dogs for? |
20222 | And yet why should it be criticized, if utility to science is a sufficient excuse? |
20222 | Are experiments upon man only reprehensible when injury follows? |
20222 | Are the foundations of morals so unstable? |
20222 | Are viands invariably well- cooked, or eaten sometimes rare or raw? |
20222 | Are we any better because it has so largely disappeared? |
20222 | Are we justified in classing them as human vivisections? |
20222 | At any rate, if doubt be possible, should they not have the benefit of it? |
20222 | BUT HOW MAY WE BE CERTAIN? |
20222 | BUT SUFFICIENT TO BALANCE THE COST? |
20222 | BUT WHY ALL THIS BURNING AND STIMULATION TO PROVE A PHENOMENON SO UNIFORM? |
20222 | Beyond this demonstration, does the history of these savage tormentors have any lesson for us to- day? |
20222 | But can anyone call this paragraph a fair statement of Dr. Bigelow''s"later views"on animal experimentation? |
20222 | But can success so achieved ever be worth of admiration? |
20222 | But from the charge of carelessness, of gross inaccuracy, is one as readily to be freed? |
20222 | But how do we know? |
20222 | But how is the measurement of the blood- pressure to be ascertained? |
20222 | But in comparison with the total number--146--how many may that phrase signify? |
20222 | But in defending the moethods of physiological experiment, has he been scrupulously accurate and uniformly fair? |
20222 | But in what way do such records of torture concern the abuses of vivisection? |
20222 | But is it certain that all these various experiments, made upon nearly five hundred dogs were without pain? |
20222 | But is it true that the law of 1876 is regarded in England as a calamitous measure, which Parliament should hasten to repeal? |
20222 | But may it not be best to wait till some knowledge of the leading facts are secured? |
20222 | But may not this"reaction"occur in every case, whether or not the individual has ever been affected by the diseas? |
20222 | But should we overlook the fact that these tests, at first were purely experimental in character? |
20222 | But was it in accord with truth to refer to this passing reference as"A DESCRIPTION of the same operation"? |
20222 | But was this deep insensibility maintained for hours? |
20222 | But what effect would the emotion of terror have upon the heart''s action if certain nerves were first severed? |
20222 | But why are we told that"the animal became TOTALLY ANAESTHETIZED, and that the corneal reflexes were abolished"? |
20222 | But, on the other hand, suppose that the laboratory in England and America dare not permit the whole truth to be known? |
20222 | By omission of all its other conclusions, especially those relating to painful experiments, has the author been fair to his readers? |
20222 | By this great experiment, what valuable knowledge was conveyed? |
20222 | By what methods should it be carried out? |
20222 | By whom should it be performed? |
20222 | CHAPTER VI IS TORTURE JUSTIFIED BY UTILITY? |
20222 | CHAPTER XIII WHAT IS VIVISECTION REFORM? |
20222 | Can it be that dying children were thus treated? |
20222 | Can it imply anything else than distrust of the experimenter? |
20222 | Can lapse of years transmute cruelty into benevolence and righteousness? |
20222 | Can one imagine a medical journal in America or England expressing in our time any sympathy for the suffering of frogs in a physiological laboratory? |
20222 | Can such a man realize the meaning of the word"PAIN"? |
20222 | Can such experimentation as this be termed anything but human vivisection? |
20222 | Can the reader perceive why they exist? |
20222 | Can we criticize the humaneness of one who, at the butcher''s bench, mutilates the body from which life has gone? |
20222 | Can we imagine him willing that the motive of his deed should govern and justify experiments of the same kind made upon his mother or his wife? |
20222 | Confronted by contradictory assertions of antagonists and defenders, how is the average man to make up his mind? |
20222 | Did any injury to Mary Rafferty result from these experiments upon her brain? |
20222 | Did not the blood- pressure rise when this creature''s nerve was stimulated? |
20222 | Do facts support this assertion? |
20222 | Do omissions like these suggest an ardent desire to present the whole truth of the matter for the information of the public? |
20222 | Do such significant omissions illustrate an impartial reliability that commands our admiration? |
20222 | Do they demand its repeal? |
20222 | Do we apply this rule to the engineer of a passenger- train, who again and again runs by a danger- signal, and yet escapes a tragedy? |
20222 | Do we find in the last observation an indication of a growing distaste for such work? |
20222 | Do we not find in this letter an outline of what Professor James would suggest as steps toward vivisection reform? |
20222 | Does all this seem obscure to the reader? |
20222 | Does any one believe that in a human being blood- pressure will ever be maintained by slowly scorching the hands and feet of the patient? |
20222 | Does anyone say that such an experiment could not be made to- day? |
20222 | Does anything here turn upon a definition of words? |
20222 | Does he criticize or condemn Magendie''s cruelty? |
20222 | Does inquiry concerning family history seem useless? |
20222 | Does inquiry concerning religion seem especially impertinent? |
20222 | Does it denote an accuracy that should inspire our trust? |
20222 | Does such condemnation of experimentation upon the hospital patient or children tend to block scientific advance? |
20222 | Does suggestion of inquiry concerning diet induce a smile? |
20222 | Does the occurrence of near- by cases have no significance? |
20222 | Does the poverty of the people have anything to do with proclivity to cancer? |
20222 | Does the social condition of the sufferer seem to have no relation to cause? |
20222 | Does this sinister confession mean that even infants were the objects of his scientific zeal? |
20222 | Eager as he is to charge inaccuracy upon others, has he been always accurate himself? |
20222 | Even granting the utility, who confers upon anyone the moral right to test poisons on his fellow- men? |
20222 | For great cruelty was there ever great remorse? |
20222 | For in what respect does the spirit that animates research to- day differ from that manifested by experimenters of the past? |
20222 | For these experiments upon the eye, WERE DYING CHILDREN EVER USED AS MATERIAL? |
20222 | For this astounding suggestion, what explanation is possible? |
20222 | For what period was there freedom from symptoms? |
20222 | For what purpose should it be performed? |
20222 | From whose door, one day, did it wander, to be snatched up by some thief, sold to a laboratory, and sent to a death like this? |
20222 | HOW CAN ANYONE EXPERIMENT ON THE"MENTAL EMOTIONS"OF AN ANIMAL WHILE IT IS PROFOUNDLY INSENSIBLE TO ALL EXTERNAL INFLUENCES? |
20222 | Had he heard of them? |
20222 | Has any Catholic writer of our time been able to present fairly the arguments which seem so overwhelmingly convincing to Protestant thinkers? |
20222 | Has any authority cited been"garbled,"so that quotation conveys an impression inconsistent with the general tenor of a writer''s views? |
20222 | Has any surgical operation been performed, and if so, what are the details of time and place? |
20222 | Has recurrence followed operation? |
20222 | Has the battlefield been well selected? |
20222 | Has the death- rate been reduced by new discoveries made in American laboratories? |
20222 | Has there not been evinced a disposition to exaggerate achievement, to deny secrecy, to mislead regarding the infliction of pain? |
20222 | Have demands of reformers been wisely formulated? |
20222 | He can not tell from looking at the animal, which is perfectly still, whether it is suffering or not?" |
20222 | How can any medical student distinguish between them? |
20222 | How can one measure the weight of a life- long prejudice, or determine its influence upon conduct or opinion? |
20222 | How can one speak with authority on a matter like this against the evidence of the"one obvious sign"of sensibility? |
20222 | How did it happen that an institution so execrated and so universally condemned to- day, managed for centuries almost unchallenged, to exist? |
20222 | How far did Civilization once go in the approval of torture because of its imagined deterrent effects? |
20222 | How is this to be accomplished? |
20222 | How many animals in any given laboratory are used in each of these phases of experimentation? |
20222 | How many of the 148 animals died because the anaesthesia was TOO DEEP? |
20222 | How many persons in England and Wales will die from some from of cancer during the year 1917? |
20222 | How may reform be promoted? |
20222 | How may the views of such a writer be attacked after he is in his grave? |
20222 | How much of wealth will have been devoted to fruitless explorations in desert regions? |
20222 | How should the scientist overcome this difficulty? |
20222 | How was the cruelty of vivisection once regarded by the leading members of the medical profession? |
20222 | I suppose I would have no difficulty?" |
20222 | I think your solution is just, but why-- WHY NOT TRY THE EXPERIMENT? |
20222 | IS THERE ANYTHING OF THAT SORT AT ALL?" |
20222 | IS TORTURE JUSTIFIED BY UTILITY? |
20222 | If he hears claims of superlative gains by the experiments there carried on, how is he to weigh and decide their value? |
20222 | If impossible to supply the details asked, can you not give the total number of each species of animals? |
20222 | If opposition from the first, had been solely directed against ABUSES of vivisection, could any reform have been achieved? |
20222 | If the belong to the first class, do you think they will become detectives and spies? |
20222 | If there is cruelty behind those barred doors, how is he to prevent its constant recurrence? |
20222 | If there were no need for secrecy, is it likely that every attempt to penetrate the seclusion of the laboratory would be so strenuously opposed? |
20222 | If this be so, why should not the human"material"be acquired always in a way to which the charge of unjust procedure would never be applicable? |
20222 | In all the literature of advocacy for free and unrestricted vivisection can we find anything resembling it? |
20222 | In all the literature of what is known as"antivivisection"is it possible to find a more emphatic condemnation of scientific cruelty than this? |
20222 | In any young writer, would not such offences against veracity invite the severest condemnation? |
20222 | In either case, is there not something of distortion or exaggeration? |
20222 | In many cases, might not scientific research have a better chance to discover the secret of origin were it directed into other channels? |
20222 | In the course of the evolution of life how came it into being? |
20222 | In the entire volume, can one find a single instance wherein a cruel experiment has been censured, or a cruel experimenter been condemned by name? |
20222 | In what way is information of this character to be secured? |
20222 | In what way may we anticipate its coming? |
20222 | In which class, we may well wonder, would he place the first American surgeon of his time because he objected only to cruelty and abuse? |
20222 | Is cancer increasing? |
20222 | Is he a vegetarian? |
20222 | Is he deserving of that implicit faith? |
20222 | Is he willing that the maxim of his act should be universal, and apply to experiments upon his own child, when it lies at the point of death? |
20222 | Is indignation chiefly directed to the"indifference to animal suffering,"or to the"OPEN PROFESSION"of the feeling? |
20222 | Is it Brown- Sequard, ending a long life devoted to the torment of living things with the investion of a nostrum that earned him nothing but contempt? |
20222 | Is it a confession that in other experiments such a state of deep insensibility was not invariably produced? |
20222 | Is it a suggestion that these experiments upon Mary Rafferty were observations following a remedial surgical operation? |
20222 | Is it against the interests of education? |
20222 | Is it antagonistic to medical science and art? |
20222 | Is it conceivable that they suddenly became inoperative thirty years ago? |
20222 | Is it not more than probable that the principal reason for divergent views on the part of honest opponents is IGNORANCE OF FACTS? |
20222 | Is it possible that utility is persistently exaggerated by those who are not unwilling to use exaggeration as a means of defence? |
20222 | Is it so very different, to- day, in the matter of vivisection? |
20222 | Is it the enemy of science? |
20222 | Is not this an admission that in some experiments there was pain? |
20222 | Is not this exactly what the author of"Animal Experimentation"has done in his attempt to discredit the weight of Dr. Bigelow''s protests? |
20222 | Is not this excuse the very height of hypocrisy? |
20222 | Is not this generally the case where inhumanity is concerned? |
20222 | Is not this the physiological ideal of to- day? |
20222 | Is protest against excess to grow weaker, until the ideal of humaneness in the laboratory shall become a scoff and a byword? |
20222 | Is residence near any fresh- water lake or stream? |
20222 | Is the above definition of vivisection stronger than is implied by this assertion of Dr. Bigelow? |
20222 | Is the cruelty of unrestricted and unregulated vivisection a reality or a myth? |
20222 | Is there a liking for the canned products of the packing- house, or for sausage that comes from the same source? |
20222 | Is there any parent who would be willing to have his ten- year- old boy subjected to an experiment like this? |
20222 | Is there to be discerned any tendency to exaggeration, to over- statement or to suppression of vital facts? |
20222 | Is there, then, no method of prevention? |
20222 | Is this a fair summary of the dangers of the eye- test? |
20222 | Is this a fair summary of the symptoms elicited during these experiments upon the brain? |
20222 | Is this a matter of uncertainty? |
20222 | Is this a valid conclusion? |
20222 | Is this the ideal of fairness which the laboratory of to- day inculcates and defends? |
20222 | Is utility to Science to be considered the standard by which human actions are to be judged? |
20222 | Keen have dreamed for a moment that any antivivisectionist would have signed such a recantation? |
20222 | Leffingwell?" |
20222 | May it not be more in appearance than in reality? |
20222 | May it not be possible to indicate principles which would be generally accepted, according to which the line may be drawn? |
20222 | May it not be rather that there are phases of agony so great that the anaesthesia of the laboratory does not suppress them? |
20222 | May there not be others in our day to whom the same criticism is only too applicable? |
20222 | OF WHAT IS THE LABORATORY AFRAID? |
20222 | Of practices secretly carried on, what can we know? |
20222 | Of what possible value was such an experiment? |
20222 | One can not doubt the possibility of laboratory anaesthesia being maintained indefinitely; but how is it with complex and full surgical anaesthesia? |
20222 | Or must we, on the other hand, ask for the total condemnation of every experiment, because some are cruel and atrocious? |
20222 | Or was its origin long before? |
20222 | Or, in the interest of Science herself, should not one attempt the exposure of inaccuracy, and the demonstration of the truth? |
20222 | Or, on the contrary, would such animals be peculiarly liable to sudden death from the effects of the chloroform? |
20222 | Ought we not to go beyond this and require reports to state the facts regarding anaesthetics? |
20222 | Shall he add to pain by his rebellion? |
20222 | Shall we always be blind to the insignificance of that phrase? |
20222 | Shall we say to- day that the utility of torment, in the vivisection of animals, constitutes perfect justification and defence? |
20222 | Should they not be forgiven, and their experiments condoned? |
20222 | Should we find the significant rise of the blood- pressure in other experiments where fire was used for the"stimulation"of the nerves? |
20222 | Should we not have found some witness before the Royal Commission of 1906 making allusion to this flight of the doctors of England? |
20222 | Sitting at their feet, how can pupils be expected to do otherwise than to absorb both their prejudices and their learning? |
20222 | Something? |
20222 | Supposing that morphia or chloroform be administered at the same time-- is the animal, notwithstanding, conscious of pain? |
20222 | That experiments have been utterly valueless? |
20222 | Then why not permit the vivisected dog to have the benefit of the doubt? |
20222 | Thus to suppress and eliminate, what is it but to garble? |
20222 | To permit the untruth to march triumphantly on its way? |
20222 | To say nothing? |
20222 | To what cause, if any, were they ascribed? |
20222 | To what extent is experimentation carried on therein merely to demonstrate what every student knows in advance? |
20222 | To what physiologists of his time did Dr. Johnson allude? |
20222 | To what"CALUMNY"can he allude? |
20222 | Under what restrictions would the British Medical Journal of that day permit animal experimentation? |
20222 | Upon these experiments involving the eye, what judgment is a plain man entitled to make? |
20222 | V. What is the attitude of the author toward cruelty in animal experimentation, or to the secrecy of the laboratory? |
20222 | WAS THERE ANY SUCH SUPPRESSION OF MATERIAL FACTS? |
20222 | WAS THERE NOT REPEATEDLY A RISE OF BLOOD- PRESSURE IN THIS EXPERIMENT? |
20222 | WHAT IS THE USE OF BEING SO ECONOMICAL?'' |
20222 | WHAT IS VIVISECTION REFORM? |
20222 | WHAT IS VIVISECTION? |
20222 | WHAT MORAL RIGHT had these medical gentlemen thus to experiment upon the eye, the pulse, the brain of a single soldier of the Republic? |
20222 | WHERE ON THIS PAGE, IN THE TEXT OR BY FOOTNOTE, HAS THE AUTHOR WITHDRAWN THAT INSINUATION? |
20222 | Was Professor Bowditch correct in assigning the beginnings of criticism concerning vivisection to Dr. Fleming''s essay published in 1864? |
20222 | Was all sensibility thereby wholly suppressed? |
20222 | Was it fair for the editor of a leading journal to misstate so obvious a fact? |
20222 | Was it fair to permit his readers to understand that a DESCRIPTION EXISTED, WHERE THERE WAS NONE? |
20222 | Was it so absolute that doubt is impossible? |
20222 | Was it so secured? |
20222 | Was there a"description given"? |
20222 | Was there any wish to give an impression that the secrecy of the laboratory did not exist? |
20222 | We are inclined to believe that the question will some day be asked, whether any excuse can make them justifiable? |
20222 | Were all these experiments upon soldiers in the Army hospital made for the relief of their pains? |
20222 | Were any of a purely scientific character, having no regard to the necessities of the individual upon whom they were made? |
20222 | Were any of these experiments associated with a"RISE IN BLOOD- PRESSURE"? |
20222 | Were the drugs so administered? |
20222 | Were there twenty? |
20222 | What are some of these reasons? |
20222 | What are the ideals held up before American students in American colleges? |
20222 | What are the names whose mention is to fire youth with enthusiasm, with longing for like achievement and similar success? |
20222 | What are we to say of the results, either to science or the art of healing, which modern vivisection has contributed? |
20222 | What authorities support this conclusion? |
20222 | What can he learn with certainty of what goes on within? |
20222 | What can we venture to forecast regarding the future of medical school vivisections, made for the one purpose of fixing facts in memory? |
20222 | What changes to the existing law of England regarding animal experimentation, or in the administration of the Act, did this Commission recommend? |
20222 | What cruelties of past experimentation has this author emphatically condemned? |
20222 | What experimenters upon human kind has he held up to the reprobation of the public? |
20222 | What has been accomplished by the agitation concerning vivisection which has persisted for the last forty years? |
20222 | What has been the result of vivisection in America, unrestricted and unrestrained? |
20222 | What has been the success of surgery in securing immunity from a recurrence of the disease? |
20222 | What if some future investigation should prove that cancer everywhere, is more prevalent among the Christians than the Jews? |
20222 | What is a vivisection experiment? |
20222 | What is anaesthesia? |
20222 | What is being done in our century in the way of submitting animals to unlimited torture? |
20222 | What is his conclusion regarding all the claims of vastly increased potency of modern medicine over these powers of darkness and death? |
20222 | What is it? |
20222 | What is meant by the qualifying adjective"material"? |
20222 | What is the judgment of the reader upon investigations of this character? |
20222 | What is the location of the suspected ailment? |
20222 | What is the necessity for all this burning? |
20222 | What is the opinion of the law held by men engaged in teaching in the medical schols of England? |
20222 | What is the remedy for human vivisection? |
20222 | What is the scientific value of this assurance-- that"absolutely no suffering was undergone"? |
20222 | What is the value of authority in matters of science, if assertions so fortified by illustrious names are to be received with doubt? |
20222 | What is their significance? |
20222 | What is to be the future of vivisection, as conducted in America to- day? |
20222 | What is"LIGHT anaesthesia"? |
20222 | What judgment does the author pass upon scientific experimentation upon human beings? |
20222 | What lines of procedure in the direction of reform would Dr. Macdonald advocate? |
20222 | What objection can be raised if there is nothing to conceal? |
20222 | What of the other part? |
20222 | What shall be said of experiments like these, made upon children who had almost or quite recovered from ailments for which medical advice was sought? |
20222 | What should we ask with the hope that popular judgment will gradually come to approve? |
20222 | What vast fortunes will have been paid out to professional explorers, whose work will have been in vain? |
20222 | What was that effect? |
