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 |
---|---|
12038 | Where is Our Drama of''76? |
13842 | Then what am I come here for? |
13842 | What do the people want? |
15162 | Orrach( Orrock?) |
31814 | And old Hugh Gaine, turning slowly about at the sound of a name he knew so well, stared at the enemy he had never seen:"Is your name Freneau?" |
31814 | Anything but that, for was he not a poet? |
31814 | More than this, was he not the only poet in the colony? |
39789 | LYEST THOU HERE? |
39789 | Many a boy, who in school declaimed, unthinkingly,"Who is there to mourn for Logan? |
21972 | What can you do? |
21972 | Whom can we trust now? |
21972 | Washington asked him,"Why do you come?" |
21972 | Washington lost his temper, and throwing his hat on the ground, he exclaimed,"Are these the men with whom I am to defend America?" |
21972 | Would it go to Boston or to Philadelphia? |
21972 | Would they attack Philadelphia or the fort on Lake Champlain? |
22567 | Could not Burr detach this district or a part of it from our Government and make here an empire of his own? |
22567 | How can he answer it to his country? |
22567 | Or might he not take it as the base of operations for an attack on Spanish America that should give him an empire there? |
22567 | Subsequently in conversation with a South Carolina lady Tarleton said:"Why do you ladies so lionize Colonel Washington? |
22567 | Then he felt himself an aristocrat, and who will deny that he was so? |
23800 | But what self- respecting violinist could endure such profanation without striking a blow for his fanes? |
23800 | Can he have referred to the limbo of classicism? |
23800 | What would part- song writers do if the Vikings had never been invented? |
23800 | Where is the piano- piece since Beethoven that has the depth, the breadth, the height of this huge solemnity? |
23800 | Where would they get their wild choruses for men, with a prize to the singer that makes the most noise? |
23800 | With the exception of a certain excess of dissonance for a love- song,"Wilt Thou Be My Dearie?" |
15518 | Are you following from day to day the war in the East? |
15518 | Can you tell us about how many people pass over Brooklyn Bridge in a day? |
15518 | Did the Admiral ever bring her into the Havana harbor as he boasted that he would, with flags flying on her? |
15518 | Do they have schools in Freeville? |
15518 | Do you think Cuba is going to win? |
15518 | Or if General Rivera is to be put to death? |
15518 | Why do n''t you try and get it for yourself by becoming one of our agents? |
15518 | Will you please tell me if General Maceo is dead or not? |
20803 | And have four hundred such fellows a right to take our liberties?" |
20803 | Or how did Cornwallis happen to be at Yorktown when Washington made such a long leap and pounced upon him there? |
20803 | This led many people to ask,"What business has a parliament sitting the other side of the ocean to be making laws for us?" |
20803 | What makes Mr. Fiske''s histories just what they are? |
20803 | Why did the British armies make South Carolina their chief objective point after New York? |
20803 | Why were New Jersey and the Hudson river so important? |
14567 | As Browning says,"A man''s reach should exceed his grasp, or what''s a heaven for?" |
14567 | But how may the child acquire this habit of mastery? |
14567 | But the student who has imagination and industry inquires"What then?" |
14567 | Can it be denied that this man is all the better citizen for his ability to appreciate the wonderfulness of a sunrise? |
14567 | Only such as the defiant, wicked, and rebellious Cain can ask the question,"Am I my brother''s keeper?" |
14567 | Shall I drink the blood of these men that have put their lives in jeopardy? |
14567 | Turning to the boys he exclaimed,"Are you pure in heart? |
14567 | Whereupon the artist replied,"Do n''t you wish you could?" |
38889 | Are they conscious of our reverent tread on the turf above them, of our low words of remembrance and affection? |
38889 | Do they care that we have come from far to bend over them here? |
38889 | Do they no longer love this once beloved spot? |
38889 | Do they not rejoice in the beauty of this summer day and the sunshine that falls upon their windowless palace? |
38889 | Or have they ceased from all ken or care for earthly things? |
38889 | The book was published anonymously, and Sanborn says that when inquiry was made,"Who is the author of''Nature?''" |
38401 | ''''similar''''amended from''''similiar?''''. |
38401 | 13, interchanged in regard to Israel, on above theory)? |
38401 | Doflein regards large pear- shaped forms as such( megagametocytes? |
38401 | How can God look down with tolerance that seems favour on so much that conflicts with His declared will and character? |
38401 | It opens with the question:"''What shall we do to be saved in this world?'' |
38401 | referring to payments( prizes?) |
39632 | A Laurell? |
39632 | Asking if all were well with him--''How can that be,''he replied,''when the state is so agitated with storms and I myself am yet in the open sea? |
39632 | Did Mr Wesley( to take his case) receive a mere hallucinatory set of pushes? |
39632 | How would you like some day to see a whole shelf full of books, written by your son, with''Hawthorne''s Works''printed on their backs?" |
39632 | Is then the felt vibration part of the hallucination? |
39632 | On the 13th of September the travellers entered Mongolia, and on the 14th(?) |
39632 | The opening lines--"What might I call this Tree? |
39632 | Thyraeus raises the question, Are the experiences hallucinatory? |
39632 | Was the hair of a friend of the writer''s, who occupied a haunted house, only pulled in a subjective way? |
39632 | When the sounds are heard, has the atmosphere vibrated, or has the impression only been made on"the inner ear"? |
39632 | what news do you hear of that good Gabriel Huffe- Snuffe, Known to the world for a foole, and clapt in the Fleete for a Runner?" |
39632 | who can forgive thee this? |
38642 | And what shall be the general plan of the campaign, on supposition either of having, or not having the aid of ships of war? |
38642 | But are not the United States so circumstanced for the present, as to render a war too expensive for them and too dangerous to their commerce? |
38642 | He desires to be informed, as far as Congress may deem proper, what force the United States can bring into the field next campaign? |
38642 | On what resources they rely for their maintenance and necessary appointments? |
38642 | Suppose, therefore, we had offered this tract to Spain, in case she retained the Floridas, should we even have had thanks for it? |
38642 | What do we ask in return? |
38642 | What for instance is intended by_ real British subjects_? |
38642 | Will she, can she, justly, refuse making compensation for such seizures? |
38642 | Will you suffer them to be outweighed by the gratification of resentment against individuals? |
38642 | or would it have abated the chagrin she experienced from being disappointed in her extravagant and improper designs on that whole country? |
41776 | What see you when you get there? |
41776 | As she ran up stairs, the Tory commander, thinking her a servant, called out,"Wench, where is your master?" |
41776 | As the Coney Island"Song of the Clam"has it:"Who better than I? |
41776 | His aid, recognizing that he was a conspicuous mark, had just observed:"Would it not be prudent for you to retire from this place?" |
41776 | When he was wearied and sore from wounds they asked,"Will you fight again?" |
41776 | in chowder or pie, Baked, roasted, raw or fried? |
41979 | Did the horses swim ahead of them? |
41979 | Horse boats? |
41979 | ''Are you all crazy, to go to the Fort,''said he,''where that scoundrel lives who has so often murdered your friends?'' |
41979 | ''Who will go to meet them?'' |
41979 | He resented such conduct; and can you wonder at it? |
41979 | Turning to Milburne he said:"Why must you die? |
41979 | What could the Indians think of the gospel of Jesus Christ and the white man''s God? |
31650 | What do you want now, Deacon? |
31650 | ..., What were our lives without thee? |
31650 | Admitting that he was successful, who would wish success at such a price? |
31650 | And if a mistake had been made in her case, why not in others? |
31650 | But is this the most effectual mode of carrying them into execution? |
31650 | But who respects the character of a spy, assuming the garb of friendship but to betray? |
31650 | But you surely do not consider his case and mine alike?'' |
31650 | Crowned by human love, and with unlimited opportunities to serve his country, who can tell by what"vision splendid"he was"on his way attended"? |
31650 | Did his country demand the moral degradation of her sons, to advance her interests? |
31650 | Has she not repeatedly favored us with her tender, most important advice? |
31650 | It was,''Is it right to enslave the Affricans?'' |
31650 | Said I with emphasis,"''Do you remember the sequel of this story?'' |
31650 | Was it not so with your mother?" |
31650 | We must not blame them if the question involuntarily rose in their hearts,"Why such waste? |
31650 | What all our lives to save thee? |
31650 | Who can help rejoicing that such days, brief as they were, and uplifting as they must have been, were given to this man, now past twenty? |
31650 | Who shall say that the statue of the bound boy, facing death so manfully, will not prove one of Yale''s noblest endowments? |
31650 | Why was such an influence so permanently destroyed?" |
20105 | Can any of the wounded pull a rope? |
20105 | *** Afraid of them!--what, sir-- shall we who have laid the proud British lion at our feet, now be afraid of his whelps?" |
20105 | But why should these tremendous efforts be necessary? |
20105 | Grave questions are presenting themselves for solution, but who can doubt that the American people have the brain and the vigor to solve them? |
20105 | Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
20105 | Menendez asked:"Are you Catholics or Lutherans?" |
20105 | Said, in a tremulous voice:''Why do n''t you speak for yourself, John?''" |
20105 | That they learned to love their adopted land who can question? |
20105 | The question is then put,''Does any one object?''" |
20105 | Was it to be Badajos over again? |
20105 | What is it that gentlemen wish? |
20105 | What would they have? |
20105 | When all of the Frenchmen, about two hundred in number, had been thus secured, Menendez again asked them:"Are you Catholics or Lutherans?" |
20105 | When some one objected that she was a pagan--"Is it not my duty,"he replied,"to lead the blind to the light?" |
20105 | Why stand we here idle? |
16508 | Do n''t you agree,he was asked,"that tailors are a conscienceless and extortionate class?" |
16508 | Have you struck? |
16508 | How long have you studied law? |
16508 | No,he answered, still smiling;"how could I? |
16508 | Shall I hoist it, boys? |
16508 | The general is tough, is n''t he? |
16508 | What time is it, Rees? |
16508 | What''s the matter there? |
16508 | Born at the Waxham settlement, North Carolina(? |
16508 | But have you ever thought what a story is? |
16508 | For what other class of men was fitted to direct it? |
16508 | Franklin?" |
16508 | Have n''t you, more than once, made up your mind that you would n''t like a thing, just from the look of it, without ever having tasted it? |
16508 | Have we had any great statesmen since? |
16508 | How were they to get back to Spain, with the wind always against them? |
16508 | I wonder if any one foresaw that day, even in the dimmest fashion, what immortality of fame was to come to that tall, quiet, dignified man? |
16508 | Now why is it that everyone likes to read these make- believe biographies? |
16508 | The compass varied strangely, and what hope for them was there if this, their only guide, proved faithless? |
16508 | What chance, then, had this little force of backwoodsmen, commanded by an ignorant and untrained general? |
16508 | What was the meaning of a sea as smooth as their own Guadalquiver? |
16508 | Where are your landmarks, your boundaries of colonies? |
16508 | Will he be a Democrat or Republican-- or of some new party yet to be born? |
27777 | And what gave we? |
27777 | Are republics ungrateful? |
27777 | But what could he do? |
27777 | But what had been happening to her and to his three children during all these dismal years? |
27777 | Could this be true, or was it a vision? |
27777 | Could this be true? |
27777 | Cur non? |
27777 | Finally, Washington turned to General Wayne( behind Greene) and said,"Well, General, what would_ you_ do?" |
27777 | LAFAYETTE by MARTHA FOOTE CROW And what gave he to us? |
27777 | Shall the miseries of their prison life be dwelt upon? |
27777 | Should Lafayette return to France now? |
27777 | What was to be done? |
27777 | What were the studies of this young aristocrat? |
27777 | Where did Lafayette, a born aristocrat, get these ideas? |
27777 | Why did she not give details? |
27777 | Why not? |
27777 | Why should not the son take the same risk and leave all for a great cause? |
27777 | Why waste any more time? |
11846 | < pb id=''269.png''/> BEAUCHAMP, WILBUR L. Guidebook for How do we know? |
11846 | A birthday greeting; what''s this for? |
11846 | After the war-- what? |
11846 | Allo allo? |
11846 | Are men equal? |
11846 | BROWNSTONE PRESS, INC. Who said that? |
11846 | Clear ahead? |
11846 | Do you know your daughter? |
11846 | Fooled ya, did n''t I? |
11846 | Guess who? |
11846 | Guidebook for How do we know? |
11846 | Have you tried staying awake? |
11846 | How do we know? |
11846 | How do we talk American? |
11846 | Lost continent? |
11846 | Must Jesus bear the cross alone? |
11846 | Please, won''tcha be mine, Valentine? |
11846 | SEE Doreal, M. DORING, ERNEST N. How many Strads? |
11846 | Should the detective story writer know anything about crime? |
11846 | So what? |
11846 | So you''re laid up? |
11846 | Well, can''tcha guess? |
11846 | What Is Christian civilization? |
11846 | What kind of a show, if any, should junior go to? |
11846 | What time is it? |
11846 | Who are you? |
11846 | Who killed my buddy? |
11846 | Who''s paying for this cab? |
42501 | Have you a policeman out here? |
42501 | How often? |
42501 | Love Lane? 42501 What can be the matter?" |
42501 | What''s your hurry? 42501 Got a date? |
42501 | His scowl says, as plainly as this type,"What are you doing way down here by the Reform Club? |
42501 | [ Illustration: What''s the matter?] |
28456 | Am I not always your wife? |
28456 | And how large a handful would the birthday child like? |
28456 | And who are you,was the general cry,"that you dare to speak with such boldness to us?" |
28456 | Shall we speak of such trifles at such a time? |
28456 | Tell me,she said to him one day,"whether my Antoinette will be happy?" |
28456 | With my broken wing how can I succeed? |
28456 | A gleam of joy lighted her pale face when he came to her bedside, but perceiving his emotion she asked,"Am I then so very ill?" |
28456 | Bennett motioned Stanley to a seat, and after a moment''s pause, asked:"Will you go to Africa and find Livingstone?" |
28456 | But of what advantage was it for mankind that the cows of Gloucestershire possessed a matter thus singularly powerful? |
28456 | But where should he learn? |
28456 | Could you go out yourself and take charge of everything? |
28456 | He was silent; then demanded,"How could you make war on me?" |
28456 | Here is a subject for debating clubs: Was the interest of the country best served by Frémont''s withdrawal from the canvass of 1864? |
28456 | How could it be otherwise when nothing in the world is indifferent to me? |
28456 | How were persons living at a distance to derive benefit from this great discovery? |
28456 | Is the Tau learning to read with mamma? |
28456 | On October 30th, the_ Times_ republished from the_ Examiner_ a letter, headed,"Who is Miss Nightingale?" |
28456 | Stanley was bronzed and aged by sun and storm, and Bennett, surprised, abruptly asked,"Who are you?" |
28456 | Then, touching her gauze robe, asked,"Is it crêpe?" |
28456 | They told her that couriers had been despatched for the king, and she asked anxiously,"Will he soon come?" |
28456 | Trials we must have, but what are they if we are together?" |
28456 | Would you like to serve Him? |
28456 | Would you not like to work for Him among men? |
28456 | in such an hour as this can the queen sleep? |
27879 | Are we to return to the wretched, oppressive system we have quitted? |
27879 | But in the meanwhile, what am I to do if the means of supplying indispensable wants are cut off? |
27879 | But who will invite the Congress to treat with England? |
27879 | But, Sir, let me ask, whether any State did then, or has even now, done all in its power to enable our Generals to prosecute this victory? |
27879 | Can they not be placed in the regiments, or retire on half pay? |
27879 | Have the efforts in this country been so successful as to ground any hopes from abroad? |
27879 | How can the reduction be brought about, consistently with the good of the service? |
27879 | Is a reduction of the number of the officers and men, as fixed by the last arrangement, expedient or proper? |
27879 | Or, can it be believed, that credit will be given abroad before solid funds are provided at home? |
27879 | Or, is it to be supposed, that foreigners will interest themselves more in our prosperity or safety, than our citizens? |
27879 | Paris,( date uncertain) 1787? |
27879 | Paris,( date uncertain) 1787? |
27879 | Shall an innocent suffer for the guilty? |
27879 | This must put an effectual end to it; what resources are then left to us? |
27879 | Under this declaration, with what face could I ask for another six millions? |
27879 | What is to be done with officers by brevet, or those who have no particular commands? |
27879 | What periods of enlistment, under present circumstances, are most proper to be adopted? |
27879 | What regulation can be made to modify the practice of taking servants from the line by officers? |
27879 | What then is to be done? |
27879 | and what arrangement should be made in consequence of this resolution? |
38964 | Do you find anything singular in what I say? |
38964 | Where are the old Magyar saints? 38964 And did she ever get out of gaol, Sir? 38964 And for heaven''s sake how came you to know her? 38964 And pray what became of her, Sir? 38964 Had, then, his operation been in some way defective? 38964 In that event, would he be able to carry his party with him in support of his modified programme? 38964 In what does life consist? 38964 Or should he adopt the procedure, deemed by Pott generally advisable, of amputating the limb above it? 38964 The famous Robin Hood(? 1160-?1247) is said to have had a claim to the earldom. 38964 The only question was which form of Christianity were the Magyars to adopt, the Eastern or the Western? 38964 The position thus created raised a twofold question: Would the crown accept? 38964 Thus Shakespeare, in the first scene of the second act of_ Julius Caesar_, makes Portia say to her husband:--Is Brutus sick? |
38964 | What did he understand the word to mean? |
38964 | What, for a conscious experience so constituted as Hume will admit, is the precise significance of such belief in real existence? |
38964 | When Boswell asked him,"Then, Sir, what is poetry?" |
38964 | Whence then do these units arise? |
38964 | Who could associate them with Sir Walter Scott''s characters of Bradwardine or Monkbarns? |
38964 | Why do they not defend the realm against the Turks?" |
38964 | Yet Rabelais came from Touraine, and if the creator of Panurge has not humour, who has? |
38964 | and is it physical To walk unbraced and suck up the humours Of the dank morning?" |
38964 | why not try the experiment? |
33000 | Colonel,said he,"can you capture that battery?" |
33000 | He was all alone, was he? 33000 I wonder if that''s possible,"said Marshall, beginning to think his companion was right;"how can we find out?" |
33000 | So it is in these times, but we''ll give it to you in gold, if you''ll show us where we can get a chance at the rebel; did you see him? |
33000 | The Indians, men and women, were in high good humor, and why should they not be? 33000 What stronger evidence can be given,"he asked,"of the want of energy in our government than these disorders? |
33000 | Who is Franklin Pierce? |
33000 | Above all, had not"Old Hickory"won the battle of New Orleans, the most brilliant victory of the War of 1812? |
33000 | And he was mounted on a black horse with a white star in his forehead, and he was going like a streak of lightning, was n''t he?" |
33000 | And what did November tell? |
33000 | But what American can not be convinced that he is pre- eminently fitted for the office? |
33000 | Can it be the breeze of morning which sounds''click, click?'' |
33000 | Happening to look around, he asked:"What is that shining near your boot?" |
33000 | If there is not a power in it to check them, what security has a man for his life, liberty, or property? |
33000 | In the midst of the terrific fighting, when the_ Richard_ seemed doomed, Captain Pearson of the_ Serapis_ shouted:"Have you struck?" |
33000 | It consisted of the words,"What hath God wrought?" |
33000 | The salutation, when one member met another, was,"Have you seen Sam?" |
33000 | We recall that one of the most popular songs began:"Oh, where, tell me where, was the log- cabin made? |
33000 | What fate awaited it on the morrow? |
33000 | What is that noise? |
33000 | What shall we do with them? |
33000 | What steps did she take to do so? |
33000 | When that officer was brought into Hancock''s tent the latter extended his hand to his old acquaintance, exclaiming heartily,"How are you, Ned?" |
33000 | While Washington lived and was willing thus to serve his country, what other name could be considered? |
12652 | Did the militia fight? |
12652 | Why,asked an English lady of an American naval officer, in the year of grace 1887--"why is your ship named the Saratoga?" |
12652 | And shall we at last become the victims of our own lust of gain? |
12652 | But can a virtuous man hesitate in his choice?" |
12652 | But suppose you had really fallen short, do you think your superlative merit entitles you to greater indulgence than others?... |
12652 | But what prospect or hope can there be of my effecting so desirable a work at this time?" |
12652 | Can any man of ancient or modern times fail to pronounce Washington peerless?" |
12652 | Can not our common country, America, possess virtue enough to disappoint them? |
12652 | Does not the uniform conduct of Parliament for some years past confirm this? |
12652 | Is there anything to be expected from petitioning after this? |
12652 | Or shall we supinely sit and see one province after another fall a sacrifice to despotism?" |
12652 | Ought we not, then, to put our virtue and fortitude to the severest test?" |
12652 | Shall we after this whine and cry for relief, when we have already tried it in vain? |
12652 | Then the next campaign might bring the decisive moment; but still, who could tell? |
12652 | What was it that they saw which inspired them at once with so much confidence? |
12652 | When they came out, Washington looked as calm as ever, and calling to Lafayette and Knox gave them the papers, saying simply,"Whom can we trust now?" |
12652 | Who can wonder at his intense excitement at that moment? |
12288 | When shall we three meet again, In thunder, lightning or in rain? 12288 Who then was the''witch''with whose execution Connecticut stepped into the dark shadow of persecution? |
12288 | Did Longfellow, after a critical study of the original evidence and records, truly interpret Mather''s views, in his dialogue with Hathorne? |
12288 | Did he deserve it? |
12288 | He may have been the husband or father of''Achsah''[?] |
12288 | How may this story best be told? |
12288 | Mary asked, Who gave you the commission? |
12288 | One time she sd she saw her and describd her whole attire, her[ master]? |
12288 | To ye 1st Quest whether a plurality of witnesses be necessary, legally to evidence one and ye same individual fact? |
12288 | What law embalmed in ancientry and honored as of divine origin has been more fruitful of sacrifice and suffering? |
12288 | What of this literature? |
12288 | What was done at Salem, when the tempest of unreason broke loose? |
12288 | What were those rules of evidence and of procedure attributed to Mather? |
12288 | Whether the preternatural apparitions of a person legally proved, be a demonstration of familiarity with ye devill? |
12288 | Who were the chief actors in it? |
12288 | Whose is that pathetic figure shrinking in the twilight of that early record? |
29438 | Have you any news of the Doctor and his friends? 29438 But from what quarter is this universal empire in Europe to originate? 29438 But to what good, if Congress does not say it also? 29438 Do you know anything of this? 29438 I replied,how long is it since France began anew to fear giving umbrage to England?" |
29438 | I say, who will be surprised, or rather who will not be surprised, should they still persist in continuing the war unsupported? |
29438 | If they dare do this in their present critical situation, what will they not dare if successful, or at peace and united with us? |
29438 | Let me ask of you, if a workman skilful in the founding of brass and iron cannon can be engaged in Holland to go to America? |
29438 | Let me know how Mr Round Face, that went lately from Paris to the Hague, is proceeding? |
29438 | Letters of marque were given to contractors, and friends of government, for what? |
29438 | S._ Pray for what sum per annum can a young man be educated at Leyden, adhering to the strictest economy? |
29438 | To cruise against our trade? |
29438 | To what number can the United States increase their continental troops? |
29438 | What are the plans of General Washington, in case his army should amount to fifteen, twelve, or ten thousand men, independently of the French troops?" |
29438 | What does the artillery of the United States consist of, and what is the number of carriages? |
29438 | What is become, or likely to become of the plan of treaty, formerly under consideration? |
29438 | What is the number of provision wagons? |
29438 | What power will then be able to withstand yours? |
29438 | What shall I say to this affectionate, as well as polite invitation to dine at Schiedam? |
29438 | What will be the expense of the number fixed? |
29438 | Where, then, is the ground for despair, when our friends are looking the enemy in the face, and he does not dare to attack them? |
29438 | Will they never cease to give credit to such impudent assertions? |
29438 | what impression the measures of the King of Prussia in favor of the Prince had made? |
29438 | why they were so dissatisfied with the Prince of Orange in the United Provinces? |
43060 | _ Political_: Sibree,"What are''French Claims''on Madagascar?" |
43060 | and can death enter Paradise? |
43060 | | 14|? |
43060 | | Ge-| Ce+34.0|| O+| As? |
43060 | | Ta+1.02(?) |
43060 | |...................|| P-0.007| Zr-0.014| Yb+(?) |
43060 | |? |
43060 | |? |
43060 | |? |
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43060 | || S-0.011| Nb+0.49(?) |
43060 | || Si+0.002| Y+3.2(?) |
42842 | And what do you think the fisherman found? 42842 The listening guests were greatly mystified, None more so than the rector, who replied:''Marry you? |
42842 | Wrapt not in Eastern balms, But with thy fleshless palms Stretched, as if asking alms, Why dost thou haunt me? |
42842 | ''But what of my lady?'' |
42842 | Can this be Martha Hilton? |
42842 | His dim vision not discerning it, he shouted,"Where away? |
42842 | Samuel Adams Drake tells of asking the momentous question of a Maine fisherman getting up his sail on the Penobscot:"Whither bound?" |
42842 | The impatient Governor cried:''This is the lady; do you hesitate? |
42842 | Yes, that were a pleasant task, Your Excellency; but to whom? |
11313 | Build a railroad to Oregon? |
11313 | / face value? |
11313 | But by what route? |
11313 | But in what manner should it be acquired? |
11313 | But the decision to have representation according to population at once raised the question, Shall slaves be counted as population? |
11313 | But when the antislavery legislature met soon after, they ordered the question, Will you, or will you not, have this constitution? |
11313 | But when the question arose, How shall he be chosen? |
11313 | Could a negro whose ancestors had been sold as slaves become a citizen of one of the states in the Union? |
11313 | Dashing down the line, Sheridan shouted,"What troops are these?" |
11313 | Did Congress have power to enact the Missouri Compromise? |
11313 | During the long embargo and the war, manufactures had arisen, and one question now became,"Shall home manufactures be encouraged?" |
11313 | How shall the paper money be disposed of and"specie payment"resumed? |
11313 | Now, what were some of the results of this movement of population into the Mississippi valley? |
11313 | Pray where is Annapolis? |
11313 | Resumption of Specie Payments.%--What shall be done with the currency? |
11313 | Shall state sovereignty be recognized? |
11313 | The English and the Indians.%--How, meantime, did the English act toward the Indians? |
11313 | The Great American Desert.%--But how came Frémont to be in California in 1846? |
11313 | The States.%--What sort of a country, and what sort of people, was Washington thus chosen to rule over? |
11313 | The Surplus Revenue.%--What caused this surplus revenue? |
11313 | The payment of the bonds brought up the question, Shall the 5- 20''s be paid in coin or greenbacks? |
11313 | The political question of the time thus became, Shall, or shall not, slavery exist in New Mexico and California? |
11313 | The question was not, Shall America support an army? |
11313 | The questions to be decided were: Shall there be one or two republics on the soil of the United States? |
11313 | The real question of the campaign thus became, Will the people of Illinois have Stephen A. Douglas or Abraham Lincoln for senator? |
11313 | Were reinforcements coming? |
11313 | What shall be done with the national bonded debt? |
11313 | Why did the States secede?%--Why did the Southern slave states secede? |
11313 | Why not divide the country west of the great river in the same way? |
11313 | [ 1] Then came the question, Is there not a shorter route? |
11313 | [ 1][ Footnote 1: The question is often asked, When did the Constitution go into force? |
11313 | but, Shall Parliament tax America? |
11313 | they submitted the question, Will you have this constitution with or without slavery? |
11313 | | value? |
3108 | What is that for? |
3108 | And how fares it with the intellectual man? |
3108 | And if it were true, why did n''t I go at once to the gate, and not lurk round there all night like another Clement? |
3108 | And if the stage goes on in this materialistic way, how long will it be before it ceases to amuse intelligent, not to say intellectual people? |
3108 | And if this divorce is permanent, is it a good thing for literature or the stage? |
3108 | And what is dramatic art as at present understood and practiced by the purveyors of plays for the public? |
3108 | As the lawyers say, is it a''vinculo'', or only a''mensa et thoro?'' |
3108 | Ask them to let me out? |
3108 | But what procession was that moving along the southern terrace? |
3108 | But, style? |
3108 | Has either he or the great politician or the great scholar cultivated the real sources of enjoyment? |
3108 | Has the audience been creating a theatre to suit its taste, or have the managers been educating an audience? |
3108 | Has the divorce of literary art from the mimic art of the stage anything to do with this condition? |
3108 | How long is it since a play has been written and accepted and played which has in it any so- called literary quality or is an addition to literature? |
3108 | If he waited five minutes, who would believe my story of going to sleep and not hearing the drums? |
3108 | Is it to affect me like a strain of music? |
3108 | Is it to produce the effect of a picture? |
3108 | Is it true that in certain spiritual states, say of isolation or intense nervous alertness, we can see them as they can see each other? |
3108 | Is the book a window, through which I am to see life? |
3108 | Is the present condition of the stage a degeneration, as some say, or is it a natural evolution of an art independent of literature? |
3108 | Is this an exaggeration? |
3108 | LITERATURE AND THE STAGE Is the divorce of Literature and the Stage complete, or is it still only partial? |
3108 | Or was he composing one of those important love- letters of state to Madame Blank which have since delighted the lovers of literature? |
3108 | The Laocoon? |
3108 | The arms moving? |
3108 | The stage can be amusing, but can it show life as it is without the aid of idealizing literary art? |
3108 | What is history? |
3108 | What is this drama and spectacle, that has been put forth as history, but a cover for petty intrigue, and deceit, and selfishness, and cruelty? |
3108 | What is this quality of truthfulness which we all recognize when it exists in fiction? |
3108 | What right have we to laugh? |
3108 | What should I do? |
3108 | What? |
3108 | Who was Grand, who was Well- Beloved, who was Desired, who was the Idol of the French, who was worthy to be called a King of the Citizens? |
3108 | Why add the pursuit of happiness to our other inalienable worries? |
3108 | Why can not we get a law regulating the profession which is of most vital interest to all of us, excluding ignorance and quackery? |
3108 | Would it never put out its lights, and cease its uproar, and leave me to my reflections? |
48832 | (_ Heads appear as before._) Every mother loves her biddies; Many a one have I; But where get gifts to fill their fists, When I''ve no gold to buy? |
48832 | Children, do you hear? |
48832 | Children, speak up bright: What day is this? |
48832 | Dear, dear, what can the matter be? |
48832 | Got presents for us all? |
48832 | How can I join in the triumphant strain Which moves all hearts? |
48832 | If a widdy''s with her biddies, Living in a shoe, If a widdy''s work unstiddies, What''ll widdy do? |
48832 | Now tell me who, against the laws, Drops down the chimneys? |
48832 | Now, then, suppose I were that ancient sprite, What would you ask, to give you most delight? |
48832 | Oh, dear, what can the matter be? |
48832 | Would n''t that be grand? |
48832 | _ Santa._ What? |
48832 | _ Song:_ CHILDREN,_ outside; air_,"_ Oh, dear, what can the matter be?_"Oh, dear, what can the matter be? |
48832 | _ Song:_ CHILDREN,_ outside; air_,"_ Oh, dear, what can the matter be?_"Oh, dear, what can the matter be? |
48832 | and can you be unkind To one who''s been by Fortune left behind; Who has no friend, no money, and no clo''es; The hunted victim of unnumbered woes? |
48832 | ca n''t I leave the house a minute, But what a head''s at every window in it? |
48832 | what''s that? |
22758 | And what would you do with that Battery? |
22758 | Do n''t you see how she''s driven? 22758 Do you know me?" |
22758 | Elizabeth,he said, as Archdale left them,"have you not had enough of it yet? |
22758 | How much have I hurt Mistress Royal? |
22758 | I may depend upon you? |
22758 | I shot her, and he carried her out,--not the yellow- haired one, oh, no, but,--Did you see his face? |
22758 | Is that Harwin? |
22758 | Weapons? |
22758 | What do you want? 22758 What would you do then?" |
22758 | Where is he? |
22758 | Where was that? |
22758 | Who knows? |
22758 | Who told you? |
22758 | Why not allow our academy to decline? 22758 You think my sword arm will not be strong enough?" |
22758 | You will certainly tell me? |
22758 | And now must he go away starving within sight of food? |
22758 | But I want to know why it is with you?" |
22758 | But for Harwin what would not have been? |
22758 | But how was the great empty house to be furnished? |
22758 | Can it be necessary that society should sacrifice its brightest ornaments, and literally do itself to death, in order to maintain its existence? |
22758 | Did you see what happened a minute ago?" |
22758 | Do you know that I was to have married Mistress Royal?" |
22758 | Do you think she would come here?" |
22758 | Does Mr. Parnell himself know how much to ask, how little he ought to take, and where to draw the limit of compromise? |
22758 | Dr. Joel Hawes received his first request to provide a missionary for that settlement, he asked a friend of mine,''Where is Kick- a- go?'' |
22758 | Edmonson seemed about to shout his answer, then, recollecting where he was, said with a passion more dreadful for its suppression,"Why? |
22758 | Had he kept his appointment already? |
22758 | He well illustrated this idea when he further said( and who that listened did not thrill with true patriotism? |
22758 | If not himself for victim, who then? |
22758 | It would be awkward, would n''t it, if the French ones came instead?" |
22758 | Now will you fight with me?" |
22758 | That''s what you mean?" |
22758 | To- day his party is united, enthusiastic and strong, but when the hour for compromise and concession arrives, will the unanimity be maintained? |
22758 | Twenty- five years after the Quitman persecution-- or any other acts, in any southern state, of like character-- what? |
22758 | Was it for this that he had come from the fleet in the dispatch boat, and was braving all dangers? |
22758 | Waters?" |
22758 | What special reasons are there for giving a new impulse to it? |
22758 | Where Grattan-- sagacious, eloquent, high- minded and sincere-- so signally failed, is Parnell likely to succeed? |
22758 | Where and how can the remainder be obtained? |
22758 | Where is it? |
22758 | Where is the cabinet? |
22758 | Where is the scientific apparatus? |
22758 | Who wonders that he was a hero to those girls of fifty years ago? |
22758 | Will he be equal to it? |
22758 | You''ll fight?" |
22758 | _ Jessie Cohen._ 3, 217.--Can College Graduates succeed in Business? |
41266 | Damn you, why do n''t you disperse? |
41266 | I have half of Old England set against me already, and do you think I will have all New England likewise? |
41266 | Well,said Stark,"would you have us turn out now, while it is pitch dark and raining buckets?" |
41266 | What do you suppose my fate would be,Arnold is said to have inquired,"if my misguided countrymen were to take me prisoner?" |
41266 | What do you think of the damnable doings of that diabolical dog? |
41266 | Who knows,said John Rowe,"how tea will mingle with salt water?" |
41266 | Why,therefore,"all this haste? |
41266 | But were it ever so easy, does any friend to his country really wish to see America thus humbled? |
41266 | But why, we may ask, did the intriguer come back? |
41266 | Colonel Reed replied,"You are aware, sir, of the rank of General Washington in our army?" |
41266 | Could it have been with the intention of playing into the hands of the enemy? |
41266 | For a moment all firing ceased on both ships, and Captain Pearson called out,"Have you struck your colours?" |
41266 | General Lee, what are you about?" |
41266 | Is this the palace that papa was to have when he came to America?" |
41266 | No one spoke for a few moments, until General Stevens exclaimed,"Well, gentlemen, is it not too late_ now_ to do anything but fight?" |
41266 | Then why not be magnanimous in the hour of triumph? |
41266 | To whom but Chatham should appeal be made to repair the drooping fortunes of the empire? |
41266 | Was it to join such a league as this that she had cast off allegiance to Great Britain? |
41266 | What must the traitor''s feelings have been when he read the affectionate letters which Schuyler wrote him at this very time? |
41266 | What would Washington, what would Congress have thought, had the truth in its blackness been so much as dreamed of? |
41266 | What would the keeper of his majesty''s lions do? |
41266 | When Cornwallis, on the 7th of April, arrived at Wilmington, what was he to do next? |
41266 | Where is the brigadier who will go?" |
41266 | Whom can we trust now?" |
41266 | Why did he think it worth his while to pose once more in the attitude of an American? |
41266 | Why not make a hill? |
41266 | Why this driving?" |
41266 | Why this urging? |
41266 | Would he not fling open the dens of the wild beasts, and then address them thus? |
41266 | [ 35] To a gentleman, like Clinton, such a proposal was a gross insult, to which the only fitting answer would have been,"What do you take me for?" |
41266 | and could Sir Henry Clinton have been aware of this purpose? |
17119 | I ask no ampler skies than those 45 His magic music rears above me, No falser friends, no truer foes,-- And does not Doña Clara love me? 17119 These buttercups shall brim with wine 5 Beyond all Lesbian juice or Massic; May not New England be divine? |
17119 | What boot your many- volumed gains, Those withered leaves forever turning, To win, at best, for all your pains, A nature mummy- wrapt in learning? 17119 120 Why, hain''t I held''em on my knee? 17119 20 Up spoke our own little Mabel, Saying,Father, who makes it snow?" |
17119 | 25 Hast thou chosen, O my people, on whose party thou shall stand, Ere the Doom from its worn sandals shakes the dust against our land? |
17119 | 25 Who is it hath not strength to stand alone? |
17119 | 375 How could poet ever tower, If his passions, hopes, and fears, If his triumphs and his tears, Kept not measure with his people? |
17119 | 420 What were our lives without thee? |
17119 | 50 And are these tears? |
17119 | And what is so rare as a day in June? |
17119 | But is there hope to save Even this ethereal essence from the grave? |
17119 | But why do I not say that I have done something? |
17119 | But why do I send you this description,--like the bones of a chicken I had picked? |
17119 | Did n''t I love to see''em growin'', Three likely lads ez wal could be, Hahnsome an''brave an''not tu knowin''? |
17119 | He and his works, like sand, from earth are blown? |
17119 | Help came but slowly; surely no man yet 5 Put lever to the heavy world with less:[22] What need of help? |
17119 | Is earth too poor to give us 70 Something to live for here that shall outlive us? |
17119 | My ode to ripening summer classic? |
17119 | Once more tug bravely at the peril''s root, Though death came with it? |
17119 | Or evade the test If right or wrong in this God''s world of ours Be leagued with higher powers? |
17119 | Our slender life runs rippling by, and glides Into the silent hollow of the past; What is there that abides To make the next age better for the last? |
17119 | Shall we to more continuance make pretence? |
17119 | Some more substantial boon Than such as flows and ebbs with Fortune''s fickle moon? |
17119 | To him who, deadly hurt, agen Flashed on afore the charge''s thunder, Tippin''with fire the bolt of men 135 Thet rived the Rebel line asunder? |
17119 | Turn those tracks toward Past or Future, that make Plymouth Rock sublime? |
17119 | V. Whither leads the path To ampler fates that leads? |
17119 | Wait a little: do_ we_ not wait? |
17119 | Was dying all they had the skill to do? |
17119 | What all our lives to save thee? |
17119 | What brings us thronging these high rites to pay, And seal these hours the noblest of our year, 230 Save that our brothers found this better way? |
17119 | What need To know that truth whose knowledge can not save? |
17119 | What now were best? |
17119 | What wonder if Sir Launfal now Remembered the keeping of his vow? |
17119 | Where''s Peace? |
17119 | Who dare again to say we trace Our lines to a plebeian race? |
17119 | Who is it thwarts and bilks the inward MUST? |
17119 | Who is it will not dare himself to trust? |
17119 | Who now shall sneer? |
17119 | Why art thou made a god of, thou poor type Of anger, and revenge, and cunning force? |
17119 | shall one monk, scarce known beyond his cell, Front Rome''s far- reaching bolts, and scorn her frown? |
3050 | Are the Boers on Bulwana? |
3050 | Are you from Ladysmith? |
3050 | Are you from Ladysmith? |
3050 | Are you sure I am not robbing you? |
3050 | Besides, we do n''t know where the press- censor is, do we? |
3050 | But you knew he was a general officer, you knew he was the first of the relieving column? |
3050 | Crossed the bridge? |
3050 | Do you hear? 3050 Do you think you can carry me?" |
3050 | Does it pain you? 3050 General Sumner''s compliments, and why are you not in your place?" |
3050 | How did you happen to get that right? |
3050 | I mean before this war? |
3050 | I see that the London_ Chronicle_,he said,"asks if, since I have become a rebel, I do not lose my rights as a Barrister of the Temple? |
3050 | Ice, have got? |
3050 | Oh, was that General Buller? |
3050 | Oh, you are an officer? |
3050 | Stand_ this_? |
3050 | That''s all very well for you chaps, but what protects me if the Admiralty finds out I have led a charge on a Spanish garrison? |
3050 | What am I to do then? |
3050 | What''s the good of your money? 3050 What-- what,"he gasped,"is that man doing with that axe?" |
3050 | When did they take you? |
3050 | Where''s your pass? |
3050 | Why did n''t you people cheer General Buller when he came in? |
3050 | Why? |
3050 | Will General Wilson think I should have waited for him? |
3050 | Will you have these? |
3050 | You are not tired, are you? 3050 Can you eat money? 3050 Can you stand it? |
3050 | Can your horse eat money? |
3050 | Does he go around with a brass band?" |
3050 | Down in the Garcia campaign along the Rio Grande I said to one of them:"Why do you go to all that trouble? |
3050 | Finally, one of them, with an inward struggle, brought himself to ask,"Are you from the outside?" |
3050 | He said:"Do we? |
3050 | I order you; damn you, I order-- We must give them hell; do you hear? |
3050 | Is that the way a Russian spy works? |
3050 | THE SOUTH AFRICAN WAR I-- WITH BULLER''S COLUMN"Were you the station- master here before this?" |
3050 | The Boers were still on Bulwana then? |
3050 | There was a long, grateful pause, and then in a voice that trembled, I again asked,"Champagne, have got?" |
3050 | They''ve killed my captain-- do you understand? |
3050 | Was it possible that it stretched already into the beleaguered city? |
3050 | Were we, after all, to be cheated of the first and freshest impressions? |
3050 | What''s the use?" |
3050 | What?" |
3050 | When he crawled over to where we lay, I explained,"I knew that would fetch you,"and he grinned, and said,"Oh, was that it?" |
3050 | When we gathered up the corners of his blanket and lifted him, he tried to sit upright, and cried out,"You''re taking me to the front, are n''t you? |
3050 | Yes?" |
3050 | and"Where is the bridge?" |
34600 | But this ca n''t be your usual fare? |
34600 | Did our men stand fire? |
34600 | Do you think,asked the prime minister,"the people of America would submit to pay the stamp duty if it was changed?" |
34600 | Do you want to fight now in the rain and at night? |
34600 | How shall I know him? |
34600 | May we not begin? |
34600 | What do you think of the doings of that diabolical dog? |
34600 | What is the meaning of all this, sir? |
34600 | What is to be done now? |
34600 | What''s the matter? |
34600 | What''s your name? |
34600 | Which side? |
34600 | Who knows,shouted one in the audience,"how tea will mix with salt water?" |
34600 | --"What''s the mat- ter?" |
34600 | Are you worth more? |
34600 | As they drew near Trenton, Washington, who rode in front, asked a man chopping wood by the roadside:--"Which way is the Hessian picket?" |
34600 | At the rough log tavern:"What do you charge for dinner here?" |
34600 | At the wayside store:"What''s the price of these boots?" |
34600 | Can the danger be averted? |
34600 | Can this self- trained lawyer from the Western prairies bear all this sudden and tremendous burden, and bear it with courage, credit, and success? |
34600 | Could anything be done to check the Albemarle? |
34600 | Could he himself do anything to save to his country this immense and valuable region?--one man, in midwinter, and across a continent? |
34600 | How could Washington do all this and keep Clinton in the dark? |
34600 | How did our ships stand the contest? |
34600 | How shall he realize his visions? |
34600 | How was it possible for the Union vessels to force their way up the river in the face of these obstructions? |
34600 | In many a country, people were asking,"Is there no easier way to get to India?" |
34600 | Rousing himself he asked,"Who run?" |
34600 | Shall I hoist it?" |
34600 | Should Perry surrender? |
34600 | The American flag is obscured with smoke, so that Captain Pearson, not seeing it, shouts,"Are you ready to surrender?" |
34600 | The Patriots forced to retreat from Lack of Ammunition.=--Their powder all gone, what could the patriots do but retreat? |
34600 | The Sturdy Pioneers of the North rise in Defense of their Homes.=--Meanwhile, what were the stout- hearted pioneers of the north doing? |
34600 | The War of 1812 begun.=--Why did we endure these insults from England so long? |
34600 | The alarming question was, Where will they strike? |
34600 | The idea was sneered at, and people asked,"Of what use is it?" |
34600 | The problem haunted him--"Must I go?" |
34600 | To which the genial philosopher replied,"What is the use of a child? |
34600 | What could he do? |
34600 | What is to be done? |
34600 | What should the colonies do to protect themselves? |
34600 | What was the matter? |
34600 | What''s yours?" |
34600 | When he came to himself, his first question was,"Have I saved the Minnesota?" |
34600 | Where could there be any hope? |
34600 | Who shall be chosen Commander- in- Chief of our armies? |
34600 | Who shall be singled out for this most difficult task? |
34600 | Who will believe in him? |
34600 | Whom can we trust now?" |
34600 | Why was this continent not named for Columbus? |
34600 | Why? |
34600 | alive, my dear general?" |
34600 | said the general;"have your fathers been teaching you rebellion, and sent you to show it here?" |
34600 | what became of him? |
22179 | Do n''t it make you mad to hear of that pleasure trip? |
22179 | Well, what in the world,I said,"is the matter?" |
22179 | What mark is on them? 22179 Why ca n''t you make me a pulpit?" |
22179 | Why what''s the matter with the west? |
22179 | Why, what''s the matter? |
22179 | A man was asked, why did you return to the west, after having gone back to New York and having spent two years there? |
22179 | An old Indian woman came in and made loud cries of dismay when she saw my wastefulness, saying,"Why did you throw this away?" |
22179 | As he came up he asked,"Young man, do you know of a good piece of land which can be bought?" |
22179 | At the time of the outbreak she said to me,"Kinnesagas?" |
22179 | Did n''t she talk to me and revile me? |
22179 | Did you ever make a pork apple pie? |
22179 | Finally Mrs. Cowan asked,"Do n''t you like music, Judge?" |
22179 | Finally, he said,"Fellows, I ca n''t stand this, I must shoot that chicken, you wo n''t tell if I do?" |
22179 | Had he not foreseen the future possibilities of this great water- power? |
22179 | Has anyone ever told you how terrible the mosquitoes were in the early days? |
22179 | Have I ever seen the Red River carts? |
22179 | Have you ever been in great danger where all was darkness where that danger was? |
22179 | He called,"Who goes there?" |
22179 | His answer was,"There are only six beds in there, what more could you want?" |
22179 | How many girls of today could walk that many blocks? |
22179 | How much? |
22179 | I asked her if she did not like the Indians better than the whites and she said in Chippewa,"If I do, why do I not stay with them?" |
22179 | I remember once our Probate Judge came along and asked,"Have you any stalks I can chew?" |
22179 | I said,"For God''s sake, what is the news, Jim?" |
22179 | I said,"What are you doing to that pie?" |
22179 | I thought,"What must I do?" |
22179 | I would go in the pasture and say,"Is that you nice gooses?" |
22179 | If each mesh is not flawless, if age has weakened them, does not the pattern remain? |
22179 | If not, where lies the blame? |
22179 | In the morning, the proprietor said,"I have a job of work I want done-- is that your chest?" |
22179 | Instead of taking a girl out driving or to the theatre, a young man would ask,"Wo n''t you go walking on the boardwalk?" |
22179 | Mrs. French said"Why ca n''t us women go too, on a pleasure trip? |
22179 | My host said,"I suppose you know what this is?" |
22179 | On the way up, I kept wondering, am I painter, blacksmith, shoemaker, carpenter or farmer? |
22179 | She said,"August, where''s the other men?" |
22179 | The braves began to ask questions about little Susan,"Is she good squaw? |
22179 | They just said"Chippewa?" |
22179 | They used to ask for coffee and one who had been to school said,"Could I have a green pumpkin?" |
22179 | Those unsung heroines should not their heroism be heralded while some still live? |
22179 | Was it made in the old Godfrey House, or was I only dreaming? |
22179 | Was n''t she stylish for a girl who was married New Years day in 1844? |
22179 | Was n''t this a jolt? |
22179 | Was this the first Cataloo? |
22179 | Was this the first flag made in St. Anthony? |
22179 | We said,"Ai n''t you afraid?" |
22179 | Were these not, indeed, children? |
22179 | What could we do? |
22179 | What did we have to eat that first year? |
22179 | What do you women nowadays, with your hospitals and doctors know of a time like this? |
22179 | What is the cure? |
22179 | When my husband saw me going toward the door he said,"What are you going to do?" |
22179 | When ready for a light he walked up alongside of me and said,"Jones, have you got any matches?" |
22179 | Where are all those drivers? |
22179 | Where could I hide? |
22179 | While preparing breakfast she heard one of the gentlemen say--"Hello, little fellow, what are you doing with my toe?" |
22179 | Who by? |
22179 | Why do I think he foresaw all this? |
22179 | Would you want to spend your life where the people twenty feet away do not know your name or care whether you live or die? |
22179 | You go?" |
22179 | You see that road out there? |
22179 | is this Sunday? |
22179 | meaning,"are you afraid?" |
46190 | Am I not a priest? |
46190 | And do you know a spot called Fountain Dale, and a certain monk who is called the Curtal Friar of Fountain Abbey? |
46190 | But why should such a thing be done? 46190 Can any one hit inside that little garland at such a distance?" |
46190 | Could no one of these ten be Robin Hood in disguise? |
46190 | Do you know the country round about, good and holy man? |
46190 | Do you know whether this friar is now on the other side of the river or on this side? |
46190 | Have you no friends who could lend you the money? |
46190 | How is this, master? |
46190 | How is this? |
46190 | How many miles is it to thy true love? 46190 How much money did you borrow of him?" |
46190 | Is it across the river? |
46190 | Master, can we not prevent such a wrong? |
46190 | Now who are you who would stop a peaceful traveler on the king''s highway? |
46190 | Now, sweet lad,he said to himself,"canst thou not tune me a song?" |
46190 | Now, who are you? |
46190 | Now, will you not come into my band? |
46190 | What dost thou here? |
46190 | What is thy name? |
46190 | What is your name? |
46190 | What mercy have you ever shown to the poor? 46190 What wilt thou give me,"said Robin Hood,"In ready gold or fee, To help thee to thy true love again, And deliver her unto thee?" |
46190 | Who gives me this maid? |
46190 | And when he came bold Robin before, Robin asked him courteously,"Oh, hast thou any money to spare, For my merry men and me?" |
46190 | Maiden, is it of your own free will that you we d with this knight?" |
46190 | Page 18, moved punctuation inside quotes for"How is this?" |
46190 | Prythee, ask me not: dost thou not hear how I croak like a frog?" |
46190 | Then the friar leaped forth, crying,"What spy have we here?" |
46190 | Who are you, man? |
46190 | Why should such a dreadful thing be done to them?" |
46190 | Will you join my service?" |
46190 | Will you join yourself to my men?" |
46190 | the young man said,"What is your will with me?" |
49141 | Aw, wait a minute, ca n''t you? |
49141 | Did n''t you once roll down the hill in a churn? |
49141 | Getting it? |
49141 | How about Farmer in the Dell? |
49141 | Know what day it is, Mumsie? |
49141 | Little- tot, where are you? |
49141 | Mother,asked Blacky- ears as they waited for the door to be unlocked--"Mother,--was Bad Boy Mischief there at the picnic?" |
49141 | Mumsie, we fellows want to play pirate, and first may we have some bread and molasses? |
49141 | Now, Spotty, what does your side choose to play? 49141 Oh, Miss Pinky, do you suppose Santa will really, truly come here to see us?" |
49141 | What do you mean? |
49141 | What were you trying to do? |
49141 | Why will you do such things? 49141 Wo n''t you come back again next Thursday?" |
49141 | Yes-- why it''s-- Wednesday, is n''t it? |
49141 | You will promise to be good, my dears? |
49141 | And what do you suppose? |
49141 | And you know all about how Old Mother Pig sent them forth to seek their fortunes, do n''t you? |
49141 | But where? |
49141 | Come on, will you play too?" |
49141 | Do you know--?" |
49141 | Do you wonder that they laughingly told each other that they would have no idle minutes that day? |
49141 | Have you lived in this house always, Mother Grunty?" |
49141 | How many hours ago did it strike 2?" |
49141 | How many want to play hide and seek?" |
49141 | I''m sorry-- honest I am,--but where''s the picnic?" |
49141 | Just what do you think that table looked like a half- hour later? |
49141 | Page 5, added missing quote after"be good, my dears?" |
49141 | You do n''t want to be called Johnny shoestrings, do you?" |
49141 | may we go over where the music is?" |
29952 | Hans Breitman gife a barty-- Vhere ish dot barty now? |
29952 | Shall gravitation cease when you go by? |
29952 | To which of these religions do you specially adhere? |
29952 | What''s your business, stranger, in these parts? |
29952 | But does romance disappear from the farm with machinery and scientific agriculture? |
29952 | But how much of this humor, after all, is either essentially universal in its scope or else a matter of mere stage- setting and machinery? |
29952 | But just what subtle racial differentiation had been at work, since William Hawthorne migrated to Massachusetts with Winthrop in 1630? |
29952 | But precisely what national traits are to be discovered in this eminent fellow- countryman of ours? |
29952 | Did the colonist need a tool? |
29952 | Does not the_ Autocrat of the Breakfast Table_ itself presuppose the existence of a truly cultivated society? |
29952 | Does this make Nathaniel Hawthorne merely an"Englishman with a difference,"as Mr. Kipling, born in India, is an"Englishman with a difference"? |
29952 | Enjoying the thing liberty, have we been therefore less concerned with the idea? |
29952 | Has our literature kept equal pace with our thinking and feeling? |
29952 | He betrays it in this striking passage from his_ Journal_, about the sculptor Greenough:--"What interest has Greenough to make a good statue? |
29952 | Is there, then, a distinctly American type of humor and satire? |
29952 | National smugness and conceit, the impatience crystallized in the phrase,"What have we got to do with abroad?" |
29952 | Next, what is right, just, lawful for my crowd? |
29952 | Or is it simply another illustration of the defective passion of American literature? |
29952 | Shall we enter the preoccupation plea once more? |
29952 | The farm expands over the wolf''s den, the Indian becomes a blacksmith, but do the gross and material instincts ultimately triumph? |
29952 | The first instinct, perhaps, is to ask what is right, just, lawful, for me? |
29952 | The sole question is,"Are you on the Lord''s side?" |
29952 | This vast series of kaleidoscopic changes which we call America; has it produced a humor of its own? |
29952 | Toward what tangible symbols of the invisible did their eyes instinctively turn? |
29952 | Was Hawthorne, then, simply an Englishman living in America? |
29952 | Were not such heroes, impossible as they would have been in any other civilized country, perfectly illuminative of your national state of mind?" |
29952 | What are the causes of American romance, the circumstances and qualities that have produced the romantic element in American life and character? |
29952 | What is it which contradicts, inhibits, or negatives the romantic tendency? |
29952 | What is the evidence? |
29952 | What is the use of battling for one''s own opinions when one can already see that the multitude is on the other side? |
29952 | When you meet a bore or a hypocrite or a plain rascal, is it better to chastise him with laughter or to flay him with shining fury? |
29952 | Who cares whether it is good? |
29952 | Why should New Jersey, for example, be more ridiculous than Delaware? |
29952 | Why should the suburban dweller of every city be regarded with humorous condescension by the man who is compelled to sleep within the city limits? |
29952 | Why? |
29952 | Will an author choose to address the selected guests or the casual crowd? |
29952 | Yet when one asks the great Russian,"What am I to do as a member of this fellowship?" |
29952 | Yet who does not know that the inherent instinct for political order may be accompanied by mental disorderliness? |
13748 | And how many were in the streets? |
13748 | And where were the rest? |
13748 | How many mechanics were at the Green Dragon when these resolutions were passed? |
13748 | And finally who raised up Lincoln, to lead, to inspire, and to die, that the opening assertion of the Declaration might stand at last fulfilled? |
13748 | Are we not realizing a noble destiny? |
13748 | Are we seeking merely to match infamy with infamy, merely to pillage and destroy those who threatened to pillage and destroy us? |
13748 | Are we to turn aside from the path that has led us to success? |
13748 | At cost of life? |
13748 | At some expense? |
13748 | But what of the present crisis? |
13748 | Can any instrument of commerce or industry ever be too powerful to serve the public needs? |
13748 | Can any prosperity be too great? |
13748 | Can we carry them on into peace? |
13748 | Can we still act on the principle that there is no sacrifice too great to maintain the right? |
13748 | Have we not seen the suffering and misery which it entails upon the people? |
13748 | Have we not seen what happens to industry, to transportation, to all commercial activity which we call business when profit fails? |
13748 | Having beaten the foe from without are we to fall a victim to the foe from within? |
13748 | Having saved Europe are we ready to surrender America? |
13748 | He revealed the meaning of the day with, one question,"Did the militia fight?" |
13748 | How can our people be made strong? |
13748 | How can they do that? |
13748 | How shall they be applied to these days of readjustment? |
13748 | If the people win who can lose? |
13748 | In the light of succeeding history, who shall say, that it was not the voice of the people, speaking with the voice of Infinite Authority? |
13748 | Is electricity too swift? |
13748 | Is it not a part of that increasing purpose which the poet, the seer, tells us runs through the ages? |
13748 | Is the heart of the Nation still sound, does it still respond to the appeal to the high ideals of the past? |
13748 | Is the steam engine too strong? |
13748 | Is there any especial obligation on the part of college- bred men to be candidates for public office? |
13748 | It was the putting into practice in government of the answer to the long pondered and much discussed question,"What is right?" |
13748 | Naturally the question arises, what shall we do to defend our birthright? |
13748 | Shall we continue to advocate and practise thrift and industry? |
13748 | Shall we not recognize the great service they have done the cause of humanity? |
13748 | Shall we require unswerving loyalty to our country? |
13748 | Shall we throw the Constitution overboard because it does not please us all alike? |
13748 | We have drawn the sword, but is it only to"Be blood for blood, for treason treachery?" |
13748 | Were not the men who stood at Bunker Hill bearing light to the world by their sacrifices? |
13748 | What all our lives to save thee? |
13748 | What are the lessons of the past? |
13748 | What could be saved if the flag of the American Nation were to perish? |
13748 | What is the teaching of all history? |
13748 | What is to come out of it all? |
13748 | What lengthened out the days of Benjamin Franklin that he might negotiate the Treaty of Paris? |
13748 | What proof that some unlineal hand, some barbarism, without or within, shall not wrench the sceptre of democracy from our grasp? |
13748 | What settled Ethan Allen in the wilderness of the Green Mountains ready to strike Ticonderoga? |
13748 | What shall I do for my child?'' |
13748 | What then of the anti- trust laws? |
13748 | What was the value of plate glass and goods, the value of real estate in Boston at three o''clock, A.M., September 10? |
13748 | What was there in the events of the seventeenth day of June, 1775, which holds the veneration of Americans and the increasing admiration of the world? |
13748 | What, then, of the prevalent criticism? |
13748 | Whence came that power to draft state papers, in a new and unlettered land, which compelled the admiration of the cultured Earl of Chatham? |
13748 | Who is there that by compromising the authority of her laws dares to haul down that flag? |
13748 | Who now will set selfishness above duty? |
13748 | Will men realize their blessing and exhibit the resolution to support and defend the foundation on which they rest? |
49500 | How is this, Sir,he inquired;"is not General Arnold here?" |
49500 | What? |
49500 | ''Why this emotion, Sir?'' |
49500 | And would not a corresponding depression of public enthusiasm and spirit have followed? |
49500 | And, above all, who would be cajoled by falsehood and malignity, as undisguised as they were audacious and wicked? |
49500 | But you surely do not consider his case and mine alike?'' |
49500 | Could any language, uttered by any individual, have a more opposite tendency? |
49500 | Even if he had escaped and moored his vessels under the guns of the fort at Ticonderoga, would the public have been satisfied with such a measure? |
49500 | He was perfectly calm, and only said to Lafayette,"Whom can we trust now?" |
49500 | How far did the military authority extend? |
49500 | How was it possible for him not to perceive, that the effect would be contrary to his interests and wishes? |
49500 | I think he further remarked, that, if he had succeeded,( and, with the aid of the opposing general, who could doubt of success?) |
49500 | May there not be a middle line between these two extremes? |
49500 | Said I with emphasis,''Do you remember the sequel of this story?'' |
49500 | Was André a spy? |
49500 | Was it not possible for the men to search for money, and still be true to their country, which is the only point at issue? |
49500 | What objects did it embrace, and in what particulars was it to take cognizance of the civil rights, condition, and acts of the people? |
49500 | What would have been the consequence? |
49500 | Where is the memento of the virtues, the patriotic sacrifice, the early fate of Hale? |
49500 | Who would deliberately seek disgrace and infamy? |
49500 | Who would join a traitor? |
49500 | said Washington,"do they not intend to salute us?" |
43863 | Aunt has told you all hant she, Miss? |
43863 | HOW THE WHOLE PARISH WAS FRIGHTENEDWho does not know Lady Ducklington, or who does not know that she was buried at this parish church? |
43863 | What a Succession of Misfortunes befell this poor Girl? 43863 Who made the Scholar proud to show The Sampler work''d to friend and foe, And with Instruction fonder grow? |
43863 | A ghost, you blockheads, says Mr. Long in a pet, did either of you ever see a ghost, or know anybody that did? |
43863 | And staying at home, she read out of Mr. Cotton Mather-- Why hath Satan filled thy Heart? |
43863 | As soon as he opened the door what sort of a ghost do you think appeared? |
43863 | Could this have been Oliver Goldsmith? |
43863 | Did Dr. Holmes refer to one when he wrote his graceful line,"light as a loop of larkspur"? |
43863 | Do you think you came here for your pleasure?" |
43863 | He called it the great sin of the Daughters of Zion, and he bursts forth:--"Who were the Inventors of Petulant Dancings? |
43863 | He says,"How should you like to live in such a nunnery?" |
43863 | He wrote to a brother minister in 1657:--"Do your children and family grow more godly? |
43863 | How they spent their time, what good books they read? |
43863 | Is n''t it strange that these three lonely little ghosts of old- time schooling should be the only representatives of their regiments of classmates? |
43863 | Might it not be useful in the present day to prevent children having chilblains?" |
43863 | Ned answered,"Dear James, did you ever hear her name the Toss- about?" |
43863 | Now is n''t that stupid? |
43863 | Now tell me I pray What were our Ages on our Wedding Day?" |
43863 | She hath never been whipped before, she says, since she was a child( what can her mother and the late lady have been about I wonder? |
43863 | What signifies it to worry ourselves about beings that are and will be just so? |
43863 | What, then, must have been the notions of less thoughtful folk? |
43863 | What[ f.]hould induce the rooks to frequent gentlemen''s hou[f.]es only, but to tell them how to lead a prudent life? |
43863 | What_ Syntax_ here can you expect to find? |
43863 | When they came to his study, he would examine them,"How they walked with God? |
43863 | Whether they prayed without ceasing?" |
43863 | Will you teach me whom to set free and thus my Grace confine? |
43863 | _ How the whole Pari[f.]h was frightened._ Who does not know Lady Ducklington, or who does not know that[ f.]he was buried at this pari[f.]h church? |
43863 | do n''t you see? |
33010 | ''Why did n''t you put it out?'' 33010 And where did you get the harpoon?" |
33010 | Are they going to make all the stamps here in Washington? |
33010 | But how did it happen that you were compelled to act as nurse? 33010 But how did you kill him? |
33010 | But was his father willing that you should have him? |
33010 | But, Tom,he answered,"how are you going to work it? |
33010 | Did n''t Merlin try to pull it out? |
33010 | Have I got anything to eat? |
33010 | How far is it? |
33010 | I''ll bet you did n''t get anything, not even a chipper bird,said Mr. Henry;"now did you?" |
33010 | Indeed? |
33010 | Of course not; but what it is? |
33010 | Say, Pop,he said,"it ai n''t so easy as one thinks, is it?" |
33010 | Say, you do n''t mind where you ride, do you? 33010 See yat''ittle boy over zare?" |
33010 | That''ll be nice for you boys,''cause you can get''em cheaper at the factory, ca n''t you? |
33010 | Well, Tommy,he answered,"what can I do for you to- day? |
33010 | What do you mean? |
33010 | What you been shooting, Tommy? 33010 Where did it come from?" |
33010 | Who put it there? |
33010 | Why not sail the ship alongside the whale? |
33010 | Why, how do you make that out? |
33010 | You''ve done what? |
33010 | A lily in the sun? |
33010 | A rose within the garden? |
33010 | And how was he to communicate with his friends? |
33010 | And now and then a clover? |
33010 | And once a week a buttercup, And so the whole land over? |
33010 | Are you sure you are not wounded nor frozen nor hurt in any way? |
33010 | But Phil, what be ye doing with that furry little beggar? |
33010 | But, really, what do you want?" |
33010 | Carver himself could n''t shoot a partridge with a rifle; why did n''t you come and ask me for my gun?" |
33010 | Catch?" |
33010 | Do Your Rabbits Ever Drink? |
33010 | Do n''t you think so?" |
33010 | Do you live in Chateaugay, N. Y.? |
33010 | Do you understand?" |
33010 | Does dear old Mother Nature Count flowers one by one? |
33010 | Elephants, hey?" |
33010 | Have n''t you suffered terribly? |
33010 | Have you any? |
33010 | Here and there a daisy? |
33010 | How did I kill him, say you? |
33010 | How does fresh steaks, and roasts, and chops, and stews strike your fancy?" |
33010 | How then, you will ask, is business done if the House never takes up the list of measures prepared for its consideration? |
33010 | I found Cree Jim, though; but--""And brought him with you?" |
33010 | In the mean time, what was to be done with those silent and motionless forms whose dread presence so pervaded that lonely cabin? |
33010 | Is he the pilot ye went sarching for?" |
33010 | May I write again? |
33010 | Now, what''s your plan?" |
33010 | Odd, is n''t it, how everybody loves to see what he writes in print? |
33010 | Say, will you do it?" |
33010 | That reminds me-- did they show you our ink- mills in your tour of inspection?" |
33010 | There was n''t any gun in camp?" |
33010 | What do you say to a tour of investigation some Saturday?" |
33010 | What ever are you doing? |
33010 | What is the experience of others? |
33010 | Will not R. T. Hale kindly give us a morsel on the subject? |
33010 | Will the Sylvia''s president tell us how its meetings are made interesting? |
33010 | Wo n''t you write? |
33010 | You wo n''t, will you?" |
33010 | exclaimed Handsome:"why, man alive, do n''t you know the condition a whale ship is in when trying- out is going on? |
33010 | it called;"what you got there?" |
33010 | said Mr. Henry, after firing all the cartridges Tom had left;"or was it only small game-- a panther or lynx-- you were after this morning?" |
6697 | What do you want in return for your goods? |
6697 | What does it mean? |
6697 | By this time others, too, were awake; windows flew open and heads were pushed out, and everybody asked,"What is it? |
6697 | If the Indians were in truth offended, would not the French now encourage them to take their revenge? |
6697 | In a moment more they would overtake him; what should he do? |
6697 | The firmness and determination with which he spoke struck the gentleman, who, desisting, exclaimed,''Who can you be? |
6697 | Was it done on purpose, or did a door or a window fly open and a gust of the night wind put them out? |
6697 | Were any of them busy that night with Connecticut''s charter? |
6697 | What is it?" |
6697 | When Waiandance died, in 1658, Gardiner wrote,"My friend and brother is gone, who will now do the like?" |
6697 | Why is this vision sent us?" |
41640 | Are France and Spain in want of warlike stores? 41640 And do they not make Sweden rather incline to their side, by means of their commerce with that country for these articles? 41640 And where is the benefit of the two last wars? 41640 Are they not as well supplied with them as we are? 41640 But how is Holland to obtain justice from the English, who take a manifest pleasure and pride in showing her and all Europe, that they despise her? 41640 But how? 41640 But is it certain that it will? 41640 But is there room to hope that our Legislatures will pass such laws? 41640 Do you wonder at it? 41640 From whence can this danger arise? 41640 Give Great Britain time to encroach and fortify upon all our frontiers? 41640 Has it not been sufficiently declared by actual hostilities in most parts of the world? 41640 I pray you to consider how you propose to fulfil those, which are due to the King? 41640 If I should go abroad, can not you lend me twenty or thirty complete sets of the journals? 41640 In the next place, is the treaty of alliance between us and France now binding upon us? 41640 Is Great Britain to be annihilated? 41640 Is there a sensible hypocrite in America, who can start a jealousy, that religion may be in danger? 41640 My Dear Friend, Will you be so good as to transmit the enclosed to Mr Jay? 41640 My Dear Sir, What shall I say to your favors of the 27th and 28th of September, which came by the last post? 41640 Or that the people have, or can be persuaded to acquire those qualities, that are necessary to execute such laws? 41640 Or whether to remain on the reserve, as I have hitherto done since my arrival in Europe? 41640 Pray tell me, has he dropped his demands, or does he still continue to worry you with them? 41640 Pray what is the foundation of the story of a quintuple alliance between Holland, Sweden, Russia, Prussia, and Denmark? 41640 Pray what think you of peace? 41640 Suffer France and Spain to relax? 41640 The question arises, how came the King and Council by authority to offer this? 41640 To rise out of her present exhausted condition? 41640 To send enemies into the States, and sow the seeds of discord? 41640 Wait for alterations by the death of Princes, or the changes in the characters of Princes, or Ministers in Europe? 41640 Was not war sufficiently declared in the King of England''s speech, and in the answers of both Houses, and in the recall of his Ambassador? 41640 What think you of luck? 41640 What would you think of a proposition, if I should make it, of a compact between England, France, and America? 41640 Where are the trophies so dearly purchased of King William and Marlborough? 41640 Whether it is prudent in me to publish in any manner, more than the journals of Congress may have already done, the nature of my mission? 41640 Who can be persuaded to believe, that he loves so degenerate and profligate a race? 41640 Why then should you be continually employed in injuring and destroying one another? 41640 Will not the national debt itself be the means, at least a temptation to continue, if not increase the luxury? 41640 Would it not be well to join Mr Ridley with Mr Barclay for that service? 36579 And I suppose you intend to vote the straight ticket right along?" |
36579 | And what do you think will follow? |
36579 | Are n''t there any Christians in Congress? |
36579 | Are you a Republican? |
36579 | Are you in earnest? |
36579 | Are you in favor of an autocracy like Germany, or of a limited monarchy like Great Britain? 36579 But I hope you stood up for us?" |
36579 | But,you may say,"should he have stayed on where he was not wanted?" |
36579 | Do they despise us as much as ever? |
36579 | Do you suppose,he growled, while a slight twinkle broke through his scowling eye,"that I would be sweeping here if she was n''t at home?" |
36579 | How are the people abroad thinking of us nowadays? |
36579 | I suppose you have always voted the straight ticket? |
36579 | I wish I could say that I did,he had the effrontery to reply calmly;"but how could I? |
36579 | No ghost where Lincoln fell? 36579 Oh,"he replied, while his little lip quivered,"I like best the old, ragged flags that have been in the battle,--don''t you?" |
36579 | Really? |
36579 | The bright new flags, or the old, ragged flags that have been in the battle? |
36579 | What is the matter, Chester? |
36579 | Where are you going so fast, my little man? |
36579 | Which do you like best, mother? |
36579 | Which do you like best? |
36579 | Why,said the boy quickly,"is n''t that bribery?" |
36579 | And if we decide on a monarchy, where should we get our royal family? |
36579 | And what is more potent in moving the will? |
36579 | Are n''t you afraid it will spoil if you do n''t put it in the ice- chest?" |
36579 | Are the back yards unsanitary? |
36579 | Are the roads bad in your town? |
36579 | Are the schools inferior or managed by politicians? |
36579 | Are the taxes improperly collected? |
36579 | Are the town officers inefficient? |
36579 | But, if we want to become a healthy and powerful people, what is more necessary for us than strong and healthy mothers? |
36579 | CHAPTER VII WORK AS A VITAL PART OF PATRIOTISM Gurowski asked,"Where is the bog? |
36579 | Do n''t you want him to know about tea,--where it grows and how it is prepared for the market?" |
36579 | Do they wish it to look all over like a slum?" |
36579 | Do you exalt in your conversation the prize- fight and the automobile- race? |
36579 | Do you patronize salacious plays? |
36579 | Had he not struck, perhaps, the main reason for the corruption of our politics? |
36579 | Have you not noticed how many laboring men remove their hats when apologizing to you, or offering a seat in a street- car? |
36579 | Have your people no pride in their country? |
36579 | I could n''t deny it, could I? |
36579 | If its government is so rotten that it can not last, what should be done?" |
36579 | Is the air in your parlor or study often thick with tobacco- smoke? |
36579 | Is the town poorly policed? |
36579 | Is wine or beer served there? |
36579 | Must not the night disgorge The ghosts of Bunker Hill, The ghosts of Valley Forge, Or England''s mightier son The ghost of Washington? |
36579 | No ghosts for seeing eyes? |
36579 | Of what use are our hard- won educational advantages, if they are going simply to a band of sickly, half- dead girls and women? |
36579 | One of them asked pleasantly,"Is your mother at home?" |
36579 | Or do you think an oligarchy a better form? |
36579 | Or say,"Excuse me?" |
36579 | Or should we request Europe to send us one?" |
36579 | Should we elect one from candidates that present themselves? |
36579 | Was not that boy deliberately turning over the government of his city to"boodlers"and"grafters"? |
36579 | Was that patriotic? |
36579 | What does one vote amount to anyway? |
36579 | What is that but interest or enthusiasm? |
36579 | What magazines? |
36579 | What newspapers are lying around there? |
36579 | What sort of conversation goes on at your table? |
36579 | What sort of people visit your home? |
36579 | Where do you come from? |
36579 | Why should not every one recite his favorite poem? |
36579 | You may ask,"What do you advise to take the place of the present mode of dress?" |
11689 | Angel, or jewel, or princess, or queen, Tell me immediately, where have you been? |
11689 | Are not the suffragists frights? |
11689 | Are not the suffragists frights? |
11689 | Chivalry, Chivalry, what did you find? |
11689 | Does n''t it rub off the bloom? |
11689 | Does n''t it rub off the bloom? |
11689 | That,he replied,"is palpably absurd----""You mean you did not mean to keep your word?" |
11689 | And those lovers, where are they, Who could hold no woman dear If she had the ballot? |
11689 | And you''re going to say that you greatly fear I do n''t understand a woman''s sphere; Now are n''t you honestly?" |
11689 | Are not the wishes of Manchester, he asks, as much consulted as those of any other town which sends members to Parliament? |
11689 | Are the polls unfit for decent women? |
11689 | Are women people? |
11689 | Are women people? |
11689 | By whom? |
11689 | Do You Know That in 1869 Miss Jex- Blake and four other women entered for a medical degree at the University of Edinburgh? |
11689 | Do legislators legislate for nothing? |
11689 | Do n''t fancy that you can Be really like a man, So what''s the use of all this fuss and trying? |
11689 | Do they really? |
11689 | Father, who loves you so? |
11689 | Feminism"Mother, what is a Feminist?" |
11689 | Go there at once and swear and be brutal, or what will become of our anti- suffrage argument? |
11689 | Have no home? |
11689 | He casts my vote, and Louisa''s, And Sarah, and dear Aunt Clo; Would n''t you let him vote for you? |
11689 | II_ In Time of Peace_ What''s this? |
11689 | Imagine the home life of a parent who turned out to be more ignorant than his( or her) child? |
11689 | Is n''t that better Than Mother or Nurse? |
11689 | Is not woman''s place the home? |
11689 | Is there any reason to believe that women will behave better? |
11689 | Now what should you think proper for a gentleman to do? |
11689 | Now, are n''t you honestly?" |
11689 | O women, have you heard the news Of charity and grace? |
11689 | Oh, ca n''t you be content To be as you were meant? |
11689 | Poor Washington, who meant so well, And Nathan Hale and William Tell, Hampden and Bolivar and Pym, And L''Ouverture-- remember him? |
11689 | Proofreading Team ARE WOMEN PEOPLE? |
11689 | SLAVE- DRIVER AND FRIEND Introduction Father, what is a Legislature? |
11689 | Sometimes We''re Ivy, and Sometimes We''re Oak Is it true that the English government is calling on women to do work abandoned by men? |
11689 | Such Nonsense("Where on earth did the idea come from that the ballot is a boon, a privilege and an honor? |
11689 | Tell me in what spot remote Do the antis dwell to- day, Those who did not want to vote, Feared their sex''s prompt decay? |
11689 | That in 1877 the British Medical Association declared women ineligible for membership? |
11689 | That in 1881 the International Medical Congress excluded women from all but its"social and ceremonial meetings"? |
11689 | That the Obstetrical Society refused to allow a woman''s name to appear on the title page of a pamphlet which she had written with her husband? |
11689 | That the president of the College of Physicians refused to give the women the prizes they had won? |
11689 | That the undergraduates insulted any professor who allowed women to compete for prizes? |
11689 | That the women were stoned in the streets, and finally excluded from the medical school? |
11689 | This I believe without debate, And yet I ask-- and ask in vain-- Why no one in a suffrage state Has moved to change things back again? |
11689 | We are waging-- can you doubt it? |
11689 | Well, is that so? |
11689 | What critic could object to that? |
11689 | What would be left for us to do-- Except to cease to be? |
11689 | What''s a woman''s native land? |
11689 | When a benefit is suggested for men, the question asked is:"Will it benefit men?" |
11689 | When a benefit is suggested for women, the question is:"Will it benefit men?" |
11689 | When? |
11689 | Where are those who used to quote Nietzsche''s words in dread array? |
11689 | Where are those who used to say:"Home alone is woman''s sphere; Only those should vote who slay"? |
11689 | Where the ancient crones who wrote:"Women rule through Beauty''s sway"? |
11689 | Where the snows of yester- year? |
11689 | Where the snows of yester- year? |
11689 | Who is it thinks the vote some use? |
11689 | Will she never be told again that her place is the home? |
11689 | Women think they''re brave, you say? |
11689 | You''ve we d an alien, Yet you ask for legislation To guard your nationality? |
11689 | _ 1st Teacher_: He''s good, but hear my one excuse----_ Board_: Oh, what''s the use, oh, what''s the use? |
11689 | _ From Our Own Nursery Rhymes_"Chivalry, Chivalry, where have you been?" |
16691 | ''My dear Madam,''I would reply,''does it not satisfy any one to come into existence with the birth of one''s country? 16691 And who are those four hundred persons?" |
16691 | But why are you here? |
16691 | Ever hear of Conan Doyle? |
16691 | Has the time come? |
16691 | What brought you to this strange corner of the world? |
16691 | Who am I? 16691 Who are you?" |
16691 | ''Do I remember you?'' |
16691 | A BROAD GARDEN SEPARATES THE HOUSE, WHICH IS EIGHTEENTH CENTURY ENGLISH, FROM THE SIDEWALK"]"But I have n''t said that it was true, have I? |
16691 | A Brummel? |
16691 | A giant, as he was in height, he bent down his head to me, and asked sharply,''What name, sir?'' |
16691 | But just what, in his heart of hearts, did Irving think of Hone? |
16691 | But to rhyme of this one- mocker, Who shall rhyme to Knickerbocker? |
16691 | But who could have failed to feel genial towards the quiet, scholarly, altogether charming gentleman of Sunnyside? |
16691 | But why not? |
16691 | Ca n''t you see those grim figures of an old world strutting down Broadway, glaring about belligerently and suspiciously? |
16691 | Do n''t you recognize me? |
16691 | Do you get me?" |
16691 | Gaudens?" |
16691 | Georgian London? |
16691 | Grim? |
16691 | Have ye ever read a wonderful little ballad by Uhland, entitled''The Minstrel''s Curse?'' |
16691 | Have you read Alphonse Daudet''s delightful"Tartarin of Tarascon"? |
16691 | Henry James, writing in 1873, in"The Impressions of a Cousin"( Tales of Three Cities), said:"How can I sketch Fifty- third Street? |
16691 | Honest now, would n''t it jar you? |
16691 | How can I even endure Fifty- third Street? |
16691 | In much the same spirit we are saying today,"What will it all matter a hundred years hence?" |
16691 | Is he d----? |
16691 | Is there anything that civilized man recalls more poignantly than the menus of yesterday? |
16691 | It flourishes still, And who can deny that forever it will? |
16691 | Kids curvetting in idiotic pride over imaginary mountain peaks on the rough ground of what is Madison Square? |
16691 | Say, do you want any more of those little personal reminiscences?" |
16691 | So inconspicuous in appearance is it that once a passer- by commented:"I can perceive the Heavenly, but where is the Rest?" |
16691 | So long as his cottage was a"cottage of gentility,"why try to augment his fortune? |
16691 | So why disdain, merely because they are of our own time, the makers of copy who may be seen on the Fifth Avenue of today? |
16691 | Tell me, was he a fussy old gentleman in a wig, who spilled snuff down the front of his coat?" |
16691 | The Influence of Rabelais on the Monastic System of the Fifteenth Century? |
16691 | The obscurity of Robert Browning? |
16691 | To escape the reproach of the uplifted eyebrow, the quizzical look, the"_ que diable allait il faire dans cette galère_?" |
16691 | Wake up, ca n''t you?" |
16691 | Was he fair game for a chapter of a flippant nature? |
16691 | Was that the origin of the expression''pulling his leg''? |
16691 | What became of him? |
16691 | What better companion could he have had in his scheme of investigation than Mr. Thomas Jones, recently come up from the West Country? |
16691 | What chance had haranguing abuse against his icy:"I have no time to bandy epithets with the gentleman from Georgia"? |
16691 | What if the title had been derived from a line in Shakespeare? |
16691 | What is the subject that they are so earnestly discussing? |
16691 | What was in those notes? |
16691 | What would have been the use? |
16691 | What would that censorious critic have to say of the association of Bohemia with stately Fifth Avenue? |
16691 | Where was it, the"Great Desert,"or some stretch in South America or in Mexico? |
16691 | Whether or not the art of the novel is a finer art than it was in the days of the Victorians? |
16691 | Why do I weep? |
16691 | Why was the beautiful structure not made permanent? |
16691 | Would you like me to tell you a few things? |
16691 | You do n''t mean to say that you have never heard it?" |
16691 | he asks, and then quotes seven stanzas from James Montgomery''s"What is Prayer? |
43539 | Oh where, and oh where does your Highland laddie dwell? 43539 Suppose, oh, suppose that your Highland lad should die? |
43539 | What clothes, in what clothes is your Highland laddie clad? 43539 Why come from yon leaf- shaded hill A suppliant at my door?-- Why ask of me to whip poor Will? |
43539 | Wo n''t you tell me how the song was written? |
43539 | A comrade who was with me sang out,''Good heavens, Cap, what are those fellows made of, anyway? |
43539 | And he said to him,"What are you doing here? |
43539 | And is Will really poor?" |
43539 | And shall we basely view the ruin, While lawless force, with guilty stride, Spreads desolation far and wide, With crimes and blood his hands embruing? |
43539 | And where is that band who so vauntingly swore That the havoc of war and the battle''s confusion A home and a country should leave us no more? |
43539 | As he went up the path, he said, for he had some doubt in his own mind,--"Are you Dan Emmett, who wrote_ Dixie_?" |
43539 | Can dungeon, bolts, and bars confine thee, Or whips thy noble spirit tame? |
43539 | De darkey stay? |
43539 | De massa run? |
43539 | Dearest love, do you remember, When we last did meet, How you told me that you lov''d me, Kneeling at my feet? |
43539 | Do you not like it?" |
43539 | He says of the experience:"Who can picture my thoughts on that notable occasion? |
43539 | Here we''ve licked them six days running, and now, on the eve of the seventh, they''re singing"Rally round the Flag?"'' |
43539 | His most popular songs were_ Who will Care for Mother Now?__ Mother would Comfort Me_, and the one we have selected--_When this Cruel War is Over_. |
43539 | No other clime has skies so blue, Or streams so broad and clear, And where are hearts so warm and true As those that meet me here? |
43539 | Once having felt thy gen''rous flame? |
43539 | Shall hateful tyrants, mischief breeding, With hireling hosts, a ruffian band, Affright and desolate the land, While peace and liberty lie bleeding? |
43539 | Then, shall they longer lash and goad us? |
43539 | These lines were very unsatisfactory to Drake, and he said to Fitz- Green Halleck,"Fitz, ca n''t you suggest a better stanza?" |
43539 | When will I hear de banjo tumming Down in my good old home? |
43539 | When will I see de bees a- humming All round de comb? |
43539 | Where breathes the foe but falls before us? |
43539 | Who could n''t have marched or fought with such songs? |
43539 | Who''ll shield it from the foe''s design? |
43539 | Why whip poor Will?--what has he done-- And who is Will, I pray? |
43539 | Will the gentlemen kindly allow us to come over and hear them sing?" |
43539 | With Freedom''s soil beneath our feet, And Freedom''s banner streaming o''er us?" |
43539 | do you hear him where he comes? |
43539 | do you know him as he comes? |
43539 | he exclaimed;''How did you come by it?'' |
43539 | how well I know your answer; To my fate I meekly bow, If you''ll only tell me truly Who will care for mother now?" |
43539 | was it the night- wind that rustled the leaves, Was it moonlight so wondrously flashing? |
43539 | was it the night- wind that rustled the leaves, Was it moonlight so wondrously flashing? |
43539 | what, tell me what, does your Highland laddie wear? |
43539 | what, tell me what, does your Highland laddie wear? |
43539 | where, tell me where is your Highland laddie gone? |
43539 | where, tell me where, did your Highland laddie stay? |
43539 | where, tell me where, did your Highland laddie stay? |
43539 | where, tell me where, is your Highland laddie gone? |
46232 | And here,said the boy;"what''s this?" |
46232 | But where does visual persistence come in? |
46232 | But,again asked our friend,"is n''t there a great deal of valuable electrical power wasted in that way?" |
46232 | But,answered the boy,"there are other new kinds of electric lights besides tungsten, are n''t there?" |
46232 | Did the pictures move very much? |
46232 | Doctor Tesla, can you tell us, please, just how far you have developed this invention for the wireless transmission of power? |
46232 | How did you come to invent your turbine while you were busy with your wonderful electrical inventions? |
46232 | How do you use it? |
46232 | How does it work? |
46232 | How much have you accomplished in telautomatics at this time? |
46232 | How much horsepower did you say this plant would send out? |
46232 | How will these airships be propelled? |
46232 | Is it a gasoline engine? |
46232 | Is it necessary,asked the boy,"to have your power plant erected near the waterfall, or other means of producing the electricity?" |
46232 | It looks simple enough, does n''t it? |
46232 | Just for instance, how could telautomatics have saved the_ Titanic_? |
46232 | Lights up all the dingy corners, does n''t it? |
46232 | What about lightning? |
46232 | What application will you first make of the wireless transmission of power? |
