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 |
---|---|
chapter-07 | And why should I wish to boast of it a''ter all? |
chapter-07 | Hear Indian when he die, and no want to lie-- what he call him?" |
chapter-06 | Will you be of the party that''s to do it? |
chapter-06 | You was once a sailor, they tell me, old Tom? |
chapter-06 | You mean well enough, but what can you do? |
chapter-20 | Has any thing happened to father? |
chapter-20 | Why should we run, Judith? |
chapter-20 | Putting her mouth near a loop she said in a low but distinct voice--"Why you do n''t roll here, and fall in scow? |
chapter-20 | Would the savages have drunk with him, and then leave him behind? |
chapter-29 | Why do you torment Deerslayer, redmen? |
chapter-29 | Deerslayer did not come for our scalps, that is true; why did he not come? |
chapter-29 | Where are the fingers? |
chapter-29 | she asked"What has he done that you trifle with his life; who has given you the right to be his judges? |
chapter-02 | Do the redmen often visit this lake, Hurry? |
chapter-02 | Have the Governor''s or the King''s people given this lake a name? |
chapter-02 | Do you say, Hurry, that there is no man who calls himself lawful owner of all these glories?" |
chapter-02 | Do you see anything of this ark?" |
chapter-02 | Has that no colony- name yet?" |
chapter-02 | No doubt, Deerslayer, you''ve seen the Susquehannah, down in the Delaware country?" |
chapter-15 | How came it there? |
chapter-15 | And do you-- can you, for an instant, suppose I place you by the side of Harry March? |
chapter-15 | How did you come by this defiance, Deerslayer?" |
chapter-15 | Judith, darling, did you mourn for me much, when I was in the hands of the Philipsteins?" |
chapter-15 | Was it by lying, or by coaxing?" |
chapter-15 | What would you wish to see in its place?" |
chapter-23 | Am I a girl to be an Indian''s slave? |
chapter-23 | And why not Hetty, Deerslayer? chapter-23 What do you mean by that?--Would not that piece look as well on my shoulder, as on any man''s?" |
chapter-23 | Even the robin and the martin come back, year after year, to their old nests; shall a woman be less true hearted than a bird? |
chapter-23 | What, then, are likely to be the consequences to yourself?" |
chapter-03 | Come, shall we go and kill us venison? chapter-03 Does Master Hutter think it necessary to burrow on this lake?" |
chapter-03 | Just hearken to reason, if you please, Deerslayer, and tell me if the colony can make an onlawful law? chapter-03 Where is this outlet?" |
chapter-03 | Who denies it? chapter-03 Who''s talking of mortals, or of human beings at all, Deerslayer? |
chapter-03 | But you''ll not say that a red man and a white man are both Injins?" |
chapter-03 | Do you call a nigger like a white man, or me like an Indian?" |
chapter-03 | Is n''t an onlawful law more ag''in natur''than scalpin''a savage? |
chapter-03 | Is there a spot on''arth, Deerslayer, to which them disquiet rogues do n''t go? |
chapter-03 | You are not a beauty, as you must know, and why should n''t fri''nds tell each other these little trifles? |
chapter-16 | Deerslayer,interrupted the girl, earnestly;"this is a most dangerous service; why do you go on it, at all?" |
chapter-16 | Who has ever heard the name of a young Delaware? |
chapter-16 | Do the eagles fly as high, is the deer as swift or the panther as brave? |
chapter-16 | Is the foul tongue of Hurry Harry to blast my life?" |
chapter-16 | Is there no young warrior of that race? |
chapter-16 | What is the family of Uncas? |
chapter-16 | Where is another as great, though the pale- faces have ploughed up its grates, and trodden on its bones? |
chapter-16 | Who has ever heard the name of a young Delaware warrior?" |
chapter-16 | hastily said the girl, interrupting him, though nearly choked by her own emotions;"do you believe all you hear about a poor, motherless girl? |
chapter-28 | Deerslayer, do you mean to marry Sumach, now she has neither husband nor brother to feed her? |
chapter-28 | Did you witness that deed, gal?" |
chapter-28 | Ought the young to wive with the old-- the pale- face with the red- skin-- the Christian with the heathen? |
chapter-28 | See this girl; what young man will come to look for a wife in a lodge that has no head? |
chapter-28 | Tell me, Hetty, what has become of all the Hurons, and why they let you roam about the p''int as if you, too, was a prisoner?" |