20222 | What was the reason for these suppressions? |
20222 | What were the possible consequences of these tests upon the sight of the orphans and foundlings of St. Vincent''s Home? |
20222 | What would happen to a new- born animal placed at the side of a mother whose breasts had been cut off? |
20222 | What, he asks, would his critics have had them do? |
20222 | What, in short, should be the reasonable attitude of every intelligent man or woman anxious to know the truth and to promote reform of abuse? |
20222 | What, then, is the value of the phrase,"ANAESTHETICS WERE USED"? |
20222 | Whatis the social position of the patient? |
20222 | When did death come to her release? |
20222 | When the paws of the miserable animal were burned, was there not the rise of blood- pressure which indicated suffering? |
20222 | When were the first symptoms manifested? |
20222 | Who was the speaker? |
20222 | Who were the men thus stigmatized? |
20222 | Why blame Brachet and Magendie and Spallanzani, to whom anaesthesia was unknown? |
20222 | Why declare that it is already here? |
20222 | Why did the apologist mention only the"smile,"and neglect altogether to mention the other symptoms reported by Dr. Bartholow? |
20222 | Why does it seem worth while to dwell upon these exaggerations and untruths? |
20222 | Why is it that so few of us are able to state the facts and arguments which favour conclusions to which we are utterly opposed? |
20222 | Why not confine attention solely to the laboratory of to- day? |
20222 | Why should any one wish to disturb the silence and secrecy in which we carry on our work? |
20222 | Why this garbling of Bigelow''s"later views"? |
20222 | Why was curare used? |
20222 | Why, then, does not a universal protest arise against such infamous cruelty? |
20222 | Why? |
20222 | Will anyone, after reading that chapter, maintain that THE THREE SENTENCES JUST CITED AFFORD A FAIR SUMMARY OF THE DEAD SURGEON''S LATEST VIEWS? |
20222 | Will it be given? |
20222 | Will it be possible for ever to maintain this secrecy? |
20222 | Will it tend to induce conviction of the need for reform? |
20222 | Will they enter into bonds to the community for the acts of those who, from time to time, they expel, for cause from the medical societies? |
20222 | Will they guarantee that such acts are not, and never shall be, committed in this State? |
20222 | Will they guarantee the humanity and the practice of the thousands of medical students who annually graduate from the colleges? |
20222 | Within the knowledge of the patient or friends, has there been any other case of malignant disease in the same house? |
20222 | Within the past forty years has the cruelty of Magendie been condemned by any English or American physiologist? |
20222 | Without sharp personal experience, can anyone, adequately comprehend what it signifies? |
20222 | Would any of us care to have his own dying child, separated from its mother, and with hands confined, made the"material"for any such experiment? |
20222 | Would he be willing that the law be universal, and that the action of such drugs should first be tested upon himself? |
20222 | Would it be likely to meet general approbation, even in our day, if it were performed upon an infant in a Babies''Hospital? |
20222 | Would it even be possible as a rule to keep them alive a week, yet completely anaesthetized? |
20222 | Would it not be wiser to make some distinctions? |
20222 | Would the author have its readers believe that painful or unjustifiable experiments are never performed? |
20222 | Would the author of"Animal Experimentation"regard this protest against certain experiments made by the men named in that paragraph, as a"calumny"? |
20222 | Yet how is it possible to expect public agreement with this position in every case? |
20222 | Yet to the eye of the experimenter would there not be something to tell him whether or not the animal was feeling pain? |
20222 | Yet what do we find? |
20222 | Yet, when confronted by false affirmations, what is one''s duty? |
20222 | You may hope and believe, but how can you tell that during a prolonged and terrible experiment, the animal suffers no pain?" |
20222 | [ 1] British Medical Journal, May 30, 1874, p. 727. Who made these experiments? |
20222 | [ 1] What is the water- supply? |
20222 | ` Does anyone believe than in a human being, blood- pressure will ever be maintained by slowly scorching the hands and feet of the patient?'' |
20222 | ` Of what possible value was such an experiment?'' |
20222 | exclaimed M. Dubois;` SIXTY- FOUR OPERATIONS, AND TEN HOURS OF SUFFERING?'' |
20222 | higher than that of England? |
20222 | of all mothers giving birth to offspring perished from the accidents or diseases incident to child- birth? |
20222 | or` WHY DON''T YOU TAKE ANOTHER DOG? |
46306 | A great deal? |
46306 | A_ little_''steep''--aren''t you, Roberts? 46306 Ah, Connecticut? |
46306 | Ah, here, eh? 46306 Ah, my friend Rogers has got as far as St. Louis, on his scent?" |
46306 | Ah, you are a friend of Mr. Coe? 46306 All right,"said"Collins,"aloud; but he stepped up to Payne, and kindly whispered in his ear,"But would you do it? |
46306 | And on reflection, you have no just reason to entertain suspicion of any of the clerks? |
46306 | And you have come to think that you are that Frederic Hague? 46306 Are these your best terms?" |
46306 | Are you Mr. Jacobs''nigger? |
46306 | Are you stopping at this hotel? |
46306 | Are you under any special obligations to your brother Floramond? |
46306 | Bob McDonald? 46306 But did n''t you see how she looked?" |
46306 | But how did he get in, and do it so secretly, my wife and I lying right there? |
46306 | But how did you get it-- and when? 46306 But what does this mean?" |
46306 | But where are the rest? |
46306 | But you have several clerks? |
46306 | But you have that important paper all secure? |
46306 | But,asked I,"are Mr. and Mrs. Clemens ready to receive me, as I requested in my note?" |
46306 | But,said Flat,"has all these fellurs paid up their''cessments?" |
46306 | Can I get by? |
46306 | Can I see them all immediately, for I''ve but little time to spare? |
46306 | Can we not walk up Broadway, and I tell you during our walk? |
46306 | Come? |
46306 | Could he do this nicely, and not be suspected? |
46306 | Could n''t you trust me to do the business? 46306 Did he examine anything?" |
46306 | Did he lose it, and you find it? |
46306 | Did you ask him his name? |
46306 | Did you ever have any notice that you were entitled to any property at all in England, till Mr.---- told you so? |
46306 | Did you ever see that before? 46306 Do n''t see? |
46306 | Do n''t you know yet that the Mississippi is infested with old gamblers rich as Jews, and who ca n''t give up their pious trade to save their lives? 46306 Do n''t you think I''d make an excellent waiter here?" |
46306 | Do so-- are you after a''bird''? |
46306 | Do you entertain any special suspicions of anybody? |
46306 | Do you know its provisions? |
46306 | Do you know whose it is? |
46306 | Do you suspect none of these servants? |
46306 | Doctor, you''ve been over to see Mr. Perkins, we hear; how''s he getting along? 46306 Does Mr.---- live here?" |
46306 | Ellsworth? 46306 Enough,"said I;"and now the question is how well can you play your part? |
46306 | Had n''t you heard that he is dead? |
46306 | Has he a fit? |
46306 | Has he told you about one Frederic Hague, a man by the same name you sometimes have borne? |
46306 | Has she a lover who visits the house? |
46306 | Have they been good pay heretofore? |
46306 | Have you a suit of rooms here? |
46306 | Have you ever talked with him about your losses? |
46306 | Here''s a man who will tell you whose it is,said I; and holding it up to the president, I asked,"Whose is this bag?" |
46306 | How dared you to abuse my kindness-- you dog? 46306 How do you know?" |
46306 | How do you suppose anybody could find what was n''t lost-- only stolen? |
46306 | How long have you been stopping here? |
46306 | How_ did_ you find these things? 46306 I am in a great perplexity, and I want your aid to get out of it, for I know that you knew George Wilson-- didn''t you?" |
46306 | I declare,said Flat,"that are''s famous,"taking hold of the book;"neow do tell me what your expenses is in runnin''this here company? |
46306 | Is he Irish, too? 46306 Is he Protestant or Catholic?" |
46306 | Is he in? |
46306 | Is it in Cincinnati that I must work, if I enter upon the matter you may have to relate to me? |
46306 | Is this house on fire? |
46306 | Is your name registered? |
46306 | Le Roy!--do you know him? 46306 Let me ask, then, if you are unwell?" |
46306 | Mr. Cancemi at home? |
46306 | Mr.----, the detective officer? |
46306 | No trifling; and where are the collaterals? |
46306 | No, sir; only he has lent me little sums of money, from time to time-- which--"You have doubtless always paid up?" |
46306 | O, I am so glad, for you''ll be company for me, and keep those mean men away from me-- won''t you? |
46306 | O, a robbery, eh? 46306 O, is he? |
46306 | O, massa, you''s quare-- ain''t you? 46306 O, no, not much, but I should like it? |
46306 | O, no,--why? |
46306 | O,said I,"a man given, in short, to wine, women, and cards, you mean?" |
46306 | Of course, then, you suspect no one in your house? |
46306 | Power of attorney? 46306 Pray tell us what it is?" |
46306 | Purvis? |
46306 | Registered? 46306 Rich?" |
46306 | See what the''spirits''have brought back to us? |
46306 | Seems so? 46306 Sir, can you come right down at once to the---- Bank?" |
46306 | The note of introduction tells you-- does it not? |
46306 | The very man that worked up that case for Coe and Phillips, two years ago? |
46306 | Then John Dinsmore is as much your name as Frederic Hague? |
46306 | Then he would n''t be apt to see it, to remind him of its being there? |
46306 | Then you like him? 46306 Then you, too, have been awake the whole time?" |
46306 | They were white men, you are sure, then? |
46306 | Thirty- seven? |
46306 | Up where? |
46306 | Wa''al, how do I know? 46306 Was a Mr. Hale there?" |
46306 | Well, I want to find him; and can I hire you to go with me to- day and pick him out? 46306 Well, describe him; is he large or small, red or black- haired; old or young; hearty or ill?" |
46306 | Well, did you ever see this bag? |
46306 | Well, did you ever see this man before? |
46306 | Well, do you now think you are entitled? |
46306 | Well, her lover, what sort of a man is he? |
46306 | Well, is n''t this a little dull, Mr. Purvis? 46306 Well, is that all you''ve got to tell me?" |
46306 | Well, sir,said I,"who took it? |
46306 | Well, what am I to do? 46306 Well, what do you judge by his writing?" |
46306 | Well,I broke in, a little impatiently,"if you have_ lost_ those papers, what do you propose? |
46306 | Well,said he,"I''ve told you about that San Antonio case, which first started me into the detective business-- haven''t I?" |
46306 | Were there any robberies on the nights of such watching? |
46306 | Were you ever in England, sir? 46306 What are you doing these days?" |
46306 | What are_ you_ doing? |
46306 | What can I do for you, sir? |
46306 | What did he place this bag with there-- what''s there? |
46306 | What does he expect? |
46306 | What if it should prove that the bank has made no such draft on us that day? |
46306 | What is the number of your room? |
46306 | What is your business, friend? |
46306 | What of it? 46306 What park?" |
46306 | What story? |
46306 | What was his condition that day? 46306 What will you take for it?" |
46306 | What''s this? |
46306 | What''s up? |
46306 | What? |
46306 | When shall I return? |
46306 | Where can I find her? |
46306 | Where can they be going? |
46306 | Where did he take it from, and what did he do with it? |
46306 | Where did you get it? |
46306 | Where were you to meet when one of you found her? |
46306 | Where''s that? |
46306 | Who calls you John Dinsmore? |
46306 | Who first called you John Dinsmore? |
46306 | Who gave you the name Frederic Hague? |
46306 | Who has access to your safe besides yourself? |
46306 | Who''s that man? |
46306 | Who''s there? |
46306 | Why do n''t he marry her and take her away? |
46306 | Why, I never told you any such story-- did I? 46306 Why, John,"--for that is my name,--"why did n''t you tell me beforehand what a glorious creature you were going to see? |
46306 | Why, do you take me for a rag- dealer? 46306 Why, then, does he continue to lead the life he does?" |
46306 | Why, this is a draft on our bank by the Bank of----; cashed, too, I reckon; how came it here? |
46306 | Why? 46306 Would you give me a note to her, as I am a stranger?" |
46306 | Would you know him anywhere you might see him? |
46306 | Yes, sir; I suppose I am_ the_ man,said I, emphasizing the article"the;""but what of it, what if I did?" |
46306 | Yes,he replied at once,"that''s my vest; but I have n''t seen it before in a good while; where did you get it?" |
46306 | Yet, where is the check? |
46306 | You are a little excited, judge; what''s the matter? |
46306 | You say your name is''Frederic Hague''? |
46306 | You took dinner just now up stairs? |
46306 | You want to go to New London? |
46306 | You''ve had a loss? 46306 You''ve seen him often?" |
46306 | Your master''s a great speculator, then? 46306 Your master''s a jolly fellow-- isn''t he? |
46306 | Your name is----, I believe, sir? |
46306 | _ Knew_ him? 46306 ''Tis a little curious, is n''t it? |
46306 | ( the tears coming into her eyes)"chated by the likes o''that dirthy blaggard? |
46306 | --"Mont Collins?" |
46306 | ----?" |
46306 | ----?" |
46306 | ----?" |
46306 | ----?" |
46306 | A good night to- night, eh?" |
46306 | And now I wish to ask you if you knew how that bag got under the counter?" |
46306 | And one day, after he had been with us a few weeks, she said to me,''What if William should not grow up a good man? |
46306 | And so_ you''ve_ come out? |
46306 | And what is there in this world, with its grievous labors and trials, comparable to riches? |
46306 | And why should n''t they? |
46306 | Are there others involved besides yourself?" |
46306 | Are you a Legate, sir, or a relative of the family? |
46306 | Are you a stranger, sir, in New York, allow me to ask?" |
46306 | Are you unwell?" |
46306 | As he was passing out, he spoke jocularly to the president,--"The banks''breaking, I suppose, does not disturb_ you_? |
46306 | Besides, we have a bill of nearly a thousand dollars against these fellows, and if you break them up, where are we to get our pay?" |
46306 | But fix your terms-- what shall I give you for the document?" |
46306 | But how came it in there? |
46306 | But how came the address there in Childs''s hand? |
46306 | But how did he unlock the safe? |
46306 | But how did it get there? |
46306 | But how did she get there? |
46306 | But how should we prove the vest to be his, if he should deny it? |
46306 | But if it were, how get a clew to the thief? |
46306 | But is there not in that letter that which touches other chords than those of sympathy-- the chords of justice in all decent souls? |
46306 | But some name I must have-- and what better can I substitute for the real one than Garretson? |
46306 | But the nation-- the community-- civilization-- what of them? |
46306 | But what was to be done? |
46306 | But when I came down from my room into the"office,"or"bar- room,"properly speaking, the young clerk said to me,"Would the stranger enter his name?" |
46306 | But where was the watch? |
46306 | But while I would not undertake to determine for others the metaphysical(?) |
46306 | But who was this"Williams?" |
46306 | Can I assist you any further now?" |
46306 | Charley,--aren''t you glad, on the whole, though?" |
46306 | Could the lawyer give him any idea of where such a plantation could be found? |
46306 | Did you notice anything at all disturbed in your desk?" |
46306 | Do n''t yer pay for yer vittals when yer takes''em?" |
46306 | Do n''t you see straight through it?" |
46306 | Do you believe in Fate? |
46306 | Do you intend to return there soon?" |
46306 | Do you know anything about Hartford? |
46306 | Do you know how these papers came into the possession of the parties?''" |
46306 | Do you know if this young man has any such garment?" |
46306 | Do you know?" |
46306 | Do you mean that it''s thought to be the work of disembodied spirits?" |
46306 | Do you think he could be induced to come to Boston? |
46306 | Do you think there''s no God in heaven to watch over innocents like your cousin Nellie?" |
46306 | Do you understand me?" |
46306 | Do you understand?" |
46306 | Does he come down chimney?" |
46306 | Does she know anything about her son''s dissipations?" |
46306 | Dr. Hudson, of Cincinnati, I hear?" |
46306 | Ellsworth?" |
46306 | Getting on well with the business?" |
46306 | Had n''t we better go?" |
46306 | Had the bird flown? |
46306 | Had they hunted out Hattie, or were they old acquaintances of Charlotte, and had found Hattie there by accident when calling on the former? |
46306 | Hague?" |
46306 | Have I not made my decision plain to you? |
46306 | Have you been arranging this box?" |
46306 | Have you ever been victimized by them?" |
46306 | Have you found the ring?" |
46306 | Having thus left college, the question arose, what William should do, what profession or business he should pursue? |
46306 | He cried, and said to Phillips,"O, Charles Phillips, how could you? |
46306 | He was well as usual then, I suppose, and just as full of the''Old McDonald''"( for his father was a great old sport)"as ever, eh?" |
46306 | He writes nicely-- doesn''t he? |
46306 | He wrote such a curious hand, did n''t he?" |
46306 | He''s a planter, I suppose-- has a great number of"hands"--hasn''t he?" |
46306 | Here''s his card, to be sure, but who knows that it''s not a fraud? |
46306 | His clothes were still wet, and Daniels exclaimed,"What, was it you, Montgomery, that rescued my child here from the water? |
46306 | How came you to know them so well? |
46306 | How dare you come to me thus?" |
46306 | How did he get in the house? |
46306 | How did he know but he wanted more thousands? |
46306 | How did you get here? |
46306 | How ever identify one dollar, or rather a single one of the ten dollar pieces? |
46306 | How long has she been with you?" |
46306 | How long have you been on from New Orleans, my dear sir?" |
46306 | How many persons are there in your family?" |
46306 | How much shall I give you for that precious will?" |
46306 | How should I proceed? |
46306 | How to find her? |
46306 | How was he? |
46306 | How''s that? |
46306 | How, then, could I hear spirits, or even mortals, so far as their footfalls were concerned? |
46306 | I do n''t know the writin''; but how do I know they ar''all genooine?" |
46306 | I do not know what led me to think of it, but I asked,"Have you locked it?" |
46306 | I gave Mr. R---- a wink, and said, quietly,"That boy would make a good operator-- wouldn''t he?" |
46306 | I have the ticket here; do you recognize it?" |
46306 | I may make such use of your name as I please?" |
46306 | I reckon I had not better try him, eh?" |
46306 | I said to myself,"Purvis? |
46306 | I said,"What shall we do with them?" |
46306 | I see you like fun; there''s a good comedy on to- night; would you like to go?" |
46306 | I suppose you''ve worked up the theory by this time? |
46306 | I thought he looked vexed, too, about something, and I asked,"Well, what''s up? |
46306 | I wonder where a fellow could get another like it?" |
46306 | I would n''t sell it for nothing; but do you want it much?" |
46306 | I''ve too much to do; but what''s the trouble?" |
46306 | Is he a pretty resolute man-- man of sanguinary temperament?" |
46306 | Is he here with you?" |
46306 | Is it a gentleman of the western branch of whom you were speaking?" |
46306 | Is it not a shame to our common humanity that a barrel of flour should, in any family, become a subject for their rejoicing? |
46306 | Is there any suspicion of something wrong about his death?" |
46306 | Is there anybody here that wants to play for something worth while? |
46306 | Is there anybody that wants to make this money?" |
46306 | Is your name on the hotel books?" |
46306 | It is n''t possible-- is it?" |
46306 | It might have been the whiskey, however,--but what matters it? |
46306 | It would be a convenient thing to conceal counterfeit money in, I thought; and then I said to myself,"Why not good to keep stolen money in too?" |
46306 | It''s enough, is n''t it, that it''s here?" |
46306 | Jolly fellow-- isn''t he? |
46306 | Le Franc; but how_ do_ you do? |
46306 | Lucky-- isn''t it, he dropped in here?" |
46306 | Mack._"Are you a native of Connecticut?" |
46306 | Mack._"Did you enlist in a Maryland regiment?" |
46306 | Mack._"Have you your discharge papers?" |
46306 | Mack._"Were you a soldier? |
46306 | Mack._"You have served with General Howard?" |
46306 | Margaret, have n''t I told you a pretty story though? |
46306 | McDonald?" |
46306 | Mr. Payne; very glad to meet you?" |
46306 | Mr. Perkins whispered to me,"Shall we rap, and catch him when he rises?" |
46306 | Mr. Wilson,"said Mr. Redfield,"you proposed to ride on the front seat when we returned; perhaps you''d like to now?" |
46306 | Now you see the relation of things, and we need n''t dispute; how will you settle this business? |
46306 | Of course a name was signed to the affidavit, but how could we know that it was correct? |
46306 | Of course the New York agency was alive to its interests; but where was the ticket? |
46306 | Old Sam Colt was a trifle gay-- wasn''t he? |
46306 | On business? |
46306 | Perhaps you are from there?" |
46306 | Perkins?" |
46306 | Permit me to ask, what was this Legate''s first name? |
46306 | Recover soon?" |
46306 | Redfield?" |
46306 | Shall he go ahead?" |
46306 | She said,''You look excited; what''s the matter with you?'' |
46306 | Suppose we go to the bar?" |
46306 | Take some wine with us? |
46306 | The bank men and clerks looked at the papers, and one of them, taking up a paper of peculiar color, and folded, said,"What''s this?" |
46306 | The door was closed by Mr. R----, who asked,"Why do you change the programme? |
46306 | The name is familiar, but where have I known anybody bearing it?" |
46306 | The night had worn well on, when my companion addressed me:--"Friend, are you ill?" |
46306 | The proprietor reached out his hand for it, looked at it for an instant, and said,--"Is this your name?" |
46306 | They are in business; but I like to have my family about me--""Are these all?" |
46306 | They are to be married within a week? |