46232 | What are some of the main improvements of the last few years? |
46232 | What are they for? |
46232 | What is this principle? |
46232 | What is tungsten? |
46232 | Who invented tungsten lights? |
46232 | Who was Santos- Dumont? 46232 Why ca n''t we make a glider that would be a success?" |
46232 | Why could n''t I build a little model aeroplane? |
46232 | Why could n''t I make a mechanical automaton that would represent me in every way, except thought? |
46232 | Will you go out into the country with me some Saturday and help me? |
46232 | Will you help me build one? |
46232 | You see this bag of coarse black powder that looks like iron filings? 46232 After the remarkable test Orville Wright was asked,Have you solved real bird flight?" |
46232 | But what was the result of this temperature which staggers the imagination? |
46232 | Of course the boy jumped at the opportunity, for what real boy would miss a chance to find out all about a new and powerful engine? |
46232 | What happened? |
46232 | What happens? |
46232 | What was that first trans- Channel flight? |
46232 | Why do they always talk about the first Rheims meet?" |
46232 | Why was it that the art of air navigation sought by man since the earliest times should have been discovered and mastered so quickly? |
46232 | Why was this? |
46232 | Would any child stay at home if he knew such a treat as this was in store for him at school? |
46232 | Would he ever be likely to forget what he had learned about Africa?" |
46232 | said the boy,"how could any one ever measure such a heat as that?" |
42413 | And how can that be effected but by a vigorous collection of taxes? |
42413 | Are certificates issued agreeable to the mode prescribed by resolution of Congress, 23d of August, to be taken up and new ones given?" |
42413 | Are we in capacity to insist on useful and honorable terms? |
42413 | But admitting that negotiations were opened, and in a train of effect, what then would be our situation? |
42413 | But as I said before, who will justify the necessity? |
42413 | But how is it to be done? |
42413 | But on what is it founded? |
42413 | But what else could be expected from us? |
42413 | But what is the predilection in favor of specie? |
42413 | But with the means in my power, how is it possible? |
42413 | For why need they attempt to accommodate the States in the manner proposed? |
42413 | Has the enemy given the slightest evidence of a desire for it? |
42413 | How long is a nation, who will do nothing for itself, to rely on the aid of others? |
42413 | How long will an army undergo want, in the midst of plenty? |
42413 | How long will one part of a community bear the burdens of the whole? |
42413 | How long will they endure misery without complaint, injustice without reproach, and wrongs without redress? |
42413 | How then are we to expect that the people themselves will do so? |
42413 | If the officer should omit to charge himself with articles purchased, can this be proved, when only the money certificate is produced against him? |
42413 | If they should change it, could they expect that there would not then be one or two opposing States? |
42413 | If this be not a wise tax, what shall we substitute? |
42413 | In a war waged by one country to obtain revenue from another, what is to be expected in case of conquest? |
42413 | Is it then to be wondered at if my foes are numerous? |
42413 | Is it then wise to raise a part of it from the_ consumption_ of foreign articles? |
42413 | Is there a State in the Union, which can say I received from them one shilling for the last year? |
42413 | Let it be inquired next, whether there is any object so unexceptionable as that which they have fixed upon? |
42413 | Shall Congress then adhere to the demand; or shall they change their application? |
42413 | Such being the importance of it with respect to America, what may we not calculate on for the other countries, who may incline to trade thither? |
42413 | Suppose no mode of valuation adopted, how are the quotas to be ascertained? |
42413 | Think you the Legislatures will be more solicitous to save the public faith than to quiet the clamors of their own citizens? |
42413 | This must be acknowledged, but what inference is to be drawn from thence? |
42413 | To answer the question let it be inquired, what objects of taxation can be devised, to which exceptions can not be made? |
42413 | What must be their feelings to find those promises violated, those requisitions neglected, and that faith disregarded? |
42413 | What then can be expected, when the validity of that title is one object of the war? |
42413 | What then is the consequence? |
42413 | What then must be the opinion of foreigners and strangers? |
42413 | Will it be a sufficient justification, to say that the demand of Congress is_ unconstitutional_? |
42413 | Will the oath or affirmation of the claimant make the charge good?" |
42413 | fifty thousand dollars, would he not be gainer of the like sum of fifty thousand dollars merely by the depreciation? |
21990 | But will you look at the address? |
21990 | ***** What was the occasion or necessity for this campaign; what the plans and preparations made for it both by the mother country and the colonies? |
21990 | ***** When and where, now, will these two armies meet? |
21990 | A deserter tells me be(?) |
21990 | And who, he asked, would be bold enough to advise abandonment? |
21990 | At Amboy.--33d and 71st Regiments, and remains of 7th and 16th[?] |
21990 | But can not the militia effect what he wishes to do? |
21990 | But how early was Putnam informed? |
21990 | COL. WILLIAM DOUGLAS TO HIS WIFE NORTHFORD, CONN.[ LONG ISLAND, Feb. 26(?) |
21990 | Did Sullivan, as one letter states, immediately send word to Stirling to retreat? |
21990 | Did the British general purposely give an evasive estimate to cover up the inhumanity which would thus have forever stained the glory of his victory? |
21990 | Field Offr of the Day tomorrow, Col. Phipps,(?) |
21990 | GENERAL LEE TO COLONEL CHESTER CAMP[ MORRISTOWN?] |
21990 | Had Miles been surprised? |
21990 | Have you any reason for knowing that? |
21990 | He went to the hill-- where from? |
21990 | His hastily written letter, penned apparently not long after midnight, runs as follows: THURSDAY MORNING[ August 8 or 15?] |
21990 | How many of these, in the next place, were killed and wounded? |
21990 | I took hold of him, asked him if he was badly wounded? |
21990 | Is Genl Greene with the Army, or is he still in Jersey? |
21990 | Last of all, where were Parsons and Atlee? |
21990 | Long Island surrendered, could New York be held? |
21990 | Or rather, the question was narrowed down to this: When and where will the British attack? |
21990 | Or why should we be discouraged even if we had lost a State? |
21990 | Pray, what is said upon the occasion? |
21990 | Pray, what is said upon the occasion? |
21990 | The Camp Cullimen(?) |
21990 | The examination was in part as follows:"_ Q._ Can you give a particular account of the state of those[ Brooklyn] lines? |
21990 | The general directs camp Columen(?) |
21990 | The serjeant of the guard came to the door, and asked whether this was the Moravian meeting? |
21990 | The summer and the campaign season were passing, and still the uncertainty was protracted-- when and where will the enemy attack? |
21990 | Under the circumstances could Washington''s force have withstood the shock of a determined assault by the enemy? |
21990 | Was not this the time for the city to prepare for her defence, and welcome assistance from whatever quarter offered? |
21990 | Were they making their principal push against Stirling? |
21990 | Were they the victims of the supposed frightful slaughter? |
21990 | Were they waiting for the fleet to work its way up to co- operate? |
21990 | What is the authority for this? |
21990 | What is your strength?'' |
21990 | What next happened after the British reached Bedford? |
21990 | What now was done? |
21990 | What signifies knowledge without power to execute? |
21990 | What was their composition and organization, what their strength, who their officers and leaders? |
21990 | What, in the first place, had Miles been about in the woods on the extreme left that the enemy should gain his rear before he knew it? |
21990 | Where better could he do so than at Point of Rocks? |
21990 | Where did it begin and where did it end? |
21990 | Where were the twenty- two hundred other maimed and fallen rebels? |
21990 | Who buried them? |
21990 | Who can prize life without liberty? |
21990 | Who escaped? |
21990 | Who knoweth if He will return and repent, and leave a blessing behind Him?" |
21990 | Why then should we be discouraged? |
21990 | Why, indeed, was it necessary to organize a force outside of New York to secure it? |
21990 | Would its phlegmatic denizen of colonial times recognize the site of his farms or his mills? |
21990 | You ask if Genl Lee is in Health and our people feel bold? |
21990 | You remember Bayard''s Mount covered with cedars? |
21990 | _ Q._ Do you know the particulars of the left part of the line towards the Wallabout? |
21990 | _ Q._ Was there a possibility of a single man''s passing round the left part of the line? |
21990 | _ Q._ Were those lines finished on every part, from the swamp formed by the Wallabout on the left, to the swamp on the right? |
21990 | or would they still attempt to force the passes and the hills at all points and overcome the American outguards by sheer weight of numbers? |
49260 | Go on with the case, gentlemen,or to be asked,"What are you waiting for?" |
49260 | What shall it be? 49260 ( Whence comest thou?) 49260 ( Where yonder?) 49260 (? 49260 ),_ The Argus,_ weekly( 1875), daily( 1876),_ The Liberal Sentinel_( 1881),_ The News_( 1883),_ The Jeffersonian_( 1886? 49260 ),_ The Forum_( 1897), and the_ Worker''s Advocate_( 1899?). 49260 1810 William Hedges Newburgh(?) 49260 1821 Theodore Wells Goshen(?) 49260 And who will say when and how this vast body of water broke through these adamantine hills, or by what Cyclopean process of upheaval they were formed? 49260 Any way, the vanquished( or conquering?) 49260 But did this satisfy Judge Barnard? 49260 But was it a mistake? 49260 Does not this prove that the whole of a first- class aurora was within the cloud- bearing regions of the atmosphere? 49260 Dunning Goshen(?) 49260 He reports it as follows:When meeting, the white man would say in the Indian language''Hitah takoman?'' |
49260 | Inc. O. C. M. S. P.1806 Elijah Welch Newburgh(?) |
49260 | Indeed, if we wait until all contemporaries have passed away, who is left to determine whether the estimates are just? |
49260 | Is it not success, after all, to live in lasting institutions? |
49260 | Is it to be wondered at that I recall them with a chastened delight? |
49260 | Morrison Newburgh P.1776 Hugh Morrison Newburgh P.1776 James Stukney Newburgh P.1780- 1810 William Elliott Montgomery P.1783 John Smedes Montgomery(?) |
49260 | Moses[?] |
49260 | N. Y. P.1806 Elijah Randall Monroe(?) |
49260 | O. C. M. S. 1814 Marcus Ostrander Port Jervis(?) |
49260 | O. C. M. S. 1821 Jonathan Sears Montgomery(?) |
49260 | O. C. M. S. 1825--r. Wynans Rush Pine Bush(?) |
49260 | O. C. M. S. 1832 Abel Lybolt Port Jervis(?) |
49260 | O. C. M. S. 1835 William Everett Goshen(?) |
49260 | O. C. M. S. P.1824 John J. Wheeler Warwick(?) |
49260 | Of what possible interest is it to know the number of a lawyer''s children, or the building in which his office is located? |
49260 | P.1806 Henry I. Hornbeck Port Jervis(?) |
49260 | P.1807 Nathaniel Gillespie Goshen(?) |
49260 | S. Halsey Chester(?) |
49260 | Starting on the drive homeward Mr. Rysdyk inquired,"How do you like the Seely farm, my new purchase?" |
49260 | Then the white man,''Tony andagowa a kee weekin?'' |
49260 | Who shall succeed these old families who have so loyally supported the Church, the State and the School? |
49260 | Why not in Newburgh, where so many great events in connection with the Revolutionary period occurred? |
49260 | i d., and Pres.,''32 P.1816 Joseph Hallock Ridgebury(?) |
49260 | p.1816--r.1832 Israel Green Monroe(?) |
7557 | Was ever produced so insipid a result? |
7557 | You think so? |
19036 | But, you do n''t mean to say,he continued,"that they really want to cut our throats on account of our bad manners?" |
19036 | Caerula quis stupuit lumina? 19036 Was ist des Deutschen Vaterland? |
19036 | What do these Germans want? |
19036 | What does Germany want? |
19036 | What wud ye do if ye were a king an''come to this counthry? |
19036 | A shady beer- garden, capital music, and happy fathers and mothers and children, what arithmetic, or algebra, or census tells you anything of that? |
19036 | And who writes thus? |
19036 | Are reasonable men to strip themselves of all armor, and suffer unreason to prevail? |
19036 | But are we not to know our neighbors the English, the Germans, the French? |
19036 | But art has nothing to do with brooms and dust- pans, and human nature is woven of surprises and emergencies, and what then? |
19036 | But is man fed by bread alone, even in the sugared form of music and theatricals? |
19036 | But what has happened? |
19036 | But, pray, what is to be done where there is no reason to appeal to? |
19036 | Canst thou tolerate, O Jupiter, that a foreigner should come to sit in the sacred temple as a senator, as a consul?" |
19036 | Cato wrote of women''s suffrage:"Pray what will they not assail, if they carry their point? |
19036 | Could anything be more burningly irritable to the Germans than those two unnecessary statements? |
19036 | Does it revert to the giver, the chief of the tribe, or does it go to the children of the owner? |
19036 | How is that to be regulated? |
19036 | How many Englishmen or Americans who sniff at German civilization ever see anything of the inside of German homes? |
19036 | If this is what they do to the greatest man in their history, what is to be expected elsewhere? |
19036 | Is this the price that a nation must pay for its industrial progress? |
19036 | Ist''s Preussenland? |
19036 | Ist''s Schwabenland? |
19036 | Ist''s wo am Belt die Möve zieht? |
19036 | Ist''s wo am Rhein die Rebe blüht? |
19036 | It is easy to say:"Dic mihi si fueris tu leo, qualis eris?" |
19036 | John Wesley, writing of this word"sentimental"as used in Sterne''s"Sentimental Journey,"says:"Sentimental, what is that? |
19036 | May I beg the reader and the student to follow me with this point clearly in mind? |
19036 | My readers may look back to the title of this chapter and ask: What has all this to do with the status of women in Germany? |
19036 | Of all these so- called indiscretions there is the question to ask: Should these things have been said? |
19036 | Over this whole force presides, a politician? |
19036 | Should these things have been written? |
19036 | The Krüger telegram was not written by the Emperor, and when the worst construction is put upon it, it expressed what? |
19036 | There has been no fulsome flattery, no bowing the knee to foreign idols, and what has been the result? |
19036 | They are there, there is no doubt about that; the question is, does he smile or scowl? |
19036 | Thus writes John Stuart Mill, and what else can be said of the political activities of the Germans? |
19036 | What do these men and movements mean? |
19036 | What does the moaning monotony of a Korean love- song mean to the westerner, or what does the Swan song mean to the Korean? |
19036 | What has become of Lessing, and Winckelmann, and Goethe, and their teachings? |
19036 | What has poor Joachim Friedrich done that he should pose forever in the Sieges Allee as an intoxicated hitching- post? |
19036 | What has the press to chronicle with insistence and with dignity of such flabby political and social conditions? |
19036 | What if we all turned to and gave something without being forced to do so? |
19036 | What journalist or what patriot indeed can take seriously a majority that has no power? |
19036 | What nation would not be even unduly keen to resent any appearance of an attempt to jostle it from its hard- won place in the sun? |
19036 | What nation would not be self- conscious after such dire experiences? |
19036 | What nation would not be tenderly sensitive as to its treatment by neighboring powers? |
19036 | What people can call itself free to whom its rulers are not responsible? |
19036 | What would become of them without the goose, the pig, the calf, and the duck, that meagre alimentary quartette? |
19036 | When shall we all recover from a certain international sickliness that keeps us all feverish? |
19036 | Where can one find a stable- man in our country who reads Shelley or Edgar Allan Poe, or who ever heard of William James and Pragmatism? |
19036 | Where would the"Yellow peril"and the"German menace"be then? |
19036 | Who can go to war with the countrymen of Racine and Molière and Pascal and Montesquieu and Descartes? |
19036 | Who can not see anarchy looming ahead of this programme, for it is surely a lunatic negation of all the laws of God and Nature? |
19036 | Why should I debar a man from my sympathy because he is a king or an emperor? |
19036 | do they dominate him, or he them? |
19036 | does he work away toward a solution, or allow himself to be swamped by them? |
19036 | flavam Caesariem, et madido torquentem cornua cirro? |
37898 | The obvious policy of the Court of London has induced them to boast perpetually of their party in America; but where it is? 37898 Am I to be hereafter reproached with deceiving the money- lenders? 37898 And why are expresses passing between Madrid and London through Portugal? 37898 Are the sentiments more just, or more friendly to us for that? 37898 Are you sure that the intelligence you heard respecting M. Mirales is_ certain_? 37898 At length, he asked me, if Dr Franklin was left alone? 37898 But I beg leave to suggest the question, whether an application of Congress to the States would not succeed? 37898 But how are my letters to get to the sea- side? 37898 By the post? 37898 Can there ever be content and satisfaction? 37898 Can there ever be industry or decency without it? 37898 Can there ever be peace and order? 37898 He asked me, what was the reason the Congress had not made use of their right? 37898 He asked, if I returned before the signature? 37898 He asked, if none of us were Ambassadors? 37898 He asked, whether Dr Franklin was an Ambassador? 37898 How far these may be affected,& c.? 37898 I am still at a loss to account for this commission''s being directed to Mr Oswald, while Mr Fitzherbert''s continues in force; or is that revoked? 37898 I asked him, if his Court permitted the English, or any other nation, to go to the Brazils? 37898 I asked him, whether he thought that the junction of three houses in my loan was any obstruction to it? 37898 I asked him, whether he thought the house of Hope, either alone, or in conjunction with that of the Willinks, or any other, would undertake it? 37898 I asked his Highness, what reason he had for this, and what advantage there was in it? 37898 I asked, if there were any refineries of sugar at Lisbon? 37898 I asked, if we were admitted to the Western Islands? 37898 If it be asked, what advantages Spain will derive in particular during the war, and what recompense can be made her after the peace? 37898 If it does not mean a latitudinal line, what does it mean, which carries any certainty with it? 37898 If they have rejected all the overtures of Britain, why is Mr Cumberland still here? 37898 Is it less genuine, whether it came from Philadelphia, Versailles, or London? 37898 Is it not time for America like other nations to provide against these inconveniences by proper regulations and establishments? 37898 Is there less weight, less evidence in it for that? 37898 The commanders may indeed have enriched themselves by plunder, and many worthy families have been distressed; but what is the consequence? 37898 The next Ambassador''s day at Versailles, I asked him if we could be admitted to the Brazils? 37898 The question is, what is to be done? 37898 They may inquire of him what are the rights of the East and West India Companies? 37898 To what an extent our vessels may be admitted to Surinam, Curaçoa, Demerara, Essequibo, Berbice, St Eustatia? 37898 To what purpose is it where this letter came from? 37898 We might, it is true, have done it without his consent or knowledge; but what would have been the consequence? 37898 What am I to do? 37898 What am I to do? 37898 What are these means? 37898 What can I say in Holland, if a doubt is started, whether we can repay the money we wish to borrow? 37898 What if it came through English hands? 37898 What more can I offer? 37898 What more can they do? 37898 What we may be allowed to carry there? 37898 What would have been our situation? 37898 What would have been the course? 37898 Whether we may carry sugars,& c. to Amsterdam, Rotterdam,& c.? 37898 Why? 37898 Would it not also be proper to provide for the safe conduct of letters to Congress after their arrival in America? 37898 Would it not be well to have American agents or consuls in one or more of the ports of France and Spain? 37898 [ 11] Now I beg to be informed by Congress, whether he has such authority or not? 37898 _ Whether there is any powerful Party in Favor of England, and what Consequences are to be apprehended from it? 37898 and what bring from thence to the United States, or to Europe? 37898 and whether any one of them, or whether any other house, would do better? 37898 my Lord, what divinity has inspired you?'' 37898 of whom composed? 37898 what it has done, or is doing? 8605 Or do you prefer the Authority of Christ to that of the Genevan Reformer? 8605 We contend for mental freedom; shall we not denounce the system which fetters both mind and body? 8605 We have declared righteousness to be the essence of Christianity; shall we not oppose the system which is the sum of all wrong? 8605 [ 21] When will the Day come? 8154 Horses,"said he,"are not very good companions for a young man; and John, why do you want a horse?" |
8154 | What can be your reasons? |
8154 | What shall we do? |
8154 | Why will you not? |
8154 | Why? |
8154 | And who was Fisher Ames, that his"Speeches"should be gathered and re- published sixty- three years after his death? |
8154 | Britain is mighty, and what are we? |
8154 | General Washington, who rode near the front of his column, asked a man who was chopping wood by the roadside:"Which way is the Hessian Picket?" |
8154 | That was not so very difficult to answer; but there was another question:_ Can_ we? |
8154 | Then there was another question: Will the people at home sustain us? |
8154 | Upon this being reported to General Sullivan, he glanced around at Captain St. Clair and asked:"What is to be done?" |
8154 | What would General Howe do next? |
8154 | Who were these adroit and faithful Culpers? |
8154 | _ Ought_ we to sever the tie which binds us to the mother country? |
51180 | And are the dreams all gone too? |
51180 | And what are these dreams which the children love? |
51180 | And what makes you think that I would last any longer? |
51180 | And who are you, my dear? |
51180 | Are any of them about me? |
51180 | Are you afraid? |
51180 | Broken leg? |
51180 | Did n''t you notice how quickly this one went, almost as soon as it came? |
51180 | Do you s''pose that one has escaped from the box? |
51180 | Good- evening, friend, who might you be? |
51180 | Have you a heavy load to- night? |
51180 | Here, is n''t this your lantern? |
51180 | How many children to- night do you suppose are dreaming of birds and springtime? |
51180 | I did n''t find out what I wanted to, did I? |
51180 | I was right too, was n''t I? |
51180 | I wish I could, though(_ Yawning._), I wish I could; but what''s the old saying:"If wishes were horses, beggars might ride"? |
51180 | If I took a tin trumpet from Santa Claus''s toy- shop and piled it full of snow''twould be just the same thing, would n''t it? |
51180 | Is Santa Claus asleep? |
51180 | Is your business something like mine, then; giving people whatever they wish? |
51180 | Is your sand- bag empty? |
51180 | Please tell me, is Santa Claus at home? |
51180 | Santa Claus, tell us, what do children dream about at Christmas time? |
51180 | Then this really is where Santa Claus lives, and I did n''t make a mistake in the place? |
51180 | Well, how did things go with you to- night? |
51180 | Well, what are these things which the children enjoy all the year and dream about every night? |
51180 | What do children dream about? |
51180 | What is it? |
51180 | Who''s coming now? |
51180 | Who''s this coming? |
51180 | Why should n''t they? |
51180 | Why should they,--when there are so many other things to dream of at Christmas time? |
51180 | Why, bless my stars, man, what makes you expect anything like that to happen? |
8881 | But why is thy hair over thine eye? |
8881 | The back of thy head, why is it bald? |
8881 | Why hast thou double wings on each foot? |
8881 | Why standest thou on tiptoe? |
8881 | An ancient legend gives us a more vivid idea of the significance of the statue:"Who art thou?" |
8881 | Could anything be more indicative of a slight but general insanity than the aspect of the crowd on the streets of Chicago?" |
8881 | To what boy at school does not the doleful history lesson assume a more brilliant aspect when the adventures of Columbus are taken up? |
8881 | What constitutes a state? |
6896 | By what authority? |
6896 | What shall I say, brave Admiral, say, If we sight naught but seas at dawn? |
6896 | And if a ship should sail to the undermost part, how could it come back? |
6896 | BATTLE OF BRANDYWINE.--What, meantime, had Howe been doing? |
6896 | Brave Admiral, say but one good word; What shall we do when hope is gone?" |
6896 | Brave Admiral, speak; what shall I say?" |
6896 | But did it flow into the Gulf? |
6896 | Could a ship sail up hill? |
6896 | FOOTNOTES[ 1] A closely related question was, What shall be done for the negroes set free by the Emancipation Proclamation? |
6896 | In February, 1793, the French Republic declared war on Great Britain, and so brought up the question, Which side shall the United States take? |
6896 | Might not this, it was asked, be the long- sought northwest passage to the Indies? |
6896 | THE DEBT AND THE CURRENCY.--The financial question to be settled included two parts: What shall be done with the bonds( p. 381)? |
6896 | THE PUBLIC LANDS.--The rise of new Western states brought up the troublesome question, What shall be done with the public lands? |
6896 | THE WAR IN THE NORTH.--What meantime had happened in the North? |
6896 | The first was, What shall be done to destroy the institution of slavery? |
6896 | The question of the hour thus became, Shall New Mexico and California be slave soil or free soil? |
6896 | The question then became, Which of these duplicate sets shall Congress count? |
6896 | The second was, What shall be done with the late Confederate states? |
6896 | Then the question arose, Which was the better of two routes, that by Lake Nicaragua, or that across the isthmus of Panama? |
6896 | Was it necessary to remove the Acadians? |
6896 | What shall be done with the currency? |
6896 | Why did John Dickinson oppose a declaration of independence? |
6896 | Why did the commissioners fail? |
6896 | [ 12] THE COAST OF FLORIDA EXPLORED.--What meantime had happened along the coast of North America? |
6896 | [ 16] Why would not Great Britain make a trade treaty with us? |
6896 | and What shall be done with the paper money? |
19659 | Or what man is there of you whom if his son ask bread will he give him a stone? |
19659 | ( This depends largely upon heredity and native endowment) but, What is its quality and its temper? |
19659 | Acknowledging then the necessity for training all these powers, how can it best be done? |
19659 | Admitting that strong moral character is the noblest result of right training, is it not still incidental to the regular school work? |
19659 | Again, a boy goes to town and sees a_ banana_ for the first time, and asks,"What is that? |
19659 | And is there any motive or incentive so stimulating to the will as a steady and constantly increasing_ interest_ in studies? |
19659 | And on what does efficiency in the production, preparation, and distribution of commodities depend? |
19659 | And where was given a better opportunity for the display of personal virtues than by the leaders of these little danger- encircled communities? |
19659 | Are the various sciences so distinct and so widely separated in nature and in real life as they are in school? |
19659 | As a child enters upon the work of acquisition are there any regulatives to guide the process of learning? |
19659 | As measured upon this cardinal purpose, what is the intrinsic value of each school study? |
19659 | But the question at once arises: Does not the will always act from_ motives_ of some sort? |
19659 | But the question that confronts us at every turn is,_ What is the disciplinary value of nature study_? |
19659 | But to what was his remarkable influence as a teacher of young men due? |
19659 | But we believe that those educators whose first, middle, and last question in education is,"What is the_ disciplinary_ value of a study?" |
19659 | But what ideas are thus disturbed? |
19659 | But where is the limit? |
19659 | Can growth in knowledge be made a progressive investigation? |
19659 | Can our common studies be approached in this inquisitive spirit? |
19659 | Do we proceed from the whole, to the parts, or from the parts to the whole? |
19659 | For culture purposes, where can their equals be found? |
19659 | Have we any home- bred food like this for the nourishment of our growing youth? |
19659 | How are glass and soap made? |
19659 | How are iron, silver, and copper ore mined and reduced? |
19659 | How do reading and natural science aid a child to grow into the full stature of a man or woman? |
19659 | How does a suction pump work and why? |
19659 | How far can teaching stimulate and develop such a will? |
19659 | How is it possible for a fish to breathe in water? |
19659 | How is sugar obtained from maple trees, cane, and beet root? |
19659 | How is the teacher to approach and influence the will of the child? |
19659 | How? |
19659 | If a dry goods merchant, a horse jockey, and an architect pass down a city street together, what will each observe? |
19659 | Into what_ relations_ shall the other studies of the school enter to these historical materials? |
19659 | Is it by supposing that the child has a will already developed and strong enough to be relied upon on all occasions? |
19659 | Is n''t there a quicker and easier way? |
19659 | Is there then any reason why school history should ignore its blood relationships to other branches of knowledge? |
19659 | Is this history adapted to cultivate the highest moral and intellectual qualities of children as they advance from year to year? |
19659 | Knowledge likewise enters the mind, but how far will assimilation go on without conscious effort? |
19659 | Now what will the average man, picked up at random, say to our question: What is the chief end in the education of your son? |
19659 | Now, who is better able to judge of the true aim than thoughtful and solicitous_ parents_? |
19659 | On the contrary, must not the teacher put incentives in the path of the pupil, ideas and feelings that prompt him to self- denial? |
19659 | On what principle is it possible to select both interesting and valuable materials for the successive grades? |
19659 | Secondly, what is the_ effect on the old ideas_? |
19659 | Shall we answer to all this that schools were never designed to teach such things? |
19659 | Shall we seek to avoid responsibility for the moral aim by throwing it upon the family and the church? |
19659 | So long as we are dealing with fundamental aims in such a serious business as education, why stop short of that ideal which is manifestly the best? |
19659 | Spencer sees clearly the importance of this problem and gives it a vigorous discussion in his first chapter,"What knowledge is of most worth?" |
19659 | The first question, preliminary to all others in the common school course,"What is the most important study?" |
19659 | The under- lying question in education is not, How strong or incisive is his mind? |
19659 | To what extent does history contribute to our purpose? |
19659 | We desire therefore to approach nearer to this problem:_ What is the highest aim of education_? |
19659 | We_ can_ pave such a road through the fields of moral science, but when a child has traveled it is he a whit the better? |
19659 | What can concentration do to remedy the one and check the other? |
19659 | What has a knowledge of natural science to do with the construction of stoves, furnaces, and lamps? |
19659 | What importance have geography and arithmetic? |
19659 | What is the cause of this difference? |
19659 | What is the central purpose of education? |
19659 | What noble examples does it furnish of right thought and action? |
19659 | What relation have these facts to induction? |
19659 | What results in this direction can the natural sciences tabulate? |
19659 | When a child, leaving school behind, develops into a citizen, what tests are applied to him? |
19659 | Who has the best survey of the field? |
19659 | Who spends six hours a day directing these currents of thought and interest? |
19659 | Why has one man learned so much and the other nothing? |
19659 | Why is it that a mole can burrow and live under ground? |
19659 | Why not bind all the studies and ideas of a child as closely together as possible by natural lines of association? |
19659 | Why not cultivate those nobler incentives that spring out of culture- bringing- knowledge? |
19659 | Why not select for reading lessons those materials which will throw added light upon contemporaneous lessons in history, botany, and geography? |
19659 | Why should the teacher rely upon his own unaided example more than the preacher? |
19659 | Why should we not, instead of dead books, open the living book of nature? |
19659 | _ Are_ there materials for school study which are adapted fully to interest first grade children? |
16513 | All right? |
16513 | Any letters? |
16513 | Anything go for you? |
16513 | But are n''t our subs sometimes mistaken for Germans? |
16513 | Did n''t you think that wreckage a couple of miles back looked pretty fresh? 16513 Did you fly the flag as you came in?" |
16513 | Have you heard of this? |
16513 | How goes it? |
16513 | In the bombardment? |
16513 | Is this all that there is to it? 16513 Not too tired by the journey?" |
16513 | See any Germans? |
16513 | See anything? |
16513 | Shaken, you ask? 16513 So you thought that our troops had all the best of the enemy this morning?" |
16513 | That must have been pretty constant thundering? |
16513 | To- night? 16513 What wound?" |
16513 | What''s doing? |
16513 | What''s that sound? |
16513 | What''s the news? |
16513 | Where was he? |
16513 | You all right yourself? |
16513 | You were in the attack? |
16513 | A day or two more and we ran calmly into-- shall we say,''deleted''harbor? |
16513 | A happy home in Siberia, which some other man has founded, or starvation in Austria? |
16513 | An Austrian prisoner at a Siberian station shouted one day so all could hear:"What is this freedom that you talk about?" |
16513 | And he submits, resigns himself: what do I say? |
16513 | Are we really on the firing line?" |
16513 | As soon as he landed in France:"Well, what about that wound?" |
16513 | As soon as they regain consciousness after the shock, the first idea is:"Am I really not dead?" |
16513 | Can the Czechs become an actual nucleus for the forces of freedom in Russia and Siberia? |
16513 | Can you imagine Christmas on a little storm- bumped submarine some hundred miles off the coast? |
16513 | Did you ever hear of such nerve?" |
16513 | Did you ever hear that song about him they sang at a revue the British''Tommies''had at Saloniki? |
16513 | Did you ever stand waiting for death? |
16513 | Do I like going to war all on my own? |
16513 | Do n''t you know, how in the stories it is always in a terrific gale that the caged lion or gorilla or python breaks loose and terrorizes the ship? |
16513 | Do n''t you remember the days when you thought son was dying if he cried-- or if he did n''t? |
16513 | Do the people who keep the world turning around ever get due recognition? |
16513 | Do you see those little winking flashes all along where the infantry are moving? |
16513 | Does it become more favorable to military operations than the deep depression through which the river flows? |
16513 | Does that mean that I am happy here far from all I love? |
16513 | Got anything good to read? |
16513 | Having absorbed the fundamental fact that the Allies proposed to continue the fight to the end, what then was Germany''s position? |
16513 | How on earth will he ever find his way to the open sea?" |
16513 | I went to welcome a patient brought in October 26th and asked:"You came tonight?" |
16513 | In either case, if the necessary agreement can not be secured, the members reserve the right to take such[ action?] |
16513 | In response to my"Who''s there?" |
16513 | Instead of comforting him, she said,"Did you hit him back?" |
16513 | Said an officer to me,"The future of the submarine? |
16513 | So can you get my point of view, and be glad with me? |
16513 | So the boys at home do n''t all take kindly to being conscripted, eh? |
16513 | The humming? |
16513 | The ordinary French phrase for"How are you? |
16513 | Was I not an American? |
16513 | Was anything certain for the future? |
16513 | Was there a panic? |
16513 | What do you think of the news? |
16513 | What figment of pretense is left if the battle remains indecisive? |
16513 | What hero in all the centuries of history attains to the grandeur of our hero? |
16513 | What is the nature of the terrain above those steep cliffs which enclose the valley of the Marne? |
16513 | What may be the reasons for his silence? |
16513 | What time did you say it was?" |
16513 | What''s it like outside?" |
16513 | When conditions are like this in Siberia, why should an Austrian return to a hungry country to fight a heroic enemy? |
16513 | Where did you hear that about two destroyers being sunk off the coast of Ireland on September 3? |
16513 | Which should it be? |
16513 | Who ever defended, in a war so terrible, a cause so important to the future of the world? |
16513 | Who has striven so hard, suffered so much, so often passed through death? |
16513 | Why did n''t you come back with a long invoice of troubles of your own, as 99 per cent of women would? |
16513 | Why is it that people sometimes deliberately hurt those they have loved most in the world? |
16513 | Will the Germans dare to hold their thin communication lines till the guns of Entente warships are thundering off Odessa and Batum? |
16513 | _ Comment ça va- t- il?_"( literally: How goes it?) |
16513 | _ Comment ça va- t- il?_"( literally: How goes it?) |
16513 | or"Could you spare a little more, sister?" |
22242 | ''Johnny,''says she, catching hold of him,''what is the matter?'' 22242 ''Where did you leave him?'' |
22242 | ''Where is your little brother?'' 22242 After this number, what will I take?" |
22242 | And after that? |
22242 | And then? |
22242 | And you? |
22242 | Are none of the other clerks disengaged? |
22242 | Are there other women there? |
22242 | At this they sank upon their knees and also pointed thither, as much as asking,''Do you also know the good God?'' 22242 But what good will that do if there''s a pack of''em?" |
22242 | But your name is Rush, is n''t it? |
22242 | Can you show as where the mine is? |
22242 | Could we got a breakfast round hers, anywhere? |
22242 | Cuspa--- what? |
22242 | Did you decapitate him? |
22242 | Did you hold a_ post mortem_ examination? |
22242 | Did you perform the Caesarean operation? |
22242 | Do you mean to say a bear does n''t hibernate? |
22242 | Do you work in the mills? |
22242 | Have you any cuspadores among your new pottery? |
22242 | Have you read it? |
22242 | How many have you got? |
22242 | I wonder if she thinks she can buy spittoons by a new- fangled name,he muttered,"and nobody know what she wants''em for? |
22242 | Is THAT the second bell? |
22242 | Is that your cow? |
22242 | Matter? |
22242 | Ralston, what under the sun is a cuspadore? |
22242 | SPEAKING of the different kind of taxes,queried the teacher,"what- kind is it where Whiskey is taxed?" |
22242 | She asked them,''Have you a mother?'' 22242 She said,''Are the green fields not better than your city?'' |
22242 | She said,''What do you think while you walk along the country roads?'' 22242 The child? |
22242 | True,--this story I''ve told you? |
22242 | Was it an accident in the mines? |
22242 | Was the wound a very severe one, doctor? |
22242 | Well, doctor, what did you do for him? |
22242 | Well, what is it? |
22242 | Wha''fo'', mamma? |
22242 | What are you so crazy to go up town for? |
22242 | What did you say to Miss Morden, that she flew off in such a rage? |
22242 | What did you say? |
22242 | What is it? |
22242 | What on earth is a''cuspadore''? |
22242 | What on earth is that? |
22242 | What right had Miss Dobbs to speak so to her? |
22242 | What shall I show you this evening, Miss Silvia? |
22242 | What style do you wish? 22242 What''s the matter?" |
22242 | Where did you see them, Sil? |
22242 | Which room? |
22242 | Who brought that rat into school? |
22242 | Who else? 22242 Who''d have thought that''toploftical''young miss, with her airs and graces, used tobacco? |
22242 | Why, what can you possibly do? |
22242 | Will they eat you? |
22242 | Would n''t you like to go in? |
22242 | ------?" |
22242 | And even If my hair does curl, Folks wo n''t ever dare to call me Any more, a girl,--"Will they?" |
22242 | Are you talking of Silvia?" |
22242 | C.''painted out?" |
22242 | Can I show you anything?" |
22242 | Come friends in need? |
22242 | Do n''t you think it a disgrace for a girl to use tobacco? |
22242 | Face brown or fair? |
22242 | Fond of his sports? |
22242 | He laughed and shouted,"Do n''t you see my clothes? |
22242 | Her three older brothers and sisters all went, and why could n''t she? |
22242 | How can He be always near us? |
22242 | How can a man take root and thrive without land? |
22242 | How many such can the postal service boast? |
22242 | Kept up by prayer and faith, eh?" |
22242 | My boy, do you know the boy I love? |
22242 | Near all of us, everywhere? |
22242 | Of course people do not want spittoons unless they use tobacco, do they? |
22242 | Or poor, or rich? |
22242 | Shall I send you a pair?" |
22242 | So again her clear voice rang out,"Miss Dobbs is drefful cross, is n''t she, Anna?" |
22242 | We never have done anything for it"---"And you wish to help the orphans, do you? |
22242 | What do you suppose Changed him so? |
22242 | Where does he dwell? |
22242 | Where was it?'' |
22242 | You are puzzled? |
22242 | you think there is not A boy like him,--surmise That he is only a bright ideal? |
8380 | But how do you know you killed that many? |
8380 | My contract requires me to stop on here until December of 1898, but it does n''t sound so long if you say''a year after this,''does it? |
8380 | Akers, of the_ London Times_, and_ Harper''s Weekly_, who has held two commissions from the Queen? |
8380 | But why should we not go a step farther and a step higher, and interfere in the name of humanity? |
8380 | For what voice crying in the wilderness are they still waiting? |
8380 | Is it likely, having risked such a price for it that they would lie about what they have seen? |
8380 | Is it that the American people doubt the sources from which their information comes? |
8380 | It will not do to put it aside by saying that"War is war,"and that"All war is cruel,"or to ask,"Am I my brother''s keeper?" |
8380 | Now suppose the troops are sent at short notice from the military camps along the line to protect any particular point? |
8380 | Or if the members of the Senate and of Congress can not visit Cuba, why will they not listen to those who have been there? |
8380 | What further manifestations are needed? |
8380 | What will convince them that the time has come? |
8380 | Why should we tolerate Spanish savages merely because they call themselves"the most Catholic,"but who in reality are no better than this naked negro? |
18048 | ''Have you anything on your arm?'' 18048 ''How did you come out?'' |
18048 | ''Me?'' 18048 ''What have you got on your arm?'' |
18048 | ''What position did you play?'' 18048 ''What system of signals did you use and who called them?'' |
18048 | ''Where is that fellow Hinkey?'' 18048 ''Who did you have on the team, Bob?'' |
18048 | ''Why?'' 18048 ''Why?'' |
18048 | ''Your big fellow? 18048 How do you think any ends can cover that?" |
18048 | I wonder if the cobbler has put new cleats on my shoes? |
18048 | I wonder if the tailor mended my jersey? |
18048 | Is it not possible that something more even than the example and influence of his character was lost to the world in his death? 18048 Said I,''What''s this one--48- 16- 32- 12?'' |
18048 | What did I learn in my football course? 18048 What has become of my ankle brace-- can''t seem to find it anywhere? |
18048 | What has become of my head- gear? |
18048 | What is it, Pop? 18048 What would the present football man think of being played for one and one- half hours whether he was in shape or not? |
18048 | Who told you_ you_ could kick? |
18048 | Who''s got my trousers on? |
18048 | Why? |
18048 | ''What the devil was the matter with you on Saturday, Hooks? |
18048 | ''Where in the world is my big fellow?'' |
18048 | A young girl was asked the question:"''If you were a mother and had a son, would you allow him to play football?'' |
18048 | Ask him if he thinks I''m all in? |
18048 | At such a time you arise in your wrath and demand:"Who is that guy anyway? |
18048 | CHAPTER III ELBOW TO ELBOW"I wonder where my shoes are?" |
18048 | Ca n''t you lem''me two bits til''Sadday night, please suh? |
18048 | Could it be that this great acknowledged champion team of Princeton was conceited, over- trained and about to be defeated? |
18048 | Did you wear it?'' |
18048 | Do you players of football remember the day you made the team, the day your chance came and you took advantage of it? |
18048 | Do you think I''m a fool? |
18048 | For a kick the signal was any phrase which asked a question, as for instance,"How many yards to gain?" |
18048 | He came to me and said,''Do you think this injury will keep me out of the big game?'' |
18048 | He emerged from his basin and asked:"''Were you at that football game yesterday?'' |
18048 | He let out a yell as Jake came down on it:"What are you biting my finger for?" |
18048 | He saw me standing on the side lines; came over to where I was; looked me over once or twice and finally said:"''Why are n''t you trying for the team? |
18048 | He was a new man to Daly, and the latter called out to him:"What is your name?" |
18048 | High as quickly responded:"What are you sticking it in my mouth for?" |
18048 | How about the fighting game?'' |
18048 | How did he do it?" |
18048 | How is this college patriotism aroused? |
18048 | I was naturally curious, and said:"''Simpson, what are you doing over here? |
18048 | I went back where he was and said:"''Come on, Bill, what''s the matter?'' |
18048 | It does n''t look as though you''re going to play, but if I put you in that lineup how will you play?'' |
18048 | Kil called for some chocolate, and Johnnie Mack, the trainer, yelled back:"What do you think this is, anyway, a hospital?" |
18048 | Leaning over Bill, Mike said:''Is it your ankle, or knee, Bill?'' |
18048 | Mac naturally was at a loss to locate the quarter, during the execution of the play and madly yelled,''Where in the devil is that quarterback?'' |
18048 | Mahan boosted the ball seventy yards, and Haughton said:"What kind of a kick is that?" |
18048 | More than once he called at now one, now another fraternity house and hailed us:''Where is that young freshman that is out for my team? |
18048 | One day Haughton said to Pooch Donovan:"Where is that Natick friend of yours? |
18048 | Perhaps a mistaken signal in the game caused the loss of a first down, maybe defeat-- who knows? |
18048 | Robby went in back of him and said:"''Why did n''t you kick him?'' |
18048 | The drummer summing up courage, faced Beacham and said,"Now will you kindly tell me why you asked me to do this?" |
18048 | The teams lined up, and thereupon Thayer, with his eagle eye looking us over, called out to our captain''how many fellows are you playing anyway?'' |
18048 | The tension was relieved, however, when Lew drawled out,''Why the devil did n''t you kick him in the shins?'' |
18048 | They were right, probably quite right, but how could we think so? |
18048 | Walter Camp stood in the distance and Shevlin yelled to him:"Well, how about it, Walter?" |
18048 | Was it any wonder that men gave Murphy the credit due him? |
18048 | Wendell, do n''t you think we have beaten them badly enough? |
18048 | What are its manifestations? |
18048 | What is finer, after a hard day''s practice, than to stand beneath a warm shower and gradually let the water grow cold? |
18048 | What kind of a Varsity football team are we going to have? |
18048 | What man is there who attended either school who does not recall the spirit of those old- time contests? |
18048 | What more do you want?'' |
18048 | What would the world be if all were open and frank as the day or the sunshine?'' |
18048 | What you going to do with it?" |
18048 | When Richardson got up, he turned to de Saulles and said:"You fool, why did you tackle me? |
18048 | When we arrived at Princeton, a friend of mine called me aside and said:"Who is that loyal Princeton man who seems never to miss a game?" |
18048 | Where did he come from? |
18048 | Who can describe the sensations of the contestants in the first moment of a championship game? |
18048 | Who that has experienced the thrill of that moment can ever forget it? |
18048 | Why ca n''t you make that line into a fighting unit? |
18048 | Why did he give that penalty?" |
18048 | Why do n''t you get in there where you belong?'' |
18048 | Why do n''t you penalize yourself?" |
18048 | Why is it that he disregards himself, and goes on in the game, suffering physical as well as mental tortures, plucky though handicapped? |
18048 | Wilson, then a quarter for Yale, turned to his center and asked him sharply:"''Why do n''t you keep track of the signals?'' |
18048 | Without one word of comment he walked over to where I was sitting and said:"Edwards, what was the score of the game to- day?" |
18048 | XX.--UMPIRE AND REFEREE 383- 406"Why Did He Give That Penalty?" |
18048 | and then''Who won?'' |
42355 | Who is authorised to treat on the part of America? 42355 Ages have intervened between its several steps, but as knowledge of late increases rapidly, why should not those steps be quickened? 42355 Are we to understand that each separately has power to conclude, or in what manner? 42355 As there had never been such requisition, what could I think of such discourses? 42355 B, having found a stick, and coming to return the blows he received, A says, my old friend, why should we quarrel? 42355 But is it possible, that for such petty interests, mankind can wish to see their neighbors destroy each other? 42355 But why should it be supposed, that the Ministry, to a man, are ill disposed to a peace? 42355 But why should we expect to fail, when the greatest rub is removed, by the liberty of entering separately into a treaty? 42355 But why should we seek to throw a damp prematurely upon any chance? 42355 But would it not be better for England to offer it? 42355 Can no cartel be settled? 42355 Can we not do a little more for ourselves? 42355 Can you not find means of repairing in some degree those injuries? 42355 Did you content yourselves with the recovery of those lands? 42355 Do you expect ever to see that army again? 42355 Does she seek to embroil affairs, and to light up a general war in Europe? 42355 Does she suppose, that England has too many enemies upon her, and that their demands and pretensions are too high? 42355 Has he then discharged the obligation? 42355 Have you the same prospects? 42355 He asked me, if his answers had been right? 42355 How do you stand with him? 42355 I asked him if he was at liberty? 42355 I asked him, if the enabling bill was passed? 42355 If the flames of war could be but once extinguished, does not the Atlantic ocean contain cold water enough to prevent them bursting out again? 42355 If then we consider and compare Britain and America in these several particulars, upon the question,To which is it safest to lend money?" |
42355 | If we had sold your people to the Moors at Sallee, as you have many of ours to the African and East India Companies, could you have complained? |
42355 | In the last war, for example, what was the object? |
42355 | In what light does this proceeding appear to Congress? |
42355 | Is Denmark in concert with her, or any other power? |
42355 | Is it impossible to devise some means for the enlargement of those, who are confined in England? |
42355 | Is it impossible, either to settle a cartel in Europe, or to have the Americans confined there sent to New York for exchange? |
42355 | M. de Vergennes asked me if Mr Oswald had not opened himself further to me? |
42355 | Or no means devised for sending them here to be exchanged? |
42355 | S._ You say nothing of Mr Adams? |
42355 | Under this declaration, with what face could I ask for another six millions? |
42355 | Were it not proper that this were contradicted flatly? |
42355 | What if you were to begin your measures of_ reconciliation_ by setting them at liberty? |
42355 | What is he doing? |
42355 | What is the system of Russia? |
42355 | What security would she have for those cessions, or even for the rest of her islands? |
42355 | What then? |
42355 | While they decline our offered friendship, are they to be suffered to encroach on our bounds, and shut us up within the Appalachian mountains? |
42355 | Why presume even against any individual? |
42355 | Why should not the law of nations go on improving? |
42355 | Will not some voluntary acts of justice, and even of kindness on your part, have excellent effects towards producing such a_ reconciliation_? |
42355 | Will not your late great advantages put it in your power to do something for their relief? |
42355 | Would not the advantage of reconciliation by such means be greater than the expense? |
42355 | You desire to know whether any intercepted letters of Mr Deane have been published in Europe? |
42355 | _ Question 4th._"What were the net proceeds of the Serapis, Scarborough, and the other prizes taken during the said expedition?" |
42355 | _ Question 5th._"What benefit the United States of America have received from the prisoners made during said expedition?" |
42355 | _ Question 6th._"What orders were given to Captain Landais?" |
42355 | _ Question 7th._"What was the ground of dispute between Captain Jones and him?" |
42355 | _ Question 8th._"What were the disbursements on the Alliance, from the time of her first arrival in France, until she left that kingdom?" |
42355 | whether it would be adhered to in regard to France at all events? |
32987 | And how did he take it? |
32987 | By whose authority do you act? |
32987 | Did Scammel act as aide- de- camp for the day, or did he not? |
32987 | Here, sir, are my troops,said he,"how is it your pleasure I should dispose of them?" |
32987 | What can you do? |
32987 | What do you seek here? |
32987 | What is the meaning of all this, sir? |
32987 | What is to be done? |
32987 | What party? |
32987 | What right has Onontio here? 32987 What think you,"said Washington,"if we should retreat to the back parts of Pennsylvania, would the Pennsylvanians support us?" |
32987 | Who runs? |
32987 | A movement towards Philadelphia? |
32987 | But how was he to do this, deficient as he was in horses and vehicles for transportation? |
32987 | But what must have been the feelings of the commander- in- chief as he anxiously patrolled his camp and considered his desperate position? |
32987 | But what part? |
32987 | But which of them?--and by whom? |
32987 | But whither? |
32987 | But you surely do not consider his case and mine alike?'' |
32987 | Could the enemy be at hand? |
32987 | Could they remain unconcerned spectators of a conflict between their ancient enemy and republican France? |
32987 | Could you lend them instantaneously funds to shelter them from English prosecution? |
32987 | Did he intend to detach a part of his forces for a winter''s campaign against the South? |
32987 | Did he meditate an irruption into the Jerseys? |
32987 | Did he really intend to break through by the way of Ticonderoga? |
32987 | He had won laurels in the field; would they continue to flourish in the cabinet? |
32987 | He must attempt something on account of his reputation, for what has he done as yet with his great army?" |
32987 | How could they be so near without coming to visit him? |
32987 | How had they been obtained? |
32987 | How was he to be protected from these intrusions? |
32987 | How was the apprehended blow to be parried? |
32987 | How was this to be done? |
32987 | How was this to be prevented? |
32987 | How were these double claims to ceremonious respect happening at the same time to be managed? |
32987 | How would his inexperienced troops stand the encounter? |
32987 | If there is not power in it to check them, what security has a man for life, liberty, or property?" |
32987 | If we should be obliged to abandon the town, ought it to stand as winter quarters for the enemy? |
32987 | In case an attack while on the march were determined on, should it be a partial or a general one? |
32987 | In this situation, remote from reinforcements, inferior to the enemy in numbers, and without hope of support, what was to be done? |
32987 | Let me ask you, sir, when is the time for brave men to exert themselves in the cause of liberty and their country, if this is not? |
32987 | Losing all caution, he exclaimed, eagerly:"Gentlemen, I hope you belong to our party?" |
32987 | Might he make social visits to acquaintances and public characters, not as President, but as private individual? |
32987 | Now, whether I am to understand this aye or no to the plain simple question asked, Is the fort to be continued or removed? |
32987 | Or why should an ineffectual attempt to relieve the distresses of one brave, unfortunate man, involve many more in the same calamities?" |
32987 | Should any difficulties that they may have to encounter at this important crisis deter them? |
32987 | Should he keep on to Brunswick or not? |
32987 | Since kingly rule is at an end, why retain its effigy? |
32987 | The disposition to uphold the army was general; but the difficult question was, who should be commander- in- chief? |
32987 | The general said to the surgeon:''Tell me the truth, is there no hope?'' |
32987 | The question now was, what would be their next move? |
32987 | The question was, how could their plans be most successfully opposed? |
32987 | Wait for the arrival of the promised reinforcement, or attempt to check the ravage? |
32987 | Washington eagerly inquired particulars; above all, how acted the militia? |
32987 | Were they to cannonade the city, or to land troops above it? |
32987 | What could be the reason of this supineness on the part of Sir William Howe? |
32987 | What stronger evidence can be given of the want of energy in our government than these disorders? |
32987 | What was the state of Washington''s army? |
32987 | What was their destination? |
32987 | What was to be done? |
32987 | What was to be done? |
32987 | What was to be done? |
32987 | What would be the defence of the city if assailed by the ships? |
32987 | What, it was asked, were Americans to do in such a juncture? |
32987 | Where would it be made? |
32987 | Who had sent them? |
32987 | Why should we suppose them to possess more humanity than we have ourselves? |
32987 | Will not the wise and good strive hard to avert this evil? |
32987 | Would they proceed thither by land or water? |
32987 | for what purpose of interest or ambition?" |
12549 | At Wagram? |
12549 | Did n''t you speak to him? |
12549 | Did our friend Horace say that? |
12549 | Do the goats live with you all in this room? |
12549 | Do you not discover a great advance in educational facilities and in the enlargement of means to popular knowledge? |
12549 | Good woman,said my friend,"where''s Mose?" |
12549 | Oh,said the President,"I have not seen her since seven o''clock this morning; Tad, how is your mother?" |
12549 | Were you at Jena? |
12549 | Were you there that night? |
12549 | What do I care for that? |
12549 | What is this, good friend? |
12549 | What shall it be? |
12549 | Where is Napoleon? |
12549 | Who is that? |
12549 | Why so? |
12549 | Will you go and find somebody to take our cards? |
12549 | Would you believe it? |
12549 | :"Children,"he exclaimed,"do you want to know what I am? |
12549 | And how could he descend to scurrilously satirize all societies formed for the promotion of temperance? |
12549 | Are not even they in the presence of Christ at His coming? |
12549 | Are not even ye in the Lord?" |
12549 | Are not even ye in the presence of Christ at His coming?" |
12549 | Are not even ye in the presence of our Lord Jesus Christ at His coming? |
12549 | Are not even ye-- ye-- in the presence of Christ at His coming? |
12549 | As he bade me good- night at yonder corner of Fulton Street, I said to him:"Uncle Horace, will you not come and spend the night with me?" |
12549 | At this Carlyle laughed loudly, and remarked:"Was that the end of him? |
12549 | But how could a man who went so far as he did go no further? |
12549 | Can anything new be said about Charles H. Spurgeon? |
12549 | Despised is he? |
12549 | Did you ever see such a sad face in your life?" |
12549 | Do many of the Londoners of this day remember Dr. James Hamilton, the pastor of the Presbyterian Church in Regent''s Square? |
12549 | Do these increased difficulties demand a new Gospel? |
12549 | Do they demand new doctrines? |
12549 | Do we need a new Baptism of the Holy Spirit? |
12549 | Do we need a new revelation of Jesus Christ? |
12549 | Dr. Cox''s patience was exhausted, and pointing to the door, he said:"My friend, do you observe that aperture in this apartment? |
12549 | Has the American pulpit grown in spiritual power since those days? |
12549 | Have the churches thriven whose pastors have become more invertebrate in their theology? |
12549 | He said to her:"Mother, when you gave me as an infant to God in baptism, did you withhold me from any service to which I might be called?" |
12549 | He said to me,"Brother Cuyler, if I break down, wo n''t you take up the service and go on with it?" |
12549 | Homeless is he? |
12549 | How can I help to make this old sinning and sobbing world the better also? |
12549 | How could the reformer who struck at so many social wrongs spare that hideous fountain- head of misery in London, the dram- shop? |
12549 | How is your sick sister? |
12549 | I leaned over to Beecher and whispered,"That is splendid platforming, is n''t it?" |
12549 | I once asked Albert Barnes, of Philadelphia,"Who is the greatest preacher you have ever heard?" |
12549 | I said to him tenderly:"Do you mean that these sweet children shall never have any help from their father to get to Heaven?" |
12549 | I said to them in French:"Were you at Austerlitz?" |
12549 | I wonder how many there are here this morning that gathered before my pulpit on that Easter Sunday thirty years ago? |
12549 | If ministers are set to be watchmen of souls, how shall they escape if they neglect the salvation of souls? |
12549 | Lincoln?" |
12549 | One day he was walking with a lady, who was also subject to depression of spirits, and he said to her:"Tell me why I am like a Jew?" |
12549 | Poor, is he? |
12549 | She exclaimed,"For God''s sake, gentlemen, ca n''t you give me a glass of gin?" |
12549 | The next morning when he saw it in the paper he went up into the composing room in a perfect rage and called out,"Who put that Cattaraugus?" |
12549 | The philosophical and poetical yield to the practical, when"_ cui bono?_"is the lest question which challenges all comers. |
12549 | The practical questions for every one of us are: how can I become better? |
12549 | The questions,"Have we got any Bible?" |
12549 | The visitor inquired of an Irishman, who was working in front of the house,"Who lives here?" |
12549 | They contemplate the long array of children whom they have guided to Jesus; and they, too, can exclaim,"What is our joy or crown of rejoicing? |
12549 | Was Albert Barnes a great preacher? |
12549 | What do the dwellers in the by- streets and the tenement houses need? |
12549 | What has been the outcome of these thirty years of happy pastorate? |
12549 | What is my joy or crown of rejoicing? |
12549 | What is our crown of rejoicing? |
12549 | What is to be done with a love which belongs only to one, when that one is gone and can not take it up? |
12549 | What shall we do with a lost love which wanders like a ghost through all the chambers of the soul only to feel how empty they are? |
12549 | What student of style will deny that his"Monograph"of his father is the finest specimen of condensed and vivid biography in our language? |
12549 | Who has a better right to reprove, exhort and correct with all long suffering than the woman who has given us her heart and herself? |
12549 | Why crowd into the already over- crowded professions? |
12549 | Why load your gun at all if you can not send your charge to the mark? |
12549 | Why, then, sunder a tie that is bound to every fibre of my inmost heart? |
12549 | and"If any Bible, how much?" |
43753 | ''And how many times have you crossed the ocean?'' 43753 Could the scheme have been meant as a blow at your business in Europe? |
43753 | Despite mistakes( and who has not made them? 43753 Have you ever written to the American ministers in Japan and China on the subject? |
43753 | Have you readCallirrhoe,"a fanciful story of George Sand''s, which has appeared in the late numbers of_ Revue des Deux Mondes_? |
43753 | I think I hear you say, Why does not papa answer all of our letters? 43753 Is the ship to go into Valentia Harbor? |
43753 | May I send a copy of your letter to Mr. Seward at Washington and my brother in New York? 43753 Second: Can you send a message, long or short, to the directors at London? |
43753 | What saith the herald of the Lord? 43753 When do you think it would be best for us to sail? |
43753 | Will Belle kiss her sister for her mother and will she kiss her cousins, too? 43753 _ My dear Mrs. Field_,--What shall I say to you? |
43753 | ( Is it not terrible that one should be so old?) |
43753 | And what view will your people take? |
43753 | And who was on the bier, so carefully and tenderly borne? |
43753 | At what hour do you breakfast?" |
43753 | But how will this be accomplished? |
43753 | Can mother guess? |
43753 | Do you reflect that there are men among you to- night, men here, who lived and were not very young before there was a steamboat on our waters? |
43753 | Does Belle say no? |
43753 | Has the coming Presidential election or nomination anything to do with this matter? |
43753 | He replied,''No; what do you advise me to do with it?'' |
43753 | Here is one of the messages that came back across the sea:"_ Precious Little Isabella_,--What are you about just now? |
43753 | How can we get it promptly?" |
43753 | How does he bear up with all this excitement and revulsion? |
43753 | I said to him,''My dear sir, what did you pay for it?'' |
43753 | If Lord Granville was in error, why did not General Schenck correct him? |
43753 | Instead of turning at once to his instrument, the man studied Mr. Field intently, and then said,"Are you the original Cyrus?" |
43753 | Is not this enough? |
43753 | It was this:"Lord, to whom shall we go? |
43753 | Now, would it not be well to call the attention of Europe and America to St. John''s as the nearest telegraphic point? |
43753 | One I recollect was, he had over his desk''Are you insured?'' |
43753 | Or is Mr. Sumner''s view of the dispute dominant in Washington? |
43753 | Then what next? |
43753 | These questions were then asked:"Is the steamer in from America?" |
43753 | They begin with"Avez vous le pain?" |
43753 | Thomas, believest thou this?" |
43753 | What could we have done, what can we now do more? |
43753 | What means this great commotion? |
43753 | What was the anxiety of those twenty- six hours? |
43753 | When shall the Atlantic cable be open for public business?'' |
43753 | Who knows that it will not reject any other convention? |
43753 | Will you please thank him for me? |
43753 | Will you think that I belie the expression I have used if I tell you candidly the effect this book has produced upon my mind? |
43753 | and the last sentence is,"Votre ami a- t- il le miroir que vous avez ou celui que j''ai? |
43753 | and"What is the price of gold in New York?" |
42123 | (_ Draws HILDA toward L._) You''ll excuse us, Professor? |
42123 | (_ Enter SUE, L._) Sue, have you seen anything of Hilda? |
42123 | (_ Looks about._) What is the matter? |
42123 | (_ Picks up HILDA''S letter._) What is this? |
42123 | (_ Shakes head at teapot._) Now here''s a quandary: how can I get you back to papa without offending that divinity? |
42123 | (_ Shyly._) But may n''t he have the teapot too? |
42123 | (_ Sound of door- bell._) Sue, will you kindly go to the door? |
42123 | (_ Starts for door R.; stumbles over DEAN''S suit- case._) What is this? |
42123 | After I''ve seen Fanny, may I come back? |
42123 | All look about._)_ Enter SUE, R._ MRS. B. Oh, Eric, you haven''t---- MR. T. Sue, where have you taken the teapot? |
42123 | And you''re not crazy-- not the least little bit? |
42123 | And your parents? |
42123 | But, my dear Professor, have you thought of the disparity in ages? |
42123 | Celia, are you crazy? |
42123 | Did Professor Gates tell you that he was coming this evening? |
42123 | Did n''t you hear me telling Sue that Hilda is unhappy, moody, incomprehensible? |
42123 | Did you fight with the burglars? |
42123 | Do I understand that Miss Templeton has already gone to New York? |
42123 | Do I understand that there is a burglar in this house? |
42123 | Do n''t you know about our teapot? |
42123 | Do n''t you know about our teapot? |
42123 | Do n''t you know about our teapot? |
42123 | Do you ever wonder at the increasing frequency with which Professor Gates calls here? |
42123 | Have you no regard for your family? |
42123 | Have you sent for the police? |
42123 | Her father is no help----(_Sound of door- bell._) I''m sure that''s the evening paper; will you kindly get it, Sue? |
42123 | Hilda? |
42123 | Horace, have you seen----? |
42123 | Horace, what have you done? |
42123 | Horrible? |
42123 | How dare you come here? |
42123 | How dare you lock up my brother? |
42123 | How long have you had that idea in your head? |
42123 | If some one went to the station---- MRS. T. Why did n''t we think of that before? |
42123 | MR. B. Eric, are you crazy? |
42123 | MR. B. Eric, do you know what you are doing? |
42123 | MR. T. But your rescuer, child? |
42123 | MR. T. Do you mean to tell me that the McLaffety boy was stealing the teapot? |
42123 | MR. T. Hilda, ca n''t you say something? |
42123 | MR. T. We''ve just found this letter---- MRS. T. How did you know? |
42123 | MR. T. Well? |
42123 | MRS. B. Eric, did Mr. Templeton find you carrying off the teapot? |
42123 | MRS. T. Sue, will you please bring Hilda''s wraps? |
42123 | MRS. T. The robber? |
42123 | MRS. T. Then what did you do? |
42123 | MRS. T. What has happened? |
42123 | MRS. T. Will you kindly hand it to him, Sue? |
42123 | Miss Templeton, will you kindly convince these people that I am neither a burglar nor a lunatic? |
42123 | My dear brother, are you alive? |
42123 | My dear child, are you still with us? |
42123 | No? |
42123 | Oh, why have I not carried the teapot to the safe deposit vault? |
42123 | Say, does he board over here? |
42123 | Splendid? |
42123 | Sue? |
42123 | The burglar''s? |
42123 | The silver- closet? |
42123 | The teapot? |
42123 | The teapot? |
42123 | To whom are you indebted? |
42123 | Unfortunate? |
42123 | What do you say? |
42123 | What does this mean? |
42123 | What does this mean? |
42123 | What has a burglar to do with Hilda? |
42123 | What has happened? |
42123 | What will become of her? |
42123 | What will you do there? |
42123 | What-- who----? |
42123 | Where have you been? |
42123 | Where is my hat? |
42123 | Where is that telephone book? |
42123 | Where is the telephone book? |
42123 | Which way did the fellows go? |
42123 | Who do you think----? |
42123 | Why Professor Gates? |
42123 | Why did you do this thing? |
42123 | Why does n''t some one do something? |
42123 | Why, no-- doesn''t he usually call on Tuesday evenings? |
42123 | Will you give me a trial? |
42123 | Will you give me your attention one moment? |
42123 | Will you? |
42123 | Will you? |
42123 | You have n''t robbed three houses on this street within a week, I suppose? |
42123 | You were speaking of Hilda''s marriage? |
42123 | You''re not a burglar? |
42123 | You''re not going just as I''m coming? |
42123 | You? |
42123 | You? |
42123 | [_ Exit SUE, R._ MRS. B. Oh, Eric, how did you know where to find her? |
29229 | Mama, shall I go to the camp to- morrow, and see the General? |
29229 | Am_ I_ a man, To soothe the sorrows of a suffering friend? |
29229 | And how is call''d this-- honourable spy? |
29229 | And why were ye so early? |
29229 | Are_ they_ here? |
29229 | Art thou my André''s mother? |
29229 | Art thou now from our Commander? |
29229 | Betray our yeoman soldiers to destruction? |
29229 | Betray''d, perhaps-- Condemn''d without due circumstance made known? |
29229 | But tell me, Bland, say-- is the manner chang''d? |
29229 | But to be hung-- Is there no way to escape that infamy? |
29229 | But was it kind to leave me as thou didst--? |
29229 | But whence this grief, these tears, my mother? |
29229 | But why do you, At this dead hour of night, approach the camp, On foot, and thus alone? |
29229 | But why, my worthy friend, this agitation? |
29229 | Didst thou not give thy hand away From me? |
29229 | Didst thou not marry him? |
29229 | Dost thou think--? |
29229 | Frail nature shrinks.-- And_ is_ death then so fearful? |
29229 | Go home with thee? |
29229 | Hast thou no feeling? |
29229 | Hast thou no nobler motives for thy arms Than love of property and thirst of vengeance? |
29229 | Hast thou no sense of honour? |
29229 | Hast thou rude seas and hostile shores explor''d For this? |
29229 | Have I done ought to cause a mother''s sadness? |
29229 | How might I be deceiv''d? |
29229 | How speeds Honora? |
29229 | I am; and, Melville, I am fraught with news? |
29229 | I, who dared act Against my reason, my declared opinion; Against my conscience, and a soldier''s fame? |
29229 | In vengeance, Dooms not some better man to die for me? |
29229 | Is it not enough, just heaven, That I must lose this man? |
29229 | Is it not hard, my friend? |
29229 | Is it not so? |
29229 | Is it then wonderful, that he should brave A lesser evil to avoid a greater? |
29229 | Is there that state on earth which friendship can not cheer? |
29229 | Is''t not unjust? |
29229 | Justice is ours; what shall prevail against her? |
29229 | M''DONALD looks at him unmoved._] Dost thou not yet feel? |
29229 | Melville, my friend, you_ here_? |
29229 | My senses!--Do I dream--? |
29229 | Not married? |
29229 | Or would''st thou, by thy looks And gestures wild, o''erthrow that manly calmness Which, or assum''d or felt, so well becomes thy friend? |
29229 | Perhaps thou canst gain_ that_----? |
29229 | Rememberest thou, when cover''d o''er with wounds, And left upon the field, I fell the prey Of Britain? |
29229 | Rises not man for ever''gainst oppression? |
29229 | Say, am I not thy wife? |
29229 | Say, madam, is there no change of counsel, Or new determination? |
29229 | Seest thou these blushes? |
29229 | Shall I speak my thoughts of thee and him? |
29229 | Soliciting for me? |
29229 | Still dost thou call me friend? |
29229 | That_ pride_ encourag''d, Which, by denying us the rights of nations, Hath caus''d those ills which thou hast now portray''d? |
29229 | The General-- Seward--? |
29229 | The wife''s, the mother''s fears? |
29229 | Then, tho''all- powerful Europe league against us, And pour in arms her legions on our shores; Who is so dull would doubt their shameful flight? |
29229 | Think''st thou thy country would not curse the man, Who, by a clemency ill- tim''d, ill- judg''d, Encourag''d treason? |
29229 | Thou didst not mean to tempt our officers? |
29229 | Thou grantest my request? |
29229 | Thus am I answered? |
29229 | Thy father-- How could I but believe Honora''s father? |
29229 | To see my death? |
29229 | What art of reasoning, or what magic words, Can still the storm of fears these lines have rais''d? |
29229 | What does she here? |
29229 | What further says Sir Henry? |
29229 | What is''t o''clock? |
29229 | What mean''st thou, André? |
29229 | What mean''st thou, Bland? |
29229 | What mean''st thou, madam? |
29229 | What meanest thou? |
29229 | What means that cannon''s sound? |
29229 | What spur now goads thy warm imagination? |
29229 | What warded off the blow? |
29229 | What!--And must I die? |
29229 | What, shall worth weigh for nought? |
29229 | Where is he? |
29229 | Where is he? |
29229 | Where is this lovely victim? |
29229 | Who calls_ me_ friend? |
29229 | Who could injure her? |
29229 | Who doubt our safety, and our glorious triumph? |
29229 | Who has forgot when gallant ANDRÉ died? |
29229 | Who shall oppose his wife? |
29229 | Who''s there? |
29229 | Whose voice was that? |
29229 | Why are these little cheeks bedew''d with sorrow? |
29229 | Why is this? |
29229 | Why seek I André now? |
29229 | Why these tears? |
29229 | Why waited not yourself? |
29229 | Why, did not you tell us that Papa was to be home to- day? |
29229 | Why, why, my country, did I hesitate? |
29229 | Witness my shame? |
29229 | You''re from the South, if I presume aright? |
29229 | [_ Pause._] Art thou silent, Bland? |
29229 | [_ To M''DONALD._ Grant you that? |
29229 | _ Wilt_ thou deny me? |
29229 | can not one, so trifling in life''s scene, Fall, without drawing such a ponderous ruin? |
29229 | for, would''st thou, canst thou, think it? |
29229 | what dares not power to do? |
29229 | why didst thou not forget me? |
29229 | wouldst thou make me cause another traitor? |
50335 | What saw I? |
50335 | About twelve at noon, Pearson came alongside, With a loud speaking trumpet,"Whence came you?" |
50335 | And then-- why ask me? |
50335 | And what tho''its stripes shall be shredded in the storms? |
50335 | And what tho''its white shall be crimsoned with our blood? |
50335 | And where is that band who so vauntingly swore That the havoc of war and the battle''s confusion A home and a country shall leave us no more? |
50335 | And you? |
50335 | Can liberty be priced and sold? |
50335 | Come-- is not this a griper, That while your hopes are danced away,''Tis you must pay the piper? |
50335 | Do you love it or slavery best? |
50335 | Does any falter? |
50335 | Fear ye foes who kill for hire? |
50335 | From the vale On they come!--and will ye quail? |
50335 | Has our love all died out? |
50335 | Has the curse come at last which the fathers foretold? |
50335 | Have its altars grown cold? |
50335 | Her claim in war who seek to rob? |
50335 | Hope ye mercy still? |
50335 | In peace her sails fleck all the seas, Her mills shake every river; And where are scenes so fair as these God and her true hands give her? |
50335 | Now Tories all, what can ye say? |
50335 | O King, you''ve heard the sequel Of what we now subscribe: Is it not just and equal To tax this wealthy tribe? |
50335 | O Say, can you see by the dawn''s early light, What so proudly we hailed at the twilight''s last gleaming? |
50335 | O say, does the star- spangled banner yet wave O''er the land of the free and the home of the brave? |
50335 | Or stand they chance with hunting- shirts, Or hardy veteran feet, sir? |
50335 | Or the hands to be folded, till triumph is won And the eagle looks proud, as of old, to the sun? |
50335 | That seat of Science, Athens, And earth''s proud mistress, Rome; Where now are all their glories? |
50335 | The battle rolled on, till bold Pearson cried:"Have you yet struck your colors? |
50335 | The lily calmly braves the storm, And shall the palm- tree fear? |
50335 | They strike at the life of the State: Shall the murder be done? |
50335 | Was fear of hell, or want of faith, Or the brute''s common dread of death The passion that began a chase, Whose goal was ruin and disgrace? |
50335 | Was the fort by traitors won? |
50335 | Was there succor? |
50335 | What hangs upon the breeze? |
50335 | What looms upon our starboard bow? |
50335 | What though their shot fall round us here, yet thicker than the hail? |
50335 | What tongue the fearful sight may tell? |
50335 | What was done, Who could know? |
50335 | What''s the mercy despots feel? |
50335 | Who had fired the earliest gun? |
50335 | Who now will stand your sponsor, Your charges to defray? |
50335 | Why lulls Britannia''s thunder, That waked the wat''ry war? |
50335 | Why stays the gallant_ Guerrière_, Whose streamers waved so fair? |
50335 | Will ye give it up to slaves? |
50335 | Will ye look for greener graves? |
50335 | Will ye to your homes retire? |
50335 | Yet are red heels and long- laced skirts, For stumps and briars meet, sir? |
50335 | are such as ye The guardians of our liberty? |
50335 | is this the nation whose thundering arms were hurled, Through Europe, Afric, India? |
50335 | the flag of the free, Oh, where treads the foot that would falter for thee? |
50335 | whose navy ruled a world? |
50335 | would not grow warm When thoughts like these give cheer? |
39518 | ''Yes?'' 39518 Are there any more old places like this in New York?" |
39518 | Are they fighters? 39518 But what are we going to eat? |
39518 | Ca n''t we go, too? |
39518 | Ca n''t we parade down the hallway? 39518 Cross your heart?" |
39518 | Did Sam wire you he would meet us? |
39518 | Did Washington send a polite letter to Howe or any of the British, when he started a fight? |
39518 | Did he give up and let Howe get away with him and his army? 39518 Did he mean it?" |
39518 | Do any of you children know why Wall Street has its name? |
39518 | Do you mean us, too, when you say''any one''? |
39518 | How can we cross, when there is nothing to cross? |
39518 | How much can you pay for? |
39518 | I do n''t want it-- do you? |
39518 | I have it in the trunk.--Why? |
39518 | I suppose you will be glad to crack walnuts and shell them for cake, eh? |
39518 | I wish we had time to cross from here and visit Morristown-- it is not so far in distance, but have we time to- day? |
39518 | I''ll ask mother-- shall I? |
39518 | Is anything going on in New York to- day? |
39518 | Is it time for the luncheon? |
39518 | Is n''t it lovely? 39518 Is this one of your practical jokes again?" |
39518 | Is you''se all right in here? |
39518 | It''s kind of stuffy in the house, is n''t it? |
39518 | Jim, do you know what saved George from bumping his head on the ground of City Hall Park that day? |
39518 | Mother, did n''t you bring the copy of our Washington history with you? |
39518 | Mother, if you all are going to have a good time, why ca n''t we have ice cream and cake for a treat up in the parlor? |
39518 | Not unusual.--Why? |
39518 | Now that we have seen the sights on Wall Street, what else can we see downtown? |
39518 | Now what? 39518 Now, whad''s dat chile talkin''uv in his sleep? |
39518 | Now, what does that mean? |
39518 | Of course you two Southerners know who first settled our fine city? |
39518 | Oh, where''d you find them? |
39518 | Shall we jump down and let them laugh at us? |
39518 | Shall we warn them, or just fall in? |
39518 | Shall we whisper to father and ask him what he can afford to pay for? |
39518 | Surely you did n''t expect to come into this dining- room covered with mud and rags, did you? |
39518 | Train? 39518 Well, as you know it so well, why do n''t you tell it to us?" |
39518 | Well, did n''t you run back, too? |
39518 | What did you expect to do? |
39518 | What do you say if we wire the garage in New York that we will not return till to- morrow? 39518 What do you suppose we hurried and bathed and combed our hair and dressed up for, if not for the circus this afternoon?" |
39518 | What do you think? 39518 What hotel are we going to?" |
39518 | What shall we do if some of them follow us up here and try to catch us? |
39518 | What shall we do? |
39518 | What shall we order? |
39518 | What shall we visit to- day? |
39518 | What''s on the other side of your high fence? |
39518 | What''s the matter there, father? 39518 What_ are_ you all laughing at, anyway?" |
39518 | When did you get home? |
39518 | Where are the stolen children? |
39518 | Where are you going, father? |
39518 | Where did you find them, officer? |
39518 | Where is it? |
39518 | Where? |
39518 | Who are you? |
39518 | Who can tell the story of Stony Point? |
39518 | Who knows what this is? |
39518 | Why, I do n''t think we''ll need any dinner, do you? 39518 Why, I think Benjamin Franklin did, did n''t he, Jack?" |
39518 | Why, this hallway is our river, ca n''t you see? 39518 Will you have enough to pay for a dish of ice cream and a sandwich?" |
39518 | ''Where is it?'' |
39518 | After greetings were all over, Jack began:"Daddy, are we going to do anything to- day? |
39518 | And what do you suppose Jim did? |
39518 | Are n''t you coming?" |
39518 | Are these our children?" |
39518 | But it took Washington''s army to lick them, did n''t it, father?" |
39518 | CHAPTER VIII A FIGHT WITH THE HESSIANS"Children, have you planned to do anything this morning?" |
39518 | Ca n''t we help?" |
39518 | Could five bellboys have played that joke? |
39518 | Could n''t we leave the children to go to bed alone for this time?" |
39518 | Do n''t you remember?" |
39518 | Do they play fair?" |
39518 | Do you know where you are going, uncle?" |
39518 | Do you remember how soft and squashy they were when they hit you in the head?" |
39518 | He diden bump, did he?" |
39518 | Hear them shouting and things bumping about up there?" |
39518 | Is dat all right foh de whole party?" |
39518 | Is some one killed?" |
39518 | Is this the way my historical readings are interpreted?" |
39518 | Nothing like a little fight to give one an appetite, eh?" |
39518 | The boys stood looking over the motley assortment of things, when suddenly Jack exclaimed:"What do you say to playing war? |
39518 | The waiter shouted and berated Maggie, and she pulled at her hair and rolled her eyes upward, crying:"What shall I do? |
39518 | We would n''t think of boarding anywhere else, would we, when we are related to Martha?''" |
39518 | What boy or girl does not worship his first watch, and find it necessary to consult the time every few minutes during the first days it is carried? |
39518 | What do you think he was reading?" |
39518 | What has happened to thim children? |
39518 | What shall I do? |
39518 | While waiting for dessert( the children had ice cream every time) Mr. Davis remarked:"Any one want to go to the theatre to- night? |
39518 | Who told you about it?" |
39518 | You out of bed?" |
12244 | ''Do n''t you find it rather dull?'' |
12244 | ''Pope taught him rhythm, Prior ease, Praed buoyancy and banter; What modern bard would learn from these? |
12244 | ''What,''said he,''could Chesterfield expect? |
12244 | ''Where,''asks Mr. Ernest Cushing Richardson, the librarian of Princetown University, New Jersey, U.S.A.,''lies the germ of the library?'' |
12244 | ''Why, then, should we desire to be deceived?'' |
12244 | Are we generous? |
12244 | Are we mean? |
12244 | As to ideas, have we got any new ones since 1871? |
12244 | But in the meantime what had become of the congregations committed to their charge? |
12244 | But round what are our memories of Disraeli to cluster? |
12244 | But this subject why pursue? |
12244 | But what promoted the anxiety? |
12244 | But what was he to do? |
12244 | But what was to happen when the last Bishop died? |
12244 | But who knows what may happen to- morrow? |
12244 | But would it diminish the wonder to suppose the two to be one? |
12244 | But, as Mr. Ogle, of Bootle, pertinently asked at the Conference,''Are his views yet accepted?'' |
12244 | But_ does_ he know it? |
12244 | Can anything less like such a style be imagined? |
12244 | Carlyle once asked,''How long will John Bull permit this absurd monkey''--meaning Mr. Disraeli--''to dance upon his stomach?'' |
12244 | Could it be ambition? |
12244 | Did Shakespeare write the plays? |
12244 | Did he look forward to being his father''s biographer? |
12244 | Do we expect to be put to open shame at the Great Day of Judgment? |
12244 | Do we forget all about it when we have turned the corner? |
12244 | Do we melt at the sight of misery? |
12244 | From whom were these unblotted copies received, and what became of them? |
12244 | From whose custody did those''papers''come? |
12244 | Had it not been, one might be tempted to ask, Why twelve? |
12244 | Having regard, then, to 5 Edward VII., chapter 12, how ought one to feel towards the decision of the House of Lords in the Scottish Churches case? |
12244 | How can we help it? |
12244 | How many of the books published in 1905 would have any copyright cash value in A.D. 2000? |
12244 | How on earth did the plays get themselves written? |
12244 | How was Symonds to know that Milton''s fame was to outlive Cleveland''s or Flatman''s? |
12244 | If a round dozen of Bad Women, all made in England too, does not satisfy me, what will? |
12244 | If affection did not dictate these letters, what did? |
12244 | If asked, What can''the bulk of mankind''know about law? |
12244 | If no-- who did? |
12244 | If the multi- millionaire wants a thing, why should he not have it? |
12244 | Is it a vital or a vulgar idea? |
12244 | Is it merely a big theory or really a great one? |
12244 | Is it not the counterpart of Parliament, its dark and majestic shadow thrown across the page of history? |
12244 | Is it the ornate beginning of a Time, or but the tawdry ending of a period? |
12244 | Mr. Gosse''s book ought not to be read in a fierce, nagging spirit which demands, What is the good of this? |
12244 | Of what did they consist? |
12244 | One play in forty is liberal measure, but who is to say out of the forty plays which is the one worthy to be housed in a noble library? |
12244 | Should any distinction in law be struck between a Tennyson and a Tupper? |
12244 | Since 1871 we have learnt the answer to the sombre lesson,''What is it to grow old?'' |
12244 | Since when has it become a crime to be dull? |
12244 | Sir William Fraser speaks rapturously of his wondrous mind and of his intellect, but where is posterity to look for evidences of either? |
12244 | The Judge, the late Mr. Justice Cave, an excellent lawyer of the old school, snarled out,''Do you think you could explain to_ me_ what is taste?'' |
12244 | The taste of Vice- Chancellors and Heads of Houses, of keepers and under- keepers of libraries-- can anybody trust it? |
12244 | Then there are those who can never get rid of the impression that Hannah More''fagged''her four sisters mercilessly; but who can tell? |
12244 | They were ridiculed by the politicians of the day for their supersensitiveness; but what were they to do? |
12244 | To speak seriously, who are librarians, and whence come they in such numbers? |
12244 | Two better men than Kettlewell and Dodwell are nowhere to be found, and as for vigorous writing, where is Charles Leslie to be matched? |
12244 | Was it literary fame for himself? |
12244 | Was it natural affection-- a father''s love? |
12244 | Were we good sons or dutiful daughters? |
12244 | What a price for a book, and where are they to be put, and who is to dust them?'' |
12244 | What about his freethinking? |
12244 | What ails the fellow at them? |
12244 | What are they? |
12244 | What can you mind politics so for? |
12244 | What do they matter? |
12244 | What do we mean by a good man or a bad one, a good woman or a bad one? |
12244 | What does that matter? |
12244 | What made the son treasure them so carefully? |
12244 | Where did he get it from? |
12244 | Where else save in the pages of_ Hansard_ can we make ourselves fully acquainted with the history of the Mother of Free Institutions? |
12244 | Where had they been all the seven years? |
12244 | Where were our young politicians? |
12244 | Where, when, and how did the author pick up his multifarious learnings? |
12244 | Which was the Itinerist? |
12244 | Who are they? |
12244 | Who can doubt that they were right, holding the faith they did? |
12244 | Who now reads even Mr. Greg''s_ Creed of Christendom_, which is in effect, though not in substance, the same kind of book? |
12244 | Whoever really cared a snap of his fingers for the contents of another man''s library, unless he is known to be dying? |
12244 | Why should I? |
12244 | Why to them? |
12244 | Will the rabble, we wonder, prove as teachable as the middle class? |
12244 | Will they buy the photograph of their physician, or heave half a brick at him? |
12244 | Will they consent to be told their faults as meekly? |
12244 | _ First_.--Was the decision wrong? |
12244 | _ Question_:"And with what feelings, Mr. Blayds, ought we to regard the decalogue?" |
12244 | be grudged to turn that reading talent into right and safe channels, where it may work for the public welfare and economy?'' |
12244 | between-- But why multiply examples? |
12244 | or, Who cares for that? |
38941 | Ah,said the admiral,"you a Coffin too?" |
38941 | And now? |
38941 | Are they quite full? |
38941 | Are you General Prescott? |
38941 | But, Ben, do you believe in dreams? |
38941 | Certes,thought I,"if it''s none of your business, why do you ask?" |
38941 | Did you ever see Cotton Mather''s''History of New England?'' 38941 Do n''t you see the silvery wave? |
38941 | Do you see yonder cloud that''s almost in shape of a camel? |
38941 | Do you think they will take me in over there? |
38941 | Do you think,he was asked,"that in such a crowd it was the fashion or the desire for instruction which dominated?" |
38941 | Have you,demanded the emperor,"among your officers any one who is acquainted with Ragusa?" |
38941 | How old are you? |
38941 | Is the cool summer injuring your corn? |
38941 | Let him go,growls an old writer;"has not Sir Harry other sons but him?" |
38941 | May I ask your Majesty,said the_ ruse_ old Briton,"if this would be your policy in case the colonies had belonged to you?" |
38941 | Or like a whale? |
38941 | Says Tweed to Till,''What gars ye rin sae still?'' 38941 Shall_ we_ make the signal, sir?" |
38941 | There is, then,I suggested,"something in a name at sea as well as ashore?" |
38941 | Wa''al,said an old fellow, removing a short pipe from between his lips,"you was jest a- cannin''on it up, warn''t ye?" |
38941 | What are we poor fellows going to do when they catch up all the porgees? |
38941 | What constitutes a state? 38941 What do you call him?" |
38941 | What is your authority? |
38941 | What on airth do you want to look at that rock for? |
38941 | Whither bound? |
38941 | Will monseigneur deign to show me his commission? |
38941 | ( Do you know, Monsieur de Calonne, that my father is as crazy as ever?) |