chapter-28 | Which does he like best? |
chapter-28 | Who shall bring it back again? |
chapter-28 | Who shall feed her and her young? |
chapter-14 | Are ye chiefs? |
chapter-14 | But my brother has another beast?--He will give two--holding up as many fingers,"for old father?" |
chapter-14 | Can any faith be put in such wretches? |
chapter-14 | Do you think, Deerslayer,inquired Hetty, in her simple and innocent manner,"that the Iroquois wo n''t let father and Hurry go? |
chapter-14 | Has my pale- face brother any more such beasts? |
chapter-14 | Shall I teach you, Deerslayer? |
chapter-14 | Thanks-- My young pale- face warrior-- he has got a name-- how do the chiefs call him? |
chapter-14 | Will they not rather keep the toy they have, and send us off some bloody proofs of their getting the better of us in cunning, by way of boasting? chapter-14 What''s your ar''n''d, and why do you come among light bark canoes, on logs that are not even dug out? |
chapter-14 | Will he show them to his friends?" |
chapter-14 | demanded Deerslayer with dignity--"Are ye chiefs?--Or have the Mingos sent me warriors without names, on such an ar''n''d? |
chapter-32 | And am I then so mistaken? chapter-32 And do you so delight in violence and bloodshed? |
chapter-32 | Tell me then, Deerslayer, if anything light of me, that Henry March has said, may not have influenced your feelings? |
chapter-32 | Why not, Judith? chapter-32 Why quit it, then? |
chapter-32 | Do you really love war, Deerslayer, better than the hearth, and the affections?" |
chapter-32 | I hope I make myself understood?" |
chapter-32 | Is it not possible, think you, that the innocence of one of these beings may answer in the eyes of God for the salvation of both?" |
chapter-32 | This is Hetty''s, on the right of mother''s?" |
chapter-32 | Why should n''t women as well as men deal fairly and honestly by their fellow creatur''s? |
chapter-32 | You will not accept me for a wife, Deerslayer?" |
chapter-01 | Anan? |
chapter-01 | Anan? |
chapter-01 | And what may have been the other? |
chapter-01 | Have you the gal''s faith, to encourage you to hope otherwise? |
chapter-01 | Was the poor woman oncommon wicked, that her husband should take so much pains with her body? |
chapter-01 | Where did you say the young chief was to give you the meeting? |
chapter-01 | Which is the reason that you always come back? chapter-01 Is there no mother, Hurry? |
chapter-01 | What did the Delawares say of the hussy? |
chapter-01 | What''s the man''s history and natur''?" |
chapter-01 | demanded the one called Deerslayer,"or do you shout at the sight of the sun?" |
chapter-22 | All this is true, Deerslayer, but if you have not escaped from the savages, how came you here? |
chapter-22 | Are they bent on revenging their losses? |
chapter-22 | Certainly, Judith, by the ears of their parents? chapter-22 Do you think so, Judith? |
chapter-22 | Is it possible you mean to do this act of extraordinary self- destruction and recklessness? |
chapter-22 | What do you think of Deerslayer, Hetty? |
chapter-22 | What pledge have they that you will ever return? |
chapter-22 | Would he not make a brother- in- law to your liking? |
chapter-22 | Have the Hurons become more human, and let you go; or have you escaped from the wretches, by your own courage and skill?" |
chapter-22 | Is the old man laid in the water, where I should think his body would like to rest?" |
chapter-22 | Why did you fancy it Deerslayer, child?" |
chapter-22 | Yet where is the man to turn this beautiful place into such a garden of Eden for us?" |
chapter-04 | And you think the trail I saw may have been that of your friend, ahead of his time? |
chapter-04 | Are you sartain, Master Hutter, that the red- skins you dread are ra''al Canadas? |
chapter-04 | But you''ve got a name-- you do n''t throw away one name, before you come honestly by another? |
chapter-04 | Did you never see Judith? |
chapter-04 | Have you seen any, and can you describe their paint? |
chapter-04 | Hurry Harry has told me of you, and I know you must be the child? |
chapter-04 | What should we gain, Master Hutter, by changing the position? |
chapter-04 | Why should I? chapter-04 Bumppo is n''t as pretty as Hutter, is it? |
chapter-04 | Did you ever see as broad a sheet of water as this above us, before you came in upon it with Hurry?" |