46306 | They might stop short of 27th Street, and I_ must_ go there, and what should I do? |
46306 | To find them?" |
46306 | Well, well; have I come to this?" |
46306 | Well, you know;--but I hope I''m not tiring you with my long yarn, sir?" |
46306 | Were they not on the eve of becoming immensely rich? |
46306 | Were they time- old customers of the place, or recent comers? |
46306 | What ails you? |
46306 | What can it mean?" |
46306 | What d''they charge you for this here nice book, to begin with?" |
46306 | What do those speculators do? |
46306 | What do you mean?" |
46306 | What do you say to it?" |
46306 | What do you think now of spiritualism, father?" |
46306 | What do you think of my new plan?" |
46306 | What do you think?" |
46306 | What do you want by the month?" |
46306 | What do you want of me?" |
46306 | What else do they come to New York for, to be sure? |
46306 | What had he done with his money? |
46306 | What have you seen?" |
46306 | What if I should suddenly die, and they should be found with me? |
46306 | What is he doing here?" |
46306 | What makes it seem so?" |
46306 | What on earth can have brought you over here?" |
46306 | What shall I do? |
46306 | What struck you most in his appearance?" |
46306 | What would it not become if these remained near her there in the box for two months, as Mrs. Seymour directed? |
46306 | When shall I begin again?" |
46306 | Where could the scoundrels have taken him? |
46306 | Where did you meet them first?" |
46306 | Where does he live, this Payne?" |
46306 | Where was it gone? |
46306 | Where were these gone, and who had taken them? |
46306 | Who brought them? |
46306 | Who is the thief? |
46306 | Why carry good money in such a"purse"? |
46306 | Why do you ask?" |
46306 | Why do you continue to persecute me? |
46306 | Why have you delayed to bring it to me before?" |
46306 | Why may not others gamble on a smaller scale, and practise their smaller cunning?" |
46306 | Will you have the kindness to forward me your pedigree, as fully as you understand it, or are able to obtain it? |
46306 | Will you help? |
46306 | Wo n''t you go ask him to come down?" |
46306 | Wonder who it was?" |
46306 | Would n''t you and your friend do us the honor to accompany us to our box, where our wives now are?" |
46306 | Would n''t you like to pull off your own? |
46306 | Would you like to go there?" |
46306 | You know him, of course; but do you know any more about him than travelling with him that day-- and what do you know?" |
46306 | You know where that is?" |
46306 | You never knows about the specumaters? |
46306 | You seldom enjoy a finer one here in New York, I suppose?" |
46306 | You''ve got my deposits all safe as the rest, I dare say, eh?" |
46306 | You, too, know all about the business, and would probably prefer to escape arrest also-- wouldn''t you?" |
46306 | _ Peck._--"Are you an officer?" |
46306 | _ Was_ it Hyde? |
46306 | _ Will will be pleased to know the_ WILL_ of the unwilling, at nine o''clock, Monday night, next? |
46306 | a hundred times?" |
46306 | and he commented on it; and I, as a matter of politeness, passed it to the young man, asking,"Did you ever see anything like it before?" |
46306 | and where did you first see it?" |
46306 | and your friend, too; he''ll join us?" |
46306 | exclaimed the man;"and whom did it bring?" |
46306 | exclaimed the old aunt;"do tell--_is_ that_ all_ that''s troubling you so? |
46306 | how do you do? |
46306 | interest, and thus make them"earn"$ 2,100 a year? |
46306 | said Blanchard;"how did you come to know Payne?" |
46306 | said I, touching him under the chin,"that I_ did n''t_ tell you, my boy?" |
46306 | said I;"and you are not able to say that any one of these is more innocent or less guilty than another, eh?" |
46306 | said my friend;"did you ever see that before?" |
46306 | some scamp, or interested person then, had played you a trick?" |
46306 | that is, what was his health?" |
46306 | that will''s got to be probated, and who''s to do it? |
46306 | then he was lending you money, and getting interest on it, which really ought to have been your own-- wasn''t he?" |
46306 | well, do they call you anything else?" |
46306 | you know Mr. Childs? |
46306 | you''re asleep, Mr. Dubois-- are you? |
42363 | ''Have you a marriage certificate?'' 42363 ''When did he go?'' |
42363 | ''When do you expect him?'' 42363 An actor? |
42363 | And Mrs. B.? 42363 And how did you live till now without applying to charity?" |
42363 | And how do you get along? |
42363 | And how do you live on two or three dollars per week? |
42363 | And how does it work? |
42363 | And meanwhile, the children-- what about the poor kids? |
42363 | And my children? |
42363 | And shoes? |
42363 | And the Jewish hospital? |
42363 | And what do you intend to do now? |
42363 | And what do you think, do you think we do n''t know what_ you_ do? 42363 And what is he?" |
42363 | And where do you think they are? |
42363 | And where is he now, your husband? 42363 And who else?" |
42363 | And who is this gentleman? |
42363 | And yours? 42363 Are you coming down soon?" |
42363 | Are you crazy? 42363 Are you her husband? |
42363 | Are you satisfied here? |
42363 | Are you sure? |
42363 | But do you suppose that she has sold her children for immoral purposes that you are so anxious to learn their whereabouts? |
42363 | But from where did you get it before that? |
42363 | But he wanted to show it to you, did he not? |
42363 | But this is not the be all and end all of your life? |
42363 | But what have you against that poor woman? 42363 But where are you the whole day long and late at night?" |
42363 | But why did she do it? |
42363 | But,I argued,"are you not a mother? |
42363 | By what right do you ask me that? |
42363 | Ca n''t you hear when I call? 42363 Ca n''t you hear?" |
42363 | Ca n''t you hear? |
42363 | Confessed, condemned to the electric chair? |
42363 | Could you give me any money for my little ones? |
42363 | Did she? 42363 Did you get at her? |
42363 | Did you hear the news? |
42363 | Did you marry again? |
42363 | Die, die? 42363 Do men come often to the house?" |
42363 | Do n''t you think she looks in the mirror a little too much? 42363 Do you think it is fun to be hit and insulted by an applicant? |
42363 | Do you think that a man like me would be satisfied with a paltry two hundred thousand dollars a year? 42363 Does she buy butter?" |
42363 | Does she go out in the evening? |
42363 | Does she go out to work? |
42363 | Does she go to moving pictures? |
42363 | Does she receive men at night? |
42363 | Does she smoke cigarettes? |
42363 | Does she stay out late at night? |
42363 | Excuse me for inconveniencing you, madam, but could you tell me when Mrs. B. will be home-- whether she is at home in the morning? |
42363 | Excuse me, madame, but why do n''t the children use the garden? |
42363 | Five hundred dollars in the bank and your children hungry and naked? |
42363 | From where did the boy get this package? |
42363 | From where do you all come so late? |
42363 | From where do you get money for bread? |
42363 | From where does your mother get money to buy food? |
42363 | Ha? 42363 Ha?" |
42363 | Ha? |
42363 | Ha? |
42363 | Have they always had what to eat? |
42363 | Have you a doctor''s certificate? |
42363 | Have you any children? |
42363 | Have you no heart? 42363 Have you no relatives?" |
42363 | Have you now an idea where your husband is? |
42363 | Hello, mother, what''s the trouble? 42363 How are you feeling, Uncle?" |
42363 | How dare you insult your mother the way you do, you scoundrel? |
42363 | How do you live, then? |
42363 | How is our man getting on? |
42363 | How long have you been deaf? |
42363 | How long is it since your husband died? |
42363 | How many children have you? |
42363 | How many children have you? |
42363 | How many children have you? |
42363 | How many? |
42363 | How much are we going to give him? |
42363 | How much are you going to give him? |
42363 | How much does your oldest son earn a week? |
42363 | How old are they? |
42363 | How old are you? |
42363 | How so? |
42363 | How? |
42363 | I am a poor widow,she started plaintively,"what can I do?" |
42363 | I will work up here-- work up to the top-- you understand? |
42363 | Is Mr. Salvator Razaza living here? |
42363 | Is he here? 42363 Is it possible that I could have steeled my purse against him? |
42363 | Is she sometimes drunk? 42363 Is she visiting the moving picture houses?" |
42363 | Is that true? |
42363 | Listen,I told him:"I do n''t want to bother you any more, but tell me, have you bread and meat every day now?" |
42363 | Madison Street-- No.--"Where does your brother live? |
42363 | Men, what are you doing? |
42363 | Mrs. S.,I called,"wo n''t you please come out and talk matters over with me? |
42363 | No? |
42363 | Now,I started,"what''s the matter with your children? |
42363 | Oh, how do you do? 42363 Old man, what is your trade?" |
42363 | One is six years old and one--"You liar, you shameless liar, six years old? 42363 One six years and, one--""You lie-- liars you all are-- how old are your children?" |
42363 | Say, Cram, why do n''t you resign your position? 42363 Say-- you-- where are you hurrying? |
42363 | Shall we continue? |
42363 | Sick-- what sickness? |
42363 | Sick? 42363 So he died? |
42363 | The dog? |
42363 | The investigator does not like you? |
42363 | Theatre, base- ball, ice cream? |
42363 | Then this is a strike- breaking agency? |
42363 | Then what can I do? |
42363 | Was a daily spectacle like this to be deemed a nuisance, which called for legal interference to remove? 42363 Was he ill? |
42363 | Well, I have a right to ask,and turning to the woman, she said:"You must tell me immediately who this man is-- do you hear? |
42363 | Well, but if he has no home? |
42363 | Well, how much do you make a week? |
42363 | Well, then, what do you want? 42363 Well, well,"I urged,"why does he not stay there?" |
42363 | Well, what has that to do with it? |
42363 | Well, why do n''t you answer? 42363 Well?" |
42363 | What about that? |
42363 | What about your children, Erikson? |
42363 | What are you laughing for? |
42363 | What do you want? |
42363 | What do you want? |
42363 | What happened next? |
42363 | What happened? |
42363 | What information? 42363 What is it you want, sir?" |
42363 | What is it? |
42363 | What is the matter with you, Erikson? 42363 What is the matter?" |
42363 | What is the name of the rag pedlar? |
42363 | What is this? |
42363 | What is your name? |
42363 | What is your uncle? |
42363 | What of it? |
42363 | What of the boy? |
42363 | What shall I do? |
42363 | What was the matter with the old Baruch? |
42363 | What will become of her? |
42363 | What would you do in her place? |
42363 | What''s the matter in there? |
42363 | What''s the matter? 42363 What''s the name of your husband?" |
42363 | What''s their address? 42363 What''s your name?" |
42363 | What''s your name? |
42363 | When are they coming to- morrow? |
42363 | When did he die? |
42363 | When does your month finish here? |
42363 | When is your happiest time here? |
42363 | When? |
42363 | Where are you going? |
42363 | Where are you the whole day? 42363 Where are your skates, Mike?" |
42363 | Where do you live now, children? |
42363 | Where do you live? |
42363 | Where does your sister live? |
42363 | Where in heaven are you all going? |
42363 | Who are they? |
42363 | Who are you? |
42363 | Who is he? |
42363 | Who is he? |
42363 | Who is that man? |
42363 | Who is that man? |
42363 | Who is that woman? |
42363 | Who visits her? |
42363 | Who''s there? |
42363 | Who? |
42363 | Whose name is Grun? 42363 Why did you leave Mrs. S., that poor woman, without coal?" |
42363 | Why did you not let me know immediately? |
42363 | Why do n''t you complain to the superintendent? |
42363 | Why do n''t you go to work? |
42363 | Why do n''t you help him? 42363 Why do n''t you send him to the Skin and Cancer Hospital?" |
42363 | Why do n''t you smoke? |
42363 | Why do n''t you work now? |
42363 | Why do you have them wait two hours? |
42363 | Why does he give her coals? |
42363 | Why is she so friendly with the coalman? |
42363 | Why so? |
42363 | Why were you discontinued? |
42363 | Why? |
42363 | Why? |
42363 | Why? |
42363 | Why? |
42363 | Will that prove that I earn more than I spend? |
42363 | Will they give him something upstairs? |
42363 | Will you immediately send an investigator? |
42363 | Woman,I cried,"what have you done? |
42363 | Yes, Sam, but what do you intend to be when you grow up? |
42363 | Yes, but from where do you get money to buy food? |
42363 | Yes, but his certificate proves something, does n''t it? |
42363 | Yes, but where did you get yesterday''s bread? |
42363 | Yes,I said,"but what has that to do with it?" |
42363 | You do n''t know who the man is who sits near you in his shirtsleeves? |
42363 | You do n''t know? |
42363 | You hear? |
42363 | You mean? |
42363 | You see? |
42363 | You squeaked-- ha? 42363 You understand?" |
42363 | ''Are you crazy?'' |
42363 | ''What is that?'' |
42363 | ''What wife Leah?'' |
42363 | ''s home?" |
42363 | A few minutes later he asked:"When am I to go?" |
42363 | A man of about forty stood up and asked:"Grun? |
42363 | A pension of$ 200 a month, a trip abroad, a palace, a country house? |
42363 | After all, what are the poor guilty of? |
42363 | After all, why not speak simply? |
42363 | After having satisfied himself that he had accomplished this, he said to me, still looking at the papers:"Why do n''t you sit down? |
42363 | Again the boy twisted around, and looking daggers at his mother he said:"You''ll tell tales? |
42363 | All of a sudden he said to me:"You saw this man? |
42363 | All the bambinos morte, sick? |
42363 | Among her shoes, her museums, and supplies for ever- gaping curiosity( and what else but an accumulation of sights-- endless sights-- is a great city? |
42363 | And Mr. G.? |
42363 | And addressing me again he said:"A fine job, is n''t it?" |
42363 | And does the canner think of that when he allows rotten meat to go into his cans? |
42363 | And does the manufacturer think of that? |
42363 | And does the milkman, a devout church- goer, who baptises his milk, think of the children he is killing, of the future generations he is crippling? |
42363 | And does the owner of mines think of that? |
42363 | And for what? |
42363 | And how could it be otherwise, considering those who give, how they give, and the terrible doctrine of"the deserving poor"? |
42363 | And how many, how many similar occurrences have led to similar results? |
42363 | And the question came again and again to my mind:"Was charity, organised charity, the salve to heal this wound?" |
42363 | And then again I asked:"But_ for whom_ is it kept up?" |
42363 | And who puts the questions? |
42363 | And why do n''t you go to the actors? |
42363 | And you''ll stay there like a lamp post? |
42363 | Any coal left? |
42363 | Any wonder the project immediately materialised? |
42363 | Are the laws different for rich and poor? |
42363 | Are you her boarder?" |
42363 | Are you not a mother? |
42363 | As he passed my chair I stood up and seizing his wrists I asked:"Why do n''t you go to school?" |
42363 | B.?" |
42363 | B.?" |
42363 | B.?" |
42363 | Baer?" |
42363 | But still, what will become of him? |
42363 | But what does that prove? |
42363 | But you saw the girls, did you?" |
42363 | But, I ask you, could I live on two dollars a week? |
42363 | Buy every day new clothes? |
42363 | CLIPPING WINGS OF LITTLE BIRDS"And where does she go every day?" |
42363 | Ca n''t I speak to the rabble with an uncultured voice?" |
42363 | Cheap kitchens for the poor? |
42363 | Did Mr. G. not himself pay$ 4.40( the difference between$ 3.60 and$ 8.00) for a kiss? |
42363 | Did you call Grun?" |
42363 | Did you find out?" |
42363 | Do n''t you understand? |
42363 | Do we get anything for that?" |
42363 | Do you know where it will land him?" |
42363 | Do you really think that he can not hear? |
42363 | Do you see this old man there? |
42363 | Do you think it''s fun? |
42363 | Do you think that I am such a fool as to believe a single word of what you say?" |
42363 | Does any one of them start his daily work with a thought of the poor, with a charitable thought? |
42363 | Even if it is only from the salary, does it not prove that he is getting too much? |
42363 | For God''s sake ca n''t you leave us alone?" |
42363 | For several days this is continued, then the question is put: What is she doing at night? |
42363 | From where all that money? |
42363 | Grun?" |
42363 | Ha? |
42363 | Had she fallen? |
42363 | Had she found her husband? |
42363 | Had she not told me that she could not live on what she earned? |
42363 | Had the sun anything to do with that? |
42363 | Had this been so yesterday he would have turned round and questioned the sunbeams:"Where do you live? |
42363 | Has he a conscience? |
42363 | Have I grown callous? |
42363 | Have I not yet seen it all-- is more horror to follow? |
42363 | Have the overseers of St. L---- caused them to be shot? |
42363 | Have they the interest of the poor at heart, or do they consider first their own job? |
42363 | Have you a personal grievance against the woman?" |
42363 | Have you no feeling? |
42363 | He answered:"Why? |
42363 | He died?" |
42363 | He was dumbfounded and kept on repeating:"Is that her? |
42363 | Hein, you would not? |
42363 | Her children die? |
42363 | How can you reduce wages?" |
42363 | How could I say otherwise? |
42363 | How could she be so sincere when she spoke to others? |
42363 | How could she pawn her watch for a struggling Socialist paper? |
42363 | How do they feel when they think of their homes, when they see a green leaf, when they hear the song of a bird? |
42363 | How do you like it? |
42363 | How do you make a living? |
42363 | How many children have you? |
42363 | How much are you earning a week?" |
42363 | How much at the butcher? |
42363 | How much did I spend at the grocery? |
42363 | How much for dresses? |
42363 | How old are you? |
42363 | How old are you?" |
42363 | How was I to know that the lady president of a Sisterhood affiliated to the office had recommended this case? |
42363 | How will he be father, husband, friend? |
42363 | I ca n''t help thinking, what will become of that boy? |
42363 | I have arms for you-- better tell me how you got on in London-- a big town?" |
42363 | I have been called three times here and what have you done for me? |
42363 | I know you will say:"What else could we do with the poor, incapable of earning their living?" |
42363 | I mean, does she use whisky? |
42363 | I once asked him:"Say, Sam, what do you like best? |
42363 | I put the picture before his eyes:"How do you like the change?" |
42363 | I remembered the Manager''s answer:"Who is supporting this institution? |
42363 | I took out my note book and put the following questions:"How long are you in America?" |
42363 | I turned to the girl and asked:"How do you like living here?" |
42363 | If the mother is in the street what will become of the children?" |
42363 | If they call him_ too good_, what about the others? |
42363 | If this be not true, why did not the Montefiore Home sue the calumniators? |
42363 | In her way to what? |
42363 | Instead of waiting, what do you think she did? |
42363 | Is he from the charities?" |
42363 | Is it not the inevitable result of the present organisation of society? |
42363 | Is it possible that in the present industrial system there should be no poor and no helpless human beings? |
42363 | Is n''t that a sign that they had enough of it, that they get candy every day?" |
42363 | Is n''t that money destined to pay for other things than gasoline, and a liveried chauffeur? |
42363 | Is n''t that so, Mr. Lawson? |
42363 | Is poverty a crime? |
42363 | Is that charity?" |
42363 | Is that her?" |
42363 | Is that payment for the pleasure they give him of torturing the poor? |
42363 | Is there whisky in the house?" |
42363 | It looks very reasonable, does it not? |
42363 | It''s a fine job, Mr. Baer, is it not?" |
42363 | Lawson?" |
42363 | Lazy? |
42363 | Lazyo- mania?" |
42363 | Live on the two dollars? |
42363 | Mamma, who''s there?" |
42363 | Mr. Cram looked at me with scorn, and turning to the applicant he shouted at the top of his voice:"How old are you?" |
42363 | Mrs. H. jumped at one of the women and called out loudly:"What do you want here? |
42363 | Once when passing me he said:"You remember what I told you the other day? |
42363 | Or is this perhaps a new interpretation of Christ''s words:"Let not thy left hand know what thy right hand doeth"? |
42363 | Pitilessly I insisted on getting an answer to my question:"From what do you live?" |
42363 | Pointblank I put the question:"How are you making a living?" |
42363 | Really?" |
42363 | S.?" |
42363 | S.?" |
42363 | S.?" |
42363 | Say-- say quickly what do you want? |
42363 | Shall I bring you her record? |
42363 | Shall I say that the whole trapping affair was engineered by the husband and the second woman? |
42363 | She was all right once, how is she now?" |
42363 | Simply the desire to augment the quantity of records? |
42363 | Six years old?" |
42363 | So and So?" |
42363 | So that''s the kind of a man he is? |
42363 | So they have no bread, eh?" |
42363 | So what could I do? |
42363 | TUESDAY Is there no way to finish it all? |
42363 | Tell me-- did you get tired-- or do you think begging a better trade?" |
42363 | That old fellow who tried to read the inscription comes up to me,"How long will I have to wait? |
42363 | The boy looked at the mother understandingly, as though he would ask, Is this not the one? |
42363 | The boy thought a moment and then he hissed out between his teeth:"What in hell is it your business, now? |
42363 | The boy, longing for childish pleasures, roller skates, which the mother dared not buy because of the investigator''s"Where did you get the money?" |
42363 | The broken- down figure rose, brushed away some tears, and asked me:"And now, sir, tell me, who are you and what do you want?" |
42363 | The charity again?" |
42363 | The gentlemen look at one another a few seconds, then Mr. R., the chairman, gets up and yells at her:"You would not? |
42363 | The janitor, very interested in charity affairs, asked:"Did you sweat them?" |
42363 | The one with flowing white beard and bushy eyebrows? |
42363 | The poor of the land spoke:"Are we to be punished because the locusts ate our grain?" |
42363 | The poor or the rich?" |
42363 | The result? |
42363 | The result? |