38941 | And what has become of the gate- ways of a thousand palaces? |
38941 | And why not? |
38941 | At last West said,''Are you dead, Stuart?'' |
38941 | Bright eyes that followed fading ship and crew, Melting in tender rain?" |
38941 | But the fishing, what of that? |
38941 | Do n''t you hear the voice of God?" |
38941 | Does not this sufficiently show that all human power and greatness is in the soul of man? |
38941 | Here, indeed, was the town, but where were the people? |
38941 | History is said to repeat itself, and why may not the whale- fishing? |
38941 | How did Marblehead look in the olden time? |
38941 | How is the historian to follow such a clue? |
38941 | I know''tan''t none o''my business; but what might you be agoin''to Mount Desart arter?" |
38941 | I then asked if those Friends were Jesuits? |
38941 | I then demanded of him and his associates then present if they acknowledged themselves subject to the laws of England? |
38941 | I then said by what law do you put our friends to death? |
38941 | I was not at all surprised when accosted by one who, like me, wandered and wondered, with the question,"Does any body live in Nantucket?" |
38941 | Is it possible, you ask, that such a waste should ever be the cause of heart- burnings, or know the name of bond, mortgage, or warranty? |
38941 | It was after a visit to some such mansion that Daniel Webster asked,"Did those old fellows go to bed in a coach- and- four?" |
38941 | Its roof and tower are of wood, and, being here, what else could it have but a fish for its weather- vane? |
38941 | Met him, did I say? |
38941 | Or have we eaten of the insane root, That takes the reason prisoner?" |
38941 | Or is it, mayhap, a softening of his great, sluggish brain? |
38941 | Peters._"How dare you look into the court to say such a word?" |
38941 | Reader, are you? |
38941 | Shall we be baffled by such a one as this? |
38941 | Supposing this doctrine correct, it becomes an interesting question where the sailors of future navies are to come from? |
38941 | The stranger''s puzzled questioning is often met with,"You know that old house in such a street?" |
38941 | The tradition of the embassy of Alden, and of the incomparably arch rejoinder of Priscilla,"Prythee, John, why do n''t you speak for yourself?" |
38941 | The vaunting, the exasperating mockery of a savage, is in these lines:''Who is there here to fight with the brave Wattawamat?'' |
38941 | The word"[ Hudson?]" |
38941 | Turning to the by- standers, he exclaimed:"My maisters whar is your harts? |
38941 | We commiserate the situation of an individual out of business; what shall we, then, say of a town thrown out of employment? |
38941 | What do they say to us? |
38941 | What does he want with it? |
38941 | What if she designed to edify her own family in her own meetings, may none else be present?" |
38941 | What should a sheep see in the ocean? |
38941 | What would now be thought of domiciliary visits like the following? |
38941 | When the captain replied,"I suppose, my lord, Admiral Collingwood will now take upon himself the direction of affairs?" |
38941 | Where is he?" |
38941 | Who cares for them?" |
38941 | Who have passed this way? |
38941 | Why may not the cotton- wood, which propagates itself in the sand on the borders of Western rivers, prove a valuable auxiliary here? |
38941 | Why might they not say to those after- comers,"We are the Jasons; we have won the fleece?" |
38941 | Will it ever come down again? |
38941 | Would not Canonicus have led the white men to the spot, and there recounted the traditions of his people? |
38941 | _ Banquo._"Were such things here as we do speak about? |
38941 | _ Governor._"Who be they?" |
38941 | _ Governor._"Will you, Mr. Coggeshall, say that she did not say so?" |
38941 | he repeated;"why, Joe''s a living man; but where''s his mates?" |
38941 | how dare you go About the town half- dressed and looking so?" |
38941 | if I knew, could I not have all myself?" |
38941 | my fancie, whither wilt thou go?" |
40412 | Can Love be controlled by Advice? |
40412 | Is Life Worth Living? |
40412 | Is n''t God upon the ocean Just the same as on the land? |
40412 | What is to be done? |
40412 | Why thus Longing? |
40412 | Why wait,he said,"why wait for May, When love can warm a winter''s day?" |
40412 | ''ABD- URRAHMÁN JAMI, the last of Persia''s classic poets, was born in Jam, Khorasan, in 1414, and died in May(? |
40412 | ), 1650(?). |
40412 | ), March 15(? |
40412 | ), about 1575, and died in London(? |
40412 | ), and died in 1597(?). |
40412 | ), and died in Spain, 102(?). |
40412 | ), and died there in 1123(?). |
40412 | ), in 1661( or at Bolam, Durham, 1660), and died in London(? |
40412 | A stranger hither? |
40412 | ALEXANDRE DUMAS, the Elder, an illustrious French dramatist and romancist, was born at Villière Cotterets, Aisne, July 24, 1803(? |
40412 | ALGERNON SIDNEY, a noted English republican patriot, was born at Penshurst, Kent, in 1622(? |
40412 | ANACREON, a famous lyric poet, of Greece, was born at Teos, in Ionia, 562(?) |
40412 | Among his writings are:"Can Abolitionists Vote or Take Office?" |
40412 | And what is joy? |
40412 | And what is sorrow? |
40412 | Are your houses regulated, your children instructed, the afflicted relieved, the poor visited, the work of piety accomplished? |
40412 | Be she fairer than the day, Or the flowery meads in May, If she be not so to me, What care I how fair she be? |
40412 | Child of mortality, whence comest thou? |
40412 | Cruel is death? |
40412 | DECEMBER DECEMBER What is the greatest bliss That the tongue o''man can name? |
40412 | Do n''t you remember, sweet Alice, Ben Bolt? |
40412 | ETIENNE PIVERT DE SÉNANCOUR, a distinguished French writer, born at Paris, March 4(? |
40412 | Else whence this pleasing hope, this fond desire, This longing after immortality? |
40412 | FOOTNOTES:[ 1] Is there no tyrant but the crowned one? |
40412 | FRANÇOIS VILLON, a renowned French poet, was born in 1431, and died 1460(?). |
40412 | GEOFFREY CHAUCER, the father of English poetry, was born in London(? |
40412 | GEORGE COLMAN, THE YOUNGER, a famous English dramatist and humorous poet, was born in London(? |
40412 | GEORGE PEELE, a famous English dramatist, was born in 1553(? |
40412 | HARRIET WATERS PRESTON, a distinguished American scholar, translator, and writer, was born in Danvers, Mass., January 14(? |
40412 | HESIOD, a renowned Greek poet, born at Ascra in Boeotia, and lived in the ninth century(? |
40412 | Have you sent to the apothecary for a sufficient quantity of cream of tartar to make lemonade? |
40412 | He has published:"Robert Browning,""Charles Dickens,""George Bernard Shaw,""What''s Wrong with the World?" |
40412 | He wrote:"Barriers Burned Away,""What Can She Do?" |
40412 | He wrote:"Our Old Church: What Shall We Do With It?" |
40412 | He wrote:"The Hermit of Warkworth,"the song,"O Nanny, Wilt Thou Gang Wi''Me?" |
40412 | He wrote:"The New Magdalen,""No Name,""Antonia,""Basil,""The Dead Secret,""Armadale,""Man and Wife,""Poor Miss Finch,""Miss or Mrs.?" |
40412 | His best known works are:"In the Midst of Life,""Shapes of Clay,"and"Can Such Things Be?" |
40412 | His"Sermons"were edited by Dr. Lyman Abbott in 1868. Who can refute a sneer? |
40412 | How comes it to pass, then, that we appear such cowards in reasoning, and are so afraid to stand the test of ridicule? |
40412 | How shall I charm the interval that lowers Between this time and that sweet time of grace? |
40412 | I loved thee once, I''ll love no more, Thine be the grief as is the blame; Thou art not what thou wast before, What reason I should be the same? |
40412 | I reply,"Liberty for whom to do what?" |
40412 | If on a Spring night, I went by And God were standing there, What is the prayer that I would cry To Him? |
40412 | If you ask me,"Do you favor liberty?" |
40412 | Is life so dear or peace so sweet as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
40412 | Is she not more than painting can express, Or youthful poets fancy when they love? |
40412 | JEAN BAPTISTE POQUELIN( MOLIÈRE), the greatest of French dramatists, was born in Paris, January 15(? |
40412 | JEAN DE LA BRUYÈRE, a famous French moralist and satirist, was born in Paris, August 30(? |
40412 | JOHANN AMOS COMENIUS, an illustrious theologian and educator, was born at Nivnitz(? |
40412 | JOHN BUNYAN, a renowned English author, was born in Elstow, Bedford, November 19(? |
40412 | JOHN DUNLOP, a noted Scottish song- writer, was born March 25(? |
40412 | JOHN FLETCHER, the renowned English dramatist, was born in Rye, Sussex, December 20(? |
40412 | JOHN GOWER, a noted English poet, was born in Kent in 1325(? |
40412 | JOSEPH MAZZINI, a famous Italian patriot, was born at Genoa, June 28(? |
40412 | JULIA PARDOE, a noted English historical and miscellaneous writer, was born at Beverly, Yorkshire, December 11(? |
40412 | LUCY LARCOM, a noted American poet, was born at Beverly, Mass., June 23(? |
40412 | MARGARET JUNKIN PRESTON, a celebrated American author, was born in Philadelphia, Pa., December 19(? |
40412 | MARTIAL, a famous Latin poet, was born at Bilbilis, Spain, A.D. 50(? |
40412 | MARY ELIZABETH MAPES DODGE, a noted American editor, poet and author, was born in New York City, December 20(? |
40412 | N''est- on jamais tyran qu''avec un diadème? |
40412 | NATHANIEL LEE, a celebrated English dramatist, was born in 1653(? |
40412 | NICHOLAS ROWE, a distinguished English dramatist and poet- laureate, was born at Little Barford, Bedfordshire, June 30(? |
40412 | O Mother dear, Jerusalem, When shall I come to Thee? |
40412 | OMAR KHAYYÁM, a celebrated Persian poet, mathematician, and astronomer, was born at Nishapur, in 1050(? |
40412 | Or make pale my cheeks with care,''Cause another''s rosy are? |
40412 | Or whence this secret dread and inward horror Of falling into naught? |
40412 | Quis legem det amantibus? |
40412 | ROBERT BLAIR, a noted Scottish poet, was born at Edinburgh, April 19(? |
40412 | SADI, one of the greatest of Persian poets, was born at Shiraz, in 1184, and died in 1291(?). |
40412 | SIR JOHN DENHAM, a noted English poet, was born in Dublin, 1615, and died in London(? |
40412 | SIR SAMUEL GARTH, a renowned English physician and poet, was born in Yorkshire(? |
40412 | ST. JOHN CHRYSOSTOM, a noted Greek Church father, born in Antioch, Syria, 350(? |
40412 | Shall I, wasting in despair, Die because a woman''s fair? |
40412 | THOMAS CHANDLER HALIBURTON( SAM SLICK), a famous Canadian author, was born at Windsor, Nova Scotia, September 26(? |
40412 | THOMAS HEYWOOD, a famous English dramatic poet, was born in Lincolnshire(? |
40412 | THOMAS WARTON, a distinguished English clergyman, critic, was born at Basingstoke, August 1(? |
40412 | Thy joys when shall I see? |
40412 | WILLIAM PALEY, a noted English divine and philosopher, was born at Peterborough, June 25(? |
40412 | What are they? |
40412 | What is it? |
40412 | What is philosophy? |
40412 | What right have we human beings to happiness? |
40412 | What shall I do with all the days and hours That must be counted ere I see thy face? |
40412 | What shall I render to my God For all his gifts to me? |
40412 | When shall my sorrows have an end? |
40412 | Where are the cities of old time? |
40412 | Where did you come from, baby dear? |
40412 | Who can blame me if I cherish the belief that the world is still young-- that there are great possibilities in store for it? |
40412 | Who will not mercie unto others show, How can he mercy ever hope to have? |
40412 | Why is thy countenance sad, and why are thine eyes red with weeping? |
40412 | Why shrinks the soul Back on herself, and startles at destruction? |
40412 | You hail from Dreamland, Dragon- fly? |
40412 | You k''n hide de fier, but w''at you gwine do wid de smoke? |
40412 | [ 5] What law can bind lovers? |
40412 | thy everlasting light? |
40412 | why should sorrow O''er that brow a shadow fling? |
28527 | And what are ye doin''comin''into my kitchen, I''d like to know? |
28527 | And what name be ye usin''hereabouts? |
28527 | And you? |
28527 | Are you a stranger hereabouts? |
28527 | Are you at liberty to tell? |
28527 | Are you ready? |
28527 | BOS''N Who are you? |
28527 | But if he comes across Long Island Sound-- do you realize what that may mean to us? |
28527 | CUNNINGHAM Ah--[_sound of tearing paper_] MONTRESSOR What are you doing, sir? |
28527 | CUNNINGHAM[_ coming up_] Where''s the prisoner? |
28527 | Ca n''t you conclude your sport and let me go? |
28527 | Can I be of any assistance to you? |
28527 | Can we go at once? |
28527 | D''ye see a small boat comin''into shore? |
28527 | DREW Anything there? |
28527 | DREW Do you live on the Island? |
28527 | DREW Have n''t we met somewhere? |
28527 | DREW Know him? |
28527 | DREW Look here, men-- what about his boots? |
28527 | DREW Oh, very well-- wait-- MRS. CHICHESTER Now what''s the matter? |
28527 | DREW We''re enjoying ourselves, are n''t we, boys? |
28527 | DREW Where? |
28527 | DREW[_ jovially_] Perhaps you know that delightfully charming lady who keeps the tavern-- Mrs. Chichester? |
28527 | DREW[_ low_] Who''s that gentleman over there? |
28527 | Did you come to see him? |
28527 | Did you take particular notice of the man sitting alone in the corner? |
28527 | Do n''t them boots of yours need new soles? |
28527 | Do n''t you remember Lieutenant Pond? |
28527 | Do you know him? |
28527 | Find anything in his pockets? |
28527 | HALE Are you at liberty today-- at liberty to do a little work for me? |
28527 | HALE Can you give it to me? |
28527 | HALE Can you read them? |
28527 | HALE Had I better hide? |
28527 | HALE Have you any idea what the General''s next move will be? |
28527 | HALE Hello, William, that you? |
28527 | HALE I wonder if you could hide some notes I''ve gathered in the same way? |
28527 | HALE If by any chance I fail to return, will you see that my uniform and other effects are sent to my family? |
28527 | HALE Is General Washington in his office now? |
28527 | HALE Is this the shop of Simon Carter, the shoemaker? |
28527 | HALE Pull away,[_ noise of regular rattle of oars in the lock and the swish of water continuing_] HULL Where are you going first, Nathan? |
28527 | HALE What is that, sir? |
28527 | HALE What-- what''s the meaning of this? |
28527 | HALE Why? |
28527 | HALE Yes? |
28527 | HALE You can do it without endangering yourself or your boat? |
28527 | HALE[_ low_] Have you any information for the General? |
28527 | HULL Are you going directly to that shoemaker the General referred you to? |
28527 | HULL But he did n''t order you to act the spy, did he? |
28527 | HULL How are you going about it? |
28527 | HULL In disguise? |
28527 | HULL Look here-- if I get permission to leave here, wo n''t you let me go in your place? |
28527 | HULL On the staff? |
28527 | HULL Shall I hail them? |
28527 | HULL Sure that''s it? |
28527 | HULL What regiment are you in? |
28527 | HULL Yes-- and what''s that? |
28527 | He was n''t mistaken? |
28527 | Hm-- what''s this? |
28527 | How long have you been in the navy? |
28527 | I jumped at the chance-- HALE Who would n''t? |
28527 | I wonder if you would meet me at the same place you are going to leave me-- say, a week from tonight? |
28527 | I wonder what it can be doin''here? |
28527 | I''ll be there-- unless-- POND Yes? |
28527 | In my tavern? |
28527 | Is that the best you can do? |
28527 | Knowlton''s Rangers, eh? |
28527 | MONTRESSOR Do you know anything about the prisoner? |
28527 | MONTRESSOR May I ask your name and rank? |
28527 | MONTRESSOR May I introduce myself? |
28527 | MONTRESSOR What did you do that for? |
28527 | MONTRESSOR Will you come into my tent? |
28527 | MONTRESSOR[_ off_] I''m sorry, Captain Hale, but the Marshal is waiting for you-- have you finished your letters? |
28527 | MRS. CHICHESTER And then? |
28527 | MRS. CHICHESTER Can I help ye to anything else, sir? |
28527 | MRS. CHICHESTER The nice- lookin''young feller in the brown suit? |
28527 | MRS. CHICHESTER What was that you said? |
28527 | MRS. CHICHESTER Yes? |
28527 | May I ask you to deliver these letters at your first opportunity? |
28527 | Not on spy duty, I hope? |
28527 | Now will you trade jobs with me? |
28527 | POND Good, why? |
28527 | POND How long will you be on Long Island? |
28527 | POND What? |
28527 | SIMON Are ye from Huntington? |
28527 | SIMON Eh? |
28527 | SIMON Now, where''s that awl? |
28527 | SIMON See here? |
28527 | SIMON Then ye_ have_ met him? |
28527 | SIMON Well, listen-- come close-- HALE Yes? |
28527 | SIMON Yer a schoolmaster, I take it from the looks o''ye? |
28527 | Some chance to distinguish yourself, while I-- HALE Why, what''s wrong with a staff appointment? |
28527 | This here sole? |
28527 | This is new business for you, is n''t it? |
28527 | VOICE I say, halt there-- where are you going? |
28527 | WASHINGTON Can you get them? |
28527 | WASHINGTON Will you sit here? |
28527 | What have ye got? |
28527 | What have you to say to that, my fine rebel? |
28527 | What is it? |
28527 | What is it? |
28527 | What''s wanted? |
28527 | When do we start? |
28527 | Where''s the prisoner? |
28527 | Who are you, and what do you want? |
28527 | Who would have expected a rebel to know Latin? |
28527 | Will you give me passage to Long Island, and land me in some secluded spot? |
28527 | Will you help me? |
28527 | You do n''t by any chance happen to be Captain Hale? |
28527 | Your reckoning? |
28527 | [_ door closes_] HALE Now, where have I met that man? |
28527 | [_ door closes_] HULL[_ coming in_] Well, Nathan, what news? |
28527 | [_ rattle of oar in oarlock_] All ready? |
28527 | [_ rattle of paper_] SIMON Pshaw, now-- what kind o''writin''is this? |
28527 | [_ sound of tearing cloth_] HALE Why am I suffering this indignity? |
52416 | And can you recommend the best inn that has a good cellar and table? 52416 But you had a method of study in your school- days?" |
52416 | Ca n''t you send me with a guard of honor? |
52416 | Can you recall the plot of the tale? |
52416 | Did a telegram from me reach Dr. Wainwright last evening? |
52416 | Did you complete the story? |
52416 | Did you see the money she''s got? 52416 Do you advise young authors to quote largely, or depend upon others for ideas?" |
52416 | Do you intend seeking an appointment? |
52416 | Do you not suppose some one is coming to meet me? |
52416 | For what do they use that? |
52416 | Have you seen any of my people lately? |
52416 | How did you do it? |
52416 | How did you first come to think of writing? |
52416 | How''s the ice? |
52416 | How, Captain Marto? |
52416 | I mean just this,said George:"you are English-- John Bulls, are you not? |
52416 | Method? |
52416 | ON, KINGFISHER, HOW FARES YOUR QUEEN? 52416 Oh, you be Dr. Wainwright''s darter that''s been to foreign parts, be you? |
52416 | Then you actually performed before a paying audience? |
52416 | What can I do for you, my hero? |
52416 | What have we here? |
52416 | What mean you? |
52416 | What''s that, I say? |
52416 | Where shall my boxes be carried, sister? |
52416 | Why? 52416 Will you give us the honor of breakfasting with our mess? |
52416 | You believe, then, that small details are of large importance in literary work? |
52416 | You mean, I presume, the drama by Robert Dale Owen? |
52416 | And who should know better than those who have studied up on the subject and who can give you the"reason why"? |
52416 | At this instant,"Is this Grace Wainwright?" |
52416 | Did the moth die of hunger or suffocation; if so, why did not the worm die in the shell? |
52416 | Do we not all agree, then, that Vocal Music has power to benefit every side of the child nature? |
52416 | Do you know what became of it?" |
52416 | Have you noticed the churned- up white water that flows away behind her? |
52416 | Herbert Spencer puts his final test of any plan of culture in the form of a question,"Does it create a pleasurable excitement in the pupils?" |
52416 | His plate is back again For buckwheat cakes? |
52416 | Ho!--hum!--tell me What is this woe That lays poor Bobby low Each morning just at school- time, yet so fleet is? |
52416 | How could it be a cocoon if the worm did not make it? |
52416 | How is it possible, we are often asked, to steer such a great vessel as the modern ocean liner? |
52416 | Is it the olden time Nineoelockitis That as a boy I had so frequently? |
52416 | Mother, is there any change in your pocket- book?" |
52416 | Then turning to Mildred:"My mother is no better, is she? |
52416 | Was he not being made the victim of a wild, reckless enthusiast? |
52416 | We were going over to your house, and may we take you? |
52416 | What have I done?" |
52416 | What if this uncle were in New York at present? |
52416 | What was he going to face? |
52416 | What was the cause of this?" |
52416 | What''s that? |
52416 | When I unpacked them, what do you suppose I found? |
52416 | Who''s got the money? |
52416 | Why did it lay_ all_ the eggs in one shell? |
52416 | Why did the moth or worm bore the hole and lay the eggs? |
52416 | Would he ever have his arm around his brother''s shoulder again, or would he ever feel the comforting touch of William''s arm about his own? |
52416 | Would you be willing to give us an idea of your method?" |
52416 | lengthy?" |
16156 | A rebel, I say? |
16156 | A rebel? |
16156 | And have you kept this-- this sport secret? |
16156 | And he? |
16156 | And now, Andy, what next? |
16156 | And now,questioned Ruth in a soft whisper,"what comes next, Andy?" |
16156 | And where have you fared? |
16156 | And you, sir? |
16156 | And, sir, do you know the British are bringing their ships up the river? |
16156 | Andy, do you think the fellow thought you dealt that blow? |
16156 | Andy, lad, is it you? |
16156 | Berrying? |
16156 | But sair tired? |
16156 | But suppose anything should happen to you? |
16156 | But we''re not going to let him be wasted, are we Andy? |
16156 | But you would act it? |
16156 | Can you get up, miss? |
16156 | Can you tell me why he stayed here? |
16156 | Could it be? |
16156 | Could there be a secret passage? |
16156 | Could you, Andy? |
16156 | Could you-- could you, Ruth? |
16156 | Did you strike this soldier? |
16156 | Do not, or will not tell? |
16156 | Do you lead, or shall I? |
16156 | Does your leg hurt awful, Ruthie? |
16156 | Does your lordship observe there are no marks on the road that bespeak the recent passing of a regiment? 16156 Fine night, Martin; everything quiet?" |
16156 | Have you the letters written? |
16156 | Have you thought where you would like to go? |
16156 | How can you prove me wrong? |
16156 | How did it happen? |
16156 | How did you get your cane? |
16156 | How do we know,she went on,"but that the gentleman was on the great Washington''s business? |
16156 | How then? |
16156 | How would I know such an one? |
16156 | I fancied so,he said,"and they are?" |
16156 | I will come every day unless-- you know, Ruth? |
16156 | I wonder if any life is really hard, dear Ruth, where--"Love lifts the burden? 16156 I, Ruth? |
16156 | Is it a bargain? |
16156 | Is that hearsay, Norton, or authentic? 16156 Is there anything else we can do for you?" |
16156 | Is there no work for me to do? 16156 Keep on living it? |
16156 | Martin, do you know that boy? |
16156 | Mine? |
16156 | Mother, you would not be an eavesdropper? |
16156 | No,grumbled the sentinel, lowering his weapon;"what''s your business?" |
16156 | Now that you have come from your hole, you young mole, good- morning to you, and where have you fared? |
16156 | Paths such as this all over the woods? |
16156 | Quiet? 16156 Shame you, Andy? |
16156 | Was our dear schoolmaster, Nathan Hale, the spy? |
16156 | We''ll do his work, wo n''t we? 16156 What have you?" |
16156 | What kind are you hunting? |
16156 | What matters? |
16156 | What secret? |
16156 | What will mother do? |
16156 | What will she do? |
16156 | Whatever has happened? |
16156 | Where did you get these? |
16156 | Where do you go? |
16156 | Where is he? |
16156 | Which road did they take? |
16156 | Which way leads most directly to Manhattanville? |
16156 | Which way? |
16156 | Would you bear a message, and try to find him? |
16156 | You are the widow''s son? 16156 You do not recognize him?" |
16156 | You heard that? |
16156 | You really mean to be a minister? |
16156 | You-- you are going? |
16156 | Your chance, Andy? |
16156 | But how could he reach her? |
16156 | But what shall I do?" |
16156 | Did the rebels pass this way?" |
16156 | How can he lead a mounted troop?" |
16156 | How, then, had he died, and where? |
16156 | I see you prodding around rocks and weeds with your noses in books, but I want to know what you mean on this road?" |
16156 | Is not the task too great?" |
16156 | Is there no place in the ranks for such as I?" |
16156 | Janie clung to the hand of this new, strange, but well- loved son,"whatever shall I do? |
16156 | May I pass?" |
16156 | Pray, good fellow, is not this his Majesty''s highway, and free to all?" |
16156 | Ruthie, is there a keyhole?" |
16156 | Should she follow? |
16156 | Should you know Washington were you to see him?" |
16156 | Success or failure? |
16156 | The heart under the coarse cotton frock beat high with pride, and-- yes, shame, for how was the boy to make himself known? |
16156 | Then, very quietly:"Andy, what was the master''s name?" |
16156 | There were several roads ahead; which was safest and quickest? |
16156 | They knew merely that Andy had ferried the great General across the river-- was that not enough? |
16156 | To whom are the others addressed?" |
16156 | Was it friend or foe? |
16156 | Washington is too dangerous to leave longer alone; should he find out-- what was that?" |
16156 | We''ll show the Britishers how we can repay, wo n''t we, Andy?" |
16156 | What ails you, lass?" |
16156 | What could he do? |
16156 | What else could you have done? |
16156 | What mattered? |
16156 | What then? |
16156 | When had Janie ever pleaded before? |
16156 | Where could he turn for comfort? |
16156 | Which way? |
16156 | Who so well fitted as I?" |
16156 | Who struck that blow?" |
16156 | Why do you ask?" |
16156 | Would he remember it? |
16156 | Would you tell, or-- or would you save me?" |
16156 | You are an American?" |
16156 | You are safe?" |
16156 | You know that?" |
16156 | You will help if you can, wo n''t you? |
16156 | asked the milder voice,"something safer than forwarding letters?" |
16156 | could they plan such a cowardly thing?" |
16156 | grinned the fellow;"August is early for berries, is it not? |
16156 | he faltered, for the hour of parting came with a strange sadness;"may I not know your name? |
16156 | jeered the man, coming insolently close;"who is to decide?" |
16156 | whispered Andy;"can I not be of use?" |
45353 | ''And why not?'' 45353 ''How can the choice of subject be absolutely unrestricted?'' |
45353 | Dorothy Qdevotes thirty- two lines to the quaint fancy"What would I be if one of my eight great, great grandmothers had married another man?" |
45353 | Suppose,said the doctor,"I had n''t found her a good woman, should I have told her to hold her tongue?" |
45353 | Waldo, why are you not here? |
45353 | Well, did n''t they listen to you, that time? |
45353 | *****"And after that?" |
45353 | And so he wrote: What, then, is the American, this new man? |
45353 | And the first reaction to such teaching is to ask with shocked disapproval,"What would happen to the world if all men followed his advice?" |
45353 | And were not_ they_ knit together by a higher logic than our mere senses could master? |
45353 | And will you cloud the muse? |
45353 | And will you scorn them all, to pour forth tame And heartless lays of feigned or fancied sighs? |
45353 | Are passages in which it suddenly appears the result of forethought or merely the result of whim? |
45353 | Are there any points in common? |
45353 | Are you?" |
45353 | BALTIMORE SATURDAY VISITER, 1833----(?). |
45353 | Because one half of humankind Lives here in hell, shall not the other half Do any more than just for conscience''sake Be miserable? |
45353 | But suppose she had missed it from the Creed As a child misses the unsaid Good- night, And falls asleep with heartache-- how should I feel? |
45353 | But why should you keep your head over your shoulder? |
45353 | Can you cite political events and characters and novels or plays on political life which belong to this period? |
45353 | DEMOCRATIC REVIEW, THE UNITED STATES, 1837- 1859(?). |
45353 | Do either or both throw light on the chief characters discussed in this chapter? |
45353 | Do his writings give evidence of patriotism in the usual sense of the word? |
45353 | Do the dates of the three poems suggest a progressive change? |
45353 | Do these throw any light on the history of his neighborhoods and his period or are they purely personal in their interest? |
45353 | Do they droop and end their lesson, wearied, over there beyond the seas? |
45353 | Do you find a distinction between Mark Twain''s attitude toward religion and his attitude toward religious people? |
45353 | Does Mark Twain''s consistent interest in history appear in his writing through the use of allusion and comparison? |
45353 | Does Stedman''s own verse confirm the theory of his criticisms of Whitman? |
45353 | Does the poem fulfill Lanier''s intentions? |
45353 | Does this list include any personal lyrics? |
45353 | Emerson visited him at the jail, where ensued the historic exchange of questions:"Henry, why are you here?" |
45353 | From 1844(?) |
45353 | Has any other educated person lived so many years and lost so many days?" |
45353 | How far does he rely upon the symbol in any one of his more effective shorter stories? |
45353 | If asked what was left? |
45353 | In 1819 Sidney Smith''s contemptuous and famous query,"Who reads an American book?" |
45353 | In 1902 he wrote: Shall we ever have an American literature? |
45353 | Is all this to be at end? |
45353 | Is it more like Emerson''s or Lowell''s, more like Whitman''s or Longfellow''s? |
45353 | Is it not well, therefore, that, sharing none of its pleasures and happiness, I should be free of its fatalities, its brevity? |
45353 | Is there a connecting unity in these passages? |
45353 | Is there a legitimate connection to be mentioned between Gilder''s poems on civic themes and the movement for better citizenship in the 1890''s? |
45353 | Is there any clear reason for this common dissent? |
45353 | Is there any real likeness between Thoreau and Whitman in these respects? |
45353 | Is there evidence that he was affected by Shakespeare''s poetic form? |
45353 | Is this golden band of kindred sympathies, so rare between nations, to be broken forever? |
45353 | Is this the way for us To lead these creatures up to find the light, Or the way to be drawn down to find the dark Again? |
45353 | It is nearly a century and a half since he tried to answer the question"What is an American?" |
45353 | NEW YORK REVIEW AND ATHENÆUM MAGAZINE, THE,(?)-1827. |
45353 | Oh, what is abroad in the marsh and the terminal sea? |
45353 | Or had they some, but with our Queen is''t gone? |
45353 | Read Zangwill''s play"The Melting Pot"in the light of this letter on"What is an American?" |
45353 | Read the letter entitled"What is an American?" |
45353 | Shall I raise the siege of this hen coop, and march baffled away to a pretended siege of Babylon?" |
45353 | Suppose you should contradict yourself; what then?... |
45353 | The next New Englander to give proof that the Puritans were not having an easy time in their"new English Canaan"was Nathaniel Ward( 1578- 1652? |
45353 | These can be supplemented by his own article in the_ Independent_ on"What is Poetry?" |
45353 | To what objects of satire does he most frequently revert? |
45353 | Were we enthusiasts? |
45353 | What can my anger do but cease? |
45353 | What company has that lonely lake, I pray?... |
45353 | What is the likeness in the general drift of the two and what are the essential differences in the treatments of the theme? |
45353 | What is wrong with the American drama? |
45353 | Whitman wrote fairly in a letter:"The book is therefore unprecedently sad( as these days are, are they not? |
45353 | Who can listen unmoved to the sweet love- tales of our robins, told from tree to tree, or to the shrill cat- birds? |
45353 | Who dare again to say we trace Our lines to a plebeian race? |
45353 | Who knows?" |
45353 | Whom shall I fight and who shall be my enemy When he is I and I am he? |
45353 | Why drag about this corpse of your memory, lest you contradict somewhat you have stated in this or that public place? |
45353 | Why should Tamenund stay? |
45353 | a newer page In the great record of the world is thine; Shall it be fairer? |
45353 | is it well To leave the gates unguarded? |
45353 | nor blush for shame To cast away renown, and hide your head from fame? |
45353 | or have they none? |
45353 | sings of America for the world, with its thrillingly prophetic fourth stanza, Have the elder races halted? |
45353 | what we carried home? |
27372 | Would not the Court of France, on your representing this matter to them, enable you to put an end to this unhappy business? 27372 And could she not do it? 27372 And what are these benefits? 27372 And will not this contribute in a great measure to keep the course of exchange against her? 27372 And will not this increased demand be the means also of increasing the quantity of her productions and manufactures? 27372 And will not this twentyfive per cent in fact operate in the nature of a bounty to that amount, to encourage the cultivation of American hemp? 27372 And will she not lose also the advantages she would infallibly derive from the concurrence of the Americans in her ports? 27372 At what period then can the commencement of it be fixed, if not at the time when they declared themselves independent? 27372 Besides, how is Russia paid for her productions and manufactures? 27372 But if the result should be, that I am not to proceed, how, and in what character am I to consider myself? 27372 But is there the least hope for Britain, that her ancient enemies are prepared to give up their new friends? 27372 But upon the supposition of its truth, will our enemies draw any essential benefits from it? 27372 But who will invite the Congress to treat with England? 27372 But will the exclusion of the Americans from a free and direct commerce have this effect? 27372 Could a more favorable occasion be presented to Great Britain for negotiation? 27372 Could not that loan be extended to a further sum? 27372 Do not the propositions speak this language to Britain? 27372 Do you ask how is this to be accounted for? 27372 Do you ask me, if they do not feel and see that America is independent? 27372 Do you ask whether this will probably be the case here? 27372 Does it follow from hence, that Russia can have no interest in a free and direct commerce with America? 27372 Does not their own safety and importance in the political system, absolutely depend upon supporting the independence of our country? 27372 Does she not flatter herself, that by the continuance of the war, Britain will become so enfeebled, that they may be wrested from her? 27372 Does this look like peace? 27372 He made a short pause, and then asked me if I had heard that Lord Germain had resigned? 27372 How long are they likely to wait before they presume to form political connexions with, and enjoy the profitable commerce of the new world? 27372 I put one general question to him, whether he thought my going would be injurious to our common interest? 27372 If not, is not our way clear? 27372 If their independence is already completely acknowledged by the King of Great Britain, is not the question decided in the negative? 27372 If, therefore, the question was brought before her, shall we admit or shall we reject their propositions? 27372 In what an awkward situation should we then be? 27372 Is it not by exchange in a very great proportion for foreign commodities? 27372 Is my former commission superseded, and what am I to depend upon? 27372 Or will it in any way injure our interests? 27372 Spain wishes to possess herself of Gibraltar and of the Floridas; can she now hope that these will be ceded to her? 27372 That having once obtained them by conquest, she will easily retain them at a peace? 27372 That they must soon speak it out? 27372 The Dutch Deputies thereupon asked, why then the Archduke retained the arms and name of the said Provinces? 27372 Their independence being once acknowledged, is it not irrevocable in its nature? 27372 This has heretofore been chiefly carried on by the Dutch; but may we not come in for a share of it? 27372 Under such circumstances, which would have suffered most, the honor and dignity of the United States, or the honor and dignity of this Sovereign? 27372 Upon what ground could a rejection be founded at this time? 27372 We can not now treat with her on terms of equality, why therefore not postpone it? 27372 What is to be done? 27372 What remains to be done on the part of the United States? 27372 What right, therefore, can Britain have to demand, that we should treat in a different manner with her? 27372 What, it may be asked, has since taken place which could occasion any change? 27372 Where are these new markets to be found but in America? 27372 Where is the Marquis de Lafayette? 27372 Whether it is advisable to communicate my real character to the Court of St Petersburg, and to ask their permission before I undertake the journey? 27372 Whether, on the whole, you conceived the Count to have any objection to the mission itself? 27372 Why then should we be anxious for a treaty with her, or make sacrifices to purchase it? 27372 Will it not enhance the price of her commodities? 27372 Will it not increase the demand for them? 27372 Will not the concurrence of America in her ports give an additional advantage to Russia? 27372 Will they wait till the moment shall arrive, when the United States will not thank them for doing so? 27372 With what propriety, Sir, can you consider this transaction in the light of making advances, or lending me money to quiet the Marquis d''Yranda? 27372 Would it be too inconvenient for your Excellency to lend us this sum? 27372 Would it not be well to transmit a copy of it to Congress? 27372 Would not two other important supplies be in danger of sharing the same fate, viz, sailcloth and cordage? 27372 You may ask me, as in another case, what can Great Britain promise herself from all this? 27372 _ Question 1._Whether, on the whole, I conceived the Count to have any objections to the mission itself?" |
20174 | Whose is the fault? 20174 ''Tis inspirational; its upward flight Lifts generations-- such your Father''s story, And also yours, for is not that, too, gory? 20174 A FOREST FOR THE KING''S HAWKS Say, what is Ma- jest- y without externals? 20174 ALL STARS MERGED IN ONE What is the Truth? 20174 Aghast at forests, white or shadowy? 20174 Ah, by what other pass, are men to fare Through mist and cloud, except the path, aflare With his blest steps from Heaven, and up again? 20174 And rows with royalty, a rabble''s vice? 20174 And what is freedom? 20174 And when earth darkens, and the North wind blows, Why into stars, flake every cloud''s black brew? 20174 Aye, weapons only; for, to whom belong The minds of England, and treed fields of song-- Nay, all but grave- ground, grudged by hill and plain? 20174 Choose-- how else art thou free? 20174 Does scent from bloom, or warble from the wood, Not atmosphere the un- aerial void Twixt thee and beauty, which thy youth enjoyed? 20174 EVACUATION DAY What is it that today we celebrate With school recital, banquet and parade Of our achievements, pageanting each trade? 20174 Eagerly they band, For is the King not greater than the land? 20174 For, who, but the brave Have glory to transmit? 20174 Frail are their ships; still, Sun, why glare aghast, Watching the billows monstering around? 20174 God''s joy to close And all its goodness break and drift cloud- wise? 20174 Gone? 20174 HEAVEN Ah, what is Heaven? 20174 HUMILITY Was not humility the Earthward stair From highest Heaven, by which God came to men, To show the way aloft to human ken? 20174 Had the sun more heart to give To warm thee, than I gave? 20174 Has good Saint George, too woundful to renew His conflict with the dragon of base taint, Been caught up by Elias from earth''s view? 20174 Have I ever been untrue? 20174 How help love thee, whose hand, raised to the sun, Glows rosy, and not red with murder''s stain? 20174 How long must her grand arch of brain, as now, Bear up a universeof what should not"? |
20174 | How, else, the dragon''s rage in irrestraint? |
20174 | II Whence comes this cold to Freedom''s claim? |
20174 | III Oh, what if lone and long thy lofty flight, My country? |
20174 | III The cock crows.--Is he dreaming? |
20174 | If such was Stilow''s fate, You saw, the felon would have been the State; Hence, turned from Precedent, demanding"Why?" |
20174 | If"Holy, Holy, Holy, Evermore?" |
20174 | In English nature-- oh, where now the saint-- The spirit, to sublime conceptions, true? |
20174 | Is Athens in ascent with sun- light flare, To come down ashes, not worth history''s keeping?" |
20174 | Is British triumph in its world- wide tramp The Hell, still"lower than lowest"--Milton''s worst? |
20174 | Is Burke''s analysis not right--"A Jest"? |
20174 | Is beauty not the camp- fire, which one host Leaves burning for another, close behind? |
20174 | Is it their Brocken- Shadow of despair, The looming of their life of cruel wrong For countless ages? |
20174 | Is the tory Behind the sun, to mock me, who am Glory, Being the lifted life those martyrs give? |
20174 | Is thy beauty without heart, Or sense of justice? |
20174 | Is thy vision not as clear As that of Vesper, dauntless pioneer On Twilight''s altitude? |
20174 | It ceased to toll After a while, but why? |
20174 | KAISER, BEWARE Dost thou, mad Kaiser, for historic name, Set fire to Europe? |
20174 | LYRIC TRANSPORT What but the spirit''s ladder to God''s throne Is beauty? |
20174 | Like Spring, wilt thou roof Earth with bloom and dwell Thereunder? |
20174 | Mention Elisha''s name for countersign-- and why, it? |
20174 | O Press, poor harlot of the tyrant, Gold, What freedom, but from truth, hast thou to boast? |
20174 | Oft, Precedent is Folly with gray hairs; So you, recalling Junius, heard the prayers Of friendless Stilow; then, what did you find? |
20174 | Oh People, all-- Italian, Spanish, French, Dutch, English, Irish, German, Jew, and Greek-- What see you, as you climb the Future''s Peak? |
20174 | Oh, how long a time Shall reptiles, deadly to the Human race, Be let grow wings and heavenward trail their slime? |
20174 | Oh, who can take Promethean Lincoln''s place, To bring light where- so- ever he can trace A Human, with his rights to soul denied? |
20174 | On they file And phalanx, and the vision makes thee strong: What, though God''s searchlight flares the sky the while? |
20174 | Or Sun so flaming, as the Angel''s sword Of Human and Devine Wills in accord? |
20174 | Quenched by dark space? |
20174 | REPTILES WITH WINGS Are lust for Gold and Power not hideous spawn Of prehistoric reptiles, that had wings? |
20174 | SAINT GEORGE AND THE DRAGON I In English nature, did Saint George prevail Over the Dragon? |
20174 | SHAKESPEARE Oh, what are England''s lines of lords and kings, Shakespeare, to thine, a- throb with thought and feeling? |
20174 | THE EARTH RENEWED BY MEMORY Ah, in the angel- fall from Heaven, is hope? |
20174 | THE PRESS Was ever such unblushing harlotry, Such sale of virtue in the Market place, As by the Press? |
20174 | THE QUEEN OF BEAUTY In rapt, roused Erin, who does not behold A Venus, rising from the sea of tears, Up to her native, Earth- illuming spheres? |
20174 | THE STARS God loves the stars; else why star- shape the dew For the unbreathing, shy, heart- hiding rose? |
20174 | THE TRUTH What is the truth? |
20174 | The sun darts under earth and east again, What sees he? |
20174 | There, lies she, crushed by troops in hot pursuit Of mocking shadows; for be Gain complete, What is it but twin brother to defeat? |
20174 | Thou thinkest, why not thus all life below? |
20174 | To feed war with our sons, our flesh and bone, That chaos may reclaim the Universe?" |
20174 | Unto whom art thou Indebted for thine arm, encircling now The world, sun- like, more than to me? |
20174 | VI O Daughters of brave sires, what is true glory? |
20174 | WASHINGTON''S ARMY AND BARRY''S NAVY Who loosed our land from Britain''s numbing hold? |
20174 | WHY PLAY WITH WORDS, ENGLAND? |
20174 | Was not Nature''s thaw From his heart heat for truth, Eternal Law? |
20174 | What care they how foes surround? |
20174 | What do I ask for? |
20174 | What is the soul? |
20174 | What is this Greater-- this which is to meet The planets and ascend high, high and higher? |
20174 | What less could fitly crown Omnipotence Than Truth, the focus of all rays in Good? |
20174 | What right have wounds, though wide, to throb, or feel? |
20174 | What scents he? |
20174 | What sea so broad, as that from Human weeping? |
20174 | What splits dark mid- night and gives earth a thrill? |
20174 | What though few may climb The mountain and the star on trail of thee? |
20174 | What though few may climb The mountain and the star on trail of thee? |
20174 | What though fine graphic sketches In magazines show them with shoulders bold Against the nights flood- gates of dark and cold? |
20174 | What, if the world be chaos where it sins, Race feuds, Creed hatreds, falsehoods gross, deceit, Intrigue and greed, form swirling, blinding sleet? |
20174 | What, then, is America''s duty to the oppressed race or the small nation? |
20174 | When a haggard fugitive, Thy dwelling was a swamp, who first to trace Thy crimson footprints to thy hiding place? |
20174 | When, to thy moan of hunger anywhere, Have I been deaf? |
20174 | Where a white summit? |
20174 | Where else canst thou boast To the eternal stars, so grand a sight? |
20174 | Where, then, can I grope And not be met by echoes that appal? |
20174 | Which wilt thou be, base or brave? |
20174 | Who hurles him down the deep? |
20174 | Who sees not an Epoch''s Angel Fall From hope for earth, in Wilson''s truth, beguiled By second childhood''s toys to play with thrall? |
20174 | Why hail they Greed, to run on menial chores From deck to deck, or to and from all shores? |
20174 | Why let Froude fiction haze thy vivid view? |
20174 | Why not hurl them and convince The world that, hence- forth, not one thrall shall stand? |
20174 | Why play with words? |
20174 | Why then, fail? |
20174 | Why? |
20174 | Will a glance not find Whole peoples alchemied from heart and mind To steal projectiles by a craft, accursed By Human Nature? |
20174 | Wilson''s arm lacks strength to hurl the flame, God gave to Lincoln for the Human race? |
20174 | With Morn, climb, or, with Night, skulk down the skies To grope in caverns, or beneath the wave, Creep, till aghast at monsters that arise? |
20174 | [ Illustration][ Illustration] DEDICATION TO THE DAUGHTERS OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION I What lineage so noble as from Sires, Laureled by Freedom? |
20174 | a Whale? |
20174 | and for what mead? |
20174 | could God do more To liken thee to Him, and love, infuse? |
20174 | in the darkness lowers boat after boat From Freedom''s fleet, and each with lightening oars? |
20174 | is British soldiery the swine, In whose gross forms the fiends, exercised, flew? |
20174 | is that thunder, God''s collapsing skys? |
20174 | loves thee, along whose track March Human rights up to the stars parade? |
20174 | mock with cloud, Thy land and sea renown And Washington, God''s Holy Spirit-- known By the unerring World Light, that it shed? |
20174 | or, with Scalping Winter''s yell, Scour grove and bush? |
20174 | read that poem true, And answer,--are those maddening men not you? |
20174 | shall she, The most devout, be shut from Freedom''s mirth? |
20174 | we strike our colors? |
20174 | where are stars so dense, That each has not the freedom of the sky? |
20174 | wherefore frown? |
20174 | why all this sleigh- bell rhyming? |
20174 | why so crass? |
20174 | with the wisdom of the heavens, dispense? |
49352 | And why is it ealled the rebel flower? |
49352 | And why,said the governor,"do you ask that?" |
49352 | Did he hit you? |
49352 | How far is it to the next gate? |
49352 | Robert, what security canst thou give? |
49352 | Were any of your family up, Lydia,he asked,"on the night when I received company in this house?" |
49352 | What can you do for me? |
49352 | Who told you to say that? |
49352 | Why so gloomy at a ball? |
49352 | Will it be advisable to hazard a general engagement? |
49352 | ''Jemmy Steptoe,''he said to the clerk,''what the divil ails ye, mon?'' |
49352 | ''Who did this?'' |
49352 | * Alluding to this fact, an anonymous poet wrote:"But where, O where''s the hallowed sod Beneath whose verd the hero''s ashes sleep? |
49352 | *"Dear Doctor,--I have asked Mrs. Cochran and Mrs. Livingston to dine with me to- morrow; but am I not in honor bound to apprise them of their fare? |
49352 | ** It was to one of the prisoners, taken at this time, that Arnold put the question,"If the Americans should catch me, what would they do with me?" |
49352 | And what have we to oppose them? |
49352 | Are fleets and armies necessary to a work of love and reconciliation? |
49352 | But neber mind; need n''t work''less I''m a mind too;''nough to eat, and pretty soon I die?" |
49352 | But when shall we be stronger? |
49352 | But why dwell upon the sad and sickening scene of the battle- field with the dead and dying upon it? |
49352 | Can escape from death he possible? |
49352 | Do you suppose they will stand by, idle and indifferent spectators to the contest? |
49352 | Has Great Britain any enemy in this quarter of the world, to call for all this accumulation of armies and navies? |
49352 | Have we shown ourselves so unwilling to be reconciled, that force must be called in to win us back to our love? |
49352 | He asked the question,"If we should be obliged to abandon the town, ought it to stand as winter quarters for the enemy?" |
49352 | I ask, gentlemen, what means this martial array, if its purpose be not to force us to submission? |
49352 | I''m amazed-- have we routed the foe? |
49352 | Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
49352 | Is there not public spirit enough in Virginia to complete this memorial of her most honored daughter? |
49352 | Is this the cold, neglected, moldering clod? |
49352 | May it not be a part of the circumvallation of a city of the mound builders? |
49352 | No one seemed willing to break that silence, until a grave- looking member, in a plain, is it?" |
49352 | No one seemed willing to propose it; and when, to Gates''s remark,"Gentlemen, you know our situation, what are your opinions?" |
49352 | Or that the grave at which I ought to weep? |
49352 | Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction? |
49352 | Shall we try argument? |
49352 | The great men who composed our first council-- are they dead, have they deserted the cause, or what has become of them? |
49352 | This effected, Washington rode back to Lee, and, pointing to the rallied troops, said,"Will you, sir, command in that place?" |
49352 | To show the spot where matchless valor lies? |
49352 | What consequences have we rationally to expect?" |
49352 | What is it that gentlemen wish? |
49352 | What is the cause? |
49352 | What orator or sage ever expressed more in so few words? |
49352 | What would they have? |
49352 | Where is the man that will dare to advise such a measure? |
49352 | Where is the man? |
49352 | Where were the landgraves, and caciquies, and lords of manors to be found among them? |
49352 | Where will they be all this while? |
49352 | Wherefore? |
49352 | Who had the courage? |
49352 | Who is there to mourn for Logan? |
49352 | Who wandered there alone? |
49352 | Why rises not some massy pillar high, To grace a name that fought for Freedom''s prize? |
49352 | Will it be next week, or next year? |
49352 | Will it be when we are totally disarmed, and when a British guard shall be stationed in every house? |
49352 | Wraxall asked Lord George Germain how North"took the communication?" |
49352 | [ Illustration: 9358] As Chatham sat down, his brother- in- law, Lord Temple, said to him,"You forgot to mention what we talked of; shall I get up?" |
49352 | [ Illustration: 9790] Instead of being its destroyer, who, in like circumstances, would not have been its defender? |
49352 | ``` Shall we yield? |
49352 | ``` Though too true to herself, e''er to crouch to oppression,``` Who can yield to just rule more loyal submission? |
49352 | ``` Would you worry the man that has found you in shoes? |
49352 | ```` Who shall thy gay buffoonery describe? |
49352 | and how is it to be remedied? |
49352 | and where were mansions for the nobility and aristocracy? |
49352 | be asleep all this time? |
49352 | general, why would you be overpersuaded by men of inferior judgment to your own? |
49352 | shall we lie down like dogs beneath``` The keeper''s lash? |
49352 | what measure should be first proposed? |
49352 | what notes of discord are these which disturb the general joy, and silence the acclamations of victory? |
49352 | where is Holland? |
49352 | where is Spain? |
49352 | who shall know the might"But wouldst thou know his name, Of the words he utter''d there? |
49352 | { 267}the various delegates were then presented, and now came a pause; who should take the lead? |
49352 | { 348}why is not the latter commenced without hesitation? |
25935 | What does thatAmerican"see in our nuts? |
25935 | A man said to me some time ago,"I wonder why God made the hicans the cross between the pecans and the hickory?" |
25935 | And she said,"Why do they bear regular crops and this good tree that makes so many fine, big kernels bears every other year?" |
25935 | Any other discussion on hickory varieties? |
25935 | Are there any questions? |
25935 | Are there in America no nuts?" |
25935 | Beside the above mentioned questions I added: What is the name and address of the owner of the tree, and its location? |
25935 | But can you plant dry seed any time during the winter? |
25935 | Could it be the winter rest period? |
25935 | DR. COLBY: How do you remove the hulls? |
25935 | DR. MCKAY: Did I understand you to mention the variety Schinnerling? |
25935 | DR. MCKAY: Will you tell us something about how you handle the nuts in your plant, how they are hulled and cracked, and so forth? |
25935 | Did it occur here? |
25935 | Did you have a further report, Mr. Secretary? |
25935 | Do I hear such a motion? |
25935 | Do I hear such a motion? |
25935 | Do pecan seed have a rest period, and is there any difference between pecans and hickory in that respect? |
25935 | Do we have any discussion on this proposal? |
25935 | Do you know whether that is still there at the Jones place, that Turkish tree hazel, Mrs. Weber? |
25935 | Does he receive more money if it contains a higher percent of kernels? |
25935 | Does n''t the Winkler hold its catkins most years? |
25935 | Dr. McKay? |
25935 | Going on with the program of the evening, are you ready to show the film? |
25935 | Has anyone any comments on hickory varieties? |
25935 | Have you anything to say about that, Mr. O''Rourke? |
25935 | Have you had some experience, Mr. Ferguson? |
25935 | Have you seen it? |
25935 | How about everything in this room? |
25935 | How about it, Slate? |
25935 | How does the chairman keep the squirrels from eating them? |
25935 | How does the disease jump from one infection center to healthy trees 200 yards, 2 miles or even 100 miles away? |
25935 | How many are growing the Wilcox? |
25935 | How many find it a good variety? |
25935 | How many have Davis? |
25935 | How many pounds of the nuts the tree yielded that year? |
25935 | How old, tall and thick the trunk of tree is? |
25935 | I have spoken of the value of trees for the preservation of wild life, but how do trees affect the life of man and how does man affect tree life? |
25935 | I said,"Why ca n''t we get the dirt somewhere else? |
25935 | I said,"You mean they are going to destroy those trees?" |
25935 | If not, let us take up Mr. Beckert''s question: When do you take scion wood of the shagbark hickory? |
25935 | In what kind of soil does it thrive? |
25935 | Is Dr. McKay in the room? |
25935 | Is it a native fungus, or imported? |
25935 | Is that due to the exceptional vigor of Rockville which apparently is a hybrid and may have hybrid vigor? |
25935 | Is that right, Mr. Bolten? |
25935 | Is that right? |
25935 | Is that true, Mr. Salzer? |
25935 | Is that your experience? |
25935 | Is there a motion to approve these names? |
25935 | Is there a second? |
25935 | Is there any further business to come before this group at this time? |
25935 | Is there anything further? |
25935 | Is there in the nuts, leaves and bark any sign of cross- pollination? |
25935 | Let us think for a minute, what are the things of the greatest value in this room? |
25935 | MR, GERARDI: Big as your thumb? |
25935 | MR. BECKERT: Are the hickory stocks potted before you graft, or are you grafting bare roots? |
25935 | MR. CRAIG: Have you tried hickory on pecan? |
25935 | MR. DAVIDSON: Do you know anything as to the bearing of black walnuts this year as compared to previous years? |
25935 | MR. FERGUSON: Do you carry higher temperatures for walnuts? |
25935 | MR. FERGUSON: What temperature do you use in the frames? |
25935 | MR. GERARDI: How big is that Schinnerling? |
25935 | MR. LEMKE: What do you do when you strike a day that is very humid and the nuts start getting moldy? |
25935 | MR. MACHOVINA: After spraying for shuck maggot with DDT do you encourage the presence of mites? |
25935 | MR. MCDANIEL: Do you have Medium Long? |
25935 | MR. MCDANIEL: Do you have any indication that you get a better quality nut from one county or one area than you do from another? |
25935 | MR. MCDANIEL: Have you fruited the Weschke at Beltsville? |
25935 | MR. MCDANIEL: Is that doing well? |
25935 | MR. MCDANIEL: What species is the Shaul, is it_ ovata_ or_ laciniosa_? |
25935 | MR. MCDANIEL: You do n''t notice any difference, do you, between the Missouri and the Kentucky nuts? |
25935 | MR. MURPHY: Do you pay a premium for cultivated nuts? |
25935 | MR. O''ROURKE: Any other comment on that? |
25935 | MR. O''ROURKE: Any other discussion on stocks that will take wet soil conditions? |
25935 | MR. O''ROURKE: Are you familiar with Mr. Lassiter''s stock work? |
25935 | MR. O''ROURKE: Do I understand you correctly that you do feel that the pecan must be after- ripened? |
25935 | MR. O''ROURKE: Is that clearly understood that there will be no attempt made to delete the section on affiliation? |
25935 | MR. O''ROURKE: Will the bitternut do better, or would the mockernut? |
25935 | MR. O''ROURKE: You would say probably 10 days to 2 weeks before the bud scales would break? |
25935 | MR. ROHRBACHER: On what basis do you buy black walnuts? |
25935 | MR. SALZER: Can you tell me if the farmer is paid by the weight of the nuts, or does he receive his pay after the kernels are shelled out? |
25935 | MR. SALZER: Which varieties will grow on fairly wet soil? |
25935 | MR. SAWYER: How is the Ryan? |
25935 | MR. SHESSLER: How many years are lost in this method of bench grafting compared with field grafting trees in the nursery row? |
25935 | MR. SHESSLER: In other words, a tree grafted out in the field will have nuts on it three years sooner? |
25935 | MR. SNYDER: Well, do n''t we have$ 3,000 in bonds? |
25935 | MR. WALLICK: What percentage of kernels do you get? |
25935 | MR. WHITFORD: Do you fertilize those bushes? |
25935 | MR. WHITFORD: Do you get any improved varieties, such as Thomas, Stabler or Ohio? |
25935 | MR. WHITFORD: What sizes and grades of kernels do you have? |
25935 | MR. WHITFORD: Which grades bring the highest prices? |
25935 | MRS. WEBER: Where is it located? |
25935 | Mr. Becker, do you wish to say something about the Reed Memorial? |
25935 | Mr. Gerardi? |
25935 | Mr. Wilkinson, what has been your experience in germinating pecan seeds? |
25935 | Opposed? |
25935 | PRESIDENT MACDANIELS: Any other discussion? |
25935 | PRESIDENT MacDANIELS: Are there further remarks? |
25935 | PRESIDENT MacDANIELS: How about the Barnes? |
25935 | PRESIDENT MacDANIELS: Is it your pleasure to adopt these resolutions all at once, or do you wish to separate them? |
25935 | PRESIDENT MacDANIELS: Mr. Magill, are you all set with your program? |
25935 | PRESIDENT MacDANIELS: Why could n''t you send some in for testing? |
25935 | SLATE: Any evidence that the fungus is mutating to make more virulent strains? |
25935 | SLATE: The seedlings? |
25935 | SLATE: What is the origin of the fungus? |
25935 | SLATE: What is the origin of the seedlings? |
25935 | SLATE: What variety do you think is best? |
25935 | STOKE: Does the black walnut bloom at the same time that the Persian walnut blooms? |
25935 | STOKE: May I say just one more thing to clarify my suggestion? |
25935 | See that tree standing right out there?" |
25935 | The furniture, the clothing you wear, the ring on your finger, the glass in the windows, etc.? |
25935 | The last time we raised the dues what was the effect? |
25935 | The next paper is,"Nut Shells-- Asset or Liability? |
25935 | Then another worry came-- could the seedlings stand the Ontario winter? |
25935 | What are they for, if it is n''t to tide us over a hard period like this? |
25935 | What characteristic of a black walnut, then, can be used in evaluating it? |
25935 | What does it do with you? |
25935 | What enemies attack it? |
25935 | What fertilizer, or manure, has been used in the particular case, or none? |
25935 | What have you to say about the filbert varieties? |
25935 | What two or three would you plant? |
25935 | What will happen to your trees after you are dead? |
25935 | What''s been your experience with some of the varieties and what are your principal cultural problems with the filberts? |
25935 | What, in your opinion, is the one factor that is more responsible for this alternate bearing of black walnuts? |
25935 | Which one would you recommend? |
25935 | Which varieties-- I presume you mean species, is that correct?--will grow on fairly wet soil? |
25935 | Who else has a variety that is doing very well? |
25935 | Who has some questions that they''d like to bring up? |
25935 | Who wants to speak first? |
25935 | Who would like to answer that? |
25935 | Why am I on that Committee in 1952? |
25935 | Why was I on that Committee in 1935? |
25935 | Why was I on that Committee in 1939? |
25935 | Will those men come here? |
25935 | Will you come up now? |
25935 | You remember those days, Pappy? |
14849 | And is mine one? |
14849 | ''Twas doing nothing was his curse-- Is there a vice can plague us worse? |
14849 | A common friendship-- who talks of a common friendship? |
14849 | A useless flint o''er which the waters flow? |
14849 | All is beauty: And knowing this, is love, and love is duty: What further may be sought for or declared? |
14849 | All the world cries,"Where is the man who will save us?" |
14849 | Am I wrong to be always so happy? |
14849 | And Jehovah said unto Joshua, Get thee up; wherefore art thou thus fallen upon thy face? |
14849 | And do our loves all perish with our frames? |
14849 | And dost thou hear the word ere it be spoken, And apprehend love''s presence by its power? |
14849 | And if ye salute your brethren only, what do ye more than others? |
14849 | And it is n''t the fact that you''re hurt that counts, But only-- how did you take it? |
14849 | And loved so well a high behavior, In man or maid, that thou from speech refrained, Nobility more noble to repay? |
14849 | And the son of man, that thou visitest him? |
14849 | And they said one to another, Was not our heart burning within us, while he spake to us in the way, while he opened to us the scriptures? |
14849 | And thou sayest, What doth God know? |
14849 | And what of that? |
14849 | And where are thy playmates now, O man of sober brow? |
14849 | And which of you by being anxious can add one cubit unto the measure of his life? |
14849 | And who will walk a mile with me Along life''s weary way? |
14849 | And why art thou disquieted within me? |
14849 | Are not two sparrows sold for a penny? |
14849 | Are not ye of much more value than they? |
14849 | Are the stars too distant? |
14849 | Are you in earnest? |
14849 | Art little? |
14849 | At rich men''s tables eaten bread and pulse? |
14849 | But he is in one mind, and who can turn him? |
14849 | But the little daughter whispered, As she took his icy hand,"Is n''t God upon the ocean, Just the same as on the land?" |
14849 | But what if I fail of my purpose here? |
14849 | But whoso hath the world''s goods, and beholdeth his brother in need, and shutteth up his compassion from him, how doth the love of God abide in him? |
14849 | Can a fig tree, my brethren, yield olives, or a vine figs? |
14849 | Can he judge through the thick darkness? |
14849 | Can thy heart endure, or can thy hands be strong, in the days that I shall deal with thee? |
14849 | Can you add to that line That he lived for it too? |
14849 | Canst thou prophesy, thou little tree, What the glory of the boughs shall be? |
14849 | Didst fancy life was spent on beds of ease, Fluttering the rose- leaves scattered by the breeze? |
14849 | Didst fondly dream the sun would never set? |
14849 | Do ye hear the children weeping, O my brothers, Ere the sorrow comes with years? |
14849 | Dost fear to lose thy way? |
14849 | Doth God exact day labor, light denied? |
14849 | Exceeding peace made Ben Adhem bold, And to the presence in the room he said,"What writest thou?" |
14849 | Feeling the way-- and if the way is cold, What matter? |
14849 | For doth not that rightly seem to be lost which is given to one ungrateful? |
14849 | For what shall a man be profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and forfeit his life? |
14849 | George W. F. Hegel born 1770. Who are thy playmates, boy? |
14849 | God will not seek thy race, Nor will he ask thy birth; Alone he will demand of thee, What hast thou done on earth? |
14849 | Hast thou named all the birds without a gun? |
14849 | Have we not darkened and dazed ourselves with books long enough? |
14849 | Have we not groveled here long enough eating and drinking like mere brutes? |
14849 | Have we not stood here like trees in the ground long enough? |
14849 | Have you an ancient wound? |
14849 | Having eyes, see ye not? |
14849 | He said:"My child, do you yield? |
14849 | He went out, and found others standing; and he saith unto them, Why stand ye here all the day idle? |
14849 | How comes it to pass, then, that we appear such cowards in reasoning, and are so afraid to stand the test of ridicule? |
14849 | How many smiles?--a score? |
14849 | How to constitute oneself a man? |
14849 | I will lift up mine eyes unto the mountains: From whence shall my help come? |
14849 | If a man die, shall he live again? |
14849 | If heard aright It is the knell of my departed hours: Where are they? |
14849 | If there were dreams to sell, Merry and sad to tell, And the crier rang the bell, What would you buy? |
14849 | In the hour of distress and misery the eye of every mortal turns to friendship; in the hour of gladness and conviviality, what is your want? |
14849 | Is all that we see or seem But a dream within a dream? |
14849 | Is life a noxious weed which whirlwinds sow? |
14849 | Is life so dear or peace so sweet as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
14849 | Is n''t it interesting to get blamed for everything? |
14849 | Is not God in the height of heaven? |
14849 | Is not the life more than the food, and the body than the raiment? |
14849 | It is not worth the keeping: let it go: But shall it? |
14849 | Josephine born 1763 Could we by a wish Have what we will and get the future now, Would we wish aught done undone in the past? |
14849 | Know ye not that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit which is in you, which ye have from God? |
14849 | Look full into thy spirit''s self, The world of mystery scan; What if thy way to faith in God Should lie through faith in man? |
14849 | Loved the wild rose, and left it on the stalk? |
14849 | NOVEMBER Who said November''s face was grim? |
14849 | O God, can I not save One from the pitiless wave? |
14849 | Say, dost thou understand the whispered token, The promise breathed from every leaf and flower? |
14849 | Seest thou a man wise in his own conceit? |
14849 | Shall I ask the brave soldier who fights at my side, In the cause of mankind, if our creeds agree? |
14849 | Shall I give up the friend I have valued and tried, If he kneel not before the same altar as me? |
14849 | Shall I hold on with both hands to every paltry possession? |
14849 | Shall days spring up as wild vines grow, Unheeding where they climb or cling? |
14849 | Shall two walk together, except they have agreed? |
14849 | Shall we have ears on the stretch for the footfalls of sorrow that never come, but be deaf to the whirr of the wings of happiness that fill all space? |
14849 | Summer and flowers are far away; Gloomy old Winter is king to- day; Buds will not blow, and sun will not shine: What shall I do for a valentine? |
14849 | Temptation sharp? |
14849 | The great Gods pass through the great Time- hall; Who can see? |
14849 | Then why, my soul, dost thou complain? |
14849 | Then why, my soul, dost thou complain? |
14849 | There is sunshine without and within me, and how should I mope or be sad? |
14849 | Though you have but a little room, do you fancy that God is not there, too, and it is impossible to live therein a life that shall be somewhat lofty? |
14849 | Thy bountiful care what tongue can recite? |
14849 | Unarmed faced danger with a heart of trust? |
14849 | Was it hard for him? |
14849 | Was it thus that he plodded ahead, Never turning aside? |
14849 | Was the trial sore? |
14849 | Well, what of that? |
14849 | Well, what of that? |
14849 | What do you live for if it is not to make life less difficult for each other? |
14849 | What doctor possesses such curative resources as those latent in a single ray of hope? |
14849 | What does your anxiety do? |
14849 | What have you done with your soul, my friend? |
14849 | What if no bird through the pearl rain is soaring? |
14849 | What if no blossom looks upward adoring? |
14849 | What is man, that thou art mindful of him? |
14849 | What is the essence and life of character? |
14849 | What is your life? |
14849 | What shall we do with it? |
14849 | What though to- night wrecks you and me If so to- morrow saves? |
14849 | What would be the use of immortality for a person who can not use well half an hour? |
14849 | What''s hallowed ground? |
14849 | When I hear a young man spoken of as giving promise of high genius, the first question I ask about him is always-- Does he work? |
14849 | When the heart overflows with gratitude or with other sweet and sacred sentiment, what is the word to which it would give utterance? |
14849 | Whence comest thou?" |
14849 | Where else can we live? |
14849 | Who is the happiest person? |
14849 | Who is wise and understanding among you? |
14849 | Who knoweth not in all these, That the hand of Jehovah hath wrought this? |
14849 | Who said her voice was harsh and sad? |
14849 | Who stands ready to act again and always in the spirit of this day of reunion and hope and patriotic fervor? |
14849 | Who would fail, for a pause too early? |
14849 | Who would fail, for one step withholden? |
14849 | Who would fail, for one word unsaid? |
14849 | Who would not rather have a right to immortality than to be immortal without a right to be? |
14849 | Whose heart hath ne''er within him burned As home his footsteps he hath turned From wandering on a foreign strand? |
14849 | Why are we so glad to talk and take our turns to prattle, when so rarely we get back to the stronghold of our silence with an unwounded conscience? |
14849 | Why art thou cast down, O my soul? |
14849 | Why comes temptation but for a man to meet And master and make crouch beneath his foot, And so be pedestaled in triumph? |
14849 | Why comest thou?" |
14849 | Why drooping seek the dark recess? |
14849 | Why drooping seek the dark recess? |
14849 | Why, why repine, my pensive friend, At pleasures slipped away? |
14849 | Will ye leave the flowers for the crown?" |
14849 | are they thine, When round thy brow the wreaths of glory shine; While rapture gazes on thy radiant way,''Midst the bright realms of clear mental day? |
14849 | each a space Of some few yards before his face; Does that the whole wide plan explain? |
14849 | little loveliest lady mine, What shall I send for your valentine? |
14849 | what do we see? |
14849 | when the eve is cool? |
36424 | A shell? |
36424 | Afraid to fight, eh? |
36424 | And you intend to eat right through the menu? |
36424 | Any of you fellows want to put on the gloves with Sheldon? |
36424 | Anyway, you''re soaked through now, are n''t you? 36424 Are you going on to- night, Frank?" |
36424 | But how did you get over here before the rest of us? |
36424 | But of what kind? |
36424 | But who''s going to be the goat? |
36424 | But why in thunder did you make that waiter crazy by asking for bullion? 36424 But you would n''t want your son to be a slacker, would you? |
36424 | Ca n''t you see the crew of it gloating over the women and children they''ve killed, and boasting about it when they get back to their lines? |
36424 | Can you beat it? |
36424 | Coming on to the office? |
36424 | Did n''t I tell you it would be only half finished? |
36424 | Did n''t I tell you the Germans would believe anything their generals told them? |
36424 | Did you hear that joke Jameson was telling about the Yankee soldier? |
36424 | Did you see that, fellows? |
36424 | Do you know what this yellow dog did, right here in the country that''s made him? |
36424 | Do you remember what that U- boat did that sank the_ Belgian Prince_? 36424 Do you understand?" |
36424 | Do you want to fight? |
36424 | Does he mean me? |
36424 | Does it? |
36424 | Gee, how do you do it? |
36424 | Going to gobble up all Europe, is she? |
36424 | Has anybody got the makin''s? |
36424 | Have I got the delirium tremens? |
36424 | Have n''t you heard that? |
36424 | He will, eh? |
36424 | How about Peterson himself? |
36424 | How do you like your first look at our camp? |
36424 | How far off is this Camp Boone? |
36424 | How in the name of all that''s lucky did you get here? |
36424 | How many of us are going to enlist and how many of us are going to wait for the draft? |
36424 | I wonder when they''re going to put us on the firing line? |
36424 | In what part of the country was your mother born? |
36424 | Is anyone hurt? |
36424 | Is it real or is it all a hideous dream? |
36424 | Is n''t it about time for those drafted men to get down here? |
36424 | Is n''t it pretty nearly time for mess? |
36424 | Is that so? |
36424 | Is this straight goods, Billy, or are you getting us on a string? |
36424 | It seems a guard challenged him,chuckled Bart,"with the regular,''Who goes there?'' |
36424 | More yet? |
36424 | Not getting homesick, are you, Tom? |
36424 | Not half bad, eh, old man? |
36424 | Oh, I''m like a postage stamp? |
36424 | Oh, so that''s all, is it? |
36424 | Oh, well, what''s a little bit of bomb between friends? 36424 Or will you do what I suggested?" |
36424 | Pretty well winded, Sheldon? |
36424 | Remember how he used to talk on the other side? 36424 Say, is n''t it rich?" |
36424 | See that smudge of smoke over there? 36424 So far away from shore as this? |
36424 | Somebody has got to rule the world, and why not Germany? |
36424 | Sort of poetic justice, eh? |
36424 | Suppose he does spot one, what good does it do? |
36424 | That''s the reason your father came here from Germany, was n''t it? |
36424 | The which? |
36424 | Then you think my mother''s chances are good? |
36424 | They went down to Mexico to catch Villa, did n''t they? 36424 This is a free country, ai n''t it?" |
36424 | To what enemy have I surrendered? |
36424 | Try agin, why do n''t ye? 36424 Well, if it''s a bluff why do n''t you call it?" |
36424 | Well, that''s the easiest thing we ever had to do; eh, fellows? |
36424 | Well, what should I say? |
36424 | Well,she asked, cheerily, as they sat down to the tasteful meal she had prepared for him,"what is the news in the city to- day? |
36424 | Were you there? |
36424 | Wh- what''s that? |
36424 | What are we going to do with him? |
36424 | What are you anyway, Rabig, a German or an American? |
36424 | What are you doing? 36424 What did I tell you about our navy?" |
36424 | What do you fellows think this is, a business office or an athletic club? |
36424 | What do you mean by that? |
36424 | What do you suppose it was? |
36424 | What do you suppose they''re trying to do? |
36424 | What does the gang want? 36424 What has he been up to, now, I wonder?" |
36424 | What have a fellow''s teeth got to do with it? 36424 What have you got to say about it?" |
36424 | What is the fountain pen game? |
36424 | What kind of a can? |
36424 | What was it the newsboys were crying through the streets? |
36424 | What was it? |
36424 | What would you do with a cur like this? |
36424 | What''s that you said? |
36424 | What''s that? |
36424 | What''s the dope? |
36424 | What''s the dope? |
36424 | What''s the matter with them? |
36424 | What''s the row, Frank? |
36424 | What''s the tightest place you were ever in? |
36424 | What''s the trouble? |
36424 | What? |
36424 | Where are they? |
36424 | Where did you dig up this rig? |
36424 | Where have you been, Frank? |
36424 | Where? |
36424 | Who asked you to butt in? |
36424 | Who is it? |
36424 | Who''s McGrath going to put against you? |
36424 | Why did n''t you do it when you were on the other side? 36424 Why did n''t you trim him, Frank?" |
36424 | Why not? |
36424 | Why not? |
36424 | Will we come out on our feet or be carried out? |
36424 | Will you do it-- or shall I make you? |
36424 | With a sky like this? |
36424 | Wot ye goin''ter do wit''me whin ye git holt uv me? |
36424 | Would he put over a bean ball or a fadeaway, do you think? |
36424 | You and father were planning to go over there just before the war broke out, were n''t you, Mother? |
36424 | At any rate, we wo n''t grizzle about it till we have to-- will we, Mother?" |
36424 | CHAPTER XI NICK RABIG TURNS UP"What is that? |
36424 | Ca n''t ye take a little joke?" |
36424 | Death? |
36424 | Did you hear it?" |
36424 | Do you hear that? |
36424 | Do you know anything about it?" |
36424 | Do you know what he did?" |
36424 | If that is n''t bullion, what is it?" |
36424 | Jazz band music? |
36424 | Oh, Frank, what do you suppose those murderers did then? |
36424 | S- o- u- p. Get that? |
36424 | See that stone? |
36424 | Shrapnel?" |
36424 | Suddenly Frank asked:"What was that, fellows? |
36424 | Well, why did n''t they do it?" |
36424 | Were they to wait there, until that grey wave overwhelmed them, pouring into the trenches like a surging flood? |
36424 | What do you fellows want-- the Moonlight Sonata or something else simple like that?" |
36424 | What do you say?" |
36424 | What is that?" |
36424 | What was your mother''s family name?" |
36424 | What would she do, alone and anguished in this quiet home while he was battling at the front in a rain of shells, of poison gas, of liquid fire? |
36424 | What''s Hindenburg doing now but retreating?" |
36424 | Where are you going? |
36424 | Who in the world was prepared except Germany? |
36424 | Who of their own number had gone? |
36424 | Why should it seem so strange?" |
36424 | Would the sentry prove to be alert and resourceful? |
36424 | Would they ever be able to claim his grandfather''s estate? |
36424 | Wounds? |
36424 | how can I let you go?" |
36424 | shouted Bart,"and where did you get the Boche?" |
41435 | Are you sure it''s not a larger species of fish? |
41435 | Business? 41435 But has he not power to remove him?" |
41435 | But how is all this possible, you may ask, this feeding of Germany through neutral Scandinavian countries? 41435 Fascination for the sea?" |
41435 | For whom does Mr. Jim require it? |
41435 | How about your line of communications? |
41435 | Me? |
41435 | Now are you satisfied? |
41435 | Perhaps a cigar would cool you down a bit? |
41435 | Then what were you doing on board that trading boat in which we crossed from---- to---- last Monday? 41435 What for?" |
41435 | What is the result? 41435 Who sent you to ask for it?" |
41435 | Why not look in and see old Pedersen, the smuggler? 41435 Why should I interfere?" |
41435 | You know who we are? |
41435 | ''Can we let through consignments to So- and- So in your capital?'' |
41435 | ''You can not persuade a civilian gentleman to rise until the world has been properly aired''? |
41435 | Am I not right, sir?" |
41435 | And sport?" |
41435 | And when the goods go on from Sweden to Germany, who relieves the Swedish banks? |
41435 | And why were you disguised as a common sailorman, all dirt and grease?" |
41435 | Ascertaining that Kiel happened to be our common destination, what more natural than we should select the same hotel to stay at? |
41435 | But how? |
41435 | But what powerful mysterious motives prompted its re- adoption after it had been rejected by the House of Lords? |
41435 | But you do not give me any idea of what my duties will consist-- to whom I am to report, or how? |
41435 | Can I give him the letter for you?" |
41435 | Can we release them?'' |
41435 | Could the old smuggler have communicated possible suspicions? |
41435 | Could we have been seen at work on the harbour? |
41435 | Did she really take me for a blithering idiot, or did she entertain doubts on the matter? |
41435 | Do n''t you see where we are drifting to? |
41435 | Do you think that any nation, no matter how wealthy, can stand indefinitely such a strain on its wealth? |
41435 | Do you understand, my dear sir, what I want to convey?" |
41435 | He argued that if fate had ordained he should be blown up by a mine, instead of being drowned, what did it matter? |
41435 | He said:"Do you realise the tremendous pile of treasure we are pouring out in this contest? |
41435 | How can it be expected of him? |
41435 | How had the sign even come to be used? |
41435 | How is it that you seem to know it so well?" |
41435 | How long do you require to put your affairs in order?" |
41435 | How, when, and where had the local police or the military been led to suspect us, to hit our trail? |
41435 | I expect your paper would like to have such items of news? |
41435 | I met him as he descended the companion and asked him what he was playing at? |
41435 | If either of us, for example, were on a small island and we received a warning that a German had had orders to shift us-- what would you fear most?" |
41435 | If not an insult to them it certainly would be an insult to me, to be invited or even expected to meet in honourable(?) |
41435 | If this trade was honest and legitimate, why should these tactics be followed, and these precautions taken? |
41435 | Immediately came back the reply:"Is father really dead_ or only deceased_?" |
41435 | Is it another joke, like the whales_ with iron skins, or the spy_? |
41435 | Is it not possible that Sir Edward Grey, like the late Lord Kitchener, may not have been his own master? |
41435 | Lord Devonport added:"What has come of the much- vaunted order in Council declaring that no goods should either enter or leave Germany? |
41435 | Mr. Booth:"Is the noble Lord aware that the Germans in New York toasted the health of the Foreign Office at Christmas time?" |
41435 | Or can it be ascribed to the much- talked- of mysterious Hidden Hand? |
41435 | Or does the fault lie with the Foreign Office at home? |
41435 | Or has someone been telling you fairy tales?" |
41435 | Sir Samuel Evans: How many herrings in 50,000 tons? |
41435 | So why waste breath on these pleasure resorts?" |
41435 | Surely we must have some good and able men who do or can serve us abroad? |
41435 | The little matter of a permit for export? |
41435 | To what lengths would she be likely to go if she so decided? |
41435 | Twiggez vous?" |
41435 | Was it to be wondered at that from the soul of the Motherland prayers had so long and so often ascended? |
41435 | Was my companion everything I believed him to be? |
41435 | Was she worth a torpedo? |
41435 | Was the Government to blame for this? |
41435 | What I mean is, wherein would you be most careful, or most on your guard?" |
41435 | What are the reliefs? |
41435 | What better material could anyone wish for to help unravel a proposition like this? |
41435 | What can you mean? |
41435 | What could give more confirmatory proof? |
41435 | What could have been easier or more inexpensive than a quickly- cultivated acquaintanceship by a Secret Service agent with a person so named? |
41435 | What could we do? |
41435 | What countries would such a course of action have forced into war against us? |
41435 | What has Lord John Fisher done? |
41435 | What is the ultimate destination of these cargoes? |
41435 | What kind of business?" |
41435 | What mattered it to anyone, least of all to myself, if I crossed the Great Divide before my allotted time? |
41435 | What more simple and inexpensive than to bring about a consummation of such wishes? |
41435 | What of it? |
41435 | What on earth are you driving at? |
41435 | What possible reason could there be behind the scenes that ordered and upheld such a creed as_ Ruat coelum supprimatur veritas_? |
41435 | What use was block letter- writing to conceal identity if it was cyphered on Ambassadorial note- paper? |
41435 | What was held in the unseen hand and to whom was it extended? |
41435 | What was it? |
41435 | What would be her next step? |
41435 | What would happen next? |
41435 | Where did it come from? |
41435 | Which of the usual weapons did I prefer? |
41435 | Who had floated it? |
41435 | Who had given information and what did they really know? |
41435 | Who hesitated to question the service? |
41435 | Why did he not explain why our Fleet was not allowed to limit particular imports to neutral countries to certain fixed totals per month, or per annum? |
41435 | Why did we not do so? |
41435 | Why give a key to a gate, or a door, which could be left open? |
41435 | Why give a scrap of writing or paper of any sort? |
41435 | Why not try it now? |
41435 | Why permit such a man to come near the Embassy at all? |
41435 | Why see such a man personally? |
41435 | Why should he trouble us?" |
41435 | Why should she be noticed now, even by the most amateur belligerent, or by the freshest novice at the game? |
41435 | Why use English gold when Norwegian money was available? |
41435 | Why wait eighteen months to arrive at such a decision? |
41435 | Why were not these words used as soon as war was declared? |
41435 | Why, then, were these Ministers abroad allowed to remain in office, where they had been a laughing- stock and were apparently worse than useless? |
41435 | Why, therefore, should I now seek their lives, or to do them some serious bodily harm? |
41435 | Why, therefore, should they now seek to destroy me? |
41435 | Why? |
41435 | Why? |
41435 | Winston Churchill referred to in his memorable speech, and which has been the subject of so much surmise and comment? |
41435 | Would she remain silent, or would she make further inquiry? |
41435 | Would the Entente eventually achieve full consummation of its hopes, so devoutly to be wished? |
41435 | Would the nations involved cease their strife owing to absolute exhaustion and attrition? |
41435 | _ Was ever there such a comedy? |
41435 | who can tell how all will end? |
18618 | But when? |
18618 | Dead, sir? |
18618 | Did the Americans stand fire? |
18618 | If the governor refuses to give the pass, shall the revenue officer be allowed to seize the tea and land it to- morrow morning? |
18618 | Shall we submit and say nothing? 18618 What makes thee think so, Isaac?" |
18618 | Who cares what this country fellow thinks? |
18618 | Who is he anyway? 18618 Would ten dollars be of any service?" |
18618 | 3. Who were the men Washington chose to help him in his new task as President? |
18618 | 4. Who was Kit Carson, and how did he help Frémont? |
18618 | 7. Who was Lafayette, and what did he do for the American cause? |
18618 | A weak man would have said:"What can I do with an army like this? |
18618 | And how did the Provincials, as the British called the Americans, regard the situation? |
18618 | And what do you suppose the chief business of this Congress was? |
18618 | Are you a patriot? |
18618 | Are you locating every event upon the map? |
18618 | Are you making frequent use of the map? |
18618 | Are you making frequent use of the map? |
18618 | Are you making frequent use of the map? |
18618 | Are you making frequent use of your map? |
18618 | Are you making frequent use of your maps? |
18618 | But how can we help ourselves?" |
18618 | But when shall we be stronger? |
18618 | Can you explain Patrick Henry''s power as an orator? |
18618 | Can you explain how it was that he had such a powerful influence over men? |
18618 | Can you tell in what ways each of these is of special value to us? |
18618 | Did not the British fleet have them so close under its nose that it could easily get between them and New York and make escape impossible? |
18618 | Did you ever hear of such a party? |
18618 | Do you wonder that the colonists felt that England was taking an unfair advantage? |
18618 | Do you wonder that they loved their new home? |
18618 | For how could the Americans get away? |
18618 | Have you in your mind a picture of young Patrick Henry as he rode on horseback along the country road toward Williamsburg? |
18618 | He wanted to rule England in his own way, and how could he do so if he allowed his stubborn colonists in America thus to get the better of him? |
18618 | How are we all dependent upon one another? |
18618 | How can the simple colonists resist it?" |
18618 | How did Washington show his ability as a general at New York? |
18618 | How did he help his countrymen before taking up his public life? |
18618 | How did he prove his strength at that time? |
18618 | How did he save this settlement from the Indians? |
18618 | How did the colonies help the people of Boston at this time? |
18618 | How did the people express their feeling for Washington when he was on his way to New York to be inaugurated as President? |
18618 | How do you account for Clark''s remarkable success? |
18618 | How is the telegraph useful to men? |
18618 | How may we be truly patriotic? |
18618 | In what respects were Samuel Adams and Patrick Henry unlike as boys? |
18618 | In what way did George III and Parliament punish Boston for throwing the tea overboard? |
18618 | In what ways are coal, iron, and steel especially useful? |
18618 | In what ways was the Erie Canal useful to the people? |
18618 | Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
18618 | It is good for us to ask ourselves this question: How can I be helpful in the community where I live, which has done so much for me? |
18618 | Of Daniel Webster? |
18618 | Of Henry Clay? |
18618 | On a certain occasion Morse said to one of them, who owed him for a few months''teaching:"Well, Strothers, my boy, how are we off for money?" |
18618 | Serious questions are being discussed:"What shall we do about the Stamp Act?" |
18618 | Shall we beg Parliament to repeal the act, or shall we take a bold stand and declare that we will not obey it?" |
18618 | Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction? |
18618 | Shall we send a petition to King George asking him for justice? |
18618 | Should you not like to have been one of the guests? |
18618 | The English captain, feeling sure of victory, called out:"Has your ship struck?" |
18618 | Then arose the burning question:"Shall the territory we have acquired from Mexico be free or open to slavery?" |
18618 | What and where was the National Road? |
18618 | What are the four great industries taken up in this chapter? |
18618 | What can you tell about the early life of John C. Calhoun? |
18618 | What can you tell of Robertson''s boyhood? |
18618 | What did I say?" |
18618 | What did Nathan Hale do? |
18618 | What did Washington say when he heard that the Americans had stood their ground in face of the British assault? |
18618 | What did William Pitt think of the Stamp Act? |
18618 | What did he do for Kentucky? |
18618 | What did he do for Texas? |
18618 | What did he find out about the spirit of these colonists? |
18618 | What did the Americans win by the treaty? |
18618 | What do you admire about John Paul Jones? |
18618 | What do you admire about Morse? |
18618 | What do you admire about each of the three great statesmen? |
18618 | What do you admire about him? |
18618 | What do you admire about him? |
18618 | What do you admire about him? |
18618 | What do you admire about him? |
18618 | What do you admire about him? |
18618 | What do you admire in Patrick Henry? |
18618 | What do you admire in Samuel Adams? |
18618 | What do you think of him? |
18618 | What do you think of him? |
18618 | What do you think of him? |
18618 | What effects did the invention of the cotton- gin have upon slavery? |
18618 | What great mistake did General Howe make at that time? |
18618 | What is it that gentlemen wish? |
18618 | What kind of Indian fighter was Sevier? |
18618 | What kind of army did Washington have when he took command at Cambridge? |
18618 | What kind of boy was Andrew Jackson? |
18618 | What kind of boy was Grant? |
18618 | What kind of boy was Houston? |
18618 | What kind of boy was he? |
18618 | What kind of boyhood had Daniel Boone? |
18618 | What kind of man was Daniel Morgan, and what do you think of him? |
18618 | What kind of man was George III? |
18618 | What kind of man was he? |
18618 | What kind of man? |
18618 | What kind of man? |
18618 | What kind of man? |
18618 | What kind of student was he in college? |
18618 | What led up to the"Boston Tea Party"? |
18618 | What part did he take in the events leading up to the purchase of Florida? |
18618 | What sort of training did the pioneer boy receive in school and at home? |
18618 | What was Clark''s brilliant plan? |
18618 | What was Webster''s idea of the Union, and in what way did it differ from Hayne''s? |
18618 | What was the Compromise of 1850? |
18618 | What was the Declaration of Independence, and when was it signed? |
18618 | What was the Emancipation Proclamation? |
18618 | What was the First Continental Congress, and what did it do? |
18618 | What was the Missouri Compromise? |
18618 | What was the Stamp Act? |
18618 | What was the condition of his army when he took command in the South? |
18618 | What was the extent of our country at that time? |
18618 | What was the outcome of the desperate sea duel between the Bon Homme Richard and the Serapis? |
18618 | What was the tax law of 1767, and why did the colonists object to paying the new taxes? |
18618 | What were some of the important results of the Civil War? |
18618 | What were the results of the Battle of Bunker Hill? |
18618 | What were the results of the capture of Burgoyne? |
18618 | What were the results of this expedition? |
18618 | What would they have? |
18618 | When did he make a great speech in St. John''s Church, Richmond? |
18618 | When did it end? |
18618 | When did the Revolution begin? |
18618 | When did this war begin, and when did it end? |
18618 | Why did Jefferson send Lewis and Clark on their famous expedition? |
18618 | Why did Lee go with Virginia when this State seceded? |
18618 | Why did Parliament pass it, and why did the colonists object to it? |
18618 | Why did Parliament repeal it? |