chapter-04 | Did you hear the echo of a piece in the mountains, half- an- hour since?" |
chapter-04 | Do you understand this reasoning, youngster?" |
chapter-04 | What''s your name?" |
chapter-30 | They shall not injure you while I stand by, if in my power to prevent it-- besides--"Besides, what, Judith? chapter-30 Which of these warriors is the principal chief?" |
chapter-30 | Who wishes Briarthorn? |
chapter-30 | Why not, Judith? chapter-30 Why should I not help the Deerslayer?" |
chapter-30 | Do you never read your Bibles? |
chapter-30 | Do you think they will treat a woman of the pale faces more tenderly than they treat their own? |
chapter-30 | No doubt my daughter has a very large wigwam somewhere about the lake; the Hurons have not found it, on account of their ignorance?" |
chapter-30 | No matter-- what her name?" |
chapter-30 | Or do you think God will forget such things?" |
chapter-30 | What means have you to stop Injin cruelties, or to avart Injin deviltries?" |
chapter-30 | You must trust to your eyes for this knowledge; what red man is there who can not see? |
chapter-30 | You was about to say something, when you stopped at''besides''?" |
chapter-30 | Your name, Hetty?" |
chapter-18 | Did Deerslayer really tell you that he thought the savages would put him to the torture? chapter-18 Did you tell him I sent you ashore, Hetty, and how much concern I feel for his misfortune?" |
chapter-18 | In what can Deerslayer be your superior? chapter-18 Well, what did he tell you, child? |
chapter-18 | What did he tell me? chapter-18 Why not, Judith? |
chapter-18 | Are you not mother''s child-- and does he know how to read-- and was n''t mother before any woman in all this part of the world? |
chapter-18 | But tell me, Hetty, did you see and speak with Deerslayer?" |
chapter-18 | But we are not altogether unequal, sister-- Deerslayer and I? |
chapter-18 | Can any thing have befallen Hist?" |
chapter-18 | Did you ever notice that?" |
chapter-18 | He is not altogether my superior?" |
chapter-18 | He told me to say that his friends-- I suppose you are one of them, sister?" |
chapter-18 | I never thought fathers could read much, but mothers ought all to read, else how can they teach their children? |
chapter-19 | Have you discovered a chipmunk in a tree, or is there a salmon- trout swimming under the bottom of the scow? chapter-19 Well, Sarpent,"cried Hurry, always the first to speak,"what news from the muskrats? |
chapter-19 | What Huron gal do, dat you kill him? chapter-19 What for you shoot?" |
chapter-19 | Did n''t he know any better than to go prowling about a Huron camp at midnight, with no place to retreat to but a lake? |
chapter-19 | Did they shew their teeth, as you surrounded their dwelling?" |
chapter-19 | How you feel, your wife killed? |
chapter-19 | What Iroquois do? |
chapter-19 | What has become of the moccasin?" |
chapter-19 | What say you, Sarpent, shall you or I canoe it?" |
chapter-19 | What you t''ink Manitou feel? |
chapter-19 | What you t''ink Manitou say? |
chapter-19 | Who pity you, when tear come for moder, or sister? |
chapter-19 | Why you so wicked, great pale- face?" |
chapter-19 | You big as great pine-- Huron gal little slender birch-- why you fall on her and crush her? |
chapter-19 | You t''ink Huron forget it? |
chapter-19 | or did he think himself a buck, that by taking to the water could throw off the scent and swim himself out of difficulty? |
chapter-09 | Has the young pale- face hunter been long on this lake? |
chapter-09 | Is any thing to be seen of the Delaware chief? |
chapter-09 | Is it fast to the war- lock, or does he carry it above the left ear? |
chapter-09 | Is the rock empty, Judith? |
chapter-09 | My brother and friend struck the body? |
chapter-09 | What can this mean, Judith? |
chapter-09 | What is''t?--What is''t, Judith? |
chapter-09 | Where does he wear his hawk''s feather? |
chapter-09 | Would the savages let father go, if Judith and I give them all our best things? |
chapter-09 | But, tell me, Sarpent, how is it as to squaws among the knaves; have they many of their own women in the camp?" |
chapter-09 | She loves her father more than most children love their parents-- and-- then--""Then, what, gal? |
chapter-09 | Were the men bound, or in any manner suffering torture? |
chapter-09 | demanded Deerslayer--"Why has your sister taken the canoe, and left us?" |