42363 | The woman looked me in the eyes for a few seconds, and then, all of a sudden, she asked me:"Are you a Jew?" |
42363 | Then why not be consistent and spend the whole amount the same way? |
42363 | They are in her way-- in her way to where? |
42363 | They wear, they tear; what can she do? |
42363 | To get rid of me he asked,''How does he look?'' |
42363 | To whom are these questions put? |
42363 | WHAT IS DONE IN HIS NAME? |
42363 | Was it purposely done to hasten their death and save the pension? |
42363 | Was she once better, had her work killed her heart? |
42363 | Was the one hundred and thirty- five dollars enough for her to support her children? |
42363 | Was the woman in her insulted? |
42363 | Was the woman placed in a hospital for incurables? |
42363 | Was this a story to purse up people''s hearts and pennies against giving an alms to the blind? |
42363 | We have here a splendid garden-- have a look through the window, sir-- a splendid garden is it not? |
42363 | Were they afraid organised charity was going out of business? |
42363 | Were they afraid that the workers had wakened up to their own misery? |
42363 | Were they afraid to lose the fat positions, or was it simply the mania for investigating? |
42363 | What about they themselves? |
42363 | What can the poor woman do?" |
42363 | What could I do? |
42363 | What could the woman do? |
42363 | What did he mean? |
42363 | What did she think of me anyhow? |
42363 | What do you come to bother us here for? |
42363 | What do you do in your free time?" |
42363 | What do you want with your three small kids? |
42363 | What does it mean? |
42363 | What had happened? |
42363 | What has happened? |
42363 | What has the"terror"done to her? |
42363 | What is it? |
42363 | What is your trade? |
42363 | What is your trade?" |
42363 | What was missing anyway? |
42363 | What was the use of arguing with that man? |
42363 | What will become of his children? |
42363 | What''s it your business?" |
42363 | When I knocked at the door he greeted me with"What d''hell d''you want?" |
42363 | When a young woman has lost her shame why should she beg? |
42363 | When any one applied for charity the first question put was:"Are you a tailor?" |
42363 | When does she come?" |
42363 | When in need of help, why not ring us up? |
42363 | When the old fellow complained about his lost arms his chum consoled him:"What''s the difference how one does, whether with usable arms or not? |
42363 | Whence does she get the necessary additional money? |
42363 | Where are they all? |
42363 | Where are you, loafer?" |
42363 | Where did I get the money? |
42363 | Where does she go during the day? |
42363 | Where does she go?" |
42363 | Where hang their useless staves? |
42363 | Where have I seen them? |
42363 | Where is she now? |
42363 | Where is she now? |
42363 | Where? |
42363 | Where? |
42363 | Who are they? |
42363 | Who ever heard of it?" |
42363 | Who is he? |
42363 | Who told you to put up at a hotel? |
42363 | Why Pagliacci? |
42363 | Why advertise him as a pauper everywhere, at the butcher''s and baker''s? |
42363 | Why are they poor? |
42363 | Why are they sick? |
42363 | Why are they walking naked? |
42363 | Why are tickets given instead of money for meat, for bread? |
42363 | Why did that brute force her to show her face? |
42363 | Why did you move from the other place?" |
42363 | Why do n''t you work now? |
42363 | Why do they die young if it is not because they are degenerates and careless and dirty? |
42363 | Why do you want her children taken away? |
42363 | Why not give it to organised charity and then send all the deserving to us? |
42363 | Why not? |
42363 | Why should I shirk because Cram was not of the right stuff? |
42363 | Why should you take away the children from a mother? |
42363 | Why, she has just paid$ 1 last week on the machine,"and with changed attitude:"What do you bother me for? |
42363 | Why? |
42363 | Why? |
42363 | Why? |
42363 | Work? |
42363 | Would a criminal be treated in this way during the third degree? |
42363 | You are an actor? |
42363 | You give light and warmth? |
42363 | Your wife, Leah?'' |
42363 | a new agent? |
42363 | and let this big stiff hit me? |
42363 | and turning to me he explained:"You see? |
42363 | and turning to me he said:"You see? |
42363 | and what is your disease? |
42363 | and who will farm their dogs? |
42363 | and yours? |
42363 | and yours?" |
42363 | do n''t you know me? |
42363 | here?'' |
42363 | is it not? |
42363 | my good lady, do you allow him to steal? |
42363 | or for what else is it desirable?) |
42363 | or into what corners, blind as themselves, have they been driven, out of the wholesome air and sun- warmth? |
42363 | or no coal, no money, no rent-- do you hear?" |
42363 | or not rather a beautiful moral of well- directed charity on one part, and noble gratitude upon the other? |
42363 | or not rather a salutary and a touching object to the passers- by in a great city? |
42363 | or were they tied up in sacks and dropped into the Thames, at the suggestion of B----, the mild rector of----? |
42363 | screams the chairman, and wipes the perspiration from his brow,"and what is that? |
42363 | she exclaimed,"you are from the Gerry Society, are n''t you?" |
42363 | that''s what you''ll do? |
42363 | the woman cried out, in ecstasy,"is he here? |
42363 | was there not room for one_ Lusus_( not_ Naturae_, indeed, but_ Accidentium_?) |
42363 | went to the poor? |
4686 | A deal? |
4686 | A program? |
4686 | A quarter of a million pounds? |
4686 | After the raids, the arrests and the court cases on three continents, what became of the hackers described in this book? |
4686 | Am I under arrest or not?'' |
4686 | And 30?'' |
4686 | And I asked myself: where are these people in Australia? |
4686 | And what if every time someone called into the general''s number, they ended up talking to the stationery department? |
4686 | And what if the WANK worm was just a dry run for something more serious down the track? |
4686 | And what the hell was he doing in jail with a serial killer raving at him anyway? |
4686 | And who exactly were the Worms Against Nuclear Killers? |
4686 | And why did the US Secret Service think that? |
4686 | And why would n''t Warren back Gill? |
4686 | And why would n''t they? |
4686 | And why` worms''? |
4686 | Are you SHOT? |
4686 | As one Melbourne hacker explained it,` What else is there to do here all winter but hibernate inside with your computer and modem?'' |
4686 | At 11.30 p.m.? |
4686 | Besides, who knew for sure if a defence of addiction could have saved him from the prosecution''s claim anyway? |
4686 | Better still, why not kick him out of Purdue all together? |
4686 | But addicted? |
4686 | But if they were n''t monitoring the connections, how on earth did they find out his special password for the login patch? |
4686 | But the sniffer? |
4686 | But where was he? |
4686 | But why would the creator of the worm release different versions? |
4686 | Ca n''t you come back later?'' |
4686 | Cachou...''` Do you know?'' |
4686 | Call the Feds? |
4686 | Can I have him return your call?'' |
4686 | Can I refer you to someone else?'' |
4686 | Can you read it?'' |
4686 | Come and arrest him? |
4686 | Come and get me?'' |
4686 | Completely enthralled, entirely entranced? |
4686 | Could McMahon have a look at it? |
4686 | Could Pad have made a case for being addicted to hacking? |
4686 | Could his sniffer have logged himself on an earlier hacking session? |
4686 | Could that be the person you referred to before as Aaron in South Australia?'' |
4686 | Could the cops make him come answer questions with a summons? |
4686 | Could they get her fired? |
4686 | Craig did n''t want to protect people like that, did he? |
4686 | Damage? |
4686 | Day leaned forward, peered at Anthrax and asked,` What did you interpret that to mean?'' |
4686 | Dead how?'' |
4686 | Did Anthrax understand that he was not obliged to answer any questions? |
4686 | Did he commit suicide or was he murdered? |
4686 | Did he want a lawyer? |
4686 | Did most Swiss speak English? |
4686 | Did n''t Phoenix ever give up? |
4686 | Did n''t he see the warning signs? |
4686 | Did n''t they announce themselves? |
4686 | Did n''t you see? |
4686 | Did people ski all the time? |
4686 | Did someone obtain access if he or she got in without using a password? |
4686 | Did space ships even have longitudes and latitudes? |
4686 | Did the use of the word` WANK''--a most un- American word-- mean the hacker was n''t American? |
4686 | Did they want him? |
4686 | Did you see that RMIT email? |
4686 | Do you agree?'' |
4686 | Do you clearly understand this allegation?'' |
4686 | Do you feel like, that a deal has been offered to you at any stage?'' |
4686 | Do you have the measurements, and the model number?'' |
4686 | Do you know him?'' |
4686 | Do you know?'' |
4686 | Do you recognise that one?'' |
4686 | Do you recognise your handwriting?'' |
4686 | Do you understand that allegation?'' |
4686 | Do you understand that?'' |
4686 | Do you use the name Pad on computers?'' |
4686 | Do you want to have a pause and a talk with your father? |
4686 | Does it make sense to view most look- see hackers-- and by that I mean hackers who do not do malicious damage or commit fraud-- as criminals? |
4686 | Electron joked with Powerspike,` Who would want to be a member of a no- talent outfit like The Realm?'' |
4686 | Feen, you''ve got the key to the encryption?'' |
4686 | Figured out who you are yet?'' |
4686 | Finally the mystery hacker asked Anthrax,` Are you a disease which affects sheep?'' |
4686 | Had Shatter known this? |
4686 | Had he been raided, even accidentally shot during a raid? |
4686 | Had he given scanned numbers to other hackers? |
4686 | Had the Melbourne hackers stolen half a million dollars from Citibank? |
4686 | Had the NorTel manager disaster at the committal hearing forced them to back down a little? |
4686 | Hand him another little traffic ticket titled` 502C''? |
4686 | Has he done it? |
4686 | Has he had the access to install backdoors in primary source code for major vendors? |
4686 | He did n''t do drugs, so why would there be any white powder anywhere? |
4686 | He did n''t drive, so could Craig help him out? |
4686 | He goes,"What is it then?" |
4686 | He had a bad attitude and he often greeted the party line by saying,` Are there any coons on the line today?'' |
4686 | He had suspected the police might pay him a visit, but did n''t they normally wear uniforms? |
4686 | He looked Mendax dead in the eye and said,` Is this a hijacked telephone line?'' |
4686 | He often thinks: what kind of people are running this show? |
4686 | He turned to Mendax and asked, with a slight grin,` So, what''s it like being busted? |
4686 | Hello? |
4686 | Hijacked? |
4686 | His` activity''forcing him? |
4686 | How about a university?'' |
4686 | How about access to the company''s payroll records? |
4686 | How big is your file?'' |
4686 | How come I do n''t have Calabash in my list?'' |
4686 | How could Phoenix be so stupid? |
4686 | How could an Australian court claim jurisdiction over a hacked computer in Texas? |
4686 | How could he argue against that? |
4686 | How could he hand himself in when he believed elimination was a real possibility? |
4686 | How could he possibly answer that question? |
4686 | How could he respect an institution which had sanctioned slavery as a righteous and progressive method of converting people? |
4686 | How could the criminal justice system put a child molester in the same category as a hacker? |
4686 | How could the police seriously consider taking his mother to Melbourne for questioning? |
4686 | How could this happen? |
4686 | How could you be so stupid? |
4686 | How could you do this to your poor sick mum? |
4686 | How did MOD get Theorem''s Altos password? |
4686 | How did he end up back here in California being chased by a mysterious driver in a white car? |
4686 | How did this rogue worm get into their computers? |
4686 | How did this stranger at the end of the phone know where he had been travelling? |
4686 | How else could it have happened? |
4686 | How embarrassing was that going to be? |
4686 | How had six months''worth of messages from PI and Zen found their way into the hands of the Victoria Police Bureau of Criminal Intelligence? |
4686 | How high was the chance that those documents, which were n''t available to the public, were stored inside NorTel''s computer network? |
4686 | How many computers had been attacked? |
4686 | How many legitimate accounts on NASA computers had that name? |
4686 | How many legitimate users from ANZ Bank would visit Altos? |
4686 | How many of the guests were really just tourists? |
4686 | How much had Anthrax done? |
4686 | How should he deal with an aggravated serial killer? |
4686 | How suspicious would that look? |
4686 | How was she going to find them? |
4686 | How were the raids connected? |
4686 | How would he be able to continue his vital intelligence work without access to Victoria''s most important hacking board? |
4686 | How''s it going?'' |
4686 | How''s it going?'' |
4686 | How''s tricks?'' |
4686 | Huh? |
4686 | Huh? |
4686 | Ideas anyone?'' |
4686 | If the US military was hacking its own computers for practice, what was it doing to other countries''computers? |
4686 | If they knew he was in there, why not just kick him out of the machine? |
4686 | If they knew he was into their systems, why did they leave the sniffers up and running? |
4686 | If we, as a society, choose not to lock hackers up, then what should we do with them? |
4686 | In fact, he had` only read the summary of facts''and when Taylor mentioned` International Subversive'', he asked her,` What was that?'' |
4686 | In prison? |
4686 | In this case, box 544 belongs to this woman...''` So, once again, you just release this type of information on the bridge?'' |
4686 | In what ways am I programmed to` trust''that machine-- to wave my normal security for connections from that system? |
4686 | Is he a fed? |
4686 | Is he addicted to computers? |
4686 | Is he in the computer underground? |
4686 | Is he trying to give me a message from the feds?'' |
4686 | Is it illegal to scan?'' |
4686 | Is it like Nom told you?'' |
4686 | Is that name allowed to connect to me? |
4686 | Is that what you are saying?'' |
4686 | Is this a scan? |
4686 | John''s most basic question was,` Where is"here"?'' |
4686 | John?'' |
4686 | Ken Day caught his breath,` So you are saying that you have now been...''he cut himself off...` that you are not here voluntarily?'' |
4686 | Let him tell the jury at his trial everything he knew? |
4686 | Let the newspapers print it? |
4686 | Lurch? |
4686 | Mendax called out,` Who is it?'' |
4686 | New Zealand? |
4686 | Nothing? |
4686 | Now what? |
4686 | Now, what if all this happened in the first few days of a war? |
4686 | Now, when you gon na give me that shovel back?'' |
4686 | On the other hand, if you were going to kill yourself, would you really want to die in the agony of a petrol fire? |
4686 | One Australian hacker joked,` What are the other hackers going to do? |
4686 | Or had he just told Pengo not to go to the US because it was good commonsense? |
4686 | Or would he really have gone through with committing such a major fraud? |
4686 | Or would you just take a few too many pills or a quick bullet? |
4686 | Par wondered why a senior guy from the Secret Service would tell his minion to clam up about the defence contractor? |
4686 | Perhaps NC state police attended the SS raid in support? |
4686 | Perhaps a better question is, do we really need to do anything with them? |
4686 | Perhaps the SS representation in Charlotte had something? |
4686 | Perhaps there were records of the warrants in the Charlotte courts? |
4686 | Robbed houses? |
4686 | See?'' |
4686 | Set fires? |
4686 | So the question remained: why NASA? |
4686 | So why would I give away this carefully ripened fruit for free? |
4686 | So, Gand, when you gon na go check that JANET system?'' |
4686 | So, if hackers are still hacking, who are their targets? |
4686 | Sour grapes, perhaps? |
4686 | Stuff? |
4686 | Subject: Par and Erik From: Daneel Olivaw Date: Mon Jan 29 21:10:00 1990 Erik, you are n''t exactly the best person to be stashing people are you? |
4686 | Subject: Par, why do n''t you... From: Ravage Date: Thu Feb 01 10:56:04 1990 Why not just go out and say` hi''to the nice gentleman? |
4686 | Such as 78? |
4686 | Suffering from a passing obsession? |
4686 | Surely Citibank would n''t have a computer full of credit cards which spilled its guts every time someone rang up to say` hello''? |
4686 | Surely they had the wrong hacker? |
4686 | Tell me you have n''t been in NorTel today?'' |
4686 | That he had attended the interview of his own free will? |
4686 | That he had the right to communicate with a lawyer? |
4686 | That he was free to leave at any time? |
4686 | The cop snarled back at him,` Do you want to be under arrest?'' |
4686 | The finger system?'' |
4686 | The lawyer would call Spaf and say,"So, Mr Spafford, is it true that you are a world- renowned computer security expert?" |
4686 | The one in Geoff Huston''s mailbox?'' |
4686 | The penalty under this legislation? |
4686 | The reason? |
4686 | The result? |
4686 | The stocky one barked at Anthrax,` Where''s your computer?'' |
4686 | Their attitude was: Hacking Big Brother? |
4686 | Then he said,"How do you know?" |
4686 | Theorem''s letters? |
4686 | There may be some deterrent value in at least catching and prosecuting? |
4686 | Think... think... where can we copy it to?'' |
4686 | Too many hackers in Telecom? |
4686 | Wanked? |
4686 | Want each employee''s security codes for the office''s front door? |
4686 | Was Par having us on? |
4686 | Was Par just making idle conversation, talking big on Altos? |
4686 | Was he alive? |
4686 | Was he in the system now? |
4686 | Was it any member of the AFP that told you this?'' |
4686 | Was it malicious? |
4686 | Was n''t everything relevant to his case supposed to be covered in a hand- up brief? |
4686 | Was that a legal copy of the source code? |
4686 | Was the hacker behind the worm malevolent? |
4686 | Was the hacker behind the worm really protesting against NASA''s launch of the plutonium- powered Galileo space probe? |
4686 | Was the thing a practical joke or a time bomb just waiting to go off? |
4686 | Was the underground rife with credit card frauders? |
4686 | Was this meant to be helpful warning, or just the gratification of some kind of sadistic tendency? |
4686 | We have your account number, but we had better check your password... what was it?'' |
4686 | Were his room- mates in cahoots the Secret Service? |
4686 | Were little blue pills placebos? |
4686 | Were the law- enforcement agencies on three different continents really organised enough to coordinate worldwide attacks on hackers? |
4686 | Were they a guerrilla terrorist group launching some sort of attack on NASA? |
4686 | Were they just buying time so they could turn him in? |
4686 | Were they some loony fringe group? |
4686 | What about that tone? |
4686 | What about the local coppers? |
4686 | What about the rest of life? |
4686 | What are they generally for?'' |
4686 | What are they going to do? |
4686 | What could Par do? |
4686 | What could be done to kill it? |
4686 | What damage? |
4686 | What did he mean-- Par had to leave? |
4686 | What did he mean?'' |
4686 | What did it mean when a system was` wanked''? |
4686 | What did it mean` to obtain access''to a computer? |
4686 | What did this key sequence do? |
4686 | What did you say?'' |
4686 | What did` voluntarily''mean? |
4686 | What else could he do? |
4686 | What else was Par going to say? |
4686 | What had Force done to get the computer to sing its song? |
4686 | What if Prime Suspect was on NorTel at that moment? |
4686 | What if Zardoz fell into the wrong hands? |
4686 | What if a trace had been installed? |
4686 | What if every time General Colin Powell picked up his phone, he was be automatically patched through to some Russian general''s office? |
4686 | What if he or she used the username` guest''and the password` guest''? |
4686 | What if no- one needed those resources at 2 a.m. on a given night? |
4686 | What if none of the phone numbers connected to their proper telephones? |
4686 | What if some buttoned- down Telecom engineer had driven to work early that morning to get some work done? |
4686 | What if someone happened to be sitting at the terminal where he chose to run the binary? |
4686 | What if someone moved the database by renaming it and put a dummy database in its place? |
4686 | What if the Secret Service was still watching the place? |
4686 | What if they had called in the Feds? |
4686 | What is it?'' |
4686 | What kind of computer was this? |
4686 | What kind of credibility would a seventeen- year- old hacker have in denying those sorts of allegations? |
4686 | What kind of programs do these hackers want to backdoor? |
4686 | What kind of trouble am I going to be in that the first people I call are the AFP?'' |
4686 | What made him want to hack or phreak in the first place? |
4686 | What maintenance unit? |
4686 | What on earth was Day talking about? |
4686 | What on earth was she doing, spending every night in front of a computer screen? |
4686 | What other languages did she know? |
4686 | What password best fitted that description? |
4686 | What programs was the hacker running? |
4686 | What sort of person would do this? |
4686 | What sort? |
4686 | What the fuck does that mean? |
4686 | What the fuck is a Caesura?'' |
4686 | What the hell is a Cabriolet? |
4686 | What the hell was a system administrator doing on a computer at this hour? |
4686 | What to do now? |
4686 | What use was a password and account name without knowing what computer system to use it on? |
4686 | What was behind the sudden silence? |
4686 | What was going on? |
4686 | What was he really trying to say? |
4686 | What was in his desk drawer? |
4686 | What was the best way out? |
4686 | What was the man trying to tell him? |
4686 | What was the point in asking for one anyway? |
4686 | What was the weather like? |
4686 | What was this all about? |
4686 | What was this cop talking about? |
4686 | What was this project? |
4686 | What were the law enforcement agencies going to do? |
4686 | What were these NorTel people on about? |
4686 | What would he look like? |
4686 | What would the Secret Service do to him when they found out? |
4686 | What would you do when you found a VMB?'' |
4686 | What''s his address? |
4686 | What''s on your disks or what''s in your desk drawer?'' |