18618 | Why did Robertson plant a settlement at the place where Nashville now stands? |
18618 | Why did Sevier go with his family to the Watauga settlement? |
18618 | Why did he so strongly desire that the colonists should be compelled to pay a tax to England? |
18618 | Why did not Lincoln set the slaves free when he became President? |
18618 | Why did the Americans fortify Breed''s Hill? |
18618 | Why did the British troops march out to Lexington and Concord? |
18618 | Why did the English call him a pirate when he was sailing along the British coasts in order to destroy property? |
18618 | Why did the Westerners wish the Mississippi to be open to their trade? |
18618 | Why did they admire him? |
18618 | Why has Washington been called the"Father of his Country"? |
18618 | Why stand we here idle? |
18618 | Why was Clay called"the Great Peacemaker"? |
18618 | Why was Napoleon willing to sell us the whole of Louisiana? |
18618 | Why were the people of South Carolina opposed to the high tariff laws of 1828 and 1832? |
18618 | Will it be the next week, or the next year? |
18618 | Will it be when we are totally disarmed, and when a British guard shall be stationed in every house? |
6316 | Hath he let vultures climb his eagle''s seat To make Jove''s bolts purveyors of their maw? 6316 Is the doom sealed for Hesper? |
6316 | Is there no hope? |
6316 | Now who will buy my apples? |
6316 | Tell us, tell us why you look so? |
6316 | What make we, murmur''st thou? 6316 ( we could hardly speak, we shook so),--Are they beaten? |
6316 | ARE they beaten?" |
6316 | And we sometimes walked together in the pleasant summer weather;--"Please to tell us what his name was?" |
6316 | And where is the band who so vauntingly swore,''Mid the havoc of war and the battle''s confusion, A home and a country they''d leave us no more? |
6316 | Are they palsied or asleep? |
6316 | Are they panic- struck and helpless? |
6316 | Because the tongues of Garrison And Phillips now are cold in death, Think you their work can be undone? |
6316 | But the treasures-- how to get them? |
6316 | But where were his lieutenants? |
6316 | Can he strike? |
6316 | Cruel, haughty, and cold, He ever was strong and bold-- Shall he shrink from a wooden stem? |
6316 | Death? |
6316 | Earth''s mightiest deigned to wear it,--why not he?" |
6316 | Ef_ I_ turned mad dogs loose, John, On_ your_ front- parlor stairs, Would it jest meet your views, John, To wait and sue their heirs? |
6316 | Fear ye foes who kill for hire? |
6316 | Fear? |
6316 | For what avail the plough or sail Or land or life, if freedom fail? |
6316 | For what avail the plough or sail, Or land or life, if freedom fail? |
6316 | Gather the ravens, then, in funeral file For him, life''s morn yet golden in his hair?" |
6316 | Had they in terror fled? |
6316 | Hath he the Many''s plaudits found more sweet Than Wisdom? |
6316 | Have our soldiers got faint- hearted, and in noiseless haste departed? |
6316 | Have those scalping Indian devils come to murder us once more?" |
6316 | Hope ye mercy still? |
6316 | How do you think the man was dressed? |
6316 | It''s you thet''s to decide; Ai n''t_ your_ bonds held by Fate, John, Like all the world''s beside? |
6316 | Italy? |
6316 | JOHN BURNS OF GETTYSBURG BRET HARTE[ Sidenote: July 1, 2, 3, 1863] Have you heard the story that gossips tell Of Burns of Gettysburg?--No? |
6316 | Must Hesper join the wailing ghosts of names?" |
6316 | O''er what quenched grandeur must our shroud be drawn? |
6316 | O, who can tell what deeds were done, When Britain''s cross, on yonder wave, Sunk''neath Columbia''s dazzling sun, And met in Erie''s flood its grave? |
6316 | One only doubt was ours, One only dread we knew-- Could the day that dawned so well Go down for the Darker Powers? |
6316 | Or do you think those precious drops From Lincoln''s heart were shed in vain? |
6316 | Or quenched the fires lit by their breath? |
6316 | Shall it be love, or hate, John? |
6316 | So she resolutely walked up to the wagon old and red;"May I have a dozen apples for a kiss?" |
6316 | Stand back of new- come foreign hordes, And fear our heritage to claim? |
6316 | Tell me, ye who scanned The stars, Earth''s elders, still must noblest aims Be traced upon oblivious ocean- sands? |
6316 | That Lovejoy was but idly slain? |
6316 | The South says,"_ Poor folks down!_"John, An,"_ All men up!_"say we,-- White, yaller, black, an''brown, John: Now which is your idee? |
6316 | The day you march away-- cannot I guess? |
6316 | The first that the general saw were the groups Of stragglers, and then the retreating troops, What was done? |
6316 | Then all was silent, till there smote my ear A movement in the stream that checked my breath: Was it the slow plash of a wading deer? |
6316 | Then should we speak but servile words, Or shall we hang our heads in shame? |
6316 | They come from South, they come from North, They come from East and West; And who can say, when all go forth, That any of these are best? |
6316 | Think you that John Brown''s spirit stops? |
6316 | Up came the reserves to the mellay infernal, Asking where to go in,--through the clearing or pine? |
6316 | Was it moonlight so wondrously flashing? |
6316 | What cares he? |
6316 | What cares he? |
6316 | What cares he? |
6316 | What cares he? |
6316 | What matters now the cause? |
6316 | What sounds awake my slumbering ear, What echoes o''er the waters come? |
6316 | What to him are all our wars, What but death bemocking folly? |
6316 | What to him is friend or foeman, Rise of moon, or set of sun, Hand of man, or kiss of woman? |
6316 | What''s the mercy despots feel? |
6316 | When empires must be wound, we bring the shroud, The time- old web of the implacable Three: Is it too coarse for him, the young and proud? |
6316 | Where breathes the foe but falls before us? |
6316 | Who causes thus the thunder The doom of men to speak? |
6316 | Who is dead? |
6316 | Who made the law thet hurts, John,_ Heads I win,--ditto tails?_"J. |
6316 | Will ye give it up to slaves? |
6316 | Will ye look for greener graves? |
6316 | Will ye to your homes retire? |
6316 | With the lessening smoke and thunder, Our glasses around we aim-- What is that burning yonder? |
6316 | You wonder why we''re hot, John? |
6316 | _ Are_ they beaten? |
6316 | _ Would_ the fleet get through? |
6316 | and what are we? |
6316 | and who could blame If_ Indians_ seized the tea, And, chest by chest, let down the same Into the laughing sea? |
6316 | and,"What will his mother do?" |
6316 | do they thrill, The brave two hundred scars You got in the River- Wars? |
6316 | hast thou seen In all thy travel round the earth Ever a morn of calmer birth? |
6316 | he shouted, long and loud; And"Who wants my potatoes?" |
6316 | held Opinion''s wind for Law? |
6316 | the Sea- Queen''s isle? |
6316 | was it the night- wind that rustled the leaves? |
6316 | what to do? |
43536 | (_ Aside._) The old scoundrel looks out for number one, do n''t he? |
43536 | (_ Comes forward._) Did ever any girl suffer as I do? |
43536 | (_ Looks up._) Why, where the devil has the woman gone to? |
43536 | (_ Points to ears._) Deaf? |
43536 | (_ Pulls her round._) I''m a sheep, am I? |
43536 | (_ Roars._) Will you dine with us? |
43536 | (_ Shouts._) A bachelor? |
43536 | (_ Shouts._) Are you a bachelor? |
43536 | (_ Shouts._) Distress? |
43536 | (_ Shouts._) Now, my boy, before you see your future bride, you''ll want to fix up a little, eh? |
43536 | (_ Sits, shouts._) Have you a wife? |
43536 | A angel? |
43536 | A fire? |
43536 | A puppy, am I? |
43536 | A wife? |
43536 | A wife? |
43536 | All my life? |
43536 | And"brute"? |
43536 | And"old foozle"? |
43536 | Angel? |
43536 | Are you deaf? |
43536 | Are you deaf? |
43536 | Ay, what''s your name? |
43536 | Bachelor? |
43536 | Can he hear with his eyes? |
43536 | Can it be possible? |
43536 | Can this be possible? |
43536 | Catch the idea? |
43536 | Charming, eh? |
43536 | Clap me into an asylum, will you? |
43536 | Deaf? |
43536 | Deaf? |
43536 | Dear old master, was it kind to deceive me in this fashion? |
43536 | Did n''t I tell you so, miss? |
43536 | Did n''t you hear me call to you, you man- slaughterer? |
43536 | Did you see him? |
43536 | Dine with us? |
43536 | Do you catch my idea? |
43536 | Do you retract"old ruffian"? |
43536 | Does he suspect me? |
43536 | Does he, miss? |
43536 | Effect of smoking? |
43536 | Eh? |
43536 | Enter JANE with a letter, in flat._) Jane, how_ can_ you be so neglectful? |
43536 | Eustachian tube? |
43536 | Fear? |
43536 | For heaven''s sake, what_ is_ the matter? |
43536 | Give you my daughter after all your frightful insults? |
43536 | Have n''t the leisure? |
43536 | Have you a wife? |
43536 | He said yes, did n''t he? |
43536 | Holler? |
43536 | How dare he? |
43536 | How dare you, sir, violate my privacy? |
43536 | How much longer shall I stand this? |
43536 | Husband? |
43536 | I a jackass? |
43536 | I a muttonhead? |
43536 | I a tyrant? |
43536 | I say, have you a wife? |
43536 | I''m a jolterhead, am I? |
43536 | I''m a mollycoddle, am I? |
43536 | Is he handsome? |
43536 | Is he young? |
43536 | Is it a caller? |
43536 | Is it possible you can hear? |
43536 | Is it possible? |
43536 | Is n''t he well? |
43536 | It''s a bargain, then? |
43536 | Jane, is any thing the matter with papa? |
43536 | Jane, what do you mean? |
43536 | Jane, where are those cigars? |
43536 | Jane, you here yet? |
43536 | Know what, papa? |
43536 | Lime- juice? |
43536 | Luncheon''s ready, do you say? |
43536 | May I ask for a bit of paper? |
43536 | Maybe you know, miss, that, in the matter of hearing, your pa is deficient? |
43536 | Miss Coddle, has he been shamming deafness, then, all this time? |
43536 | My dear sir, is it possible you suffer such insolence? |
43536 | My name? |
43536 | Neither of us deaf, eh? |
43536 | Nothing more? |
43536 | Partridges? |
43536 | Pull dog, pull devil, eh? |
43536 | Rather early, is n''t it? |
43536 | Seen whom? |
43536 | So you''re deaf, eh? |
43536 | Son- in- law? |
43536 | Was n''t he, miss? |
43536 | What can have happened? |
43536 | What did you tell me your name was Whittermat for? |
43536 | What do I hear? |
43536 | What do you mean? |
43536 | What do you say? |
43536 | What do you say? |
43536 | What do you say? |
43536 | What does he say, Jane? |
43536 | What does he say? |
43536 | What does the scamp say? |
43536 | What for, sir? |
43536 | What for, then, I''d like to know? |
43536 | What have you there? |
43536 | What have you there? |
43536 | What is the old fool after now? |
43536 | What kind does he expect, I wonder? |
43536 | What man? |
43536 | What nonsense is this about his being deaf? |
43536 | What should I do without her? |
43536 | What''s this? |
43536 | What''s your name, sir? |
43536 | What? |
43536 | What? |
43536 | Where is he? |
43536 | Where is that letter? |
43536 | Why did n''t ye tell me? |
43536 | Why did n''t you say so before? |
43536 | Why do n''t you look in? |
43536 | Will not Miss Coddle dine with us to- day? |
43536 | Yes? |
43536 | You call me an idiot, do you? |
43536 | You love me, Eglantine? |
43536 | You said,"Can this be possible?" |
43536 | You tell me to shut up, eh? |
43536 | You understand? |
43536 | You''ll have a little fun out of the old sheep, will you? |
43536 | You''ve heared of the sacrifice of Abraham, Miss Eglantine? |
43536 | Your pa is not here, miss? |
43536 | a card? |
43536 | fire your abominable gun under my window, sir? |
43536 | how can I bear it? |
43536 | knock down my walls? |
43536 | marry my darling to a deaf man? |
43536 | smash my melon- frames? |
43536 | son- in- law? |
43536 | what now? |
43536 | what''s that infernal noise? |
43536 | what''s that? |
43536 | who cares for you? |
43536 | whose house is it, by the way? |
43536 | with the shad? |
43536 | you here? |
34344 | Ai n''t you Mr. O. K., that was out in Texas with Major J----? |
34344 | Are you both Yankee soldiers? |
34344 | Are you sure that your friends over there have not heard of your being in the army? |
34344 | Aunty,seeing that I was awake, came closer to my bed, and, in a kindly way, asked:"How is you dis mornin''?" |
34344 | But do n''t I have to pay something for the delivery? |
34344 | But, my dear boy, why did you refuse to take the oath of allegiance? 34344 But,"said the old scoundrel,"why did n''t you stay here last night?" |
34344 | Do you know Colonel Blank, of Baltimore? |
34344 | Does the Secretary want to procure any information as to General Patterson''s movements? |
34344 | How does a man feel in battle? |
34344 | How is it that your companion in the uniform ran away on the approach of our troops? |
34344 | How long have they been here? |
34344 | Is that so? 34344 It looks as if something was up, do n''t it?" |
34344 | Oh, you have passes, have you? 34344 Rd"did not seem to comprehend, and made the telegraphic signal for interrogation(?) |
34344 | Right away; do you hyar? |
34344 | Say, Baker, ai n''t you just playing off as a Dutchman? 34344 That''s enough, ai n''t it? |
34344 | What are they doing up there? |
34344 | What are they talking about so much; why do n''t they come on? |
34344 | What are you doing there? |
34344 | What did he say? |
34344 | What do they do with them? |
34344 | What regiment was your friend in? |
34344 | What shall I tell him? |
34344 | When did you see him? |
34344 | Where in---- are you going? |
34344 | Why,I said,"are we near the navy yard?" |
34344 | Yes, I know; but what soldiers? |
34344 | 121 The Sergeant kindly Gave Him the Steel 441"To Father: I am Safe; Are All Well at Home?" |
34344 | 282 Cavalry Picket on the Rappahannock 473"Colonel Mosby''s Soldiers, I Reckon, Sir?" |
34344 | 338"Bill, Ai n''t He the Fellow?" |
34344 | 66 An Interview with Parson Brownlow 304"Are You Union, or Confederate?" |
34344 | Addressing me courteously, he said:"What in the name of all that''s good brings you out on this road on such a dark night, disturbing our sleep?" |
34344 | Broome?" |
34344 | Ca n''t you go up there and see them for me?" |
34344 | Could I forget that banquet? |
34344 | Could it be possible that we were to be baffled at last? |
34344 | Dear me, what bass drums there were in General Patterson''s army; was n''t there one to each company? |
34344 | Did we catch any fish? |
34344 | Did you ever try to get into a hammock? |
34344 | Do n''t you see the''old man''is full?" |
34344 | Every person I have talked with for five minutes about Gettysburg, asks the question:"Were you there when Pickett charged?" |
34344 | He drew his chair right up in front of mine, looking me straight in the eye, as he said:"Now, my young friend, what is it that you propose?" |
34344 | He replied to my observation:"Yes; where did you come from?" |
34344 | Here are some Maryland secessionists being sent away down here to Tennessee to punish and coerce Unionists?" |
34344 | His reply to this put me off my pins entirely:"Well, why do n''t you all go to your own home in your own country?" |
34344 | How, then, could I explain this arrest to them? |
34344 | I asked only the one question--"Where do we go?" |
34344 | I made the signal for interrogation, or question, which all operators understand to mean,"I did not hear you,"or"What did you say?" |
34344 | I met at the hotel office my companion, the Colonel, who, upon seeing me, rushed over the office floor to say:"Why, where the devil have you been? |
34344 | I said more deliberately:"That message about Banks-- is there anything important?" |
34344 | I spoke first, with the desperation of an outlaw challenging a helpless traveler:"Are you Union or Confederate?" |
34344 | In a voice trembling with suppressed rage, he said, looking savagely at me:"Did n''t you see me at the theater the other night?" |
34344 | Instead of that, however, in a quiet, slow- speaking voice, I suggested involuntarily:"How about the Monitor and Merrimac?" |
34344 | Is n''t he just too nice?" |
34344 | It may also be asked why I bring this subject up at this late date, and after Hancock''s death? |
34344 | It must have been a violent shock to father, but why should I so write and rouse within all of you the bitter renewal of your grief? |
34344 | Making an appearance at the head of the stairway, she asked, pleasantly:"What in the world is the matter with you?" |
34344 | Never turning my head, I was walking on hurriedly when the blamed fool sang out after me so everybody could hear:"What?" |
34344 | Of course, I must have imagined the worst; who would not have done so under the same conditions? |
34344 | SKETCHING, ARE YOU?"] |
34344 | Sketching, Are You?" |
34344 | Superintendent here?" |
34344 | The Colonel said:"You have a letter to send home I am told?" |
34344 | The Colonel, who was the jolly fellow of this trio, said, laughingly:"Hello, boy, what have you been up to?" |
34344 | The General, without halting his slow movement, gruffly said:"Where is Slocum?" |
34344 | The first words the brass tongue of the instrument sounded to his startled ears were:"I am O. K."--this was my telegraphic signal--"Who are you?" |
34344 | The hint was sufficient, and to my hurried inquiry:"Are there any cavalrymen at the house?" |
34344 | The man on duty at the door looked at me with disgust as he said:"That''s no damned doctor, man; do n''t you know General Meade?" |
34344 | The officer now began to get mad and, in a commanding tone, inquired:"What is your business, sir, with the General?" |
34344 | The only consolation I got from the officer was,"Can your horse stand it? |
34344 | Then Lanyard with a contemptuous look, turned to Baker and said:"Say, Dutchy, you blasted rascal, you played me for a marine, did n''t you?" |
34344 | Then she added, laughing heartily as she spoke:"Did n''t you hear him slam the door?" |
34344 | Then taking my arm, familiarly, said:"Come along, the boys will all be glad to see you?" |
34344 | Then the old lady chipped in with:"Shall I send Mammy to help you bathe it with warm water, before you go to bed?" |
34344 | Then, in an undertone,"Are you all alone?" |
34344 | To gratify the General, and get around the question, I asked:"Is it''Rd?''" |
34344 | To his sleepy growl of"Who''s there?" |
34344 | Under the circumstances, what could I do? |
34344 | Under the circumstances, what else could I do but take this advantage of the good people? |
34344 | Was n''t there a Rebel camp near Leesburg, or was that the name of the town near that mountain? |
34344 | We passed the two men-- one of whom was in uniform-- and as we did so, I heard one of them, say:"That''s him, ai n''t it?" |
34344 | Were they going back to their Rebel camps? |
34344 | What are you doing? |
34344 | What can I do for you? |
34344 | What could I do? |
34344 | What could have been better for my purpose? |
34344 | What did I do? |
34344 | What did I do? |
34344 | What would have been the result,_ if_ Meade had been supported by Franklin, when he broke Stonewall Jackson''s line at Fredericksburg? |
34344 | What would you have done? |
34344 | When Covode crawled into the carriage, Mr. Moorehead said,"Well, what''s the programme?" |
34344 | When handing the paper back to the clerk, he remarked jocularly:"They have made you sign a mighty tight paper, have n''t they?" |
34344 | When he stopped his conversation long enough to hear me, he simply said, in his polite, kindly way:"Well, you come in and see me again, wo n''t you?" |
34344 | Where is Slocum now? |
34344 | Where is he?" |
34344 | Where shall your answer be delivered?" |
34344 | Who are you?" |
34344 | Who in---- are you, anyhow?" |
34344 | Who is it?" |
34344 | Why did n''t I get ahead of them? |
34344 | Why did n''t you say something to me before? |
34344 | Will you please give me your name?" |
34344 | With my own hand trembling on the telegraph key I sent my own message, as follows:"To father: I am here safe; are all well at home?" |
34344 | You do n''t know what that is? |
34344 | [ Illustration: TAPPING THE TELEGRAPH WIRE.--"ARE THE YANKS IN FREDERICKSBURG?"] |
34344 | [ Illustration: TO FATHER:"I AM SAFE; ARE ALL WELL AT HOME?"] |
34344 | [ Illustration:"ARE YOU UNION OR CONFEDERATE?"] |
34344 | [ Illustration:"BILL, AIN''T HE THE FELLOW?"] |
34344 | did n''t you tell me to keep close to you?" |
34344 | is a question often asked, or"Were you frightened the first time?" |
34344 | is that you, Yank?" |
34344 | now?" |
15868 | ''What Career?'' 15868 And do you really mean, sir,"continued the old man,"that there is an embargo in force in Monte Video?" |
15868 | And we are all right, as you say, here? |
15868 | And what can I do for you? |
15868 | And what is to be the hook, darling, this time? |
15868 | And where did you get the pork, Deacon? |
15868 | And where shall we send to you then, madam? |
15868 | Are you quite sure,said I,--"quite sure? |
15868 | But David? |
15868 | But how would it sound in one of the hymns on one of our feast- days? |
15868 | But perhaps the duplicate got through? |
15868 | Can nobody sing here, or play, or tell an old- time story? |
15868 | Can you give me the address of Mr. Mason who returned from Europe last May? |
15868 | Child of the Public,I said to myself,"what do you do now?" |
15868 | Child of the Public,said my mourning genius,"are you better than other men?" |
15868 | Deacon,said he,"what meat did you eat for breakfast yesterday?" |
15868 | Did you think Kilpatrick got it? |
15868 | Do they? |
15868 | Excuse me, sir; what paper do you allude to? 15868 How, indeed?" |
15868 | Indade, sir, and where is it? |
15868 | Muses? |
15868 | Not the slightest, sir? 15868 Now, did you look up Clement? |
15868 | Papa,said old Clara, who is the next child,"all the people gave presents, did not they, as they did in the picture in your study?" |
15868 | Streak of light--Is there a light in Lycidas''s room? |
15868 | To the respectable boarding- house? |
15868 | Todd,said I,"is this a night to be talking of ingots, or hiring, or losing, or gaining? |
15868 | Very well, I thank you,said he, after the eating elements were adjusted;"and you?" |
15868 | Was not Christ our Saviour? |
15868 | What can I send to your children? |
15868 | What fun, to be sure; but Clara, what is in the picture? |
15868 | What is his name? |
15868 | What is it, Chloe? |
15868 | What sent you out from your warm steam- boiler? |
15868 | What should_ I_ sing? |
15868 | What was the bit of wire? |
15868 | What!--a deserter? |
15868 | Where are you, Frederic? |
15868 | Where is the barrel this time, Fausta? |
15868 | Where? 15868 Who have they there?" |
15868 | Why do they not give such presents every day? |
15868 | _ Ah oui_said she,"_ mais où_?" |
15868 | _ Quæne sit historia Reformationis in Ungariâ?_quoth Haliburton, after some thought. |
15868 | _ You_ sing like him? 15868 --_Exchange._ WHAT CAREER? 15868 1, vainly:Very well, thank you; and you?" |
15868 | A hundred or more people had straggled in then, and the preacher, good soul, he took for his text,"Doth not God care for the ravens?" |
15868 | And Seneca? |
15868 | And a revolution in Chili?" |
15868 | And did you not forget the Arundelian Marbles? |
15868 | And if I did not meet her to- day, when should I meet her? |
15868 | And in Venezuela?" |
15868 | And so, taking his question literally, they replied,"Sing? |
15868 | And what is a"Sheffield wimble?" |
15868 | And you?" |
15868 | Are there any Yankees, or am I getting crazy? |
15868 | Are you a Yankee whaler? |
15868 | Are you ready, then, to go on shore?" |
15868 | As we turned away from the house on Christmas morning,--I to preach and he to visit his patients,--he said to me,"Did you make that whiskey?" |
15868 | Ask what was the secret of Paul''s power as he bearded the baby Emperor, and abashed the baby Philosopher? |
15868 | Bottle marked in MS. What in the world is it? |
15868 | But what if Cornel has gone by? |
15868 | But where are your other fourteen? |
15868 | But why did I say"Yes"? |
15868 | But will not some one set up a stone for my memory at Fort Adams or at Orleans, that my disgrace may not be more than I ought to bear? |
15868 | Could the old man suspect? |
15868 | Did I expect them to walk down to the bridge themselves with great parcels to throw into the river, as I had done by Julia''s? |
15868 | Did he remember writing a note to old Jack Percival for me five years ago? |
15868 | Did he want the bottle corked? |
15868 | Did you ever do it, reader, with one of those pressed glass bottles they make now? |
15868 | Do n''t you know what it was? |
15868 | Do not you? |
15868 | Do you think you are talking of the opening of a rose- bud or the death of a mosquito? |
15868 | Does the reader know that in the desolation of the Arctic shores the Ptarmigan is the bird most often found? |
15868 | Does the reader know what that is? |
15868 | For he asked perfectly unconsciously:--"Pray, what has become of Texas? |
15868 | Graff?" |
15868 | Had I been writing there five hours? |
15868 | Have I said that she was beautiful as heaven? |
15868 | Have you ever treated Miranda for a day and found the charge so low? |
15868 | Have you no sympathy with the sufferings of a fellow- creature? |
15868 | Have you seen Captain Back''s curious account of Sir Thomas Roe''s Welcome?" |
15868 | He ended the prelude with a sudden crash on the strings, and said shortly,"And what is better to sing of than the olive?" |
15868 | I suppose you know: can you write me word be fore the 2d? |
15868 | I wish Rosas was in-- and that the Indians have risen near Maranham?" |
15868 | I wish--""Who does not wish so? |
15868 | If a man leaves for an hour, twenty"correspondents"may be howling,"Where was Mr. Pendergrast when the Oregon bill passed?" |
15868 | If she did not find her,--good God? |
15868 | If she found her aunt, how should I find her? |
15868 | Indeed, what is there not there,--which should make an Arctic winter endurable,--make a long night into day,--or while long days away? |
15868 | Is it ice blink,--are my poor old lookouts blind? |
15868 | Is it not worth noting that in this chivalry of Arctic adventure, the ships which have been wrecked have been those of the fight or horror? |
15868 | Is not there the''Intrepid''? |
15868 | Is the poor"Resolute"conscious of the change? |
15868 | Keep on, Pim; shall one never get there? |
15868 | May he not waste the hours in the blandishments of lying courtiers, or the honeyed falsehoods of a mistress? |
15868 | Must the Emperor be there? |
15868 | Nobody?.... |
15868 | Now I am stripping myself of one of the private comforts of my life,( but what will one not do for mankind?) |
15868 | O, how often I went through one phase or another of this colloquy:--"Is Mr. Mason in?" |
15868 | Only, where shall I begin?'' |
15868 | Shall I have the honor of dancing?" |
15868 | She longed for freedom,--but what is freedom where there is no law? |
15868 | Should I risk the clothes- brush again? |
15868 | Should he keep him? |
15868 | Should he let him go? |
15868 | Tell me again there is some mistake, will you?" |
15868 | The captain drives off his six dogs,--vanishes over the ice, and they are all gone"Will they not come back again?" |
15868 | The clerk looked, and said, inquiringly,--"Is it Miss Jones''s trunk which came this afternoon?" |
15868 | The same gallery- boy shouted,"How''s your mother?" |
15868 | The secret was not out-- what could he want? |
15868 | Then,''Where was Vicksburg?'' |
15868 | WHERE IS THE BARREL? |
15868 | We have served them so well, and have they really left us alone? |
15868 | Were one, two, or all of us crazy? |
15868 | Were you ever in Bahia?" |
15868 | What are you so impudent and cool about it for? |
15868 | What could Lafarge have given to the President? |
15868 | What did all this mean? |
15868 | What did he give the praise to, as he left that scene? |
15868 | What if Fausta fell into trouble? |
15868 | What if I failed her there? |
15868 | What in the world did Lycidas bring distilled water from Montreal for? |
15868 | What in thunder were they at there? |
15868 | What right had Barry to a wife? |
15868 | What should I say, what could I say, to Julia? |
15868 | What was a man to do? |
15868 | What was the mystery of Paul''s power? |
15868 | What will you hear, gentlemen?" |
15868 | What would she say? |
15868 | What, then, if he were called to account by the Department for violating the order of 1807? |
15868 | What, there is no boy? |
15868 | Where do you suppose you are?" |
15868 | Where would you go?" |
15868 | Why do you stop? |
15868 | Will I ever, ever think I have better rights than the Public again?" |
15868 | Will it be my very last? |
15868 | Will nobody come? |
15868 | Will not any of these come home now?" |
15868 | Will that girl never come? |
15868 | Will you call upon me, or appoint a time and place where I may meet you? |
15868 | Would that Kelt ever come up stairs? |
15868 | You have not cut up any of the old ones, I hope?'' |
15868 | You have rightly guessed that the question means"What is the history of the Reformation in Hungary?"] |
15868 | You smile, sir? |
15868 | _ What is the mystery of his power?_"Seneca did not know. |
15868 | do you remember the mysteries we boys used to invent about his room, in the old Intrepid days? |
15868 | have they really deserted us? |
15868 | of course you are;--and that all foreigners are sent out of Buenos Ayres?" |
15868 | that was worse,--where might she not be before twelve hours were over? |
41833 | But have you bought a ticket, mamma? |
41833 | After it is once admitted, that it ought to be redeemed at a less value than the nominal, the question arises, at what value? |
41833 | America, which grows stronger every year, or England, which grows weaker? |
41833 | And are not these advantages as tempting to these powers as to England, and as urgent motives to pursue the war? |
41833 | And to whom did God and nature give them? |
41833 | And why? |
41833 | Another question will arise, whether they should all winter together in one port, or be separated to several ports? |
41833 | Are not the members of Congress made of the same clay? |
41833 | Are not these articles as precious to France, Spain, and Holland as to England? |
41833 | Are sixtythree thousand seamen a feebler bulwark for America than Great Britain? |
41833 | Are they not an object then to America, as important and desirable as to Great Britain? |
41833 | Are they not annually created? |
41833 | Are they not dependent every moment upon the Assemblies for their existence? |
41833 | Are they not the creatures of the Assemblies? |
41833 | Are they not themselves members of the Assemblies? |
41833 | Are they not then as strong a temptation to us to continue the war, as to them? |
41833 | Are they the principal inhabitants? |
41833 | At the time of her rupture with the Porte, what part have they acted? |
41833 | But has any one ever uttered a word against Congress, or the Assemblies, or the judges, under their new governments? |
41833 | But if we continue the war, will France and Spain be less zealous to conquer your islands? |
41833 | But it is impossible not to inquire, whether we have not committed errors in the destination of our vessels? |
41833 | But the question will arise, where shall they winter? |
41833 | But to combine with M. de Ternay at a certain latitude? |
41833 | But what is the tendency of this? |
41833 | But what is there to hinder Great Britain from importing pitch, tar, and turpentine from America, after her independence? |
41833 | But where are such forces to be found? |
41833 | But who is it that has violated this faith? |
41833 | But will this higher price induce America to give up her independence? |
41833 | By returning to England, would not their debt be ten times more burdensome? |
41833 | By what engine is this tyranny exercised? |
41833 | Can anything be done in Europe for his comfort or relief? |
41833 | Can not the Assemblies instruct their members of Congress? |
41833 | Can not the people instruct their members of Assembly? |
41833 | Can not they annihilate them every moment? |
41833 | Do not the Assemblies create the members of Congress every year? |
41833 | Do they pay an interest for this debt? |
41833 | Does the paper money prevent the increase and the population of the States? |
41833 | Does the war prevent it? |
41833 | Does this tend to make them dissolve their union? |
41833 | Dunkirk, it is true, is near enough, but what forces are there at Dunkirk? |
41833 | Especially, when did any nation undergo a revolution in government, and sustain a war at the same time without it? |
41833 | Has her commerce increased? |
41833 | Has it not employed the British army? |
41833 | Has not America then at least as strong and pressing a motive to fight for them as Great Britain? |
41833 | Has the political weight of the nation in the scales of Europe increased? |
41833 | Have not the Assemblies a right to instruct them how to act? |
41833 | Have not the Assemblies a right to recall them when they please, and appoint others by law and the constitution? |
41833 | His Excellency asked me if I had any good news from America? |
41833 | How could that Minister bear the mention of a treaty of commerce, which can only take place between independent nations? |
41833 | How long then can we expect that their attachment, arising from a similarity of laws, habits, and manners, if any such should remain, will continue? |
41833 | How, and in what manner, a reciprocal protection and mutual assistance shall be given? |
41833 | If it serves to convince Britain that she should continue the war, does it not serve to convince the allies that they ought to continue it too? |
41833 | If the Assemblies desired a reconciliation with England, would not they appoint a Congress who desired it too? |
41833 | If the people desired it, could not they appoint Assemblies who would soon make a Congress suitable for their purpose? |
41833 | If they do not obey these instructions, can not the Assemblies displace them and appoint others who will be more obedient? |
41833 | In the garrisons, which the Republic maintains there? |
41833 | Is every necessary and convenience of life taxed to perpetuity, to pay this interest? |
41833 | Is it by the militia? |
41833 | Is it credible that in the most critical moments they will generously renounce these exemptions? |
41833 | Is it not also the wisdom of the States- General to have a regard to the critical situation of one of the Seven Provinces which compose the union? |
41833 | Is it not every man, who has demanded more paper money for his labor or his goods than they were worth in silver? |
41833 | Is it not the most consummate madness not to have sought to insure a single ally? |
41833 | Is it not then the part of prudence in the States of Zealand, to avoid with care everything that might embroil them, particularly with England? |
41833 | Is it possible these men should tyrannise over men upon whom they are so entirely dependent? |
41833 | Is it possible to demonstrate the necessity of making peace, now while we may, more clearly? |
41833 | Is it the Continental army then, that is the instrument of their own servitude and that of their country? |
41833 | Is not Congress the creature of the Assemblies? |
41833 | Is not this a demonstration of the sentiments of the people? |
41833 | Is not this full proof of the necessity of making peace? |
41833 | Is not this the strongest of all arguments for putting an end to the war? |
41833 | Is the whole equal in proportion to their abilities to the debt of England? |
41833 | Moreover, who are these citizens, which might be joined to the regular troops? |
41833 | Now what power have any of these, but what the people please to allow them? |
41833 | On the contrary, has the wealth and population of Great Britain increased? |
41833 | Or that these powers will be less zealous to continue it, by your holding out to them such temptations? |
41833 | Pray is it not necessary to think a little of Portugal? |
41833 | Shall it be at seventyfive, forty, thirty, twenty, ten, or five, for one? |
41833 | Shall it be the French, who are now friendly? |
41833 | Shall the Zealanders themselves make a resistance to the English? |
41833 | Should a war take place between us and the northern powers, where are we to procure our naval stores? |
41833 | So that we come again to the old question, which is likely to hold it out longest? |
41833 | Suppose it otherwise, and how will the matter stand? |
41833 | Supposing this to be true, which it is in part, but not in the whole, if Great Britain loses her fisheries, does not America gain them? |
41833 | That America has been harassed by the war is true, and when was any nation at war without being so? |
41833 | The only question then, is, at what depreciation? |
41833 | The question then is reduced to another, which has the best prospect of contending for them successfully? |
41833 | The question then recurs again, which has the fairest prospect of success? |
41833 | The sovereignty resides in the States- General; but who are the States- General? |
41833 | These councils, called the Admiralties, preside over the perception[?] |
41833 | This squadron, composed of five ships of the line, and loaded with provisions for seven and a half months, is it bound to the Indies? |
41833 | Those to whom birth and education have given sentiments of honor and of glory? |
41833 | Those who have the most to lose? |
41833 | To violate their alliances? |
41833 | What has given occasion to this astonishing measure? |
41833 | What has there been then in the remaining nine or ten States for an instrument of tyranny? |
41833 | What is there now to prevent them from opposing Congress? |
41833 | What parts have our Ministers acted in this circumstance? |
41833 | What rule? |
41833 | What should hinder the government of Virginia from laying on the same, or a greater duty, on the exportation? |
41833 | What stress then can be justly laid on an attachment arising from a similarity of laws, government, or religion? |
41833 | What then? |
41833 | What will it fetch at market? |
41833 | What would become of them then, if the militia or any considerable number of them were to join the British troops? |
41833 | Where does his Lordship find the ground of his difference between the Congress and the Assemblies? |
41833 | Where is the reason, then, that Congress should pay them forty times as much as they take of their neighbors in private life? |
41833 | Whether our articles of war for the government of the marine, are adequate to the introduction of that obedience and discipline that are necessary? |
41833 | Whether our navy is equal to the attack or defence of places? |
41833 | Who shall oppose their enterprise? |
41833 | Why should he not be willing now? |
41833 | Why should they give the King new powers to bring it to a conclusion? |
41833 | Why would it not do to remonstrate; then prohibit any of the productions of Portugal from being consumed in America? |
41833 | Will the English recede, if the Dutch do not? |
41833 | Will these troops of the Republic be supported by armed citizens? |
41833 | Will you be so good as to apply to Court, and see if they will send us somebody suitable to exchange for him? |
41833 | With what view should England insist still with the Irish upon the pretension of supremacy? |
41833 | Would not the embarrassment be much greater? |
41833 | Would the debt be rendered less, by joining Great Britain against France and Spain? |
41833 | Would the paper money embarrass Congress less if they had a war to maintain against France and Spain, than it does now? |
41833 | Would the war against France and Spain be shorter, less expensive, or less bloody, than the war against England? |
41833 | at least has it not contributed much to these vast advantages to America? |
41833 | has it not cut out work enough for the British navy? |
41833 | has it not engaged Russia, Holland, Sweden, Denmark, and Portugal, at least to a neutrality? |
41833 | has it not given scope to American privateers? |
41833 | has it not hurt that of Great Britain? |
41833 | has it not prevented these from being employed against America? |
41833 | has it not protected the American trade? |
41833 | has it not taken away from Great Britain the dominion of the sea, so far as to allow liberty of navigation to others? |
41833 | has it not wasted for England her annual twenty millions? |
41833 | or a wish to return to the obedience of England? |
48673 | Johnnie, do you suppose you can find your way five miles to Neighbor Ashley''s clearing? |
48673 | Tell me what you did last summer? |
48673 | True enough,said the caliph;"but who ever thought of insisting upon a pack saddle''s being included in a load of wood? |
48673 | Well, what shall I buy? |
48673 | Were n''t you in Archester one summer? |
48673 | Why do you refuse to shave this man''s companion? |
48673 | ( If your great- grandfather had written his autobiography when he was your age, what would you have liked to know of his life? |
48673 | ---- are you to believe? |
48673 | ---- can this be from? |
48673 | ---- do you think it was? |
48673 | ---- do you think this is? |
48673 | 4. Who saw it first, you or----? |
48673 | = Exercise 1.=--Which are dependent clauses? |
48673 | = Exercise 28.=--What do the opening sentences in the following paragraphs show? |
48673 | = Exercise 4.=--Which sentences are simple? |
48673 | = Exercise 52.=--Do you see any difference in meaning in the pairs of words given below? |
48673 | Ah, Moses, cried my wife, that we know, but where is the horse? |
48673 | Ali, kissing the ground, answered,"It is true, O caliph, that such was our agreement; but who ever made a companion of a donkey before?" |
48673 | And now the great question was,"What shall be done with the rogue?" |
48673 | And those maps-- how could they be any better? |
48673 | And what became of the little----, the poor_ boy_ in the pretty town of Marbach? |
48673 | And what next? |
48673 | Are n''t you glad then, little Queen, That your name is Josephine? |
48673 | Are you having a good time? |
48673 | Better for whom; or for what results?) |
48673 | But how shall we begin? |
48673 | But what are_ bad_ sentences? |
48673 | Can it be----? |
48673 | Can you tell---- to believe? |
48673 | Can your basket- ball team put off the match we were to play on Monday until Wednesday? |
48673 | Construct your argument as though in answer to the remark,"Why do you feel that way? |
48673 | Could it have been----? |
48673 | Dear mother, cried the boy, why wo n''t you listen to reason? |
48673 | Did you get the new skates you wanted? |
48673 | Did you notice the extreme delicacy of the shells? |
48673 | Did you put it in the trunk or was it left behind? |
48673 | Do these boys go to school? |
48673 | Do you feel that you would need to know more about it before trying to play? |
48673 | Do you mean that they should learn nothing else? |
48673 | Do you remember---- you saw? |
48673 | Do you see how much better the first way of telling you all this about Harry is than the second? |
48673 | Do you sing as wonderfully as you fly?" |
48673 | Does not the paragraph seem a little flat? |
48673 | Dost thou love life? |
48673 | Explain( as if to a boy or girl younger than you, who asks,"What is it for?") |
48673 | For instance, if some one should ask you, What is cheerfulness? |
48673 | For instance, the answer to the question,"Who was Abraham Lincoln?" |
48673 | From that charge who needs defend her? |
48673 | Has he---- it yet? |
48673 | How about dreadful tales of witches and hobgoblins that make the healthiest child afraid of the dark? |
48673 | How are bricks made? |
48673 | How do little girls play keep house? |
48673 | How does a water wheel work? |
48673 | How many did Audubon? |
48673 | How many did Henry Thoreau? |
48673 | How many eyes did Gilbert White open? |
48673 | How many topics are treated in each? |
48673 | I ask you,"Shall I go?" |
48673 | If I can not believe in her, in---- can I believe? |
48673 | If Pocohontas had written her autobiography, what would most interest you?) |
48673 | If a boy in China kept a diary, what would you find most interesting? |
48673 | If you are away on a visit, for instance, the questions he would probably ask are,"What sort of a place is it where you are? |
48673 | If you had been able to keep a diary when you were six or seven, what would you now read in it with most interest? |
48673 | If your parents had kept one when they were your age, what would you have found most interesting now? |
48673 | In a word, that Hat and you Do not have to be Hindu? |
48673 | In the complex sentences, which clauses are dependent? |
48673 | Is history taught in the schools? |
48673 | Is it you, Alice? |
48673 | Is it you? |
48673 | Is n''t he grand, the captain, as he comes forward_ like lightning_, stroke after stroke? |
48673 | Little Mistress Josephine, Tell me, have you ever seen Children half as queer as these Babies from across the seas? |
48673 | MAIN:_ Cities and Sights of Spain._ Are there any questions that you would like to ask about pelota after reading this explanation? |
48673 | May Aunt Jane buy a new one for me to wear at my cousin''s party? |
48673 | May Ethel and---- remain after school? |
48673 | May I stay over another day to see it? |
48673 | Or animals used for food? |
48673 | Shall I drink the blood of these men that have put their lives in jeopardy, for with the jeopardy of their lives they brought it?" |
48673 | Shall I go? |
48673 | That you live in Springfield, or Not at least in old Jeypore? |
48673 | That you''ve an entire nose And no rings upon your toes? |
48673 | That your Christian parents are John and Hattie, Pa and Ma? |
48673 | The mother turned her head as Alice entered, and said, Who is it? |
48673 | The next morning, at breakfast, the landlord said to him,"Did you enjoy the cornet playing in the room next to yours last night?" |
48673 | Tiger, tiger, burning bright in the forests of the night, what immortal hand or eye could frame thy fearful symmetry? |
48673 | Till at length the portly abbot Murmured,"Why this waste of food? |
48673 | Was it---- whom you saw? |
48673 | Welcome, welcome, Moses; well, my boy, what have you brought us from the fair? |
48673 | What are you and---- doing? |
48673 | What are you doing to amuse yourself?" |
48673 | What could she do? |
48673 | What do you mean by being"better off"--merely"healthier"or"happier"or"more secure"? |
48673 | What do you mean by"playing Indians"? |
48673 | What do you think should go in a diary? |
48673 | What good wind brings you here?" |
48673 | What is a handicap? |
48673 | What is composition? |
48673 | What is the difference between the sentences in this extract and ordinary prose sentences? |
48673 | What kind of animals? |
48673 | What kind of history? |
48673 | What makes popcorn pop? |
48673 | What man is he that lustest to live, And would fain see good days? |
48673 | What sentences shall come first? |
48673 | What slang expression do you use most frequently? |
48673 | What sorts of sentences should you try not to make? |
48673 | Where are you? |
48673 | Where have you been so long? |
48673 | Which words in the following sentences should begin with capitals? |
48673 | Why are fishhooks made in the form they are? |
48673 | Why does a chimney"draw"? |
48673 | Why does an ice house keep the ice from melting? |
48673 | Why have you opened this wicked box?" |
48673 | Why? |
48673 | Will the seventh grade of your school join ours in a nature- study excursion to the river next Saturday? |
48673 | Will these principles still hold if you speak your thoughts for others to hear? |
48673 | Will you telegraph us if there is anything we can do to help you? |
48673 | Will your debating society be willing to meet ours, on the 27th of this month, in our class room? |
48673 | Would they not spare a little for the dumb creature that really had as much right to his small share of God''s bounty as they themselves to theirs? |
48673 | You can test the unity of your paragraph by asking with respect to each sentence that you construct,"Does it relate to the subject of my paragraph?" |
48673 | You remember my big cousin who goes to the State University, do n''t you? |
48673 | You were saying that-- I suppose-- but why should I tell you? |
48673 | _ A boy''s club should not study history._ What kind of boys? |
48673 | _ All girls should learn to be housekeepers._ What do you mean by"housekeeper"? |
48673 | _ Animals in captivity are better off than in their natural state._ What kind of captivity? |
48673 | _ Composition is the subject that has to do with the best expression of thought by language._ But how, then, does composition differ from grammar? |
48673 | _ It is not harmful for children to read fairy tales._ How about nervous, excitable children who can not sleep after a fairy story? |
48673 | _ It is wrong to kill animals._ Do you include noxious and dangerous ones? |
48673 | _ Unbroken._"Have you any money?" |
48673 | a well sweep? |
48673 | a windmill? |
48673 | baseballs? |
48673 | complex? |
48673 | compound? |
48673 | exclaimed Alice, in a startled tone, what do you mean? |
48673 | glass? |
48673 | gold leaf? |
48673 | hairbrushes? |
48673 | ink? |
48673 | iron? |
48673 | mirrors? |
48673 | paper? |
48673 | phrases? |
48673 | said the caliph to the barber:"was not that your agreement?" |
48673 | said the other, in great amazement;"who ever heard of such a bargain? |
48673 | saws? |
48673 | scissors? |
48673 | sentences? |
48673 | shingles? |
48673 | steel? |
48673 | wheels? |
28379 | And do you really mean, sir,continued the old man,"that there is an embargo in force in Monte Video?" |
28379 | And we are all right, as you say, here? |
28379 | And what can I do for you? |
28379 | And what is to be the hook, darling, this time? |
28379 | And where did you get the pork, Deacon? |
28379 | And where shall we send to you then, madam? |
28379 | Are you quite sure,said I,--"quite sure? |
28379 | But David? |
28379 | But how would it sound in one of the hymns on one of our feast- days? |
28379 | But perhaps the duplicate got through? |
28379 | Can nobody sing here, or play, or tell an old- time story? |
28379 | Can you give me the address of Mr. Mason who returned from Europe last May? |
28379 | Child of the Public,I said to myself,"what do you do now?" |
28379 | Child of the Public,said my mourning genius;"are you better than other men?" |
28379 | Deacon,said he,"what meat did you eat for breakfast yesterday?" |
28379 | Did you think Kilpatrick got it? |
28379 | Do they? |
28379 | Excuse me, sir; what paper do you allude to? 28379 How, indeed?" |
28379 | Indade, sir, and where is it? |
28379 | Muses? |
28379 | Not the slightest, sir? 28379 Now, did you look up Clement? |
28379 | Papa,said old Clara, who is the next child,"all the people gave presents, did not they, as they did in the picture in your study?" |
28379 | Richards,said Sisson at last,"what became of that last order of ours for water- lined, pure linen government- callendered paper of_ suretà ©_? |
28379 | Streak of light--Is there a light in Lycidas''s room? |
28379 | To the respectable boarding- house? |
28379 | Todd,said I,"is this a night to be talking of ingots, or hiring, or losing, or gaining? |
28379 | Very well, I thank you,said he, after the eating elements were adjusted;"and you?" |
28379 | Was not Christ our Saviour? |
28379 | What can I send to your children? |
28379 | What fun, to be sure; but Clara, what is in the picture? |
28379 | What is his name? |
28379 | What is it, Chloe? |
28379 | What of a fact? 28379 What of an exaggeration? |
28379 | What sent you out from your warm steam- boiler? |
28379 | What should_ I_ sing? |
28379 | What was the bit of wire? |
28379 | What!--a deserter? |
28379 | What,I said in the night- watches,"is the brief expression of a possibility? |
28379 | Where are you, Frederic? |
28379 | Where is the barrel this time, Fausta? |
28379 | Where? 28379 Who have they there?" |
28379 | Why do they not give such presents every day? |
28379 | Will they not come back again? |
28379 | _ Quà ¦ ne sit historia Reformationis in Ungariâ?_quoth Haliburton, after some thought. |
28379 | _ You_ sing like him? 28379 1, vainly:Very well, thank you; and you?" |
28379 | A hundred or more people had straggled in then, and the preacher, good soul, he took for his text,"Doth not God care for the ravens?" |
28379 | And Seneca? |
28379 | And a revolution in Chili?" |
28379 | And did you not forget the Arundelian Marbles? |
28379 | And if I did not meet her to- day, when should I meet her? |
28379 | And in Venezuela?" |
28379 | And so, taking his question literally, they replied,"Sing? |
28379 | And what is a"Sheffield wimble?" |
28379 | And you?" |
28379 | Are there any Yankees, or am I getting crazy? |
28379 | Are you a Yankee whaler? |
28379 | Are you ready, then, to go on shore?" |
28379 | As we turned away from the house on Christmas morning,--I to preach and he to visit his patients,--he said to me,"Did you make that whiskey?" |
28379 | Ask what was the secret of Paul''s power as he bearded the baby Emperor, and abashed the baby Philosopher? |
28379 | Bottle marked in MS. What in the world is it? |
28379 | But what if Comet has gone by? |
28379 | But where are your other fourteen? |
28379 | But why did I say"Yes"? |
28379 | But will not some one set up a stone for my memory at Fort Adams or at Orleans, that my disgrace may not be more than I ought to bear? |
28379 | By F. I.,& c.,& c.,& c. But, as I slept and waked on this, I said,"Who knows that these are_ moral_ sketches?" |
28379 | Can there be so many in a world which runs in grooves? |
28379 | Could it be,--"Julia, what did we do with that stuff of Sarah''s that she marked_ secret service_?" |
28379 | Could the old man suspect? |
28379 | Did I expect them to walk down to the bridge themselves with great parcels to throw into the river, as I had done by Julia''s? |
28379 | Did he remember writing a note to old Jack Percival for me five years ago? |
28379 | Did he want the bottle corked? |
28379 | Did you ever do it, reader, with one of those pressed glass bottles they make now? |
28379 | Do n''t you know what it was? |
28379 | Do not you? |
28379 | Do you think you are talking of the opening of a rose- bud or the death of a mosquito? |
28379 | Does the reader know that in the desolation of the Arctic shores the Ptarmigan is the bird most often found? |
28379 | Does the reader know what that is? |
28379 | For he asked perfectly unconsciously:--"Pray, what has become of Texas? |
28379 | Graff?" |
28379 | Had I been writing there five hours? |
28379 | Have I said that she was beautiful as heaven? |
28379 | Have you ever treated Miranda for a day and found the charge so low? |
28379 | Have you no sympathy with the sufferings of a fellow- creature? |
28379 | Have you seen Captain Back''s curious account of Sir Thomas Roe''s Welcome?" |
28379 | He ended the prelude with a sudden crash on the strings, and said shortly,"And what is better to sing of than the olive?" |
28379 | I suppose you know: can you write me word before the 2d? |
28379 | I wish Rosas was in---- and that the Indians have risen near Maranham?" |
28379 | I wish--""Who does not wish so? |
28379 | If a man leaves for an hour, twenty"correspondents"may be howling,"Where was Mr. Pendergrast when the Oregon bill passed?" |
28379 | If she did not find her,--good God? |
28379 | If she found her aunt, how should I find her? |
28379 | Indeed, what is there not there,--which should make an Arctic winter endurable,--make a long night into day,--or while long days away? |
28379 | Is it ice blink,--are my poor old lookouts blind? |
28379 | Is it not worth noting that in this chivalry of Arctic adventure, the ships which have been wrecked have been those of the fight or horror? |
28379 | Is not there the''Intrepid''? |
28379 | Is the poor"Resolute"conscious of the change? |
28379 | Keep on, Pim: shall one never get there? |
28379 | May he not waste the hours in the blandishments of lying courtiers, or the honeyed falsehoods of a mistress? |
28379 | Must the Emperor be there? |
28379 | Nobody?... |
28379 | Now I am stripping myself of one of the private comforts of my life,( but what will one not do for mankind?) |
28379 | O, how often I went through one phase or another of this colloquy:--"Is Mr. Mason in?" |
28379 | Only, where shall I begin?'' |
28379 | Or thus, with the stars,"***& c.,& c.,& c."? |
28379 | Shall I have the honor of dancing?" |
28379 | She longed for freedom,--but what is freedom where there is no law? |
28379 | Should I risk the clothes- brush again? |
28379 | Should he keep him? |
28379 | Should he let him go? |
28379 | Tell me again there is some mistake, will you?" |
28379 | The clerk looked, and said, inquiringly,--"Is it Miss Jones''s trunk which came this afternoon?" |
28379 | The poor Governor doubted his senses and crossed to stop him,--not in time, however The same gallery- boy shouted,"How''s your mother?" |
28379 | The secret was not out-- what could he want? |
28379 | Then,''Where was Vicksburg?'' |
28379 | WHERE IS THE BARREL? |
28379 | We have served them so well, and have they really left us alone? |
28379 | Were one, two, or all of us crazy? |
28379 | Were you ever in Bahia?" |
28379 | What are you so impudent and cool about it for? |
28379 | What could Lafarge have given to the President? |
28379 | What did all this mean? |
28379 | What did he give the praise to, as he left that scene? |
28379 | What if Fausta fell into trouble? |
28379 | What if I failed her there? |
28379 | What in the world did Lycidas bring distilled water from Montreal for? |
28379 | What in thunder were they at there? |
28379 | What right had Barry to a wife? |
28379 | What should I say, what could I say, to Julia? |
28379 | What was a man to do? |
28379 | What was the mystery of Paul''s power? |
28379 | What will you hear, gentlemen?" |
28379 | What would she say? |
28379 | What, then, if he were called to account by the Department for violating the order of 1807? |
28379 | What, there is no boy? |
28379 | Where do you suppose you are?" |
28379 | Where would you go?" |
28379 | Who are we, to claim that we have attained a moral standard? |
28379 | Why do you stop? |
28379 | Why ignore them? |
28379 | Will I ever, ever think I have better rights than the Public again?" |
28379 | Will he even get the number that he needs of our treatises? |
28379 | Will it be my very last? |
28379 | Will nobody come? |
28379 | Will not any of these come home now?" |
28379 | Will that girl never come? |
28379 | Will you call upon me, or appoint a time and place where I may meet you? |
28379 | Would that Kelt ever come up stairs? |
28379 | You have not cut up any of the old ones, I hope?'' |
28379 | You have rightly guessed that the question means,"What is the history of the Reformation in Hungary?" |
28379 | You smile, sir? |
28379 | _ What is the mystery of his power?_"Seneca did not know. |
28379 | do you remember the mysteries we boys used to invent about his room, in the old Intrepid days? |
28379 | have they really deserted us? |
28379 | of course you are;--and that all foreigners are sent out of Buenos Ayres?" |
28379 | that was worse,--where might she not be before twelve hours were over? |
39344 | Are you decided to go to the States? |
39344 | Aye, what? |
39344 | But in what instance,said he,"have we discovered such a disposition?" |
39344 | For what reason? |
39344 | Had you not better wait, until I can write to the Count de Vergennes, and have his opinion? |
39344 | Have you seen,said he,"a certain letter written to the Count de Vergennes, wherein Mr Samuel Adams is treated pretty freely?" |
39344 | How,said I,"will an independent man in one of our Assemblies consider this? |
39344 | I am fully of your mind, about that,said he,"but what else can we do?" |
39344 | Is it possible,says he,"that the people of America should be afraid of us, or hate us?" |
39344 | Moreover, how many ameliorations may be made in the natural resources of that country? 39344 Well, what else shall we do?" |
39344 | Well,said he,"what shall we do to remove those fears and jealousies?" |
39344 | What,said he,"now we have come to our senses?" |
39344 | Among other things, I wish to know in what light they view our cause, as just or unjust? |
39344 | And by what means one may remedy it, and direct and re- establish still affairs, as much as possible, for the safety of the State? |
39344 | And could not all American trade be carried on in neutral bottoms? |
39344 | And that any Minister from Great Britain will meet him there? |
39344 | And what end can it answer to dispute them, unless it be to extend the flames of war? |
39344 | And what is the importance of it? |
39344 | And what motives can our Court have to interfere, or intercede with the neutral powers, to receive you into their confederation?" |
39344 | As a nursery of seamen, did England consider us as worse enemies than France? |
39344 | As a source of contention, how could we restrain our fishermen( the boldest men alive) from fishing in prohibited places? |
39344 | As a source of profit, had England rather France should supply the markets of Lisbon and Cadiz with fish, and take the gold and silver, than we? |
39344 | Besides, what advantages are to be derived from such a peace? |
39344 | But do not the turnpikes, or fall- stops, with which these rivers are thickset, contravene also the rights of nature? |
39344 | But have not the French still a better right to the same navigation, because this river takes its rise in France? |
39344 | But in taking away the property of the Dutch, with what right can one find fault with the violence of Russia? |
39344 | But what is there to oblige a citizen of the United Provinces to consider the Americans as the friends of the Republic? |
39344 | But why should it stick? |
39344 | Can Britain restore her conquests, now in the hands of the French? |
39344 | Can she afford them a compensation for the loss of last year''s commerce? |
39344 | Can she give back the plunder of St Eustatia, or the cargoes of the Indiamen divided among the captors? |
39344 | Can she think it conciliatory, to oblige us to lay taxes upon those, whose habitations have been consumed, to reward those who have burned them? |
39344 | Can they be sorry then to see us split upon such a point as the tories? |
39344 | Can they be sorry then to see us split upon such a point as the tories? |
39344 | Denmark remains, but what can she do? |
39344 | For what? |
39344 | Had not you better wait until we can make the proposition in concert?" |
39344 | Had she rather France should have the seamen than America? |
39344 | Have they not reason to conclude from it, that our inaction ought to be less attributed to our weakness, than to our affection for England? |
39344 | Have you any information concerning Mr Jefferson, whether he has accepted the trust? |
39344 | He asked if it was definitive and separate? |
39344 | He asked me, what step I proposed to take in consequence of these instructions? |
39344 | He asked, if there was to be any truce or armistice in the mean time? |
39344 | How I liked this country? |
39344 | How could our men see the French admitted to fish, and themselves excluded by the English? |
39344 | How far are we bound to favor the Spaniards? |
39344 | How is the American Minister to know that there is a Congress, and that it is expected that he should repair to it? |
39344 | How long I had been in Europe? |
39344 | How long I had been in this country? |
39344 | How long I had lived at Amsterdam? |
39344 | How soon afterwards his memorable journies to Holland and to Paris? |
39344 | How will it look for you to go to the States without my concurrence?" |
39344 | How? |
39344 | I answer again, why would not the ports of Bruges, Ghent, Ostend, and Nieuport produce the same effect? |
39344 | I asked him, if they did not intend to do us the honor soon, of sending an Ambassador to Congress, and consuls, at least, to Boston and Philadelphia? |
39344 | I asked the Duke, where was the combined fleet? |
39344 | I asked, if they had any plan for obtaining intelligence, the soul of war, from England? |
39344 | I asked, who it was that governed naval matters? |
39344 | If Britain persists in her two preliminaries, as I presume she does, what will be the consequence? |
39344 | If not, to what is it to be attributed? |
39344 | If there were a means of reviving these cities, would it not be by the enlargement and the safety of the port of Ostend? |
39344 | If they have not, whether any such thing is in contemplation? |
39344 | If we are advised to restore and compensate the tories, are we to comply? |
39344 | Is it possible for me to communicate all these things to Congress? |
39344 | Is not every sovereign adequate to the government, punishment, or pardon of its own criminal subjects? |
39344 | Is the British Court, or their Ambassador, to give him notice? |
39344 | Is the slavery of the Scheldt then the cause, that Louvain is peopled only with students and professors? |
39344 | It may sometimes be known to a deputy, that an instruction from his principal was given upon information of mistaken facts, what is he to do? |
39344 | M. Brantzen asked me, how we went on? |
39344 | Malines filled with attornies and judges? |
39344 | None of your letters takes the least notice of the French Ambassador at the Hague; is there no intercourse between you? |
39344 | Or proposes soon to embark? |
39344 | Or what motives can she be supposed to have to acknowledge your independence? |
39344 | Or, why would it not be proper now to invite the Dutch? |
39344 | Pray what are the sentiments of the_ Corps Diplomatique_, at Versailles? |
39344 | Sir, You will naturally inquire, whether the neutral powers will continue their neutrality, or whether the neutral confederacy will be broken? |
39344 | That Mons, Tournay, Ypres, Ghent, and Bruges, are no longer more than carcasses? |
39344 | That in 1780 more than two thousand of Dutch vessels having passed the Sound, not one was found upon the list in 1781? |
39344 | The constant cry is, why is Spain silent? |
39344 | The earnest zeal of Spain to obtain that impenetrable rock, what has it not cost the House of Bourbon this war? |
39344 | The great question is, in what character are the United States to be considered? |
39344 | The house of my neighbor intercepts the light, of which I have great occasion; have I the right for this reason to pull it down? |
39344 | The question now arises, what measures will the Cabinet of St James pursue? |
39344 | Upon this I asked him, with whom he and the other Dutch Ministers abroad, held their correspondence? |
39344 | Upon this, I rose up and said, gentlemen, is there, or can there be, a clearer right? |
39344 | Upon those, whose relations have been cruelly destroyed, to compensate the murderers? |
39344 | Was it not full of matter, calculated to stimulate him to hasten his negotiations with France concerning the abolition of the barrier towns? |
39344 | Was not the American memorial full of matter for the Emperor''s contemplation, when he was at Ostend, Antwerp, and Bruges? |
39344 | What a dust we raise, said the fly upon the chariot wheel? |
39344 | What are their ideas of the comparative power of France and Britain, so far as it may affect them? |
39344 | What can Russia do? |
39344 | What can be the design of France, on the other hand, by espousing the cause of those men? |
39344 | What can be their motives to become the advocates of the tories? |
39344 | What can be their motives to become the advocates of the tories? |
39344 | What can we do? |
39344 | What could they not do, therefore, when it shall be free to them to make a direct and unrestrained commerce? |
39344 | What inducements can we hold out to them? |
39344 | What influence they imagine our independence will have upon the general system of Europe, or their own States? |
39344 | What is the true principle of the policy of Spain, in delaying so long to declare themselves explicitly? |
39344 | What man, what State, would be authorised to appropriate a thing to itself because it was for his convenience? |
39344 | What motives can be thrown out to the Empress of Russia? |
39344 | What powers, said he? |
39344 | What progress is made in the negotiation for peace? |
39344 | What was the drift of all this? |
39344 | What, said I, do you yourself believe, that your Ministers, Governors, and even nation, will not wish to get us of your side in any future war? |
39344 | When all nations are agreed in the principle, why should England stand out? |
39344 | Whether I had not lived some time at Leyden? |
39344 | Whether I had purchased a house at the Hague? |
39344 | Whether he has embarked? |
39344 | Whether they have entered into any treaty with France since the war; if they have, what are its objects? |
39344 | Who indeed should break it? |
39344 | Why are they so short sighted or so indolent, as to neglect to acknowledge the United States, and make treaties with them? |
39344 | Why do the neutral powers stand still and see it, or imagine they see it, when it is so easy to put a stop to it? |
39344 | Why do they leave America and Holland under so great obligations? |
39344 | Why do they leave the House of Bourbon to content so long and spend so much? |
39344 | Why should we leave room for illiterate fishermen to wrangle and chicane? |
39344 | Will not this delay occasion a suspicion, that we prefer the interest of our enemy, to that of our country? |
39344 | Will not this opinion destroy all confidence in our nation heretofore so renowned in this respect? |
39344 | Will they agree to the Congress at Vienna? |
39344 | Will they take New York, or only prevent the English from evacuating it? |
39344 | Will they treat with the American peace Ministers now in Europe? |
39344 | Would it do for me to communicate all this to the French Ministers? |
39344 | Would not all neutral vessels have a right to go to America? |
39344 | You inquire whether there is no intercourse between the French Ambassador and me? |
39344 | and insists upon such preliminaries as are at least an insult to France and America, and a kind of contempt to the common sense of all Europe? |
38 | , and people from IBM objectUNIX? |
38 | , meaningWhat''s new?" |
38 | , people from the commercial/ industrial UNIX sector are known to complainBSD? |
38 | ,What about that Heinlein guy, eh? |
38 | ,What should we add to the new Jargon File?" |
38 | Are you on the net? |
38 | Been hacking your new newsreader? |
38 | C++? 38 Can we install that without causing a flag day for all users?" |
38 | Can you repeat that? 38 Content- free? |
38 | Do you know a good eye doctor? |
38 | Do you know what I just said? |
38 | Food- p? |
38 | Foodp? |
38 | Grep the bulletin board for the system backup schedule, would you? |
38 | Guess what? 38 Has the system just crashed?" |
38 | Have you ever looked at the United States Budget? 38 Have you seen the Networking FM lately?" |
38 | Have you seen the spiffy{ X} version of{ empire} yet? |
38 | Have you tried it out on live data? |
38 | Hey, Eric--- I just got a burst of garbage on my{ tube}, where did that come from? |
38 | How''d you figure out the buffer allocation problem? |
38 | If a program ca n''t rewrite its own code, he asked,"what good is it?" |
38 | Interrupt--- have you seen Joe recently? |
38 | Lunch? 38 No source for the buggy port driver? |
38 | Oh, you''re sending him the{ bits} to that? 38 Only six monocase characters per file name? |
38 | See? 38 Snail me a copy of those graphics, will you?" |
38 | This compiler bites the bag, but what can you expect from a compiler designed in New Jersey? |
38 | Tube me that note? |
38 | We are going to reconfigure the network, are you ready to suck mud? |
38 | Well, but how''s this interface going to play with the room- temperature IQ crowd? |
38 | Well, why do n''t you defenestrate that 100 megs worth of old core dumps? |
38 | What are you doing? 38 What do you mean? |
38 | What do you want me to do with that 80-meg{ wallpaper} file? |
38 | What is all this gubbish? |
38 | What time did I agree to meet you? 38 What was the delta on program size?" |
38 | What''d Corporate say in today''s nastygram? |
38 | What''s the current theory on letting lusers on during the day? |
38 | What''s the right thing for LISP to do when it sees`( mod a 0)''? 38 What''s the state of your latest hack?" |
38 | What''s the theory on dinner tonight? |
38 | What''s the theory on fixing this TECO loss? |
38 | What''s your phase? |
38 | What? 38 Whatcha up to?" |
38 | When is the system coming up? |
38 | Who was at the conference? |
38 | Why did the program suddenly turn the screen blue? |
38 | Why do n''t you jfcl that out? |
38 | Why do you close your eyes? 38 Why is the net wired randomly? |
38 | Yeah? 38 Yet* another* set of disk catalog utilities for{{ MS- DOS}}? |
38 | You ca n''t require` printf(3)''to be part of the default runtime library--- what if you''re targeting an elevator controller? |
38 | You claim to have solved the halting problem for Turing Machines? 38 You want this reviewed? |
38 | You want to code* what* in ADA? 38 { DWIM} for an assembler? |
38 | # ifdef FLAME Has n''t anyone told those idiots that you ca n''t get decent bogon suppression with AFJ filters at today''s net speeds? |
38 | ( Port? |
38 | ( This theory probably owes something to the"Warlock"stories by Larry Niven, the best known being"What Good is a Glass Dagger? |
38 | ( and follow it up with"Got any good numbers/ IDs/ passwords?") |
38 | ( expects` ACK''or` NAK''in return) FOO? |
38 | ( from sense 1) meaning"Are you there? |
38 | ( often used on unexpected links, meaning also"Sorry if I butted in..."( linker) or"What''s up?" |
38 | : AIDX: n./aydkz/ n. Derogatory term for IBM''s perverted version of UNIX, AIX, especially for the AIX 3.? |
38 | : Dissociated Press:[ play on` Associated Press''; perhaps inspired by a reference in the 1949 Bugs Bunny cartoon"What''s Up, Doc?"] |
38 | : What''s a spline? |
38 | : gubbish:/guhb''*sh/[ a portmanteau of` garbage''and` rubbish''?] |
38 | : has the X nature:[ seems to derive from Zen Buddhist koans of the form"Does an X have the Buddha- nature?"] |
38 | : mu:/moo/ The correct answer to the classic trick question"Have you stopped beating your wife yet?". |
38 | : ques:/kwes/ 1. n. The question mark character(`? |
38 | : tenured graduate student: n. One who has been in graduate school for 10 years( the usual maximum is 5 or 6): a` ten- yeared''student( get it?). |
38 | ? |
38 | A luser overheard one of the programmers ask another"Do you have a green card?" |
38 | A non- hacker who is indelicate enough to ask a question like"So, are you working on finding that bug* now* or leaving it until later?" |
38 | A one- banana problem is simple; hence"It''s only a one- banana job at the most; what''s taking them so long?" |
38 | A true spod will start any conversation with"Are you male or female?" |
38 | A:"Been reading JARGON.TXT again, eh?" |
38 | After opening a{ talk mode} connection to someone apparently in heavy hack mode, one might type` SYN SYN ENQ?'' |
38 | Also frequently verb- doubled as"Ques ques?" |
38 | Also used in response to questions like"What is WYSIWYG?" |
38 | An indication of confusion, usually spoken with a quizzical tone:"Wall??" |
38 | An indication of confusion, usually spoken with a quizzical tone:"Wall??" |
38 | Another standard question is"What''s the state of the world? |
38 | Another way of phrasing the first question under sense 1 would be"state- p latest hack?". |
38 | Are we sufficiently confused yet? |
38 | At any time: Q:"State- of- the- world- P?" |
38 | At dinnertime: Q:"Foodp?" |
38 | BCNU be seeing you BTW by the way BYE? |
38 | Blast them( y/ n)?'' |
38 | By verb doubling,"Popj, popj"means roughly"Now let''s see, where were we?" |
38 | Compare{ ping},{ finger}, and the usage of` FOO?'' |
38 | Distinguished from{ raw mode} and{ cooked mode}; the phrase"a sort of half- cooked( rare?) |
38 | Distinguished in context from` mail''; one might ask, for example:"Are you going to post the patch or mail it to known users?" |
38 | Do n''t you love Intel? |
38 | Does that gateway have a martian filter?" |
38 | Equivalent to"Now, where was I?" |
38 | Examples:"What is the proper type of NULL?" |
38 | For example, suppose you have a long list or array of items, and want to process items m through n; how many items are there? |
38 | From the following problem:"If you build a fence 100 feet long with posts 10 feet apart, how many posts do you need?" |
38 | Functionally poor, e.g., a program that is very difficult to use because of gratuitously poor( random?) |
38 | His inquiry was:"Split- p soup?" |
38 | How do you choose a fresh magic number of your own? |
38 | How''s that address- book thing for the Mac going?" |
38 | I wonder what exactly is in it?" |
38 | In 1989, a random of the journalistic persuasion asked hacker Paul Boutin"What do you think will be the biggest problem in computing in the 90s?" |
38 | In ANSI C, the`??'' |
38 | In ANSI C, the`??'' |
38 | In a general( time- extended) sense:"What do you do around here?" |
38 | In an immediate sense:"What are you doing?" |
38 | In other words, can you write programs which write programs? |
38 | In the form` cdr down'', to trace down a list of elements:"Shall we cdr down the agenda?" |
38 | In the{ Real World}, software often goes through two stages of testing: Alpha( in- house) and Beta( out- house?). |
38 | In what order should he or she visit them in order to minimize the distance travelled? |
38 | Is the{ VAX} back up yet?" |
38 | It is reported that hackers at IBM itself sometimes sing"Who''s the breeder of the crud that mangles you and me? |
38 | Later, confused questioners began voicing"Wall?" |
38 | Now RPG and his then- wife KBT( Kathy Tracy) were putting us up( putting up with us?) |
38 | Oh, you want an etymology? |
38 | On the phone to Florida: Q:"State- p Florida?" |
38 | On- line joke answer to{ ACK}? |
38 | One well- known early Easter egg found in a couple of OSes caused them to respond to the command` make love''with` not war?''. |
38 | Part of this is almost certainly due to influence from LISP( which uses deeply nested parentheses( like this( see?)) |
38 | People from the BSDophilic academic community are likely to issue comments like"System V? |
38 | Q: How can you recognize a DEC field circus engineer who is out of gas? |
38 | Random Loser be allowed to{ gun} down other people? |
38 | Random Loser marry your daughter?" |
38 | Result? |
38 | Said of decaffeinated coffee, diet coke, and other imitation{ programming fluid}s."Do you want regular or unleaded?". |
38 | See? |
38 | Should it return` a'', or give a divide- by-0 error?" |
38 | Stallman:"What did he say?" |
38 | The asterisk is most common, as in"What the* hell*?" |
38 | The following uses specific to MUDs are reported: UOK? |
38 | The more terse and humorous way of asking these questions would be"State- p?". |
38 | The problem is, how can the computer be programmed to make use of the camera information? |
38 | The standard question"What''s your state?" |
38 | The thin one says:"How did you manage? |
38 | There is also a usage"ACK?" |
38 | There is an entire genre of jokes about DEC field circus engineers: Q: How can you recognize a DEC field circus engineer with a flat tire? |
38 | They include` happy hacking''( a farewell),` how''s hacking?'' |
38 | The{ canonical} reply to this assertion is"Then it works just the same as it did before, does n''t it?" |
38 | Those commonly encountered include the following:* wildcard for any string( see also{ UN*X})? |
38 | Thus, the standard put- down question at an MFTL talk is"Has it been used for anything besides its own compiler?". |
38 | Thus, this usage may owe something to Philip K. Dick''s novel` Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?'' |
38 | Translates roughly as"Hey, I tried to write this portably, but who* knows* what''ll happen on your system?" |
38 | Used to question an unbelieved quote, as in"Did you read that in` Datamation?''" |
38 | WTF the universal interrogative particle; WTF knows what it means? |
38 | WTH what the hell? |
38 | We can{ snarf} this opcode, right? |
38 | What does that mean?) |
38 | What''s the difference between a used- car dealer and a computer salesman? |
38 | What? |
38 | When used as a question("Mumble?") |
38 | Who wrote this, Quux?" |
38 | Why do n''t we find some dog that''s been run over and sat in the sun for a week and put some* ginger* on it for dinner?!" |
38 | Why do n''t you use a* real* operating system? |
38 | Why do n''t you use a* real* operating system? |
38 | Why do n''t you use a* real* operating system?" |
38 | Why, you may ask, does the` S''stand for` do not Skip''rather than for` Skip''? |
38 | You would then throw out a"Hello, wall?" |
38 | [ INTERCAL called this` ampersand''; what could be sillier?] |
38 | and"What''s that funny name for the`#''character?" |
38 | are you OK? |
38 | are you busy? |
38 | are you ready to unlink? |
38 | are you there? |
38 | are you there? |
38 | could contain his curiosity no longer, and asked again,"You really like that stuff, huh?" |
38 | is shorthand for"How is this going to fly in* real* use?". |
38 | it seems to be asking the opposite question from"Are you going? |
38 | means"What are you doing?" |
38 | or"What are you about to do?" |
38 | or"What''s going on?". |
38 | or"Where''s the X?". |
38 | said,"How''s the ginger honey?" |
27522 | ''An angular person in a gray suit?" |
27522 | ''Harriet, her given name?" |
27522 | ''How much are the tickets?" |
27522 | ''How-- how long would she be gone?" |
27522 | ''The language?" |
27522 | ''Whose child is that out there on the lawn?" |
27522 | ''Why, what''s the matter?" |
27522 | ''You really think,"asked Jess, a little worried in tone, I thought,"you really think it''s likely to be a job for life?" |
27522 | ''Do you remember how, with cheers for St. Helen''s and groans for Athens, we bequeathed Greenie to the Ancient World last winter? 27522 ''The question before the assembly now was-- Should we or should we not visit the third trap? |
27522 | After all, it''s better to come away like this, is n''t it? |
27522 | Alec,she whispered,"the cherries on my bonnet? |
27522 | And which will you do? |
27522 | Apiece, you mean, or together? |
27522 | Are n''t the mountains way off there blue? |
27522 | Ca n''t we even come to call? |
27522 | Ca n''t you sleep, Vivian? |
27522 | Did n''t you never see one before? |
27522 | Did you ever see such queer people in your life? |
27522 | Did you really have a splendid time, Vivian? |
27522 | Do n''t you like it, Don? |
27522 | Do n''t you want us to homestead for you, Jean, while you''re away? |
27522 | Does n''t anything grow on those hills but little trees and sagebrush? |
27522 | Honestly, have n''t you-- all your life? |
27522 | How far is it to the nearest house? |
27522 | I never felt so important in all my life, did you, Virginia? |
27522 | If Donald thought we were n''t going to make it, why did n''t he camp here himself? |
27522 | Indians? |
27522 | Is n''t it fun? |
27522 | Is n''t it still? |
27522 | Is n''t it the loveliest thing in all the world for Dorothy to do? |
27522 | Is the Emperor old? |
27522 | Is this the way you receive my guests? |
27522 | It makes you feel like whispering, does n''t it? |
27522 | It would n''t be so bad to grow old if you could be sure of being like that, would it? |
27522 | It''s just like a secret, is n''t it, hidden away up here? 27522 It_ is_ sagebrush, is n''t it? |
27522 | Mary, what do you think? 27522 Mr. Hunter,"gasped Vivian when the new man had taken the horses,"do you know who he is? |
27522 | Never-- been-- afraid-- of-- anything? |
27522 | Oh, Don,she cried,"is n''t it wonderful? |
27522 | Oh, are n''t they happy? 27522 Out of money?" |
27522 | Pedro,she said at last, her voice breaking,"I guess perhaps we''d better go home, do n''t you? |
27522 | Remember Eben Judd''s girl who kept the school last spring? 27522 Safe, Nan? |
27522 | Sha n''t I get your horse ready for you, ma''am? |
27522 | So much of a tenderfoot as that? |
27522 | Supplies is all right, deary,said she,"but who''s going to cook them?" |
27522 | The story, Aunt Deborah, about the Indian coming into the hut? |
27522 | Then you wo n''t go back to Cripple Creek? |
27522 | Was n''t she funny this afternoon when she said good- by, her hat on one side and her hair all falling down, and her eyes full of tears? 27522 Was you plannin''to ford, young ladies?" |
27522 | What child? |
27522 | What do you suppose they''re doing now? |
27522 | What does the paper say? |
27522 | What shall we do about the door? |
27522 | What was that? |
27522 | What''s that? |
27522 | What''s the matter? |
27522 | When is it dated? |
27522 | Where are they? 27522 Where shall I begin?" |
27522 | Who is he, Virginia? |
27522 | Why not invite us to supper? |
27522 | Why so quiet, Vivian? |
27522 | Will you stay or go away after it is yours? |
27522 | You New England folks are strong on crests and mottoes and that sort of thing, are n''t you? |
27522 | You do n''t feel you''re going to be-- too grown- up, do you? |
27522 | You do n''t know her, do you? |
27522 | You know who he is, do n''t you? 27522 You say she was your teacher?" |
27522 | You''re feeling better, are n''t you? |
27522 | Your German? 27522 Your garden?" |
27522 | A. W.''""Rustle?" |
27522 | Ai n''t afraid o''big boys, are you?" |
27522 | Ai n''t there a likely one among''em? |
27522 | And Mary? |
27522 | And is n''t the sky blue? |
27522 | And so you all come from away back East-- the place we used to call home? |
27522 | And you know Virginia Hunter?" |
27522 | And, oh, Don, is n''t this morning perfect? |
27522 | Are all the girls Vigilantes, Virginia-- Mary and Priscilla and Vivian?" |
27522 | Are n''t you, Aunt Deborah?" |
27522 | Are there many big ones?" |
27522 | CHAPTER VII THE VIGILANTES HOMESTEAD"John, do you really think it''s safe?" |
27522 | CHAPTER XIII ON THE MESA"Pedro,"said Virginia,"do you realize for one little minute what''s happened?" |
27522 | Could it be the meadow- lark of which Virginia had always spoken? |
27522 | Do Jack and Carver ride, do you suppose?" |
27522 | Do n''t you call that pretty good? |
27522 | Do n''t you call that pretty good?''" |
27522 | Do n''t you like it?" |
27522 | Do n''t you think so, too?" |
27522 | Do n''t you think that''s a fairly good explanation? |
27522 | Do you remember a year ago, Don? |
27522 | Do you think that fact would give Vivian an extra amount of courage if she said it over a thousand times? |
27522 | Does n''t it twinkle? |
27522 | Does n''t that make it a little easier, do n''t you think?" |
27522 | Does n''t that make the ending just perfect?" |
27522 | Everybody ready? |
27522 | Everything went all right up there, did n''t it, Virginia-- on the mountain, I mean?" |
27522 | Given insanity and a gun, what would be the demonstration? |
27522 | Had n''t we best go in for a moment? |
27522 | Had she discovered the trail which, like the Milky Way, led to them? |
27522 | Had the big Jarvis boy triumphed after all, and made Mary a prisoner? |
27522 | Had the school adjourned and gone for a picnic in the woods? |
27522 | He''s been queer ever since that night on the mountain-- last Tuesday, was n''t it? |
27522 | He''s not going to stay here after he has something to eat, is he, Mr. Hunter? |
27522 | How are you on arithmetic?" |
27522 | How would it seem, she wondered, to gallop alone through this country? |
27522 | I do n''t believe it can give the best kind of happiness, do you? |
27522 | I do n''t believe that any one could look at the mountains and the stars and ever be doubtful about-- God and-- and-- things like that, do you?" |
27522 | I guess we can see to undress by moonlight, ca n''t we?" |
27522 | I think Mary''s like the larkspur in the Valley, do n''t you? |
27522 | I wonder what Vivian''s like? |
27522 | Is it at the creek Carver''s going to meet you?" |
27522 | Is n''t he about your Aunt Nan''s age? |
27522 | Is n''t it splendid of him? |
27522 | It is still, is n''t it?" |
27522 | It''s most eleven, is n''t it?" |
27522 | It''s three o''clock now,"she continued, consulting her watch,"and I do n''t think it would be a bad plan to get settled and consider supper, do you?" |
27522 | Makes you sound about forty- five, does n''t it?" |
27522 | Oh, what are you going to do?" |
27522 | Oh, wo n''t it be the happiest time? |
27522 | Priscilla, why do n''t you take one of Jean''s rods and follow up the creek? |
27522 | Sagebrush Point, Don-- at the open place? |
27522 | Shall we drink a few more bugs?" |
27522 | Should one just stand still or walk back and forth, dragging the line after her? |
27522 | Should she hurry through four cars and tell the others that they might see him also? |
27522 | Should she send the porter? |
27522 | Signals all right? |
27522 | Tell me, Don, are you just as excited inside as I am?" |
27522 | The question was-- should she do anything more than wait? |
27522 | The sermon was on"Vigilance"--wasn''t that strange? |
27522 | There''s no difference any longer, is there, Virginia?" |
27522 | Was that your errand?" |
27522 | We gazed at one another blankly Money gone-- hope gone-- what should we do? |
27522 | Were one''s chances of success greater if she wiggled the rod? |
27522 | What are you doin''here, miss? |
27522 | What are you doing away up here anyway? |
27522 | What did they look like? |
27522 | What do you think, Alec? |
27522 | What do you think, John? |
27522 | What does it say? |
27522 | What relation will that make you and me?" |
27522 | What then must Aunt Deborah''s be? |
27522 | What was she to do? |
27522 | What were those best things, she wondered? |
27522 | What would Carver say when he knew? |
27522 | What_ would_ the Winthrop family say? |
27522 | Whatever shall I tell people who inquire? |
27522 | When do you suppose it will happen?" |
27522 | When will the others get home, do you suppose?" |
27522 | When will you be back?" |
27522 | Where are those girls anyway? |
27522 | Where had they all come from? |
27522 | Where is the next shady spot, Virginia? |
27522 | Where was everybody? |
27522 | Which will you do, ride or stay?" |
27522 | Who Goes There? |
27522 | Who at that joyous moment would have thought that she would again and so soon enter our lives? |
27522 | Who knew that there were not? |
27522 | Why are all the trees out here those tall cottonwoods?" |
27522 | Why did not Carver come? |
27522 | Why not one here as well as farther up the canyon where they had caught that monster from the sight of which she had not yet recovered? |
27522 | Why not pick some of the raspberries which grew in profusion near by, and cook a quart of them as winter preserves for the ranger? |
27522 | Why should Mr. Crusoe want to go to the root- cellar? |
27522 | Wo n''t they all just love it? |
27522 | Wo n''t you walk to the office and see Miss Green? |
27522 | Would you rather wait to hear it, Aunt Nan, until you''ve read your mail?" |
27522 | Would you take my quirt? |
27522 | Yes, Virginia, what is it?" |
27522 | You do n''t feel afraid, do you?" |
27522 | You do n''t think I will, do you?" |
27522 | You remember Horace upon his Sabine farm? |
27522 | You remember it, do n''t you?" |
27522 | You see, he''s been reigning twenty- five years, has n''t he, Don?" |
27522 | You think he''ll fit in all right, do n''t you, Virginia? |
27522 | You will, wo n''t you?" |
27522 | You''ll write from every large place, wo n''t you, Priscilla?" |
27522 | _ Where were the traps? |
7427 | ''Miserable business to be in, ai n''t it?'' 7427 ''Who are you?'' |
7427 | Air you the man I voted for and that I''ve been reading about in the papers doin''legislatin''and sich in Washington? |
7427 | And a prominent member of the gymnastic class? |
7427 | And now what is it? |
7427 | And quite a hand at all athletic exercises? |
7427 | And what did she say? |
7427 | By gravy, mister,said the farmer, admiringly,"air you in the aggercultural business?" |
7427 | Ca n''t you postpone the call? |
7427 | Ca n''t you wait until after the call? |
7427 | Did you see any like me there, dear? |
7427 | Did you tell your mamma that Mr. and Mrs. Blank are here? |
7427 | Do you carry big loads of household goods for thirty cents? |
7427 | Do you use the electric or pneumatic signals? |
7427 | Have you a double track? |
7427 | How did politics get you out? |
7427 | How is it you''ve managed to keep so fresh and good- looking all these years? |
7427 | How many did I kill sir? 7427 How many?" |
7427 | How much did you get for both? |
7427 | How much is the cross worth? |
7427 | It''s-- er-- a-- did you say, what is it? |
7427 | Maybe you can help me out"Well, what is it? |
7427 | Nayther whiskey punch? |
7427 | Now, on which side are the most people? |
7427 | On the south side? |
7427 | On which side is the South Pole? |
7427 | Pray, who is that? |
7427 | Quite a hand? 7427 Say, ma, do they play base- ball in heaven?" |
7427 | Shall I send them on an emigrant train, or must they go first- class? 7427 Then how are you an Episcopalian?" |
7427 | Then what in thunder air you? |
7427 | To what parish do you belong? |
7427 | Well, now, suppose they should open on you with shells and musketry, what would you do? |
7427 | Well, of course, you have a train dispatcher, and run all trains by telegraph? |
7427 | Well, then,continued the clergyman,"what diocese do you belong to?" |
7427 | Well, thin, yer riverence, would it be any harrum fur me to give a toast? |
7427 | What barley? |
7427 | What did you do with the hide? |
7427 | What have you been drinking? |
7427 | What is a jackleg carpenter? |
7427 | What is it? |
7427 | What is that boy tied up there for? |
7427 | What is this cent for? |
7427 | What kind of a carpenter? |
7427 | What new substance, my dear? |
7427 | What''s his name? 7427 What''s that for? |
7427 | Where''s the hamper? |
7427 | Who confirmed you, then? |
7427 | Why not? |
7427 | Why, what did he say? |
7427 | Why, what did you mean by sending me such a message? |
7427 | Why, where have you been sleeping these last two nights since we left? |
7427 | Why? 7427 Will you, really?" |
7427 | Y''ain''t selling plows? |
7427 | You know your duty here, do you, sentinel? |
7427 | ''Did you see anything down- stairs worth stealing?'' |
7427 | ( to a committeeman at his side)"Eh? |
7427 | ATHLETIC NURSE Young Wife--"Why, dear, you were the stroke oar at college, were n''t you?" |
7427 | Ai n''t you got the nerve to go up and down Broadway fixed up like that, and your poor father and mother workin''hard at home? |
7427 | Ai n''t you''shamed o''yourself, and your father a honest, hard- workin''driver, and your mother a decent, respectable washwoman? |
7427 | An inquisitive passenger on a railroad recently had the following dialogue:"Do you use the block system on this road?" |
7427 | But he asked who is this coming man? |
7427 | But how are you able to do it?" |
7427 | But why is it not as reputable to invent one''s own story as to tell the story some one else has invented? |
7427 | CUTE BOY The teacher in geography was putting the class through a few simple tests:"On which side of the earth is the North Pole?" |
7427 | Catch on to them gaiters, will you? |
7427 | Do n''t I pay you enough?" |
7427 | Do n''t you Britishers know anything?" |
7427 | Does the second telling improve its morality? |
7427 | FAMILY AFFAIRS"Newlywed seems to find particular delight in parading his little family affairs before the eyes of his acquaintances,""Does he? |
7427 | First, what are sound views of literature; second, what is a religious paper? |
7427 | HITTING A LAWYER"Have you had a job to- day, Tim?" |
7427 | Has our nation always been just and kind? |
7427 | How did it happen? |
7427 | How do you flag the rear of your train if you are stopped from any cause between stations?"'' |