chapter-09 | he hastily demanded--"Is any thing to be seen?" |
chapter-05 | Ay, Master Hurry,again interrupted the rich voice of Judith,"is it religion to say that one bad turn deserves another?" |
chapter-05 | Did that make you come out of the cabin, in spite of their rifles, too? |
chapter-05 | Have I got a wilderness heart, father-- and Hurry, is his heart true wilderness? |
chapter-05 | In which case, old Tom, why was their first salute an attempt to cut our throats? |
chapter-05 | Is Judith any happier for being so handsome? |
chapter-05 | Is it wicked to be ugly, father?'' |
chapter-05 | May I depend on you to stand by me and my daughters, then, Deerslayer? |
chapter-05 | Why has Judith more reason than I, father? |
chapter-05 | Why should you and Hurry kill people-- especially women and children? |
chapter-05 | Why so, poor child? chapter-05 Are you glad to see our old friend, March, back again? chapter-05 Besides, how often they burned me out, and robbed my traps-- ay, and pulled trigger on me, in the most peaceful times? |
chapter-05 | Dost thou wish for more sense?" |
chapter-05 | How do you like our new acquaintance, Deerslayer?" |
chapter-05 | How long would it take to kick a man through the colony-- in at one ind and out at the other, on that principle?" |
chapter-05 | What''s your sentiments, Hurry, touching these p''ints?" |
chapter-26 | And why should your warpath, as you call it, come so near to an end, Deerslayer? |
chapter-26 | Do the missionaries teach their white brethren to think it is so? |
chapter-26 | Do you think the Hurons will have the heart to do what you say, Deerslayer? |
chapter-26 | I thought the pale- faces believed all men were wicked; who then could ever find the white man''s heaven? |
chapter-26 | Is this wise, Judith? chapter-26 Well, what of that? |
chapter-26 | What sort of a thing is a furlough, then, if it be stronger than hemp or iron? chapter-26 Why do you go back to the Hurons, Deerslayer?" |
chapter-26 | Answer me one thing, child; do you believe yourself to have mind enough to become a wife, and a mother?" |
chapter-26 | Besides--""What were you about to say, Deerslayer?" |
chapter-26 | Do you think I would stand by and see you tormented?" |
chapter-26 | If sisters ca n''t keep each other''s secrets, who can?" |
chapter-26 | If you are bound, with what are your hands and feet fastened?" |
chapter-26 | You can understand what it is to give a promise, I dare to say, good little Hetty?" |
chapter-26 | You have n''t forgotten Hurry Harry, gal, so soon, I calculate?" |
chapter-12 | And the''Feeble- Mind''has seen the chist opened? |
chapter-12 | But, are you sartain, gal, you could find it in your heart to part with your own finery for such a purpose? chapter-12 Do you mean, Deerslayer, to offer these clothes to the Iroquois as ransom?" |
chapter-12 | Then the key is hid only from the Wild Rose? |
chapter-12 | To you it may seem so, Deerslayer,returned the disappointed girl,"but of what use could a dress like this be to any Indian woman? |
chapter-12 | Where could a key be put, so little likely to be found by the Wild Rose, as among coarse clothes? |
chapter-12 | Are you sartain you could find it in your heart to part with your own finery?" |
chapter-12 | Can you help us in calculating where Floating Tom would be apt to keep the key of a chist that he holds to be as private as this?" |
chapter-12 | Did your father ever give you any downright commands consarning that chist?" |
chapter-12 | Have you any scheme, that you would like to have the Sarpent and me indivour to carry out?" |
chapter-12 | Here are three locks, Judith; is there no key?" |
chapter-12 | What have I done that you should wish to see me in such a flaunting coat, Judith?" |
chapter-12 | What is it to us how the finery is treated, so long as it answers our wishes? |
chapter-12 | Yet, who knows? |
chapter-12 | she said--"Had we not better give up the attempt, and find some other means of releasing the prisoners?" |
chapter-08 | And how does that concern you, Deerslayer? |
chapter-08 | And what is it that he does, and what does he say? |
chapter-08 | And where, then, is your sweetheart, Deerslayer? |
chapter-08 | Did you never see that chest opened, Judith? |
chapter-08 | Do they ever talk of the shooting, gal? |