4686 | What''s that?'' |
4686 | What''s the matter?'' |
4686 | What''s the name of the incoming machine? |
4686 | When McMahon pointed out the flaw, Oberman thought, God, how did I miss that? |
4686 | When he rang friends, they would open the conversation saying,` Oh, is that Little Jack Horner?'' |
4686 | When was the last time he had logged into the system using that special password? |
4686 | Where is it? |
4686 | Where is this heading? |
4686 | Where was the damn thing? |
4686 | Where were these guys getting these numbers from? |
4686 | Where were they? |
4686 | Where?'' |
4686 | Which computer had the worm come from? |
4686 | Which file?'' |
4686 | Which one of your friends has it?'' |
4686 | Which systems was it attacking from the infected site? |
4686 | Which was automatically doing this? |
4686 | Who are hackers? |
4686 | Who cares? |
4686 | Who could chase him? |
4686 | Who could he trust? |
4686 | Who could tell whether a system housed the Christmas party invite list or the secret designs for a new NorTel product? |
4686 | Who else could have been involved? |
4686 | Who had? |
4686 | Who is on the other side these days? |
4686 | Who knew if the Zardoz bundle was still there? |
4686 | Who knows? |
4686 | Who makes up these dictionaries?'' |
4686 | Who told you my system was a pirate system?'' |
4686 | Who was behind the attack? |
4686 | Who was behind this? |
4686 | Who was that guy? |
4686 | Who was the Killer Tomato? |
4686 | Who was this Captain Cash? |
4686 | Who were the American law enforcement agencies after in Australia? |
4686 | Who were these people? |
4686 | Who would chose a worm as a symbol of power? |
4686 | Who would want to invade NASA''s computer systems? |
4686 | Who wrote the article?'' |
4686 | Who wrote this letter? |
4686 | Who''d pick Cabbage as their password?'' |
4686 | Why are these guys bringing me in the front entrance? |
4686 | Why do they hack? |
4686 | Why had no- one, no political or other group, claimed responsibility for the WANK worm? |
4686 | Why had the creator recreated the worm and released it a second time? |
4686 | Why kill Commercial?'' |
4686 | Why not just write one version properly and fire it off? |
4686 | Why not? |
4686 | Why not? |
4686 | Why not? |
4686 | Why on earth would an AT&T guy be staying in a tiny hick town in North Carolina? |
4686 | Why pull the plug? |
4686 | Why should he treat these people with any respect after the way they threatened his mother? |
4686 | Why should n''t they be? |
4686 | Why was everyone behaving in such a weird way? |
4686 | Why was the consular official talking to him like that? |
4686 | Why were the cops getting so uncomfortable all of a sudden? |
4686 | Why would RMIT keep a full- time staff person on?'' |
4686 | Why would an author give away an unlimited number of copies of her book for free? |
4686 | Why would n''t Spaf''s machine answer? |
4686 | Why would n''t he be? |
4686 | Why would they bother with some tiny amount of dope that was hardly worth the paperwork? |
4686 | Why? |
4686 | Why? |
4686 | Why? |
4686 | With growing anxiety, Par whispered to Phoenix,` Who IS this guy? |
4686 | Work???'' |
4686 | Work???'' |
4686 | Work???'' |
4686 | Would he come over to help handle the crisis? |
4686 | Would he help Tencati? |
4686 | Would it destroy all the scientific data it came into contact with? |
4686 | Would it want to risk him talking to other prisoners-- hardened criminals who knew how to make a dollar from that sort of information? |
4686 | Would the US government just lock him up and throw away the key? |
4686 | Would they go in hard if he pleaded guilty? |
4686 | Would they have the same chemistry in person as on- line? |
4686 | Would they tell the office where she worked as a clerk? |
4686 | You are KIDDING?'' |
4686 | You do n''t think we will?'' |
4686 | You saw Deszip''s source code?'' |
4686 | ` All right, well are you going to answer any questions in relation to unlawfully accessing any computer systems?'' |
4686 | ` And is anyone forcing you to make the answers you have given here today?'' |
4686 | ` And once you found something, what would you do with it?'' |
4686 | ` And you believe that if I pick up the telephone book, I would get all this information?'' |
4686 | ` Any other names besides dickhead that is?'' |
4686 | ` Anything in here of interest?'' |
4686 | ` Are there any firearms in the house?'' |
4686 | ` Are you home so soon?'' |
4686 | ` Ca n''t you think of anything better than that?'' |
4686 | ` Can we get a copy anywhere else?'' |
4686 | ` Can you check his originating NUA?'' |
4686 | ` Can you make sure everything is working? |
4686 | ` Dead? |
4686 | ` Did it work?'' |
4686 | ` Did you see THAT?'' |
4686 | ` Do I know you?'' |
4686 | ` Do they know my real name?'' |
4686 | ` Do you and Gand still have that encrypted copy of Deszip we gave you a few months ago?'' |
4686 | ` Do you feel that an unfair inducement has been placed on you as a result of that?'' |
4686 | ` Do you feel that as a result of that being said that you have been pressured to come forward today and tell the truth?'' |
4686 | ` Do you know who WE are?'' |
4686 | ` Do you still have Deszip?'' |
4686 | ` Do you use computers? |
4686 | ` Good news?'' |
4686 | ` Got ta be some place with room-- how big is it?'' |
4686 | ` Guess what?'' |
4686 | ` Guest, do you have a name?'' |
4686 | ` Hang on-- does it have Crypt?'' |
4686 | ` Have you decrypted it yet?'' |
4686 | ` Hello, and is this the man called Patrick?'' |
4686 | ` Hmm, why do n''t I go check?'' |
4686 | ` Hmm? |
4686 | ` How bad?'' |
4686 | ` How come you want it?'' |
4686 | ` How come? |
4686 | ` How did you go?'' |
4686 | ` How do I know you''re really the police?'' |
4686 | ` How many characters is it?'' |
4686 | ` How many digits is it?'' |
4686 | ` How much is a lot?'' |
4686 | ` Huh? |
4686 | ` Huh? |
4686 | ` Huh?'' |
4686 | ` I hid it, but who knows? |
4686 | ` If he had n''t withdrawn into the cybernetic highway, what would he have done instead? |
4686 | ` If you rang a 1- 800 number, where would you go?'' |
4686 | ` In what sense?'' |
4686 | ` Is it Canada--0014?'' |
4686 | ` Is it something I can think over and discuss?'' |
4686 | ` Is n''t it?'' |
4686 | ` Is that guy OK?'' |
4686 | ` Is that meant to be an insult?'' |
4686 | ` Is there something wrong? |
4686 | ` It does matter,''Day responded,` because at the beginning of the interview it was stated-- do you agree-- that you have come in here voluntarily?'' |
4686 | ` It might be a warning of some kind?'' |
4686 | ` It''s a conference type of call?'' |
4686 | ` It''s the circumstances that are forcing this upon you, not an individual?'' |
4686 | ` Just between you and me, are you Mendax?'' |
4686 | ` Mr McKenny? |
4686 | ` No? |
4686 | ` Oh? |
4686 | ` Once you have tasted the forbidden fruit?'' |
4686 | ` Par?'' |
4686 | ` Party not much fun?'' |
4686 | ` See?'' |
4686 | ` Should I give him the key?'' |
4686 | ` Since this?'' |
4686 | ` So, Mendax, what do you know about that white powder in the bedroom?'' |
4686 | ` So, Pad, what else did Shatter tell you?'' |
4686 | ` So, do you reckon we''ll make the cover of Time or Newsweek?'' |
4686 | ` So, what is the methodology behind it... finger... then, it''s normally... what is the normal command after that to try and get the password out?'' |
4686 | ` So, what''s the address?'' |
4686 | ` So,''a relaxed Par asked his room- mate,` How are things going at home?'' |
4686 | ` So,''said one of the officers as they headed toward his home,` what are you more worried about? |
4686 | ` Then Markoff sounds really stunned, and he goes,"People?" |
4686 | ` They any good?'' |
4686 | ` They looked up to me? |
4686 | ` Try it on?'' |
4686 | ` Two judges have had a crack at it, why not a third one? |
4686 | ` Uhm, which system?'' |
4686 | ` WHAT???? |
4686 | ` WHAT???? |
4686 | ` WHAT???? |
4686 | ` WHAT???? |
4686 | ` Was he? |
4686 | ` Was it a matter of curiosity--"Gee, this is interesting"or was it more like"I would like to get into them"at this stage?'' |
4686 | ` Was that A GUN SHOT? |
4686 | ` Was that the phone that you used to call the 008 numbers and subsequent connections?'' |
4686 | ` Well, I decrypted it using the program you gave me...''` And And And???'' |
4686 | ` Well, I decrypted it using the program you gave me...''` And And And???'' |
4686 | ` Well, I decrypted it using the program you gave me...''` And And And???'' |
4686 | ` Well, accounting maybe?'' |
4686 | ` Well, at first I thought I had forgotten which system I left it on...''Electron jumped in,` And then?'' |
4686 | ` Well, do n''t you know?'' |
4686 | ` Well, have you ever used that system before?'' |
4686 | ` Well, if he was to turn around to me and say that you were doing all this hacking, he would be lying, would he?'' |
4686 | ` Well, if they had, why would they leave those accounts open? |
4686 | ` Well, what did you do from 1989 to 1992?'' |
4686 | ` Well, what do you reckon?'' |
4686 | ` Well, which companies did you get your work experience from?'' |
4686 | ` Well, which university did you get your degree from?'' |
4686 | ` Well, why the hell are you doing it manually?'' |
4686 | ` Well?'' |
4686 | ` What about MIT-- you hacked an account there recently, Gand?'' |
4686 | ` What about a 1- 800 number?'' |
4686 | ` What about these other numbers? |
4686 | ` What account did it get into?'' |
4686 | ` What are 1- 900 numbers? |
4686 | ` What are their names?'' |
4686 | ` What computer?'' |
4686 | ` What is the address?'' |
4686 | ` What is the first char?'' |
4686 | ` What is your code, sir?'' |
4686 | ` What kind of stuff?'' |
4686 | ` What pirate system? |
4686 | ` What the fuck is a Cabbala?'' |
4686 | ` What the hell kind of word is Caduceus?'' |
4686 | ` What were your intentions at the time with these computer networks?'' |
4686 | ` What''s happening?'' |
4686 | ` What''s that? |
4686 | ` What''s wrong? |
4686 | ` When you say play with it you would break the code out to the VMB?'' |
4686 | ` Where did you get those numbers?'' |
4686 | ` Where''s your son?'' |
4686 | ` Who do they think they are anyway? |
4686 | ` Who the fuck are you?'' |
4686 | ` Who?'' |
4686 | ` Why C?'' |
4686 | ` Why are you doing that?'' |
4686 | ` Why are you driving from Hamburg to Bremen with your phone on stand- by mode?'' |
4686 | ` Why are you two watching those nigger video clips?'' |
4686 | ` Why would you want to do that?'' |
4686 | ` Yeah,''Erik continued,` And then Markoff said,"Can you get me to talk to them?" |
4686 | ` Yeah? |
4686 | ` Yeah?'' |
4686 | ` Yeah?'' |
4686 | ` Yeah?'' |
4686 | ` Yeah?'' |
4686 | ` You did? |
4686 | ` You do n''t wish to comment on the fact that you have hacked into other computer systems and military systems?'' |
4686 | ` You do?'' |
4686 | ` You got any other names?'' |
4686 | ` You reckon the Feds have dropped the line traces for real?'' |
4686 | ` You think?'' |
4686 | ` You wanna go through the list? |
4686 | ` You want some help hacking the system again, Gand?'' |
4686 | ` You''ve seen it? |
4686 | `"John,"I said,"You know that article you wrote on page 12 of the Times? |
32533 | After you left Ottawa where did you go? |
32533 | And committed for what? 32533 And men were betrayed?" |
32533 | And you heard the loud words directly afterward? |
32533 | Are you opposed to the execution of the death penalty? 32533 Are you reading that testimony of Dr. Perkins correctly?" |
32533 | Are you sure about that? |
32533 | At that time who were the Executive? |
32533 | At the time of the existence of this so- called Triangle, Sullivan, Boland and Feeley, do you know of their betraying any members of the order? |
32533 | But, gentlemen, why was this floor painted, if there was an ox killed there, or if a dog were killed in there, or if a guinea pig were killed there? 32533 Can you tell to a certainty whether two drops of blood come from the same body?" |
32533 | Could these men whom you believe to have been betrayed, have been betrayed without the knowledge of the Executive? |
32533 | Could you distinguish the loud words you heard? |
32533 | Did he get up as if he intended to leave the car? |
32533 | Did he have a box or parcel in his hand? |
32533 | Did he have any parcels? |
32533 | Did he speak to the man in the buggy before the latter drove away? |
32533 | Did the servants? |
32533 | Did you hear any loud words before the man from the buggy entered? |
32533 | Did you hear any sounds that would indicate that a scuffle was in progress? |
32533 | Did you not suspect that he might expose you? |
32533 | Did you notice how he was dressed? |
32533 | Did you notice the man in it? |
32533 | Did you notice whether anybody was with him when he stepped out at Frederick Street to board your car? |
32533 | Did you plan for a man to call at your office and request you to go out to the ice- house and attend a patient? |
32533 | Did you present him to your father and mother? |
32533 | Did you read of the arrest of O''Sullivan and Coughlin? |
32533 | Did you see an undersized man with a heavy mustache and a slouch hat? |
32533 | Did you see how he was dressed? |
32533 | Did you see the man''s face? |
32533 | Do I understand you to say,interrupted Mr. Donahoe,"that Mulcahey swore he was out of the house?" |
32533 | Do any other persons entertain this theory? |
32533 | Do n''t you know? |
32533 | Do you believe, Mr. Dillon, that Dr. Cronin''s opinion of Sullivan was correct? |
32533 | Do you know the reason why Alexander Sullivan left the order? |
32533 | Do you remember whether he knocked for admission? |
32533 | Do you see the man? |
32533 | Do you think that a man of less principle or brains might do so? |
32533 | Do you think your solitary passenger was under the influence of liquor? |
32533 | Forest then says to you:''It is strange, is n''t it, that they drove right down toward the city, where they could be seen by the police force?'' 32533 Gentlemen"said he"are there any more witnesses that you would wish me to call?" |
32533 | Had he reference to the trial committee? 32533 Have you any opinion as to who is responsible for his death?" |
32533 | Have you any opinion,queried Mr. Donahoe,"outside of what you read in the newspapers, that Dr. Cronin was murdered?" |
32533 | Hello, Doc; what are you doing here? |
32533 | How about Patrick O''Sullivan? 32533 How can you tell whether certain blood is that of a human being, or of some animal?" |
32533 | How did the horse start when he turned out? 32533 How did you come to engage him as physician to your family and workmen, when you live six miles from his office?" |
32533 | How did you leave Chicago? |
32533 | How do you happen to know so much about Cronin''s St. Louis record? |
32533 | How far did he ride? |
32533 | How is the money to be made? |
32533 | How often do you hear the expression that a man is not fit to belong to a church, or is not fit to belong to a political body? 32533 How was it that you noticed him then?" |
32533 | How was the man dressed? |
32533 | How would testimony to that effect benefit Parnell? |
32533 | I want to know, if your Honor please, if there is any evidence of any claquers having been placed in this court in this case? |
32533 | If he died of apoplexy,cried the State''s Attorney,"why were his shirt and pantaloons cut to get them off him? |
32533 | If known, where would those outside receive their information from? |
32533 | Indeed,the doctor continued,"why should I be the enemy of Mr. Sullivan? |
32533 | Is Dr. Cronin in? |
32533 | Is Mr. Sullivan at home? |
32533 | Is he considered such now? |
32533 | Is he the Frank Williams you saw? |
32533 | It was quite natural, was it not? 32533 Now was it appointed? |
32533 | Now what sort of a defense-- because I propose to deal with that first-- what kind of a defense is made by these five prisoners? 32533 Now, gentlemen, have you any doubt about that furniture going to that number? |
32533 | Now, how is that met? 32533 Now, if he made that remark-- that it was to report to him alone-- where is the man that will assert that there was no committee appointed? |
32533 | Revenge for what? |
32533 | Singular, is it not? 32533 Soloman,"said Tschappatt,"what kind of a man do you take me for? |
32533 | That you ought to take life? |
32533 | That''s strangereplied Finegan, coming up"how the deuce could a dog get in there?" |
32533 | The Lake Shore drive, man, is two miles from here,I said,"ca n''t you see there is no roadway here?" |
32533 | Then you did not call on Dr. Cronin, or send for him? |
32533 | Then you do not know how it happened that he was summoned to your ice house? |
32533 | They were not known to anybody outside of the Triangle? |
32533 | This proceeding was not altogether unexpected? |
32533 | Under your own name? |
32533 | Was Dr. Cronin a spy? |
32533 | Was Le Caron a member of a camp in Illinois? |
32533 | Was he known to be such before Le Caron testified? |
32533 | Was he once considered a good member of the order? |
32533 | Was he tall? |
32533 | Was it Parkhurst? |
32533 | Was it a top buggy? |
32533 | Was there not an accident in your ice house? |
32533 | Well, Doctor, back again? |
32533 | Well, did the judge in the English court say you were a dangerous man? |
32533 | Well, now, as to why you left Chicago? |
32533 | Well, what is your name? |
32533 | Well, why did you leave Ottawa? |
32533 | Were there any lights in the house? |
32533 | What address did you give? |
32533 | What are you so excited about? |
32533 | What did he do with it when he sat down? |
32533 | What else? 32533 What for?" |
32533 | What is it? |
32533 | What is the evidence against Kunze? 32533 What is the matter?" |
32533 | What is your name? |
32533 | What name did you give? |
32533 | What number from your left? |
32533 | What other evidence do you want to show that that trunk came out of that cottage? 32533 What other names have you got?" |
32533 | What position did he hold? |
32533 | What prompted you to do that? |
32533 | What sort of a horse was attached to the buggy? |
32533 | What was the verdict? |
32533 | When did you get to Montreal? |
32533 | When did you leave Montreal? |
32533 | When was the convention to be? |
32533 | When you got to Montreal where did you intend going? |
32533 | Where are you stopping in town? |
32533 | Where did he sit down? |
32533 | Where did the trouble begin? 32533 Where did you go?" |
32533 | Where did you put up in Ottawa? |
32533 | Where did you put up? |
32533 | Where did you then go? |
32533 | Where have you been for the past two hours? |
32533 | Where is he? |
32533 | Where shall I have the goods delivered? |
32533 | Where was the concealment then? 32533 Where were you from 9 o''clock till the_ Empire_ reporter met you on Yonge street?" |
32533 | Who are you looking for? |
32533 | Who owned the rig in which Dr. Cronin was driven to the assassin''s den? |
32533 | Who saw Cronin at your house? |
32533 | Why did Cronin have any enmity toward Sullivan? |
32533 | Why did he say he expected to be arrested on the Cronin business? 32533 Why did n''t he occupy this cottage? |
32533 | Why did n''t you bring Cronin out to your house? |
32533 | Why did n''t you say so in your dispatches? 32533 Why did that wretch want to employ Dr. Cronin? |
32533 | Why did you leave Montreal, and when did you do so? |
32533 | Why did you not then go on to New York? |
32533 | Why did you wish to see him? |
32533 | Why do I say this? 32533 Why do you think so?" |
32533 | Why should I? |
32533 | Why should the casket be opened? |
32533 | Why should you have left Chicago without letting your friends know? |
32533 | Why, Cronin, is it possible that you do n''t remember me? |
32533 | Why? |
32533 | Yes, sir; in Braidwood, Ill."Who is Le Caron? |
32533 | Yes,was the answer,"why should n''t I? |
32533 | You believe they were arrested, do n''t you? |
32533 | You do not claim that I said that? |
32533 | You know what kind of a man Sullivan is, do n''t you? |
32533 | ''Has that committee reported?'' |
32533 | ''I contracted for the horse and buggy to drive you to death?'' |
32533 | ''Is he a good doctor?'' |
32533 | ''Will you go down and introduce me to him?'' |
32533 | Again, why was the use of a card necessary? |
32533 | And did he preserve himself unspotted from the world? |
32533 | And now, my dear friends, have we reason to be sorry to- day? |
32533 | And then slapping him on the shoulder continued:"Have you been summoned as a venireman?" |
32533 | Andrews and Moyer? |
32533 | Approaching him with extended hand, he said:"Hello, Tschappatt, what are you doing here?" |
32533 | Are such men worthy of your confidence? |
32533 | Are the gentlemen for the State satisfied with that? |
32533 | Are they in a conspiracy with the other associates, the members of the same camp as John F. Beggs, Daniel Coughlin and Martin Burke? |
32533 | Are those isolated men, scattered over the city, having no bond of harmony? |
32533 | Are we not to have conscience in this matter at all? |
32533 | Are we to follow these men blindly in every enterprise to which fancy or ambition leads them, including schemes of American politics? |
32533 | Are you a fool that you wo n''t accept it?" |
32533 | Are you gentleman ready to violate your oaths by sustaining it?" |
32533 | Are you waiting for a murder more atrocious? |
32533 | Burke had an abiding place, and why should he go to that store on Sunday, the 5th of May, and buy a shirt? |
32533 | But he asked Martin Burke one question,''What do you think of Cronin''s disappearance?'' |
32533 | But suppose that the hot- headed Presbyterians had said, we do not believe that this man ought to be permitted to live? |
32533 | But were they at O''Sullivan''s that afternoon? |
32533 | But who was it that was familiar with all this? |
32533 | But why had he enemies? |
32533 | By Dr. Cronin-- Did Lomasney attend the district convention held in Chicago in 1884? |
32533 | Can any organization of intelligent, self- respecting men tolerate such a state of affairs? |
32533 | Can not you learn from that fact some lessons? |
32533 | Can you as twelve men making up your minds upon the evidence have any doubt but that it was Dr. Cronin who was driven into that cottage? |
32533 | Condemned and executed by whom? |
32533 | Condemned for what? |
32533 | Conklin?" |
32533 | Could they look the prisoner''s wife in the face and say to her,"I sent your husband to prison upon the words of Major Sampson?" |
32533 | Cronin?" |
32533 | Cronin?" |
32533 | Cronin?" |
32533 | Cronin?" |
32533 | Cronin?" |
32533 | Cronin?" |
32533 | Cronin?" |
32533 | Cronin?'' |