7427 | How in the world do you expect to live and keep a horse on seventy cents a day?" |
7427 | Husband--"May I hear about it?" |
7427 | I never thought of that; but why ca n''t we eat a bit of duck, yer riverence?" |
7427 | I replied:"Very well, stay there, and do n''t let any one see you, do you hear?" |
7427 | MORAL SUASION"What are your usual modes of punishment?" |
7427 | Mrs. McSwatters--"What is?" |
7427 | One year it was,"How many kinds of trees are there in the college yard?" |
7427 | Our Noble Selves: Why not toast ourselves and praise ourselves since we have the best means of knowing all the good in ourselves? |
7427 | STILL ROOM FOR RESEARCH"What is this new substance I hear so much about?" |
7427 | Scandals?" |
7427 | Some of his more intimate companions, in self- defense, would exclaim when he proposed a story,"Is it a mile from Boston?" |
7427 | The dismal youth looked thoughtful, and then replied:"You know I always inclose a stamp for the return of rejected manuscript?" |
7427 | Then, when he was breathless, he turned to his companion, and asked:"Where''s your farm?" |
7427 | Toast.--"Should Religious Papers Make Money?" |
7427 | WHAT''S IN A NAME? |
7427 | Were civilization and Christianity to be snatched from the Zenanese just when both were within their grasp? |
7427 | What a sensation he would create with his modest(?) |
7427 | What are they? |
7427 | What if you are not the most brilliant, humorous, and stirring speaker of the evening? |
7427 | What shall we say to them on this ligneous occasion? |
7427 | Where and how have these qualities been most strikingly manifested? |
7427 | Why did our heroes die? |
7427 | Why do you ask?" |
7427 | Would that be any harrum, sir?" |
7427 | You can put it on, ca n''t you?" |
7427 | _ Does Dr. Jones know it?_"Ma caught her breath, but failed to articulate a response. |
7427 | _ how many_ enemies did I kill? |
7427 | did He? |
7427 | do philosophers love dainties?" |
7427 | musha, Mistress O''Brien, what have ye there?" |
7427 | one man form a line?" |
7427 | replied the scholar;_"do you think all the good things of this world were made only for blockheads? |
7427 | said he,"have you got them hanging there?" |
7427 | says the man;''burglar?'' |
7427 | the next,"What is the make- up of the present English cabinet?" |
16307 | Ages ago, a lady there, At the farthest window facing the East Asked, Who rides by with the royal air? |
16307 | And is the man that is to be still far in the distance? |
16307 | And is there any absolute right? |
16307 | And we may venture to ask also-- Who started this movement in which we are all involved? |
16307 | And what more convincing evidence of the spiritual nature of man could be desired than that he asks such questions? |
16307 | Are all ideas concerning spiritual ministry delusions? |
16307 | Are all reverent, earnest, cheerful, optimistic? |
16307 | Are not some born moral cripples as others are born with physical deformities? |
16307 | Are not some spiritually deaf, dumb, and blind from birth? |
16307 | Are not such persons conscientious? |
16307 | Are temptation, sin, sorrow, and even death, angels of God sent forth to minister to the perfection of man? |
16307 | Are the hindrances in the path of the soul without any ministry? |
16307 | Are there any clearly defined paths by which this knowledge may be reached? |
16307 | Are they perfecting souls which at last are to be laid away with the bodies which were fortunate enough to win an earlier death? |
16307 | Are they taught as a duty in the Scriptures? |
16307 | Are they two experiences? |
16307 | Are we in the midst of a process of evolution? |
16307 | Are we now thinking of immensities, eternities, and the cosmic process? |
16307 | Are we thinking of Jehovah the God of Israel? |
16307 | But has no clearer voice spoken? |
16307 | But how do I know? |
16307 | But how is it to be taught to appreciate that one voice only in all that confusion of strange sounds should be heeded, and all the rest disregarded? |
16307 | But how shall it discern the morally excellent? |
16307 | But what efficacy will prayers for the dead have? |
16307 | But what then shall be said of heredity? |
16307 | But when we have ascended to such a height what does the word Father mean? |
16307 | But who ever bore the griefs of another before he himself had felt sadness? |
16307 | But why did He appear at all after death? |
16307 | By mother- love? |
16307 | Can we be sure that no malign spiritual influences hinder and bewilder? |
16307 | Did John Bunyan truly picture the ascent of the soul? |
16307 | Do love and mutual helpfulness prevail? |
16307 | Do the members of the family live as if God were a near and blessed reality, and right and duty were more sacred than life? |
16307 | Does any light from Jesus penetrate the mystery of death? |
16307 | Does its path, of necessity, lead through the Slough of Despond, through Vanity Fair, by Castle Dangerous, and into the realm of Giant Despair? |
16307 | Does the death of the body do anything more than change the mode of the spirit''s existence? |
16307 | Does this teaching seem mystical and fanciful? |
16307 | Given the spiritual being, what are the stages through which he will pass on his way to the goal toward which he is surely pressing? |
16307 | Has our idea expanded so as to include all the nations? |
16307 | Has the horizon been lifted to take in heavenly heights? |
16307 | Have they had a fair chance? |
16307 | How can our systems of education be justified, if the soul is perfected only to be destroyed? |
16307 | How can we say then that any are free? |
16307 | How could it be otherwise, since its being is derived from Him? |
16307 | How could it have been otherwise? |
16307 | How does the soul become adjusted to the moral order? |
16307 | How has this epoch in the ascent of the soul been treated in literature? |
16307 | How may it be adjusted to this knowledge? |
16307 | How may prayers for the dead be justified? |
16307 | How may sorrow, suffering, and even moral evil be made ministers of an upward movement? |
16307 | How shall the bitter injustice which is frequently found on the earth be explained? |
16307 | How shall we explain the singular devotion of Monica to Augustine? |
16307 | How, then, does it learn what truth and right are? |
16307 | IS DEATH THE END? |
16307 | If His teaching is true, is it not as reasonable to try to serve those of our loved ones who are out of the body as those who are in the body? |
16307 | If one asks for proof that the spirit persists, the only reply must be a Socratic one-- Can you prove that it is vitally connected with the body? |
16307 | If prayer helps any one, why not those who have passed from our sight? |
16307 | If that were true, how could we account for the enormous waste in discipline and culture, in education and affection? |
16307 | If we are thus helped why should we presume that they may not also, by such sweet hours, be strengthened for their duties? |
16307 | In other words, is not the fact that we are spirits all the proof that we need to have of the Father of Spirits? |
16307 | In the meantime let us ask, What aid does the soul need in its passage through its life on the earth? |
16307 | Indeed, may it not be assumed that physical differences are but expressions of still more clearly marked differences in spirits? |
16307 | Is Jesus Christ the brightness of the Father''s glory? |
16307 | Is Jesus the unique revelation of the divine? |
16307 | Is evolution alone a sufficient guarantee that it will some time reach its goal? |
16307 | Is he correct? |
16307 | Is it an end or a beginning? |
16307 | Is it difficult to select the one phrase of all human utterances which has exerted the largest influence in ameliorating the human condition? |
16307 | Is it from man himself? |
16307 | Is it necessary that any should fall in order that they may rise? |
16307 | Is it possible to believe that the man was less enduring than his work? |
16307 | Is not a single ray of light all the evidence which any one needs of the reality of the sun? |
16307 | Is not the presence of one spiritual being a demonstration of a greater Spirit somewhere? |
16307 | Is not truth a matter of education? |
16307 | Is that ethereal something which we call soul simply the result of the organization of atoms? |
16307 | Is the death of the body the end of the spirit? |
16307 | Is the old doctrine of Guardian Angels true? |
16307 | Is there no way by which a soul may be brought to the knowledge of God except by bitter trials? |
16307 | Is this all? |
16307 | Is this answer rejected as fanciful or superstitious? |
16307 | Is this environment of evil necessary to the development of the soul? |
16307 | Jesus has responded to the essential questions: For what have we been created? |
16307 | Job''s question,"If a man die shall he live again?" |
16307 | Just here we should ask, What do we mean by the soul? |
16307 | May those who have realized this experience help others to attain to it so that the process may be hastened and made easier? |
16307 | Must one pass through hell and purgatory before he may enjoy the"beatific vision?" |
16307 | No freedom? |
16307 | Of its enormity I have already spoken; but what about its origin, its uses, and its continuance? |
16307 | Of what value, then, is conscience? |
16307 | On what do we base our faith that the soul exists after death? |
16307 | One individual may help another to acquire other knowledge,--must it make an exception of things spiritual? |
16307 | Or is the body like a house in which a spiritual tenant dwells? |
16307 | Or that they are moral failures? |
16307 | Or, if we have not sufficient material for a positive statement, is there enough to make a strong affirmation of probability? |
16307 | Other teachers have tried to answer the inquiry, Does God exist? |
16307 | Shall it choose simply to exist? |
16307 | Shall it yield to the limitations and solicitations of the body? |
16307 | Should they be blamed or pitied? |
16307 | So we stand before the future, and ask, Toward what goal are all this education, experience and discipline tending? |
16307 | That many, or most, of these men have been essentially and totally bad? |
16307 | The call of his destiny finds every man, and, when he hears it, he asks: How may I reach that goal? |
16307 | The practical question, therefore, for all in this human world is not, are there spiritual laws? |
16307 | Then how shall we account for the imagination which is capable of giving birth to such magnificent dreams? |
16307 | Then what is conscience? |
16307 | Then, suddenly and swiftly, come the questions, Although my friend is called dead is he any less alive than when he was in the body? |
16307 | This answer only pushes the question one stage further back, and leaves us still inquiring, Where do the souls of men originally come from? |
16307 | Thus hope is born, and he who one moment cries, Who shall deliver from this body of death? |
16307 | VII_ THE PLACE OF JESUS CHRIST_ In the ascent of the soul do light and power come to its assistance from outside and from above? |
16307 | Was it the study of Plato? |
16307 | Well, then, whence does the soul come? |
16307 | What are some of these hindrances? |
16307 | What are the agencies which have most to do with promoting the ascent of the soul? |
16307 | What are the causes of this re- awakening? |
16307 | What are the qualities of the character of Christ? |
16307 | What art thou then? |
16307 | What awakens the soul? |
16307 | What caused it? |
16307 | What caused the revolution in the character of Augustine by which the sensualist became a saint? |
16307 | What do such facts signify? |
16307 | What has made the average of human life so much longer than it was formerly? |
16307 | What has occurred? |
16307 | What if it does? |
16307 | What is death? |
16307 | What is life? |
16307 | What is meant by prayers for the dead? |
16307 | What is our true home? |
16307 | What is the difference between the awakening of the soul and its re- awakening? |
16307 | What is the goal of personality? |
16307 | What is the teaching of the New Testament concerning this subject? |
16307 | What light does Jesus shed upon this mystery? |
16307 | What purpose does it serve? |
16307 | What shall be said of these facts which are so numerous and so evident as to make an effort at classification and explanation imperative? |
16307 | What shall it now do for itself? |
16307 | What shall one generation do for those which are to come after it? |
16307 | What shall the soul do for itself in order that it may promote its own growth? |
16307 | What shall we say of these confusing conditions? |
16307 | What should be the attitude of the soul in view of the hindrances by which it is environed? |
16307 | What will the re- awakened soul do? |
16307 | Whence came the soul? |
16307 | Whence did it come? |
16307 | Whence does this eagerness come? |
16307 | Whence is it? |
16307 | Where did this conviction originate? |
16307 | Which is the greater mystery, life or death? |
16307 | Who can exaggerate the delight and benefit of such an exercise? |
16307 | Who can govern the thinking of another? |
16307 | Who has been able exhaustively to delineate the soul''s humiliation? |
16307 | Who is not surprised every day at what he finds within himself? |
16307 | Who shall answer our questions? |
16307 | Who shall explore the contents of that great phrase? |
16307 | Whom shall we admire? |
16307 | Why are such ministries needed? |
16307 | Why are they allowed? |
16307 | Why are we so slow in learning that conscience, being divine, is authoritative and may be trusted? |
16307 | Why could not the ascent of the spirit be along an easier pathway? |
16307 | Why do men live in houses with scientific plumbing, fresh air, and have well- cooked food? |
16307 | Why is it? |
16307 | Why need sorrow, suffering, sin, and death invade the fair realm into which man has been born? |
16307 | Why not follow its suggestions at once and press on toward that fair land of truth and beauty which so earnestly invites? |
16307 | Why should it be necessary to write its history in tears and blood? |
16307 | Why should we say that what we call death, alone of all the changes through which we pass, leads to that which is unchangeable? |
16307 | Will not all that constituted his personality continue to grow in the future as in the past? |
16307 | Will their children have? |
16307 | Would a figure of clay ask whether it were the abode of a higher order of being? |
16307 | Yet they perform acts which are in themselves wrong? |
16307 | and what purpose do they serve? |
16307 | but, may we choose for ourselves whether we will obey or disobey them? |
16307 | or are they fiends which, in some foul way, have invaded the otherwise fair regions in which we dwell? |
16307 | or different phases of the same experience? |
16307 | or the prayers of Monica? |
16307 | or the preaching of Ambrose? |
16307 | or, shall it seek to prepare itself by discipline, and the cultivation of right choices, for the goal whose intimations it has heard? |
16307 | why not? |
11400 | A beauty named Atupu,or"A black- eyed girl?" |
11400 | All goes well? |
11400 | Alors,replied the physician,"where has he taken meals?" |
11400 | And the babies? |
11400 | Are we to let Tahiti rival Paris? |
11400 | Are you ready for adventure? |
11400 | As the Fanny physic fails to straighten you out,I said to him,"why not try the hospital?" |
11400 | But they have newspapers here? |
11400 | Come and have déjeuner? |
11400 | Could n''t you bring French Chinese from Indo- China? |
11400 | Did the prayers have anything to do with your pulling through and saving the copra? |
11400 | Do you know about the nono? |
11400 | Do you know the negro? |
11400 | Does not Christianity improve them? |
11400 | Dooze gin, dooze Manhattan? 11400 George, did n''t I say the El Dorado would turn up?" |
11400 | Have we time for that history? |
11400 | Have you ever lamped it? |
11400 | Have you no Japanese? |
11400 | How about Atamu and Eva? |
11400 | How about getting an apartment or a suite of rooms? |
11400 | How about the time the French came here with the treasure? |
11400 | How you''re goin''a get any bloody fun with no roast beef, no mutton, no puddin'', and let alone a drop of ale and a pipe? |
11400 | Huh? 11400 I angry with you?" |
11400 | In what language? |
11400 | Is she your girl? |
11400 | Is the French republic to permit here in its colony the whites who enjoy its hospitality to shame the nation before the Tahitians by their nakedness? 11400 Is the bloody meat- safe still on the back porch? |
11400 | Mais, I gave you three francs for the fish, n''est- ce pas? |
11400 | Newspapers? 11400 Serious, monsieur?" |
11400 | Spik Furanche? |
11400 | Steve,I asked gentry,"did you keep a log? |
11400 | The French? |
11400 | They have been married long? |
11400 | Those missionaries, the Tonito? 11400 Ve vas dere mit''i m, und vas ve in de museum, py damage? |
11400 | Vere do ve gat oop on dat? |
11400 | Vous etes faché avec moi? |
11400 | Was it not funny? 11400 Was that a custom of Tahiti mothers, to bury their babes alive at birth?" |
11400 | Was the Chinaman sure dead when you put the leaves over him? |
11400 | We are a little sleepy, n''est- ce pas? |
11400 | What brings him here now? |
11400 | What did the queer fellow want to go to Tahiti for? |
11400 | What did you do? 11400 What do they preach?" |
11400 | What does the bounder look like? |
11400 | What is the secret? |
11400 | What land is this? |
11400 | What ship are you from? |
11400 | What will you do to uphold the honor of the British crown? 11400 What would be the result? |
11400 | What you do so long no see you? 11400 What, you have left Terii?" |
11400 | What? 11400 Where will the Umuti be?" |
11400 | Where''s the American Counsul? |
11400 | Where''s the El Dorado? |
11400 | Who pays him? |
11400 | Why bother with some one who may be dead when we are here? |
11400 | Why what have I done to show it? |
11400 | Why, who hit you, and what did you do? |
11400 | You are not an American? |
11400 | You know that big cocoanut tree in the garden of the Annexe? 11400 You savee, gin and bitters? |
11400 | You were safe on Easter Island, and ill from stuffing yourself with fresh mutton,I prompted,"And now what?" |
11400 | Against what? |
11400 | Am I going to give you death in exchange for my life? |
11400 | And what was an Occidental, a city man, before her? |
11400 | Any blow would send him to prison, but why not for a sheep instead of a lamb? |
11400 | Are we French citizens to die of hunger that savages may ride in les Fords?" |
11400 | Are we human, or are these savages?" |
11400 | Are you ceemented to that hooker?" |
11400 | Become enamored of those simple, primitive places and ways, and want to keep going westward? |
11400 | But was not romance a spiritual emanation, a state of mind, and not people or scenes? |
11400 | Buy a vanilla plantation?" |
11400 | Como estas tu?" |
11400 | Dead? |
11400 | Did I not see the former queen lift the hem of his tapa and bow over it? |
11400 | Did he hurt you?" |
11400 | Did not Napoleon say that? |
11400 | Did not Zarathustra so philosophize, and is not the national trend in Europe exalting his theory? |
11400 | Did not these natives of Tahiti themselves wear little clothing? |
11400 | Did you hear that Tissot left for Raiatea when he heard of the census? |
11400 | Do you know, their mother came here with them this morning?" |
11400 | Do you mean to tell me he gets away with that folderol?" |
11400 | Do you understand that? |
11400 | Do you want to know how they got hold here? |
11400 | Does not this hark back to a clime where the inequality of day and night was greater than in the tropics? |
11400 | Dost think''t is sweet to let thy mock''ry fall? |
11400 | Dot shkvarehet be''n''t de only wrider?" |
11400 | Even had I been guilty of all that has been said, why were they not manly and generous enough to give or find me congenial employment? |
11400 | Fish to sell or to barter? |
11400 | For me to hear forgotten noises in the Strand? |
11400 | Had the love of their father been so soon lost to them, as under the foul breath of a demon that may have wandered about their home? |
11400 | Had this child of Tahiti arranged beforehand that she should be met by a jinn with sandwiches and cakes? |
11400 | Has David run off with Miri or Caroline?" |
11400 | Have n''t I lived with''em twenty years? |
11400 | Have you eaten the fei?" |
11400 | He had the stanzas, burlesquing the sacred lines, one of which the natives especially liked: Oh, why do n''t you work, as other men do? |
11400 | How about it at night, too, when the trade quits? |
11400 | How about the tupapau, the bloody ghosts? |
11400 | How about their achievements here?" |
11400 | How could he have got it? |
11400 | How did women get along in your father''s day?" |
11400 | How much?" |
11400 | How the hell can we work when there''s no work to do? |
11400 | How would you''a''done? |
11400 | How you think? |
11400 | How''d you like to chyse up there to his roost in the''ills?" |
11400 | I do n''t say nothing about her, but you know her tongue? |
11400 | I had danced with her, I had talked with her under the stars, but what might she expect me not to do? |
11400 | I sat down and quaffed a Doctor Funk, and then inquired idly:"Where''s David?" |
11400 | I was passing the opium den here a few minutes ago, and I heard Hip Sing say something like that: What have I to do with David? |
11400 | I was willing, but I said,''What for? |
11400 | If a man had not his dream, what could life give him? |
11400 | If it is possible, could I be buried in the sea? |
11400 | Is the Scotch bastard to go on with his fairy- tale and do brown the colonials?" |
11400 | Is the ship the Tatto?" |
11400 | Is there anything in that bleedin''idea? |
11400 | Is there nothing else for me but this ignominious death? |
11400 | Is this business go on?" |
11400 | Is this war? |
11400 | Maru, could that doctor have brought the hotahota to Lovaina? |
11400 | Oh, why did I ever leave there, where love and all that is good and pure was lavished on me? |
11400 | Or the French, the governors of Tahiti? |
11400 | Quatre cocktails, n''est- ce pas?" |
11400 | See those bottle''champagne goin''in?" |
11400 | Shall I find you her?" |
11400 | She ask her,''Where that babee?'' |
11400 | She beautiful? |
11400 | She''s lovely, is n''t she? |
11400 | Suppose you were part Kanaka, an''the kid''ad done what''e did? |
11400 | THE HOME- LAND CALL Why wilt thou torture me with unripe call, Bringing these visions of the dear old land? |
11400 | That flat woman from''Nited States, ai n''t she funny? |
11400 | That from the Chaldea of millenniums ago to the Tautira of to- day, the ceremonial was virtually the same? |
11400 | The flesh was not burned, but, well-- What? |
11400 | The law forbids it, but do you suppose people do n''t fish on that account? |
11400 | The princess put her finger on her lips and whispered in my ear:"Do you hear the warbling of the omamao and the olatare? |
11400 | The waterfall?" |
11400 | Then I saw the name on the boat,"El Dorado S. F.""Did n''t I tell you so?" |
11400 | Then he turned to me, and his eyes contracted into mere black gleams as he asked:"Are you like all these others? |
11400 | These were to foil the rats or crabs which climb the trees and steal( can a creature steal from nature?) |
11400 | They all remained quiet, until McHenry, with an oath, blurted out:"What the hell''s the good of all this bloody silence? |
11400 | They replied to the first whites who asked them if they ate people:"Do you?" |
11400 | To Sen knew no English, and Temanu only,"Yais, ma darleeng,"and"Whatnahell?" |
11400 | To give bad name my good house?" |
11400 | Until the date of carrying out the mandate, one picked out a pleasing fish or string of fish, all nicely wrapped in leaves, and one asked,"A hia? |
11400 | Vaimato?" |
11400 | Vous savez cocktail, à la mode des ancients? |
11400 | Was I an average tourist or loafer come to put an unknown quantity in their smoothly working problem of a pleasant life in this Eden? |
11400 | Was I hypercritical? |
11400 | Was I responsible for his death? |
11400 | Was it for me to wander among those fabulous coral isles flung for a thousand miles upon the sapphire sea, like wreaths of lilies upon a magic lake? |
11400 | Was it not eighty- nine?" |
11400 | Was it that happiness was a delusion never to be realized? |
11400 | Was n''t that funny?" |
11400 | Was nature so fearful? |
11400 | Was this what Lovaina was bursting with? |
11400 | Were the owners glad to see that schooner again? |
11400 | Were they, in that isle so distant from Paris, their capital, practising a puritanism unknown at home? |
11400 | What Tahiti was like before the white? |
11400 | What became of her?" |
11400 | What can I do? |
11400 | What could a friendless man of eighty do to exist in the United States other than become the inmate of a poorhouse? |
11400 | What did Tahiti hold for me? |
11400 | What more liberal dispensation of nature? |
11400 | What to do? |
11400 | What was I to find in Tahiti? |
11400 | What was the secret of the miracle I had witnessed? |
11400 | What you think? |
11400 | What you think? |
11400 | What you think? |
11400 | What''s this terrible thing about young David?" |
11400 | What, you whisky- filled pigs, you will resist the law?" |
11400 | Whence had come these Polynesians or Maoris who peopled the ocean islands from Hawaii to New Zealand, and from Easter Island to the eastern Fijis? |
11400 | Whence would the luncheon come? |
11400 | Where did you come from? |
11400 | Where have you been? |
11400 | Who could it be? |
11400 | Who were they to object to a white man doffing the superfluities of dress in a climate where breadfruit and bananas grow? |
11400 | Who would keep the stores or grow vegetables if we did not have the Chinese? |
11400 | Why do n''t you? |
11400 | Why should not Steinach or the others make the grand experiment on me? |
11400 | Why should we fool with these cards here when we might sing?" |
11400 | Why was he afraid to wake them to- night when always they ate the fish with their parents-- the fish just from the sea and golden from the umu? |
11400 | Why? |
11400 | Will you not yourself show me Fautaua?" |
11400 | Would I, too, fish to be honored for my string? |
11400 | Would I, too,"go native"? |
11400 | Would he gather the fishermen from all over Tahiti, and decimate them, the way the Little Corporal purged mutiny out of his regiments? |
11400 | Would the entire British population of the ship resist the taking away of any of the crew? |
11400 | You go and see her, wo n''t you? |
11400 | You know that the French are excitable, n''est- ce pas? |
11400 | You not hear about that turribil thing?" |
11400 | You not meet that rich uncle of David from America? |
11400 | do you hear the passing flute? |
11400 | how long you been? |
11400 | is it that the indigènes pay the governor or give him fish free? |
11400 | what to do? |
3650 | But where are the clowns and puppets, And imps with horns and tail? 3650 Famed, as we are, for faith and prayer, We merit sure peculiar care; But can we think great good was meant us, When logs for Governors were sent us? |
3650 | Hark There, heard you not the alp- hound''s bark? 3650 Here''s a priest and there is a Quaker, Do the cat and the dog agree? |
3650 | My wut? |
3650 | Wal... no... I come dasignin''--"To see my Ma? |
3650 | What is it I see? |
3650 | Why should folk be glum,said Keezar,"When Nature herself is glad, And the painted woods are laughing At the faces so sour and sad?" |
3650 | Would the old folk know their children? 3650 Wouldst know him now? |
3650 | you want to see my Pa, I s''pose? |
3650 | ( Selection) Come, my tan- faced children, Follow well in order, get your weapons ready; Have you your pistols? |
3650 | And is this all? |
3650 | And loved so well a high behavior, In man or maid, that thou from speech refrained, Nobility more nobly to repay? |
3650 | And what is so rare as a day in June? |
3650 | And where are the Rhenish flagons? |
3650 | And where is that band who so vauntingly swore That the havoc of war and the battle''s confusion A home and a country should leave us no more? |
3650 | And where is the foaming ale? |
3650 | And, as his strength Failed him at length, He met a pilgrim shadow--"Shadow,"said he,"Where can it be-- This land of Eldorado?" |
3650 | Are his points definite? |
3650 | Are there many figures of speech here? |
3650 | Are they alike in purpose? |
3650 | Are they alike? |
3650 | Around these few names does all the fragrance of American poetry hover? |
3650 | Art thou afraid?" |
3650 | At rich men''s tables eaten bread and pulse? |
3650 | But who his human heart has laid To Nature''s bosom nearer? |
3650 | By this test where would you place Bryant himself? |
3650 | Can love for you in him take root, Who''s Catholic, and absolute? |
3650 | Can you account in the same way for the divisions at lines 68 and 89? |
3650 | Colts grew horses, beards turned gray, Deacon and deaconess dropped away, Children and grandchildren-- where were they? |
3650 | Connected? |
3650 | Deep distress and hesitation Mingled with his adoration; Should he go or should he stay? |
3650 | Did he do what he here advises? |
3650 | Did storms harass or foes perplex, Did wasps or king- birds bring dismay-- Did wars distress, or labors vex, Or did you miss your way? |
3650 | Do I look on Frankfort fair? |
3650 | Do not the bright June roses blow, To meet thy kiss at morning hours? |
3650 | Do the corpulent sleepers sleep? |
3650 | Do the feasters gluttonous feast? |
3650 | Do they affect you in the same way? |
3650 | Do they droop and end their lesson, wearied over there beyond the seas? |
3650 | Do you find any other adjectives in this poem which are poetic words? |
3650 | Do you find such a comparison of nature and human nature in any other poems by Bryant? |
3650 | Do you find this same idea in other poets? |
3650 | Do you not know me? |
3650 | Does Bacchus tempting seem,-- Did he for you this glass prepare? |
3650 | Does he define it? |
3650 | Does the punctuation help to indicate the speaker? |
3650 | Does this rhyme scheme help to produce the effect of the poem? |
3650 | FORBEARANCE Hast thou named all the birds without a gun? |
3650 | From these details can you form a picture of this temple in its exterior and interior? |
3650 | Go''st thou to build an early name, Or early in the task to die? |
3650 | Has color any part in it? |
3650 | Has the night descended? |
3650 | Have they burned the stocks for oven- wood? |
3650 | Have they cut down the gallows- tree? |
3650 | Have you noticed a similar use of"more"in any other poem? |
3650 | Her hair is almost gray; Why will she train that winter curl In such a spring- like way? |
3650 | How can she lay her glasses down, And say she reads as well, When through a double convex lens, She just makes out to spell? |
3650 | How do they agree? |
3650 | How does Longfellow differ with him? |
3650 | How does it apply to the bee? |
3650 | How much actual information did Bryant have about the bird? |
3650 | How should I fight? |
3650 | How would such a position compare with filling the governor''s chair of any state? |
3650 | I breathed a song into the air, It fell to earth, I knew not where; For who has sight so keen and strong, That it can follow the flight of song? |
3650 | I hear the church- bells ring, O say, what may it be?" |
3650 | I hear the sound of guns, O say, what may it be?" |
3650 | I see a gleaming light, O say, what may it be?" |
3650 | In the hurry, prosperity, and luxury of modern life is the care if the flower of poetry lost? |
3650 | In vain do they to Mountains say, fall on us and us hide From Judges ire, more hot than fire, for who may it abide? |
3650 | In what poems do you see evidences of such a method? |
3650 | In what ways does he secure the merriment? |
3650 | Irving? |
3650 | Is earth too poor to give us Something to live for here that shall outlive us? |
3650 | Is it a fete at Bingen? |
3650 | Is it effective? |
3650 | Is it like a modern church? |
3650 | Is not thy home among the flowers? |
3650 | Is the thought divided? |
3650 | Know''st thou what wove yon woodbird''s nest Of leaves, and feathers from her breast? |
3650 | Lord, he thought, in heaven that reignest, Who am I, that thus thou deignest To reveal thyself to me? |
3650 | Loved the wood- rose, and left it on its stalk? |
3650 | Now in a fright, he starts upright, Awaked by such a clatter; He rubs both eyes, and boldly cries,"For God''s sake, what''s the matter?" |
3650 | Now, heard you not the storm- bell ring? |
3650 | O pioneers Have the elder races halted? |
3650 | Or how the fish outbuilt her shell, Painting with morn each annual cell? |
3650 | Or how the sacred pine- tree adds To her old leaves new myriads? |
3650 | Our slender life runs rippling by, and glides Into the silent hollow of the past; What is there that abides To make the next age better for the last? |
3650 | Said I not well that Bayards And Sidneys still are here? |
3650 | Say, Yankees, do n''t you feel compunction, At your unnatural rash conjunction? |
3650 | Seek''st thou the plashy brink Of weedy lake, or marge of river wide, Or where the rocking billows rise and sink On the chafed ocean- side? |
3650 | Seek''st thou, in living lays, To limn the beauty of the earth and sky? |
3650 | Shall creatures abject thus their voices raise? |
3650 | Should he leave the poor to wait Hungry at the convent gate, Till the Vision passed away? |
3650 | Should he slight his radiant guest, Slight this visitant celestial, For a crowd of ragged, bestial Beggars at the convent gate? |
3650 | Should not the dove so white Follow the sea- mew''s flight, Why did they leave that night Her nest unguarded? |
3650 | So shalt thou rest, and what if thou withdraw In silence from the living, and no friend Take note of thy departure? |
3650 | Some more substantial boon Than such as flows and ebbs with Fortune''s fickle moon? |
3650 | THE RHODORA ON BEING ASKED, WHENCE IS THE FLOWER? |
3650 | TO A HONEY BEE Thou, born to sip the lake or spring, Or quaff the waters of the stream, Why hither come on vagrant wing? |
3650 | The secret wouldst thou know To touch the heart or fire the blood at will? |
3650 | Then on a stately oak I cast mine eye, Whose ruffling top the clouds seem''d to aspire; How long since thou wast in thine infancy? |
3650 | Then up spake a Scottish maiden, With her ear unto the ground"Dinna ye hear it?--dinna ye hear it? |
3650 | Think ve I made this ball A field of havoc and war, Where tyrants great and tyrants small Might harry the weak and poor? |
3650 | Think ye that Raphael''s angel throng Has vanished from his side? |
3650 | Think ye the notes of holy song On Milton''s tuneful ear have died? |
3650 | Thy golden fortunes, tower they now, Or melt the glittering spires in air? |
3650 | Thy strength, and stature, more thy years admire; Hath hundred winters past since thou wast born, Or thousand since thou breakest thy shell of horn? |
3650 | Till at length the portly abbot Murmured,"Why this waste of food? |
3650 | Unarmed, faced danger with a heart of trust? |
3650 | Was it the lifting of that eye, The waving of that pictured hand? |
3650 | Was the road of late so toilsome? |
3650 | We ca n''t never choose him o''course,--thet''s flat; Guess we shall hev to come round,( do n''t you?) |
3650 | Wealth''s wasteful tricks I will not learn Nor ape the glittering upstart fool; Shall not carved tables serve my turn, But all must be of buhl? |
3650 | What American poets express a similar need of nearness to nature? |
3650 | What archer of his arrows is so choice, Or hits the white so surely? |
3650 | What characteristics of the bumblebee make animated torrid- zone applicable? |
3650 | What do you think the parson found, When he got up and stared around? |
3650 | What does Lowell mean by Earth? |
3650 | What effect does this poem have upon you? |
3650 | What fire burns in that little chest So frolic, stout and self- possest? |
3650 | What is the shame that clothes the skin To the nameless horror that lives within? |
3650 | What land did Columbus see first? |
3650 | What objection may be made to this word? |
3650 | What others can you name? |
3650 | What wonder if Sir Launfal now Remembered the keeping of his vow? |
3650 | What would be the advantage to us if we knew when we climbed a Mount Sinai? |
3650 | What''s this? |
3650 | Where are the flowers, the fair young flowers, that lately sprang and stood In brighter light and softer airs, a beauteous sisterhood? |
3650 | Where breathes the foe but falls before us, With Freedom''s soil beneath our feet, And Freedom''s banner streaming o''er us? |
3650 | Where did he from? |
3650 | Which does he love better? |
3650 | Which interests you more? |
3650 | Which is more poetic? |
3650 | Which seems most real to you? |
3650 | Whither leads the path To ampler fates that leads? |
3650 | Who am I, that from the centre Of thy glory thou shouldst enter This poor cell, my guest to be? |
3650 | Who calls thy glorious service hard? |
3650 | Who deems it not its own reward? |
3650 | Who fathoms the Eternal Thought? |
3650 | Who is it that can make such shafts as Fate? |
3650 | Who is suggested in this line as white? |
3650 | Who is the owner? |
3650 | Who of this crowd to- night shall tread The dance till daylight gleam again? |
3650 | Who sorrow o''er the untimely dead? |
3650 | Who sweetened toil like him, or paid To love a tribute dearer? |
3650 | Who talks of scheme and plan? |
3650 | Who writhe in throes of mortal pain? |
3650 | Who, for its trials, counts it less A cause of praise and thankfulness? |
3650 | Why are not diamonds black and gray, To ape thy dare- devil array? |
3650 | Why did Moses climb Mount Sinai? |
3650 | Why does Bryant suggest"the wings of the morning"to begin such a survey of the world? |
3650 | Why does Poe use this peculiar word? |
3650 | Why does n''t he need to seek a milder climate in Porto Rico? |
3650 | Why does the coming of the raven suggest this realm to the poet? |
3650 | Why dream of lands of gold and pearl, Of loving knight and lady, When farmer boy and barefoot girl Were wandering there already? |
3650 | Why is the poem divided here? |
3650 | Why is the river pictured as dumb and blind? |
3650 | Why is this mentioned as our motto? |
3650 | Why is"Excelsior"the more familiar? |
3650 | Why should a man so endowed be compared to Shakespeare? |
3650 | Why should the vest on him allure, Which I could not on me endure? |
3650 | Why then is he called a Genoese? |
3650 | Will I admit you to a share? |
3650 | With what other poems in this book may"Hakon''s Lay"be compared? |
3650 | Would he choose the Oregon now? |
3650 | Would he then have knelt adoring, Or have listened with derision, And have turned away with loathing? |
3650 | Would the Vision come again? |
3650 | Would the Vision there remain? |
3650 | Would they own the graceless town, With never a ranter to worry And never a witch to drown?" |
3650 | Wrapt not in Eastern balms, But with thy fleshless palms Stretched, as if asking alms, Why dost thou haunt me?" |
3650 | Wut shall we du? |
3650 | ai nt it terrible? |
3650 | and what for? |
3650 | and why com''st thou here?" |
3650 | are they not in his Wonder- Book? |
3650 | at last he cried,"-- What to me is this noisy ride? |
3650 | did we stop discouraged nodding on our way? |
3650 | does no voice within Answer my cry, and say we are akin?" |
3650 | have they lock''d and bolted doors? |
3650 | have you your sharp- edged axes? |
3650 | how could I forget Its causes were around me yet? |
3650 | said Keezar:"Am I here or am I there? |
3650 | these gray stones-- are they all-- All of the famed, and the colossal left By the corrosive Hours to Fate and me? |
3650 | what dost here? |
3650 | why should we?" |
3650 | why that sound of woe? |
38523 | A privateer, they say? |
38523 | About the buccaneers, eh? |
38523 | Am I ever to see him again? 38523 And not Lyme?" |
38523 | Anneke,said Rachel,"does thee not know the red men? |
38523 | Another? 38523 Are all the crew aboard?" |
38523 | Boats? 38523 Boy hurt?" |
38523 | Ca n''t you see? |
38523 | Can you see anything out there? |
38523 | Captain Avery, is it? |
38523 | Captain Watts,said the commander of the_ Noank_,"do you demand these men? |
38523 | Captain,asked an excited officer,"did she blow up?" |
38523 | Could I stay here and think of the_ Noank_ being out there in a fight? 38523 Did n''t any of''em know what you were doing? |
38523 | Did n''t you go into the house? |
38523 | Did you sight her yourself, Sam? |
38523 | Did you? 38523 Do you feel sure you can creep through?" |
38523 | Does n''t this begin to look a little squally? |
38523 | Guert,said Vine Avery, as they stood together, with their backs against the main boom of the_ Noank_,"what do you think of this?" |
38523 | Help yourself? |
38523 | Hit us? |
38523 | How did thee manage to escape the war vessels of thy good king? |
38523 | How is it that you''re so short- handed? |
38523 | How''bout Hell Gate, when we get there? 38523 Is n''t a telescope wonderful?" |
38523 | It''s the captain of this American pirate? |
38523 | Know''em? |
38523 | Lyme,replied his mate,"do n''t you know that slave catchers do fly the skull and bones every now and then, in the far seas? |
38523 | Mean? |
38523 | Mother, you said I might go with him? |
38523 | Mr. Tracy,said a young officer on her quarter- deck to the gray lieutenant,"what do you think of her, sir?" |
38523 | My boy,said Rachel,"is that like thy friend? |
38523 | Now, Pedro,he said to the Carib pilot,"what next?" |
38523 | Now, Watts,said the commodore,"what course do you take, homeward bound?" |
38523 | Oh, what did they say? |
38523 | Prison? |
38523 | Privateer, is she? |
38523 | S''pose he''tone bline? 38523 See that? |
38523 | Shall we fire a gun, sir? |
38523 | Slaver? |
38523 | That''s her armament, is it? |
38523 | That''s it, is it? |
38523 | They might hang you this time, eh? |
38523 | They wo n''t make much out of that,Guert was thinking, but the British officer angrily shouted back:--"_ Kraken_, of Liverpool? |
38523 | Think? |
38523 | Three guns each broadside? 38523 Tubs, eh? |
38523 | Up anchor, is it? 38523 Up- na- tan, has thee been wicked, too? |
38523 | Vine,said Rachel Tarns,"does thee not see the peaceful nature of thy long cannon? |
38523 | We are sinking, are we? 38523 We are struck? |
38523 | What are we here for, then, father? |
38523 | What bark''s that? |
38523 | What brig''s that? |
38523 | What can a Yankee sugar- boat do for us? |
38523 | What cargo do you find? |
38523 | What could he do with all those slaves if he took''em? |
38523 | What did that old woman yell for? |
38523 | What do you see? |
38523 | What do you see? |
38523 | What do you think, Sam? |
38523 | What does that mean, father? |
38523 | What else did you hear among the Yankees? |
38523 | What he do with''em? |
38523 | What is it you want me to say? 38523 What is it, Rachel?" |
38523 | What is it, Sam? |
38523 | What is it? |
38523 | What is it? |
38523 | What is it? |
38523 | What is it? |
38523 | What is it? |
38523 | What is she, anyhow? |
38523 | What schooner''s that? |
38523 | What schooner''s this? |
38523 | What ship''s that? |
38523 | What sort is he, Guert? |
38523 | What things? |
38523 | What would you do, then? |
38523 | What''s that, Groot? |
38523 | What''s that, Rachel Tarns, about getting news from New York? |
38523 | What''s that? 38523 What''s that?" |
38523 | What''s the matter? |
38523 | What''s your notions? |
38523 | When will he come sailing in? |
38523 | Where away now, Captain? |
38523 | Where away, now, stupid? |
38523 | Where away? 38523 Where away?" |
38523 | Where cap''n? |
38523 | Where did you leave the American? |
38523 | Where has thee been, chief? |
38523 | Where next? |
38523 | Why did n''t you signal sooner? 38523 Why not?" |
38523 | Wo n''t the shore people jump? |
38523 | Would you like to come aboard? 38523 You are the American captain, sir? |
38523 | You''ve seen rough weather, eh? 38523 _ Magdalen_, of Rotterdam?" |
38523 | ''Bout that?" |
38523 | Are they layin''a trap for us? |
38523 | Are we in a fight? |
38523 | Are you leakin''?" |
38523 | Are you taking anything worth while?" |
38523 | Are you with me? |
38523 | But what was the good of it all when the wind was dying? |
38523 | Ca n''t we save some of them?" |
38523 | Can it be we are going to be captured by''em this time?" |
38523 | Can not thee understand that their souls may be much disturbed by this untoward event?" |
38523 | Can that be a fact?" |
38523 | Captain Syme had his hands full, he said, and away he went without uttering aloud the reply that was so near his lips:"Three- master? |
38523 | Captain got plenty lantern? |
38523 | Did the mutineers take the boats and get away? |
38523 | Did you hear anything of that American privateer?" |
38523 | Did you say you were going to scuttle my ship, or set her afire?" |
38523 | Do I not love him exceedingly? |
38523 | Do n''t I want to get there?" |
38523 | Do n''t they mean to answer us? |
38523 | Do ye know, Lyme, the first o''the West Injy pirates, long ago, made their beginnin''with very much that kind o''open boat? |
38523 | Do you belong to that clumsy corvette, yonder?" |
38523 | Do you know if we''re to run into Amsterdam?" |
38523 | Do you s''pose you can repair that pivot- gun? |
38523 | From Copenhagen last? |
38523 | From the seventy- four?" |
38523 | Had it been put down? |
38523 | Had it succeeded? |
38523 | Has thee been shooting at thy good king with thy big gun?" |
38523 | Has thee no feelings for thy good king and his wise counsellors? |
38523 | Have ye ony good tobacco aboord, or a drop o''claret, or an anker of old Hollands?" |
38523 | Have you heard about Sam Prentice and Vine Avery? |
38523 | How are you off for beef and mutton, or, it might be, a little fresh pork?" |
38523 | How could the Englishman have known anything about it? |
38523 | How does thee know that thee can hit anything?" |
38523 | How is it that a Quaker can make cartridges?" |
38523 | How many of''em?" |
38523 | How many on board?" |
38523 | How''d it do to tack back and try to cut out one o''them supply ships?" |
38523 | How''d you get your cloak?" |
38523 | How''s your luck? |
38523 | Is Lyme Avery aboard?" |
38523 | Is anybody hurt?" |
38523 | Is he with thee and her, or is he with his Father in Heaven?" |
38523 | Is it some new business?" |
38523 | It was at the very moment when Lieutenant Tracy remarked, inquiringly:--"What? |
38523 | Not hung yet? |
38523 | Now, sir, is there anything else?" |
38523 | One o''your sticks gone?" |
38523 | Or shall we let him go?" |
38523 | Or shall we shoot him? |
38523 | Plenty flag? |
38523 | Rachel, did n''t you hear that?" |
38523 | Remarkably full crew? |
38523 | Sam, how''s the stranger?" |
38523 | See that lot o''pirate boats from the_ Solway_? |
38523 | Shall we fight it out? |
38523 | Shall we hang Luke Watts? |
38523 | She beat off a pirate for the Spaniard? |
38523 | Ten Eyck,"did he say the_ Noank_ is here?" |
38523 | Ten Eyck,"how is thy conscience this evening? |
38523 | That''s what you call''em? |
38523 | Thee is wounded? |
38523 | There was a laugh behind them, and Guert swung around to ask of Sam Prentice:--"Can you tell me how it is, sir?" |
38523 | Three more successive reports, and then where were the picaroons? |
38523 | Upon which of them had been the mutiny? |
38523 | We cut up your spars a little?" |
38523 | What Coco find?" |
38523 | What are we to do with the crew? |
38523 | What can it mean?" |
38523 | What can our own used up, half- armed, half- starved, badly beaten Continentals do against such awful odds? |
38523 | What can that mean?" |
38523 | What could it mean? |
38523 | What could it mean? |
38523 | What did you say this one with you is?" |
38523 | What do I care for that? |
38523 | What do you make her out?" |
38523 | What do you make of that, Mackenzie?" |
38523 | What do you think o''the impidence of''em?" |
38523 | What do you think?" |
38523 | What has thee been stealing?" |
38523 | What have they been up to?" |
38523 | What if the_ Noank_ should manage to get away without me on board of her?" |
38523 | What if they should have sighted a British man- o''-war? |
38523 | What if this Carib''s lagoon and the channel into it are known to the British, or if they should be discovered while we''re cooped up in there? |
38523 | What is it?" |
38523 | What is she?" |
38523 | What more could any boy or girl desire? |
38523 | What news?" |
38523 | What next?" |
38523 | What schooner''s that?" |
38523 | What ship''s that? |
38523 | What ship''s that?" |
38523 | What ship''s that?" |
38523 | What were you chased by, sir?" |
38523 | What would thee do if they should come to take it away from thee?" |
38523 | What''s the captain up to?" |
38523 | What''s the use o''burnin''a ship you ca n''t keep? |
38523 | What''s the world coming to? |
38523 | What?" |
38523 | When Captain Avery himself came down and the opinion of the_ Spencer''s_ captain was reported to him, he said:--"From Bermuda, eh? |
38523 | Where Up- na- tan lose he nose?" |
38523 | Where are the enemy? |
38523 | Where away''s the Yankee?" |
38523 | Where ole woman gone? |
38523 | Where''s that Englishman?" |
38523 | Where''s that schooner?" |
38523 | Who are you?" |
38523 | Who cares for convoy? |
38523 | Why could n''t we mix''em up?" |
38523 | Why does she not use her broadside guns?" |
38523 | Yankee trader outside?" |
38523 | You do n''t mean to say she''s coming out to fight us?" |
38523 | You do n''t say they''ll surrender without firing a shot? |
38523 | You report that you were chased by some enemy? |
38523 | You spoke the line- o''-battle ship_ Humber_, coming this way? |
38523 | shouted the captain,"what do you say? |
28180 | ''Will you scorn the message Sent in mercy from above? 28180 A Jew?" |
28180 | And the king followed the bier; and the king lifted up his voice and wept; and the king said,''Died Abner as a fool dieth?'' |
28180 | And you did n''t protest against such ungallant treatment of a woman, and by mere lads? |
28180 | Architect and builder? |
28180 | Are we to blame for the shortcomings of these people? |
28180 | Be careful,said Molly,"You would n''t have the women for whom you would be so chivalrous know who Ben Hartright_ really is_, would you?" |
28180 | Benny, did you ever read Uncle Tom''s Cabin? |
28180 | But how I gwine fer kill duck? |
28180 | But how are they to do it? |
28180 | But who he s ther rite ter tek them critters property an giv hit ter yo uns? |
28180 | But who of these people would believe that such was in store for them? 28180 By the thunder, what do you mean by such language?" |
28180 | Did n''t you hear me asking Fannie where Emily is? 28180 Did you dare?" |
28180 | Do you believe in the truthfulness of God''s word? |
28180 | Do you know that you are talking to a gentleman? |
28180 | Do you mean to try to choke it down my throat that my whiteness would save me should your people rise up against Niggers in Wilmington? 28180 Do you solemnly promise that you will leave and never come back?" |
28180 | Do you think that a very brave thing to do? |
28180 | Emily, are you mad? |
28180 | Fisher? |
28180 | Going? 28180 Got er trunk?" |
28180 | Government? 28180 Have you ever tried to put that theory to a test?" |
28180 | Have you joined the sanctified band? |
28180 | How long has he been in Wilmington? |
28180 | Is he a tax payer? 28180 Is it true he is killed? |
28180 | Is n''t Miss Emily in there? |
28180 | It''s no use to waste words; we all have suffered at the hands of these superior(?) 28180 Le''me tell yo'', Kurnel, you na Wilmin''ton rich bocra, dun throw yo''number an''los''; hear me? |
28180 | Mr. Sikes, are you looking for work at your trade in the North? 28180 Name?" |
28180 | Now Teck Pervis, wher is yer proof thet the scripter ment Nigger? 28180 Now, is it not time for white men to act?" |
28180 | Say, Calvin, I saw you talking to a rather striking looking colored girl the other day; who is she? 28180 Teck Pervis, do ye mean ter tell me thet Brother Jonas Melvin wus at thet meetin?" |
28180 | Teck Pervis,exclaimed the wife,"Hev I bin er rastlin''in prayer an pleadin ter ther Lawd in vain? |
28180 | Teck, do tell me what preachers war they? |
28180 | Then you believe in Negro rule? |
28180 | Thet name''s Jewey e''nuff fur yir, ai n''t it? |
28180 | Wa fur yo''shake yer he d, you no got um? |
28180 | Wa''fer? |
28180 | Well mus yer put on er graveyard face ter day bekase yer had er interestin meetin las night? 28180 Well what in ther wor''l is ter matter Teck Pervis? |
28180 | Well, Bill, how are you? |
28180 | Well, Henrietta, how have you managed to live through it all? |
28180 | Well, Mr.--what is your name? |
28180 | Well, must white women stop to lament over such things? |
28180 | Well, whart du you wannt? |
28180 | Well, what are Negroes saying about the uprising, Guy? |
28180 | Well, what are you standing up here for? |
28180 | Well, what can I do for you, my good man? |
28180 | Well, what news? |
28180 | Well, what''s ther mater here? |
28180 | Well, what''s up? |
28180 | What I keers fer der black lisdt, eh? 28180 What did you say boudt black lisdt, Gheorge?" |
28180 | What do I want? |
28180 | What do them risticrats kere er bout the likes er we? 28180 What do you want?" |
28180 | What do you wish us to do? 28180 What has happened her?" |
28180 | What have I done? |
28180 | What is Thanksgiving Day? |
28180 | What is the bells ringin''for, mamma? |
28180 | What is the feller''s name? |
28180 | What is your name, my son? |
28180 | What means this demonstration? |
28180 | What s the matter with the Colonel? 28180 What will such a thing as that amount to against rifles? |
28180 | What''s his name? |
28180 | What''s the matter my darling? |
28180 | What''s the matter, Fannie; is the baby sick? |
28180 | What''s the matter, William? |
28180 | What''s the matter, William? |
28180 | Where is you sneakin''ter? 28180 Where''s my husband?" |
28180 | Who air yu er talkin ter Mandy? |
28180 | Who else will come? 28180 Who is the Colonel, and what right has he to give such orders?" |
28180 | Who is this man Isaacs? |
28180 | Who is this man? 28180 Who''s there?" |
28180 | Whose widow are you? |
28180 | Why did you, oh, why did you come back? |
28180 | Why do you sit up so late to- night, my dear? |
28180 | Why fer ther lan sake, what''s er comin over ye Teck Pervis? 28180 Why hello, Calvin, is that you?" |
28180 | Why is you bin er listenin ter me all this time an dunno who I''m talkin erbout? |
28180 | Why this excitement so early in the morning? |
28180 | Why, what''s the matter Molly? |
28180 | Why, what''s the matter, son? |
28180 | Why? 28180 Will I never be permitted to reach the press?" |
28180 | Will you kindly inform me who the leader of this movement is? |
28180 | Yes, but will he use that power? 28180 Yes? |
28180 | You are almost white, why vote with them Niggers? |
28180 | You mean to say that you took contracts, planned and built houses? |
28180 | You say you are a carpenter-- house builder? |
28180 | You will warn them, wo n''t you, Silas? 28180 Your house?" |
28180 | Yuna mouts g''wine ter git yuna inter trouble; hear me? 28180 _ Do you want niggers to marry your daughters? |
28180 | _ Where in the thunder is she then?_roared Ben Hartright, now beside himself with rage. |
28180 | A few lines of another:"The cows in de ole field, do n''t yo''hear de bell? |
28180 | A young man was called to his door a few nights ago and shot down because he had driven his horse over a gentleman''s(?) |
28180 | Ai n''t your name Silkirk?" |
28180 | An''are you comin''to kill me?" |
28180 | And for what?" |
28180 | And what better market could have been sought for murderers and cowards and assassins, and intense haters of negroes than Georgia? |
28180 | As we gaze upon the bleeding form of this simple negro, this question comes forcibly to us: Died Dan Wright as a fool dieth? |
28180 | But did yer git em?" |
28180 | But who is really responsible for this cowardly massacre? |
28180 | But why this ghastly sentence from the mouth of a representative Wilmingtonian? |
28180 | But why weary the reader with the Colonel''s firey harangue? |
28180 | But would we suppose that Pilate washed his hands only once? |
28180 | But, my dear girl, if you are here to aid us, have you counted the cost?" |
28180 | Ca n''t you fix it so I can get an interview?" |
28180 | Can man sin against his neighbor without suffering its consequences? |
28180 | Can men capable of committing such deeds as the burning and mutilating the body of this wretch be relied upon for truth? |
28180 | Can we look around Wilmington and believe that his home does not need a stronger arsenal than ours? |
28180 | Colored girls in isolated districts exposed to lustful white brutes; what''s the difference? |
28180 | Dese rich bocra? |
28180 | Did Dan Wright feel that death was to be his reward for this act of bravery? |
28180 | Did Dan Wright fully realize the enormity of his act as he faced this mob of white men, armed to the teeth, now pressing down upon him? |
28180 | Did n''t I beg yer not ter fergit yer religin in jine- in in wid sinners in doin eval?" |
28180 | Did this man know that Sam Hose committed the crime for which he suffered such a horrible death? |
28180 | Did yuna see Jedge Morse when he go by? |
28180 | Did yuna see''i m stop ter listen at you? |
28180 | Do we feel pity for Dan Hawes, John Maxim, Charlotte Jones? |
28180 | Do you want niggers on the juries trying white men? |
28180 | Do you want niggers to sit in school beside your children? |
28180 | Does he think we air the banner carriers of Christian civilization? |
28180 | Does not this account for the human sacrifices that have shocked the nation? |
28180 | Does the Negro''s ruined home amount to nought? |
28180 | For can any of us feel that God has countenanced the murder, pillage and intimidation which the whites of Wilmington have resorted to? |
28180 | Gideon, in the name of God, what next? |
28180 | Goin''down ter tell wa''t you foun''out at de committee meet''n, eh?" |
28180 | Have we not done enough to a forgiving race? |
28180 | Have yer back slided an fergot yer religin erready Teck Pervis?" |
28180 | Honestly, Ben Hartright, do you mean that?" |
28180 | How dey no it, I say?" |
28180 | How dey no it? |
28180 | I wonder what the Negro thinks of us now? |
28180 | If you do n''t want such dreadful calamities to befall the South, go to the polls and do your duty!_""What''d he say? |
28180 | Is he or has he ever engaged in any business in the community?" |
28180 | Le''us ask de Lawd wot it all means?" |
28180 | Look at Illinois; can the South cope with such? |
28180 | Mac?" |
28180 | Mrs. Fells style is extremely brazen, and can we expect to harp with impunity upon the shortcomings of the Negro? |
28180 | Must the innocent and guilty suffer alike? |
28180 | Naamah,"What will you see in Shulamite?" |
28180 | Niggers er marryin our darters? |
28180 | Niggers in skule wid we uns? |
28180 | Now pray tell me where do we get the right to drive him from his home where he has as much right to dwell as we have?" |
28180 | Now, when we have driven out the Negro, whose to take his place? |
28180 | Ole Noey''s er our Blessed Lawd an Saviour? |
28180 | Protest? |
28180 | Pure Nigger cunnin'', here me? |
28180 | See how he''pliss yer is? |
28180 | Shall earth''s brief ills appall the brave? |
28180 | Shall manly hearts despond? |
28180 | Shall we for the sake of political ascension plunge Wilmington into an abyss of shame?" |
28180 | Shall we smite with the sword?" |
28180 | Shall we this day rise in our might? |
28180 | Should we be disappointed under this showing because the Negro does not vote with us? |
28180 | The Colonel jumped to his feet;"In the name of God, Gideon, do you believe that a nigger should answer a white man back?" |
28180 | The cows in de ole field, do n''t yo''hear de bell? |
28180 | Then there was Jim, the drummer, Who could beat a drum like Jim? |
28180 | This caused many of his white friends to cool towards him, and it placed his name upon the list of dangerous(?) |
28180 | Walking up and touching this man on the shoulder, he said:"Looker here, mister, you goin''North?" |
28180 | Was it right for him to stand alone against such fearful odds? |
28180 | Was there a Judas on the Republican Executive Committee of New Hanover county? |
28180 | We went back on our colored frends ter giv''yo''''ristocrats ther gov''ment, and we uns''ll combine wi''ther colored men an''take hit from yer, see?" |
28180 | What are we to do? |
28180 | What are you doing in my house?" |
28180 | What brings you here?" |
28180 | What had plunged the Colonel into such a desperate state of mind? |
28180 | What has he done?" |
28180 | What has wrought all this havoc in the city once so peaceful? |
28180 | What kept you out so late, Emily?" |
28180 | What of that? |
28180 | What would Jesus do under such circumstances? |
28180 | What''s the matter with those people down there-- crazy?" |
28180 | What''s your name, old Aunty?" |
28180 | When Schults cum ster Wilmiton sick mit der rhumatiz, mit no moneys, mit no frients, who helbs Schults ter git on his feets? |
28180 | Where are you from?" |
28180 | Where have you been?" |
28180 | Where?" |
28180 | Who buys mine groceries? |
28180 | Who give ther nigger ther stick ter break our heads? |
28180 | Who helbs Schults den? |
28180 | Who here is ready to make a start for heaven to- night? |
28180 | Who is to guard the home of the Negro man? |
28180 | Who ish mine frients? |
28180 | Who killed this simple fellow, and the score of others of his race who fell on that eventful day? |
28180 | Who makes Bohn whadt he is on Dry Pon''? |
28180 | Who makes Gheorge Bohn whad he is in dis counthry? |
28180 | Who of that great church can forget Frey Chambers, Thomas, Nichols, Gregg, Epps and others whose names I can not now recall? |
28180 | Who was in ther Cote House thet day when thet Nigger White tole Colonel Buck he did''n no law? |
28180 | Who''s in there with you?" |
28180 | Whose teachin air we er follerin? |
28180 | Wonder where is Emily? |
28180 | Would you believe it? |
28180 | _ Who done it I say?_ You rich white uns, thets who;""But we''ll do it no longer,"said a voice from the audience. |
28180 | _ You_ a gentleman? |
28180 | how dare you expose that woman in that manner?" |
28180 | oudt weer?" |
28180 | what next?" |
28180 | who can control his fate?" |
28180 | will these hands never be clean?" |
28180 | you as good as tell a gentleman to his teeth that he lies then?" |
23663 | ''N''ye niver heard anny more uv him? |
23663 | A_ what_? 23663 Ai n''t gettin''cold feet, are you?" |
23663 | An''yer bruther? |
23663 | Anybody accuse you of being that? |
23663 | Anybody comin''? |
23663 | Are you French? |
23663 | Believe what? |
23663 | Ben away on a ship, hev ye? |
23663 | But what''s the use talking about it, when we got that tangle of wire out there in front of us all the way round? |
23663 | But you were born in France? |
23663 | Ca n''t I-- please-- can''t I not be arrested-- please? |
23663 | Can you beat that? |
23663 | D''I tell you how I was kiddin''the niggerr we had in the life boat-- when it was leakin''? |
23663 | Dey catch a spy, huh? |
23663 | Did I tell you how we made a hand grenade full of old tomatoes near Rheims? |
23663 | Did n''t I tell you I was with you strong as mustarrd? 23663 Did the spy get rescued?" |
23663 | Did you just find your brother there by accident, Tom? |
23663 | Did you know this kid was mixed up in it? |
23663 | Did you let him? |
23663 | Did you think I did n''t know what I was doing when I picked you, Tommy? |
23663 | Did? 23663 Do n''t you see, if I try to break the wires before they''re ready, we''ll be worse off than ever?" |
23663 | Do you know where our boys are-- what part of it? |
23663 | Do you know why she''s got her arm up? |
23663 | Do you know why the Statue of Liberty looks so sad, Frenchy? |
23663 | Does it mean I go to Slopsgotten? |
23663 | For traveling? |
23663 | Fwhativer became uv yer fayther, lad? |
23663 | German agents, you mean? |
23663 | Germany? 23663 Going to get out and walk, Whitey?" |
23663 | Have you time? 23663 Hey, pal, where are we going?" |
23663 | Hi, Fritzie, cawrn''t yer tike a joke? |
23663 | Hi, Fritzie,he added, addressing one of the soldiers,"are we for Wittenberg or carn''t yer s''y?" |
23663 | How are you going to do it? 23663 How could he get there?" |
23663 | How did you happen to come to America? |
23663 | How far is the front? |
23663 | How many trips you make? |
23663 | How''ll I know the places if I go there? |
23663 | I haf''two-- see? 23663 I wonder if you would n''t be willing to move one or two things for us?" |
23663 | I''m the entertainment committee, hey? |
23663 | If you did n''t know about this,said the captain, watching him keenly,"how did you suspect it? |
23663 | Is he there? |
23663 | Is it a prison camp? |
23663 | Is that a new name, Whitey? |
23663 | Is that all they did? |
23663 | Is that upstream? |
23663 | Is that where the engineers sleep-- down there? |
23663 | Is the engine supposed to pump water up from the brook? |
23663 | Is there any gas in the tank? |
23663 | Is this Germany? |
23663 | It''ll be all right, wo n''t it? |
23663 | Know what I think would be the best thing for it? |
23663 | Let''s see,said the sailor;"did n''t I jolly well tell yer? |
23663 | Mybe, and mybe not,said the sailor;"''ow old are yer?" |
23663 | No batteries-- magneto, huh? |
23663 | Not sore''cause they''ve been kiddin''us, are you? 23663 Say, what''s the next stop for this jitney?" |
23663 | So they did n''t manage to sink my old chum, Sherlock Nobody Holmes, eh? 23663 So you turned up like a bad penny, huh?" |
23663 | So? 23663 Speak German?" |
23663 | Steward''s poy, huh? |
23663 | That black thing? |
23663 | That was our understanding, was n''t it? |
23663 | Then why do n''t_ they_ fix it? |
23663 | Then you do n''t think it was spies they suspected or-- anything like that? |
23663 | These are_ stirring_ times, hey, Frenchy? |
23663 | They make fun of you a lot, do n''t they? |
23663 | They wo n''t kill him, will they? |
23663 | They-- they ai n''t going to arrest me, are they? |
23663 | Trying to dope it out? |
23663 | Two thousand, huh? |
23663 | Vell, vot did I tell you, huh? |
23663 | Vell, vot''s der matter? |
23663 | Vell, we are not so pad, huh? 23663 We''ll have it fixed in---- How long''ll it take to fix it, Slady?" |
23663 | We''re off a bloomin''mine l''yer,the sailor answered, including his companion;"nabbed in the channel--''i, Freddie?" |
23663 | Well, what became of the light? |
23663 | Were you captured? |
23663 | What are you doing here? |
23663 | What did they do with all the stuff? |
23663 | What did you come here for? |
23663 | What do you suppose they suspected him of? |
23663 | What in the world took you so long? |
23663 | What is Slopsgotten? |
23663 | What made them think there was? |
23663 | What-- do-- you-- know-- about-- that? |
23663 | What? |
23663 | When are we going to start? 23663 When do we eat?" |
23663 | Where do we go from here, kiddo? |
23663 | Where in all_ get- out_ did_ you_ blow in from? 23663 Where''s your flashlight?" |
23663 | Who are you? |
23663 | Who are you? |
23663 | Who did he recommend you to? |
23663 | Who''re the public benefactors now? 23663 With the glass locked shut?" |
23663 | Would n''t thim Dutch skippers in Noo Yorrk Harrbor help him out? |
23663 | Wuz he a German citizen? |
23663 | Yes,laughed Tom,"and then I started running down the street and hollered,''Throw a brick, you Irish mick!''?" |
23663 | You ai n''t afraid there''s something else the matter with the engine, after all, are you? |
23663 | You and your brother get your jobs together? |
23663 | You bring ofer a lot of droops? |
23663 | You had a flashlight and threw it out, did n''t you? |
23663 | You had a vite jacket? |
23663 | You heading for Dundgardt? |
23663 | You know where it runs through the bushes at the other end? |
23663 | You mean to prison? |
23663 | You off der_ Montauk_, huh? |
23663 | You say the place had already been searched? |
23663 | You see that piece of cotton waste that you kicked? |
23663 | You''re not from Blighty,[3] eh? |
23663 | You''re the fellow that read that semaphore message the other day, too, eh? |
23663 | You''re the fellow that read the semaphore message, are n''t you? |
23663 | Ze iron cross-- you know zat? |
23663 | Ze tin can? 23663 Ziss-- how you call--_can_ ze Kaiser?" |
23663 | ***** But did they ever reach Dundgardt-- once Leteur? |
23663 | Adventures never cease, huh?" |
23663 | Am I right? |
23663 | And what other way was there to get out? |
23663 | And who would be the wiser? |
23663 | Away from ze veenyard? |
23663 | Besides, where you goin''to get the file?" |
23663 | But they''re mighty particular, huh?" |
23663 | But what would they do with an American? |
23663 | But where then might the great transport be? |
23663 | But you see, I have n''t got to be ashamed of you, have I? |
23663 | But-- but---- Are you listening, Bill? |
23663 | CHAPTER II HE DOES A GOOD TURN AND MAKES A DISCOVERY"What became of the Schmitts?" |
23663 | CHAPTER XVIII HE TALKS WITH MR. CONNE AND SEES THE BOYS START FOR THE FRONT"What-- what do you think they''ll do with him?" |
23663 | Ca n''t it be fixed?" |
23663 | Could it be over so soon? |
23663 | D''I tell you''bout the sharrk eatin''a bomb?" |
23663 | Did Tom''s"good ideas"pan out? |
23663 | Did n''t I tell you, you could n''t even get a file?" |
23663 | Did they make their way through fair Alsace, under the shadow of the Blue Alsatian Mountains, to the Swiss border? |
23663 | Did ye know the school house burned down?" |
23663 | Did you ever hear of a place called O''Brien''s Junction out there?" |
23663 | Do n''t you know they have?" |
23663 | Do you eat apples as much as you used to?" |
23663 | Do you think he wanted to steal some of our membership buttons?" |
23663 | Get me?" |
23663 | Go and tell an officer about his discovery? |
23663 | Had he not done his part in scouring and rubbing them down there in the galley? |
23663 | Hey, Slady?" |
23663 | Hi there, Fritzie,''ave we long to wite, old pal?" |
23663 | Hi, Fritzie, w''en do we have tea?" |
23663 | How about that?" |
23663 | How could they prove what you said about me getting you the job?" |
23663 | How old are you?" |
23663 | How''d you find out about it? |
23663 | How''d you know about this?" |
23663 | How''d_ you_ get on this ship? |
23663 | Maybe he''s rich now, hey?" |
23663 | Maybe you think I was crazy---- Are you listenin''?" |
23663 | Nobody''ll be hunting for you, will they? |
23663 | Not''arf bad, wot? |
23663 | Now put your mind on your work and do n''t think of anything else----""Have I got my job yet?" |
23663 | Now where is it?" |
23663 | Remember that?" |
23663 | See? |
23663 | That ai n''t dishonorable, is it?" |
23663 | That puzzling phrase came into his mind again:_ Sure, I could tend to the other matter too-- it''s the same idea as a periscope._ What did that mean? |
23663 | That shows he was patriotic, does n''t it? |
23663 | The thing is, are you with me? |
23663 | Then, turning to Tom, he said,"Zis is ze Bartholdi statue, yess? |
23663 | Then, turning upon Tom he said brusquely,"you were supposed to hurry down here with the tip if the convoy signaled, eh?" |
23663 | Those were about the only good things he could remember about his father and Uncle Job, but were n''t they enough? |
23663 | Tommy, my boy, how are you?" |
23663 | Vere?" |
23663 | Was he indeed permitted to carry out his determination to fight for two? |
23663 | Was it----? |
23663 | What could he say? |
23663 | What should I care if they laugh at me? |
23663 | What should he do? |
23663 | What should he do? |
23663 | What was a periscope, anyway? |
23663 | What''s it all about?" |
23663 | What''s that you''ve got in your hand?" |
23663 | What''s the matter with you?" |
23663 | Whatever you do, will you promise not to say anything to anybody?" |
23663 | Where can he go? |
23663 | Where you goin''? |
23663 | Which is the hill?" |
23663 | Who but sturdy old John Bull had come forward when Belgium was being violated? |
23663 | Who was a spy and who was not? |
23663 | Who were Secret Service men and who were not? |
23663 | Who''s running this camp anyway?" |
23663 | With all our stuff down there? |
23663 | Wot d''ye s''y, Freddie?" |
23663 | Would he dare to speak? |
23663 | Would n''t you think the gas company would have known that? |
23663 | Would ye gimme a lift wid this here table, now, while ye''re here, Tommy?" |
23663 | Would you like to know what became of the good friends you have made in this book? |
23663 | Would you like to read other stories continuing their adventures and experiences, or other books quite as entertaining by the same author? |
23663 | Ye''ve growed ter be a big, strappin''lad, ai n''t ye?" |
23663 | Yess? |
23663 | Yess?" |
23663 | You ai n''t asleep, are you?" |
23663 | You do n''t suppose an American citizen would be a spy for Germany, do you?" |
23663 | You do n''t think that''s sort of cheating the government, do you?" |
23663 | You know ze Franco- Prussian War-- when Zhermany take Alsace- Lorraine-- yess?" |
23663 | You make Brest? |
23663 | You see''em? |
23663 | You see? |
23663 | You see? |
23663 | You see? |
23663 | You see? |
23663 | You see?" |
23663 | You see?" |
23663 | You see?" |
23663 | You take this for-- what you call-- lucky piece?" |
23663 | You want to get me in trouble? |
23663 | You''ve got a key to that porthole, eh? |
23663 | Ze-- how you call-- wipe ze floor wiz him?" |
23663 | Zis is when Alsace and Lorraine were lost-- you see? |
23663 | [ 2]"Did n''t you-- didn''t you-- believe me?" |
23663 | _ What_ was the same idea as a periscope? |
23663 | _ You_ do n''t believe it, do you?" |
26146 | All right,said Gustave,"but who is to go ahead of the show?" |
26146 | Am I? |
26146 | And how long,faltered Frohman, thinking of his play--"how long would it take to learn them?" |
26146 | And how''s your own play getting along? |
26146 | And the play does n''t matter? |
26146 | And then? |
26146 | And with whom? |
26146 | Are there any of those country fairs around here, where they have side shows and you can throw balls at things? |
26146 | Are there no men in your audiences? |
26146 | Are there rules of painting, sculpture, music? 26146 But ca n''t you give me Monday or Tuesday night?" |
26146 | But how about my mustache? |
26146 | But is a playwright,I asked,"more highly reputed than a theatrical manager?" |
26146 | But what do the critics say? |
26146 | But who will write you your Terror and Pity? |
26146 | But why did you permit yourself to lose so much money on a play that seemed bound to fail? |
26146 | By the way, Smith,called out Frohman,"how much do you want me to pay you for taking him off my hands?" |
26146 | Ca n''t we do it? |
26146 | Did you forget all about the supper? |
26146 | Did you see that man outside? |
26146 | Do you spell high- ball with a hyphen? |
26146 | Do you think there is any danger? |
26146 | Do you think you can get me a job as programmer with your show? |
26146 | Do you want a contract? |
26146 | Have they a daughter named Barbara? |
26146 | Have you got the whole week? |
26146 | How about her costume? |
26146 | How did it go? |
26146 | How go the rules? |
26146 | How is it going? |
26146 | How would you like to go under my management? |
26146 | How''s that? |
26146 | How''s that? |
26146 | How''s that? |
26146 | How''s the house, Tommy? |
26146 | How? |
26146 | Is he the bailiff? |
26146 | Is it as easy as that? |
26146 | Is n''t it enough to be a theatrical manager? |
26146 | May I wait for him? |
26146 | Miss Who? |
26146 | Now what would you like to do this evening? |
26146 | Rules? |
26146 | Shall I take it home and read it? |
26146 | Then you hold,said I,"that even in a French farce the events should be reasonable?" |
26146 | Then,said the manager,"what else could you do? |
26146 | This is terrible, is n''t it? 26146 To what do you attribute such a state of affairs?" |
26146 | WHY FEAR DEATH? |
26146 | Was it interesting? |
26146 | Well, then, I may have him? |
26146 | Well,said Frohman,"you sent matter to all the papers, did n''t you?" |
26146 | What are they talking about? |
26146 | What are you doing here, Charley? |
26146 | What are you doing here? |
26146 | What are you laughing at? |
26146 | What do you consider the biggest thing that you have done? |
26146 | What do you mean by leading actor? |
26146 | What do you think? |
26146 | What have you to do? |
26146 | What is it? |
26146 | What is that? |
26146 | What is the name of the book? |
26146 | What is wrong with it? |
26146 | What salary do you want? |
26146 | What would a literary man like to do in Paris? |
26146 | What would you like to do? |
26146 | What''s his name? |
26146 | What''s that? |
26146 | What''s the matter with the torrent? |
26146 | What''s the matter, Lionel? |
26146 | What''s the matter? |
26146 | What''s up? |
26146 | What, you here again? |
26146 | When do you want to go? |
26146 | Where are you going? |
26146 | Where did you get your cockney dialect? |
26146 | Where do they come from? |
26146 | Where do you want to go? |
26146 | Where to, Governor? |
26146 | Where? |
26146 | Which part? |
26146 | Who are you? |
26146 | Who is it? |
26146 | Who is that man? |
26146 | Who is that? |
26146 | Who''s Shakespeare? 26146 Who''s that?" |
26146 | Whom do you consider the greatest American dramatist? |
26146 | Why all this fuss? |
26146 | Why ca n''t Ongley pretend to be a crank and appear to be making an attempt on Miss Marlowe''s life? |
26146 | Why ca n''t you make it into a long play? |
26146 | Why did you do this play? |
26146 | Why do n''t you do it under my management? |
26146 | Why do n''t you stop in down- stairs and see''Rosemary''? |
26146 | Why not give a magnificent pageant? |
26146 | Why not have a real negro play Uncle Tom? |
26146 | Why not make him stage- manager? |
26146 | Why split and separate a good acting combination? |
26146 | Why? |
26146 | Why? |
26146 | Why? |
26146 | Why? |
26146 | Will she be able to do it? |
26146 | Will you take charge of the company? |
26146 | Wo n''t I play with Uncle John? |
26146 | Would you like to play in''Alice''? |
26146 | Would you like to play with me? |
26146 | You do n''t expect,I said,"to pick up another''Two Orphans,''a second''Ticket of Leave Man''?" |
26146 | You know I have an agreement to deliver you the manuscript of a play? |
26146 | You mean the candelabrum? |
26146 | You mean to say that you want me to change Mr. Thomas''s lines? |
26146 | ''What are you going to give us next season, Frohman?'' |
26146 | ''Who in thunder is Sardou?'' |
26146 | ( Turning to Miss Pringle),"England, why should I stay in England? |
26146 | After all, what is melodrama? |
26146 | After an interval of a few moments a dulcet voice came through the door, saying,"Wo n''t you see me?" |
26146 | Approaching the treasurer at the box- office, he said:"Will you please let me have a hundred dollars on account of the show?" |
26146 | At lunch that day Frohman remarked to the agent:"Why did you send me that note about the papers?" |
26146 | At the end of this meeting Lestocq said in jest,"What do I get out of this?" |
26146 | But you''ve got London by the neck, have n''t you?" |
26146 | Charles borrowed a quantity of it and also from the"Whose Baby Are You?" |
26146 | Collier, who had been playing bridge until dawn, showed up at the appointed time, whereupon Frohman said:"How did you do it?" |
26146 | Did n''t Augustin Daly make splendid adaptations of German farces? |
26146 | Did n''t Lester Wallack write''Rosedale''and''The Veteran''? |
26146 | Do n''t you think it is a pretty good life''s work?" |
26146 | Do n''t you think we had better warn him?" |
26146 | Do we walk?" |
26146 | Does he want me?" |
26146 | Does n''t Belasco turn out first- class dramas? |
26146 | Each public asks,''What have you got?'' |
26146 | Every now and then he would chirp up with the question:"How do I get out of town?" |
26146 | F.?" |
26146 | F.?" |
26146 | Fine part.--First act--_you_ know-- romantic-- light through the window... nice deep tones of your voice, you see?... |
26146 | Frohman jumped up from his chair, saying, eagerly,"What''s the verdict?" |
26146 | Frohman looked up with a start and said:"Is that so? |
26146 | Frohman now got Ditrichstein to adapt"Are You a Mason?" |
26146 | Frohman thought a moment and said:"Can you be at my office to- morrow morning at eight o''clock? |
26146 | Frohman thought a moment, and suddenly flashed out:"Why not rewrite''The Taming of the Shrew''with a new background?" |
26146 | Frohman turned to Dillingham and said:"What in the name of Heaven is that? |
26146 | Frohman, who was just walking through the side door on his way to William Faversham''s dressing- room, turned to the star and said:"Who is calling? |
26146 | Frohman,_ you''_ve got London by the neck, have n''t you?" |
26146 | Frohman?" |
26146 | Frohman?" |
26146 | He had five different plays going at the same time--"Sherlock Holmes,""Are You a Mason?" |
26146 | He had hardly repeated the first three words--"Why fear death?" |
26146 | He kept on saying,"Will it never come?" |
26146 | He nagged at his brother:"Gus, when do we start for Chicago? |
26146 | He slapped Collier on the back and, turning to his companion, said:"Was n''t that a bully scene that Willie put into the play?" |
26146 | Heimley_, do n''t you?" |
26146 | His first greeting to Gustave was:"Well, when do we start again?" |
26146 | How about my fee?" |
26146 | How would you like to go on?" |
26146 | If he saw an impressive bit of scenery he would say,"Would n''t that make a fine background?" |
26146 | In London they say,''How long will the play run even though it is a failure?''" |
26146 | Instead, Frohman whispered:"Charley, I wonder if they have any more of that famous apple- pie over at Hueblein''s?" |
26146 | May I?" |
26146 | More than one actor, on entering the shop, asked the question:"Where is Charley? |
26146 | Much to her surprise Frohman said:"Well, Ethel, what can I do for you?" |
26146 | Often in discussing a business arrangement with his representatives he would say:"Did I say that?" |
26146 | On going into the adjoining dressing- room the great actor said to her:"Would n''t you like to stay in England?" |
26146 | On this same occasion he was asked,"What seat in the theater do you consider the best to view a drama or a musical comedy from?" |
26146 | Once he was asked the question:"If you had your life to live over again would you be a theatrical manager?" |
26146 | Once he was asked this question:"What is the difference between metropolitan and out- of- town audiences?" |
26146 | One day in 1909 he said to Frohman:"Why do n''t you establish a Repertory Theater?" |
26146 | One day, a year later, Frohman remarked to Potter in Paris,"What do you say to paying Ouida a visit in Florence?" |
26146 | One night, just before Gustave started out, the lad said to him:"Gus, how can I make money like you?" |
26146 | Quick as a flash Chambers said to him:"Why do you keep His Grace waiting?" |
26146 | She became indignant, called him to the footlights, and said:"I want you to know that I am an artist?" |
26146 | Shoving the money at him, Frohman said,"How far will this take us?" |
26146 | Some years afterward a well- known English playwright asked Stephen Gatti:"What is your contract with Frohman?" |
26146 | Sometimes he would say,"Try it my way first,"or"Do you like that?" |
26146 | Summoning a waiter, he asked:"What''s all that noise about?" |
26146 | The most extraordinary plays succeed, and many that deserve a better fate fail; so how are we to know until after we test a play before the public? |
26146 | Then he said to Germon:"You''re a member of the well- known Germon family, are n''t you? |
26146 | Then he said, eagerly:"When shall we do it; whom do you want for star?" |
26146 | Then why not I? |
26146 | Then why not go to a young country where all is life and gaiety and sunshine and joy and youth-- the land of promise, the land for me?" |
26146 | Then, as always, she asked herself the question:"What will this character mean to the people who see it?" |
26146 | Then, with all the terror of destruction about him, Frohman said to his associates, with the serene smile still on his face:"Why fear death? |
26146 | They came to his mind as he stood on that fateful deck and said:_ Why fear death? |
26146 | This was discussed for a little while, when Sir Charles said,"What do you say, Frohman?" |
26146 | To Arthur he said:"What do you think about my taking the Wallack successes out on the road? |
26146 | What comes next on the American stage? |
26146 | What do you say?" |
26146 | What does this result in? |
26146 | When Charles saw them he said,"How much do you want?" |
26146 | When Haverly replied that he had not, Gustave immediately spoke up:"Why do n''t you hire my brother Charley? |
26146 | When Lestocq told Frohman these terms over the telephone, all he said was this:"Did you tell her not to slam the door?" |
26146 | When do artists eat?" |
26146 | When he was able to talk Thomas said to him:"Why in Heaven''s name did n''t you use the elevator?" |
26146 | When he was told he said:"I want to see it, but do I have to look at anything else in the gallery?" |
26146 | When he went to see Frohman to hear about the third, this is the way the manager expressed it to him:"New play-- see?... |
26146 | When the curtain went down his new star said to him:"How did it go?" |
26146 | When the play went into rehearsal, Frohman, who sat in front, spoke to Miller from time to time, asking,"Where is that line you spoke in my office?" |
26146 | When the terms had been agreed upon, Frohman said to Crane:"Are you sure this is perfectly satisfactory to you?" |
26146 | Where can you find a more human theme than that?" |
26146 | Who shall we have in the cast?" |
26146 | Why do n''t you give him a chance?" |
26146 | Why do n''t you go as my understudy and tell the doctor what is the matter with you? |
26146 | Why throw away your money on it? |
26146 | Will you help me put her out in a piece?" |
26146 | Will you let me have her, and in that way do another great wrong by doing me a favor? |
26146 | Will you speak to your father about it?" |
26146 | Would you like to adapt a French farce for me?_ Dillingham accepted this commission and thus met Frohman. |
26146 | XIX"WHY FEAR DEATH?" |
26146 | or"Does this give you a better feeling?" |
26146 | was the query? |
26146 | you know?'' |
49351 | * What was this butcarrying their appeal from the justice to the fears of government?" |
49351 | An''wid three Vickeys sowed up in the waistbands? |
49351 | And all these have come on a friendly visit too? |
49351 | And all these men wish to converse with the chief too? |
49351 | Ay, Master Ford, is that you? |
49351 | But you surely do not consider his case and mine alike? |
49351 | By what authority do_ you_ demand it? |
49351 | Can you tell me,he said,"what causes that rainbow?" |
49351 | Do you ask for information? |
49351 | Do you know where we now are? |
49351 | For what? |
49351 | How can I? |
49351 | I have given you the countersign; why do you not shoulder your musket? |
49351 | I will go and see, sir,I said; and now, master, what is to be done? |
49351 | Indeed,answered Sir William;"what did my red brother dream?" |
49351 | Is he at home? |
49351 | Is it possible,said Franklin,"when he is so great a writer? |
49351 | Of what use is your standing army? |
49351 | Touch not the hand they stretch to you; The falsely- profferd cup put by; Will you believe a coward true? 49351 We have no countersign to give,"Barton said, and quickly added,"Have you seen any deserters here to- night?" |
49351 | Well,said Stark,"do you wish to march now, while it is dark and raining?" |
49351 | What aim? |
49351 | What can you do? |
49351 | What did my pale- faced brother dream? |
49351 | What need of repeating the same tale of horrors? 49351 What, Brother H----ske? |
49351 | What,feebly exclaimed Wolfe,"do they run already? |
49351 | Where''s the colonel[ Warner]? 49351 Who commands this garrison?" |
49351 | Who peopled all the city streets A hundred years ago? 49351 Who shall decide when doctors disagree?" |
49351 | Whom can we trust now? |
49351 | Will he fight? |
49351 | Will that do, colonel? |
49351 | ''How came it to pass?'' |
49351 | ''Is your name James Rivington?'' |
49351 | ''My lads,''he said,''why did you come to disturb an honest man in his government that never did any harm to you in his life? |
49351 | ''Why this emotion, sir?'' |
49351 | *"And can we deem it strange That from their planting such a branch should bloom As nations envy? |
49351 | ** What could have been more injudicious than holding such language to Washington, under the circumstances? |
49351 | 206theory of light? |
49351 | 223is your master?" |
49351 | After the doctor had announced his business, and Prescott had become calm, the general said,"Was not my treatment to Folger very uncivil?" |
49351 | Almost, the first words she uttered on my entrance were,"What are Cass''s prospects in New York?" |
49351 | And for what is this done? |
49351 | And how am I requited? |
49351 | And what a compliment does he pay to our understandings, when he recommends measures, in either alternative, impracticable in their nature? |
49351 | And what are we That hear the question of that voice sublime? |
49351 | And wherefore, for such a purpose, were the foundation- stones wrought into spheres, and the whole structure stuccoed within and without? |
49351 | And why? |
49351 | And would the tribes of New England permit the nation that had first given a welcome to the English to perish unavenged? |
49351 | And yet, bold babbler, what art thou to Him Who drowned the world, and heaped the waters far Above its loftiest mountains? |
49351 | As decadence is slow combustion, may not the heat evolved in the process produce the effects noticed? |
49351 | But how are they to be promoted? |
49351 | But how should they catch him? |
49351 | But in an American tax what do we do? |
49351 | But who are they to defend? |
49351 | But why this rigorous treatment? |
49351 | Can he be a friend to the army? |
49351 | Can he be a friend to this country? |
49351 | Can they ever forget the solemn promises there made, or be unfaithful to the pledge there sealed? |
49351 | Can you, then, consent to be the only sufferers by the Revolution, and, retiring from the field, grow old in poverty, wretchedness, and contempt? |
49351 | Canonchet, the chief sachem of the Narragansets, was the son of Miantonômoh; and could he forget his father''s wrongs? |
49351 | Could Britons seek of savages the same, Or deem it conquest thus the war to wage? |
49351 | Could Tryon hope to quench the patriot flame, Or make his deeds survive in glory''s page? |
49351 | Could any language written by an individual have a more opposite tendency? |
49351 | Did he desert his post or shrink from the charge?" |
49351 | Did we treat you in this manner when you were in the power of the Tryon county Committee? |
49351 | Do any of our historical antiquaries know by whose authority the alteration was made? |
49351 | Do n''t you consider how much the country is distressed by the war, and that your officers have not been better paid than yourselves? |
49351 | Do you ask, who is he? |
49351 | Do you intend to desert your officers, and to invite the enemy to follow you into the country? |
49351 | Do you know?" |
49351 | Do you not remember that you then agreed to remain neutral, and that upon that condition General Schuyler left you at liberty on your parole? |
49351 | Do you remember when we were consulted by General Schuyler, and you agreed to surrender your arms? |
49351 | Dr. Benjamin Rush, who formed a part of the general''s suite, earnestly asked,''A son of the Earl of Levin?'' |
49351 | Durfee''s"What Cheer?" |
49351 | Ford?" |
49351 | Forman,''said I,''do you call this a village? |
49351 | Goffe''s firmness alarmed the fencing- master, who exclaimed,"Who can you be? |
49351 | Has murder staind his hands with gore? |
49351 | Have you considered whether you have troops and ships sufficient to reduce the people of the whole American continent to your devotion? |
49351 | Have you no property, no parents, wives, or children? |
49351 | He came to America, and presented himself to the commander- in- chief He answered the inquiry of his excellency,"What do you seek here?" |
49351 | He immediately galloped to the encampment, and, in his uncouth, but earnest manner, thus addressed them:"My brave lads, where are you going? |
49351 | He left the room, and, calling his aid after him, asked, as they went out,"Did you ever hear so impudent a son of a b- h?" |
49351 | How could Shoemaker doubt it? |
49351 | In the foreground is a paper inscribed,"Shall they be obliged to maintain bishops that can not maintain themselves?" |
49351 | Is it not your own? |
49351 | Is there no man here? |
49351 | Johnson, Lady of Sir John, conveyed to Albany and kept as Hostage, 236.? |
49351 | Just then voices in the crowd behind Preston cried,"Why do n''t you fire? |
49351 | Let us turn back two centuries, and what do we behold from this lofty observatory? |
49351 | Lomonosov, a native Russian poet, thus refers to the sublime spectacle:"What fills with dazzling beams the illumined air? |
49351 | May not these names have been written on that occasion? |
49351 | Ogden, in reply to the commandant''s question,"Is there no way to spare Andre''s life?" |
49351 | On being told that one of them was unfortunate, he exclaimed,"What, has he misbehaved? |
49351 | On that representing Grenville, holding out a Stamp Act in his left hand:"YOUR Servant, Sirs; do you like my Figure? |
49351 | One bears the initials"G. R.,"George Rex or King; the rude form of an anchor, a mark peculiar to Great Britain, and placed upon her cannon- ball? |
49351 | Or taste the poison''d draught, to die? |
49351 | Or what are all the notes that ever rung From war''s vain trumpet, by thy thundering side? |
49351 | Other histories of our Revolution had been written, embellished, and read; what could be produced more attractive than they? |
49351 | Our wives, our children, our farms, and other property which we leave behind us? |
49351 | Pie had charge of the colonel''s horse, and frequently exclaimed,"What are we doing here? |
49351 | Rather, is he not an insidious foe? |
49351 | Said you not so? |
49351 | Say, is it just that I, who rule these bands, Should live on husks, like rakes in foreign lands? |
49351 | Say-- what is it? |
49351 | Shall Britons be such savages, that, when they can not spill the blood of enemies, they will shed that of each other?" |
49351 | She mourned not for the dead, for they were at rest; but little Frances, her lost darling, where was she? |
49351 | Smith, Adam, Author of? |
49351 | The English are but a handful, what has he to fear? |
49351 | The captain comprehended the silent allusion, and said,"Does that look like my nose? |
49351 | The colleagues whom he had assorted at the same boards stared at each other, and were obliged to ask,''Sir, your name?'' |
49351 | The colonel was sent for, and the captain, in a nasal tone, said,"Well, colonel, what d''ye want I should do?" |
49351 | The general was surprised, and said,"Sir, is not General Arnold here?" |
49351 | The light returned to the dim eyes of the dying hero, and he asked, with emotion,"Who runs?" |
49351 | The question arises, By whom was the inscription made? |
49351 | There can be no doubt of the purity of his intentions, but who can respect his judgment? |
49351 | They had seen something like this before, but when and where? |
49351 | They were delivered with emphasis, while he looked the officer, he says, full in the face:"Do I understand you, sir? |