chapter-08 | Do they ever talk of the shooting? chapter-08 Must we reach the rock exactly at the moment the sun sets?" |
chapter-08 | Such I hope will not be the case with your friend Chingachgook, as you call him-- what is the English of his Indian name? |
chapter-08 | When and where did you ever see that chest opened, Hetty? |
chapter-08 | Who is this Chingachgook; from what place does he come, and why does he come here? |
chapter-08 | Who thinks or speaks of the heartless gallants now? chapter-08 Will a few minutes, sooner or later, alter the matter? |
chapter-08 | You think this Delaware can be depended on, Deerslayer? |
chapter-08 | You think, then, they see us, and watch our movements, Deerslayer? chapter-08 But what of my father, and of poor Hurry Harry? |
chapter-08 | But what will you have? |
chapter-08 | You say you do not suspect me, Judith?" |
chapter-11 | Daughter,said the senior chief to the young Delaware,"ask this grey beard why he came into our camp?" |
chapter-11 | Have we a friend in you, young woman? |
chapter-11 | S''pose''ey come ashore to take scalp? |
chapter-11 | This is the law by which my white brethren professes to live? |
chapter-11 | What for no break open chest? |
chapter-11 | What that mean? |
chapter-11 | Why Great Spirit no send book to Injin, too? |
chapter-11 | Why then does the pale- face use them? chapter-11 Why you so trouble? |
chapter-11 | Why? |
chapter-11 | Can we count on this young woman, think you?" |
chapter-11 | Do you think you can tell them this, so that they will understand it, Hist?" |
chapter-11 | Has Deerslayer sent any message; or has he any scheme by which he thinks to get us free?" |
chapter-11 | He comes from beyond the rising sun, with this book in his hand, and he teaches the red man to read it, but why does he forget himself all it says? |
chapter-11 | I hope Hurry, too, has not been able to harm any of the Indians?" |
chapter-11 | Such is the pale- face law?" |
chapter-11 | Why never can be?" |
chapter-24 | And why not? chapter-24 Did you never hear anything whispered against the former life of this person, Deerslayer?" |
chapter-24 | Hurt my feelin''s? chapter-24 Is poor Hetty compass enough for that, Judith?" |
chapter-24 | What reason can there be, if Hetty and I are willing to part with the trifles for your sake, and the savages are willing to receive them? |
chapter-24 | Why Thomas Hutter, Judith, and not your father? chapter-24 Why not, Judith, why not? |
chapter-24 | Would you have had me, Deerslayer, become the wife of such a man as Henry March? |
chapter-24 | But where''s the sense in trifling about such a thing? |
chapter-24 | But why is not Hetty present? |
chapter-24 | Can you-- do you think, Deerslayer, that you could be happy with such a wife as a woman like myself would make?" |
chapter-24 | Children take the names of their parents, nat''rally, and by a sort of gift, like, and why should n''t you and Hetty do as others have done afore ye? |
chapter-24 | Have you never heard any fearful stories about Thomas Hutter''s having once been concerned with the people they call buccaneers?" |
chapter-24 | I own I''m cur''ous to know why a youth like Hurry should n''t find favor with a maiden like you?" |
chapter-24 | The last may do for girls, but who thinks of them at all, in a hunter, or a warrior, or a husband? |
chapter-24 | Who, then, could Thomas Hutter be, and who are his darters?" |
chapter-24 | Why not, gal? |
chapter-21 | Do n''t you feel better now, father? |
chapter-21 | Father went for scalps, himself, and now where is his own? chapter-21 Have you got any scalp? |
chapter-21 | I know you-- Hurry Skurry-- I''ll sell you a scalp!--a sound one, and of a full grown man-- What''ll you give? |
chapter-21 | Is it too late, now, Judith? chapter-21 What does the old fellow mean, Judith? |
chapter-21 | Which is more than you think was the case with old Hutter? chapter-21 Who are you?" |
chapter-21 | Why not, Judith? |
chapter-21 | And, Hurry, we are now friends, and I may trust in you, may I not?" |
chapter-21 | Can Hetty and I relieve your pain?" |
chapter-21 | Hetty, is n''t there something in the Bible about cooling the tongue of a man who was burning in Hell fire?" |
chapter-21 | If you''re not Thomas Hutter''s darter, whose darter be you?" |
chapter-21 | In this instance, the very opening sentence--"Is there not an appointed time to man on earth?" |