32533 | Did I not tell you that those witnesses were remarkable witnesses? |
32533 | Did any one else move from there that day? |
32533 | Did he do that? |
32533 | Did he fulfil his vocation; I ask you here in the presence of his mortal remains, did he carry out his vocation? |
32533 | Did he not at one time try to hurt your reputation?" |
32533 | Did he tell you there was anything wrong with the horse that drove Dr. Cronin away? |
32533 | Did it ever occur to any man connected with the prosecution or the defense that any question of that kind could enter into the breasts of this jury? |
32533 | Did n''t he talk a long time about that? |
32533 | Did this man who traveled all the way from New Jersey tell you what kind of knees the horse had? |
32533 | Did you consider that proposition I made you?" |
32533 | Did you ever hear of a policeman taking a revolver and two old knives worth 10 cents to the Fidelity Bank because he was responsible for the property? |
32533 | Did you ever think since this trial-- have you heard of anybody having any feeling against Dr. Cronin? |
32533 | Did you notice the peculiarity of the witnesses? |
32533 | Do I say that they perjured themselves? |
32533 | Do n''t you know it is the same old cover of Irish slander? |
32533 | Do n''t you notice the urgency there was how to get him to express an opinion? |
32533 | Do n''t you see how important it was? |
32533 | Do n''t you see that stand out plainly and distinctly? |
32533 | Do n''t you see what remarkable feats they perform? |
32533 | Do n''t you see? |
32533 | Do you believe it was a guinea pig''s blood that was on that cake of soap or in the trunk or in the cottage? |
32533 | Do you believe there was a guinea pig killed in that cottage? |
32533 | Do you believe there was an ox killed in that cottage? |
32533 | Do you believe, gentlemen, that there is a conspiracy here to convict innocent men? |
32533 | Do you have any doubt now but that Dr. Cronin was driven to the Carlson cottage? |
32533 | Do you know them?'' |
32533 | Do you propose to guess my clients guilty and then hang them?" |
32533 | Do you remember that about a half hour after that time, about half a mile south of the Carlson cottage, a wagon was seen with a trunk in it? |
32533 | Do you see this blood in the trunk? |
32533 | Do you suppose there is much difference between the leaders of the two wings? |
32533 | Do you think that the Carlson family went around there and never touched any thing? |
32533 | Do you want anything else in reference to that key and lock? |
32533 | Do you wonder at it? |
32533 | Does it give him character? |
32533 | Does it throw open the record? |
32533 | Does that show the associations of every man who has shaken the President''s hand? |
32533 | Dr. Cronin had been charging the triangle with misappropriation of the funds-- and what else? |
32533 | Dr. Cronin-- Did the term report show any loss to Maroney? |
32533 | Ein doctor no man can heal und he don''d know the woondt; und I vant der chudge to tell me vat I am chail in for to- day anyhow?" |
32533 | Finally, Cronin requested that questions should be put to him, and the following conversation took place:"When did you leave Chicago?" |
32533 | Foreman?" |
32533 | Had not Miss Murphy seen him on the car? |
32533 | Has that anything to do with the case at issue? |
32533 | Has there been a man that dare come to the front and say that any investigation had been made-- that anything had been done? |
32533 | Has there been any evidence of any other person on earth that would be likely to kill Dr. Cronin? |
32533 | Have we reason to mourn that our friend has gone from us? |
32533 | Have you an opinion as to whether or not Martin Burke, one of the defendants, was the tenant of said cottage? |
32533 | Have you an opinion that the Clan- na- Gael Society is in any way to blame for the death of Dr. Cronin? |
32533 | Have you any doubt as to what was in that trunk? |
32533 | Have you any doubt as to who guided that wagon and directed its course? |
32533 | Have you formed an opinion as to whether or not Dr. Cronin was killed in pursuance of a conspiracy? |
32533 | Have you formed an opinion as to whether or not Martin Burke, one of the defendants, was a tenant of the Carlson cottage? |
32533 | Have you formed an opinion as to whether or not any of these defendants was concerned in said conspiracy, or was a member of said conspiracy? |
32533 | Have you formed an opinion as to whether the tenant or tenants of the Carlson cottage had anything to do with said murder? |
32533 | Have you formed any opinion as to whether or not Dr. Cronin was killed in the Carlson cottage? |
32533 | He said,"do n''t you see the Clan- na- Gaels at work? |
32533 | How can they tell the cause of death? |
32533 | How could we prove that the clothes were not over the sea if accident had not turned them up in the sewer in Lake View? |
32533 | How did Martin Burke know this cottage was for rent? |
32533 | How did he get one of O''Sullivan''s new cards? |
32533 | How did he know of the contract? |
32533 | How did he know there was a vacant cottage out there near Patrick O''Sullivan? |
32533 | How did he know where to go to rent that cottage unless some one of those parties had talked to him, either Dan Coughlin or Patrick O''Sullivan? |
32533 | How did they know the history of this man Sampson unless they got it from Coughlin? |
32533 | How did they know what he had done in Michigan? |
32533 | How did this man Williams know that this cottage was for rent? |
32533 | How do you know? |
32533 | How does the wing that sits in the witness seat conduct itself? |
32533 | How is it done? |
32533 | How much evidence do you want? |
32533 | How settled? |
32533 | How would you like to enter a scheme where you could make a thousand dollars?" |
32533 | I asked if there was any organization in Australia? |
32533 | I asked"Where is it?" |
32533 | I said, Why did you mention Alexander Sullivan''s name? |
32533 | I said,''Why did you mention Alexander Sullivan''s name? |
32533 | I would not ask you to convict the men unless you feel that the evidence justified you in doing so, but their defense, what is it? |
32533 | If Burke rented the Carlson cottage for a lawful purpose, why should he go to Winnipeg and thence to the old country? |
32533 | If Martin Burke rented it intending that his sister should keep house for himself and his brother, why did n''t they keep house? |
32533 | If he had learned of it through one of the three men who were present at the time, how did he happen to get one of the new cards? |
32533 | If that argument had been made to me, and these clothes had not been discovered would not I have given it weight? |
32533 | If that is so, then what is the duty of those police officers; what was their duty as men put on the force to look after the interests of this city? |
32533 | If the brain was so far disintegrated that they could not tell one thing, how could they tell the other? |
32533 | If they do not know, how do you know? |
32533 | If they were guilty of if, do you suppose that they could do it without my knowing it? |
32533 | In the name of heaven when do you expect to hear of one? |
32533 | Instead of going to Dr. Fenger or other prominent medical men and asking their opinion, what do they do? |
32533 | Is he corroborated? |
32533 | Is it an open book of his character to go and shake the hand of President Harrison? |
32533 | Is it for that purpose, or what does he mean by it? |
32533 | Is it for us to say whether they pried open that trunk or kicked it open from the rear? |
32533 | Is it to intimidate the people''s representatives, so that they would not dare go further in this hellish conspiracy? |
32533 | Is that the reason why he introduced this speech that Beggs had made to President Harrison? |
32533 | Is that your recollection of what took place? |
32533 | Is the fame of Ireland so great that it can afford to condone murder? |
32533 | Is there any explanation on earth except that it was purchased and moved in for the very purpose for which it was used thereafter? |
32533 | Is there anything in the camp that shows it was amicably settled? |
32533 | Is your rent due?'' |
32533 | It involves the entire prosecution, and how does it feel toward my client? |
32533 | It runs on now to the 24th of March, and what do we find? |
32533 | Jonas Carlson went there and said:''How about those tenants? |
32533 | Lomasney? |
32533 | Long declined to answer, but said that he had a copy of the pamphlet entitled,"Is It A Conspiracy?" |
32533 | Make a statement? |
32533 | Most assuredly, my friends, he did so And why did he do so? |
32533 | Mr. Boland-- Did you see him at Boston? |
32533 | Mr. Donahoe--"You will concede that every Irishman knew who it was that gave Le Caron his credentials?" |
32533 | Mr. Feeley-- Was your charge denied by Maroney? |
32533 | Mr. Feeley-- When was Maroney''s debt paid? |
32533 | Mr. O''Boyle-- Upon whom was the check drawn? |
32533 | Mr. Rogers-- Had this not been a prior date? |
32533 | Mr. Rogers-- What did Maroney say when you gave him the money? |
32533 | Mr. Rogers-- You swear you called the attention of Boland and Carroll to her condition? |
32533 | Mulvaney said:"Why do n''t you see Boland?" |
32533 | No matter whether I had five, six, or a dozen assistants, the question is, What are the facts? |
32533 | No one had told him that any one drove a white horse, and why should he say to Dinan,''Do n''t mention it, because Cronin and I were not friends?'' |
32533 | Not necessarily with his own hand, but was he a part and parcel of a conspiracy to destroy the life of Patrick H. Cronin? |
32533 | Now jump on to the 22d, the next meeting of Camp 20, where these minutes are approved, and what do you find? |
32533 | Now what do they do? |
32533 | Now what is the effect of this? |
32533 | Now why should he go over to see O''Sullivan? |
32533 | Now, Gentlemen, do you believe there was a dog killed in that cottage? |
32533 | Now, if the doctors say they can not, can you? |
32533 | Now, if witnesses were urged here, what do you suppose was urged upon them outside? |
32533 | Now, is that hard to say of a man who is dead? |
32533 | Now, is that your name written on this ticket?" |
32533 | Now, let me pass on up- stairs?" |
32533 | Now, that is not fair, is it? |
32533 | Now, what do we find? |
32533 | Now, what effect do you suppose that will have upon his zeal in giving evidence? |
32533 | Now, what else is disputed? |
32533 | Now, what was he doing at 117 South Clark street, if he was not engaged in that conspiracy? |
32533 | Now, why was that flat rented? |
32533 | O''Sullivan would say to them,''Do n''t you remember that I was here?'' |
32533 | On the 22d of February in the line of his letters, in the line that he hopes that no trouble will result, what does he do? |
32533 | P. O''Sullivan talks to Mr. Carlson, and says to him:''Is the cottage rented?'' |
32533 | Q-- Did I ask you to get the amount right as representing R. D.? |
32533 | Q-- When and to whom did you complain on your return to this country? |
32533 | Q.--By Mr. Boland-- The conversations were in the presence of Kerwin, were they not? |
32533 | Q.--By Mr. Feeley-- Did you present any objection at district convention as to your statement as to district? |
32533 | Q.--By Mr. Rogers-- What did you give the money to Dillon for? |
32533 | Q.--Did Maroney do any work after that? |
32533 | Q.--Did the matter come up in relation to your treatment at Chicago? |
32533 | Q.--Did you ask for help? |
32533 | Q.--Did you present any evidence, other than your statement, in relation to any of the acts mentioned? |
32533 | Q.--Did you see Carroll at New York? |
32533 | Q.--Did you want to accept the Presidency of the league? |
32533 | Q.--Do you know of his having left on a certain motive? |
32533 | Q.--Do you recollect my opposing the representation of Australia by any person in that body? |
32533 | Q.--Do you recollect that a vote was taken in regard to District A.? |
32533 | Q.--Do you remember the last time he went? |
32533 | Q.--Has any difficulty since that made you say why you were on R. D.? |
32533 | Q.--Have they been seen since? |
32533 | Q.--How many operations did you perform? |
32533 | Q.--How much did it cost for Mackey''s work? |
32533 | Q.--How much money have you received from the organization since? |
32533 | Q.--How much since? |
32533 | Q.--Pending the discussion of the report you left the convention? |
32533 | Q.--Until August, 1886, what was her condition? |
32533 | Q.--Was any one elected from your D.? |
32533 | Q.--Were you a delegate at the time you got the money? |
32533 | Q.--Were you appointed on foreign relations or finance committee? |
32533 | Q.--What did he say to you on the subject of his work? |
32533 | Q.--What family had he? |
32533 | Q.--What was Mrs. Lomasney''s condition before his going? |
32533 | Q.--What was the relation between Maroney and the executive? |
32533 | Q.--When again did you call upon Mr. Sullivan? |
32533 | Q.--Who were with him? |
32533 | Q.--Would Lomasney tell you if he had been selected a delegate by any one outside of D.? |
32533 | Q.--Would he have gone there, if not elected a delegate? |
32533 | Q.--You charged that the executive used the funds of the organization to pay Maroney''s debts, did you? |
32533 | Q.--You do n''t know of operations outside of your own? |
32533 | Q.--You do n''t know who I appointed? |
32533 | Q.--You saw me in 1886, was it not? |
32533 | Question by Mr. Dillon-- Do you know that Mrs. L. is an economical woman? |
32533 | Question by Mr. Ryan-- How much money in all did you receive? |
32533 | Question by Mr. Ryan-- What became of this man? |
32533 | Should I fail in my duty when invited into this case by the State''s Attorney to assist him in its prosecution? |
32533 | Some of it took place before you were elected? |
32533 | Suppose it was so, what has that got to do with the guilt or innocence of Beggs? |
32533 | Suppose the body was burned after a man was poisoned, would you be able to prove that he was poisoned? |
32533 | Swing but these men who said he was unworthy to live, and that men said he ought to be killed, and these men had themselves invited him out? |
32533 | Swing? |
32533 | Take that circumstance and what have you got? |
32533 | Talk about reading between the lines? |
32533 | That is why Mr. Beggs said to me when he was brought face to face with the record that a committee had been appointed, but does he explain? |
32533 | The Court glanced over the contents and then inquired:"Have you any further business to transact, gentlemen?" |
32533 | The burden of proof is on them and they must prove the cause of death, and how do you know it? |
32533 | The chief asked:''Where did you know Smith?'' |
32533 | The idea struck him at once,''Here are Mahoney and Dr. Cronin, great friends,''and afterward he said to Mahoney:''Do you know Cronin well?'' |
32533 | The officials did not ask him a single question, and when one of the bystanders approached him and asked:"Have you anything to say to- night?" |
32533 | The plain and simple question is, did John F. Beggs kill Dr. Cronin? |
32533 | The prisoners excitedly asked each other and the spectators:"What''s in the wind? |
32533 | The question arises, was not that Patrick O''Sullivan? |
32533 | The question with them is, shall their personal reputations be destroyed, or the organization be ruined? |
32533 | Then he answers:''Why did n''t you call Tom Murphy?'' |
32533 | Then who did it? |
32533 | Then, why was it that this man, Beggs, said that it had been amicably settled? |
32533 | They say that he claimed friendship for Alexander Sullivan-- I shall refer to that hereafter-- but did he ever denounce Cronin? |
32533 | This much accomplished, however, the next question was, could Burke be identified? |
32533 | Those three witnesses swear that Frank Williams rented it, and do you think that Williams was anybody else except this man Burke? |
32533 | To whom did Beggs refer when he spoke of"these men who are continually breeding disorder in the ranks?" |
32533 | Was he ever a man opposite or opposed to the good of his fellow- man? |
32533 | Was he not ever anxious to improve the lot and well- being of his fellow- men? |
32533 | Was it because Foster had to advertise at the expense of his client? |
32533 | Was it because he had to read the Irish history that he had copied into his manuscript? |
32533 | Was it because he was trimmed for a speech? |
32533 | Was it concealment? |
32533 | Was not this patriotic? |
32533 | Was that committee appointed? |
32533 | Was the committee appointed? |
32533 | We called Michael J. Kelly, another member of that organization, a junior guardian in Camp 20, and what does he say? |
32533 | Well, did the police do it? |
32533 | What are the material allegations in the indictment? |
32533 | What better eulogy can we pronounce upon him than this? |
32533 | What did O''Sullivan do with these cards? |
32533 | What did Spelman mean when he said he had hoped for a reunion and for better results? |
32533 | What did he do? |
32533 | What did they carry down from that flat? |
32533 | What do they say? |
32533 | What do you want?" |
32533 | What does he do? |
32533 | What does that show? |
32533 | What effect has this had upon the witnesses? |
32533 | What explanation is there to give for its being rented? |
32533 | What for? |
32533 | What for? |
32533 | What for?" |
32533 | What for?" |
32533 | What had they done in the camp? |
32533 | What has he done to me that I should, as he says, single him out for personal enmity?" |
32533 | What intelligent man will bind himself to promote all measures adopted by the Triangle,"whether known or unknown?" |
32533 | What is murder? |
32533 | What is the effect of it? |
32533 | What is the fact? |
32533 | What is the reason for it? |
32533 | What is your object in doing it? |
32533 | What justification could you have made in the forum of your own consciences to yourselves? |
32533 | What justification could you have made in your prayers to your God? |
32533 | What more was needed? |
32533 | What more was wanted? |
32533 | What offense did he commit? |
32533 | What other man among the two thousand lawyers at the Chicago bar except William J. Hynes, is the man to whom their attention is called?" |
32533 | What protection could a card guarantee? |
32533 | What report had been made? |
32533 | What statute draws a line between the salesman and the head of a business? |
32533 | What statute recognizes a distinction between the laborer and the man who hires him? |
32533 | What steps had been taken to investigate the matter? |
32533 | What was he doing there all the month? |
32533 | What was his avocation and mission in life? |
32533 | What was his reply? |
32533 | What was the first thing to do? |
32533 | What was the motive? |
32533 | What were they? |
32533 | What would you have thought at that time? |
32533 | What would you have thought if you had been a brother in the camp with Dr. Cronin? |
32533 | What wrong had he done to any person or any cause? |
32533 | What, then, were Long''s motives in giving currency to these dispatches? |
32533 | When that old man got on the stand, Forrest was yelling at the top of his voice,''How do you know, how do you know?'' |
32533 | Where did they get those letters which he wrote to Spelman and received from Spelman? |
32533 | Where do we learn of this conspiracy first?" |
32533 | Where do you find it? |
32533 | Where do you go, where do you get the starting point in this great conspiracy? |
32533 | Where has been the concealment of a fact? |
32533 | Where has there been an exception to the ruling of the court? |
32533 | Where has there been any objection against testimony? |
32533 | Where was the third man? |
32533 | Where was the trunk found? |
32533 | Which result shall it be? |
32533 | Who could have dreamed that such a thing was possible in the State of Illinois? |
32533 | Who did he give them to? |
32533 | Who ever heard of a second- class lawyer, or even a police court shyster, claiming that that identification was not perfect? |
32533 | Who is there that corroborates his testimony? |
32533 | Who knows best, and what is the value of recollection as to the hour when the thing occurred? |
32533 | Who was he referring to? |
32533 | Who was it brought it to his ears, unless it was Daniel Coughlin or Patrick O''Sullivan? |
32533 | Who was this strange man? |
32533 | Whoever said it was the organization or a part of the Clan- na- Gael which formed that inner circle? |
32533 | Whose rig was it that took him to it? |
32533 | Whose was the guiding hand that induced him to take so great a risk? |
32533 | Why ca n''t you let me go? |
32533 | Why did O''Sullivan need an introduction to Dr. Cronin? |
32533 | Why did he devote his time to talking about that? |
32533 | Why did n''t O''Sullivan step up to the Doctor that night and make his contract? |
32533 | Why did they know it? |
32533 | Why did they not say so to his face if they had anything to say? |
32533 | Why did they not say so to his face? |
32533 | Why did you tell another story the other morning?" |
32533 | Why do n''t they move in? |
32533 | Why does she say that? |
32533 | Why is that office sought for? |
32533 | Why should he flee the State of Illinois? |
32533 | Why should he tell that he was a spy? |
32533 | Why should not the people of the State of Illinois have ability as well as the defendants? |
32533 | Why should old man Carlson, who scarcely knew O''Sullivan, walk over to him to inquire about his tenant? |
32533 | Why was Dan Coughlin thinking then of this subject? |
32533 | Why was Dr. Cronin slain? |
32533 | Why was he induced to believe that that horse had taken Dr. Cronin to his death? |
32533 | Why was he stripped, his body put in one sewer and his clothes in another? |
32533 | Why was that inquiry made? |
32533 | Why was this done? |
32533 | Why was this furniture purchased? |
32533 | Why was this investigating committee appointed? |
32533 | Why, in God''s name, if men are sincere, will they insist upon opening old sores? |
32533 | Why, then, is such an investigation refused? |
32533 | Why? |
32533 | Why? |
32533 | Why? |
32533 | Why? |
32533 | Why? |
32533 | Why? |
32533 | Why? |
32533 | Will you guess at it? |
32533 | Would not the alibi for the Hylands be just as good as their alibi for Saturday night? |
32533 | Would not the word of a caller have answered just as well? |
32533 | Would you have stood there as a stone? |
32533 | Yet he would have you believe he said''How do you know?'' |
32533 | You do not believe that he died from poison, do you? |