49351 | This circumstance drew from Whittier his glorious poem,''The Prisoner for Debt, in which he exclaims,"What has the gray- hair''d prisoner done? |
49351 | To bring the object we seek nearer? |
49351 | We, your majesty''s Commons for Great Britain, give and grant to your majesty, what? |
49351 | Webb coolly and cowardly replied,"What do you think we should do here?" |
49351 | What do you think of a flag with a white ground, a tree in the middle, the motto''Appeal to Heaven?'' |
49351 | What else could the hill be called, under the circumstances, but Anthony''s Nose? |
49351 | What is your present situation there? |
49351 | What wakes the flames that light the firmament? |
49351 | Where our hero in glory is sleeping? |
49351 | Who can tell the heavy hours of woman? |
49351 | Who fill''d the church with faces meek A hundred years ago?" |
49351 | Who shall be the aggressor? |
49351 | Who shall be the conqueror? |
49351 | Who will call William? |
49351 | Who will strike?" |
49351 | Whose cause have you been fighting and suffering so long in? |
49351 | Why did n''t I know you yesterday?" |
49351 | Why did this body of men land at Fairfield at all? |
49351 | Why did you not take us prisoners yesterday, after Sir John ran off with the Indians and left us? |
49351 | Why do n''t we go on? |
49351 | Why do n''t you disperse, you rebels? |
49351 | Why do we stop here? |
49351 | Why, then, did not the boats proceed immediately to Albany? |
49351 | With such precious mementoes, how could she be other than a Democrat? |
49351 | Yea, what is all the riot man can make In his short life to thy unceasing roar? |
49351 | and are you familiar with the science of optics?" |
49351 | do you treat mo with the food of hogs?" |
49351 | dost thou aspire to happiness? |
49351 | from what quarter? |
49351 | our own property? |
49351 | pray, who is in fault, The one who begun, or resents the assault?'' |
49351 | said the general,"have your fathers been teaching you rebellion, and sent you to exhibit it here?" |
49351 | shall we never more seek out his grave, While fame o''er his memory is weeping?" |
49351 | the laws of refraction and reflection? |
49351 | what can this writer have in view by recommending such measures? |
49351 | what does he say? |
49351 | where is William Slocum?" |
49351 | why do n''t you fire?" |
33201 | Do They Affect Our More Serious Reading? |
33201 | The Growth of the Short Storyand"Which Magazine Seems on the Whole the One Best Worth Taking in a Family, and Why?" |
33201 | ( 3) Is the elimination of the servant possible? |
33201 | ( 4) How far is woman responsible for the state of things, and what can she do to reduce social expenditure? |
33201 | A concluding paper might inquire, What is it in these two themes which has always attracted the poets? |
33201 | A discussion may follow: Should the Philippines be made self- governing? |
33201 | A good topic here is, How shall we have variety without increasing the expense? |
33201 | And is buying in large quantities a good plan? |
33201 | Are advertisements painted on rocks or put up in fields? |
33201 | Are children paid too much attention? |
33201 | Are clubs for servants desirable? |
33201 | Are coffee rooms needed to supplant the saloon? |
33201 | Are materials more, or less, expensive? |
33201 | Are open- air schools needed? |
33201 | Are our children growing up thinking that money is the principal thing in the minds of their parents? |
33201 | Are rents, food, and clothing actually higher for the same things, or does life to- day demand that we add to what we then had? |
33201 | Are sufficient numbers of courses offered? |
33201 | Are the Courts of Domestic Relations of value in preventing them? |
33201 | Are the alleys clean? |
33201 | Are the boys educated? |
33201 | Are the playgrounds used in summer time? |
33201 | Are the problems of Anna the same as those which confront women in other lands to- day? |
33201 | Are the shows clean? |
33201 | Are their home lives well developed? |
33201 | Are their morals endangered? |
33201 | Are there any playgrounds for children? |
33201 | Are there cheap theaters in town? |
33201 | Are there saloons, and, if so, do they in any way evade the law? |
33201 | Are there short cuts in laundry work? |
33201 | Are there tenements? |
33201 | Are there vines, flowers and grass around the building? |
33201 | Are they enforced? |
33201 | Are they essential? |
33201 | Are they fitted for the career of the law? |
33201 | Are they in good order? |
33201 | Are they loafing places? |
33201 | Are they over- amused? |
33201 | Are they really as useful as they seem at first sight? |
33201 | Are they sanitary? |
33201 | Are they well cared for and attractive? |
33201 | As to the schools, can not manual and vocational training be secured? |
33201 | Assuming that prices have really gone up, and are to stay there, what can women do to adjust themselves to the fact? |
33201 | But the great question will surely arise: What shall we study? |
33201 | Can a Woman Work All Day and Still Bear Healthy Children and Bring Them Up Properly? |
33201 | Can a girl save for illness? |
33201 | Can employers combine to make relations between mistresses and maids better? |
33201 | Can not music and art be better taught? |
33201 | Close with a discussion on the point: How can a woman learn to be a good cook? |
33201 | Discuss the bargain each country made; what did she lose and what did she gain? |
33201 | Discuss the question: How shall we make our brains save our bodies? |
33201 | Discuss the relative values of the two; is there a tendency more and more toward having the State give the whole education? |
33201 | Discuss the topic: What did the Dutch settlers give to the American people? |
33201 | Discuss, Does it give an unbiased picture of the people? |
33201 | Discuss, How can the school obtain and hold the child? |
33201 | Discuss: Are athletics neglected or overdone? |
33201 | Discuss: How did it represent the spirit of the age? |
33201 | Discuss: Is it an extravagance or an economy to hire the hard work of the family? |
33201 | Discuss: Is it too comprehensive? |
33201 | Discuss: What can be done to give us better servants? |
33201 | Discuss: What did Rome give England of permanent value? |
33201 | Do Strikes Pay? |
33201 | Do boys go from them to college better prepared to meet the life there than from the high school? |
33201 | Do children patronize them? |
33201 | Do our growing girls receive the care they need in this regard? |
33201 | Do servants''unions help matters or make them worse? |
33201 | Do they send a yearly clique to college? |
33201 | Do we have too many clothes? |
33201 | Do writers and artists tend to become bohemians? |
33201 | Does Hawthorne answer the question? |
33201 | Does a college woman lose interest in her home? |
33201 | Does he have too much home work? |
33201 | Does he successfully combine the real and the grotesque, or lean too far toward the latter? |
33201 | Does her picture differ from that of Dickens in"David Copperfield"? |
33201 | Does it fit the child for business and home life? |
33201 | Does it pay to dye one''s gowns? |
33201 | Does separation take the place of divorce in most cases? |
33201 | Does she marry early, or does she drift into a career? |
33201 | Does the artist in him at times overpower his moral sense? |
33201 | Does the low wage drive girls to immorality? |
33201 | Does the town need a"clean- up"day? |
33201 | Especially make a point of the question: How much should the individual sacrifice for the good of society? |
33201 | Has the child a right to one father and one mother even though their attitude toward each other is strained? |
33201 | Have a paper on public laundries: Are they sanitary? |
33201 | Have papers or talks on these themes: Shall divorce be free where love has gone? |
33201 | Have some of these questions taken up: Should Women Enter Trade Unions, or Is Organization Unnecessary? |
33201 | Have they swings, parallel bars and the like? |
33201 | How can one do with less meat? |
33201 | How can one learn how to buy good and still cheap meats? |
33201 | How can we systematize the making of our wardrobes so that sewing shall occupy us only a small part of our time? |
33201 | How do our great endowed universities compare with those of England and Germany? |
33201 | How does it wear as compared to that made elsewhere? |
33201 | How does the standard of morals differ in our day from that in the time in which the book is placed? |
33201 | How is it made so cheaply? |
33201 | How is she educated and trained? |
33201 | How is the poorhouse managed? |
33201 | How many churches are there and in what financial condition? |
33201 | How much should a girl know of business? |
33201 | II-- DRAMATIC POETRY An early meeting should study the comparison of poetry and prose in plays, and the question, Is poetry acceptable on the stage? |
33201 | III-- ECONOMY IN FOOD By way of opening the meeting a brief paper may be read on What Is True Economy? |
33201 | If not, how far does Goethe give his own experiences? |
33201 | If so, on what? |
33201 | If so, what does it teach? |
33201 | If the playgrounds of the school are inadequate, can they be supplemented? |
33201 | In spite of the faults of construction, how does the book rank as literature? |
33201 | In what does the power of the book lie? |
33201 | Is Don Quixote a madman, or does the author intend to show under his extravagances some philosophy of life? |
33201 | Is Levin a mouthpiece for Tolstoy''s own views of life? |
33201 | Is Tolstoy really capable of humor? |
33201 | Is a high standard of purity held up always? |
33201 | Is a mere smattering given? |
33201 | Is benevolence compatible with a small income? |
33201 | Is education to be regarded as an investment? |
33201 | Is hygiene taught? |
33201 | Is immorality due to a low living wage? |
33201 | Is it a benefit to children in their later education to have it begun in the kindergarten? |
33201 | Is it a benefit to them? |
33201 | Is it a clean, well- kept place? |
33201 | Is it a fair one? |
33201 | Is it an economy to take lessons in dressmaking and millinery? |
33201 | Is it economical to have shirts done up there rather than at home? |
33201 | Is it extravagant to hire a day''s work when one could really do it one''s self? |
33201 | Is it fair to pay alike the competent and incompetent? |
33201 | Is it only because so many go into business life? |
33201 | Is it possible to establish a rest room for farmers''wives who come to town? |
33201 | Is it safe to send washing out to a home which may not be clean? |
33201 | Is it sufficiently practical? |
33201 | Is it up- to- date? |
33201 | Is it wise to develop the mind of a young child rapidly? |
33201 | Is making- over always cheap? |
33201 | Is the book a parable? |
33201 | Is the book a study in realism or does it deal with the unnatural? |
33201 | Is the book an autobiography? |
33201 | Is the building in which he studies clean, well- ventilated, and sanitary? |
33201 | Is the comedy character, Oblensky, satisfactory? |
33201 | Is the common drinking cup used? |
33201 | Is the cost in the making? |
33201 | Is the garbage well taken care of? |
33201 | Is the general course too cultural and not sufficiently practical for a boy who is going into business? |
33201 | Is the material of any ready- made garment really as good as it looks at first? |
33201 | Is the preparation for college adequate? |
33201 | Is the railroad station attractive? |
33201 | Is the sewerage system in good order? |
33201 | Is the theater building sanitary? |
33201 | Is the town jail sanitary? |
33201 | Is the town water pure? |
33201 | Is the training in athletics valuable? |
33201 | Is their health impaired? |
33201 | Is their home training at fault for the many mistakes of the average woman? |
33201 | Is there a doctor to supervise the children''s eyes, ears, throats, and general condition? |
33201 | Is there a fund for cheap food for the very poor children? |
33201 | Is there a hotel in town? |
33201 | Is there a lack of democracy about them? |
33201 | Is there a moral purpose, and are any problems settled? |
33201 | Is there a plot? |
33201 | Is there a supervisor? |
33201 | Is there a town library? |
33201 | Is there an oversight against contagion? |
33201 | Is there any one in charge of the waiting- room? |
33201 | Is there any place in town which affects good morals? |
33201 | Is there any town nuisance, such as soft coal smoke or malodorous factories? |
33201 | Is too much attention paid to social preparation? |
33201 | It will raise such questions as these: Are standards of character higher than in the public schools? |
33201 | Last of all, should not a club extend its membership to as many as possible, rather than have a waiting list? |
33201 | One meeting should raise the question, Upon what should marriage be based? |
33201 | Read the reports of exhibitions: Could the club have some sort of an exhibit? |
33201 | Should There Be Mothers''Pensions? |
33201 | Should Women Insist on Compensation for Injuries and Old- Age Pensions? |
33201 | Should divorce be given on other than statutory cause? |
33201 | Should every girl be able to earn a living? |
33201 | Should fathers see that their daughters understand something of banking, of keeping accounts, of investments, of managing an income? |
33201 | Should public opinion against child labor be aroused? |
33201 | Sing"Kennst du das Land?" |
33201 | Sing"The Erl- King,"written when he was only eighteen,"Hark, Hark, the Lark";"Death and the Maiden";"Who is Sylvia?" |
33201 | Speak of coeducational colleges and State Universities; have they advantages over the rest? |
33201 | Such questions as these may follow: Should professional women marry? |
33201 | The discussion may be on the point: How shall we reduce the size of the family wash? |
33201 | The discussion may take such lines as these: What sacrifices to economy are worth while? |
33201 | The first subject which will come up will be: What are the principal difficulties we have to meet in our homes, and how can we overcome them? |
33201 | The paper next to this would be on the finishing school for girls, and will raise the questions: Are the standards of education sufficiently high? |
33201 | Then have again a brief discussion: Is the Montessori system adapted to American children? |
33201 | There should be an excellent discussion on this subject, covering such things as: Home dressmaking; does it pay? |
33201 | Two lovely settings of old words are noticeable:"Ye Banks and Braes o''Bonnie Doon,"and"Kennst Du das Land?" |
33201 | Was George Eliot really a humorist? |
33201 | Was their influence good? |
33201 | What advantages has the finishing school? |
33201 | What are its limitations? |
33201 | What are the relations of men and women in the same profession? |
33201 | What can be done locally to better conditions in our shops? |
33201 | What can be done to rid the town of flies and mosquitoes in summer? |
33201 | What can be said of literature, art, music and science? |
33201 | What can be said of the morals of the Latin Americans? |
33201 | What can club women do by way of personal acquaintance and interest? |
33201 | What does the author satirize? |
33201 | What has been done along these lines, and what is still to be done? |
33201 | What has the author to say of education, religion and esthetics? |
33201 | What is her home efficiency? |
33201 | What is the effect in its later education? |
33201 | What is the effect of divorce on children in the home? |
33201 | What is the mainspring of Anna''s character? |
33201 | What is the moral effect on a child in the latter case? |
33201 | What is the percentage of those who can read and write, and why is it so low? |
33201 | What is the position of woman? |
33201 | What is the relation between church and state and what has the church done for education? |
33201 | What is their condition? |
33201 | What luxuries are necessities? |
33201 | What of Night Work for Women? |
33201 | What of her health and schooling? |
33201 | What of higher education? |
33201 | What of its pay? |
33201 | What of lack of recreation and social life? |
33201 | What of ordering by mail? |
33201 | What of short shopping hours and early Christmas shopping? |
33201 | What of the conditions under which garments are made? |
33201 | What of the effect of long hours of confinement? |
33201 | What of the ethics of the removal of the sculptures? |
33201 | What percentage of child criminals come from the laboring classes? |
33201 | What results were brought about later? |
33201 | What should be the attitude of the church toward divorce? |
33201 | What should be the proper attitude of the State toward divorce? |
33201 | Where does South America show her strength, and where her weakness? |
33201 | Where shall a housekeeper buy-- at a large market or a small one? |
33201 | Who can stop to write dull papers on Italian Art in this day of efficiency? |
33201 | Would Divorce Courts, dealing with this whole matter intelligently, be helpful? |
33201 | Would the addition of a civil ceremony to the religious make divorces less frequent? |
33201 | Would the attitude of society toward hasty marriages, should they be discountenanced, be helpful? |
33201 | X-- WHAT IS HOME FOR? |
33201 | XII-- LATIN AMERICA Among the many topics which will suggest themselves for discussion are these: What can be said of education in Latin America? |
33201 | _ Discussion_: Is it more economical to buy bread or make it, for a small family? |
33201 | _ Discussion_: Shall the Baby Sleep Out of Doors? |
33201 | _ Paper_: The chafing dish; is it practical? |
33201 | _ Paper_: The nurse, or the hospital? |
33201 | _ Roll call_: How shall we replenish the preserve closet in winter? |
33201 | _ Roll call_: Waste; what is it? |
33201 | _ Roll call_: Where shall we market? |
46341 | A clown? 46341 And does it not affect the lady''s social and professional standing?" |
46341 | Are all those tickets for to- night? |
46341 | Are yez the man that left the call for the five o''clock train? |
46341 | But how will anyone know we''re going to play? |
46341 | Did n''t you notice his condition? |
46341 | Do n''t you know your own wife''s name? |
46341 | Do you expect to find tomato cans as far down in the bowels of the earth as that? |
46341 | Do you mean she is n''t going to get her divorce? |
46341 | Do? |
46341 | Does that apply to private life in Paris? |
46341 | Governor,said Payne,"if we turn up aboard the ship to- morrow a bit squiffy or with a hold- over, you wo n''t mind, will you?" |
46341 | Governor,said he,"why do n''t you write about this beautiful place in your new book?" |
46341 | Granted,replied Barrymore,"but why censure the lady personally, a foreigner as well? |
46341 | Have you any idea what the price of American beauties is? |
46341 | He''s clever, quite; Whence came he? 46341 How can I write about a place when I ca n''t see?" |
46341 | How did you get them then? |
46341 | How do you know anything about my mental capacity? |
46341 | How long did he cry? |
46341 | How much a dozen? |
46341 | I beg pardon, guv''nor,replied the cabby,"but where is your''ome, sir?" |
46341 | Is he dead? |
46341 | Is that known in Paris? |
46341 | Is that right? |
46341 | Maybe it will,I agreed,"but we have n''t done any wrong, any harm, so why should we worry?" |
46341 | Shall I send you the script to read? |
46341 | Tanked up to the collar button and skate? 46341 Tight?" |
46341 | Well,said Charley,"you like him as an artist, do n''t you?" |
46341 | What do you tell me all this for? 46341 What do you think of Gertrude''s suggestion?" |
46341 | What do_ you_ think of it? |
46341 | What in the world are you doing there, Charley? |
46341 | What is it? |
46341 | What kind of a part is mine? |
46341 | What? |
46341 | Where shall I drive you to now, sir? |
46341 | Who is that chap? |
46341 | Who is this boy? |
46341 | Why did n''t you do this two days ago and save the coal? |
46341 | Why did n''t you say Johnny Jones was coming? 46341 Why do n''t you do it at once?" |
46341 | Why do n''t you go and witness a performance? |
46341 | Why not? |
46341 | Why not? |
46341 | Why, oh why, do beautiful women marry Nat Goodwin? |
46341 | Will that satisfy you and the members of your family? |
46341 | Will you announce us to the public from the stage? |
46341 | Winning? |
46341 | Would we ever meet again? |
46341 | You call that art,asked Lackaye,"a wanton, expounding her amorous successes? |
46341 | You do n''t imagine I''m going to tell every common cabman my private address, do you? |
46341 | You have n''t engaged her for Australia, have you? |
46341 | 127 XXV THE SKATING RINK 131 XXVI NUMBER TWO 134 XXVII A FIGHT WON(?) |
46341 | 283 LXVI ROBERT FORD 284 LXVII MORE PLAYS 286 LXVIII WILLIE COLLIER 288 LXIX HENRY MILLER 290 LXX WHAT''S IN A NAME? |
46341 | A trifler? |
46341 | After that what could a true- born American do? |
46341 | Alone? |
46341 | Also how about the returns from a revival of both? |
46341 | Am I not to be envied? |
46341 | And why not? |
46341 | And why should I take myself seriously when nobody else does? |
46341 | Are all the budding geniuses to be strangled at their birth, their dreams to be made delusions? |
46341 | Are they to have no chance to gratify their ambitions, only the remote possibility of being one of an ensemble? |
46341 | Are we? |
46341 | Are you sure?" |
46341 | As for our contemplated plunge into matrimony Gertrude asked,"Why deny that? |
46341 | As he gave the imitation a friend of mine, seated in the front row, looked over and very audibly asked,"Well, what do you think of that, Nat?" |
46341 | As we stood there I chanced to overhear this remark:"How could you possibly have married such a vulgar little person?" |
46341 | At the end of every act I simply said,"Go on,"and at the finish,"When do we produce that play?" |
46341 | But San Francisco asked,"How can a man be a hero and have red hair?" |
46341 | But Time looks sadly down upon the merry makers and the measured swing of the pendulum of thought and argument questions,"How long will it last?" |
46341 | But after all-- what''s in a name? |
46341 | But do the masses know? |
46341 | By what right has the modern actor forsaken his frock coat for the sock and buskin? |
46341 | Can you imagine anything more ludicrous than these psalm singers making arbitrary laws about the temperature of our food? |
46341 | Cowardly? |
46341 | Did he ever cause a ripple of laughter to equal those ripples set running by delightful Willie Collier? |
46341 | Did he ever hold you enthralled in a spell of reverence, as did Salvini or John McCullough in his address to the Senate in"Othello"? |
46341 | Did the public go to see the players or the play? |
46341 | Do n''t you think I am frightened enough without this information?" |
46341 | Do n''t you think him rather amusing? |
46341 | Does it ever occur to these psalm singers that people do this of their own volition? |
46341 | During the several months before my wife finally won(?) |
46341 | Everybody loved him and who could help it? |
46341 | Finally one of them approached Goodi and pulling off his cap asked,"It''s all right, guv''nor, but what do we get for our time?" |
46341 | HE: Did he talk remarkably well to- night? |
46341 | HE: Does he-- really? |
46341 | HE: In what way? |
46341 | HE: Really? |
46341 | HE: Were those stories he told at dinner supposed to be funny? |
46341 | HOME 240 LVI NUMBER THREE 243 LVII WHEN WE WERE TWENTY- ONE AND OTHER PLAYS 248 LVIII AT JACKWOOD 254 LIX"WHY DO BEAUTIFUL WOMEN MARRY NAT GOODWIN?" |
46341 | Had he built a playhouse, like the man of his hour and time, Edwin Booth? |
46341 | Had he during the last decade created any characters? |
46341 | Had he produced any original plays, made any production, or even leased a theatre, like Mansfield, or Sothern, Irving, or Possart? |
46341 | Has he maintained the dignity of the drama? |
46341 | He continued,"Well, you do drink, do n''t you?" |
46341 | He doubtless ruminated,"I must produce it; but how?" |
46341 | He finished his remarks with,"Do you and your enlightened countrymen consider Mr. Corbett a good actor?" |
46341 | He just looked at me a minute, his black eyes nearly popping out of his head, then indicating the bills and silver in his hand said solemnly,"Me? |
46341 | He listened to their patronizing suggestions as to a consummation of the deal and, pointing to Rob, asked,"Is my pal included in this?" |
46341 | He looked at them for a moment, then turned to one of his companions, saying:"Where is the per- per- picture of our Saviour?" |
46341 | He was standing in the wings and as I came off I said,"What can I do, Mr. Robson? |
46341 | Holy? |
46341 | How long will it last? |
46341 | How many knew the author or Joseph Brooks who presented us? |
46341 | Humor? |
46341 | I said,"Surely, you are not going to make good a promise made in jest?" |
46341 | I shouted,"What''s the matter?" |
46341 | I simply asked,"How did Mr. Warren like me?" |
46341 | I think it was the summer of 1898( but what difference does it make?) |
46341 | I was about to leave friends, family and a woman who was sure to loathe my name when she heard of my act-- and all for what? |
46341 | I wonder how many readers cut out the pictures of those little cherubs,"Alan Dale"and"Vance"Thompson, and paste them in their scrap books? |
46341 | I wonder if people go to see clever George Cohan or George Cohan''s play? |
46341 | I wonder? |
46341 | If the commercial gentlemen who wield the sceptre do but command submission what does it signify who pays the price of admission? |
46341 | If they draw the money, what matter to the booking agent what amount of money has been invested? |
46341 | If we worshipped you down here, what must they be doing for you now? |
46341 | In a word did Mansfield ever make you really laugh or truly sob? |
46341 | Instead of either of them I brought back a manuscript of a comedy called"What Would a Gentleman Do?" |
46341 | Irving quietly looked up and queried,"And was it?" |
46341 | Irving, calmly wiping his glasses, looked at him for a moment and asked,"Why not try one of the Scilly Islands?" |
46341 | Is he still going strong in America?" |
46341 | Is he supposed to be a comic man in your country? |
46341 | Is it a crime to be respectable? |
46341 | Is it a crime to have an honest fireside? |
46341 | Is there anything in that frank, boyish countenance which even suggests a cold blooded, conscienceless murderer? |
46341 | Jefferson, who was very literal, asked,"Is Sol tired?" |
46341 | John Daly, the gambler? |
46341 | Lackaye said,"Where are you going to- night, Sydney?" |
46341 | ME, bet on a prize fight? |
46341 | Never? |
46341 | No art? |
46341 | Now they thoroughly understand the story and wo n''t you please come to- night and tell the story over again?" |
46341 | Now, do n''t you think it''s wise for me to paper the house?" |
46341 | Of course not? |
46341 | Of whom does he remind you, Rob?" |
46341 | Oh why did I not go to Washington? |
46341 | Out of my mouth issued these words:"Wo n''t you please come in, Max?" |
46341 | Possessed of subtlety? |
46341 | Rob asked,"How did he take it?" |
46341 | SHE: By way of anecdotes and funny stories? |
46341 | SHE: Of course; did n''t you hear the guests laugh? |
46341 | Said Jefferson,"What load is he carrying?" |
46341 | Shall I ever again enjoy that pleasure? |
46341 | Shall we be? |
46341 | Shall we join them? |
46341 | The manager looked at him and replied:"My boy, where could I get the thousand?" |
46341 | The owner started after him, but Travers held him back, saying,"Nev- nev- never mind the d- d- dog, wha- wha- what''ll you take for the rat?" |
46341 | The real reason? |
46341 | The star''s wife turned to me and asked,"What is the matter? |
46341 | Then I turned and with all the force at my command snarled,"How now?" |
46341 | Then ensued the following dialogue:-- SHE: Do you think him vulgar? |
46341 | Then some extremely clever reviewer of prize fights comes forth with this headline:--"Why do Beautiful Women Shake Nat Goodwin?" |
46341 | They had no thought of her anguish, her future and as for me-- of what matter my end? |
46341 | Think of it, gentle(?) |
46341 | To gratify his wife''s ambition would I secure her an opening on the stage or put her with some good tutor? |
46341 | To which does he turn? |
46341 | True, the man''s personality always transcends the characterization, but is n''t that true of all great actors? |
46341 | Was he,"The Dean,"anything like what the author intended Bob Acres to be? |
46341 | Was it fair to break up this happy home? |
46341 | Was it her acting or the unwholesome notoriety that preceded us that had opened his discerning eyes? |
46341 | Was this fair to her? |
46341 | Was this fair to the public, to the author, to anyone? |
46341 | Were the others? |
46341 | What are you talking about?" |
46341 | What did they know of me except through the newspapers? |
46341 | What does it matter after all? |
46341 | What edification can that give? |
46341 | What honest actor does not? |
46341 | What is he? |
46341 | What is it? |
46341 | What of it? |
46341 | What will man not do for gold? |
46341 | What will the verdict be? |
46341 | When he had finished, I said,"For the love of heaven, Cazauran, why did you select me to play that gruesome tragedy rôle?" |
46341 | Where began his gentle schooling? |
46341 | Where does he come in? |
46341 | Which star do John and the brilliant men I have mentioned occupy? |
46341 | Which will it be? |
46341 | Who does not find a hazardous game attractive? |
46341 | Who shall say it is not the fault of those who have pointed the finger of scorn at a woman seeking only to do right? |
46341 | Why be fair with anything or anybody? |
46341 | Why ca n''t---- do this?" |
46341 | Why cause the Indiana flowers to cry for a gardener-- for who will sing their praises when dear Jim has gone? |
46341 | Why clog"The Old Swimmin''Hole"with weeds? |
46341 | Why did he concentrate his force upon one sister at that interview and demand obedience? |
46341 | Why did n''t he shut up all the barber shops and revoke the Gillette Safety Razor patent? |
46341 | Why did n''t you put it in the bad eye? |
46341 | Why do we court conflict with Fate when we know Fate is merciless? |
46341 | Why is it so many women are such consummate actresses off the stage and such impossible amateurs on? |
46341 | Why make humanity weep and chill our hearts? |
46341 | Why not kill her and her paramour? |
46341 | Why not? |
46341 | Why should he disguise the fact that he was her friend?" |
46341 | Why, oh why, did my mad passion for fish cakes cause me to tarry at the Metropole? |
46341 | Why? |
46341 | Will history do the little corporal justice? |
46341 | Will the world ever be rid of this form of human parasite? |
46341 | With all her powers, envied by the many, rich in worldly goods-- did those searching liquid orbs denote complete happiness? |
46341 | Wo nt you give me an appointment tomorrow? |
46341 | Would she exchange one for the other? |
46341 | Yet what physiognomist could read in this boyish face such dastardy as Robert Ford delighted in? |
46341 | [ Illustration: COQUELIN_ Would he have gone in vaudeville? |
46341 | _ Chapter LIX_"WHY DO BEAUTIFUL WOMEN MARRY NAT GOODWIN"? |
46341 | _ Chapter LI_ ANTONY(?) |
46341 | _ Chapter LXX_ WHAT''S IN A NAME? |
46341 | _ Chapter XXVII_ A FIGHT WON(?) |
46341 | before allowing him the privilege of taking her hand in marriage? |
46341 | is this really Fletcher?''" |
46341 | or the next day? |
46341 | or the next? |
46341 | them? |
46341 | who is this young man?" |
46341 | whom do you suppose I met in Paris, last week?" |
33265 | A brief talk may be given on The Change in the Scale of Living To- day, and another on Is a Return to the Simple Life Possible? |
33265 | A discussion may be planned on home work: How much shall be expected and arranged for by the parent? |
33265 | A paper might deal with the question: How can women carry out their ideas without antagonizing the town council? |
33265 | A practical discussion may follow on, What shall we do with our ugly belongings? |
33265 | A supplementary paper may be written on the question, Has Shaw a positive message of any importance, or is he merely a negative critic? |
33265 | A third paper would speak informally of conversation to- day; is it becoming a lost art? |
33265 | After this program have a discussion on the question: Are women responsible for the character of the modern drama? |
33265 | Are Ibsen''s themes suited to the stage and the average audience? |
33265 | Are children too prominent in the home life? |
33265 | Are city water and gas at hand? |
33265 | Are husbands and wives separated? |
33265 | Are our ideas changing on this subject? |
33265 | Are the airs as marked as those of a decade ago? |
33265 | Are the old people well fed, clothed and amused? |
33265 | Are there readable books on geology in the public library, and are they read? |
33265 | Are these considered historically true to- day? |
33265 | Are they accessible, yet not too near for comfort? |
33265 | Are they hygienic? |
33265 | Are they still held? |
33265 | Are they true to life? |
33265 | Are wall- papers desirable? |
33265 | Are weekly menus a help? |
33265 | At what age should a child begin to attend church service? |
33265 | Begin the discussion of the day with a paper on the Modern Science of Eugenics: How Far is It Practical? |
33265 | Can entertaining be done economically? |
33265 | Can the average woman consider housekeeping as a profession? |
33265 | Can the latter insist on cleanliness and fair trade? |
33265 | Can the situation be changed in any way for the better? |
33265 | Cheap opera: is it possible for us to- day? |
33265 | Children''s questions about God and heaven: how shall they be answered? |
33265 | Close with a discussion on these lines: What books have replaced the Rollo Books, Little Prudy, and the Elsie Books? |
33265 | Close with a discussion: What is the standing of your local school? |
33265 | Clubs should take up some of the following subjects: The health of school children; what is being done to improve it? |
33265 | Contrast the two styles; discuss the character of Marjorie in the latter; is she a possible woman? |
33265 | Did Shakespeare intend so to represent him, or to leave the matter in doubt? |
33265 | Did he reveal himself in his plays? |
33265 | Discuss in closing such questions as: What does our local Board of Health do for us? |
33265 | Discuss the bearings of this great struggle for liberty on other nations: what was really won? |
33265 | Discuss the opera music of to- day: Is it on the whole melodious, or is there a tendency to return to the old style recitative? |
33265 | Discuss the question, Is an architect really necessary, or can a builder carry out a printed plan? |
33265 | Discuss the question, Who is the hero of the drama? |
33265 | Discuss the question: Are our children being really prepared for a broad and useful life- work? |
33265 | Discuss the question: How does the furnishing of an apartment differ from that of a house? |
33265 | Discuss the sky scraper; is it necessary? |
33265 | Discuss these questions: What proportion of one''s income is properly spent in a vacation? |
33265 | Discuss these subjects, and add others: Does college life unfit a girl for life at home? |
33265 | Discuss topics such as these: How far shall we follow the dictates of fashion? |
33265 | Discuss welfare work, the care of employers for employees; what has been done? |
33265 | Discuss, Business- like Housekeeping; How shall we best train our daughters in it? |
33265 | Discuss, Is Emerson''s place among philosophers what it was a generation ago? |
33265 | Discuss: Does Mendelssohn rank among the great musicians? |
33265 | Discuss: In how many ways can parents and children share their pleasures, and how may the spirit of mutual enjoyment be fostered? |
33265 | Discuss: Is war ever necessary? |
33265 | Discuss: The Cost of Mural Paintings To- day: Are They Worth While? |
33265 | Discuss: Would enforced prohibition be beneficial to the state? |
33265 | Discussion: What are the best books for family reading aloud? |
33265 | Discussion: What can we do to improve local conditions? |
33265 | Discussion: What good books can we suggest? |
33265 | Do hedges pay? |
33265 | Do his books lend themselves to the stage? |
33265 | Do settlements, vacation homes, and the like meet their needs? |
33265 | Do teacher and parent work together? |
33265 | Do they think and reason? |
33265 | Do we consider it seriously? |
33265 | Does Hardy show a lack of humor? |
33265 | Does a pretty bedroom tend to make a girl orderly? |
33265 | Does earning money tend to make boys mercenary? |
33265 | Does he give an accurate account of events or only reproduce general color? |
33265 | Does it pay to spend time on the esthetic side of cooking and serving? |
33265 | Does it tend to foster or discourage neighborliness? |
33265 | Does much reading of stories vitiate their taste for better literature? |
33265 | Does one form the habit of moving, and is the sense of continuity of a permanent family home destroyed? |
33265 | Does she marry? |
33265 | Does the modern idea of social service find encouragement in him? |
33265 | Does the play The Christian show more strength than the novel of the same name? |
33265 | Does the weight of their expressed opinion influence the management? |
33265 | Has house- cleaning lost its terrors? |
33265 | Have little ballads about dress sung if possible, the Old Grey Bonnet, the Owld Plaid Shawl, and Oh Dear, What Can the Matter Be? |
33265 | Have papers on, Is a college education essential for all girls? |
33265 | Have their advantages and disadvantages presented, and question: What are the essentials of a good, livable apartment? |
33265 | Have these books a moral? |
33265 | How can life be made more easy and attractive on a farm? |
33265 | How can public sentiment be aroused? |
33265 | How can such committees coöperate with similar men''s committees and with the public authorities? |
33265 | How can we make over what we have? |
33265 | How does Velazquez compare with Raphael? |
33265 | How early should they be taught, and how? |
33265 | How far is imagination responsible for falsehood? |
33265 | How far were they calculated to stimulate patriotism by the glorification of England? |
33265 | How is it managed in Germany and Italy? |
33265 | How may our girls be taught to understand the value of money? |
33265 | How much can the children help? |
33265 | How much influence should the parent exert? |
33265 | How much liberty should a child have in using it? |
33265 | How much of a woman''s income should be spent for clothes? |
33265 | How satisfactory do the tenants find the system of leases and regulations? |
33265 | How shall good music be secured in a small neighborhood? |
33265 | How shall the mystery of sex be taught to a child? |
33265 | How shall we deal with the ordinary faults? |
33265 | How shall we deal with this phase? |
33265 | III-- BUILDING A HOME How shall one decide on a site for a new house? |
33265 | IV-- THE REMODELLED HOUSE What can be done to make over a city house that is unattractive? |
33265 | IX-- THE CARE OF THE HOUSE Prepare in advance a discussion on these subjects: How much care shall we put on our houses? |
33265 | If in a country district, how near are the schools, the church, the markets? |
33265 | If so, was he justified? |
33265 | If the room is small, how can the space be best utilized? |
33265 | If there is no gymnasium provided by the school, can the parents combine and make one? |
33265 | If they are wrong, what can be done? |
33265 | In a large city, can there be a roof- garden for recreation? |
33265 | In the long run, are such floors and the necessary rugs more or less expensive than carpets? |
33265 | In what differing ways do Ibsen''s plays affect the club members? |
33265 | Is Ibsen critic or prophet? |
33265 | Is Taine''s estimate of him just? |
33265 | Is a college girl likely to demand a career? |
33265 | Is he a fatalist? |
33265 | Is he trustworthy? |
33265 | Is his broad humor defensible? |
33265 | Is his optimism philosophically justifiable? |
33265 | Is his refined and unconscious selfishness a common occurrence? |
33265 | Is improvement possible? |
33265 | Is it a good preparation for later work? |
33265 | Is it drained? |
33265 | Is it possible under ordinary conditions? |
33265 | Is it well done and well paid? |
33265 | Is living in an apartment hygienic? |
33265 | Is local option a success? |
33265 | Is she Shakespeare''s highest female type? |
33265 | Is the American color correct? |
33265 | Is the condition of the street on which the house will face attractive, well kept, and shaded? |
33265 | Is the enlarging of the social circle of one''s grown children a duty? |
33265 | Is the estimate of the Duke of Marlborough just? |
33265 | Is the lot in good condition?--not too full of stones, not so low that it will require filling, nor so high that it will need grading? |
33265 | Is the outlook good? |
33265 | Is the public exhibition desirable? |
33265 | Is the rest from housekeeping and the change of life compensation for the drawbacks there? |
33265 | Is the school board doing its best? |
33265 | Is there a Shakespearean affectation? |
33265 | Is there a cipher in Shakespeare? |
33265 | Is there open violation of the law in prohibition states? |
33265 | Is there shade? |
33265 | Is vegetarianism wise? |
33265 | Must our boys fight? |
33265 | Note also these questions: How can spaces be saved in sleeping and other rooms? |
33265 | On the whole, are the morals of the drama improving? |
33265 | On what did the suffrage party base its claims? |
33265 | Once a club is started, the great question is, What shall we study? |
33265 | Settlements; their origin and history; what can neighborliness do for the poor? |
33265 | Shall boys be taught housework? |
33265 | Shall there be a place for"collections"? |
33265 | Shall we employ an architect for the small home, or are published plans practical? |
33265 | Shall we prepare ourselves in advance for conversations at dinners and other social occasions? |
33265 | Shall women give up all their time to keeping them clean and orderly? |
33265 | Sherman: What is Shakespeare? |
33265 | Should children be taught to converse rather than to chatter? |
33265 | Should tale- bearing be encouraged? |
33265 | Should the theater preach or amuse, or both? |
33265 | Should they be paid for doing daily household duties, or not? |
33265 | Subsidizing the opera: shall this be done by the state, as in Germany; or by individuals, as in New York? |
33265 | Take up as additional topics: How shall we have an abundant table under present conditions? |
33265 | The Montessori system; is it successful? |
33265 | The jail: what are the present local conditions? |
33265 | The subject of mothers''congresses may be discussed: Are they practically helpful, or merely speculative? |
33265 | The third paper would be on the care of the aged; of almshouses, especially those of the county; are they sanitary, well cared for and cheerful? |
33265 | This paper will lead naturally to a discussion on these and similar themes: What of our home table talk? |
33265 | To how much liberty in taste and choice is a child entitled? |
33265 | Under what conditions is such work done? |
33265 | VIII-- SPECIAL ROOMS Have illustrated papers or talks on these topics:_ The Living- Room_--How can it best be made beautiful and comfortable? |
33265 | Was he really mad? |
33265 | Was his meaning always clear to himself? |
33265 | Were any plays written at her suggestion? |
33265 | Were they purposely obscure? |
33265 | What about a sideboard, glass- closet, pantry? |
33265 | What about heating and ventilation? |
33265 | What about modern appliances to avoid sweeping, and the like? |
33265 | What about the Darwinian theory? |
33265 | What about the condition of the roads in winter? |
33265 | What about woman''s work in general? |
33265 | What are artistic, durable, harmonious in color and pattern? |
33265 | What are its difficulties and what its advantages? |
33265 | What are the possibilities of the near future in medicine and surgery? |
33265 | What can be done to make over a farmhouse? |
33265 | What can be done to make over a village house? |
33265 | What can be done to regulate our markets, and make them clean and wholesome? |
33265 | What can be done with old carpets? |
33265 | What can be eliminated from the daily routine? |
33265 | What can they do to save steps? |
33265 | What can women''s clubs do to make it more effective? |
33265 | What can women''s clubs do toward making the home city beautiful? |
33265 | What colors are best? |
33265 | What colors are suitable for the walls? |
33265 | What colors are suitable? |
33265 | What curtains and hangings are best? |
33265 | What did the other poets of Shakespeare''s time think of these early poems? |
33265 | What especial questions are of vital interest to women, and how will they be aided by the vote? |
33265 | What excursions may they take in the vicinity for this purpose? |
33265 | What furniture can be home- made for the bedroom? |
33265 | What has the pure food legislation done on those points? |
33265 | What have women done here of recent years to clean up the markets of the West? |
33265 | What in research work? |
33265 | What is Forestry? |
33265 | What is an ideal education? |
33265 | What is being done for working girls? |
33265 | What is essential, and what can we do without? |
33265 | What is his position with regard to religion? |
33265 | What is the cost of hard wood, of Southern pine, of painted or stained floors? |
33265 | What is the expense of opera in New York, in great salaries, scenery, costumes, etc.? |
33265 | What is the influence of life in a summer hotel on parents and children? |
33265 | What is the relation between a good conversationalist and a good listener? |
33265 | What of adopting children from asylums? |
33265 | What of apartment houses? |
33265 | What of corresponding salons elsewhere? |
33265 | What of country sports? |
33265 | What of factory work, domestic service, and work in shops? |
33265 | What of foreign markets, especially in Germany? |
33265 | What of giving children grown- up writers to read such as Shakespeare, Don Quixote, Mallory and Bunyan? |
33265 | What of her relation to her home if equal suffrage is granted? |
33265 | What of making and breaking wills? |
33265 | What of our country? |
33265 | What of our daughters''dress? |
33265 | What of placing children in homes instead of asylums? |
33265 | What of such work as that of soldier, sailor, worker on roads, in sewers, on the police and fire boards? |
33265 | What of the floor, the curtains, the cushions? |
33265 | What of the floor? |
33265 | What of the legislative work of the Anti- Saloon League? |
33265 | What of the question of equal pay? |
33265 | What of the relation of farmers to customers? |
33265 | What of the use of chintz and white paint? |
33265 | What of the"living wage"? |
33265 | What of woman''s physical and mental ability to handle political issues? |
33265 | What ought to be the relative emphasis on money in our home life? |
33265 | What should it cover? |
33265 | What shrubs are best adapted for hedges locally? |
33265 | What sort of furniture will he like best, and what colors? |
33265 | What sort of politician shall boys be taught to admire? |
33265 | What sort of rugs are desirable beyond the Oriental? |
33265 | What was his attitude in regard to individualism? |
33265 | What was the effect of Ibsen on the German drama? |
33265 | What were his personal characteristics? |
33265 | What wood for the furniture? |
33265 | When are punishments outgrown? |
33265 | When is it best done? |
33265 | When should discipline end and personal freedom begin? |
33265 | Where does it fail? |
33265 | Where shall the writing- desk, the large table, the piano, stand? |
33265 | Which of the two best concealed the moral purpose both used as the theme of their books? |
33265 | Which states have equal suffrage, and how does it work? |
33265 | Who was the Earl of Southampton, to whom the poem was dedicated? |
33265 | Why is Meredith not more popular? |
33265 | Why is Whistler''s appeal not more popular? |
33265 | Why this change in opinion? |
33265 | Why was he ignored in the later seventeenth century? |
33265 | _ Characteristics of His Work_--Did he plagiarize? |
33265 | _ Estimate of Shakespeare in His Own and Later Times_--What did his contemporaries think of him? |
33265 | _ General Discussion_--Living where we do, how can we improve our houses and their surroundings? |
33265 | _ His Personality_--How much education had Shakespeare? |
33265 | _ His Place in Literature_--What is the meaning of his mysticism and his symbolism? |
33265 | _ Moral and Religious_--How are morals best taught? |
33265 | _ Music_--Should all children be taught to play and sing? |
33265 | _ Neighbors_--Who is my neighbor? |
33265 | _ Organization_--What committees are needed to help improve the town? |
33265 | _ Punishments_--Discuss the question: Is physical punishment ever allowable? |
33265 | _ The Bedrooms_--Shall we use wood or metal beds? |
33265 | _ The Boy''s Room_--How can it be at once sensible and attractive? |
33265 | _ The Dining- Room_--Which side of the house is best to choose? |
33265 | _ The Girl''s Room_--How shall this be at once dainty and practical? |
33265 | _ The Minister''s Home_--Should the social life of the church center in the minister''s home? |
33265 | _ The Plan of the Town_--Is the location of the best? |
33265 | _ The Question of the Allowance_--At what age should a child have an allowance? |
33265 | _ The Relation of Manners and Morals_--Are American manners deteriorating? |
33265 | _ Travel_--Should we see our own country before going abroad? |
33265 | _ Vacation and Study_--Is it a good plan to combine the two? |
33265 | and Should their studies be those of men''s colleges entirely? |
33265 | and What are its advantages over the boarding- school, and its disadvantages? |
33265 | and What of athletics for girls? |
33265 | and if so, how and where can she best be trained? |
33265 | of bungalows, camps, seashore cottages, etc.? |
33265 | of disfiguring gas works, chimneys, manufactories? |
33265 | of elevated railroads? |
33265 | of funds left for institutions which may not be always needed? |
33265 | of golf, tennis, hunting, motoring, etc.? |
33265 | of protection to society through state boards, etc.? |
33265 | what furniture? |
33265 | what pictures and ornaments? |
1364 | A big thing financially? |
1364 | All business, Ned, are n''t you? 1364 All those being facts, what of it?" |
1364 | An electric locomotive that can travel two miles a minute? 1364 And has it to do with highwaymen?" |
1364 | And must you have such great speed, Tom? |
1364 | And ninety- six miles? 1364 And suppose instead of a triumph it is a fiasco?" |
1364 | And that of course was Tom''s fault? |
1364 | And this suggestion you have made,added Tom,"about a possible electric locomotive of a faster type than has, ever yet been put on the rails?" |
1364 | And what about Mary? |
1364 | Anything to do with the works? |
1364 | Are n''t going to let the Swifts get done, are you? |
1364 | Are they sending help from Cliff City? |
1364 | Are you sure that was the same fellow who stole your wallet? |
1364 | As good men as Myrick? |
1364 | Asleep? |
1364 | Burglars? |
1364 | But those notes you said you took of Mr. Bartholomew''s offer? |
1364 | But under the terms Mr. Bartholomew offers it is worth trying, do n''t you think? |
1364 | But what do you want me to do? |
1364 | But what puzzles me, as it seemed to puzzle Lewis, more than anything else, is what became of O''Malley? |
1364 | But--"But the important question,interrupted Tom,"is this: How did the bomb get into the interior of the electric locomotive? |
1364 | By the way, Tom,said his chum,"did it ever strike you as odd that that private detective agency never got any trace of O''Malley?" |
1364 | By the way, were your friends following you when you came here this morning? |
1364 | Did he get anything? 1364 Did they do any harm, Tom?" |
1364 | Do n''t you think father will need you here, Rad? |
1364 | Do you hear that, father? |
1364 | Do you know what strikes me after your telling me about your second hold- up? |
1364 | Do you mean that you will go West when I take out the Hercules Three- Oughts- One? |
1364 | Do you mean that? |
1364 | Do you see what I see, Tom? |
1364 | Do you think so? |
1364 | Drive around by Ned''s house, will you, please? 1364 Hammon? |
1364 | Has Koku seen nobody lurking about at night? |
1364 | Have I got to come after you? 1364 Have you tried it yourself?" |
1364 | Hear that, Ned? |
1364 | Hear what, Tom? |
1364 | Heard anything more of him? |
1364 | Here what is? |
1364 | How about it? 1364 How came you to find them, Koku?" |
1364 | How can you? 1364 How is she making out?" |
1364 | How long is it, Tom? |
1364 | How''s father? |
1364 | Huh? 1364 I expect you know just about how you are going to work on this new invention, Tom?" |
1364 | I wonder if it does n''t prove that the fellow has somebody in cahoots with him right here in Shopton? |
1364 | I wonder what the outcome of the trip will be? 1364 Impossible to be sure on the trackage already built here, Tom?" |
1364 | Is he a spotter, Ned? |
1364 | Is he badly hurt? |
1364 | Is it likely he will bother me again? |
1364 | Is n''t he here? |
1364 | Is n''t that switch open? |
1364 | Is nothing really injured, Tom? |
1364 | Is the locomotive they are using out there a very marvelous machine? |
1364 | Is this important? |
1364 | Is this your man? |
1364 | Make what impossible? |
1364 | Master see the red mud dried on Big Feet''s boots? 1364 Mr. Tom here yet?" |
1364 | My friends? |
1364 | Not O''Malley? |
1364 | Nothing happened on the way? |
1364 | Now, what else? 1364 Rad is here, you mean?" |
1364 | Rad,he said, as he got into the runabout,"did you ever hear the name O''Malley?" |
1364 | See the difference? |
1364 | She did slide around easy, did n''t she? 1364 Suppose she''s off the track?" |
1364 | Suppose that is a bomb and he means to fling it in front of Tom''s locomotive? |
1364 | Suppose we had bumped something? |
1364 | Tell that crazy fellow? |
1364 | That Andy O''Malley? |
1364 | That man? 1364 That ticking sound? |
1364 | That would n''t pay for one engine, would it? |
1364 | That you, Koku? |
1364 | The Hercules Three- Oughts- One? |
1364 | The enemy? |
1364 | Then, Tom dear, what is wrong? |
1364 | Theoretically it works out all right, I suppose? |
1364 | There was a freight wreck, I understand? |
1364 | Think they got wind of this so quick? |
1364 | Think you can bamboozle me, do you? 1364 Well, suppose he had? |
1364 | Well, what has happened ahead of us, George? |
1364 | Well, why ca n''t you find him? |
1364 | What are those advantages? |
1364 | What did I tell you? 1364 What did you do this for, Eradicate?" |
1364 | What do you know about that? |
1364 | What do you mean by this? |
1364 | What do you mean, Tom? |
1364 | What do you mean? |
1364 | What do you say to three months? |
1364 | What does he mean? |
1364 | What does it lack? |
1364 | What done got into dat big lump o''bone an''grizzle? |
1364 | What enemy is this you speak of? |
1364 | What for? |
1364 | What for? |
1364 | What is that? |
1364 | What is that? |
1364 | What is the horsepower? |
1364 | What is the matter now, Tom? |
1364 | What is the matter with him? |
1364 | What time did you make? |
1364 | What was in''em? 1364 What will happen to your buff Orpingtons while you are gone?" |
1364 | What you got there, Ned? |
1364 | What''s that? |
1364 | What''s that? |
1364 | What''s that? |
1364 | What''s that? |
1364 | What''s that? |
1364 | What''s the matter with him? |
1364 | What''s the matter with it? |
1364 | What''s the matter with you, Koku? |
1364 | What''s up now? |
1364 | What''s up? |
1364 | Where is it? 1364 Where''s O''Malley?" |
1364 | Where''s Rad? 1364 Where''s that young fool Swift?" |
1364 | Where''s your evidence that this O''Malley was connected with the attempt to blow up your locomotive the first time? 1364 Which way did they go?" |
1364 | Who is he? |
1364 | Who is he? |
1364 | Who is he? |
1364 | Who is he? |
1364 | Who is he? |
1364 | Who is that fellow? |
1364 | Who is the enemy, Koku? |
1364 | Who is troubling you, sir? |
1364 | Who opened the switch? |
1364 | Who was the footpad? 1364 Who''s that?" |
1364 | Who''s this? |
1364 | Why should I tell him, Massa Tom? 1364 Why should n''t you? |
1364 | Why try for it, then? |
1364 | Why, Mr. Newton, do n''t you''member dat man? |
1364 | Why? |
1364 | Yes, sir? |
1364 | Yes? |
1364 | You arranged to get reports en route from the conductors handling the Hercules Three- Oughts- One? |
1364 | You believe that you have the edge on all the other inventors? |
1364 | You do n''t know Tom Swift? |
1364 | You do n''t really consider that you have failed, do you, Tom? |
1364 | You do n''t suppose it can be done, do you? |
1364 | You do not consider your electric locomotive, then, a completed invention? |
1364 | You mean you are going to make it impossible for this locomotive ever to slide down such a hill again if the brakes wo n''t work? 1364 You think he is a bad citizen, do you?" |
1364 | You think that on a straight track you might accomplish what you set out to do? |
1364 | You want to scare Rad out of half a year''s growth? |
1364 | You wo n''t be careless? |
1364 | You''re getting old--"Me gittin''old? |
1364 | ''Tain''t mawnin'', is it?" |
1364 | Ai n''t I able to bring dat runabout out o''de garbarge? |
1364 | Ai n''t he a sight?" |
1364 | All those single motor sort of things? |
1364 | And the second?" |
1364 | And who put''em in the cab up there?" |
1364 | And your head already full of this electrified locomotive you are going to build?" |
1364 | Another footpad?" |
1364 | Any of you fellows,"he asked the group of hands,"know anything about any overalls?" |
1364 | Are you all right?" |
1364 | Bartholomew?" |
1364 | Bartholomew?" |
1364 | Bartholomew?" |
1364 | Bartholomew?" |
1364 | Break a way in there-- What''s that?" |
1364 | But all that is over--""Is it?" |
1364 | But he halted where he was when he heard his chum ask:"What train left the track, George?" |
1364 | But illegally?" |
1364 | But what speed can I attain?" |
1364 | Ca n''t you do it for me, Tom Swift?" |
1364 | Chapter IX Where was Koku? |
1364 | Chapter XXV Speed and Success"What town is that?" |
1364 | Damon?" |
1364 | Do n''t you know better yet, than to cross Koku when he is excited?" |
1364 | Do you know them?" |
1364 | Do you mean to say you have n''t seen him, Conductor?" |
1364 | Do you think he''s killed, Tom?" |
1364 | Do you?" |
1364 | Does it make all the speed you want, Tom Swift? |
1364 | Enemy or not-- understand?" |
1364 | Get me? |
1364 | Get me?" |
1364 | Get that?" |
1364 | HONEY BUNCH: HER FIRST DAYS ON THE FARM Can you remember bow the farm looked the first time you visited it? |
1364 | Had his father come downstairs to look around and see what the matter was? |
1364 | Had his movements been marked by the person outside the fence? |
1364 | Had the latter got so far ahead that he no longer heard his master''s command? |
1364 | Have I got anything like the speed I am aiming for?" |
1364 | Have you any reply, sir?" |
1364 | He shrilled into the latter''s ear:"Shall we jump?" |
1364 | He''s just missing? |
1364 | Heads were poked out between curtains all along the aisle and a chorus of more or less excited voices demanded:"What''s the matter?" |
1364 | Hear me? |
1364 | Him come in?" |
1364 | Him come out?" |
1364 | How are you going to do that?" |
1364 | How big the cows and horses were, and what a roomy place to play in the barn proved to be? |
1364 | How dared he shoot that stuff into my face and eyes?" |
1364 | How does it work? |
1364 | If the operator''s nerves were tense, what about those of Tom Swift and his chum? |
1364 | In answer to something one of the railroad men said the important looking individual uttered an oath and added:"There''s nobody been killed then? |
1364 | In de jungle again? |
1364 | Is dat de way de tailors out here build a man up? |
1364 | Is it plain?" |
1364 | Just why have you come to us-- to Tom and me-- in reference to your railroad difficulties?" |
1364 | Ned wheeled to his friend, the vice president, and asked:"Who are those men, Mr. Stanley? |
1364 | Ned?" |
1364 | Newton?" |
1364 | Nothing personal in your going after the fellow, then?" |
1364 | Or was the villain foolish enough to attempt to enter the enclosure by surmounting the fence? |
1364 | Should he ring the bell and get Rad or his father down to the door? |
1364 | So why should n''t I go at it? |
1364 | Suppose that operator at Half Way had been out back somewhere, and had not seen or heard us flash by?" |
1364 | Suppose you do n''t catch the whale after all?" |
1364 | Swift?" |
1364 | Tell Koku, will you, Rad?" |
1364 | Tell me, Tom: Is the locomotive a success?" |
1364 | The motor boat? |
1364 | The motor- car? |
1364 | Then you will surely pull down the extra hundred thousand dollars?" |
1364 | Those great mountain- hogs that draw most of the mountain railroad trains are very powerful, are n''t they? |
1364 | Tom Swift, my heart swells when I see you--""And is like to burst off the said vest buttons?" |
1364 | Tom once more appeared and addressed the workmen:"Whose bundle of dirty overalls is this in here? |
1364 | Trolley cars? |
1364 | Understand?" |
1364 | What dat lizard doin''here? |
1364 | What do you mean?" |
1364 | What drew his attention to you two? |
1364 | What had become of the enemy? |
1364 | What is it?" |
1364 | What would happen next? |
1364 | What you want, tromping in here for, man?" |
1364 | What''s happened?" |
1364 | What''s that ahead?" |
1364 | What''s the answer?" |
1364 | What''s the matter with him now?" |
1364 | Where are we?" |
1364 | Where are you going with that big contraption? |
1364 | Where was Koku? |
1364 | Where you t''ink yo''is? |
1364 | Where''s Number Twenty- eight? |
1364 | Whose are these?" |
1364 | Why linger longer, Tom?" |
1364 | Why should n''t I find the right combination to bring about a two- miles- a- minute drive?" |
1364 | With what force would the locomotive hit that obstruction? |
1364 | Would the operator hear the roar of the descending runaway and understand what had happened? |
1364 | Would you like to know what became of the good friends you have made in this book? |
1364 | Would you like to read other stories continuing their adventures and experiences, or other books quite as entertaining by the same author? |
1364 | You are not afraid of the speed matter now, are you?" |
1364 | You going to agree? |
1364 | You know that patent?" |
1364 | You understand that, Ned?" |
1364 | You''ll keep your eye on father, Mary, wo n''t you?" |
1364 | are you all right?" |
1364 | cried Mr. Damon,"you are not losing hope, Tom Swift? |
1364 | cried one big fellow,"d''you want we should get that fellow for you?" |
1364 | do you know that we have been held up by a highwayman within two blocks of this very house?" |
1364 | ejaculated Mr. Damon,"do n''t you see what I want? |
1364 | exclaimed Mr. Damon,"What can happen now that the locomotive is practically perfect?" |
1364 | he called back to that eccentric man,"will you please remain there and watch the locomotive?" |
1364 | he exclaimed earnestly,"what do you suppose the first people to dabble in electrically driven vehicles were aiming at? |
1364 | how does that sound?" |
1364 | is it all right?" |
1364 | is n''t that enough?" |
1364 | is n''t that fun?" |
1364 | is that Tom Swift? |
1364 | is that the fact?" |
1364 | replied the conductor"Who was that man who just spoke to you?" |
1364 | what''s that?" |
1364 | what''s this? |
1364 | who left his bundle of overalls in here? |
31008 | A fate worse than death? 31008 A gimmick?" |
31008 | Am I still receivable? |
31008 | And now? |
31008 | And other examples? |
31008 | And the Pink Army? |
31008 | And when it''s all been accomplished, what do you get out of this, Freddy? |
31008 | And why? |
31008 | And you admit that your precious Party, the ruling organ of this Proletarian Paradise of yours, actually orders what amounts of assassination? |
31008 | And you mean this is catching hold in this day and age? |
31008 | Are we supposed to know each other? |
31008 | Are you convalescing, major? 31008 Are you suggesting that I am not welcome to stay in this, our family home, simply because the property is in your name?" |
31008 | Are you sure you will be then? |
31008 | Are you surprised at my memory? 31008 Aw, what difference does it make? |
31008 | Balt? 31008 Bob Flaubert?" |
31008 | Bob, eh? |
31008 | But are n''t you a Party member yourself? |
31008 | But why? |
31008 | By the way, how is he? |
31008 | Camouflage, sir? |
31008 | Choice of weapons, eh? 31008 Did you think I was stupid?" |
31008 | Do I have to draw a picture? |
31008 | Do n''t you see how this takes up people''s time? 31008 Do you think you''re looking_ down_ at me now?" |
31008 | Eh? |
31008 | Gentlemen,he said,"I assume you are all familiar with the battle of Chancellorsville?" |
31008 | Have n''t you ever heard of Sándor Rákóczi? |
31008 | Have you gone drivel- happy? |
31008 | Have you read much of the Roman_ ludi_, the games as we call them? |
31008 | He wants you to fly that sailplane thing of yours again, huh? 31008 How about leaving us alone for a while, Sam? |
31008 | How come you''re never on lens when you''re in there going good, major? 31008 How is he with Bowie knives?" |
31008 | How''d you like them apples, soldier- boy? |
31008 | I do n''t believe you have any other title do you, Frank? |
31008 | Infantryman? |
31008 | Is that the word? 31008 Look, next time you decide to spend five shares of my stock on some deal like this, let me know, eh?" |
31008 | My fault, sir? |
31008 | Not even when you''re casting? |
31008 | Nothing else you can toss out? |
31008 | Oh, Joe, you have n''t taken another commission? |
31008 | Oh, you figured that out, eh? |
31008 | Oh? |
31008 | Ready, Major Mauser? |
31008 | So as to carry on our never- ending argument over the value of status? |
31008 | Stick my neck out? |
31008 | Studies tough in the Temple schools? |
31008 | Suppose you did n''t know I was born into Category Mining? |
31008 | The capital of the Sov- world? 31008 The gladiators and such?" |
31008 | The marshal? |
31008 | The who? |
31008 | Then what''d happen? |
31008 | Then why, good heavens, do you say your mission was unnecessary? |
31008 | Then you''ll be on the plane? |
31008 | Very interesting, eh? |
31008 | Wanta bet? 31008 Welcome aboard?" |
31008 | Well, what''s all this got to do with me getting into Category Religion? 31008 Well, why come here at all? |
31008 | Well, why not? |
31008 | What do you mean, a gimmick? |
31008 | What do you mean, frame- up, Nadine? 31008 What glasses? |
31008 | What has Balt to do with it? |
31008 | What has that man been hiding within the craft? |
31008 | What in devil''s going on? |
31008 | What price glory? |
31008 | What''ll you have, Nadine? |
31008 | What''re you trying to do, make the life of a Telly reporter sound romantic to the kid? 31008 What''s a proletarian?" |
31008 | What''s accomplished? 31008 What''s the matter?" |
31008 | What''s wrong with him? |
31008 | What_ is_ the answer? |
31008 | Whiskey? |
31008 | Who gives a damn? |
31008 | Who''re the names every fracas buff knows? 31008 Who?" |
31008 | Why Phil, inane words of flattery from serious old you? |
31008 | Why not admit it? 31008 Why not, major? |
31008 | Why not? 31008 Why not? |
31008 | Why not? |
31008 | Why was n''t I told? 31008 Why, what? |
31008 | Why? |
31008 | Why? |
31008 | Why? |
31008 | Would you indeed? |
31008 | You are n''t talking against the government, or the old time way of doing things, are you Papa? 31008 You know one of the big reasons you''re only a major?" |
31008 | You mean pitdogs, like in Wales, in the old days? |
31008 | You mean the Disarmament Commission? |
31008 | You mean to sit there and deliberately admit the duel was a planned attempt to eliminate me? |
31008 | You mean to tell me,he said,"that those people still conduct duels? |
31008 | You think I''m drivel- happy, eh? 31008 You want me to jump?" |
31008 | You''re one of us, are n''t you? 31008 You''ve heard the news?" |
31008 | Your point, Paul? |
31008 | _ Gave_ it to you? 31008 A dashing mustache, eh? |
31008 | A son of mine gawking at Telly? |
31008 | A sour voice said,"Celebrating, captain? |
31008 | Against Sándor Rákóczi? |
31008 | Am I a junior member or something, that I ca n''t be trusted?" |
31008 | And I said, why not try and change the rules?" |
31008 | Any questions, thus far?" |
31008 | Any questions?" |
31008 | Armstrong said curiously,"If you wanted to use throwing knives, why did n''t you challenge him to a duel with throwing knives?" |
31008 | Because as the Sov- world expanded its borders it assimilated peoples of far more, ah, sharpness, shall we say? |
31008 | But I was thinking, why do n''t they get modern and have real fracases, like us? |
31008 | But did you do yourself any good with the buffs? |
31008 | But even though you make it, what will you have on your hands but these problems that the Uppers seem unable to solve?" |
31008 | But have you ever heard of anybody doing any real jumping of caste levels in any category except Military or Religion? |
31008 | But how many buff- clubs you got to your name? |
31008 | But now? |
31008 | But perhaps you have never heard of the Italian short sword, eh? |
31008 | But where are we now? |
31008 | But where in the world did you receive that strange opinion?" |
31008 | But, if so, why? |
31008 | But, truly, why did you turn him down?" |
31008 | But... but_ why_--?" |
31008 | Did n''t efficiency mean anything here? |
31008 | Did n''t read any of the publicity I got? |
31008 | Did n''t you point out earlier that a Lower, in our society, never makes full priest? |
31008 | Do I make myself completely clear, Major Mauser?" |
31008 | Do n''t you realize what you''re doing, so far as the buffs are concerned? |
31008 | Do n''t you see you ca n''t win against the whole Sov- world? |
31008 | Do n''t you see? |
31008 | Do n''t you think you might ask me about it?" |
31008 | Do you realize the expense involved in getting a rhinoceros to Rome in those days? |
31008 | Do you think they have n''t the resources to kill a single man?" |
31008 | Do you think this clumsy weapon is so different from the Italian short sword, eh?" |
31008 | Ever heard of a crash landing, Freddy? |
31008 | Ever thought about that? |
31008 | Frankly, I''m no great admirer of the group in control of United Miners, but--"Joe was surprised enough to say,"Why not, sir?" |
31008 | Freddy demanded,"Look, what was the smallest machine gun in use in 1900?" |
31008 | Freddy growled,"How come the Hungarians have become so important in the Sov- world? |
31008 | Freddy looked at the Sov- world officer and said innocently,"Hiding? |
31008 | Freddy said slowly,"Why ca n''t you have some blood and guts combat, right up there in that glider?" |
31008 | Freddy said, slowly,"Why not?" |
31008 | Freddy said,"What in Zen''s the matter with you? |
31008 | From the door, Nadine said,"Good heavens, Balt, are you badgering my guests again?" |
31008 | Gee, how come you chose Category Military, instead of Religion?" |
31008 | General Armstrong said, his voice tight and worried,"Ready, Captain Rákóczi?" |
31008 | Gentlemen, do you realize what General McCord and his staff are doing this very moment? |
31008 | Got it, son? |
31008 | Have the movies ever done''The Joe Mauser Story''?" |
31008 | Have you studied Marx and Engels?" |
31008 | He demanded,"Why?" |
31008 | He leaned forward,"Yeah, you talk about priests and undertakers and all battening on human sorrow, but how about you? |
31008 | He said now,"Why not?" |
31008 | He said to Joe,"Major Mauser, you are sure such craft were in existence before 1900? |
31008 | He said worriedly,"Major, sir, you sure you''re checked out on that thing? |
31008 | He said, finally, to Nadine, rather than to the men,"What''s this got to do with me?" |
31008 | He said, idly,"And you think our basic institutions have reached the state of needing change?" |
31008 | He said, without taking time for customary amenities,"Major Mauser, could you come to my office immediately?" |
31008 | He said,"And was n''t that largely what you used to think about things over here, when you were back home? |
31008 | He said,"For example?" |
31008 | He said,"Well, gee, do n''t you believe in any gods at all? |
31008 | He said,"What was I supposed to do, hand him a rose from our table bouquet?" |
31008 | He said,"Why did you take so long to come?" |
31008 | He said,"Why''re you... exception? |
31008 | He said,"You mean, in all these years you have n''t been able to clean up such small elements of enemies?" |
31008 | He snapped bitterly,"Did I say something about poor old Bob Flaubert not having a gun, while I did? |
31008 | He snapped,"What''s the situation?" |
31008 | He sneered,"The famous Joe Mauser, eh? |
31008 | His son said,"Major, maybe you can finish that story some other time, huh?" |
31008 | Holland said,"You wonder at what I am driving, eh? |
31008 | How about telling me about one of your fracases, eh? |
31008 | How about the Category Military? |
31008 | How come they do n''t have all these rituals and all in some language everybody can understand?" |
31008 | How come they do n''t have auto- bars and all?" |
31008 | How do we go about changing the rules?" |
31008 | How have they changed in that time?" |
31008 | How many men you killed, major?" |
31008 | How many starving have you seen?" |
31008 | How many times have you ever heard of him really being in the dill? |
31008 | How much of a chance does one of them have if he runs into an old- timer like Joe Mauser, out there in no- man''s- land?" |
31008 | How often do the buff magazines run articles about you? |
31008 | How often do you get interviewed on Telly, in between fracases? |
31008 | How, why, when?" |
31008 | However, he had a nightclub singer with a list of nine or ten victories behind her--""Victories?" |
31008 | Is this it?" |
31008 | It had a heady quality, or was that merely the close presence of Nadine herself? |
31008 | It is well to rid the world of such, eh?" |
31008 | It that clear?" |
31008 | Joe Mauser growled,"What''d you mean, why not?" |
31008 | Joe Mauser was thinking,_ so what?_"Of course,"Cogswell rapped. |
31008 | Joe blurted,"But... but you mean you Uppers are actually planning to subvert your own government?" |
31008 | Joe said to Freddy,"Could I speak to you alone?" |
31008 | Joe said to Nadine,"Would you pardon me for a moment? |
31008 | Joe said, evenly,"And your alternative?" |
31008 | Joe said, only half interested,"For proletarians, Party members, or what?" |
31008 | Joe said, suddenly,"What''s all this got to do with me, Colonel Kossuth?" |
31008 | Joe said,"Gentlemen, may I present Max Mainz?" |
31008 | Joe shook and said,"Pink Army? |
31008 | Joe wet his lips, carefully,"Why''d you think it was?" |
31008 | Joe, irritated, said,"What in Zen do you want?" |
31008 | Listen, were you able to find out who either of General McCord''s glider pilots are?" |
31008 | Listen, you ever heard about dogfights, major?" |
31008 | Listen, you want me to help you on home?" |
31008 | Max growled,"How in Zen you going to be able to lift all this weight, major, sir?" |
31008 | Max said, in his fiesty belligerence,"Does that mean better?" |
31008 | Max, at the peak of excitement now, yelled,"What''d you think I been saying? |
31008 | Nadine said to Joe''s batman,"What did you expect, Max?" |
31008 | No longer do you worry about locating the Sov- world underground and helping to overthrow the Party, eh? |
31008 | Now, just what?" |
31008 | O.K., have you ever heard of a major religion where the priests did n''t do just fine for themselves?" |
31008 | One of them said,"Major Mauser, may we present you to Lieutenant Bela Kossuth of the Pink Army?" |
31008 | Remember Hitler reviving it among the German universities? |
31008 | Remember that big banquet the Pink Army gave me when I first arrived? |
31008 | She said, her voice low,"Promotion in rank, or caste, Joe?" |
31008 | She said, repelled,"But does n''t such morbidity disgust you? |
31008 | She said,"Oh, did he want you to dash into some burning building and save some old lady''s canary, or something?" |
31008 | Should n''t this be somewhat surprising in the secretary of the administration''s foreign minister?" |
31008 | So what? |
31008 | Soligen said,"Mid- Middle, are n''t you? |
31008 | Somebody, General Armstrong, or was it Max? |
31008 | Stuart, eh?" |
31008 | Suppose you do win? |
31008 | Surely you did n''t manage to cop one in that last farce?" |
31008 | Tell me, when you hear the word revolution, what comes first to your mind?" |
31008 | That worthy said apologetically,"May I see your credit card, major? |
31008 | The Hungarian captain said lazily,"Are you sure, Frol, that_ either_ of them are gentlemen? |
31008 | The celebrated Major Joseph Mauser fling? |
31008 | The one who had spoken, one of the majors who wore the boots of the cavalryman, said, nastily,"Indeed? |
31008 | The thing is, what is your opinion Joe, and yours, Nadine, on the advisability of sending other operatives on the same mission?" |
31008 | Then she held back a foot or two, and said into his face, desperately serious,"Does this make any difference, Joe?" |
31008 | These are governmental buildings, are n''t they?" |
31008 | This is understood?" |
31008 | To what do I owe this unexpected visit, Major Mauser?" |
31008 | Understand? |
31008 | Well, Major Mauser? |
31008 | What aspect of the lower classes is she studying in your case, major?" |
31008 | What difference does it make what they''re doing down below? |
31008 | What difference does it make? |
31008 | What difference does it make?" |
31008 | What happens to West- world prestige when the celebrated Joe Mauser backs down from a duel?" |
31008 | What in Zen was this long monologue on the Roman games leading to? |
31008 | What in the name of Zen could anyone need with other than an auto- receptionist? |
31008 | What serf would dare attempt the overthrow of his lord, in the face of God''s wishes?" |
31008 | What was it that the aristocrat seemed able to acquire after but a generation or two of what they were pleased to call breeding? |
31008 | What was the example I read somewhere? |
31008 | What was the old expression? |
31008 | What was the old saying? |
31008 | What''re you Frank?" |
31008 | What''s accomplished?" |
31008 | What''s the matter?" |
31008 | What''s wrong with what we got? |
31008 | What''ve you been getting at the Temple school these days? |
31008 | What''ve you got back there that can be thrown out?" |
31008 | When do we find out who killed the victim?" |
31008 | Where are they? |
31008 | Where did you ever acquire such a car? |
31008 | Where''s it got us, so far?" |
31008 | Where_ are_ we going? |
31008 | Why did he give you this perfectly marvelous car?" |
31008 | Why do n''t you stick to trank?" |
31008 | Why stick your neck out? |
31008 | Why''d you think I wanted that?" |
31008 | Why, especially?" |
31008 | Will ruthlessness be next, Joe Mauser?" |
31008 | With all those doctors standing around?" |
31008 | Would it surprise you to know that I have replayed, a score of times, your celebrated holding action on the Louisiana Military Reservation? |
31008 | You ever heard of a Lower becoming a full priest? |
31008 | You feel in your stomach the fear of death, eh? |
31008 | You follow me? |
31008 | You gentlemen will excuse me?" |
31008 | You grow afraid, eh? |
31008 | You mentioned that in any society the... how did you put it? |
31008 | You say they''re giving you comparative religion in your classes at the Temple now, eh? |
31008 | You think you could work your way up from Mid- Lower to Upper caste with that beginning, Soligen? |
31008 | You''ve tried strength, intelligence, and aggressiveness, have n''t you, Joe? |
31008 | Your brother?" |
31008 | Zen, he knew the three were Upper caste, what was Major Mauser getting into a tissy about? |
31008 | _ Why?_ Why should they want me eliminated?" |
31008 | _ Why?_ Why should they want me eliminated?" |
31008 | outfit?" |
31008 | techno- intellectuals?" |
31008 | woman?" |
28618 | ''How can I refuse to go now that I have enlisted, and my trunk is on board?'' 28618 ''What proceedings?'' |
28618 | ''You surprise me, father; to what can you refer?'' 28618 A very discouraging fact indeed,"answered the staff officer;"and how will you fill the breach created by their going?" |
28618 | Ai n''t the house yours, and the garden, and the horses and oxen and sheep? |
28618 | Ai n''t you my_ true_ father, pa? |
28618 | An attack all along the line? |
28618 | And give all my time to the work? |
28618 | And how did he take it? |
28618 | And how many inhabitants of Boston are there in the city now? |
28618 | And how many men? |
28618 | And if the whole British army attack us, what then? |
28618 | And is that all? |
28618 | And it was a kind of relief to let your tender regard express itself in poetry? |
28618 | And take the risk? |
28618 | And what are your wishes about the time of starting? |
28618 | And what did you tell him? |
28618 | And what do you propose? |
28618 | And what do you seek here? |
28618 | And what is that? |
28618 | And what is their temper now? |
28618 | And where are you going? |
28618 | And where is your cabin? |
28618 | And who is Frazier? |
28618 | And you interposed and tried to reconcile the angry parties? |
28618 | Any letters about you? |
28618 | Are they not our children, planted by our care, nourished by our indulgence, and protected by our arms? |
28618 | Are you shot? |
28618 | Are you shot? |
28618 | Are you sure they are strangers? |
28618 | Are you the poet who writes such lines as these? |
28618 | Ay, how do you make that out? 28618 Better than playing soldier?" |
28618 | Business relating to the expedition against Fort Duquesne, I suppose? |
28618 | But I was told at Venango that they had_ eight_? |
28618 | But seriously, where do you think he is going? |
28618 | But suppose Parliament actually imposes a tax upon us, and sends agents to collect it, what can be done? |
28618 | But what is it, my son? 28618 But who should make it there, pa? |
28618 | But you believe in patriotism? |
28618 | But you will stop and dine with us? |
28618 | By his abrupt inquiry,''What did you come here about?'' 28618 By what authority are you trespassing upon these grounds?" |
28618 | By whose authority do you make this demand? |
28618 | Ca n''t we stop the raft and let the ice go by? |
28618 | Can I go? |
28618 | Can you ascertain for me the number and strength of the British on Long Island? |
28618 | Can you give me any idea of your intended progress? |
28618 | Can you go with us and show us the nearest way? |
28618 | Can you provide me with a canoe? |
28618 | Colonel Washington retired? 28618 Dead?" |
28618 | Did I not direct you_ how_ to do it? |
28618 | Did I not tell you to do that piece of work? |
28618 | Did any one ever try? |
28618 | Did no one attempt to prevent or reconcile this trouble? |
28618 | Did she respond to your professions of love? |
28618 | Did the condition of the bodies show that the massacre was recent? |
28618 | Did the men fight well? |
28618 | Did they make an attack? |
28618 | Did you ever see such a sight in all your life- time? |
28618 | Do I ever tell lies? |
28618 | Do I understand that I may be excused immediately after dinner? |
28618 | Do n''t? 28618 Do you propose an immediate movement?" |
28618 | Do you think of anything else it is essential for me to do? 28618 Do you think that your sickness will prove fatal?" |
28618 | Do you think the people of America would submit to pay the stamp duty if it was moderated? |
28618 | Does God give me everything? 28618 General Moultrie, what do you think about giving up the fort?" |
28618 | George, did you do it? |
28618 | George,said his father,"do you know who killed that cherry- tree in the garden?" |
28618 | Have they attained to this excellence of drill under your command? |
28618 | Have you any better evidence of their depredations than rumor? |
28618 | Have you any suspicions as to who the murderers were? |
28618 | Have you practised much in this art? |
28618 | Have you seen him? |
28618 | How about crossing the river with so much floating ice in it? |
28618 | How about the boy who was captured and carried through this place? |
28618 | How can I give you anything, George? 28618 How can it be so?" |
28618 | How can that be? |
28618 | How could such a thing happen? |
28618 | How does it happen that you are traveling on foot in this direction? |
28618 | How far away? |
28618 | How great is the distance? |
28618 | How is that, my son? 28618 How is that?" |
28618 | How is that? |
28618 | How large a force do you imagine the French have at Duquesne? |
28618 | How many Americans were engaged in it? |
28618 | How many guns does the fort mount? |
28618 | How many troops of the king hold Boston? |
28618 | How many were killed? |
28618 | How many, then? |
28618 | How much water here, massa? 28618 How resist?" |
28618 | How so? |
28618 | How were you received at the fort? |
28618 | How would you like a midshipman''s berth on a British man- of- war? |
28618 | How would you like to go to Mr. Williams''school at Bridge''s Creek, George? |
28618 | How would you like to survey my lands for me, George? 28618 If the Stamp Act is not repealed, what do you think will be the consequences?" |
28618 | In large force? |
28618 | In what way did he show his sternness? |
28618 | Is it possible? |
28618 | Is it wise to march against the fort at this late season and in this rough weather? |
28618 | Is there no hope? |
28618 | Is this the charger and this the servant presented to you by General Braddock? |
28618 | It would seem so,remarked Mrs. Washington;"but are there no rules relating to our higher duties to God among the whole number?" |
28618 | Just to see what you could do? |
28618 | May it not be that a remarkable future is before him? |
28618 | My fingers are frozen, and some of my toes; and what is to prevent the freezing of the remainder of my body? |
28618 | No more? |
28618 | Pray, tell me, who gave you any exercise of judgment in the matter? 28618 Retired?" |
28618 | Shall I go soon? |
28618 | Shall we allow the enemy to leave the city without attacking them? |
28618 | Then why have you not done as you were directed to do? |
28618 | Then you do n''t think he is going home? |
28618 | Then you do not believe the war is ended yet? |
28618 | Then you mean I shall be a planter? |
28618 | Then you think it did not grow there by_ chance_? |
28618 | They are not original with him, are they? |
28618 | They nourished by your indulgence? 28618 Thou hast, it may be, wealth, stores of money; but how much of it is of use to thee? |
28618 | To what do you particularly refer? |
28618 | We must fight the enemy somewhere; why not here? |
28618 | Well, George, might not such a thing happen though I never saw it before? |
28618 | Well, boys, have you seen the Arabian colt in your walks this morning? |
28618 | Well, where is he? 28618 What about the French forts near New Orleans?" |
28618 | What can you do? |
28618 | What chance? |
28618 | What did he say? |
28618 | What do you call it, George, and what do you ever expect to do with it? |
28618 | What do you mean, you dastard? |
28618 | What has been done with John Trotter and James McClochlan, two Pennsylvania traders, whom the French captured and carried away with all their goods? |
28618 | What is it? |
28618 | What is the matter now, Isaac? 28618 What is the meaning of all this, sir?" |
28618 | What is there at New Orleans? |
28618 | What is this that I hear about a quarrel among you, boys? |
28618 | What is this, George? |
28618 | What is your advice, Colonel Washington, under the circumstances? |
28618 | What makes you think so? |
28618 | What next? |
28618 | What next? |
28618 | What officers fell? |
28618 | What part of the town can be most effectively cannonaded? |
28618 | What party? |
28618 | What shall I study? |
28618 | What shall you tell her? |
28618 | What should an oysterman come to our landing for? |
28618 | What think you,continued Washington,"if we should retreat to the back part of Pennsylvania, would the Pennsylvanians support us?" |
28618 | What was it, then, do you think, my son? |
28618 | What water, massa? 28618 What will be my duties if I get the appointment?" |
28618 | What will the people of our country say to that? |
28618 | What''s the harm? |
28618 | What''s the matter, my son? 28618 What, then, will you do?" |
28618 | When did you leave Venango? |
28618 | Where and when shall we be in a better condition to meet the enemy? |
28618 | Where are the guards? |
28618 | Where can he have gone? |
28618 | Where did you leave your horses and the rest of your party? |
28618 | Where? 28618 Where?" |
28618 | Where? |
28618 | Who are coming, my little man? |
28618 | Who are these Americans? |
28618 | Who assigned such a part to you? |
28618 | Who is equal to it? |
28618 | Who is she, and where does she live? |
28618 | Who led them? |
28618 | Whose daughter was she, then? |
28618 | Why did you return? |
28618 | Why do n''t they fire? |
28618 | Why do you call it_ gunpowder_ tea? |
28618 | Why do you not lend a helping hand? |
28618 | Why so? |
28618 | Why, no, pa; did you ever know anybody''s name in a plant bed before? |
28618 | Will you take a walk with us? |
28618 | With courage and skill to correspond they can withstand quite a siege; and what is there at Twigtwies? |
28618 | Without appealing again to the king? |
28618 | Without reinforcements from Colonel Fry? |
28618 | Without returning to Mount Vernon? |
28618 | Yes; but who is it? |
28618 | You are resolved to attack them? |
28618 | You black rascal, I knew it was salt water; I only wanted to know how_ much_ water you have there? |
28618 | You mean God, do n''t you? |
28618 | You think that he will recover? |
28618 | Your part? |
28618 | _ I_ wish so now,answered one of his companions;"but who ever thought that the colt could kill himself?" |
28618 | An end did I say? |
28618 | As he was laid down, pale and near spent with loss of blood, he faintly said to Washington:"Well, colonel, what''s to be done now?" |
28618 | As if not satisfied with that, Washington looked up to him again, and said:"Do you understand me?" |
28618 | Before this time, Colonel Reed said to him one day,"When shall we stop this everlasting retreating and make a stand?" |
28618 | Besides, what have we to build a raft with? |
28618 | But he did not succeed?" |
28618 | But how are you succeeding?" |
28618 | But how do you know that you ca n''t ride him? |
28618 | But what are these forms, anyhow?" |
28618 | But what can I do? |
28618 | Ca n''t you tell me what has happened?" |
28618 | Can it be that Providence has not connected the permanent felicity of a nation with its virtue? |
28618 | Can you name a trusty man who will find out?" |
28618 | Could_ chance_ bring about all these things so exactly as to suit your_ wants_ and_ wishes_?" |
28618 | Did_ you_ fight?" |
28618 | Do n''t I see the poor people every day carrying away your bread, and yet paying you nothing?" |
28618 | Do n''t it look very much like_ chance_?" |
28618 | Do n''t you give me_ some things_?" |
28618 | George tried to keep the peace, did he? |
28618 | Have you ever tried?" |
28618 | He called upon the pastor, Dr. Johns, and inquired:"Does it accord with the canons of your church to admit communicants of another denomination?" |
28618 | He declined to accept the large gift, saying:"What will the world think if they should hear that I have taken fifty thousand dollars for this affair? |
28618 | He must attempt something on account of his reputation, for what has he done as yet with his great army?" |
28618 | How can they trust you with the bayonet at their breasts? |
28618 | How could I give life to the oxen and horses, when I ca n''t give life even to a fly, my son?" |
28618 | How is it, William( addressing William Bustle), what do you know about it?" |
28618 | How, my fellow- citizens, shall I single to your grateful hearts his pre- eminent worth? |
28618 | I lend a helping hand?" |
28618 | If this be true, how much do mankind owe to the mother of Washington?" |
28618 | In his interview with the commander, Washington inquired of him:"By what authority have the French made prisoners of several of our English subjects?" |
28618 | Is there a doubt whether a common government can embrace so large a sphere? |
28618 | Knowlton''s last words were,"Did we drive the enemy in?" |
28618 | Mr. Hobby continued:"Is it true that some of my boys have been fighting?" |
28618 | Mrs. Washington had been sitting in silent grief all the while, at the foot of the bed; but now she inquired with calmness:"Is he gone?" |
28618 | Now, George( turning to George Washington), shall we hear what you have to say about this unfortunate trouble?" |
28618 | On his way, a tithing man came out of a house and inquired of the coachman:"Is there any necessity of your travelling on the Lord''s Day?" |
28618 | One day Lawrence surprised him by the inquiry,"George, how would you like to take lessons in the manual exercise of Adjutant Muse?" |
28618 | Pray, sir, what is the reason?" |
28618 | Religion and morality enjoin this conduct; and can it be that good policy does not equally enjoin it? |
28618 | Seeing a man chopping wood, Washington inquired:"Which way is the Hessian picket?" |
28618 | Shall I speak of his warlike achievements, all springing from obedience to his country''s will, all directed to his country''s good? |
28618 | The brave Colonel Barré, with cheeks all inflamed with virtuous indignation, replied:"They planted by your care? |
28618 | The lady now archly observed,''I perceive that your excellency''s eyes are turned to the right object; what say you to your wager now, sir?'' |
28618 | They protected by your arms? |
28618 | Through Van Braam, he inquired:"Where do you hail from now?" |
28618 | Weems says that he called to one of them:"Cudjo, what water have you there?" |
28618 | What could he do? |
28618 | When before was affection like this exhibited on earth? |
28618 | Where I going get quart pot for measure him?" |
28618 | Where is my wampum that you took away with the marks of towns on it? |
28618 | Where shall I begin in opening to your view a character throughout sublime? |
28618 | Where will it meet a man so experienced in military affairs-- one so renowned for patriotism, conduct, and courage? |
28618 | Where?" |
28618 | Who could hack it in that manner?" |
28618 | Who has so great a knowledge of the enemy we have to deal with?... |
28618 | Who is there that has forgotten the vales of Brandywine, the fields of Germantown, or the plains of Monmouth? |
28618 | Who made it there?" |
28618 | Who that is a sincere friend to it can look with indifference upon attempts to shake the foundation of the fabric? |
28618 | Who, in short, so able to support the military character of Virginia? |
28618 | Why forego the advantages of so peculiar a situation? |
28618 | Why quit our own to stand upon foreign ground? |
28618 | Will it not be their wisdom to rely for the preservation of these advantages on the Union by which they were procured? |
28618 | Will they not henceforth be deaf to those advisers, if such there are, who would sever them from their brethren, and connect them with aliens? |
28618 | Will they not suspect, on my next proposition, that money is my motive? |