chapter-21 | Mine''s gone-- How does it feel to have a scalp? |
chapter-21 | My tongue wants cooling, now-- what will it be hereafter?" |
chapter-21 | The solemn words"I have sinned; what shall I do unto thee, O thou preserver of men? |
chapter-21 | Why have you bound up his head? |
chapter-21 | or, have the savages tomahawked him about the brains?" |
chapter-10 | And do you know the Deerslayer? |
chapter-10 | Ask me what?'' chapter-10 But who in this wild wood May credit give to either eye, or ear? |
chapter-10 | Hetty got broder, as well as fader?--she said--"Why no talk of broder, as well as fader?" |
chapter-10 | How you can know? chapter-10 How you know? |
chapter-10 | How you know? |
chapter-10 | No got broder-- got a young warrior-- Love him, almost as much as fader, eh? chapter-10 What''s your name?" |
chapter-10 | Why he no ask you, himself?--Brave looking-- why not bold speaking? chapter-10 Why he shouldn''t-- ha? |
chapter-10 | Why no? chapter-10 Why you come for?" |
chapter-10 | Why your father come to Mingo camp in night? |
chapter-10 | Will you tell me, Hetty, what you intend to say? |
chapter-10 | Deerslayer and Chingachgook great friend, and no the same colour, Hist and-- what your name, pretty pale- face?" |
chapter-10 | Why he come night time, seize me by hair, and try to scalp Delaware girl?" |
chapter-10 | Why nobody want to marry you?" |
chapter-10 | You Hist friend; do n''t I say trut''?" |
chapter-10 | You know Serpent?" |
chapter-10 | said Hetty, almost sickening with horror--"Did he seize you-- did he try to scalp you?" |
chapter-10 | the young Indian eagerly inquired--"Where you come for?" |
chapter-17 | And Hawkeye and Chingachgook came into our camp on this errand, only? |
chapter-17 | And your father, good little Hetty-- and Hurry; did they know of your arr''nd? |
chapter-17 | But a string has two ends-- one is fast to the mind of a Mohican; and the other? |
chapter-17 | But what shall I tell Judith? chapter-17 Does Hawkeye love the Muskrat?" |
chapter-17 | How do you know that, Catamount? chapter-17 My sight is keen; is my brother''s leap long?" |
chapter-17 | The pale- face-- but my brother has a name? chapter-17 What sign, or signal, told the young maiden that her lover was nigh?" |
chapter-17 | And can the Feeble Mind pull so hard against so stout a warrior?" |
chapter-17 | And how will the plunder be divided? |
chapter-17 | Did you say that Judith told you to come ashore-- why should your sister do that?" |
chapter-17 | Does my brother love in his head, and not in his heart? |
chapter-17 | For what else should we come? |
chapter-17 | Hawkeye has a good countenance, and he is tough-- but why should he be tormented, when the Hurons love him? |
chapter-17 | Hawkeye is not a woman; why does he live with the Delawares?" |
chapter-17 | Is it enough? |
chapter-17 | My friend has come here on account of a little string held by a girl, that can pull the whole body of the sternest warrior?" |
chapter-17 | So great a warrior would not have lived without a name?" |
chapter-17 | What music do I hear? |
chapter-17 | Yes, this was the most important part of the errand-- what she had best do, in order to serve you?" |
chapter-17 | he abruptly demanded;"Or does he love his daughters?" |
chapter-17 | how do you know that?" |
chapter-17 | or, must I, while a thrill Lives in your sapient bosoms, cheat you still?" |
chapter-31 | Am I to suppose, sir, that you are about to desert your colours, in the great corps of bachelors, and close the campaign with matrimony? |
chapter-31 | Are you the officer that came with Hurry? |
chapter-31 | Do you know my sister? |
chapter-31 | Do you mean to be buried in the lake, too? chapter-31 How came they to shoot a poor girl like me, and let so many men go unharmed? |
chapter-31 | How came you to know that her name is Judith? chapter-31 I here, poor girl-- Why you no see me?" |
chapter-31 | If handsome, you would marry a beggar? |
chapter-31 | Is there no hope that she can survive the hurt? |
chapter-31 | Of what are you thinking, my sweet sister? |
chapter-31 | Shall I tell him to come and receive your good wishes? |
chapter-31 | Tell me, Judith, is it the friend of Hurry? |
chapter-31 | The flower that smiles to- day To- morrow dies; All that we wish to stay, Tempts and then flies: What is this world''s delight? chapter-31 What shall I say, Judith?" |