32533 | You do not believe that the man in that trunk died from apoplexy do you? |
32533 | You find it in Camp 20, in Turner Hall? |
32533 | You know as well as I do that when you go and buy a ready- made shirt there is only one question asked you-- What is the size of your collar? |
32533 | and where did the learned counsel who cross- examined him for the defense learn the man''s record, except from Dan Coughlin? |
32533 | and why moreover was his death so greatly desired? |
32533 | or was it because he thought there was something against his client? |
27146 | And why wait for Mrs. Wright, madam? |
27146 | Better, father? 27146 But first tell me what your bad words were, John,"said his father;"not swearing, I hope?" |
27146 | But have I not a right,says he,"to use my own property in such a way as I choose, provided I do not violate the laws of the land? |
27146 | But have not ardent spirits one good quality, one redeeming virtue? |
27146 | But how is it,said Mrs. Crowder,"that we never catch a sight of you now?" |
27146 | But our fathers imported, manufactured, and sold ardent spirit, and were they not good men? 27146 But stop,"said he, just as we got to the outer door,"how did you come-- no lantern?" |
27146 | But where are you, mother? |
27146 | But where_ is_ your wife, James? |
27146 | Canst thou draw out leviathan with a hook? 27146 Done, James?" |
27146 | Have not you any cloak of your own? |
27146 | How is Mary? |
27146 | Hungry, child,said I;"then why did you not ask me before you went to bed?" |
27146 | I hope we shall have a change, eh, James? |
27146 | Is it not a little one? |
27146 | Is that mother? |
27146 | James,said the doctor,"have you no time in the house?" |
27146 | Mother''s so ill, Jane says, father-- is she; is she, father? |
27146 | Mr. and Mrs. Wright are very kind,I added,"and you are kind; what should I have done but for you and them?" |
27146 | Mrs. Mason at your house now? |
27146 | O, Robert,_ will you try_? |
27146 | Susan,he said,"what can I render to the Lord for all his goodness to me? |
27146 | Well, Mrs. Mason,said the doctor,"pray what is the matter?" |
27146 | Well, sir, and what''s for you? |
27146 | What, drink none? |
27146 | Where is your wife, James? |
27146 | Who hath woe? 27146 Why, Jane,"said I,"this is a new story-- what, is there nothing at all in the house?" |
27146 | Why, John, what''s this that I see? |
27146 | Yes,said Mrs. Mason, very gravely,"and without its dinner too, I fear; but where is your wife, James? |
27146 | You mean,said his neighbor,"is he not_ sometimes_ sober?" |
27146 | Your mother? 27146 Your wife ill?" |
27146 | ***** Here the question occurs,_ What can be done? |
27146 | ***** Is INTOXICATING LIQUOR wo nt to produce misery, and wretchedness, and death? |
27146 | ***** Reader, have you perused this pamphlet; and are you still willing to drink, use, or sell this soul- destroying poison? |
27146 | --"what concord hath Christ with Belial?" |
27146 | 247. WHO SLEW ALL THESE? |
27146 | A few years ago, who would not have been considered almost deranged had he predicted what has already been accomplished in this cause? |
27146 | A voice from the throne of his excellent glory cries,"Turn ye, turn ye from this evil way; for why will ye die?" |
27146 | Again, I ask the men whom I am addressing, how they reconcile their manufacture and sale of spirits with another command of the Bible? |
27146 | Ah, had honest trader ever_ such_ a conscience to deal with before? |
27146 | Ah, what made him a fool? |
27146 | Ah, who can say, he has had no relative infected by this plague? |
27146 | All these barrels-- where are the wretched beings who are to consume this liquid fire, and to be consumed by it? |
27146 | Am I not a little one, and can do no harm? |
27146 | Am I not, then, a murderer? |
27146 | And are its effects any less deadly? |
27146 | And are not the men and their business of the same character? |
27146 | And as the drunkard can not go to heaven, can drunkard- makers? |
27146 | And by what power, ye mothers, and wives, and daughters, shall I invoke your aid? |
27146 | And can the real Christian, or patriot, think it hard thus to enlist for the safety of all future generations? |
27146 | And can they doubt that vigor of mind will decay in the same proportion? |
27146 | And can they not be found in this land of humane men, and patriots, and Christians? |
27146 | And do you save a little by abstinence? |
27146 | And for these, while all are thus paying homage to the bottle, what is the hope? |
27146 | And have not her members cried to heaven that the destroyer might perish? |
27146 | And have you no_ pity_? |
27146 | And how can you associate with these, and yet continue a habit viewed by them with disgust? |
27146 | And how do they prove this? |
27146 | And if it did, whose fault would it be? |
27146 | And if it is too bad for a professed Christian to pray about it, is it not too bad for him to practise it? |
27146 | And is it any worse for a man to tell the people beforehand honestly what he will do, if they buy and use his poison, than it is to go on and do it? |
27146 | And is it not horrible wickedness for them, by exposing for sale one of the chief causes of this ruin, to tempt them in the way to death? |
27146 | And is it not inflicting great evils on society? |
27146 | And is not this an immorality of a high and aggravated description? |
27146 | And is not this, after all, the true reason why they shrink from the sacrifice? |
27146 | And is that any better? |
27146 | And is the maintenance of a_ public nuisance_ really necessary to your support? |
27146 | And is this destruction of the talents God has given, consistent with the injunction to"glorify God in body and spirit?" |
27146 | And is this"receiving his gifts with thanksgiving?" |
27146 | And now, I ask, can that which, of its own nature, produces these diseases, make a man feel better? |
27146 | And now, need any more be said to persuade mankind to abandon the use of ardent spirits? |
27146 | And now, what is the APOLOGY for prosecuting a business so manifestly offensive to God, and ruinous to yourself, as well as others? |
27146 | And now, what security have you for yourselves? |
27146 | And now, when God has put into their hands a weapon by which it may at once be exterminated, will they hesitate? |
27146 | And see there too, that tattered, half- starved boy, just entering the yard with a bottle-- who sent him here at this early hour? |
27146 | And shall I yet find advocates for their use? |
27146 | And should not dark suspicion and decided reprobation be stamped upon that which is thus associated with the lowest debasement and crime? |
27146 | And should they lose their prey? |
27146 | And that domestic poison, via New Orleans; and on the next page, that large consignment, via Erie Canal? |
27146 | And what are they now? |
27146 | And what consequences were to be expected? |
27146 | And what do you think I heard and beheld, as I stood petrified with astonishment and horror? |
27146 | And what does the nation pay for the honor and happiness of this whole system of ruin? |
27146 | And what if it is? |
27146 | And what if they are not aware of the mischief which he is doing them, and he can accomplish it through their own perverted and voluntary agency? |
27146 | And what is it? |
27146 | And what other security have you for your children, or for yourselves? |
27146 | And what shall we say concerning the permission, above pointed out, for the Jews to use_ strong drink_? |
27146 | And what took away his character? |
27146 | And what took away his reason? |
27146 | And what took away his sense of shame? |
27146 | And what will it profit him to gain even the whole world by that which ruins the soul? |
27146 | And what''s more to the purpose, Jack, I try to have a clean conscience-- the most comfortable of all; do n''t you think so? |
27146 | And when the morality, and religion, and the conscience of the majority of our nation are gone, what but a miracle can save our liberties from ruin? |
27146 | And who can estimate the endless influence of those individuals, or their capacity for rising with you in celestial splendor? |
27146 | And who is the author of all this; and where lies the responsibility? |
27146 | And who is to bear the guilt of destroying the thirty or forty thousand who are cut off annually in this country by intemperance? |
27146 | And who would not regard any of the truly noble, as lowering themselves by disparaging this sentiment? |
27146 | And who, I ask, would not do it? |
27146 | And why may not I as well pocket the money as another?" |
27146 | And why not, if it is a lawful business? |
27146 | And why not? |
27146 | And why should not you participate with them, on the same principle? |
27146 | And will you do nothing to speed its triumph? |
27146 | And would he not aggravate it still further, should he charge the blame on the sacred word? |
27146 | And yet does any man doubt that these are immoral? |
27146 | And yet is this a business which was ever engaged in, or ever pursued, with a desire to honor God? |
27146 | And, Jack, can you ever forget his cry of agony as we shot ahead in the gale, forced to leave him to perish? |
27146 | And, on the other hand, is it not morally certain, that if they abstain, their combined influence will save millions from infamy and ruin? |
27146 | Are not we the authors? |
27146 | Are poor health and feeble constitutions, therefore, no evils? |
27146 | Are these court days generally profitable to you, landlord? |
27146 | Are these things so? |
27146 | Are they conducive to health? |
27146 | Are they inhabitants of cities? |
27146 | Are they inhabitants of country places? |
27146 | Are they not, when tried by the principles of the Bible, in view of the developments of Providence, manifestly immoral men? |
27146 | Are you utterly_ selfish_? |
27146 | As the Bible is true, then, are not the manufacturers of ardent spirits in our land the means of sending five hundred souls to hell every week? |
27146 | Ask that widowed mother who did her the greatest evil: the man who only killed her drunken husband, or the man who made a drunkard of her only son? |
27146 | Ask the children; what would be their answer? |
27146 | Ask the wife; what would she tell you? |
27146 | Because they came off unhurt, shall_ we_ be willing to rush into the streets of an infected city, or join the conflict of charging battalions? |
27146 | Besides, from whom do we hear this plea? |
27146 | But O, what will become of them? |
27146 | But are the makers of intoxicating liquor aware of its effects? |
27146 | But are you conscious of possessing talent? |
27146 | But can men who understand the will of God with regard to these subjects, continue to do such things now, and yet go to heaven? |
27146 | But did she ever regard the cry of the sheep? |
27146 | But do not pretend to be the friend of God or man while you count it a privilege to insult the one and ruin the other? |
27146 | But do the principles of the Bible_ condemn_ such use and manufacture? |
27146 | But do you not like a little yourself, son, when eleven o''clock comes? |
27146 | But does any one still say,"I will unite in no pledge, because in no danger?" |
27146 | But does not every man who sells or uses this liquor, as a beverage, encourage his neighbor to drink, and thus contemn God''s authority? |
27146 | But have you wealth, or power with the pen? |
27146 | But how are you going to dispose of this great black building? |
27146 | But how can we hope against the express declarations of the word of God? |
27146 | But how does it appear that the stoppage of all the distilleries in the land will reduce the price of cider and rye? |
27146 | But how many are there, do you suppose, who habitually drink ardent spirits, and yet suffer no bad effects from it? |
27146 | But how shall we continue temperate? |
27146 | But how speaks experience on this head? |
27146 | But how were those children ruined? |
27146 | But if I stop, what will the people do? |
27146 | But if it was wrong to sell five hundred casks last year, how can it be right to sell two hundred this year, and one hundred next? |
27146 | But if the places of the present generation of drunkards are to be supplied, whence will the victims come but from your own children? |
27146 | But is it not preposterous to expect him to abstain, if he sees the minister, the elder, the deacon, and other respectable men indulging their cups? |
27146 | But is this a correct principle of conduct? |
27146 | But on the plea of the dealer in ardent spirits, why should they have been withheld? |
27146 | But suppose this principle universally adopted, would it clear the country of intemperance? |
27146 | But the resistance became weaker and weaker-- by and by the struggle is ended-- they float with the current, and where are they? |
27146 | But then what can I do?" |
27146 | But were they in no danger? |
27146 | But what can we do? |
27146 | But what captivity, what pirate, what murderer so cruel as Alcohol? |
27146 | But what course of wickedness will not such reasoning justify? |
27146 | But what does every year repeat in our peaceful land? |
27146 | But what first inclined their way to that house of seduction? |
27146 | But what mourning would fill_ all_ Britain, if every year should behold another Waterloo? |
27146 | But what will it save? |
27146 | But what would you have me do? |
27146 | But whence have you derived authority to procure a living at the sacrifice of conscience, character, and the dearest interests of others? |
27146 | But where is the_ soul_, the disembodied spirit of a deceased drunkard? |
27146 | But where must we look for the prime cause of this destruction? |
27146 | But who does not see the utter impossibility of this, if some continue an indulgence which others regard with abhorrence? |
27146 | But who has a heart so traitorous to humanity as to feed this monster? |
27146 | But why do you try to conceal your jug when you go to the store for whiskey? |
27146 | But why should not the opinions of physicians suffice on this point? |
27146 | But why so pale and deathlike? |
27146 | But why these chiding inquiries? |
27146 | But why, in the case first supposed, is the owner quit, or guiltless? |
27146 | But why? |
27146 | But will men esteem Christians the more for_ drinking_, and thus be led to glorify God on their behalf? |
27146 | But, Jack, what are poverty and shame, bad as they are, in comparison with the loss of the soul? |
27146 | But, Tom, you do n''t mean to say that poor Ben''s reel has been run off in that style, do you? |
27146 | But, if this be discarded, what plan of reformation remains? |
27146 | By what avenue did evil associates first effect a lodgment in those children''s hearts? |
27146 | Can any man deny that"the ox is wo nt to push with his horn?" |
27146 | Can any thing good be expected of them? |
27146 | Can any words express the indignation which would be felt? |
27146 | Can he ask the God of heaven to give him success? |
27146 | Can he do more work, or do it better? |
27146 | Can he, in his recklessness and selfishness say,"Let others take care of themselves? |
27146 | Can it be that they are acquainted with the extent of the mischiefs which our country already suffers from intemperance? |
27146 | Can such be a_ moral_ business? |
27146 | Can they be met at all? |
27146 | Can this be true? |
27146 | Can we countenance that which is certain to bring deep reproach on the church of Christ? |
27146 | Can we feel for human woe, and not be moved at the spectacle of wretchedness and despair which the intemperance of this country presents? |
27146 | Can you doubt? |
27146 | Can you, for a little selfish gain, persist in converting the bread of multitudes into pestilential fire? |
27146 | Can you, then, after all that has passed between us, persist two or three years longer in a contraband traffic? |
27146 | Can_ real Christians_, by example, propagate such heresy? |
27146 | Corrupt the majority, and what security is there in popular elections? |
27146 | D. Was there ever such a scarcity of money? |
27146 | Dear Mrs. Crowder, how do you manage?" |
27146 | Delay is death-- death to the consumer at least; and how can you flatter yourself that it will not prove your own eternal death? |
27146 | Did the owner_ know it_ when he let him loose? |
27146 | Did you never hear of abettors and accessaries, as well as principals in crime? |
27146 | Do n''t you know that it contains alcohol? |
27146 | Do n''t you remember how particular the minister was to say,''_ Leave it off at once_?'' |
27146 | Do n''t you think, Tom, that rum is at the bottom of nine out of ten of the floggings that take place in the navy? |
27146 | Do not these court occasions often lay the foundation for other courts? |
27146 | Do not these foul"spots in your feasts of charity"clearly say,"Touch not the unclean thing?" |
27146 | Do they enable him to bear fatigue, to endure heat and cold? |
27146 | Do they live to a great age? |
27146 | Do you begin to doubt whether you are in the path of duty? |
27146 | Do you intend, then, to make me answerable for all the mischief that is done by ardent spirit, in the whole state and nation? |
27146 | Do you know that little half- starved, bare- footed child, that you just sent home with two quarts of rank poison? |
27146 | Do you not know that his pious wife is extremely ill, and suffering for want of every comfort, in their miserable cabin? |
27146 | Do you say that ardent spirits, as they are commonly drank, do not produce these effects except in a very slight degree? |
27146 | Do you say that many drink spirits for years, and are not destroyed; and do you hence inquire how they can be poisonous? |
27146 | Do you say, your influence is of no account? |
27146 | Do you say,_ It is necessary as a means of support_? |
27146 | Does he believe that the Bible will countenance them? |
27146 | Does he make signs for a glass of spirits, to enable him to cleave the ground or climb a hill? |
27146 | Does he not act on the same principle as the man who deals in ardent spirits-- a desire to make money, and that only? |
27146 | Does he not aggravate his guilt by sinning against great light? |
27146 | Does he pray that he may? |
27146 | Does he really want the monster to live? |
27146 | Does it accord with the divine law? |
27146 | Does it do injury to the great cause which has all my heart? |
27146 | Does it tend in its effects to bring glory to God in the highest, and to promote the best good of mankind? |
27146 | Does not the responsibility rest upon us? |
27146 | Enjoy it, did I say? |
27146 | Evidently it is the only, but is it the effectual remedy? |
27146 | For,"what communion hath light with darkness?" |
27146 | From the indolence, and want of principle, and want of attention, which intemperance produces? |
27146 | Give them to the divine; do they add to his piety, to his zeal, to his faithfulness, to his love of God or man? |
27146 | Give them to the laborer; do they add to his strength? |
27146 | Give them to the mechanic; do they assist his ingenuity, his judgment, or his taste? |
27146 | Had they no hand in that cruel tragedy? |
27146 | Halloo, shipmate; what cheer? |
27146 | Has he a shadow of consistency who will rather do that, which, if done by the church generally, would lead millions to hopeless ruin? |
27146 | Has it not caused her to bleed at every pore? |
27146 | Has not intemperance been the greatest curse to the church? |
27146 | Has this been testified to those who make and deal in it as a beverage? |
27146 | Have I a right to do all which I know other men will do? |
27146 | Have I a right to do it? |
27146 | Have I a right to do it? |
27146 | Have I not often seen him in your taproom? |
27146 | Have not they gone to heaven?" |
27146 | Have the men who make this plea tried, even for a single year, to live without the manufacture of spirits? |
27146 | Have they no stomach complaints, no nervous maladies, no headaches? |
27146 | Have you a right to do it? |
27146 | Have you a right to do it? |
27146 | Have you ever been at a drunkard''s funeral? |
27146 | Have you ever tried the same experiment? |
27146 | Have you heard how N---- abused his family, and turned them all into the street the other night, after being supplied by you with whiskey? |
27146 | Have you no companions early palsied, withered, and scathed by alcoholic fires, treading now on the verge of the drunkard''s grave? |
27146 | Have you supported this cruel kingdom of darkness and death? |
27146 | He asked himself again and again, Is my use of tobacco a stumbling- block in the way of any? |
27146 | He has not yet contracted the desire for ardent spirits; and how will he contract it? |
27146 | He obtains the property of his fellow- men, and what does he return? |
27146 | How can I let you alone? |
27146 | How can I? |
27146 | How can this woe be arrested?_ The answer is plain. |
27146 | How can we aid the poor unfortunate drunkard? |
27146 | How do you know that it helps to make such a frightful host of drunkards and vagabonds? |
27146 | How is this?" |
27146 | How long, then, will it take to dry up this fountain of death? |
27146 | How many slaves are at present among us? |
27146 | How then can he be destroyed? |
27146 | How then can you possibly throw off bloodguiltiness, with the light which you now enjoy? |
27146 | How then could a temperate man ever become a drunkard? |
27146 | How utterly unfitted to perform those duties which are requisite to secure a blessed immortality? |
27146 | How, then, in view of that day when all the bearings of your conduct shall be judged, can you hesitate on which side to give your influence? |
27146 | I approached, took him by the hand, and said,"Well,----, how do you do?" |
27146 | I do not ask, did you look at his corpse? |
27146 | I stared at him, or rather paused and hesitated-- who could tell why? |
27146 | I would ask him if he has never been offended at the smell of that filthy drunkard who has hung around him? |
27146 | I would ask him if his conscience has never stung him as ragged children have come to him in bleak November to have him fill their father''s bottle? |
27146 | I''ll make no promises-- I''ll not be bound-- I am in no danger?" |
27146 | If a physician could live only by diffusing disease and death, who would regard his as a moral employment? |
27146 | If he fears God or regards man, can he stop short of this? |
27146 | If it is criminal to poison forty men at one time, how can it be innocent to poison twenty at another? |