28618 | ai n''t I a good boy? |
28618 | by repealing a piece of parchment? |
28618 | do n''t I always run to you soon as I hear you call_?'' |
28618 | exclaimed Washington,"General Pierre Paul?" |
28618 | his mother exclaimed,"what can you mean, George?" |
28618 | how much water here? |
28618 | inquired Washington, recalling some experiences of the past,"or do you announce what you_ know_ to be a fact?" |
28618 | is it rendered impossible by its vices? |
28618 | satisfy them by repealing a bit of paper? |
28618 | sea water always salt water, ai n''t he, massa?" |
28618 | ten thousand peasants keep five thousand king''s troops shut up? |
28618 | what of that? |
28618 | what water? |
28618 | what''s the matter?" |
39434 | About my joining the organization? |
39434 | An''why w''u''dn''t he? |
39434 | And are you going to sea again soon? |
39434 | And now you do n''t think so? |
39434 | And only one slice of lemon, is n''t it? |
39434 | And what is this very solemn thing? |
39434 | And where does-- did Mr. Carroll live? |
39434 | Are all these old fools women? |
39434 | Are you not sure about it? |
39434 | Are you sure? |
39434 | But are you sure of it? |
39434 | But it may be you do not know,Dr. Thurston continued,"that she herself was aware of the nature of her disease? |
39434 | Ca n''t I call you Evelyn? |
39434 | Ca n''t you call me John? |
39434 | Ca n''t you get a bald spot any other way? |
39434 | Can I look at him? |
39434 | Can any one tell me who this is? |
39434 | Chubb? 39434 Chubb?" |
39434 | Coffee, eh? |
39434 | Come, come, Curtis,the Judge replied,"that''s unworthy of you, is n''t it? |
39434 | Come, now, Judge,said Van Dyne,"is that quite fair? |
39434 | Did I? |
39434 | Did he get it? |
39434 | Did n''t I mention her name? |
39434 | Did you now? |
39434 | Did you suppose that I wanted to marry you for your money? |
39434 | Did you tell him Mr. Blackstock was not home yet? |
39434 | Do I know her? |
39434 | Do n''t I? |
39434 | Do n''t you think it might be well to get the girl out of town for a little while next month? 39434 Do you know Dr. Pennington, the rector of St. Boniface''s, in Philadelphia?" |
39434 | Do you know him? |
39434 | Do you know what Miss Marlenspuyk said about her? 39434 Do you know what struck me on Sunday as I looked at Martha?" |
39434 | Do you know who he is? |
39434 | Do you mean that you are to be paid for associating with these people? |
39434 | Do you mean to say that my stock is worthless? |
39434 | Do you mean to say that you still want to marry me,she asked, looking him full in the face,"even after I have insulted you?" |
39434 | Do you think she would be willing if she knew? |
39434 | Do you think your sister would approve if she knew? |
39434 | Does anybody here know this man? |
39434 | Does he? |
39434 | Evelyn,he began, abruptly,"do you know the Pixleys in San Francisco-- Tom Pixley, I mean?" |
39434 | Fair? |
39434 | Got to? |
39434 | Has Sadie Jones thrown him down again? |
39434 | Have you anybody else on your list? |
39434 | Have you anybody in particular in view? |
39434 | He''s dead, ai n''t he? |
39434 | He''s going to marry the California widow? |
39434 | How can that be? |
39434 | How could any woman be so unlady- like? |
39434 | How did he manage that? |
39434 | How do you know she will have you? |
39434 | How is a young doctor to get on unless he knows lots of people? |
39434 | How''s mother? |
39434 | I am a doctor,he began, soothingly,"and I am sorry to say that there has been an accident--""An accident?" |
39434 | I ca n''t know till I try, can I? 39434 I can trust you without the wristlets, ca n''t I?" |
39434 | I do n''t think any man has a right to come in here and die like that without warning, heart failure or no heart failure, do you? |
39434 | I do n''t think that''s a nice way of earning a living, do you? |
39434 | I hate lightning,she explained,"and I detest a storm-- don''t you? |
39434 | I wonder if he is the average American? |
39434 | I would n''t do it if I was n''t going to make something out of it, would I? 39434 I''ll give them up, if you say so,"said he;"but I''ve always heard that they are good, quiet girls-- domesticated, you know-- and--""Who is next?" |
39434 | I''m not going to rob a bank, am I? |
39434 | If you are sure, where did he live? |
39434 | Is he hurt very bad? |
39434 | Is it dangerous? |
39434 | Is it the tall one you want? |
39434 | Is it? |
39434 | Is n''t papa absurd? |
39434 | Is n''t that inconsistent? |
39434 | Is that all? |
39434 | Is that what it is? 39434 It does not pay at all, does it?" |
39434 | It''s Dr. Chandler''s place you''re takin''now, ye know that? |
39434 | It''s not a pretty name, is it? 39434 Minnie,"he urged once more,"do n''t you think it is your duty-- as a friend, you know-- to give me the wife I ought to have?" |
39434 | My advice? |
39434 | Not plump? 39434 Of course you sailors have to know all about the weather, do n''t you?" |
39434 | Oh, you were talking about me, were you? |
39434 | Perhaps you are aware that the late Mrs. Blackstock died of heart failure? |
39434 | Shall I wait for you at the ribbon- counter? |
39434 | Shall we rest here for a while, father? |
39434 | She says to him, she says,''Willy, I''ll report you every time I catch you, see?'' 39434 She''s from the South somewhere, or the Southwest, I do n''t know--""What''s her name?" |
39434 | So it is for your sister you are selling yourself, is it? |
39434 | So it''s a mere marriage of convenience you are after? |
39434 | So you do n''t think Miss Chubb would be a good wife for me? |
39434 | So you have felt that way too, have you? |
39434 | So you knew all along that I was poor? |
39434 | Speak about what? |
39434 | Suppose I do n''t put it in? |
39434 | Sure of it? |
39434 | That is not your husband? |
39434 | That scrawny thing? |
39434 | That was the sick- looking creature in black lolling back in a victoria, was n''t it? |
39434 | That''ll be a sight for sore eyes, wo n''t it, kid? |
39434 | That''s all very well for you, no doubt; but how about the woman who marries you? 39434 That''s splendid for you, is n''t it?" |
39434 | That? |
39434 | The tall one who squints, or the fat one with red hair? |
39434 | Then I may come to see you again-- Evelyn? |
39434 | Then why are you going? |
39434 | Then why did n''t you say so? |
39434 | Then why did you ask me to marry you? |
39434 | Then you do n''t want to join the organization? |
39434 | Then you were aware already that the Belinda and Lone Star is a failure? |
39434 | This is Mrs. O''Donough, is it not? |
39434 | This is where Mr. Carroll lived, is n''t it? 39434 To Milwaukee?" |
39434 | To me? |
39434 | To my husband? |
39434 | Virgie Chubb? |
39434 | We want you to meet the boys and let them know you, do n''t you see? 39434 Well, he has two daughters-- nice girls, both of them--""Which one do you want?" |
39434 | Well, they are not exactly fools, are they? |
39434 | Well,he asked, when she said nothing,"is it to be yes or no?" |
39434 | Well? |
39434 | What did he do? |
39434 | What did n''t he do? |
39434 | What do you mean by that? |
39434 | What does that mean? |
39434 | What good would it do me? 39434 What is it, Dexter?" |
39434 | What is it? |
39434 | What matter about that? |
39434 | What you got for me to- day? |
39434 | What''s that? |
39434 | What''s the matter with you? 39434 What''s this? |
39434 | What? |
39434 | When must you be there? |
39434 | Where are you going? |
39434 | Where does he live? |
39434 | Who is she? 39434 Who is she?" |
39434 | Who is she? |
39434 | Who is she? |
39434 | Who on earth was that? |
39434 | Who''d she report him to? |
39434 | Why have you got to? 39434 Why is it that we think a man despicable who marries for money, and yet it is what we expect a woman to do? |
39434 | Why not? 39434 Why not?" |
39434 | Why waste all that time talking if he''s dead? |
39434 | Why--began the bride, with a little hysteric laugh,"why, what could she possibly have to say to me?" |
39434 | Why? |
39434 | Will we take a little drop of something warm? |
39434 | Will you be satisfied if I do not say''no''--even if I do not say''yes,''all at once? |
39434 | Women? |
39434 | Yes,the Southerner replied,"and I''m afraid it is a serious case-- a pretty serious case--""Is he dead?" |
39434 | You did n''t mean me? |
39434 | You do n''t care? |
39434 | You do n''t expect me to pick out a wife for you, do you? |
39434 | You do n''t mean he''s dead? |
39434 | You do n''t mean to tell me that he is going to die? |
39434 | You have been overwhelmed by the immensity of the metropolis? 39434 You know, I''ve been helping Dr. Cheever as a sort of third man while Dr. Aspinwall has been ill? |
39434 | You lonely? |
39434 | You remember how I used to think the frog that played the trombone was trying to execute a Heine- Schubert song? 39434 You want me to read that?" |
39434 | You will let me give you a cup of tea, wo n''t you? |
39434 | You wo n''t be offended? |
39434 | ''Is there anything in particular you would prefer?'' |
39434 | A home of her own and a husband!--what was a woman''s life without them? |
39434 | AIN''T IT AWFUL? |
39434 | AIN''T IT AWFUL? |
39434 | Am I going to be one of you?" |
39434 | And at the end, what? |
39434 | And how do we men meet it? |
39434 | And how many of them would give him a second thought after they had read of his arrest and of his trial and his sentence? |
39434 | And if you do what''s the use of our waiting ever so long? |
39434 | And is it Tim?" |
39434 | And is n''t that the scar on him he got when the wheel broke?" |
39434 | And what can equal the love of a woman for the son she has borne? |
39434 | And what do you suppose happened when I took them all up to the library desk? |
39434 | And what have I to do with her now? |
39434 | And what sort of a son is he who would add another?" |
39434 | And who do you suppose was in the pew just across the aisle from old Pierce? |
39434 | And why have you run away, so that I ca n''t talk things over with you quietly and calmly? |
39434 | Are there not seven swords in the heart of the Mater Dolorosa? |
39434 | Are we to be satisfied with that? |
39434 | Are you worried at home? |
39434 | As it is, I''ve about enough money left in the bank at the corner to carry me another month-- and then? |
39434 | Besides, what do girls know about politics? |
39434 | But I trust you will forgive me for my share in the matter--""Forgive you?" |
39434 | But how much do they know?" |
39434 | But if this is not your husband, whose husband is he?" |
39434 | But the Judge went on, regardless of what the young lawyer was going to say:"They may mean well, but what of it if the result is what we see? |
39434 | But what do you want to know about the people in this house for? |
39434 | But why must we put it off till June? |
39434 | But you will love me too-- won''t you, dear?" |
39434 | Can you show us?" |
39434 | Carroll?" |
39434 | Did n''t I work alongside of him for five years? |
39434 | Do n''t you remember that when you told me you could n''t love me you went on to say you hoped we should always be good friends?" |
39434 | Do n''t you think I''m a very good little girl?" |
39434 | Fierce, was n''t it? |
39434 | Going round the Park, are you? |
39434 | Have you any right to sacrifice yourself for your sister''s sake in a way she would not like?" |
39434 | Have you seen a ghost?" |
39434 | He hesitated for a moment, and then continued:"I feel as if I owe you an apology--""What for?" |
39434 | Her soul? |
39434 | How can you be lonely?" |
39434 | How could I care for any other girl, loving you as I do? |
39434 | How did it happen?" |
39434 | How did you ever have the courage to venture out? |
39434 | How many names now honorable would be disgraced if the truth were suddenly made known? |
39434 | How many of the men under the shadow of Trinity were more honest than he? |
39434 | How many of them would miss him?--would be conscious even of his absence? |
39434 | I ca n''t be a matron in Milwaukee, can I? |
39434 | I do n''t think it''s a very nice lookout for her, do you? |
39434 | I know my business, do n''t I? |
39434 | I suppose there is no truth in it?" |
39434 | I wonder if he will? |
39434 | I wonder if she guesses how much I love her? |
39434 | I wonder if you would n''t like to help in the Sunday- school library while you are in town? |
39434 | If I go to Florida for January, can you go with me?" |
39434 | If it were contentment that he really was seeking, why not be satisfied now with what he had won? |
39434 | Is there anything the matter? |
39434 | Is this gettin''married all it''s cracked up to be?" |
39434 | Is your mother sick or your father? |
39434 | It is curious, is n''t it, that I did n''t get a chance to tell you all these things for nearly six months? |
39434 | It is funny how I keep meeting her, is n''t it? |
39434 | It was very kind of him, was n''t it? |
39434 | It would n''t be fair to marry you now I know you are in earnest, would it?" |
39434 | Little Mat Hitchcock-- you must remember that withered little old beau? |
39434 | MY DEAR MIRIAM,--What is the matter with you? |
39434 | May I join you?" |
39434 | McEcchran?" |
39434 | Mother had a good time when she was a girl, and why should n''t Martha? |
39434 | Not Virgie Chubb?" |
39434 | Now, what had I done wrong yesterday? |
39434 | Of course, he had written by every steamer, but what were letters when she was longing for the clasp of his arms? |
39434 | Out for a spin?" |
39434 | Poole?" |
39434 | She drew a long breath and responded as lightly as she could:"Yes?" |
39434 | She wanted to say"What of it? |
39434 | She''d give me all her savings gladly if I was mean enough to take them; but I could n''t live on that pittance, could I? |
39434 | Some of them, no doubt-- but how many? |
39434 | That ought to count in cutting down the sentence, ought n''t it? |
39434 | That shows you how different things are here in New York, do n''t it? |
39434 | That some day seems a long way off, sometimes, do n''t it? |
39434 | That''s an extraordinary thing to say, is n''t it? |
39434 | That''s his name, is n''t it?" |
39434 | The other two salesladies laughed, and one of them asked,"What did Miss Van Antwerp say to that?" |
39434 | Then she asked:"Why is it that most of the women we have passed this afternoon sitting back in their carriages look bored to death?" |
39434 | Then she heard footsteps on the stairs; and in a moment more her aunt was standing at the door and calling:"Elinor, are you ready? |
39434 | There''s no use in our putting it off and putting it off till we''ve both got gray hair, is there? |
39434 | They are not specially religious, these books, but what of it? |
39434 | Turrible, ai n''t it?" |
39434 | Was n''t it Heine who said that the monks of the Middle Ages thought that Greek was a personal invention of the devil, and that he agreed with them? |
39434 | Was n''t it nice of her?" |
39434 | Well, I am sorry to say there has been an accident, and--""Is that Martin there?" |
39434 | Well, and when are you coming round to see the boys? |
39434 | Well, that may be true; I do n''t think it is quite true; but even if it is, what of it? |
39434 | Well, why not? |
39434 | Were they the price of her freedom? |
39434 | What are they bringing it here for?" |
39434 | What did it profit a girl to make a splendid match, if she did not marry the one man she was destined to love? |
39434 | What have I done to offend you? |
39434 | What was the purpose of it all? |
39434 | What was there left for her to do in life? |
39434 | What was victory but a chance to engage again in the combat? |
39434 | What zest could there be in life when life was bounded in a whitewashed cell? |
39434 | What''s that? |
39434 | What''s the use of a fortune to me if I do n''t have you to share it with me? |
39434 | What''s this?" |
39434 | When the tall woman saw this she gripped the arm of the other and hissed out,"Is it_ it_?" |
39434 | Where are you then?" |
39434 | Which one do you recommend?" |
39434 | Who is she?" |
39434 | Who is to speak if I do n''t?" |
39434 | Why can not she leave me alone?" |
39434 | Why could not she have died for him? |
39434 | Why could she not have been taken, and why could not he have been spared? |
39434 | Why could she not have died in his place? |
39434 | Why does n''t that car come? |
39434 | Why is it I have n''t really the half- million or more that they think I have? |
39434 | Why not quit? |
39434 | Why not step out of the ranks and throw down his musket and get out of the way and leave the fighting to those who had a stomach for it? |
39434 | Why should I be offended?" |
39434 | Why should n''t I go to Mr. Stanwood''s house if he asks me? |
39434 | Why should n''t we be married in June, too? |
39434 | Why, what would I have to look forward to in life if I did n''t have you? |
39434 | Will that satisfy you? |
39434 | Wilson Carpenter''s marriage had been happy, and his boy was all he could wish,--and yet-- and yet-- Is this all that life can give a man? |
39434 | You do, do n''t you, Miriam? |
39434 | You know our friend in Denver? |
39434 | You will forgive my telling you these things, wo n''t you? |
39434 | You will go and see her, wo n''t you? |
39434 | You would n''t in my place, would you?" |
39434 | You would not be apologizing to me for joining the church, would you?" |
39434 | _ Mais il faut vivre, n''est- ce pas?_ And what am I to live on next month? |
39434 | _ Mais il faut vivre, n''est- ce pas?_ And what am I to live on next month? |
39434 | ai n''t it awful? |
39434 | he mused;"what will happen? |
39434 | she answered, laughingly;"that''s a solemn way of addressing me, is n''t it? |
39434 | she asked, laughing;"and grandpa, too? |
39434 | the doctor asked, only to correct himself swiftly--"where did he live?" |
30589 | A half hour? |
30589 | About what? |
30589 | Afraid? 30589 Am you like to hab de chance, sir?" |
30589 | And Mr. Colden, whom I saw in that hall about an hour ago, when I bought the horse? |
30589 | And be smoked by old Mr. Valentine? 30589 And what gives you reason to hope?" |
30589 | And when shall that time be? |
30589 | And you are doubtless now an officer in some Tory corps? |
30589 | And you did wish to? 30589 Are they your men?" |
30589 | Are you convinced? |
30589 | Ay, but such love as mine,--how can it so fill me to overflowing, and not infect you? |
30589 | But it is so, is it not? |
30589 | But what are you going to do? |
30589 | But what have I to say? |
30589 | But what then? |
30589 | But your men will probably come for you? |
30589 | But, as he''s a rebel and deserter,pursued Miss Sally,"was it not your duty as a soldier to take him, just now?" |
30589 | But,said she, regarding him with angry suspicion,"the confession,--the plot?" |
30589 | By what acts? |
30589 | Can not you see? |
30589 | Can you not see? |
30589 | Damn my tobacco? |
30589 | Dear me, am I all that? |
30589 | Did n''t you know? 30589 Did n''t you urge him to take a commission?" |
30589 | Did you come in here to cheer me up in my last hours? |
30589 | Did you ever hear of such rashness, major? 30589 Do n''t I do the best I can to love you? |
30589 | Do n''t you know? 30589 Do n''t you understand?" |
30589 | Does not my cloak incommode you? |
30589 | Gentleman? |
30589 | Girls? |
30589 | Great heavens, what evidence do you want? 30589 Have I not said''tis better than living with a hopeless passion?" |
30589 | Have n''t I heard that before? |
30589 | Have n''t I said I''ve been blind to you until to- night? 30589 He was passing through New York from Boston to his home in Virginia, after he had deserted from the King''s army--""Deserted?" |
30589 | He''s a widower again, is n''t he? |
30589 | Horses? |
30589 | How can I go and leave you exposed to the chance of another visit from some troop of rebels? |
30589 | How can you speak so lightly of such matters? |
30589 | How can you talk so absurdly? |
30589 | How could you leave without saying it? |
30589 | How dare you jest with me? |
30589 | How dare you touch my hand? |
30589 | How do you know that? |
30589 | How much? |
30589 | I suppose that was not the only thing she said to you? |
30589 | I wonder, could Williams be bribed to spirit me away? |
30589 | I? 30589 I? |
30589 | I? 30589 If it were, would you?" |
30589 | If now, why not before? |
30589 | Indeed? 30589 Indeed? |
30589 | Indeed? 30589 Indeed?" |
30589 | Is not the King soon to have his revenge? 30589 Is not the quarrel here? |
30589 | Is there no one I can turn to? |
30589 | Jest? 30589 Kinsman to Lord Fairfax, of Virginia?" |
30589 | Lies? 30589 Love- making, do you say? |
30589 | Madam, you then make me your guest? |
30589 | Major Colden, eh? |
30589 | Make him love you? |
30589 | Must n''t what? |
30589 | My attack? |
30589 | My guest? |
30589 | News? |
30589 | Oh, did n''t he? |
30589 | Oh, is it? |
30589 | Oh, what shall I do? 30589 Oh, what shall I do?" |
30589 | Oh, you allude to my wearing this gown? 30589 Oh,"said he, thinking to make account by finding offence where none was really expressed,"has my touch contaminated them for you?" |
30589 | Pay whom back? |
30589 | Reward? |
30589 | Secrets? |
30589 | Seek a quarrel? |
30589 | So you knew the fellow before? |
30589 | So your name is Molly? 30589 So, then, there was no plot?" |
30589 | Still here, eh? |
30589 | Tell me, does she love any man so, now? |
30589 | The Hessian camp by Tippett''s Brook, or the Highlanders'', at Valentine''s Hill? |
30589 | The ladies not here? 30589 The road to Tarrytown, you say?" |
30589 | Then he''s told you all about it? |
30589 | Then somebody else is about to begin a visit that_ is_ expected? |
30589 | Then why do n''t you help me out of this? |
30589 | Then why have not your servants made him a prisoner? |
30589 | Then you mean,he faltered,"you did not really love me?" |
30589 | Then you_ do_ love him? |
30589 | Then, at least, you will have guns fired, and also send a man to one of our outposts for help? |
30589 | Then, the reward of which you hinted? |
30589 | They would feed the animal for the slaughter, eh? |
30589 | To which one? |
30589 | Was ever a woman as unreasonable as Elizabeth? |
30589 | Was it not at my suggestion? |
30589 | Was it the ladies''presence,retorted Peyton, contemptuously,"or the fact that you''re a devilish bad shot?" |
30589 | Well, are you not forever calling yourself my slave? 30589 Well?" |
30589 | What are you doing there? |
30589 | What can I do? 30589 What could be more important than tobacco?" |
30589 | What d''ye spy, Tom? |
30589 | What do you mean? |
30589 | What do you want? |
30589 | What has such rubbish to do with your confession and your plot? |
30589 | What is it, if not love, that makes me forget my coming death, see only you, hear only you, think of only you? 30589 What is it, my dear?" |
30589 | What is it, sir? |
30589 | What is it? |
30589 | What is that, pray? |
30589 | What is''t now, Molly? |
30589 | What matters? |
30589 | What shall we do, dear? |
30589 | What then? 30589 What was the use?" |
30589 | What''s that? |
30589 | What''s the matter? |
30589 | What, Elizabeth, are you still angry? |
30589 | What, Molly? |
30589 | What, Mr. Valentine? 30589 What, me?" |
30589 | What, then? |
30589 | What, you expect to take my love by storm, in reality, as you did, in appearance, a week ago? |
30589 | What? 30589 What?" |
30589 | Where is the rebel, Elizabeth? |
30589 | Where were your eyes? |
30589 | Which one, aunty? |
30589 | Who are these coming? |
30589 | Who are you? |
30589 | Who desired your heart to yield to anything? |
30589 | Who''s there? |
30589 | Who? |
30589 | Why did n''t you fight him? |
30589 | Why do n''t you call him back? |
30589 | Why do you indulge in it, then? |
30589 | Why not? 30589 Why, am I not going to give him myself? |
30589 | Why, child, do you wish to? |
30589 | Why, do men alone, because they laugh at women for taking love seriously, have the right to take it lightly? 30589 Why, madam,"said he, his heart hammering forcefully,"do you think I may communicate them to you directly? |
30589 | Why, what gave you that impression? |
30589 | Why, yes, we never thought of looking there, did we? |
30589 | Why? 30589 Why?" |
30589 | Will it really come to that? |
30589 | Will the troops at King''s Bridge heed the story of a black man? |
30589 | Will_ she_ come to see me there, I wonder? |
30589 | Wo n''t something happen when those two meet? |
30589 | Would you mind helping me look for it? |
30589 | Would you,he panted,"may I beg-- loosen it?" |
30589 | You do n''t wish I should love you? |
30589 | You do? |
30589 | You prefer that, do you? |
30589 | You refuse me a glimpse of hope? |
30589 | You remember how you upheld them with a rapier in Bayard''s woods? |
30589 | You will doubtless not honor us by remaining? |
30589 | You will not-- do that? |
30589 | You''re sure''twas he, aunt Sally? |
30589 | Your heart and mind are as roseate and delicate as your face? 30589 _ My_ Peyton? |
30589 | A snap o''the finger for your all- conquering charms!--why do you not leave me?" |
30589 | After having so far exerted herself, must she suffer the ignominious consequences of failure? |
30589 | And how did you know?" |
30589 | And is that a reason why you should leave me now?" |
30589 | And of what love am I speaking lightly,--the love you say you feigned for me, or the love you say you thought you had awakened in me?" |
30589 | And the time is going--""Well, sir, what is it?" |
30589 | And you''ve brought me tea this time?" |
30589 | And you, Jack?" |
30589 | At half- past three the beauteous Mary( did so proud a heart- breaker blush, I wonder?) |
30589 | At last the Tory major found speech:"Elizabeth,--what does it mean? |
30589 | Before she could continue, Colden suffered a start of alarm to possess him, and asked, quickly:"Are any of his troops here?" |
30589 | But was it a mere rabble? |
30589 | Ca n''t they understand?" |
30589 | Ca n''t we ride faster? |
30589 | Colden pretended to laugh, saying:"Am I a fool to put it in your power to murder me?" |
30589 | Colden?" |
30589 | Convinced that I love you madly?" |
30589 | Did she listen at the door to the last part of that notable conversation? |
30589 | Did some of the dandyism of the French dragoon survive in the old Philipsburgh farmer? |
30589 | Do me the kindness, madam, will you not?" |
30589 | Do n''t you know? |
30589 | Do n''t you see he''s injured? |
30589 | Do n''t you see?" |
30589 | Do you order me from my own parlor?" |
30589 | Do you seriously think of marrying?" |
30589 | Does a man jest in the face of his own death?" |
30589 | Getting no answer, and irritated at the old man''s owl- like immovability, she repeated, with vehemence,"Was he?" |
30589 | Had provision been made for his possible return? |
30589 | Had she already taken measures towards his conveyance to the British lines? |
30589 | Has not Miss Philipse spoken of an offence to your name, for which I ought to receive payment from you? |
30589 | He looked at them as they withered in the blaze, then said,"Have you any objection to my carrying away the ashes, Miss Philipse?" |
30589 | He then walked over to the disconsolate Colden, and, with a very gay- doggish expression, remarked in an undertone:"Fine pair o''girls yonder, major?" |
30589 | Hereupon he addressed Cuff, who was about to depart:"Where is your mistress?" |
30589 | How about the aunt and me taking a lesson from you two, eh?" |
30589 | How can I keep them out?" |
30589 | How could you think I did? |
30589 | How dare you?" |
30589 | How long might such a feeling last? |
30589 | How shall I begin? |
30589 | How to begin? |
30589 | How would she proceed about it? |
30589 | How--""How?" |
30589 | I afraid?" |
30589 | I hate him!--Well, what if I am? |
30589 | I''ve been married afore, hain''t I? |
30589 | If you could be sure I spoke in earnest, you said,--what then? |
30589 | In fact, he has proposed marriage to me, and now, as a man of the world to a woman of little experience, would you advise me to accept him?" |
30589 | Is he to come for you to- day or to- morrow?" |
30589 | Is it I who indulge in levity?" |
30589 | Is not your sense of your own charms sufficient to convince you of their effect?" |
30589 | It was Miss Sally who then said:"And he disarmed you in a duel?" |
30589 | Major of what?" |
30589 | Meanwhile, what of Harry Peyton and his troop? |
30589 | Money, do you call it? |
30589 | Must, then, all her previous ingenuity be wasted? |
30589 | My God,_ will_ she not come? |
30589 | Now will you not have him when I offer him to you? |
30589 | Oh,_ how_ shall I pay him? |
30589 | She answered with good- humored lightness,"Why, sir, do you complain of not being flattered? |
30589 | So, in his instinctive endeavor to gain time, he bungled out the conventional reply,"You wish to seek a quarrel with me, sir?" |
30589 | Still laden with the cloak and hat, he desperately began:"Miss Philipse, I-- ahem-- before I start on my walk to- night--""Your walk?" |
30589 | Taunted beyond all self- control, the Tory yelled:"Not mine, eh? |
30589 | That''s it, do n''t you think?" |
30589 | The letter shall relate them, too, and if the person who holds the pen for me pays heed to the letter''s contents, is it my fault?" |
30589 | Then he is in the King''s service, after all? |
30589 | Then you are not like common beauties,--as poor and dull within as they are rich and radiant without? |
30589 | Then,"Without saying what?" |
30589 | Thus I am, in a manner, bound no less on my side, than you-- I beg your pardon--""What do you mean?" |
30589 | Valentine?" |
30589 | Was General Howe, who had command of the movements, sending for more troops? |
30589 | Was it, then, Harry''s own countrymen that his regiment was going to fight? |
30589 | Was not Romeo of the enemies of Juliet''s house? |
30589 | Was this love at last? |
30589 | Were not the best people in Boston loyal to the King''s government? |
30589 | Were they, indeed, paralyzed with fear at sight of the lines of the King''s grenadiers? |
30589 | What do you value, I implore you, tell me?" |
30589 | What had been thought of his disappearance? |
30589 | What more can I do than that, and promising my hand? |
30589 | What shall I do?" |
30589 | What then?" |
30589 | What was there for him to do but sail with his regiment, awaiting disclosures or occurrences to guide? |
30589 | What were the men doing behind those defences? |
30589 | What were they saying and thinking? |
30589 | What would be its effect on her after his departure? |
30589 | What''s to hinder?" |
30589 | What''s your answer, ma''am?" |
30589 | When was that discovery made?" |
30589 | When would this resolute and vengeful Miss Elizabeth fulfil her threat? |
30589 | Where are Cuff and the servants? |
30589 | Where are the seconds?" |
30589 | Where would he be supposed to have gone? |
30589 | Who is your Washington? |
30589 | Why ca n''t they hang the old and ugly ones instead?" |
30589 | Why did not the Yankees fire? |
30589 | Why do I not spend this time, this last hour, in pleading for my life, in begging you to hide me and send the troops away without me when they come? |
30589 | Why do n''t they prevent? |
30589 | Why do you wait?" |
30589 | Why does n''t she come? |
30589 | Why is this man here,--again?" |
30589 | Why not send your servants after him? |
30589 | Why should I wish anything of one who is nothing to me?" |
30589 | Why, sir, how could I? |
30589 | Why, then, do I not, in the brief time I have left, beg for my life? |
30589 | Will you not take it instead of this lady''s?" |
30589 | Will you not write for me?" |
30589 | Will you please open the door, Colden?" |
30589 | Will you put others on me?" |
30589 | Would it come southward, towards the house, or go northward, decreasing? |
30589 | Would it really come to war? |
30589 | Yes, born of a glance--""Born of a gown, in that case, do n''t you mean?" |
30589 | Yet what was to be done? |
30589 | Yet, if you wish to turn me out--"Elizabeth interrupted him:"So it is true that, if you fell into the hands of the British, they would hang you?" |
30589 | You can understand my praises and my feelings? |
30589 | You can value such love as mine aright, and know''tis worthy some repayment?" |
30589 | You taunt me with my situation?" |
30589 | You will trust me with it?" |
30589 | You''ve dropped it, do n''t you see?" |
30589 | so Miss Elizabeth_ did_ give her permission, then?" |
30589 | which sex, I wonder, has the busier scalping- knife?" |
30589 | wo n''t you drink to mine?" |
48363 | ''The three men''were the three Rutherford lads-- aren''t they tall creatures? |
48363 | Age and muscle, or beauty and babyhood? |
48363 | Ah, Roberta dear, how are you to- day? |
48363 | Already? |
48363 | And earn but six dollars a week, out of which you would have to pay your board? 48363 And if I am, what then?" |
48363 | And if I do n''t do this? |
48363 | And in the meantime? |
48363 | And is n''t it great that your father has no more heart attacks? |
48363 | And little Polly Flinders? |
48363 | And so Sylvester is in danger? |
48363 | And throw up the invention? |
48363 | And what is Oswyth''s opinion? |
48363 | And what kind of stories am I to tell, Frances? 48363 And would you have defrauded me?" |
48363 | And you do n''t think that disgraceful, as you are situated? |
48363 | Anything wrong? |
48363 | Are n''t we perfect geese about our little grey house? 48363 Are n''t you forgetting that there are more necessary things than chair- covers?" |
48363 | Are n''t you forgetting the state of your finances, and that you ca n''t afford the least extravagance? 48363 Are they spoiled?" |
48363 | Boys, wo n''t you stand by me? |
48363 | Bread? 48363 But I''m ravenous, dear folkses-- can''t you feed a poor wanderer, while she tells her story?" |
48363 | But if I am a help to you, I wonder if I can get you to do something for me? |
48363 | Can you hold him, Rob? 48363 Can you really paint, Bart? |
48363 | Did the bugs and dry- rot attack only our potatoes? |
48363 | Did you ever know anything so splendumphant? |
48363 | Did you have a good time, children? |
48363 | Do I smell coffee? |
48363 | Do I? 48363 Do n''t you remember how you used to amuse all the rest of us children telling stories by the yard? |
48363 | Do n''t you see how I must ache to get back? 48363 Do n''t you think there has to be that difference, Bruce?" |
48363 | Do you expect to be a painter, Bart? |
48363 | Do you feel ill, Sylvester dear? |
48363 | Do you mean to say you are n''t dressed? 48363 Do you not remember that Patergrey said:''It must not be less than fifty thousand dollars to be accepted?'' |
48363 | Do you realize that it is now half past one, and that the Baldwins arrive at four? 48363 Do you remember how, when we reckon our resources, we put down two columns, one certainties, the other possibilities? |
48363 | Do you want me now? |
48363 | Does Bartlemy paint? |
48363 | For pity''s sake, Mary,she cried,"has something else bad happened to you? |
48363 | Goodness, Wythie, what is it now? |
48363 | Had to practise the most fractional fractions ever since I was born-- why should n''t I be? 48363 Help walk northward through the prairie, help find the house, or help cut the grass, Rob?" |
48363 | Honestly? |
48363 | How are you, Grey ladies? |
48363 | How can I ever thank you? |
48363 | How can I help but try it, when it is all done for me? 48363 How can you understand that, Roberta?" |
48363 | How did you get it this time? |
48363 | How much did he offer? 48363 How were you taken?" |
48363 | How''s the poor mite? |
48363 | I think she''s well now-- don''t you, Mardy? 48363 I think you need n''t be alarmed, Roberta-- you said Roberta, did n''t you? |
48363 | I wonder if you would mind-- Aunt Azraella, might I have them? |
48363 | I wonder what would become of poor Elvira if Mrs. Winslow had n''t the little grey house as a safety- valve? |
48363 | If I''m a tonic, Wythie must be cold cream, or something healing, and Prue-- what is Prudy? 48363 If she disapproved of our extravagance in having a kitten, what will she say to a child in the house?" |
48363 | If you could be but one, which would you rather be, poor or genteel, Rob? |
48363 | If you cut a few feet it would be the most that you could do, and what difference would it make out of so much? |
48363 | Is it anything we could help? |
48363 | Is it death, Mardy? |
48363 | Is it so bad? |
48363 | Is it? |
48363 | Is n''t it queer how almost all American little boys are ashamed to do nice things? 48363 Is there any new reason for haste, any fresh pressure?" |
48363 | Is there danger? |
48363 | Is there really coal there? |
48363 | Is this going to be a comic- opera, and are we taking part as stage peasants, or really working? |
48363 | It''s all right now, is n''t it, Patergrey? |
48363 | It''s more than wonderful, Mary,she said,"but who in the world could have foreseen it? |
48363 | It''s signed William Armstrong; is that any of the gentlemen you saw, Rob? |
48363 | Just four couples-- papa, will you dance? |
48363 | Mad? 48363 Meaning me, or the goat?" |
48363 | Mr. Baldwin''s office? |
48363 | My Rob, my dear Rob, my brave, reliable daughter,said Mrs. Grey, fondly,"what can I say to you? |
48363 | My portrait? |
48363 | No, no-- oh, no,cried Wythie, hastily, while Rob said:"Do n''t you see what it is? |
48363 | Not a bad little girl, is she? |
48363 | Not another night, dear little Robin? |
48363 | Not very hard to see through, the Lady Grey, is she? |
48363 | Now, look here, Sylvester Grey, is there any use in my giving you orders, or are you going to do precisely as you please anyway? |
48363 | Oh, Aunt Azraella, what do you think we are going to do? 48363 Oh, Rob, Rob, and if everything goes wrong?" |
48363 | Oh, Rob, dear Rob,cried Prue, hysterically,"you mean well, but how can you be so obstinate? |
48363 | Oh, Rob; how can you? |
48363 | Oh, ca n''t you go on? |
48363 | Oh, how do you feel, Patergrey? |
48363 | Please tell me how to go to Broadway? |
48363 | Poetry reminds me of the story- telling; are you going to keep it up another winter, Rob? 48363 Prue-- what?" |
48363 | Read? |
48363 | Rob, have you good news? |
48363 | Rob, my dear, are you quite crazy? |
48363 | See it over the telephone? |
48363 | Shall I wear my bridle, Mardy? |
48363 | So tired of us? |
48363 | Suppose we take turns in dressing, and Rob and Prue go first? |
48363 | Sylvester Grey, my old college mate? 48363 The machine?" |
48363 | The offer? 48363 Then Roberta is the only one that stands out against good luck?" |
48363 | Then would it disappoint you to lend me rather more than half of your wealth, to launch the bricquette machine? 48363 There are thirty- six yards here, fifty- four inches wide; do you think you need so much? |
48363 | There''s no danger in our being as glad as we please, is there? 48363 This is----?" |
48363 | Very likely,said Rob,"but what are we going to do now, this minute?" |
48363 | Want to try, Wythie, or shall I? |
48363 | Want to? 48363 We do n''t believe that only bad things happen outside of books, do we, Rob?" |
48363 | We''re not afraid, are we, Rob, my son? 48363 Well, what have you to propose to me, Francie, a secretaryship to the President, or to write the best- selling book of the year?" |
48363 | What are you up to, now, Sylvester man? |
48363 | What did papa say, Polly? |
48363 | What do you know about business, child? |
48363 | What do you propose doing, then? |
48363 | What form is it going to take, Rob? |
48363 | What has happened, my dear? |
48363 | What has happened? |
48363 | What in all the wide world have you there, Wythie? |
48363 | What is he? |
48363 | What is it all about, Rob? |
48363 | What is it, dear? 48363 What luck?" |
48363 | What shall I do to earn money? 48363 What shall I do? |
48363 | What shall we do to celebrate? |
48363 | What shall we have for dinner that day? 48363 What were you doing, Prudence?" |
48363 | What will be all right? 48363 What''s in the basket, papa?" |
48363 | What''s that? 48363 What''s the use, Wythie? |
48363 | Where did you get the little angel, Rob? |
48363 | Where does your moral felon hurt you? |
48363 | Where have you been''one morning, oh, so early, my beloved, my beloved?'' |
48363 | Where have you been? 48363 Where in the world should I get one, Wythie?" |
48363 | Where shall we begin? |
48363 | Where were you, Aunt Azraella? 48363 Where? |
48363 | Which is the nicest? |
48363 | Who''s first? |
48363 | Who, may I ask, is the village chestnut? |
48363 | Whose patent are we celebrating, I''d like to know? 48363 Why did n''t you tell us?" |
48363 | Why do n''t we come here oftener? |
48363 | Why do n''t you wish we could afford to hire a man to keep the place decent, like other people, while you''re wishing? |
48363 | Why, no; are we? |
48363 | Why, that''s true, Wythie; they wo n''t have to ask her, will they? |
48363 | Will I? 48363 Will Sylvester join us?" |
48363 | Will it be much, Sylvester? |
48363 | Will it take long to place the bricquette machine when it is done? |
48363 | Will you let me try a portrait of you, or wo n''t you, Prue? |
48363 | Will you, or will you not, listen to reason and be guided by someone with judgment? 48363 Will you, say toward spring?" |
48363 | Wo n''t you come in and rest? |
48363 | Would Mr. Flinders cut it? |
48363 | Would n''t I rather be Roberta Grey, your daughter, than the richest girl in the world with another father? 48363 You do n''t mean to say, Rob,"she exclaimed,"that you let those children swarm all over you? |
48363 | You do n''t object, Lady Grey? |
48363 | You do n''t suppose I''ll yield without striking a blow? |
48363 | You must give it to her yourself; what have I to do with it? |
48363 | You wo n''t write, Mary? |
48363 | Your worthless father is not quite useless, is he? 48363 *****Oh, you''re up, are you, Rob?" |
48363 | An''what''d your folks say?" |
48363 | And do you realize how children love to be with you? |
48363 | And the oldest Rutherford boy-- he looked nearly eighteen-- added:"Are you farming?" |
48363 | And will you do my portrait?" |
48363 | And wo n''t you get your hat and coat and go with me to invite them, Patergrey? |
48363 | And you find out what can be done with the invention, you, a young, inexperienced girl? |
48363 | And, Bart, would you mind very, very much if you were asked most politely to go and fetch Frances?" |
48363 | Any kind that keeps them quiet? |
48363 | Are n''t you forgetting something besides the heat, Mary?" |
48363 | Are your sisters pretty, too?" |
48363 | Baldwin?" |
48363 | Been working hard, thinking hard?" |
48363 | But I said:''O my Sweet, it will give you small feet, And wo n''t you consider the price? |
48363 | CHAPTER TWO ITS NEIGHBORS"Wo n''t you come and see the new Rutherford boys, Mardy? |
48363 | Can it do it, really, Patergrey?" |
48363 | Can you carry them?" |
48363 | Can you do this?" |
48363 | Can you tell me?" |
48363 | Cat days are nicer than dog days, are n''t they, Kiku- san? |
48363 | Dearest children, you are so frightened, are n''t you? |
48363 | Did n''t we look pretty, aunt? |
48363 | Did you say that, Wythie? |
48363 | Did you see what a pleasant one it was?" |
48363 | Do n''t you know it costs something to feed animals? |
48363 | Do you ever wonder if a lifelong affection, of a stronger sort, may grow out of this beautiful triple friendship?" |
48363 | Do you know what it is?" |
48363 | Do you know what that means-- to be a coal of fire?" |
48363 | Do you suppose, can it be, girls-- and boys-- that this is n''t too good to be true?" |
48363 | Do you think I can go home to- morrow?" |
48363 | Do you think he knows your father has gone, this Marston of yours?" |
48363 | Does she shut her eyes?" |
48363 | Flinders?" |
48363 | For long?" |
48363 | From the golden veil in which this enveloped her she spoke:"Wants me for a servant to help Elvira? |
48363 | Go back to Fayre to- night, or will you tell me which hotel to go to-- am I needed here longer?" |
48363 | Have you any special use for the first hundred and twenty- five dollars from your story- telling?" |
48363 | Have you told Mardy?" |
48363 | He was right, but I fear you need it because Sylvester can counsel you no longer-- is this so?" |
48363 | He''s got plenty money an''no one but us, an''if Maimie dies, what''s the use of it all? |
48363 | How could we part with them?" |
48363 | How much did you pay a yard for that material?" |
48363 | I suppose we must n''t try to keep you a moment longer than can be helped, Bobs bahadur?" |
48363 | I wonder how many times a day we do this? |
48363 | I wonder if Mrs. Bonell would mind? |
48363 | If he says take the four thousand, I am satisfied, but if he says not to, do n''t you see how well it will be that I went? |
48363 | If we had anyone else to do it, we would let them, of course, but who is there? |
48363 | Is he likely to go off again?" |
48363 | Is my hair too crazy, and have I grass stains on my nose, Wythie?" |
48363 | Is n''t it perfectly blessed?" |
48363 | Is n''t that a comfort, after so long? |
48363 | Is n''t the trailing arbutus the Mayflower?" |
48363 | Is n''t truth more chestnutty than fiction?" |
48363 | It ca n''t make much difference with the machine, and is n''t it worth three days''delay to relieve Mardy darling''s mind? |
48363 | It is because your name is Grey, is n''t it?" |
48363 | It''s sure and sure that the invention will go, is n''t it? |
48363 | Mad?" |
48363 | May n''t I ask the boys and Frances down to- night to rejoice with us, Mardy? |
48363 | Mrs. Winslow held up her hands in horror, and Mrs. Grey said, reproachfully:"Rob, how can you?" |
48363 | My father-- I am Sylvester Grey''s daughter; do you remember him?" |
48363 | Now, Mary, how can you be so indulgent to these girls? |
48363 | Now, what is there that sort of a young person could do to make her fortune and her family''s?" |
48363 | Oh, Mardy and other girls, do n''t you hope it will be all right?" |
48363 | Oh, for the land sakes, why do we talk about it as though she were a person to be listened to? |
48363 | Oh, why are n''t all relations like you?" |
48363 | Oswyth, will you come?" |
48363 | Over and over, with growing desperation, she said to herself:"I must earn money, I_ must_ earn money, but how?" |
48363 | Ready, Rob?" |
48363 | Rob, my son, can I borrow you after this repast is over? |
48363 | She''s got go and pluck, and did you ever see such a face for crinkling up? |
48363 | Suppose you fail, and we lose not only the offer, but the expenses of your journey and your stay in the city?" |
48363 | That man settled it, did n''t he?" |
48363 | The singing grew louder, clearer, and at last developed into nothing more classic than the darky song,"Wo n''t you come home, Bill Bailey?" |
48363 | There ye''ll take a downtown Broadway car-- see? |
48363 | They ought to be done soon, I should think: how long does it take to put on a mortgage?" |
48363 | Very valuable, is it? |
48363 | Want a cayb, miss?" |
48363 | We are fortunate to get money when we need it so sorely, and we shall pay off that mortgage in a short time; is n''t that true, Rob, my son?" |
48363 | We know what treasures there are in the chests and horse- hair trunks up there, do n''t we, girls?" |
48363 | What I want is to ask you how much that invention is really worth? |
48363 | What am I going to tell them?" |
48363 | What are you going to do with the money, Mary? |
48363 | What did Mardy say?" |
48363 | What do you mean? |
48363 | What do you play all day-- do you play you''re a little turtle and this is your shell?" |
48363 | What has she to do with it, anyway? |
48363 | What on earth could you do with them? |
48363 | What part of Broadway do ye be wantin''?" |
48363 | What was Aunt Azraella going to do with those old curtains? |
48363 | What''s that?" |
48363 | What''s wrong with your tempers? |
48363 | Where are you taking us?" |
48363 | Where''s your mother? |
48363 | Why did n''t you come in? |
48363 | Why did you go for to do it? |
48363 | Why do you say that to me?" |
48363 | Will I not?" |
48363 | Will Mr. Flinders let her go?" |
48363 | Will you come often, and help us have good times?" |
48363 | Will you do that?" |
48363 | Will you help, Wythie and Prue?" |
48363 | Will you see when you go up?" |
48363 | Will you try it, Rob?" |
48363 | Ye do n''t know N''Yawk?" |
48363 | Yes, they asked me-- why?" |
48363 | You accept that offer on the spot,_ on the spot_, do you hear? |
48363 | You ca n''t mean to get your mother to dye them for curtains for your house? |
48363 | You did n''t feel like playing house when I saw you after dinner, did you?" |
48363 | You have come to me because your father told you that if you needed counsel, his old chum would gladly give it you? |
48363 | You speak as though you were alone; are you boys all there are in the family?" |
48363 | You wo n''t mind if you have to stay here alone with Hortense, do you? |
48363 | You, Rob, alone? |
48363 | _ Still_ happy? |
48363 | cried three rapturous girl voices, and Wythie added:"It is n''t her lovely, white little Billee?" |
48363 | demanded Bartlemy, and added, shaking his fist at the goat:"You old sign of the zodiac, I was n''t interfering with you, was I?" |
10958 | A dance, Peter? 10958 A dwarf, do you mean?" |
10958 | Admired the devil? |
10958 | Ah, then you do remember? |
10958 | All my dances? 10958 All ready, Betty?" |
10958 | Am I to dismount the lady at the Inn? |
10958 | And Oliver-- my brother,said Betty, leaning from the coach as they were about to move off:"what tidings of him?" |
10958 | And how? 10958 And if you wo n''t tell-- promise?" |
10958 | And what may you be called? |
10958 | And wherefore? |
10958 | And who is this gentleman? |
10958 | Are you cold, Moppet? 10958 Are you deserting me, Peter?" |
10958 | Are you there, Miss Bidwell? |
10958 | Audacious? |
10958 | Aunt Euphemia, will you permit me to use the north chamber? 10958 Betty, Betty,"implored Pamela, bursting into tears,"do I not love our little sister as well as you? |
10958 | Betty, what are you doing here? |
10958 | Betty-- let me see-- is that the sister next yourself? |
10958 | But, Geoffreyshe faltered,"my father"--"Did not General Wolcott himself bid me fetch you here? |
10958 | But, I thought you were at daggers drawn with the boys of the Vly Market, Peter? 10958 By whom?" |
10958 | Can you drive a ball for me? |
10958 | Captain Yorke? 10958 Censure,"said Betty, throwing back her small head haughtily,"wherefore? |
10958 | Child, what are you talking about? |
10958 | Children,called a voice from the hall,"where are you? |
10958 | Dat you, Massa Peter? 10958 Dearest,"he cried, kissing the little hand which lay in his,"will you not bid me hope? |
10958 | Did Captain Yorke climb out of his window and go down the big elm, Pamela? 10958 Did I fall, Betty?" |
10958 | Did he? |
10958 | Did the hue and cry for that wretched, miserable Whig spy frighten the horses? 10958 Did you happen to hear any noises on the roof or in the big elm last night?" |
10958 | Did you hear any noises last night, Betty? |
10958 | Did you not see the bag he carried at the saddle? 10958 Did you not set him as guard to your prisoner?" |
10958 | Did you rise early this morning? 10958 Did you sleep soundly after the milk?" |
10958 | Did you speak? |
10958 | Did you take horse in pursuit of the spy last night? |
10958 | Do n''t you give yours a holiday up in New England? 10958 Do you hold Moppet''s dear life as nothing? |
10958 | Do you think he was a soldier-- perhaps an officer from Fort Trumbull, like the one Oliver brought home last April? |
10958 | Do you think it could be Oliver''s friend, young Otis from Boston? |
10958 | Do you think''Billy the fiddler,''as you call him, is one of the Sons of Liberty? |
10958 | Done what? |
10958 | Dun you know how to speak to a lady? |
10958 | For me? |
10958 | Ha, ha,quoth Betty, much amused,"is that the way you take it? |
10958 | Had you not better take a glass of milk? |
10958 | Has there been any news from Oliver when he set forth on this last expedition? |
10958 | Have I grown a coward? |
10958 | Have I? |
10958 | Have you lately arrived? |
10958 | Heyday? |
10958 | How are we to cross? |
10958 | How can you answer for him? |
10958 | How did he get out? |
10958 | How did you arrange the escape? |
10958 | How did you come to think of that? |
10958 | How does thee do? |
10958 | How handsome he was,said Moppet;"did you see his hair? |
10958 | How kind!--and at this season? 10958 How long will it take you to drive the remaining mile?" |
10958 | How often must I tell you not to give way to such sinful temper? 10958 How old are you, Betty?" |
10958 | How so? |
10958 | How would her mistress fare without her? |
10958 | Hundreds of feet? |
10958 | Hush,said grandma, with an uneasy glance toward the door;"do not talk of rebels in this house; had n''t thee better run up and see Clarissa?" |
10958 | I certainly do hate to call you, but jes''look here; what you say for dat, little missy? |
10958 | I shall give you nothing,said Mrs. Seymour firmly;"if you can not read my safe- conduct yourself, is there not one of your men who can?" |
10958 | I, Oliver? |
10958 | I-- prim? |
10958 | I-- you-- that is--faltered Betty, meekly dropping her eyelids--"Oh, sir, do you really think we shall gain the Inn safely?" |
10958 | If Miss Kitty pleases,spoke the voice of Pompey at the door,"will she walk upstairs? |
10958 | If you are so sure of it, why did he, an apparent stranger, have aught to communicate to that fiddler yonder? 10958 In New York?" |
10958 | In what disguise? |
10958 | Indeed,said Betty calmly,"And who, pray, has done me that honor, in this city, where I am but a recent comer?" |
10958 | Is he the aide- de- camp you told me of, Gulian, for whom you had taken a liking? |
10958 | Is it so long? |
10958 | Is there another exit from this room, Kitty? |
10958 | It is a sad affliction, sir; has it troubled you long? |
10958 | It is here,gasped Betty;"I fetched it on my way down the slope; oh, sir, do you think she lives?" |
10958 | Josiah Huntington,said Moppet promptly;"but you heard what Oliver said at supper?" |
10958 | Know him? |
10958 | Law, Massa Gulian, you tink falling down dat stair gwine to hurt dis chile? |
10958 | Let me have my worsted jacket, and my flannel wrapper( indeed, I do believe they are too small for me; can I find others in New York, Betty? 10958 Mistress Betty, I salute you,"said Geoffrey Yorke, bowing low,"and may I also beg your acceptance of a bunch of clove pinks? |
10958 | Moppet, Moppet, my darling,cried her sister,"are you hurt? |
10958 | Moppet, Moppet, what can we say to prove our gratitude? 10958 My heart but not my will, consents,"she said,"Dare you take such a naughty, perverse rebel in hand for life?" |
10958 | Nay, wherefore? |
10958 | News? |
10958 | Noises? |
10958 | None for me? |
10958 | Nothing, Betty? |
10958 | Oh, Betty darling,whispered the child,"how will you ever gain the garret stairs when Reuben is watching? |
10958 | Oh, Betty, do I live to hear you tell a fairy tale as if it were real? |
10958 | Oh, Gulian,cried Betty, catching hold of her brother- in- law as he came forward,"may we not visit the kitchen and see the servants dance? |
10958 | Oh, Gulian,cried she, stretching out both hands,"do n''t you know me? |
10958 | Perhaps you will try a race with me, Captain Yorke? |
10958 | Peter Provoost, do you fancy that my sister would smile on a scarlet coat? 10958 Peter,"began Moppet presently, with true feminine persistency,"what were you saying about a British officer who knew Betty?" |
10958 | Pray who are you who detain ladies on a journey? |
10958 | Reuben? |
10958 | Right gladly,replied Kitty;"will you ride alone, Gulian?" |
10958 | Shall I lift it off the fire? |
10958 | Since when have you grown so staid? |
10958 | So you might even be sorry for a foe, eh, Betty? |
10958 | Surely you will grant me a moment to plead on my own behalf? |
10958 | Surely you will not deny me that grace? |
10958 | Surely you will not refuse to come to the manor? 10958 Sweetheart, sweetheart,"he said,"you will not refuse to hear me now? |
10958 | Sweetheart, will you listen to me? |
10958 | The big lantern? |
10958 | Then you''re all right, sir; why did n''t you say so before? |
10958 | This from you, Pamela? 10958 To Betty?" |
10958 | Was he? 10958 We may perhaps have your escort, lieutenant?" |
10958 | What am I to conclude? |
10958 | What are you about? |
10958 | What are you all coming in for? 10958 What did he look like?" |
10958 | What do you please to want? |
10958 | What do you suppose? |
10958 | What do you think of all this? |
10958 | What does a little maid like you know of looks? |
10958 | What does this mean? |
10958 | What have I found? |
10958 | What have you got there? |
10958 | What is it all about? |
10958 | What is it, my child? |
10958 | What is it? |
10958 | What is that? |
10958 | What knowledge have you of them, I''d like to know? |
10958 | What shall we do? |
10958 | What you got in your hamper? 10958 What you''so doin''hyar, little missy?" |
10958 | Where are the men nowadays, grandma? 10958 Where have you been? |
10958 | Where have you been? |
10958 | Which way are you traveling? |
10958 | Who is it that requires my parental hand, Oliver, and why do you so lament my absence? |
10958 | Who speaks of faith? |
10958 | Who was the one you mention? |
10958 | Whom do you seek here, sir? |
10958 | Why did you ask? |
10958 | Why did you not send Reuben? |
10958 | Why not just as well as for older folk? |
10958 | Why not? 10958 Why,''tis Captain Yorke''s cape that he muffled me in the day I fell into Great Pond-- Oh, Betty, Betty, what is amiss?" |
10958 | Will he, indeed? |
10958 | Will it please you to alight, madam? |
10958 | Will the young lady be able to ride one of your horses? |
10958 | Will they really turn out bullets? |
10958 | Will you come inside before going upstairs? 10958 Will you dance with me to- night at the ball-- promise me all the dances you can possibly spare?" |
10958 | Will you help console me with my primer and that altogether dreadful sampler when my Betty is away? |
10958 | Will you not bring the gentleman in, Oliver? |
10958 | Will you not come home with us? |
10958 | Will you walk in, sir, and let me explain to my nephew how greatly we are indebted to you? |
10958 | With my father? |
10958 | With pleasure, and for what stakes? |
10958 | Would you have me turn a helpless man loose among your Hessians? 10958 Yes,"said Pamela, turning away from the window,"and so is Moppet''s; where is Aunt Euphemia?" |
10958 | Yes? |
10958 | Yorke-- did not that handsome young officer say his name was Yorke? 10958 You heard?" |
10958 | You mistake,said Pamela, who, truth to tell, half longed for Betty''s opportunities, for was not her sister going somewhere near Josiah''s post? |
10958 | You will let him go free, brother Oliver,cried Moppet, flying to the young officer''s side;"you surely will not clap him into jail?" |
10958 | ''Tis I, Betty Wolcott; have I outgrown your recollection?" |
10958 | --Moppet nodded--"not a word, mind, even to Betty-- where do you think I saw Captain Yorke the other day? |
10958 | A stake? |
10958 | And I do not know how we will return his cape; do you?" |
10958 | And he is away?" |
10958 | And his eyes-- surely you noted his eyes, Betty?" |
10958 | And how tightly it curled, wet as it was? |
10958 | And there is my father-- oh, Sally, I wonder if there be news from General Washington and the army?" |
10958 | And well for her that it was so; do we not all know a few rare natures whose fascination dwells in this very quality? |
10958 | And, Moppet, I think I shall give you in special charge to Sally; how will that please you?" |
10958 | Are n''t you, Betty?" |
10958 | Are you quite sure you are familiar with the road here, Caesar? |
10958 | Betty threw her arms around Kitty; why did she feel as if the innocent words stabbed her? |
10958 | Betty, Betty, do you think Miss Bidwell could cut this one smaller for me? |
10958 | Betty, do you know that Miranda has a new follower? |
10958 | Brother, have I your permission?" |
10958 | But it is my duty, unfortunately, to make passing search of your coach; will you pardon me if I do so?" |
10958 | CHAPTER XV LOVE OR LOYALTY"Do you mean to tell me that you, Clarissa''s sister, had anything to do with the escape of a Whig spy?" |
10958 | Can you see through yonder door if the man be there still with the others?" |
10958 | Can you tell me how many miles I am from Goshen, which I left this morning?" |
10958 | Captain Sir John Faulkner seems greatly taken with her, does be not?" |
10958 | Captain Yorke must have seen-- and yet, how could he know Oliver''s face sufficiently well? |
10958 | Captain Yorke was on the steps as I came out, hearing the shouts; did he witness this extraordinary occurrence?" |
10958 | Did I tell you how we moulded the bullets last summer? |
10958 | Did you call me?" |
10958 | Did you forget?" |
10958 | Did you not tell me, Sally, that she was going to New York?" |
10958 | Did you note the time on the hall clock?" |
10958 | Did you strike anything in your fall?" |
10958 | Do n''t you hear the music beginning?" |
10958 | Do you belong to the British army or are you a volunteer accompanying Tryon in his raid upon our innocent and unoffending neighbors at Fairfield?" |
10958 | Do you conceive it is like a bull or a lion''s roar?" |
10958 | Do you fancy that scarlet commends itself to a rebel maid like me, or that the cause you represent can be aught but hateful to a loyal Wolcott?" |
10958 | Do you fancy we will hear soon, Gulian?" |
10958 | Do you follow me shortly?" |
10958 | Do you give me your permission to proceed in the matter?" |
10958 | Do you know of it, sir? |
10958 | Do you not reply to a lady?" |
10958 | Do you not wish to acknowledge an obligation when it is doubly due? |
10958 | Do you recollect how close the great elm- tree boughs come to your window?" |
10958 | Do you skate up in Litchfield, Moppet?" |
10958 | Do you stop here long, Dolly, or will you have my escort back to Lebanon?" |
10958 | Do you think I shall conceal my share in this night''s work? |
10958 | Do you think we might go out on the doorstep and see if there be any sign of its approach?" |
10958 | Do you think"--insinuatingly--"that I might have a slice, a very tiny slice, before I go forth with Betty to gather nuts in the Tracys''woods?" |
10958 | Do you want to come with me on an errand for Clarissa near Bowling Green, which must be done before the streets are full of the troops?" |
10958 | Fie, Pamela; Josiah is strong and well, and there is not likely to be a movement of the troops just now, father says, so why worry? |
10958 | Give us a pottle; that''s better than mugs of ale, eh, poys?" |
10958 | Had the"hateful redcoats"ceased to be hateful to her? |
10958 | Had you as severe weather in Lebanon as this? |
10958 | Had you not better seek Madam Cruger?" |
10958 | Have you fish- hooks and nets within?" |
10958 | Have you kept yours?" |
10958 | Have you met any of our troops?" |
10958 | He will be sure to think it strange; can I not go for you?" |
10958 | How are you spending the afternoon?" |
10958 | I am better; will you come into the hall with me, Betty? |
10958 | I can easily go to King''s Bridge and inquire at the Inn for dispatches; you will not mind my being absent all day? |
10958 | I must speak to Captain Yorke, and can you guess how I shall manage to do it?" |
10958 | I really believe she has made a stocking and a half for Moppet-- or was it a pair, Betty?" |
10958 | I thought you had negro servants as well as we?" |
10958 | I trust that you have General Washington''s pass close by you? |
10958 | I will not leave you until I tell you that I love you devotedly; ah, why should politics and war come between our hearts? |
10958 | I wonder if my father would object?" |
10958 | If it be twenty years, I will yet come, with your father''s consent, to win you, and then,_ then_, sweetheart, may I claim my reward?" |
10958 | If it were only possible"--"Why not?" |
10958 | In some scrape with the Vly boys, I''ll warrant; do you wish me to come in and plead for you?" |
10958 | Is it dinner- time?" |
10958 | Is not Miss Euphemia''s chamber on this side?" |
10958 | It wo n''t be for long, will it?" |
10958 | May I ask the name of this somewhat audacious gentleman?" |
10958 | May I just run down and ask? |
10958 | May I offer Captain Yorke a pinch of snuff?" |
10958 | Moppet, as you came by the north door, whom did you see on guard in the hall?" |
10958 | Now, Betty,"as the child disappeared inside,"have you any idea who this stranger can be, or whence he came?" |
10958 | Pamela, you are a gentle and charming nurse; shall it be you?" |
10958 | Perhaps Kitty will come and bear you company while I am gone?" |
10958 | Perhaps it had only begun, for Oliver had said--"Mistress Betty,"spoke Yorke, and his voice was low and very tender,"may I offer you my arm? |
10958 | Pray, what excuse can you devise for such neglect?" |
10958 | Promise me, dear heart?" |
10958 | Shall I tell Miss Bidwell that you are ready for supper?" |
10958 | Surely not by the chimney?" |
10958 | Surely she knew that tall, elegant figure, that erect, graceful carriage? |
10958 | Surely you can not go there and stop, waiting at the Inn for days?" |
10958 | Surely, you told me blood- curdling tales of the fights between them and you Broadway boys?" |
10958 | Tell me, are your windows securely fastened?" |
10958 | The boxes are undone, and we need your help; Moppet-- why, what ails the child?" |
10958 | The first wedding in our family-- I wonder whose be the next?" |
10958 | The ice is in fine condition; may I put on your skates?" |
10958 | Then Betty saw half a dozen shadowy forms surround them, and a voice said sharply,"Who goes there? |
10958 | Then aloud,"Have you a bit of paper, friend, on which I can write a message?" |
10958 | Then she started; there was something familiar in the sound-- was any one speaking to her? |
10958 | Then whispering in Betty''s ear,"Did you ever hear Kitty speak of Billy the fiddler?" |
10958 | Then, eying her keenly, as if struck by a sudden thought,"Did you know the man, or was it all pure patriotism?" |
10958 | Think, the tide may turn; we are both young, and who can predict the fortunes of war? |
10958 | Verplanck?" |
10958 | Was I to blame for retaining him?" |
10958 | Well, what of Betty?" |
10958 | Well,"--with a significant smile,--"what have you to tell me?" |
10958 | What are they doing to the horses?" |
10958 | What are we to do with it, Miss Euphemia?" |
10958 | What did all this mean? |
10958 | What did you suppose we were all about?" |
10958 | What do you mean, fellow, by handling a lady in that manner?" |
10958 | What good fortune brought you in contact with Captain Yorke''s patrol? |
10958 | What shall I say to your father for you?" |
10958 | What was this impetuous young man daring to say to her? |
10958 | When are you coming home, Betty? |
10958 | Where did you procure those knots of rose- colored ribbon which adorn the waist? |
10958 | Where is the brave young man who came to your aid? |
10958 | Where is your honored father?" |
10958 | Where''s Betty?" |
10958 | Which one, Clarissa?" |
10958 | Who can say? |
10958 | Who tells you these things, Peter? |
10958 | Whose coach is this? |
10958 | Why did n''t you get here last night?" |
10958 | Why do you flout one who longs to show you his devotion?" |
10958 | Will General Putnam hang my dear, kind gentleman as the British hanged Captain Nathan Hale, and shall we never, never see him more?" |
10958 | Will he go off to- day with all the other redcoats?" |
10958 | Will it please you to enter?" |
10958 | Will you name a toast?" |
10958 | With your permission, may Pompey light the big lantern on the wall?" |
10958 | Would the alarm be speedily given, and would they see him captured and carried to certain death? |
10958 | You are worried, I perceive; can I help you?" |
10958 | You were dancing with him at the De Lanceys''''small and early,''were you not, Kitty, last week?" |
10958 | Your acquaintance is but recent, and, I think, somewhat formal?" |
10958 | and then tiptoeing over the bare floor she opened with small trembling fingers the tiny aperture and whispered,"Are you there?" |
10958 | answered Betty, facing him calmly,"of what nature?" |
10958 | blenty cognac, eh? |
10958 | burst in Kitty;"have you seen the pictures made by the new artist who came from Albany? |
10958 | cried impetuous Betty, interrupting the reader,"how is one to go when the British are in occupation?" |
10958 | echoed the bewildered Gulian,"are you mad or am I dreaming?" |
10958 | exclaimed Miss Euphemia, as she recognized her youngest nephew in one of the wayfarers,"whence come you, and what news? |
10958 | have I been at the bottom of the pond?" |
10958 | said Betty reprovingly,"and what would Aunt Euphemia say to such comments, I wonder?" |
10958 | said the fisherman eagerly;"perhaps you have a billet for me?" |
10958 | shouted Peter, as he flung himself between them;"''t was the prettiest race of the season, was it not, Kitty? |
10958 | starting back half frightened as the instant answer came, close beside her:"Yes, is it time?" |
10958 | what''s that?" |
10958 | wherefore art thou Romeo?" |
38489 | About bad men? |
38489 | Am I late? |
38489 | And I would never have thought of broaching it if I was n''t sure you would look at it in the light it''s offered, you understand? 38489 And are all men bad?" |
38489 | And what are you doing this evening? |
38489 | Anything wrong, Judge? |
38489 | Are you afraid to discuss things you are absorbed in? 38489 Are you tired?" |
38489 | Are you with anyone? |
38489 | Ashamed? |
38489 | But Judge Basine is made, do n''t you think? |
38489 | But men-- there you have something else, do n''t you think? 38489 But what do I want of her?" |
38489 | But why, dearest? 38489 But why?" |
38489 | Ca n''t you keep His Nobs home like a God- fearing man on Sundays? |
38489 | Call me up tomorrow at the office, will you? 38489 Can I do anything, Judge?" |
38489 | Company? |
38489 | Darling, tell me... please tell me-- will you marry me? |
38489 | Did he? |
38489 | Did you hear we were going to war, Lief? |
38489 | Do n''t you love me at all? |
38489 | Do n''t you love me? |
38489 | Do n''t you love me? |
38489 | Do n''t you understand that yet? 38489 Do you know him?" |
38489 | Do you know his work? |
38489 | Do you know what? 38489 Do you love me, George? |
38489 | Do you love me? |
38489 | Do you want to go for a walk? |
38489 | Does it pain you anywhere, Doris? |
38489 | Going to run for Judge, eh? |
38489 | Had n''t you better answer some of these? |
38489 | Have you an engagement? |
38489 | Have you written any more things since last time? |
38489 | He saw...."Who? |
38489 | Henny,he said quickly, he had called her Henny two years before,"are you really in love with Aubrey?" |
38489 | Him? 38489 How do you feel now, Doris?" |
38489 | How do you like him? |
38489 | How is Henrietta? |
38489 | Huh, why do n''t he do something? |
38489 | I do n''t have to go up to the desk with you, do I? |
38489 | Is Doris ill? |
38489 | Is Doris in? |
38489 | Is it something personal? |
38489 | Is n''t it hot though? 38489 Is that so?" |
38489 | It''s easier to drink yourself into forgetfulness than to lie yourself into forgetfulness, eh? 38489 Listen dear, do you want something?" |
38489 | Oh Judge... Judge...."Yes, what is it, Senator? |
38489 | Oh, I hound you? |
38489 | Oh, I think it''s going to be a wonderful success, George? |
38489 | Oh, then it''s the woman''s fault? |
38489 | Oh, what do we care? |
38489 | Really? |
38489 | Ruth,he whispered,"do you love me?" |
38489 | See you at ten tomorrow, eh? |
38489 | Shall I retype the Friday speech, Judge? |
38489 | Tell me, why are men bad? |
38489 | That is the retail merchandise establishment in this city? |
38489 | The Commission? |
38489 | The Hill case? |
38489 | The world been falling on your nose? 38489 Then what do you want?" |
38489 | Tired? 38489 Tired?" |
38489 | Walking my way, Hugh? |
38489 | Well, why waste time? 38489 Well,"he said to her,"how you been? |
38489 | What about the witnesses? 38489 What about?" |
38489 | What are you doing around here, Hugh? |
38489 | What are you doing today? |
38489 | What do you want? |
38489 | What does he write? |
38489 | What happened? |
38489 | What have you been doing, Hugh? |
38489 | What is it you want me to do? |
38489 | What is it you want? |
38489 | What is it you''re trying to say, madam? 38489 What is it, George?" |
38489 | What kind of books do you read? |
38489 | What was that book you told me about, Mr. Gilchrist, last month? |
38489 | What writers do you like? |
38489 | What''s the matter, Dorie? 38489 What''s the matter, Dorie?" |
38489 | What''s the matter, Hugh? 38489 What''s the matter?" |
38489 | What''s wrong, George? |
38489 | What, dear? |
38489 | Where are the children? |
38489 | Where have you been? |
38489 | Where were you and George last night? |
38489 | Where''s a bellboy? 38489 Where''ve you been, Fanny?" |
38489 | Who is he? |
38489 | Who told you that? |
38489 | Who was it? 38489 Who, Henrietta?" |
38489 | Who? |
38489 | Why am I like that? |
38489 | Why do n''t you answer what I say? |
38489 | Why do n''t you go up in George''s room? |
38489 | Why do you say that? |
38489 | Why not? |
38489 | Why not? |
38489 | Why should I be interested? |
38489 | Why? |
38489 | Why? |
38489 | Why? |
38489 | Will you have some of this? |
38489 | Will you stay for tea? |
38489 | Wo n''t you leave me alone? |
38489 | Worried about something? |
38489 | Would what, Hughie? |
38489 | Writing? 38489 Yes I do,"he said,"why should n''t I?" |
38489 | You do n''t expect a man to remain cooped up night and day, do you? |
38489 | Your name? |
38489 | Your position? |
38489 | A new terror, eh?" |
38489 | All for what? |
38489 | And a coward? |
38489 | And before that what were you? |
38489 | And for what reason? |
38489 | And if it destroyed Lief along with the rival, what matter? |
38489 | And if somebody found out something true, what then? |
38489 | And on what did he base this cold- blooded point of view? |
38489 | And the men we know-- the hangers- on around here, comical, eh? |
38489 | And then another question,"Why am I able to do things?" |
38489 | And what''s the result?" |
38489 | And where does He live?" |
38489 | And why did George want her to? |
38489 | And why should she try to help him if she despised him and his type of ambition? |
38489 | And, moreover, despised people and politics in general? |
38489 | Another simile-- borrowed finery, eh? |
38489 | Are n''t they wonderful?" |
38489 | Are n''t you?" |
38489 | Are we going to have any witnesses?" |
38489 | Are you going to be home Tuesday evening?" |
38489 | Business men buried in business pause to blink at their desks and mutter,"Let''s see, where am I?" |
38489 | But I do n''t come in, see? |
38489 | But for what? |
38489 | But how did Aubrey who was a superficial dabbler come by Elizabethan England? |
38489 | But how did he happen to be thinking like that? |
38489 | But now-- what if someone saw them? |
38489 | But the law could not give her back the happiness this scoundrel had snatched from her....""Had he... had he accomplished his purpose with her?" |
38489 | But what did he want her for? |
38489 | But what had he done? |
38489 | But what if she had notions about things? |
38489 | But what if someone did bump into her accidentally? |
38489 | But what would happen if they were told suddenly that Judge Basine was passing them, rubbing shoulders with them? |
38489 | But where do I come in? |
38489 | But why all this make- believe? |
38489 | But why? |
38489 | But why? |
38489 | But why? |
38489 | But you see... you see where it all led? |
38489 | But,"Who are We and what are We?" |
38489 | Core''s picture and Miss Johnson''s picture side by side so that one might almost think, unless one read carefully( and who did that?) |
38489 | Core, particularly if the cross examination placed him and his establishment in an unfavorable light? |
38489 | Damn...."But what could he do? |
38489 | Did he believe there was no God, no heaven, no after life? |
38489 | Did he pity himself, he, George Basine, who was just beginning to ascend? |
38489 | Did he think a young woman could keep virtuous on$ 10 a week? |
38489 | Did n''t they know how dead they were? |
38489 | Did n''t you see how he looked at me? |
38489 | Did she suppose he had spent the night in debauchery? |
38489 | Did you see their eyes shining in the street, and their mouths gloating? |
38489 | Did you see this man beat her?" |
38489 | Do n''t you like Aubrey''s works?" |
38489 | Do n''t you think so, Ruth?" |
38489 | Do you agree?" |
38489 | Do you follow me?" |
38489 | Do you hear that? |
38489 | Do you hear?" |
38489 | Do you know? |
38489 | Do you mind?" |
38489 | Do you really love me?" |
38489 | Do you really think you ought to ask me questions like that, George Basine?" |
38489 | Do you see? |
38489 | Do you understand that?" |
38489 | Ever? |
38489 | Fanny looked at her with a questioning innocence that said,"Dear me, I wonder what people do who walk in the park at night?" |
38489 | For what? |
38489 | For who was this waxen- faced man in the coffin? |
38489 | Full of theories...."Where shall we go, Paul?" |
38489 | Got a knife, Harry? |
38489 | Had he ever sought to determine how many good girls there were in his employ? |
38489 | Had she done something? |
38489 | Has n''t the management provided any fans?" |
38489 | He came forward, and added,"All the comforts of home, eh?" |
38489 | He had seen him-- where? |
38489 | He noticed she failed to add,"Why?" |
38489 | He said to her:"Well, my dear child, and how are you today? |
38489 | He said to himself,"What''s there to this thing? |
38489 | He was a liar, was he? |
38489 | He was afraid to stay away? |
38489 | He was twenty- five years old, neatly dressed, a bit unshaven and whistling valiantly,"Wo n''t you come home, Bill Bailey, wo n''t you come home?" |
38489 | Henrietta answered,"Why do you ask that? |
38489 | How about dinner and a show?" |
38489 | How are you?" |
38489 | How are you?" |
38489 | How could he after last night, how could he dare? |
38489 | How long have you been a prostitute, Winona Johnson? |
38489 | How much do you want? |
38489 | How the Hell... why the Hell? |
38489 | How''s his Honor, these days?" |
38489 | How? |
38489 | I had something, what was it?" |
38489 | If one said to her,"Did you see Sothern and Marlowe last week?" |
38489 | If there was a God, for whom was all this necessary-- the flowers, speeches, prayers? |
38489 | If you do n''t believe this figure out for yourself-- of what are people the most afraid? |
38489 | If you know me, if you know one-- what then? |
38489 | Is n''t it wonderful?" |
38489 | It did n''t, eh? |
38489 | Just gabbing for years and I do n''t come in nowhere.... Get me? |
38489 | Kiss her? |
38489 | Kissed? |
38489 | Like to go hear Lindstrum lecture tonight? |
38489 | Lindstrum?" |
38489 | Listening to reason when the big wigs spoke? |
38489 | Look, she was already old but how had it happened? |
38489 | Lucid thoughts that he later stared back upon and wondered,"What the hell were they? |
38489 | No? |
38489 | Now what was it? |
38489 | Often when she watched him furtively as he wrote out political speeches should would think,"Is there a man there?" |
38489 | Oh, why did I do it? |
38489 | One was walking with a man-- where? |
38489 | Open that window, wo n''t you Jim?" |
38489 | Or had she given her lips? |
38489 | Or why should he seek him out? |
38489 | Perhaps they had something in common? |
38489 | See? |
38489 | She had already lived but how, where? |
38489 | She must destroy-- what? |
38489 | So that was the way to power, eh? |
38489 | Something to idealize and give one''s soul to? |
38489 | That''s sense is n''t it?" |
38489 | The blur of faces in the street, moving along every night, what was that? |
38489 | The cry is no longer"Who is God? |
38489 | The greater this passion, the more violently her pulse beat, the more violently the platitudes would clang and the more outraged her"how dare you?" |
38489 | The heat, do n''t you think? |
38489 | Then how will it benefit us? |
38489 | Then to Aubrey he added,"What are you two pirates after from Basine?" |
38489 | Then what could he do? |
38489 | There is an answer always to''Who are we and what are we?'' |
38489 | They mutter to themselves in the street,"Lets see, where am I?" |
38489 | Think a dozen''ll be enough?" |
38489 | Want me to be teacher?" |
38489 | Was he certain of this? |
38489 | Was he ill? |
38489 | Was he so fond of Doris, then? |
38489 | Was n''t it rather old fashioned? |
38489 | Was she the same as she had been? |
38489 | Well, we''d better do something, do n''t you think?" |
38489 | What did he know about books? |
38489 | What did his mother mean by that? |
38489 | What did she do all day? |
38489 | What did she mean? |
38489 | What did she want of him? |
38489 | What did that mean? |
38489 | What did you want to ask me?" |
38489 | What difference? |
38489 | What do I know about''em? |
38489 | What do you say we walk, Hugh?" |
38489 | What does one want for? |
38489 | What for? |
38489 | What have you been doing?" |
38489 | What if it was a man? |
38489 | What if she did, with Schroder? |
38489 | What is your love of people but a blind infatuation with yourself? |
38489 | What kind of a woman could have loved Keegan? |
38489 | What lies under our senses? |
38489 | What should she call him? |
38489 | What sort of people were they under their poses and behind their words? |
38489 | What was good writing? |
38489 | What was it that had lifted him off the bench? |
38489 | What was no use? |
38489 | What was scandal? |
38489 | What was there to make her cry? |
38489 | What were men and women? |
38489 | What were people for? |
38489 | What were they singing for? |
38489 | What''ll you marry us for, your Honor? |
38489 | What? |
38489 | When he''d been elected judge, he had surprised her by asking,"Would you like to come along with me to the County Building? |
38489 | Where could he have been if not-- in such places? |
38489 | Where was he in the dream? |
38489 | Where were the others going? |
38489 | Where were you employed as a clerk, Winona? |
38489 | Where''s Judge Basine?" |
38489 | Where? |
38489 | Who was Mr. Gilchrist and what had he done that he should be giving himself airs? |
38489 | Who was this man Ware that he could pick him up and cart him to a club and buy him a highball-- and expect to impress him, Basine? |
38489 | Who? |
38489 | Whose humanity are you all the time writing about and singing about? |
38489 | Why are we? |
38489 | Why did Doris want to leave her home? |
38489 | Why did you come up when you saw him? |
38489 | Why do n''t you love me? |
38489 | Why do n''t you think? |
38489 | Why do you ask that?" |
38489 | Why do you ask?" |
38489 | Why had Mrs. Gilchrist insisted upon a home funeral? |
38489 | Why had he come at just that moment? |
38489 | Why had he come? |
38489 | Why had he started the lie? |
38489 | Why had he thought that? |
38489 | Why had she been afraid? |
38489 | Why not? |
38489 | Why should he turn out for her? |
38489 | Why should she be interested in his career? |
38489 | Why should she weep about that, then? |
38489 | Why was he angry? |
38489 | Why was he weeping? |
38489 | Why? |
38489 | Why? |
38489 | Why? |
38489 | Will you?" |
38489 | Would he ever embrace her? |
38489 | Would you like that?" |
38489 | Would you? |
38489 | Years ahead of him and he would end-- where? |
38489 | Yes to what? |
38489 | You do n''t believe a word I say, do you?" |
38489 | You know Jennings?" |
38489 | You mean books? |
38489 | You remember Mr. Ramsey, do n''t you?" |
38489 | You understand? |
38489 | You wo n''t, again? |
38489 | Your name? |
38489 | Your occupation? |
38489 | Your''how dare you?'' |
17588 | = Environment.=--In what measure is a man the product of his environment? |
17588 | = Machinery.=--She must challenge every piece of machinery that meets her gaze with the question"Whence camest thou?" |
17588 | = Story of a boy.=--A seven- year- old boy who was lying on his back on the floor asked his father the question,"How long since the world was born?" |
17588 | And while their eyes are weeping their hearts are saying:"Wha will be a traitor knave? |
17588 | Are such affairs as are described in the beginning of the chapter peculiar to democracies? |
17588 | Are the pupils( and perhaps the teacher) likely to overestimate what is done in the socialized recitation? |
17588 | As corroborating evidence or as a final proof of competence? |
17588 | By what means may public schools assist in the transformation of illiterate foreigners into"intelligent American citizens"? |
17588 | Can a teacher lead pupils to regard work as a privilege rather than as a task, unless she has that attitude herself? |
17588 | Can enthusiasm result if there is a lack of joy in one''s work? |
17588 | Can one do his best without it? |
17588 | Can one instill high ideals in others without frequently absorbing inspiration himself? |
17588 | Can one teacher utilize all of the interests of a child within a nine- month term? |
17588 | Chairman:--Miss Brown, have you any suggestion as to time limit? |
17588 | Could Abraham Lincoln have withheld his pen from the Emancipation Proclamation and permitted the negro race to continue in slavery? |
17588 | Could Christopher Columbus possibly have done otherwise than discover America? |
17588 | Could Julius Cæsar have turned back from the Rubicon and refrained from saying,"The die is cast"? |
17588 | Could any influence have deterred Walter Scott from writing"Kenilworth"? |
17588 | Did some influence of home, or school, or playground give him an impulse and an impetus toward this event? |
17588 | Do most teachers realize to what extent they have influence? |
17588 | Do people seem to realize this truth when they do not build their world as they might? |
17588 | Do the duties of a superintendent have to do only with curriculum and discipline, or have they to do also with teaching power? |
17588 | Do you and your pupils in actual practice regard examinations as an end or as a means to an end? |
17588 | Do you mean to take them article by article? |
17588 | Does acquaintance with the great in history tend to produce merely a good static character, or does it do more? |
17588 | Does education have anything whatever to do in determining what a man will or will not do? |
17588 | Does wit or humor cause most of the laughter in school? |
17588 | Electrical engineering? |
17588 | For what purpose? |
17588 | From what should interest start, and in what should it function? |
17588 | From your experience or observation do you find this true? |
17588 | Has a high degree of culture been attained by a person who must ever be on his guard? |
17588 | Have we been able to eliminate physical defects and develop physical merits in people to the same extent that we have in domestic animals? |
17588 | He made out examination questions in accordance with this plan fifteen years ago and the heavens did n''t fall; then why, pray, change the method? |
17588 | How and by what means may the school bring about a more intelligent choice of tangible and intangible things? |
17588 | How are culture and refinement related to patriotism? |
17588 | How can he be led to larger aims? |
17588 | How can one acquire a clear- cut method? |
17588 | How can one add to his culture? |
17588 | How can teaching be timed approximately? |
17588 | How can the contemplation of a rainbow educate? |
17588 | How can the trained mind get the most out of life and contribute the most to it? |
17588 | How can this be done? |
17588 | How can you make it more of a center than it is? |
17588 | How convince an indolent pupil of this truth? |
17588 | How did Lincoln make use of humor? |
17588 | How direct the pupils''choice of reading matter? |
17588 | How do the motives of the artisan differ from those of the artist? |
17588 | How do the typical recitations of your school contribute to the happiness of your pupils? |
17588 | How do you make your school a center for community life? |
17588 | How does agriculture lead to the exercise of faith? |
17588 | How does socialized class work affect the home and society? |
17588 | How does the author define education? |
17588 | How does the repeating of answers by the teacher affect the pupils? |
17588 | How does the response of the school to a laughable incident reflect the leadership of the teacher? |
17588 | How is an operation in a factory timed? |
17588 | How is his plan applicable in your school? |
17588 | How is the principle applicable in your school? |
17588 | How is the spirit of jealousy among teachers injurious to our school system? |
17588 | How may an understanding of the mutual reaction of the child and his environment assist the teacher in planning for character building in pupils? |
17588 | How may education give rise to self- reliance? |
17588 | How may elementary teachers inculcate the principles of true democracy? |
17588 | How may examinations test intelligence? |
17588 | How may it unfit them? |
17588 | How may lack of thoroughness limit freedom? |
17588 | How may motivation in teaching the multiplication table be assisted by vitalization? |
17588 | How may school discipline recognize democratic principles, thereby laying the foundation of respect for law and order by our future citizens? |
17588 | How may the child''s experience, imagination, and expression be interrelated? |
17588 | How may the monarchical government of a school fit pupils for a democracy? |
17588 | How may the vitalized teacher be distinguished from the traditional teacher in her attitude toward facts? |
17588 | How may the vitalized teacher encourage in pupils the formation of habits of careful diction? |
17588 | How may this difference of concept affect the work of the teacher? |
17588 | How may words be vitalized in composition? |
17588 | How remove unnatural stilted words and expressions from the oral and written expressions of pupils? |
17588 | How shall the teacher proceed in order to make the substitution? |
17588 | How should dividends on school investments be estimated? |
17588 | How should the industrial work in a school be linked with that in the community? |
17588 | How will the reading of such authors improve the teaching ability of elementary teachers? |
17588 | How will this increase the pupils''knowledge of chemistry? |
17588 | How would you demonstrate to pupils that mental work is more exhausting than manual labor? |
17588 | How? |
17588 | If a hundred musicians were writing musical compositions at the same moment, would they offer similar explanations of their behavior? |
17588 | If his property at the school is not in order? |
17588 | If not, why not? |
17588 | If pupils fail to realize it, what can the teacher do to help them? |
17588 | If so, is it the best sort of interest? |
17588 | If so, is this condition peculiar to that type of recitation? |
17588 | If so, what sort of recitation- lesson will stimulate each kind? |
17588 | If the teacher can have lessons finished with greater rapidity, what can be done with the time thus remaining? |
17588 | If there is a deficiency of physical strength? |
17588 | If there is a poor knowledge of the subject? |
17588 | If this is an effect, what and where was the cause? |
17588 | In Hawthorne''s story of the_ Great Stone Face_ what qualities were attained by those whom Ernest expected to grow into the likeness? |
17588 | In our present civilization what conditions may give rise to mental thralldom? |
17588 | In the case of any type of human behavior can we postulate antecedent causes? |
17588 | In the vitalized school, he finds himself busy all day long trying to find answer to the question: What is Truth? |
17588 | In what other ways is the socialized recitation likely to produce better reactions? |
17588 | In what particular way do many teachers lose much of the recitation- lesson or study- lesson period? |
17588 | In what respects do you regard teaching as a privilege? |
17588 | In what respects does society resemble a vitalized school? |
17588 | In what respects is agriculture a noble pursuit? |
17588 | In what respects is it drudgery to you? |
17588 | In what way besides the direct waste of the minutes is the expenditure of undue time unfortunate? |
17588 | In what ways and to what extent should patriotism affect conduct? |
17588 | In what ways is agriculture a typical study? |
17588 | In what ways is good fiction of value to teachers? |
17588 | In what ways is one who has had private instruction likely to be a poorer citizen than one who has attended school? |
17588 | In what ways is vitalization of subject matter related to its socialization? |
17588 | In what ways may the following institutions raise the level of democracy: centralized schools? |
17588 | Is Luther Burbank''s work to be regarded as botanical or as agricultural? |
17588 | Is feeling an important element of culture? |
17588 | Is interest in a subject as an abstract science likely to be an adequate interest? |
17588 | Is it a compliment to be easily recognized as a teacher? |
17588 | Is it comfortable to think that one is an example? |
17588 | Is it fair to demand a higher standard of the teacher and preacher? |
17588 | Is it more desirable to have the pupils develop these powers or to memorize facts? |
17588 | Is it only teachers who need to feel that they are examples? |
17588 | Is it probable that more of this will be done in the future by supervisors and investigators? |
17588 | Is memory of facts the best test of knowledge? |
17588 | Is one likely to overestimate the value of one''s possessions, mental or physical? |
17588 | Is one who reads good literature to acquire culture as yet an"artist"teacher? |
17588 | Is the fact that a class is unusually aroused a reason for decrying a method as sensational? |
17588 | Is the"Golden Rule"a vital principle of patriotism? |
17588 | Is there another subject as important for the city school as agriculture is for the rural school? |
17588 | Is there any humor in the Gettysburg speech? |
17588 | Is there danger of adopting an ideal that, while it is worthy as far as it goes, is merely incidental and not worth while? |
17588 | Is there danger that a teacher may become too appreciative or susceptible-- too poetic in temperament? |
17588 | Is there danger that one may have too much of a good quality, or is the danger not in having too little of some other quality? |
17588 | Is this difference in the concept of the school a vital one? |
17588 | Is this particular episode in his life merely happening, or does some causative influence lie back of this event somewhere in the years? |
17588 | Is this true? |
17588 | Is what one knows or what one does the more important part of it? |
17588 | Just what is meant by"narrowness"in a teacher? |
17588 | Law? |
17588 | May there not be an obscure element in the teacher''s character that is having a deleterious effect? |
17588 | May writing have the essentials of poetry and yet have no regular rhythm? |
17588 | Mr. Chairman, may we have the secretary read the points brought out by yesterday''s recitation? |
17588 | Of the teacher? |
17588 | Or is it only the outstanding features of his conduct that affect the pupils? |
17588 | Or, in other words, are the activities of his earlier life functioning on the bit of paper before him? |
17588 | Self- respect? |
17588 | Should teachers try to eradicate or sublimate these sentiments? |
17588 | Should the chief aim of language work in the grades be force, accuracy, or elegance in the use of language? |
17588 | So, when this boy asks What is Truth? |
17588 | Subject to what limitations should a successful teacher be a politician? |
17588 | Teacher:--Mr. Chairman, may we have the secretary read the several points in the assignment? |