chapter-31 | Where''s the Serpent? chapter-31 Who is that in scarlet?" |
chapter-31 | By the way, Wright-- is Davis still living?" |
chapter-31 | Can it be night so soon? |
chapter-31 | Did Harry March tell you, where to find us, and how much need there was for your services?" |
chapter-31 | I can hardly see you at all-- where is Hist?" |
chapter-31 | I''m as stupid as one of those Dutch parsons on the Mohawk-- I hope your arm is not painful, my dear boy?" |
chapter-31 | Sister, where are you? |
chapter-31 | What can be the reason, Judith, that I see so badly, to- day? |
chapter-31 | Why is n''t father there? |
chapter-25 | And what are your ideas of the fate of an Indian, in the other world? |
chapter-25 | Can he see it? |
chapter-25 | Can it be in better hands than those in which it is now, Deerslayer? chapter-25 Has Hetty been consulted in this matter? |
chapter-25 | How does my brother know that the earth turns round? |
chapter-25 | I do expect to see mother,returned the truth- telling and simple girl,"but what will become of father?" |
chapter-25 | If Chingachgook was in the hands of the Hurons, what would my pale- face brother do? chapter-25 In what is a gift different from a nature? |
chapter-25 | What is one warrior against a tribe? chapter-25 What will the Son of Uncas do?" |
chapter-25 | What would you have me do with the weapon,she asked,"should that which you seem to expect take place?" |
chapter-25 | When the sun is in the top of that pine to- morrow, where will my brother Deerslayer be? |
chapter-25 | Which of these opinions is most pleasing to you, Deerslayer? |
chapter-25 | Would it be disagreeable to think that you should meet all who are now on this platform in another world? chapter-25 But, how long will it be likely to remain there? chapter-25 Can either, or both of you, alter a Mingo natur''? chapter-25 How long am I like to own this rifle or any other? chapter-25 I dare say, now, Hist, you''ve beheld this, time and ag''in, and yet it never entered into your galish mind to ask the reason? |
chapter-25 | Is not nature itself a gift from God?" |
chapter-25 | That''s it, is n''t it?" |
chapter-25 | What is it you want?" |
chapter-25 | What would I do? |
chapter-25 | Will your grand looks, or Hist''s tears and beauty, change a wolf into a squirrel, or make a catamount as innocent as a fa''an? |
chapter-25 | Would he do this?" |
chapter-13 | And did you find any thing of this among the savages, poor Hetty? |
chapter-13 | And why not take them to your wigwams? |
chapter-13 | And you think, Deerslayer, that these ivory toys are my father''s Gods? chapter-13 And you, Deerslayer,"she at length succeeded in saying--"are you, indeed, altogether unhurt? |
chapter-13 | Can you tell me, boy, what your chiefs intend to do with these captyves, or have n''t they yet made up their minds? |
chapter-13 | Did any tongue name Chingachgook, Drooping- Lily? |
chapter-13 | How did my young friend know there was another? |
chapter-13 | Judith,he asked earnestly, but with a concern that amounted almost to tenderness of manner,"did your parents ever talk to you of religion?" |
chapter-13 | My sister''s ears were open-- has she lost her tongue? |
chapter-13 | Was his name sung by a little bird among Iroquois? |
chapter-13 | When? |
chapter-13 | Where t''other pale brother? |
chapter-13 | Will my sister say words of song? chapter-13 Would he keep his gods in a bag, and locked up in a chest? |
chapter-13 | You are Chingachgook, the Great Serpent of the Delawares, ar''n''t you? |
chapter-13 | And you found the raft ready made to your hands, and in the water, and in waiting like for its cargo?" |
chapter-13 | Deerslayer, and father, and Judith, and I, and poor Hurry Harry-- do you know Henry March, Great Serpent? |
chapter-13 | Did you ever see any of the cravings of a surveyor about your father, gal?" |
chapter-13 | Do you suppose that Thomas Hutter ever wore that coat? |
chapter-13 | I see no signs of blood, nor any rent of skin or garments?" |
chapter-13 | The raft was ready made and in the water-- could that have been by a miracle, Judith?" |
chapter-13 | What do you say to this visit, Deerslayer?" |
chapter-13 | What she sing most-- how she look-- often she laugh?" |
chapter-13 | Where can she be hurt, Sarpent? |
chapter-13 | Will you promise this?" |
chapter-13 | You know the difference between a smile and a laugh?" |