27146 | If parents love their offspring, if Christians love the millions coming upon the stage, will they not gladly secure them all from the destroyer? |
27146 | If they are well, why do they need them? |
27146 | If we take their advice as to what will cure us when sick, why not also as to what will injure us when well? |
27146 | If you may not throw a hundred firebrands into the city, how will you prove that you may throw one? |
27146 | If, then, intoxicating liquor is thus disparaged in the most moral and intelligent circles, why should it not be universally abjured by individuals? |
27146 | In other words, can not he live without destroying them? |
27146 | In speaking of him to one of his neighbors, I said,"Does he not_ sometimes_ get drunk?" |
27146 | In the trial of the owner of the ox, the only questions to be asked were these two: Was the ox_ wo nt to push_ with his horn in time past? |
27146 | Is every honest calling so crowded, or so unproductive, that every avenue is closed? |
27146 | Is every thing gone? |
27146 | Is he a husband? |
27146 | Is he a magistrate? |
27146 | Is he a minister of the gospel? |
27146 | Is he determined to deny himself in nothing? |
27146 | Is he the father, or is she the mother of a family of children? |
27146 | Is here no danger that the temptation will prove too strong for them? |
27146 | Is it a less evil to the community to make drunkards of sober men than it is to kill drunkards? |
27146 | Is it a privilege to bear the responsibility of sending abroad pestilence and misery and death? |
27146 | Is it a question whether the country is cursed with this plague to a most horrible and alarming extent? |
27146 | Is it an employment over which a man will pray? |
27146 | Is it asked,_ What can young men do?_ We can do this one thing at least. |
27146 | Is it consistent with the great law of love by which you profess to be governed? |
27146 | Is it human law that is the standard of morality and religion? |
27146 | Is it indeed right and scriptural to impair body and mind, to defile the flesh, cloud the soul, stupefy conscience, and cherish the worst passions? |
27146 | Is it indeed scriptural and right to sanction habits fraught only with wounds, death, and perdition? |
27146 | Is it just? |
27146 | Is it no loss that 300,000 men are drunkards, and are the slaves of indolence and want? |
27146 | Is it no loss that bad debts are made, and men are made unable and unwilling to pay their debts? |
27146 | Is it no loss to the nation that 30,000 each year go to the grave? |
27146 | Is it not better that he and his family should come to want, than that hundreds of thousands should be ruined, soul and body, for time and eternity? |
27146 | Is it not equally abominable, if_ he knows_ it, and does not cease from producing it? |
27146 | Is it not exposing our children and youth to become drunkards? |
27146 | Is it not so? |
27146 | Is it one that a true patriot ought to adopt? |
27146 | Is it right to bring occasions of stumbling into the church? |
27146 | Is it right to encourage drunkards; right to treat with contempt a great national reform? |
27146 | Is it right to offend such as Christ calls"brethren;"right to grieve the Holy Spirit, and hinder his blessed influence? |
27146 | Is it right to"consume on lust"what would fill the Lord''s treasury; and right to make religion odious to the heathen? |
27146 | Is it said, that for eminently holy men to"mingle strong drink"may be inconsistent; but not so for those less spiritual? |
27146 | Is it said, that the influence of a small temperance society, or church, is unimportant? |
27146 | Is it such a business as his countrymen ought to approve? |
27146 | Is it such as his God and Judge will approve? |
27146 | Is it such as his conscience and sober judgment approve? |
27146 | Is it the mere_ abuse_ of a good and wholesome thing? |
27146 | Is it_ slander_, or is it_ because I tell you the truth_, that your temper is so deeply ruffled under my remonstrances? |
27146 | Is man so bent on self- gratification that he will have every sweet, though it be mingled with poison? |
27146 | Is not the desolation advancing? |
27146 | Is not this a horrid state of society? |
27146 | Is not this, you ask, a libel? |
27146 | Is she a wife? |
27146 | Is that therefore right? |
27146 | Is that therefore right? |
27146 | Is the prosperity of such to be attributed to them? |
27146 | Is there any nourishment in drinking alcohol? |
27146 | Is there no loss in the expense of supporting 75,000 criminals, and nine- tenths of the paupers in the land? |
27146 | Is this a moral employment? |
27146 | Is this an honorable traffic? |
27146 | Is this fair? |
27146 | Is this the rule which heaven has given, or which conscience gives, to direct the doings of man? |
27146 | It smells of blood-- and can God possibly accept of such an offering? |
27146 | May not a man be a notoriously wicked man, and yet not violate human law? |
27146 | May not those busy little fingers stop a moment, just while you jump up and throw your arms about your father''s neck, and kiss him?" |
27146 | Men who professed to be good once had a multiplicity of wives, and have not some of them too gone to heaven? |
27146 | Men who professed to be good once were engaged in the slave- trade, and have not some of them gone to heaven? |
27146 | Money a compensation for intemperance, and idleness, and crime, and the loss of the health, the happiness, and the souls of men? |
27146 | My fears arose, and my heart sunk within me:"Is Mary worse?" |
27146 | Nay, is it not certain, that if the religious community indulge, the example will lead_ millions_ to drunkenness and perdition? |
27146 | Nay, shall I draw back the curtain and disclose to you the scene of the drunkard''s death- bed? |
27146 | Need I point out the change that ebriety produces in the moral and social affections? |
27146 | Need I point to yonder grave, just closed over the remains of one who went from the cup of excess to almost instant death? |
27146 | Need I present the sword red with a brother''s blood? |
27146 | Need I tell how? |
27146 | Now what was this? |
27146 | Now, Jack, what do you think of temperance? |
27146 | Now, how can this formidable host, who cry out, Our craft is in danger, by this demon we have our wealth-- how can they be met? |
27146 | Now, what was the cause of this surprising change? |
27146 | O what has he, who drinks the cup of the Lord, to do with the cup of devils? |
27146 | O where lies this astonishing witchery? |
27146 | O, how can I hold my peace? |
27146 | Of course, Tom, you promised? |
27146 | Oh, is there no guilt in thus spreading a snare for my children? |
27146 | Oh, sir, can you think it strange if all these things should come into my mind every time you and I sit down together at the same communion- table? |
27146 | On opening my cottage door, I called out-- for no one was in the room--"Mrs. Mason, are you up stairs? |
27146 | Or shall he not, at once, be arrested, when it can be done without cost, and with infinite gain? |
27146 | Or will the Saviour praise them for this,"when he shall come to be glorified in his saints, and to be admired in all them that believe?" |
27146 | Or wise ever became a drunkard, except by moderate indulgence in the beginning? |
27146 | Others said, As Mr. B---- can do without rum, why can not we? |
27146 | Others will steal, rob, and commit murder, if you do not; and why may not you do it, and have a portion of the profit, as well as they? |
27146 | Pray, in what stream of his bounty, from what mountain and hill does it flow down to man? |
27146 | Pray, madam, do these children attend school? |
27146 | Rather, will not their drinking lead some to excess, and thus sully the Creator''s work? |
27146 | Robert broke silence, and in a sharp tone said,"What on earth do you sit there for, at work on that dirty rag? |
27146 | Robert said no more, but when I came back with the cloak, and said to him,"Will you go with me?" |
27146 | Says Dr. Rhinelander, who, with Dr. De Kay, was deputed from New York to visit Canada,"We may be asked who are the victims of this disease? |
27146 | See thou to that._ And was it therefore nothing to them? |
27146 | Shall God be grieved? |
27146 | Shall I ask you to accompany me to the penitentiary and the prison, that you may there behold the end of intemperance? |
27146 | Shall I go with you to the almshouse, the orphan asylum, and to the retreat for the insane, that your sensibility may be roused? |
27146 | Shall I stop to tell you of the agony of my mind? |
27146 | Shall conscience be riven by the act? |
27146 | Shall he still deceive the nation, and pursue his ravages? |
27146 | Shall it declare thy truth? |
27146 | Shall our benevolent institutions fail, and our liberties be sacrificed? |
27146 | Shall the dust praise thee? |
27146 | Shall the land now be rid of intemperance? |
27146 | Shall this state continue? |
27146 | Shall wailings from the bottomless pit hereafter reproach and agonize you as the cause of the ruin, perhaps of your children and children''s children? |
27146 | Should they fall, will none of their blood be upon your heads? |
27146 | Strike them from existence, and who would feel the loss? |
27146 | Suppose our missionaries should meet the heathen with the Bible in one hand, and the intoxicating cup in the other; what impression would they make? |
27146 | Suppose the distilleries were all to stop, how many would then die from hard drinking? |
27146 | Suppose_ you are safe_; have you then no_ benevolence_? |
27146 | Tell me, my friends, how will this awful truth appear to you on the bed of death? |
27146 | That which diffuses learning and domestic comfort around his family circle? |
27146 | That which will benefit his family? |
27146 | That which will make him a happier man? |
27146 | That which will tend to promote his real welfare? |
27146 | The father was a drunkard, and the mother-- what could she do? |
27146 | The man who is engaged in this business says, perhaps,"I have inherited it, and it is the source of my gain; and what shall I do?" |
27146 | The old man, but a short time ago, was warned again, and the question put to him,"What are the benefits of this practice?" |
27146 | The question is, Is it right? |
27146 | The simple question now is, what would you wish a neighbor to do in such a case? |
27146 | Then what does the spirit of patriotism say to us? |
27146 | Then what will effort of man avail? |
27146 | Then what would be the security against a new inroad of the exterminated vice? |
27146 | There is, however, one exception, the youngest; and how did she escape? |
27146 | They were never delirious; but were they never fevered? |
27146 | Think of it? |
27146 | Thus, without an approving conscience, without cordial Christian intercourse, without the smiles of the Comforter, how can he enjoy religion? |
27146 | To care not if others perish? |
27146 | To risk shipwreck of character and conscience, and to keep in countenance every drunkard and dram- shop around him? |
27146 | To what market do you mean to send that long row of casks? |
27146 | To whom would the trump of battle be sounded so effectually? |
27146 | Was ever a man made rich by the use of ardent spirits? |
27146 | Was ever any man''s conscience so captious before? |
27146 | Was it for the want of intellect and talents to appreciate those obligations? |
27146 | Was it for the want of motives and obligations to pursue an opposite course? |
27146 | Was it trouble, arising from disappointed hopes and blasted prospects? |
27146 | Was not S----, who hung himself lately, one of your steady customers? |
27146 | We have only to ask, what would be the effect if it were consumed in your own habitation, in your neighborhood, in your own city? |
27146 | We were all at the door, when Mrs. Wright said,"What, come to fetch us without a lantern? |
27146 | What are the statistics of this traffic? |
27146 | What are we to do?" |
27146 | What are you doing with these boiling craters, and that hideous worm there? |
27146 | What can a professor mean who refuses to enlist under the temperance banner? |
27146 | What can be the meaning of this? |
27146 | What can you do? |
27146 | What clerical association, or what convention of philanthropists, would now be found"mingling strong drink?" |
27146 | What do you think of the golden rule of_ doing unto others as we would they should do unto us_? |
27146 | What does he mean; that ardent spirit is the gift of God? |
27146 | What does the exhortation of religion say to us? |
27146 | What does the voice of common humanity say to us? |
27146 | What encouragement had the wife or the children to attempt any thing-- to make any exertion? |
27146 | What excuse could they find for supineness and sloth? |
27146 | What farmer would not be roused, should a wild beast come once a year into his borders and destroy the best cow in his farmyard? |
27146 | What giant''s arm dragged this fair victim to an untimely grave? |
27146 | What good? |
27146 | What has done it? |
27146 | What has he done? |
27146 | What has made her angry at the call to come out from the embrace of her deadliest foe? |
27146 | What has put the church to sleep? |
27146 | What have you, friend D, bound up so carefully in your handkerchief? |
27146 | What heart, not made of stone, can look at such a family without feeling exquisite distress, and the most terrible forebodings? |
27146 | What if every benefit that the moderate and immoderate drinker can think of, flows from it? |
27146 | What is a teetotaler, Tom? |
27146 | What is done then in this traffic? |
27146 | What is his errand, and where is his hungry, shivering family? |
27146 | What is that last invoice from the West Indies? |
27146 | What is the occasion? |
27146 | What is the point in dispute between your neighbors? |
27146 | What is the testimony of every chemist and physician in the land? |
27146 | What question have we to decide? |
27146 | What rational man would use them, for the sake of these two possible cases? |
27146 | What ruins these poor wretches? |
27146 | What say we to the second, the_ moderate use_ of intoxicating drinks? |
27146 | What sin or crime can not be excused in this way? |
27146 | What though he does not live in other immoralities-- is not this enough? |
27146 | What will every good citizen do? |
27146 | What will this do to compensate for its giant evils which are desolating our land? |
27146 | What will_ he_ do with the establishment when he gets it? |
27146 | What would they think of him? |
27146 | What wrought this wonderful transformation in this individual? |
27146 | What youth can not, at least, circulate a few Tracts, and perhaps enlist as many individuals? |
27146 | What youth, then, who loves his country, will not cheerfully coöperate with the most respected of every profession in encouraging this course? |
27146 | What, Tom, you do n''t mean to say that you give such a wide berth to_ beer_? |
27146 | What, can it be that a real Christian should, at this day, be concerned in the manufacture of ardent spirits for general use? |
27146 | What, said he, in amazement, can this be true?--distilled spirits of no more use to any man in health than arsenic or opium? |
27146 | What, so soon and so early at your post again? |
27146 | What, then, in days of exposure to this malady, is so great a nuisance as the places which furnish this poison? |
27146 | What, then, is the whole amount of guilt and of woe which they exhibit? |
27146 | What, then, would be the character of our beloved republic? |
27146 | What; boozy so early, mother? |
27146 | When I entered the doctor''s house,"Is that you, James King?" |
27146 | When the rich are failing all around, how can a poor mechanic stand it? |
27146 | When, then, can the unhappy man find peace with God amid this tumult of his unbalanced faculties, this perturbation of his unholy passions? |
27146 | Whence are_ your_ bad debts? |
27146 | Whence, but directly or indirectly from this business? |
27146 | Where are they not seen? |
27146 | Where have you last been, in what craft, etc.? |
27146 | Where is the proof that the little which my respectable customers carry into the country, with their other groceries, ever does any harm? |
27146 | Wherein does this plea differ from that of the trafficker in ardent spirits? |
27146 | Which of these two men brought upon them the greatest evil? |
27146 | Which shall we choose? |
27146 | Who can measure the shame and aversion which she excites in her husband? |
27146 | Who can not see that it is a foul, deep, and fatal injury inflicted on society? |
27146 | Who does not know the odious fact that, in many places, the_ distillery_ has regulated the price of bread? |
27146 | Who does not see its certain efficacy, and the grandeur of the result? |
27146 | Who else would feel upon themselves the chief responsibility for their country''s rescue? |
27146 | Who give support and respectability to spirit- shops, and the whole spirit- trade? |
27146 | Who is not wounded by the intemperance of this nation? |
27146 | Who then could turn back the burning tide; or who could govern the maddening multitudes? |
27146 | Who was ever induced to taste, by the disgusting sight of a drunkard? |
27146 | Who will aid in the deliverance of thousands of thousands from this debasing thraldom of sin and Satan? |
27146 | Who will come to his rescue? |
27146 | Who would not have been struck with the cold- blooded and inhuman avarice of such a man? |
27146 | Who, then, that regards our national character, can hesitate to adopt it? |
27146 | Whose grain is that? |
27146 | Whose situation so low, could he have known all, that would not have pitied me? |
27146 | Why are these instruments of cruelty permitted? |
27146 | Why do n''t you give me something to eat?" |
27146 | Why do they continue to grant and sell licenses, if it is wrong for me to sell rum? |
27146 | Why do you ask such puzzling questions? |
27146 | Why is it now so easy to entice a young man into the haunts of drunkenness? |
27146 | Why not ask God to increase it, and make you an instrument in extending it over the country, and perpetuating it to all future generations? |
27146 | Why not coöperate promptly in a public reform that is regarded with intense interest in heaven, on earth, and in hell? |
27146 | Why should not the young, especially, of both sexes, keep themselves unspotted, and worthy of the most elevated society? |
27146 | Why so? |
27146 | Why, Jack, is that you? |
27146 | Why? |
27146 | Why? |
27146 | Will he engage in them, because they are not specified formally, and with technical precision, in the Scriptures? |
27146 | Will he exercise no reason; make no discrimination between unmixed good and good followed by desolating woes? |
27146 | Will he not clear his house, his shop, his premises of it? |
27146 | Will he say that he is not responsible, and like Cain ask,"Am I my brother''s keeper?" |
27146 | Will he stand aloof from this conflict? |
27146 | Will it bear examination in a dying hour? |
27146 | Will it do more good than evil on the whole? |
27146 | Will the money which you may receive here, be a compensation for all the evil which will be done there? |
27146 | Will they hang back? |
27146 | Will they say, we can not make the sacrifice? |
27146 | Will this enlightened community yet say, they are useful and necessary? |
27146 | Will you do it longer? |
27146 | Will you fill his bottle with wrath, to be poured out without mixture, by and by, upon your own head? |
27146 | Would it be well to obtain a living in this way in any other business? |
27146 | Would it mend the matter at all, if, instead of sometimes dreaming, I were to be always wide awake? |
27146 | Would you not say to him, you may send them off, but you can not send off the responsibility? |
27146 | Would you pull your child out of the fire cautiously and gradually; or would you out with him at once? |
27146 | Would you thank your conscience for having let you alone while there was space left for repentance? |
27146 | Yes, certainly_ they_ must answer for it; but will that excuse those who furnish the poison? |
27146 | Yonder comes from the store the mechanic, neighbor D. Well, neighbor D, how do the times go with you now? |
27146 | You got safely back, I hope? |
27146 | Young men, shall we not enlist heartily and unitedly in promoting the extermination of intemperance? |
27146 | [ Illustration: Gin- shop] Have you ever seen a London gin- shop? |
27146 | _ But what could I do?_ So long as I remained here, I could not turn a corner in your streets without passing a grog- shop. |
27146 | _ Can a man take fire in his bosom, and his clothes not be burned? |
27146 | _ Has this been testified to the owner?_ Are the makers and venders aware of its effects? |
27146 | _ Has this been testified to the owner?_ Are the makers and venders aware of its effects? |
27146 | _ In this cure there is no pain._ It is recommended to whom? |
27146 | _ Your_ savings''bank is at the tavern, and the landlady of the Stag keeps your accounts, I believe, eh, James? |
27146 | _ you_ did n''t make her ill, did you, father-- nice bread, father-- did mother bring this nice bread home, father? |
27146 | and how many of them will it take, upon an average, to dig a drunkard''s grave? |
27146 | and one which ought to mark every man who understands its nature and effects, and yet continues to live in it, as a notoriously immoral man? |
27146 | and what is bread called in the Bible? |
27146 | and where do you think his soul is now fixed for eternity? |
27146 | as much worse as the soul is better than the body? |
27146 | here is Mrs. Wright; shall I come up?" |
27146 | how is Mary? |
27146 | looking up in my face as I sat down,"is she?" |
27146 | no,"said I;"and what if it was, what then?" |
27146 | or has he been chosen to fill a high and respectable station in the councils of his country? |
27146 | said I quickly;"if what?" |
27146 | said he, sharply;"do you want me?" |
27146 | said she mildly;"done, James? |
27146 | that it is in a high degree cruel and unjust? |
27146 | that it scatters the population of our cities, renders our business stagnant, and exposes our sons and our daughters to premature and sudden death? |
27146 | was it the taunts I was thus obliged to endure; or was it bodily exhaustion? |
27146 | what produced the disease? |
27146 | what would all the world think of him? |
27146 | what_ ought_ they to think of him? |
27146 | who hath contention? |
27146 | who hath sorrow? |
27146 | who hath wounds without cause? |
27146 | who made her ill? |
27146 | worse than a murderer? |