17588 | Teaching? |
17588 | That one may have influence is it enough for one to be good, or is it what one does that counts? |
17588 | The question"Is she a school- teacher?" |
17588 | Then after another interval, he asked,"What was there before the world was born?" |
17588 | Then the very pertinent question is asked,"Which century will see Life?" |
17588 | To what extent does the richness of our lives depend on the way we react to stimuli? |
17588 | To what extent does the school share the responsibility for the improvement of the physical and moral quality of the children of the future? |
17588 | To what extent is a man able to influence his environment? |
17588 | To what extent is education the process of enlarging the content of words? |
17588 | To what extent is the study of agriculture important in the city school? |
17588 | To what extent must individual differences be recognized by the teacher in the recitation? |
17588 | To which of these sciences do plant variation and improvement properly belong? |
17588 | Under what conditions can one have joy in his work? |
17588 | Upon what does the vitalization of a school mainly depend? |
17588 | Upon what else does it depend in part? |
17588 | Upon what is mental freedom conditioned? |
17588 | Was Robert Fulton''s invention of the steamboat inevitable? |
17588 | Was this a satisfactory response? |
17588 | Wha can fill a coward''s grave? |
17588 | Wha so base as be a slave? |
17588 | What advantages are there in having variety in one''s plans? |
17588 | What agencies have been employed with the expectation that they would improve the school? |
17588 | What are some items of school work upon which some teachers spend time that they should devote to finding materials suited to the child''s interests? |
17588 | What are some of the characteristics that gain one the distinction of being an"artist"teacher? |
17588 | What are some of the results that have accrued from the timing of work by efficiency experts? |
17588 | What are some of the things that have been done to improve physical man? |
17588 | What are some of the ways in which you have known superintendents successfully to increase the teaching power of the teachers? |
17588 | What are some of the weaknesses of democracy which the public school may remedy? |
17588 | What are some reasons for the scarcity of physically perfect men and women? |
17588 | What are suitable sources? |
17588 | What are the benefits of such a type of training as military training? |
17588 | What are the characteristics of sensationalism? |
17588 | What are the distinguishing characteristics of the vitalized teacher? |
17588 | What are the inherent rights of childhood? |
17588 | What are the objections to teaching the book? |
17588 | What are the objections to teaching the subject? |
17588 | What are the proper remedies for this? |
17588 | What are the reasons why some of these have not accomplished more? |
17588 | What are the reasons? |
17588 | What are the results of an undue expenditure of time in this way? |
17588 | What are the teacher''s functions in such a recitation? |
17588 | What are the teacher''s functions in the traditional recitation? |
17588 | What attainments or qualities have you yet to acquire in order to stand out as"distinctive and regnant"to a good many pupils? |
17588 | What benefits accrue to a teacher from the study of a subject in its ramifications? |
17588 | What books could you read to the pupils to enliven some of the subjects that you teach? |
17588 | What branches of study should have for their sole function to stimulate the growth of patriotism? |
17588 | What can be done to bring humor into essays written by the students? |
17588 | What can be done to bring more or better humor into the school? |
17588 | What causes historical facts to seem commonplace? |
17588 | What conditions might cause some of those who go through school to be polluted instead of rectified? |
17588 | What constitutes character? |
17588 | What corollary can be drawn on the advisability of the employment of no teachers except those recommended by competent supervisors? |
17588 | What definition of education will best harmonize with the ideals of this chapter? |
17588 | What diseases that invade society would be checked if in school the stream of life were rectified? |
17588 | What do these functions of the school and of its studies teach us regarding the adaptation of subjects and methods to the individual? |
17588 | What do you think is the practicable way of helping the pupils in your school to develop along the lines of their natural endowment? |
17588 | What do you think of a person who prefers new books? |
17588 | What do you think of a teacher who asserts that no important advance has been made in educational theory and practice since, say, 1910? |
17588 | What do you think of a teacher who persists in"meaningless formalities"? |
17588 | What do you think of his practice? |
17588 | What do you think of one who prefers sensational books? |
17588 | What education should result from a view of Niagara Falls? |
17588 | What educational agency in your state first reflected the need of scientific instruction in agriculture? |
17588 | What elements should be emphasized in history to make it seem alive with meaning? |
17588 | What evils necessarily accompany examinations? |
17588 | What evils usually accompany them? |
17588 | What further training should the school give in better living than to teach the pupils what it is? |
17588 | What have they in common to justify this? |
17588 | What hint may the teacher of geography receive from the brief description of London''s points of interest? |
17588 | What is essential in vitalizing a school? |
17588 | What is meant by an"aptitude for vicariousness"? |
17588 | What is meant by the school''s being the"melting- pot"? |
17588 | What is meant by the time element in teaching? |
17588 | What is meant by the"socialized recitation"as the term is here used? |
17588 | What is meant by"bigness"? |
17588 | What is now the general attitude toward it? |
17588 | What is poetry? |
17588 | What is the effect on society when a man does work for which he is not fitted? |
17588 | What is the essence of the"gang spirit"? |
17588 | What is the general function of the school? |
17588 | What is the inference concerning one''s culture if his clothes and body are not clean? |
17588 | What is the measure of how far she should be expected to do so? |
17588 | What is the primary purpose of each school study, for instance, language? |
17588 | What is the purpose of rhyme? |
17588 | What is the relation between the waste of time in school and the exodus of children from the upper grades? |
17588 | What is the relation of pathos to humor? |
17588 | What is the relation of the school to complete living? |
17588 | What is the result on one''s work of brooding over troubles? |
17588 | What is the source of humor in a humorous story? |
17588 | What is the teacher''s chief reward? |
17588 | What is the true purpose of grammar? |
17588 | What is their effect if the teacher is taken as an ideal? |
17588 | What is to be included in the term"read"in the sentence"She can teach reading because she can read"? |
17588 | What kind of teaching is needed to meet this responsibility? |
17588 | What kinds of arts are there other than the fine arts? |
17588 | What may be done to prevent a child going outside the school to find something congenial? |
17588 | What may be done, in the matter of bodily positions, to improve mental time- reactions of the student? |
17588 | What may the school do to give helpful direction and needed modifications to the instinct of acquisition? |
17588 | What may the vitalized teacher do to assist in the development of self- expression? |
17588 | What modes of self- expression should be used by pupils of elementary schools? |
17588 | What objection is there to the expression"getting an education"? |
17588 | What of the Psalms? |
17588 | What powerful appeal for clean living may be made to the adolescent youth? |
17588 | What principle of the drama comes into play in teaching, when a teacher desires to invest the subject with life? |
17588 | What principles of teaching did Tom Sawyer apply? |
17588 | What purposes are actually achieved by examinations? |
17588 | What qualities of citizens are inconsistent with a high level of democracy? |
17588 | What qualities would a teacher have to possess that her influence aside from her teaching might be of more value than the teaching itself? |
17588 | What questions should we ask ourselves about the things that are being done in our schools? |
17588 | What resemblances has the process of education to the evolution of machinery? |
17588 | What result besides waste of time may come of a cumbersome method of teaching? |
17588 | What should be a student''s motive in choosing a course? |
17588 | What should be the teacher''s rule in regard to digressions? |
17588 | What should she refrain from doing? |
17588 | What suggestion is made in this chapter in regard to the planning of school buildings? |
17588 | What suggestions are offered for the vitalization of mathematics? |
17588 | What things do we need to know about a child in order to utilize his interests? |
17588 | What things may offset this tendency? |
17588 | What two factors must be considered in estimating mental work with a view to time considerations? |
17588 | What use may be made of play in the education of children? |
17588 | What usually makes one teacher disparage the work of another? |
17588 | What works of Dante have you read? |
17588 | What would be a better expression to indicate the purpose of attending school? |
17588 | What would you expect to gain from a course in school administration? |
17588 | When should she not do so? |
17588 | When should the teacher laugh with the school? |
17588 | Wherein does physical training seem to have failed to attain its ends? |
17588 | Which of these have to do primarily with heredity and which with rearing or training? |
17588 | Who first stated this definition? |
17588 | Whose fault would it be? |
17588 | Why are there fewer students in the higher than in the lower grades of most schools? |
17588 | Why are"question and answer"publications antagonistic to modern educational practice? |
17588 | Why did Ernest''s face come to resemble that of the great stone face? |
17588 | Why does the character of the books one reads most serve as an index of one''s own character? |
17588 | Why harmful to students? |
17588 | Why has the question of school lunches gained so much prominence recently? |
17588 | Why is education not satisfactorily defined by saying that it is a preparation for complete living? |
17588 | Why is extended reading essential to success in teaching? |
17588 | Why is it a calamity to a community for a boy to fail to graduate from the high school? |
17588 | Why is it desirable that pupils shall not lose their individuality in passing through school? |
17588 | Why is it especially important for a teacher to be thoroughly acquainted with the great characters of history? |
17588 | Why is it more important to acquire ideals than to acquire knowledge? |
17588 | Why is it unwise for teacher or pupils to boast of the achievements of the school? |
17588 | Why is one who is living the complete life sure to be altruistic? |
17588 | Why is poetry especially valuable to the teacher? |
17588 | Why is the possession of healthy bodies a matter of national concern? |
17588 | Why is the twentieth century called the"age of the child"? |
17588 | Why is work a blessing? |
17588 | Why or why not? |
17588 | Why or why not? |
17588 | Why should a teacher have great joy in the teaching of science? |
17588 | Why should care be taken in choosing the decorations of a school? |
17588 | Why should every teacher strive to be a"ten- minute"teacher, and why should every supervisor strive to recommend no others? |
17588 | Why should one avoid the sensational in school work? |
17588 | Why was its importance not realized until recently? |
17588 | Why? |
17588 | Why? |
17588 | Why? |
17588 | Why? |
17588 | Why? |
17588 | Why? |
17588 | Why? |
17588 | Why? |
17588 | With what spirit should a teacher prepare to teach about the thirteen colonies? |
17588 | Would these prove effective in a class taught in the ordinary way? |
17588 | Would you appreciate it? |
17588 | Would you resent the timing of your work? |
17588 | a thousand voices in the school and outside the school repeat the question to him: What is Truth? |
17588 | and"Does this apply in our own city?" |
17588 | and"In case the President or Congress failed in their duty, what could the people do about it?" |
17588 | evening schools? |
17588 | history? |
17588 | in discipline? |
17588 | junior high schools? |
17588 | language? |
17588 | means one thing; but the question"Can she teach school?" |
17588 | moonlight schools? |
17588 | of Shakespeare? |
17588 | of Victor Hugo? |
17588 | of high schools? |
17588 | public officials? |
17588 | reading? |
17588 | the attitude of the pupil? |
17588 | the people? |
17588 | the press? |
17588 | thrift? |
17588 | to the evolution of biological species? |
17588 | vocational schools? |
32163 | ''But you surely do not consider his case and mine alike?'' 32163 ''Is there no way to spare his life?'' |
32163 | Afterward general, papa? |
32163 | Ah, papa, I do not often object by word or look to your decisions nowadays, do I? |
32163 | Ah? 32163 And God can take care of us there just as well as anywhere else, ca n''t he, papa?" |
32163 | And as they burned the town, there are no Revolutionary houses to be seen there now, I suppose? |
32163 | And carry us to some historical scenes, wo n''t it, papa? |
32163 | And did he go right into our army, papa? |
32163 | And did the British find out what was going on and attack our fellows? |
32163 | And for papa to have these young girls all to himself, eh? |
32163 | And how is it now? |
32163 | And how soon does January come, papa? |
32163 | And if the repairs are finished, will you send for her? |
32163 | And is Wilkesbarre an Indian name too? |
32163 | And it was a dreadfully hard fight for them; was n''t it, grandma? |
32163 | And it was then he built the Fort Meigs you are taking us to, papa? |
32163 | And now what can I do for your entertainment? 32163 And see the tree the silver bullet man was hung on?" |
32163 | And that encouraged emigration to the Northwestern Territory, did it not, papa? |
32163 | And the majority decide, I suppose? |
32163 | And then we will start on our return journey, I suppose? |
32163 | And there are boats passing up and down every day, I suppose? |
32163 | And they are off, are they, father? 32163 And they listened to it all and never suspected him?" |
32163 | And was Washington good to his wife and child? |
32163 | And was nobody hurt, papa? |
32163 | And was so filled with interesting occurrences that you hardly thought of your absent friends? |
32163 | And was the rock too high and steep to climb, papa? |
32163 | And were any of our people killed? |
32163 | And who are you that dares to say such saucy things to our company? |
32163 | And you will let me help you in that, sir? |
32163 | And you, Grace, had so long a ride this morning that you are too tired for another, I presume? |
32163 | And you, papa? 32163 Are there not a good many places in this neighborhood where something happened during the Revolution, papa?" |
32163 | Are we about starting, Lu? |
32163 | Are we going right on now to the islands in Lake Erie, papa? |
32163 | Are you all too tired of travel to enjoy a sail-- perhaps only a short one-- up or down the river? |
32163 | Are you not willing that we should, father? |
32163 | Are you not willing to be on the_ Dolphin_ with us? |
32163 | Because Jesus died for us and washed them all away in his precious blood? |
32163 | Because the war was over? |
32163 | Being a spy? |
32163 | But I am a Yankee, am I not? |
32163 | But it does n''t lie there now? |
32163 | But perhaps the repairs you said she needed are not finished yet? |
32163 | But when and where and how should I tell about Jesus to others? |
32163 | But where''s that little pup that was in my pocket? |
32163 | But who''ll take care of us? |
32163 | But you did n''t because you wanted to give me and all the rest a pleasant surprise? |
32163 | But you''ll do some more for us some other time, wo n''t you, Uncle Ronald? |
32163 | But, mamma, why do n''t you and I stay with him? 32163 But, now, please wo n''t you go on and tell us some more? |
32163 | Ca n''t Gracie and I occupy it to- night, papa? 32163 Ca n''t we go and see the Robinson House, on the other side of the river, papa?" |
32163 | Can I go to you on the deck in the morning, papa? |
32163 | Captain, was it not at Erie that General Wayne died? |
32163 | Certainly, my son, he is the creator of all things, the ruler of all the universe, and''none can stay his hand or say unto him, What doest thou?'' |
32163 | Congress rewarded the men who took Andrà © prisoner, did it not, papa? |
32163 | Cousin Ronald on your shoulder? |
32163 | Did all of our men get shot? |
32163 | Did he go over to the British, papa? 32163 Did he have any more such escapes, uncle?" |
32163 | Did he return here, captain? |
32163 | Did he stay in this country till the war was over, papa? |
32163 | Did it do them any good to burn down the town, grandma? |
32163 | Did n''t the British despise him, papa? |
32163 | Did n''t they even try at all, uncle? |
32163 | Did not Washington go from New Windsor to Peekskill? |
32163 | Did our people get back the other fort, uncle? |
32163 | Did the women and children run away, papa? |
32163 | Did you invite him, papa, and who is he? |
32163 | Did you order it brought here? |
32163 | Did you sleep well? |
32163 | Dinna ye think so? |
32163 | Do n''t I? |
32163 | Do n''t you think we should take Eva to visit the different islands in this group, papa? |
32163 | Do you think he was as great a man as Napoleon, captain? |
32163 | Do you think of going there to- day, papa? |
32163 | Evelyn, what have you to say? 32163 Fighting the British in the Revolutionary War, do you mean, grandma?" |
32163 | Fired by the Americans, papa, or by the British? |
32163 | Have I said we could n''t? |
32163 | Have n''t you another little story for us, mother? |
32163 | Have we far to go now to get to Fort Meigs? 32163 He got into a boat, papa?" |
32163 | He was n''t so bad a man as Arnold, was he, uncle? |
32163 | How can we know if we belong to him, papa? |
32163 | How could it be you? 32163 How could it get away so fast? |
32163 | How far from New York is Newburgh, papa? |
32163 | How much of it, papa? |
32163 | I hope he did n''t get killed, papa? |
32163 | I hope you too are satisfied, sir? |
32163 | I often say to myself,''How could I ever live without my dear father?'' 32163 I suppose Crosby was a born American, uncle?" |
32163 | I suppose they accepted it? |
32163 | I think Wayne was wounded in the fight, was n''t he? |
32163 | I think history says that Andrà © went through it all very bravely; does it not, captain? |
32163 | I think there was something known of Arnold''s plot in England at that time; was there not, captain? |
32163 | I wonder if Walter wo n''t be joining us soon? |
32163 | In the meantime we may talk the matter over, I suppose, and see what the majority is in favor of? |
32163 | Is Fort Stephenson still standing, papa? |
32163 | Is Wyoming an English name? |
32163 | Is he alive now, papa? |
32163 | Is his grave there now, papa? |
32163 | Is it haste to catch the first glimpse of Erie-- not lake but city-- that has brought you on deck so soon? |
32163 | Is it right to hang a man just for being a spy? |
32163 | Is it your doing? 32163 Is not that vicinity the scene of many of the incidents given in Cooper''s''Spy''?" |
32163 | Is that a real, true story, papa? |
32163 | Is that where we are going? |
32163 | Is that why you are growing up, Uncle Walter? |
32163 | Is the boy blind, that he goes right past a body and never sees him? |
32163 | Is the storm over, father, do you think? |
32163 | Is there a storm coming, father? |
32163 | Is your sister Grace up yet? |
32163 | It means a relation, does n''t it? |
32163 | It''s always wicked on one side, but sometimes right on the other; is n''t it, grandma? |
32163 | Just where is it, papa? |
32163 | Kingston is a very old place, is it not? |
32163 | Like papa? |
32163 | May I run down and see, papa? |
32163 | Meaning Grace and yourself, I suppose? |
32163 | Nathan Hale? 32163 New York was a slave State at that time?" |
32163 | No; what business has he to treat you so? |
32163 | Not? |
32163 | Now, is n''t it my turn, Eva? |
32163 | Oh, Chester, Chester, where are you hurt? |
32163 | Oh, Chester, how could I help it, when you have almost died for me? |
32163 | Oh, ca n''t you tell us the whole story of it now, papa, and let us go to the place to- morrow? |
32163 | Oh, can you paint out the house, father? |
32163 | Oh, is it, papa? |
32163 | Oh, it was just you, was it, Cousin Ronald? |
32163 | Oh, papa, did he go and fight against his country? |
32163 | Oh, papa, surely they did n''t surrender without fighting at all? |
32163 | Oh, what about it, papa? |
32163 | Ought I, papa? |
32163 | Papa, are we going to visit any more places in this State where they had fights? |
32163 | Papa, ca n''t you have our yacht brought here for us to go in? |
32163 | Papa, did Major Croghan go to the general? 32163 Papa, did somebody call you?" |
32163 | Papa, did the British carry off those of our men they had taken prisoners? |
32163 | Papa, has Chester said anything to you? |
32163 | Papa, was n''t the home of Captain Molly somewhere in this neighborhood? |
32163 | Papa, what is there to see at Fishkill? 32163 Papa, when will Brother Max come home?" |
32163 | Papa, why ca n''t we have our yacht come here so that we can go up and down in it? |
32163 | Papa, you know you promised to tell about Nathan Hale; please wo n''t you do it now? |
32163 | Papa,said Ned,"might n''t I ask him to stop this storm, so we could go right on home?" |
32163 | Please, dear, good folks, wo n''t you all say what you want? |
32163 | Say, youngsters, what have you done with my little dog? 32163 Seeing he has grown too auld to be trusted wi''wark in that line, eh, captain?" |
32163 | So that we can start on our homeward journey? |
32163 | So they came across the ocean and up this river and settled near Kingston, did they, grandma? |
32163 | Suppose I take you to Newburgh, which is not very far away, and let you see the Hasbrouck House, Washington''s old headquarters? 32163 That Smith was a traitor too, was he not, captain?" |
32163 | That scoundrel is dead? |
32163 | The fort the British had built upon our ground without so much as saying by your leave? |
32163 | The massacre of St. Bartholomew was before that, was n''t it, grandma? |
32163 | The schoolroom as well as the rest? |
32163 | The time will soon pass; and, to make it go faster, shall we not row over to one of the islands and have a stroll on the beach? |
32163 | Then she is still free? |
32163 | Then the Protestants moved away to escape being killed? |
32163 | Then why did he get in my pocket? |
32163 | Then you do n''t apprehend any danger? |
32163 | Then you will go over there, wo n''t you, father? |
32163 | There are not many more historic scenes in this State that we will care to visit at this time, are there, papa? |
32163 | There were some fights there-- weren''t there, papa? |
32163 | This will not be your first visit to Newburgh and the Hasbrouck House, mother? |
32163 | Though occasionally not altogether agreeable to my eldest daughter, eh? |
32163 | To be called a spy, papa? |
32163 | To letting you tell your tale of love? |
32163 | To- morrow is Friday, but you do n''t think it would be unlucky to start on a journey for that reason, father? |
32163 | Was Erie a city at the time Perry''s fleet was built there, papa? |
32163 | Was Kingston only a very little place then, grandma? |
32163 | Was Proctor pleased with that answer, papa? |
32163 | Was Tecumseh one of the deserters, papa? |
32163 | Was anybody killed before that, papa? |
32163 | Was anybody killed, papa? |
32163 | Was n''t it somewhere in that region that Wayne fought one or more of his battles with the Indians? |
32163 | Was n''t it there, father, that some of them had proposed to make him king? |
32163 | Was the camp in the town, papa? |
32163 | Wayne was very much praised for the taking of Stony Point, was n''t he, papa? |
32163 | We have given you a surprise, have n''t we? |
32163 | We will have a sermon, prayers, and hymns this morning, and a Bible class this afternoon, wo n''t we, papa? |
32163 | We will start for home pretty soon, father, wo n''t we? |
32163 | We will take up our studies again, papa, just as the little ones do, will we not? |
32163 | Well, daughter, what would you like to do to- day? |
32163 | Well, papa, where shall we go, or what shall we do, to- day? |
32163 | Were the Huguenots there when all that happened, grandma? |
32163 | Were the Indians all gone from about Kingston by that time, grandma? |
32163 | Were you giving the boys a history of Kingston? |
32163 | What do you say, mother? |
32163 | What does go with the little scamp? |
32163 | What does that mean, grandma? |
32163 | What may be yours, Eva? 32163 What was that war about, papa?" |
32163 | What would you think of a trip up to Kingston-- to view it as one of the scenes of Revolutionary occurrences? |
32163 | What''ll he do? 32163 When the folks on one side are fighting for freedom, that''s right, is n''t it?" |
32163 | When was it that Washington was there? |
32163 | Where are we going to- morrow, papa? |
32163 | Where are you going to take us to- morrow, papa? |
32163 | Where did it go to? |
32163 | Where did they go, grandma? |
32163 | Where there were battles fought, son? 32163 Where would you like to go to- morrow?" |
32163 | Who are you, anyhow? |
32163 | Who owns this house now? |
32163 | Who was it? |
32163 | Who would dare call me that? |
32163 | Why did n''t our men dig a well? |
32163 | Why did they name this place Tarrytown, uncle? |
32163 | Why not go to Fishkill to- morrow? |
32163 | Why, papa? |
32163 | Why, where did he go? 32163 Why, who was it? |
32163 | Why,exclaimed the little fellow,"who said that? |
32163 | Will it be a long voyage, captain? |
32163 | Will that suit you, my dear? |
32163 | Will we go on shore at Kingston, papa? |
32163 | Will we have school to- morrow, papa? |
32163 | Will you be mine? |
32163 | Wo n''t you please tell us something about Baron Steuben, papa? |
32163 | Yes, children,said Lucilla;"do n''t you remember papa''s telling us about some of the fights near Lake Erie, and Perry''s victory on the lake?" |
32163 | Yes, sir; and has he not been caught and returned to his prison? |
32163 | Yes, sir; but may n''t I stay with you for a little while? 32163 Yet there are times when one is really weary, that rest is right, are there not?" |
32163 | You could telegraph, could n''t you, papa? |
32163 | You remember the bit of news-- in regard to the escape of a convict-- which hastened our departure for the North some months ago? |
32163 | You, sir? |
32163 | ''Do you know where we now are?'' |
32163 | ''Sir, is not General Arnold here?'' |
32163 | ''What place is it?'' |
32163 | ''Where is General Proctor?'' |
32163 | ''Whom can we trust now?'' |
32163 | An officer by his side asked,''Why this emotion, sir?'' |
32163 | And he saith unto them, Why are ye fearful, O ye of little faith? |
32163 | And you''ll tell us about the land fights, wo n''t you, papa?" |
32163 | Are all well at Fairview?" |
32163 | Are you growing homesick?" |
32163 | Are you not of the same opinion, mother?" |
32163 | Bailey?" |
32163 | But he did not live in Massachusetts?" |
32163 | But what doings there have you to tell of, captain?" |
32163 | But you are not willing that he should tell his love?--not willing to give me to him, however much he may desire it?" |
32163 | CHAPTER V."How many would like to take another trip up or down the river to- morrow?" |
32163 | Can you not give me a little love in return?" |
32163 | Carest thou not that we perish? |
32163 | Cousin Ronald, what can you tell us or read us on the subject?" |
32163 | Dinsmore?" |
32163 | Do all the company feel the same desire that Mrs. Lilburn has just expressed?" |
32163 | Do n''t you think so, daughter?" |
32163 | Do n''t you, grandma?" |
32163 | Do n''t you, grandma?" |
32163 | Do you mean to run into us? |
32163 | Eric adding:"Have you been down by the river? |
32163 | Have you any plans you would like carried out?" |
32163 | Hope you all arrived safely and well?" |
32163 | How canst thou lie asleep, When each moment so madly is threatening A grave in the angry deep? |
32163 | How does he get away so fast?" |
32163 | How long since you arrived?" |
32163 | How many would like that?" |
32163 | I hope you are not ill- pleased to own so auld a cousin?" |
32163 | I suppose you left Grace still asleep?" |
32163 | Is he still living, papa?" |
32163 | Is not that so, Elsie and Ned?" |
32163 | Is not this army composed of the same materials as that which fought and conquered under the immortal Wayne? |
32163 | It is your wish, mother, is it not?" |
32163 | Just then a rather discordant voice was heard calling,"Lu, Lu, what you''bout? |
32163 | Little Elsie, who was sitting close beside it, sprang up with a startled cry of"Oh, whose dog and cat are they?" |
32163 | Lucilla, can you tell us of a Bible saint who had learned this lesson?" |
32163 | My husband will go with me, I know; and you too, Cousin Elsie, will you not?" |
32163 | Now, what are you all laughing at?" |
32163 | Papa, have n''t we just the very best country in all the world?" |
32163 | Papa, how shall we spend this evening?" |
32163 | Papa, is n''t that cloud spreading and growing darker?" |
32163 | Papa,"turning to him,"shall we have our usual stroll back and forth upon the deck-- Percy joining us, if he wishes?" |
32163 | She followed him into the library, asking,"Have n''t you some letters to be answered, father? |
32163 | She gave him a rather startled, inquiring look, asking,"About what, papa?" |
32163 | So he was as bad as a murderer; was n''t he?" |
32163 | Sydney said inquiringly,"Lady Washington was here with her husband, was she not?" |
32163 | That part was built in 1750, was it not?" |
32163 | The captain paused in his narrative, and Eric asked,"What did Arnold write to Washington about, uncle?" |
32163 | The dominion of Christ, is it not, father?" |
32163 | The morning found them all in good health and good spirits, and as they sat about the breakfast table the captain asked:"Where shall we go to- day? |
32163 | Then a loud, rough voice said:"Hello there, youngsters, what are you bothering with that stupid old fellow for? |
32163 | Then a voice seemed to come from a distant corner:"Ca n''t you let that poor old man alone? |
32163 | Then, turning to Violet,"Could not you give us a bit o''sacred music, cousin?" |
32163 | They knew they had somewhere seen something like it before-- but where? |
32163 | They were surprised at first, laughed, asking,"Was that you, Uncle Ronald?" |
32163 | This-- Lake Erie-- is as much of a sea as the Lake of Tiberias or Sea of Galilee, is n''t it, papa?" |
32163 | Was he not rewarded for his gallant defence of Fort Stephenson?" |
32163 | Was it not so, papa?" |
32163 | Well, is that fellow living or dead?" |
32163 | Well, you came to say good- night to your father in the usual way, I suppose?" |
32163 | Were you moping at home all the time?" |
32163 | What are your opinions and feelings on the subject, my dear?" |
32163 | What do you say to it, captain?" |
32163 | What''s the matter here to- night, that we hear so many folks that we ca n''t see?" |
32163 | What''s the matter with me? |
32163 | What''s the way to do it?" |
32163 | Where is it?" |
32163 | Who was he, papa? |
32163 | Why did n''t I think before? |
32163 | Why do n''t you leave him and go off to your sports? |
32163 | Why, you are out unusually early, are you not?" |
32163 | Will we not, captain?" |
32163 | Will you please read it to us?" |
32163 | With a startled jump and exclamation,"Oh, how did it get in there?" |
32163 | Wo n''t you let us?" |
32163 | Wo n''t you please send for it?" |
32163 | Would n''t you, Neddie?" |
32163 | am I going blind?" |
32163 | and how many doors?" |
32163 | and is it just as it was when Harrison and his men were there?" |
32163 | and is there a walk along down by the waters edge?" |
32163 | and shall I not write them for you on the typewriter?" |
32163 | and was he very cross to him?" |
32163 | and what did he do?" |
32163 | and what happened there in the Revolution?" |
32163 | and where did she go to?" |
32163 | and why could n''t we see him?" |
32163 | and without anybody seeing it?" |
32163 | asked Don;"and why do n''t you show yourself? |
32163 | asked her father, as she paused;"do you care for him at all? |
32163 | can you give him any return of affection?" |
32163 | did you bring that dog here?" |
32163 | did you sleep well?" |
32163 | exclaimed Ned;"then who invited you?" |
32163 | is n''t that a rash choice?" |
32163 | p''raps hurt me worse than the bee has?" |
32163 | she leaves soon?" |
32163 | the world is well rid of him; but what has become of his soul?" |
32163 | they all exclaimed; Grace adding,"And, papa, wo n''t you take us to Gibraltar? |
32163 | what are you now, sonny?" |
32163 | who can she have been?" |
41411 | ''How? 41411 ''Is that a friar passing?'' |
41411 | ''Say ye so? 41411 ''Shall we?'' |
41411 | ''Sink the ship?'' 41411 ''Then I entreat you, tell me if to the best of your own convictions, this your story is, in substance, really true? |
41411 | ''What are you making there?'' 41411 ''What do you think? |
41411 | ''What do you want of me?'' 41411 ''Where are you bound? |
41411 | ''Why not? 41411 ''Will you be so good as to bring the priest also, Don?'' |
41411 | ''Will you promise not to touch us, if we do?'' 41411 Ah, Master John,"said she, clasping his nerveless hand--"well, the fields be pleasant now-- I hope you are come to stay a bit? |
41411 | Am I reinstated in my grade? |
41411 | And do you think that he would have gone thus far, sir? |
41411 | And never buys? |
41411 | And the narrative is true? |
41411 | And what sayd he, mother, to that? |
41411 | And yet you are not much above four or five- and- twenty years of age? |
41411 | Are you a native of----? |
41411 | Are you not ashamed of yourself? |
41411 | Are you sure? |
41411 | At whose suit? |
41411 | Ay? 41411 But can she talk?" |
41411 | But the prince rejected the proposal? |
41411 | But, friend,said the cautious miser,"how often will it be requisite to bleed me?" |
41411 | But_ apropos_ of what do you puzzle us with these queries on courage? |
41411 | Can you doubt the author? |
41411 | Cocquerel, the Guernseyman you mean? |
41411 | Come, give over weeping, dearest mother;''twill do neither him, you, nor us anie goode.... What was your first speech of him? |
41411 | Cut himself loose, do you say, lieutenant? |
41411 | Did not stern old Sam Johnson say he could never write but from want? |
41411 | Did not you say that you made, at least, a guinea a- week? |
41411 | Do you know, with any certainty, in what language Adam declared his love to Eve? |
41411 | Do you want me? |
41411 | Do you write orthographically? |
41411 | How can you be dull enough to ask? 41411 How did the fellow propose the act? |
41411 | How do you know that, sir? |
41411 | How do you mean? |
41411 | How old are you, my dear? |
41411 | How to others? |
41411 | I ca n''t quite agree with you,said Randal, taking his leave;"but you must allow me to call again-- will the same hour to- morrow suit you?" |
41411 | I thought it would be useless; when they made so little of a Condà ©, what right had I to suppose they would think much about me? |
41411 | I will stay with you, my kind friend,said Burley, with unusual meekness--"I can have the old room, then?" |
41411 | I wish to be bled,said he;"what is your charge?" |
41411 | I? |
41411 | In other words, the Count D''Artois,said the count;"did it not strike you so?" |
41411 | Is it here? |
41411 | Is it indeed so? |
41411 | Is it insensibility to fear? 41411 Is that all?" |
41411 | Is the descendant of a Condà © ashamed to own his name? |
41411 | Is there a copy of the Holy Evangelists in the Golden Inn, gentlemen? 41411 Is there any other living who could have dared to make such a proposal but the count? |
41411 | Is there no mention of my restoration to the service? |
41411 | Joanna behaved very well, did not she? |
41411 | La, Austin, how can you say so? |
41411 | Man, launched into life,said Napoleon,"asks himself, whence do I come? |
41411 | Monsieur le Comte,pursued the gallant captain,"are you, too, in a jesting mood? |
41411 | My dear Constantine,said he,"I thought you intended to stay at Greendale a much longer time?" |
41411 | My dear friend,said I to him one day,"how have you managed to be so happy in your marriage?" |
41411 | Never better, child, sayst thou? 41411 Never were one?" |
41411 | No; but I mean to ask, were the sentiments your own, without any external influence, or any persuasions from others? |
41411 | Not the Colonel Mahon who commanded the 13th Cuirassiers? |
41411 | Now, madam,said he,"where shall we carry you?" |
41411 | Of course suborned by England? 41411 Oh, yes; some that the dear lady left behind her; and perhaps you would like to look at some papers in her own writing?" |
41411 | Or that this acknowledgment for eight hundred was not given? |
41411 | Out of the bill, good fellow? |
41411 | Perhaps,said he, with a half- sneer,"Monsieur de Tiernay might refuse to accept my excuses?" |
41411 | Poor fellow,he said in a whisper, to his fair companion,"would it not be a pity to disturb him?" |
41411 | Shall I keep the purse again, Leonard? |
41411 | So that you are not a royalist? |
41411 | Soe then, sweetheart, he sayth,''Come, tell me, Mrs. Alice, how long do you think we might reckon on living to enjoy it?'' 41411 Surely, Evers, you are not thinking of that in earnest, are you?" |
41411 | That is, I never knew him to be the duke till the moment of his arrest? |
41411 | The tabernacle of our earthly joys And sorrows, hopes and fears-- this Home of ours Is it not pleasant? |
41411 | Then, what is to become of me-- to what end am I liberated? |
41411 | This is a bad business,I said;"but the venture has not, I trust, been made with your own or your father''s money? |
41411 | Unprompted; without any suggestions from another? |
41411 | Well, but, it is clear enough, the man must have had means; he traveled by a very circuitous route; he had come from Hamburg, probably? |
41411 | Well, the eggs are fresh laid, and you would like a rasher of bacon, Master John? 41411 What class is this?" |
41411 | What class is this? |
41411 | What do you mean? |
41411 | What do_ you_ say, sir? |
41411 | What in the name of madness could induce you to venture your all upon a single throw in so hazardous a game? |
41411 | What is courage? |
41411 | What is courage? |
41411 | What is gambling,said he,"after all, but a species of exchange, skill for skill, or chance for chance? |
41411 | What is his name? |
41411 | What is the book, my lord? |
41411 | What more would you have? |
41411 | What think you of this self- confidence? 41411 What''s to be done, gentlemen?" |
41411 | What,he exclaimed, when assured that otherwise his case was hopeless,"shall I break my faith with him who trusted it? |
41411 | Where could you two ever have met? |
41411 | Which is the Duc D''Enghien? |
41411 | Why do you not remind him of it? |
41411 | Why was it,said one of these visitors,"that the Americans_ fled_ on this occasion?" |
41411 | Why, you are not a constituent, as I am? |
41411 | Will you give me Marie? |
41411 | Would you have me violate my word of honor? |
41411 | You are sure you would him remember if we met him by chance? |
41411 | You are then, father, put out of the bill? |
41411 | You had an object, however, in composing it? |
41411 | You have not breakfasted? |
41411 | You hesitate; you have not yet made up your mind, apparently? |
41411 | You wrote it for yourself alone, then? |
41411 | Your age, monsieur? |
41411 | ''My lord,''he said,''have you in any way committed yourself?'' |
41411 | ''Tis the river that founded and gave pomp to the city; and without the discontent, where were progress-- what were Man? |
41411 | ''s evening party, summoned the sinner Sundholm to hear his final doom? |
41411 | ***** Now that I''ve come back, let me seek to think, to remember.... Sure, my head will clear by- and- by? |
41411 | ... And how goes the court, Meg?" |
41411 | ... Soe then I say,''What thing?'' |
41411 | ..."And then, mother? |
41411 | ; will you buy it? |
41411 | An excess in wine had never affected him so before: could this arise from simple drunkenness? |
41411 | And Lisette, all this time? |
41411 | And how could the boy turn out of his room the man to whom he was under obligations? |
41411 | And is it so, that woman is responsible, in a great measure, for the fashions and habits of the community in which she lives? |
41411 | And then I took hold of him by the sleeve, and asked him,''Jan Evers, Jan Evers, where have you come from?'' |
41411 | And we''re scarce off our knees, when I''m fetched away; and I say,''When will you change your note, and act like a wise man?'' |
41411 | And what was the aggregate sum of all these twenty monthly payments? |
41411 | And who does not love their pleasant song, shrill though it be? |
41411 | And who were the blackguard actors in this cold- blooded tragedy? |
41411 | And your father, is he yet living?" |
41411 | And, think you, without feeling aught of its forces? |
41411 | As you are going into the House, will you remind him?" |
41411 | Ask why civilization can not escape its ills and fly back to the wilds and the wigwam? |
41411 | At what school did you conceive a taste for letters? |
41411 | Brainard, a poet of true tenderness and feeling, once asked,"What is there saddening in the autumn leaf?" |
41411 | Burley( moved).--"You go, my little lady?--and why? |
41411 | Burley( with a gulp).--"Is it because he thinks I am not fit company for you?" |
41411 | Burley?" |
41411 | But now I have time to think about it, and I like Marie very much? |
41411 | But pray, Austin, what is courage?" |
41411 | But what comfort in this? |
41411 | But what of all this? |
41411 | But why should it be so? |
41411 | But why then was so excellent a soul so cold toward me? |
41411 | But, had Burley written the pamphlet, would the same repute have attended_ him?_ Certainly not. |
41411 | Can we not all live together?" |
41411 | Caxton.--"You would not have minded if it had been a Frenchman with a sword in his hand?" |
41411 | Could I remain there till his return? |
41411 | Did you get it from an unquestionable source? |
41411 | Do you think he wo n''t do me a turn, when it''s to help himself in the end, shipmate?'' |
41411 | Do you want to sink the ship, by knocking off at a time like this? |
41411 | Does he not speculate to gain? |
41411 | Does he not?" |
41411 | Does it not prove her love of truth; her strength of character, and her greatness of soul? |
41411 | Even from the first, when Leonard had exclaimed,"Ah, Helen, why did you ever leave me?" |
41411 | Every one inquired, Who is this young general, whose talents thus suddenly, with such meteoric splendor, have blazed upon Europe? |
41411 | From what point shall our bibliographical notices date?--beyond or in advance of the monasticism? |
41411 | From what source did this young soldier imbibe these elevated principles? |
41411 | Goodyer?" |
41411 | Have you not heard how a noble of the court rode postillion to the king''s carriage on the celebrated escape from Varennes? |
41411 | He gazed in silence, and at length said--"But can she walk?" |
41411 | He trembled in all his limbs, and convulsively drew back his foot as he addressed his guides in front:''Where are you conducting me?'' |
41411 | Heavens, sir, do I understand aright-- can Mr. Prickett be dead since I left London?" |
41411 | His companion smiled, and replied by another question,"What is the man who reads the book?" |
41411 | His dreamy impressions of London? |
41411 | His lordship was quite unprepared for this additional infliction, and exclaimed,"What, Mr. A----, are_ you_ really going to speak on the same side?" |
41411 | How do you like her?" |
41411 | How shall I come to book? |
41411 | How? |
41411 | I go for it; but are you well advised? |
41411 | I have writ somewhat after this fashion to him...."What do you think, most dear father, doth comfort us at Chelsea, during this your absence? |
41411 | I held her back and said,"What is to do?" |
41411 | If you remember me, I hope all boyish quarrels are forgotten?" |
41411 | In a moment he saw his own error, and returning the slate to the pupil, with ill- concealed chagrin, exclaimed,"Yes? |
41411 | In the devil''s name how can I face my creditor this evening at Madame''s rà © union? |
41411 | Is it not a proof of excess of vanity? |
41411 | Is it said that He is always speaking-- that the Great Cause of causes is always exhibiting itself in its effects? |
41411 | Is not his sole object to profit by the transfer? |
41411 | Is their speedy rise to be followed by a like speedy decline? |
41411 | Is there any thing so singular in the fact, sir, that you should look so much astonished?" |
41411 | Is there not something grand in all this? |
41411 | Is there one gamester out of twenty who, in a very few years, does not go-- circumstances only considered-- to ruin? |
41411 | Is this the result of the conduct of a merciless, unfeeling tyrant? |
41411 | It was purely accidental?" |
41411 | Lord, Meg, who would live, that could die? |
41411 | Of whom else should he beg? |
41411 | Oh, wicked woman, how could you?... |
41411 | One day at St. Helena, he was conversing with Las Casas, when some remark which was made led Napoleon to inquire,"Were you a gamester?" |
41411 | Pardon: who and what are they?'' |
41411 | Poor thing, what could have become of her?" |
41411 | Pray, what is a Lakeman, and where is Buffalo?'' |
41411 | Quakers?" |
41411 | Reader, what think you would have been the amount of the payment due on the first of the twentieth month? |
41411 | Sayth Bess,"Sure, mother, that was cold comfort.... And what next?" |
41411 | See, would you like to look at it?" |
41411 | Shall a man be more pure than his Maker? |
41411 | Shall posterity say that we knew how to conquer, but knew not how to improve victory? |
41411 | Shall we find a Capua in Lombardy? |
41411 | Shipmate, I have n''t enough twine-- have you any?'' |
41411 | Should she burden him? |
41411 | Sir sailor, but do whales have christenings? |
41411 | Soe then he puts me off with questions, How is Will? |
41411 | Soe then he sayeth,''Is not this house, sweetheart, as nigh heaven as mine own?'' |
41411 | Soldiers of Italy, will you fail in courage?" |
41411 | Suddenly his attention was diverted to those around by the sound of a name-- displeasingly known to him,"How are you, Randal Leslie? |
41411 | Talleyrand started, as he heard it, and then turning to Caulaincourt, whispered,"Yes;''tis all over now?" |
41411 | That had been their statement; and was there not something very beautiful in it? |
41411 | Then, suddenly, as the light flashed full on my features, he started back, and said,"How is this-- who are you?" |
41411 | Then, why did you not address a memoir to that effect to the minister?" |
41411 | There was silence-- And yet I heard a voice-- saying-- Shall a mortal be more just than God? |
41411 | Turning to one of the pupils, he inquired,"What is the difference between sleep and death?" |
41411 | Two days before, Leonard had pawned Riccabocca''s watch; and when the last shilling thus raised was gone, how should he support Helen? |
41411 | Was I, or was I not, any longer a soldier of his army? |
41411 | Was there not something worldly in thinking so much about money and the future? |
41411 | What am I? |
41411 | What but disgust can be created against a system when prostituted to the purposes of sheer murder? |
41411 | What cause have I then, to care so greatlie for a house that woulde soe soone forget its master?''" |
41411 | What comfort has it for the soul, or what enlargement even for the intellect? |
41411 | What is she, if her lips revile The lowly Jesus? |
41411 | What is this? |
41411 | What say ye, men?'' |
41411 | What sum, think ye, the little penny had become? |
41411 | What think you?" |
41411 | What was it that he wrote? |
41411 | What, then, shall I do? |
41411 | When can you let me have it?" |
41411 | When would he be back? |
41411 | Whither do I go? |
41411 | Who can be long boisterous in the presence of woman? |
41411 | Who the devil is this pamphleteer?" |
41411 | Who were the original bookworms? |
41411 | Who, and what is this clever man whom you call Burley?" |
41411 | Who, but the head of his house, could have presumed on such a step? |
41411 | Whom call you Moby Dick?'' |
41411 | Why could he not escape? |
41411 | Why does not God speak to us here? |
41411 | Why has the inspired historian placed the night first? |
41411 | Why must you leave him because I come?" |
41411 | Why this strange delight in believing in the omnipotence and unchangeableness of a blind and unrelenting nature? |
41411 | Why, the enormous sum of four thousand three hundred and sixty- six pounds, eleven shillings, and threepence? |
41411 | Would your honor like a jarvey?" |
41411 | Yes, we shall meet in heaven, but how long first, oh Lord? |
41411 | Yesterday, Bonaparte speaking of this favor, said to me,''Think they then, that_ I_ have need of_ their_ protection to arrive at power? |
41411 | You fancy these four walls lonesome; how oft, dost thou suppose, I here receive Plato and Socrates, and this and that holy saint and martyr? |
41411 | You must often have heard his name from the prince; has he not frequently spoken of the Count de Maurepas?" |
41411 | [ Illustration:_ Uncle._--"So, you''ve been to the Crystal Palace-- Have you, Gus?" |
41411 | _ Uncle._--"Well, now, I''ll give you Sixpence if you will tell me what you admired most in that Temple of Industry?" |
41411 | an anathema on its streets, and its hearts of stone? |
41411 | and Daisy? |
41411 | and Rupert? |
41411 | and for what are you bound?'' |
41411 | and has Tom found his hoop? |
41411 | and have I practised the viol? |
41411 | and have we elected a new king of the cob- loaf yet? |
41411 | and he sayth,''When? |
41411 | and how are we off for money? |
41411 | and how goes the court? |
41411 | and is not all speculation, morally considered, gambling? |
41411 | and is y^e hasp of the buttery- hatch mended yet? |
41411 | and pray, what quantity of blood do you intend to take from me at each operation?" |
41411 | and rabbits? |
41411 | and t''other one? |
41411 | and that full development of figure, which all the poets, from Homer down, have made one of the chiefest beauties of a woman? |
41411 | and the peacocks? |
41411 | and then?" |
41411 | and this one? |
41411 | and was''t y^e chamber father had used to sleep in? |
41411 | and what was the text o''Sunday? |
41411 | and when the betrothed answers,''I will be true,''does not the lover trust to her courage as well as her love?" |
41411 | and why ca n''t he see Meg? |
41411 | coming to hear the debate?" |
41411 | cried Coigny;"what does that mean?" |
41411 | cried my mother, firing up;"was it not only last week that you faced the great bull that was rushing after Blanche and the children?" |
41411 | cried the other;"we are here in the territory of the margrave?" |
41411 | dark elegies on fate? |
41411 | exclaimed the captain,"do you pretend, sir, to assert, that you did not lose three hundred naps to me?" |
41411 | exclaimed the sick man with a stare;"why, what do you mean? |
41411 | for goodness sake, what is it?" |
41411 | had he any accomplices? |
41411 | have ye come to kill me in mine own house?" |
41411 | have you nothing for the million?'' |
41411 | he asked,"to be brought before me in this condition?--you that_ can_ be so good a soldier? |
41411 | how does he know that?" |
41411 | how long? |
41411 | how? |
41411 | murmurs against poverty? |
41411 | or was I disqualified for joining in that burst of national enthusiasm which proclaimed that all France was ready to march under his banner? |
41411 | or was he alone?" |
41411 | pray, what''s the matter now?" |
41411 | returned his companion;"you were not drunk but mad-- what devil possessed you to play? |
41411 | said I, looking around my cell,"Is it here that I should be likely to find a fellow- laborer?" |
41411 | said he, peering at me beneath the dark shadow of his heavy brow;"he would not hear of it?" |
41411 | was that her voice? |
41411 | was that indeed one of my faults? |
41411 | what does it look like?'' |
41411 | what''s that pump stopping for?'' |
41411 | will this gear never be left? |
20230 | A--_what_? |
20230 | And I''m to talk to her-- to beg her to tell him? |
20230 | Are n''t we going to stop by for Sally? |
20230 | Are n''t you-- I do n''t know the rest of your name, but are n''t you-- Jerry? |
20230 | Are we just to wait here until help comes? |
20230 | Are you telling your fortune? |
20230 | Babes in the Woods? 20230 But is n''t''stay_ all_ night''a silly expression? |
20230 | But--she took account for the first time of Michael Daragh--"_quién es el hombrón?_"( Who is the big man?) |
20230 | But--she took account for the first time of Michael Daragh--"_quién es el hombrón?_"( Who is the big man?) |
20230 | But, if she wo n''t? 20230 Ca n''t they leave me alone? |
20230 | Ca n''t you see? |
20230 | Core of my heart,he said,"will you hush your pretending? |
20230 | D''you s''pose I want to? |
20230 | Did Ethel tell him? |
20230 | Did n''t she? |
20230 | Do you believe in corporal punishment? |
20230 | Do you know what I''m trying to say to you? 20230 Do you know what''ladies''means? |
20230 | Does n''t Ethel care for the baby? |
20230 | Ethel, how much do you love him? |
20230 | Ethel? |
20230 | Goner slip''em some high- brow stuff? 20230 Good gad, Jane Vail,--don''t you know what you''ve got here? |
20230 | Good gracious, Michael Daragh,I said,"you do n''t suppose I like it, do you? |
20230 | Have you decided not to marry me? |
20230 | Have you lost your senses? |
20230 | He-- he looks_ bright_, does n''t he? |
20230 | How are you? 20230 How long till dinner, Mrs. Hills? |
20230 | How''d you like to cut out the paper joy- bells? |
20230 | How- do- you- do? 20230 I can quite picture him, ca n''t you? |
20230 | I do n''t suppose you''d give me a whack at it, would you? 20230 I got her here, did n''t I?" |
20230 | I hope,said Emma Ellis, conscientiously, the taut lines of her face loosening a little,"you had a pleasant outing?" |
20230 | I mean, are you really as happy as you act, or are you just-- gay? |
20230 | I wonder,Daragh paused in the outer hall,"would I better cover him up?" |
20230 | It sounds rather like a line from a comic song, does n''t it? |
20230 | It''s the way I''m asking you something now I''ve never dared ask you before, Jane Vail,purled the brogue,"and I''m wondering, dare I?" |
20230 | Janey,she leaned toward her and spoke wistfully,"are you really as impossibly happy as you look?" |
20230 | Look here,she said,"why should n''t we do something together?" |
20230 | Love him,--more than I want him? |
20230 | Michael Daragh, do you know what I''m going to do? |
20230 | Michael Daragh,I said, meekly,"will you take Randal with you and let me take Dolores with me?" |
20230 | Michael Daragh,I whispered, when we at last were packed into the taxi,"could n''t we stop at some school on the way home and leave her?" |
20230 | More than Irene? |
20230 | More than the baby? |
20230 | Mrs. Hills, will you let Mabel come and do me up in twenty minutes? 20230 My dear, what is it? |
20230 | My dearest girl, are n''t you happy in your home? 20230 My hair?..." |
20230 | Never that, Acushla, but-- couldn''t we be taking him with us? 20230 Not_ go_? |
20230 | Now what do you mean by that? |
20230 | Oh, do you find it so? 20230 Oh, is that so? |
20230 | Oh, very well,--you shall have your tubs and your linoleum, if you''ll let me humanize the rest of the house,--will you? |
20230 | Oh,--_Jerry_? |
20230 | Oh,--do you mind waiting just a minute? 20230 Paper go nicely, Janey? |
20230 | Poor old Marty.... Well, we ca n''t lead other people''s lives for them, can we? |
20230 | Sally,_ dear_,Jane determinedly broke the spell,"what''s the silly matter with us?" |
20230 | Shall we go downstairs? |
20230 | She going to stay all night with you? |
20230 | Simply torrid up here, is n''t it? 20230 Sinking, my good Michael? |
20230 | That is, if there''s something I can do? |
20230 | The air is getting pretty awful, is n''t it? 20230 The right? |
20230 | Then I think it''s pretty mean not to play fair with him, do n''t you? 20230 Then, how about-- the other one?" |
20230 | Then, why do you? |
20230 | To_ work_? |
20230 | Want to hop in? 20230 Was n''t I quick, Jane?" |
20230 | Was n''t it yourself told me what you said to your friend back in the village-- that you were''going on''? 20230 We must just wait until they come for us, must n''t we?" |
20230 | Well, Jane,_ dear_,a faint, sympathetic flush warmed her small, pale face,"is n''t that perfectly natural? |
20230 | Well, it did n''t take that Mr. Rodney Harrison very long to get in action, did it? |
20230 | Well, may I see it? |
20230 | Well, then,Michael was still staring at her, unhappily,"will it be the bus, or a taxi? |
20230 | Well, then,said Jane, after agreeing to alligator pear salad,"shall we say Fairy God- cousin? |
20230 | What are letters? |
20230 | What did I tell you? 20230 What is he like, this Jerry person?" |
20230 | What is it? |
20230 | What is this? |
20230 | What makes you think I could help? 20230 What''d you come for, then?" |
20230 | What''s the big idea? |
20230 | What, Jane? 20230 What,"said Jane interestedly,"what was it you called me?" |
20230 | What? 20230 What?" |
20230 | What? |
20230 | Where_ are_ we? 20230 Who is that man?" |
20230 | Why do you call her Billiken? |
20230 | Why not? |
20230 | Why, yes, of course I''ll come, but-- why? |
20230 | Why? 20230 Why?" |
20230 | Yes,said Jane, easily,"he''s told me everything, I think, but what I''m interested in now is-- what are you going to do with this stuff?" |
20230 | You are n''t sick, are you? |
20230 | You have a_ mile_ of it, have n''t you? |
20230 | You mean, did she tell Jerry about-- about the baby? |
20230 | You mean,I said,"you want to postpone our marriage?" |
20230 | You see? |
20230 | You see? |
20230 | _ Eighteen?_ Oh----"Yes. 20230 _ La jour de gloire est arrivé!_"Was it? |
20230 | _ No es tu esposo?_she quivered with tentative rage. |
20230 | _ Now_ will you let me? |
20230 | _ Tu novio?_I admitted that he was my betrothed. |
20230 | ''Is himself out there in the sun the way he''d be hearing me? |
20230 | ''The loveliest lace, is it? |
20230 | ''What were we always telling you? |
20230 | ( Could anything be less lyrical, I ask you?) |
20230 | ( How is that for a demonstration of Mr. Burroughs''well- known theory about folding your hands and waiting and having your own come to you?) |
20230 | ( Is n''t that delicious, Sally?) |
20230 | ( See how I gave him an opening, E.E.?) |
20230 | ( Sounds more like eighteen than twenty- eight, does n''t it?) |
20230 | ( Was n''t I right about the Erring Daughters and the Snow?) |
20230 | ( Was n''t it pitiful, Michael? |
20230 | ***** A shame, is n''t it, Sally, that we ca n''t be frank and honest? |
20230 | ... did you ever play----""What, Acushla?" |
20230 | A man grew querulous:"Where are we? |
20230 | After all his years of devotion----""But do n''t you think he got large chunks of enjoyment out of them?" |
20230 | After all, she had not broken the old home ties( to put it lyrically) for this sort of thing, now, had she? |
20230 | Afterward, when he was leaving, she looked him squarely in the eye and said,"You are a newcomer in Guadalajara? |
20230 | Am I Tobias? |
20230 | Am I to give you the quarter for your Poor and Needy?" |
20230 | And Michael Daragh, her best friend of four good years, her-- what should she say?--dream lover? |
20230 | And anyhow-- what about Harriet Beecher Stowe, writing_ Uncle Tom''s Cabin_ with poverty and sickness and a debilitating climate and seven children?" |
20230 | And have I a fish to heal a blindness?" |
20230 | And how is everybody?" |
20230 | And how is-- how are all the others?" |
20230 | And how near is the baby- grand?" |
20230 | And is n''t he cool as a cucumber?" |
20230 | And my point is won? |
20230 | And was n''t I always getting bad big boys to smoke less and drink less and pass ex''es and dance with wallflowers and write to their mothers? |
20230 | And will he be good to the baby?'' |
20230 | And, of course, there''s a girl in it somewhere, and I''m sure she has waited for Michael all these years instead of marrying The Heir, are n''t you?" |
20230 | Are n''t you both immensely pleased with me? |
20230 | Are n''t you glad V. is such a nice, easy letter to embroider?) |
20230 | Are you going on, I say? |
20230 | Are you going to give him a lie for his wedding gift?" |
20230 | Are you''going on''? |
20230 | As she came off she gave me a kindly pat and said--"Ai n''t they eatin''it up? |
20230 | At any rate, I needed perspective on the whole situation, and who knows but I shall meet my nice new fate on this romantic pilgrimage? |
20230 | At the pinnacle of her big speech the door is wrenched open and THE MAN stands there, a gun in each hand, demanding--"Who''s here?" |
20230 | Billiken-- when it''s the last time Muddie''ll ever have to feed you? |
20230 | But I do n''t believe it will be much longer, now, do you?" |
20230 | But is n''t it rather a comedy situation? |
20230 | But with Mr. Daragh entirely convinced and more maudlinly worshipful than ever, what was the use of saying anything? |
20230 | But"( how appeal to a sense of fair play where no fair play had been?) |
20230 | Ca n''t you write here in your own town, in your own home? |
20230 | Ca n''t you? |
20230 | Can she reach the sandwiches? |
20230 | Can you_ see_ it, Sally? |
20230 | Could you imagine me marrying any one in the wide world_ but_ Michael Daragh? |
20230 | Cream, buff, tan, apricot, burnt orange-- Let me come down and go shopping with you some day, will you? |
20230 | Daragh says you are interested in drawings-- just look round, will you? |
20230 | Daragh?" |
20230 | Did I write something about the rosy but dim and distant date when Dolores would be"through school?" |
20230 | Did n''t I always coax sling shots away from bad little boys and make them sign up for the S.P.C.A.? |
20230 | Did n''t I tell you? |
20230 | Did n''t my three unsteady angels more than make up for one poor devil? |
20230 | Did n''t they serve tea? |
20230 | Did n''t you get my signal? |
20230 | Did you ever in all your born days see such luck? |
20230 | Do I score? |
20230 | Do n''t you adore that, Michael Daragh? |
20230 | Do n''t you like the sound of that, Sally? |
20230 | Do n''t you suppose I have imagination enough to project myself into another type? |
20230 | Do you dare to count the one exception that gloriously proved the rule? |
20230 | Do you hear, Michael Daragh?" |
20230 | Do you know it, Michael? |
20230 | Do you mind if I just sleep a-- f-- few minutes? |
20230 | Do you think it will"get across?" |
20230 | Do you wonder that I''m an old woman before my time? |
20230 | Dost thou not burn to fold me to thy breast?" |
20230 | Drink deep of the good air, just, till-- what? |
20230 | Gentle, innocent- sounding name, is n''t it? |
20230 | Gillespie?" |
20230 | Give it up? |
20230 | Going_ away_? |
20230 | Going_ away_?" |
20230 | Got a job yet?" |
20230 | Guess where? |
20230 | Guess which one I opened first, Michael Daragh, Do- er of Miracles? |
20230 | Had BROTHER''S brother died of fright? |
20230 | Had my poor starveling fainted again? |
20230 | Half an hour? |
20230 | Has he?" |
20230 | Have n''t I won, Emma Ellis? |
20230 | Have n''t I won, Michael Daragh? |
20230 | Have n''t you any parlor tricks?" |
20230 | Have you?" |
20230 | He had birth, breeding, abilities; why must he wrap himself in monkish sackcloth, in monkish celibacy? |
20230 | He said in liquid Spanish,"So, Your Grace will not buy my little lizard? |
20230 | He''s always seemed a belted earl sort of person, for all his other- worldly ways, has n''t he?" |
20230 | Hills?" |
20230 | His friend, after a few weeks of slenderest acquaintance? |
20230 | How about it, Emma Ellis? |
20230 | How blow a blast to shatter them? |
20230 | How did your paper go?" |
20230 | How many pupils have you now? |
20230 | How- do- you- do? |
20230 | How- do- you- do?" |
20230 | I am to lift up the light of my countenance on this young gentleman, then, and convince him that he is still socially desirable?" |
20230 | I have n''t had a real play- time for a year, and it''s four years and a month since I left home for New York-- can you realize it? |
20230 | I said that you always saw life through a stained- glass window and that it gave you distorted values, did n''t I? |
20230 | I saw you just now at the Booking Office, did n''t I? |
20230 | I suppose Daragh''s told you-- about me?" |
20230 | I suppose I''m tired out with all this rushing about, for I just went to pieces over it, and when Lupe said sympathetically,"Oh, deed you_ want_ it?" |
20230 | I trust you wo n''t expect to glean any useful information or statistics about Mexico from these chronicles? |
20230 | I was reading to him last night, and suddenly he said in his shy, repressed way,"Was you ever to a circus?" |
20230 | I wonder if they''d consider me up stage if I wore gloves? |
20230 | I wonder why we do n''t say,''stay over night''?" |
20230 | I wrote you how much he liked it when I read the original''script to him? |
20230 | I''ll ask her at dinner.... How''s your mother, dear?... |
20230 | I''ll call him now,--may I?" |
20230 | I''m much obliged for blacksmiths nowadays, are n''t you, Michael Daragh? |
20230 | If he had at last dared to ask her to leave her sunny fields for his shadowed paths, was this the vision to reassure him? |
20230 | Is it in the constitution of Hope House to have only hideous and uncomfortable furniture?" |
20230 | Is it too much, indeed?" |
20230 | Is n''t NETZAHUALCOYOTL a cunning word? |
20230 | Is n''t it curious? |
20230 | Is n''t it pretty much of a miracle to make me turn my back on five orders and bring my soul up here to renovate it? |
20230 | Is n''t that charming? |
20230 | Is n''t that one- in- the- eye for your theory, at the start? |
20230 | It was n''t because you were interrupted, was it, dear? |
20230 | J. V._ Wednesday._ I have n''t told you about the"Low- down Wilkes,"have I? |
20230 | Jane wanted hotly to know,"or an angel in a nightdress and a snow scene?" |
20230 | Just to please me?" |
20230 | Land t''goodness,"he regarded me mournfully,"do n''t we have to strive night an''day,''thout takin''any extry sins on our souls?" |
20230 | Let me play with it a minute, will you? |
20230 | Like the old woman in the fairy tale,--"Can this be I?" |
20230 | Look,--the part where THE HAWK tells her what a rotten deal he''s always had, is n''t this how you meant it?" |
20230 | Love, was it? |
20230 | May I?" |
20230 | My throat ached and I could hardly drag one foot after another, and even my eyeballs----""But you''re fine now, are n''t you? |
20230 | Nevertheless, in a world of foot- lickers, is n''t pride like that delicious? |
20230 | No? |
20230 | Nobody knows except Irene and the people here,--and nobody''d be mean enough to just go and tattle to him,--would they?" |
20230 | Not go to Mrs._ Wetherby''s_? |
20230 | Nothing could happen to us..._ now_... what do you suppose makes me so sleepy?... |
20230 | Now she was in the dust, but would n''t it all come right for her in the end? |
20230 | Now will you write and tell me if you like it? |
20230 | Now, Sarah Farraday, I ask you, as a reasonable human being, what you think of that? |
20230 | Now, is n''t that the great wonder surely? |
20230 | Of course, music is the most marvelous thing in the world, but is n''t there something of deadly monotony in it? |
20230 | Oh, my dear Lord''n Saviour, it_ ai n''t_ too late?" |
20230 | One does n''t enjoy_ having_ an experience like this, but_ having_ had it makes for growth, should n''t you say?" |
20230 | One of the parcels contained liver, and it became unwrapped....( Dost like the picture, Jane Vail bearing home the liver for her frugal evening meal?) |
20230 | Or will you stop content with the pavement, the likes of you that was made for the mountain peaks? |
20230 | P.S.--Do you realize that my month is up? |
20230 | Pride( where was her decent pride?) |
20230 | Rather neat, what? |
20230 | Richards?" |
20230 | Richards?" |
20230 | Rollicking nursery rhyme, was n''t it? |
20230 | Sally, did n''t I say something nitwitted about music? |
20230 | Sarah, does n''t that make your scalp creep? |
20230 | Sarah, now that your mother is so improved, would n''t you like to take a boarder? |
20230 | Say, I guess maybe that''s poor? |
20230 | Say, girlie, did n''t I tell you I''d put the raisin in it?" |
20230 | Say, ring her up, will you, sure? |
20230 | See how it brings out the good lines of your face? |
20230 | Shall I be finding a cab to rush you home?" |
20230 | Shall I send you bulletins of my pilgrim progress? |
20230 | So, this was the man for whom she had dressed herself three times, cunningly and provocatively? |
20230 | Subtle, was n''t it? |
20230 | Suppose they muddle it utterly, what will the Powers say to me-- after not telling them of the change in cast? |
20230 | Surely you wo n''t let her take Billiken until we are sure?" |
20230 | That''s what we are, are n''t we?" |
20230 | The Budders( does n''t Budder sowd as if I ad a code i d by ed?) |
20230 | The thing you''ve just written and sold, now,--are you proud in your heart of it?" |
20230 | The_ poor_ thing----"Miss Ellis, I''ve taken your chair, have n''t I?" |
20230 | They had a little way of saying,"What have you been writing lately, Janey?" |
20230 | This one said,"Was they a string around his neck, Dan''l?" |
20230 | Thumbs down? |
20230 | Thumbs up? |
20230 | Wait,--where''s your hand mirror? |
20230 | Want I should send her up for it?" |
20230 | Want to hear about it? |
20230 | Want to hop in the boat and run out to see her now and talk it over?" |
20230 | Was n''t it going to be fun--_if_ the play went over"big"--to vanquish this much of the hideousness of the world? |
20230 | Was n''t that clever of him? |
20230 | Was n''t that fitting? |
20230 | Was n''t that funny? |
20230 | Was not this a part of her life with Michael since he had sent her to that lean, clean island to snare back her soul? |
20230 | Was she, then, so much finer clay? |
20230 | We are to be married( see how calmly and steadily she sets down that astounding word?) |
20230 | Well, how is it? |
20230 | Well, now, was she? |
20230 | Well, you''re the last to come, see? |
20230 | Were you never young yourself?" |
20230 | What are you doing with it?" |
20230 | What can I_ do_? |
20230 | What do you mean,--only''getting on''?" |
20230 | What for? |
20230 | What''s the difference between Nannie and Sally? |
20230 | What''s the matter?" |
20230 | What_ is_ it? |
20230 | What_ is_ it?" |
20230 | When can we start? |
20230 | When he saw me he cried out:--"Oh, it ai n''t too late? |
20230 | Where are we? |
20230 | Where was the youth in those young feet? |
20230 | Where will you sit, Miss Vail? |
20230 | Where?" |
20230 | Where_ are_ we?" |
20230 | Which house?" |
20230 | Who am I to write a one- act play? |
20230 | Who did that to them?" |
20230 | Who is the poor thing you''re concerned with now?" |
20230 | Why do n''t you contribute something to the gayety of nations? |
20230 | Why had she come at all? |
20230 | Why had she done it? |
20230 | Why had she mixed and muddled in this sordid tangle which was none of her bright business? |
20230 | Why should n''t she do as the other girls of the set had done? |
20230 | Why this dramatizing of the pleasant and placid course of Wetherby Ridge events? |
20230 | Why, how did you get away so early? |
20230 | Will I be able to"put it over"? |
20230 | Will that do?" |
20230 | Will you ask Mrs. Hills to express my tea basket and two cups? |
20230 | Will you come up to her now?" |
20230 | Will you try doing it this way? |
20230 | Wirra... down all the years I can hear the wild joy of him still----"Core of my heart, have you come? |
20230 | Woman, dear,"the purling brogue--"the rare, high places you can climb if you will? |
20230 | Would n''t it_ have_ to come right for her? |
20230 | Would n''t you think she''d be dead on her feet and want to crawl into bed quick''s ever she had her supper? |
20230 | Would she be coming with him to- morrow to the Agnes Chatterton Home, where there was a girl in black sorrow? |
20230 | Would she be tearing off with another young man, first evening home? |
20230 | Would you--_could_ you-- be dining with a dope fiend?" |
20230 | Yes, he was!--And how many pupils have you now, Sally?" |
20230 | You care more for him than for your baby?" |
20230 | You give her my love, wo n''t you? |
20230 | You have n''t one? |
20230 | You have n''t quarreled with Marty, have you? |
20230 | You ought to give it a hundred and twenty strokes a night,--see, like this? |
20230 | You''ve come for Billiken?" |
20230 | [ Illustration:"SAY, GIRLIE, DIDN''T I TELL YOU I''D PUT THE RAISIN IN IT?"] |
20230 | _ Do n''t you see the hoof- prints?_"The posse wheels and thunders away. |
20230 | _ New York, April Twelfth._ SALLY DARLING, Thanks for your two wires, though the first one--"So happy, but who is it?" |
20230 | _ Now_ who''s asleep?" |
20230 | _ What_ had happened back there? |
20230 | _ When_ are you coming? |
20230 | _ Why_ must they have that liver- colored glass in the door?" |
20230 | here you are in my throbbing, thrilling midst at last, having left your sylvan home because it ceased to nourish you,--and you have nothing to say?" |
20230 | letter?" |
20230 | to him, for if we had n''t had supper with him that night, and gone uptown in the subway, who knows if I''d ever have won my elusive swain? |
26218 | ''Can you do it?'' 26218 A tramp? |
26218 | Ai n''t you fellows going to try it over again? |
26218 | An''did ye find Miss Ardell? |
26218 | And can you make much that way? |
26218 | And he wo n''t trust you even that long? 26218 And how far behind are you?" |
26218 | And how is it with you? |
26218 | And is that where you live? |
26218 | And the property belongs to you? |
26218 | And what became of the little girl? 26218 And what is daddy''s name?" |
26218 | And what kind of a man is he? |
26218 | And where is it? |
26218 | And who are you? |
26218 | And you have been sitting here ever since? |
26218 | And you say you think Miss Ardell was abducted? |
26218 | Are n''t we almost there? |
26218 | Are you coming back? |
26218 | Are you going to let me see those papers? |
26218 | Are you not Abraham? |
26218 | Are you the boy said he was robbed? |
26218 | Are you the man they call the hermit of the island? |
26218 | Are you trying to get me into trouble? |
26218 | Blumpo, coil up some of that rope, will you? |
26218 | Blumpo, on your honor, did you ever own two hats at once? |
26218 | But where shall I go? |
26218 | But who were they, and where did they go? |
26218 | By the way, who is that little girl who lives with you? |
26218 | Ca n''t he? 26218 Ca n''t we leap over?" |
26218 | Ca n''t we patch things up sufficiently to take her back into Lakeview? |
26218 | Ca n''t you give me the precise location? |
26218 | Can we beach her on the island? |
26218 | Can we come on board and take a look around? |
26218 | Can we pass the Spray? |
26218 | Can we tow the yacht? |
26218 | Carry yer baggage? |
26218 | Come, what do you say? |
26218 | Could n''t find him, eh? |
26218 | Did I see her? 26218 Did n''t I say Jerry Upton would n''t be in it?" |
26218 | Did she set you to hounding me? |
26218 | Did they mention the steam launch? |
26218 | Did you hear me? |
26218 | Did you hear the news? |
26218 | Did you hear what I said, Upton? 26218 Did you lose much?" |
26218 | Did you open the packet? |
26218 | Did you see Miss Ardell this afternoon? |
26218 | Did you see the thief? |
26218 | Do n''t he look like Charley the Dude? |
26218 | Do n''t they know anything about steering? |
26218 | Do n''t you see the lights coming toward us? |
26218 | Do you hear me? |
26218 | Do you know him? |
26218 | Do you know how much I charge a week? |
26218 | Do you live here? |
26218 | Do you mean that? |
26218 | Do you mean to say you wo n''t trust me? |
26218 | Do you recognize me? |
26218 | Do you remember what a row we had up around this island last summer with Si Peters, Wash Crosby and the rest of the Rockpoint crowd? |
26218 | Do you see that man over there by the paper stand? |
26218 | Do you think I have plotted and worked all these years for nothing? 26218 Does he drink?" |
26218 | Does he send you out very often to beg? |
26218 | Dottie what? |
26218 | Five cents? |
26218 | Give him up? |
26218 | Has Mr. Slocum an interest in it? |
26218 | Have Si Peters and Wash Crosby been caught yet? |
26218 | Have n''t you any folks? |
26218 | Have they any idea who the thieves were? |
26218 | Have you a boat? |
26218 | Have you no friends? |
26218 | Have you seen anything in here of a flat, white package with a black shoestring tied around it? |
26218 | He is in prison? |
26218 | Heard of him? |
26218 | Here, vot''s dot? |
26218 | Here, what do you want here? |
26218 | Here, what''s the meaning of this? |
26218 | Here, what''s up? |
26218 | How did they do the job? |
26218 | How did you escape the steamboat? |
26218 | How do you know this? |
26218 | How do you like that smell? |
26218 | How far is the race to be? |
26218 | How is Cora? |
26218 | How is your father? 26218 How long have you lived with him?" |
26218 | How many rooms have you? |
26218 | How much did you have? |
26218 | How much do you owe him? |
26218 | How so? |
26218 | How so? |
26218 | Hullo, what''s that boat doing here? |
26218 | Hunting for a pin or gold dollars? |
26218 | I am your papa, Dottie; do n''t you remember papa and big Ruth that used to be with you? |
26218 | I can stay on deck, ca n''t I? |
26218 | I wonder if Peters knows we are still on the island? |
26218 | I wonder if there is a spring handy? |
26218 | I wonder if they are out of the reformatory yet for setting fire to the barn? |
26218 | I wonder if they are still hanging around Harmony Beach? |
26218 | I wonder what mother and father would say if they knew? |
26218 | I''m not rich, nor eddicated, as you call it, and all that, but I can hunt and fish, and so on, as good as the next feller, ca n''t I? |
26218 | I-- I-- who said I had the men and a girl? |
26218 | If I give you ten dollars, will you call it off? |
26218 | Is he hurt? 26218 Is it getting soft?" |
26218 | Is this James MacHenry? |
26218 | Jack, could we take the Whistler down through Poplar River to Long Lake? |
26218 | Jack, how about a smoke? |
26218 | Jerry, does n''t that look like Si Peters''yacht? |
26218 | Jerry, what do you think of that? |
26218 | Never had a dose of tar before, did you? |
26218 | No, I want to know where you have been? |
26218 | Oh, wo n''t that be robbing you? |
26218 | On business? |
26218 | On guard? 26218 Please describe that tramp to me, will you?" |
26218 | Please, mister, will you give me five cents? |
26218 | Ready? |
26218 | Robbed? |
26218 | Say, Harry, supposing we get on the yacht and make them row us back to the island? |
26218 | Say, Pop maybe I kin hab-- I mean have-- a new suit, eh? |
26218 | Say, is this a game? |
26218 | Say, wot yer doin''in here? |
26218 | See anything? |
26218 | See here, Upton how much do you want to go off and leave me alone? |
26218 | Shall I give''em a shot? |
26218 | Shall we go in boldly and order them to produce the girl? |
26218 | Shay, waz you do that fer? |
26218 | Since when? |
26218 | So you live with Crazy Jim? |
26218 | So you''re trying to rob this gent, eh? |
26218 | Supposing we have a drink, then? |
26218 | Supposing we take a walk out together this evening? |
26218 | Supposing you take it over to Mr. Dike, Jerry? |
26218 | Sure it was n''t a spasm in your great toe? |
26218 | Take to the woods? |
26218 | That was n''t bad, eh? |
26218 | Then you do n''t git a cent, see? |
26218 | Think you are boss, eh? |
26218 | To daddy-- you mean your father? |
26218 | To the station house? |
26218 | Vot you means py preaking mine vinder, hey, you Crazy Gim? 26218 Want a carriage, boss?" |
26218 | Was she stolen from you? |
26218 | Was the thing worth much? |
26218 | Waz you knock me down for, I demand to know? |
26218 | Waz you mean, boy? |
26218 | We must follow that boat; eh, Jerry? |
26218 | Well, now that the midsummer holidays have really commenced, what do you intend to do with yourself, Jerry? |
26218 | Well, young man, how did you make out last night? |
26218 | Well, young man, what can I do for you? |
26218 | What are yer doin''? |
26218 | What are you going to do about my father''s claim? |
26218 | What are you going to do with five cents? |
26218 | What are you going to do with me? |
26218 | What are you going to do? |
26218 | What boat is that? |
26218 | What can you do? |
26218 | What did he do, Dick? |
26218 | What did you do with the valise, Wash? |
26218 | What do you do for a living? |
26218 | What do you mean by locking that door? |
26218 | What do you mean by running into me in this fashion? |
26218 | What do you mean, Harry? |
26218 | What do you mean, Si Peters? |
26218 | What do you mean? 26218 What do you mean?" |
26218 | What do you mean? |
26218 | What do you see? |
26218 | What do you think of that, Jerry? |
26218 | What do you want to find Crazy Jim for? |
26218 | What does Cornfield know about rowing, anyhow? |
26218 | What does he want with it? |
26218 | What does your-- your daddy want with the five cents? |
26218 | What for? |
26218 | What have you heard? 26218 What is he up to?" |
26218 | What is it you want? |
26218 | What is it you want? |
26218 | What is it, Jack? |
26218 | What is it, Towser? |
26218 | What is it? |
26218 | What is to prevent him from running the launch so that I shall get all the swash? 26218 What is your name?" |
26218 | What is your name? |
26218 | What kind of time did we make? |
26218 | What news? |
26218 | What shall I do if they put me on the street? |
26218 | What shall we do? |
26218 | What shall we do? |
26218 | What shall we do? |
26218 | What shall we do? |
26218 | What sort of a plot? |
26218 | What sort of looking men? |
26218 | What were you robbed of? |
26218 | What will you do now? |
26218 | What will you do? |
26218 | What would you like me to do? |
26218 | What''s the matter with Villelet? |
26218 | What''s the matter with asking me? |
26218 | What''s the matter, Dick? |
26218 | What''s the matter, Jerry? 26218 What''s the matter, do n''t you like it?" |
26218 | What''s the matter-- are you hurt? |
26218 | What''s the matter? |
26218 | What''s the meaning of this? |
26218 | What''s the trouble here? |
26218 | What''s the trouble? |
26218 | What''s the use? 26218 What''s up here?" |
26218 | What''s up, Jerry? |
26218 | What''s up? |
26218 | What''s up? |
26218 | What, and let the robbers escape? |
26218 | What-- ah-- do you mean by talking to me in this fashion? |
26218 | What-- what is the meaning of this? |
26218 | What? |
26218 | What? |
26218 | When do you want him to come? |
26218 | Where are they? |
26218 | Where can it be? |
26218 | Where did he go? |
26218 | Where did he go? |
26218 | Where did she go with them? |
26218 | Where did the horse kick him, mother? |
26218 | Where did you come from? |
26218 | Where do you live? |
26218 | Where do you suppose Crosby and Peters are? |
26218 | Where is Harry? |
26218 | Where is Miss Nellie? |
26218 | Where is he? |
26218 | Where is she now? |
26218 | Where is the brush? |
26218 | Where is the land located? |
26218 | Where shall I go? |
26218 | Where shall I land you, Blumpo? |
26218 | Where to? |
26218 | Where were you fouled? |
26218 | Which way did the carriage go? |
26218 | Who are ye lookin''fer? |
26218 | Who are you? 26218 Who are you?" |
26218 | Who are you? |
26218 | Who are you? |
26218 | Who did this? |
26218 | Who did you have for a fare? |
26218 | Who is Abraham? |
26218 | Who is going to hurt us in this out of the way spot? |
26218 | Who is that boy? |
26218 | Who robbed you? |
26218 | Who said they belonged to you? |
26218 | Who set you over me? |
26218 | Who threw that? |
26218 | Who will take your word against mine? 26218 Who-- what?" |
26218 | Who-- where did you hear of Bryant Ardell? |
26218 | Who? |
26218 | Whose order? |
26218 | Why ca n''t we take our yacht down through the river and be on deck to see it? |
26218 | Why did n''t you hold the thief? |
26218 | Why not? |
26218 | Why not? |
26218 | Why, boy, what do you mean? 26218 Why, father, were you going to New York?" |
26218 | Why, what''s your hurry, Jerry? |
26218 | Will they do it? |
26218 | Will we have to go back? |
26218 | Will you come along and make a charge against them? |
26218 | Will you stop and arrest him? |
26218 | Will you? |
26218 | Wo n''t that Mr. Islen whom you work for, help you? |
26218 | Wo n''t we? 26218 Would you put me on the street?" |
26218 | Yo''expect watah to run up hill? 26218 You are certain this Crazy Jim is the man I am after?" |
26218 | You are certain? |
26218 | You are going along, are n''t you, Harry? |
26218 | You are out of a situation? |
26218 | You are sure? |
26218 | You do n''t mean to say you delivered that packet to him? |
26218 | You have n''t seen him since we jumped from the row- boat? |
26218 | You have your uncle''s papers? |
26218 | You know Wash Crosby? |
26218 | You know him to be a pickpocket? |
26218 | You let him have it but an hour ago? |
26218 | You may make others believe that, Mr. Slocum, but--"But what, boy? 26218 You mean up at the island?" |
26218 | You mean you want me to go with you? |
26218 | You say that packet belonged to you? |
26218 | You take boarders here? |
26218 | You want everything, do n''t you? |
26218 | You were going to ask me for a job, were n''t you? |
26218 | You wo n''t stop? |
26218 | Your father''s claim? |
26218 | A new sail must be set at once, but in that high wind who would bring the old sail in? |
26218 | Ai n''t I, Harry? |
26218 | Ai n''t dat de truf, Jerry?" |
26218 | Ai n''t it? |
26218 | All that property is mine, do you hear? |
26218 | And now what of Blumpo Brown, you ask? |
26218 | And where can he be found?" |
26218 | Are you hungry?" |
26218 | Are you ready?" |
26218 | Can you tell me where this one is?" |
26218 | Clear out from home entirely?" |
26218 | Did Mr. Slocum say to put her out?" |
26218 | Did it have your name on?" |
26218 | Did n''t I tell ye ter keep yer clapper still about me? |
26218 | Did they rob you, Jerry?" |
26218 | Did you obtain a position?" |
26218 | Do n''t you hear some persons talking?" |
26218 | Do n''t you think your folks would let you?" |
26218 | Do you know the man?" |
26218 | Do you think we will make that point?" |
26218 | From whence had that unexpected command proceeded? |
26218 | Had he dropped them in Slocum''s office, or during his hasty flight to the alleyway? |
26218 | Have you ever heard of him?" |
26218 | How did you happen to fall in with them?" |
26218 | How had he come to that place? |
26218 | How?" |
26218 | If I go out, will you look after the children?" |
26218 | If this was so how was he to go to work to establish his father''s claim? |
26218 | In the meanwhile, how was Jerry faring? |
26218 | Is little Tommy hurt?" |
26218 | Mary, why did n''t you take better care of him?" |
26218 | May I ask what you are going to do in New York?" |
26218 | May I ask your name?" |
26218 | Oh, why did that storm have to come up on us?" |
26218 | Perhaps Jerry and Harry were not delighted? |
26218 | Say, do you know you have got the job Grice was going to give my brother?" |
26218 | She is well?" |
26218 | Slocum''s?" |
26218 | The captain overheard the remark and turned to Harry:"Would you really like to remain on board during the race?" |
26218 | The question now was, should he return to Slocum''s office or seek outside assistance? |
26218 | The question was, how should he best approach the man? |
26218 | Then he added in a whisper:"You have to set up the drinks for the crowd before you can work here, see?" |
26218 | Then he went on to Harry, in a lower tone:"I did n''t expect to make a public exhibition of our little trial at speed, did you?" |
26218 | To where? |
26218 | To whom does the land belong?" |
26218 | Upton?" |
26218 | Was n''t Dick Harben''s uncle killed by one? |
26218 | Was the bundle valuable?" |
26218 | Was there, Greenley?" |
26218 | Well, how did you make out? |
26218 | What can I do?" |
26218 | What did you say about a little girl?" |
26218 | What do you want to see him for?" |
26218 | What for?" |
26218 | What had I best do?" |
26218 | What had become of them? |
26218 | What have you done with my money?" |
26218 | What if their chum had really gone to the bottom of Lake Otasco? |
26218 | What is yours?" |
26218 | What kind of a looking man?" |
26218 | What shall we do now?" |
26218 | What would he have to say when he learned who the youth was and what he had come for? |
26218 | When will you move? |
26218 | Where did you take the young lady?" |
26218 | Where do you come from-- Brooklyn?" |
26218 | Where was he and how long had he been there? |
26218 | Which of you will take the tiller, if I tell you exactly what to do?" |
26218 | Who else would go along, do you think?" |
26218 | Why did n''t she come with you?" |
26218 | Will you be kind enough to stay with Tommy a few minutes?" |
26218 | Will you promise not to reveal my dwelling place to your friends?" |
26218 | Wot was in de package?" |
26218 | Would the man endeavor to hunt him out or would he write to his father? |
26218 | Would you mind telling me about it? |
26218 | You are sure you are right?" |
26218 | are you going to combine to ruin my reputation?" |
26218 | has she been blabbin''again? |
26218 | he called- out,"do you see this gun? |
26218 | is she dead?" |
26218 | what are you doing?" |
26218 | what does this mean?" |
26218 | what''s that crowd on the street?" |
30698 | All set, Sergeant? |
30698 | And in the pocket was your old identification fold, and certain other papers? 30698 And the recommendation you tacked on to it?" |
30698 | And your hand? |
30698 | Any other reason? |
30698 | Anything else, Major? |
30698 | Anything else? |
30698 | Are n''t you going to ground him? |
30698 | Are they good? |
30698 | Are you joking us? |
30698 | Are you kidding me? |
30698 | Attack the Hindenburg Line? 30698 Both of you are quite well acquainted with Lieutenant Siddons, I believe?" |
30698 | But he talked? |
30698 | But what about that''drome I located at Fere- en- Tardenois? 30698 But you''d take up combat formation, of course?" |
30698 | Clever? 30698 Count von Herzmann, I believe?" |
30698 | Did Sergeant Williams get orders for my plane? |
30698 | Did n''t Robinson have any more masquerade costumes? |
30698 | Did you call, sir? |
30698 | Did you ever see anything like it, Buzz? 30698 Did you get orders, too?" |
30698 | Did you say your name was Smoot, or Snoot? 30698 Did you see this communique from our old front?" |
30698 | Do we not all enjoy the thing that presents some hazard? 30698 Do you know where my orderly sleeps, Rawlins?" |
30698 | Do you realize the danger of the mission? |
30698 | Do you remember passing over the French''drome outside of Vitry? |
30698 | Do you want some smart Looie to come up here and chase us out? |
30698 | Ever notice how much longer these blasted things are when you are sleepy? |
30698 | First question-- will I fly again? |
30698 | Five days? |
30698 | Fool''s errand,_ Herr Hauptmann?_he responded in German. |
30698 | Going by the cafà © down on the main drag? |
30698 | Great show, eh? |
30698 | Has Siddons reported to you, sir? |
30698 | Have n''t you seen the General Order providing for it? |
30698 | Have you heard anything of this repatriation business? |
30698 | How can that be done? |
30698 | How could I? 30698 How do you know?" |
30698 | How do you mean, avenge you? |
30698 | How in the world did you get across the line? |
30698 | How long does it take a broken arm to heal, Buzz? |
30698 | How''d you like to have a flyer like that in this outfit? |
30698 | How''s that, Martins? |
30698 | How''s that, sir? |
30698 | I believe both of you have heard of a certain German ace, Count von Herzmann? |
30698 | I suppose you wonder why I have said nothing to you about your failure to rejoin the squadron the other day after you cut out at Vitry? |
30698 | I take it you have said nothing to Larkin, or anyone else, concerning your-- ah, our suspicions? |
30698 | I wonder if you would like to give me a confirmation, Lieutenant Siddons? |
30698 | Indeed? 30698 Indeed?" |
30698 | Is Larkin here? |
30698 | Is my squadron there, sir? |
30698 | Is there anything more precious to our cause than to learn just now where this next blow is to be struck? 30698 Just where would we get off?" |
30698 | Know the way? |
30698 | Lieutenant,his voice had the edge of a razor but its cut was not so smooth,"do you not know that attention is not called when at mess?" |
30698 | Lucky? 30698 May I speak to you a moment-- privately?" |
30698 | Maybe we do n''t look so bad, if fellows like that are willing to throw in with us, eh, Tex? |
30698 | Mean? 30698 No orders for to- morrow morning?" |
30698 | No? |
30698 | Not even_ one_--for luck? |
30698 | Not trained, eh? 30698 Oh, McGee?" |
30698 | Oh, you go in for size? 30698 Perhaps you recall how I bawled him out for cutting formation over Vitry that day when we were on our way up for our first action? |
30698 | Petrol off, sir? |
30698 | Ready? 30698 Really, Buzz?" |
30698 | Really? 30698 Say, have you got the pip? |
30698 | Say, what did that tongue- tied sap Rodd mean by that dirty dig? 30698 Say, what''s eatin''you, soldier?" |
30698 | See any of''em fly? |
30698 | See anything peculiar in this situation? |
30698 | See him crash? |
30698 | Serve America? 30698 So Cowan is all right?" |
30698 | So the attack comes here? 30698 So you have at last found out what I knew all along, Major?" |
30698 | So you really wanted to be a pilot, Martins? |
30698 | So? |
30698 | Switch off? |
30698 | That makes a lot of chuckle- heads out of the rest of us, does n''t it? |
30698 | That morning? 30698 Think so?" |
30698 | Uniform? |
30698 | Was n''t that a careless thing for a great ace to do? |
30698 | Well then, what''s the dope? |
30698 | Well, for the luva Pete? |
30698 | Well, why not? 30698 Well,"he said at last,"just what would you do in my place?" |
30698 | Well,_ Herr Hauptmann_,he addressed the officer at the head of the table,"do you find my disguise, and my English, sufficiently correct?" |
30698 | Well-- what''s that to do with-- with Siddons? |
30698 | Were you badly hurt? 30698 What about Hank Porter?" |
30698 | What about von Herzmann? |
30698 | What about-- Yancey? |
30698 | What are you driving at, Lieutenant? |
30698 | What did I tell you? |
30698 | What did you say, sir? |
30698 | What do I want? 30698 What do you know about that?" |
30698 | What do you mean, lucky? |
30698 | What do you mean? |
30698 | What happened, Buzz? |
30698 | What happened, Red? 30698 What if the squadron should be sent up?" |
30698 | What is he coming here for? |
30698 | What is it? |
30698 | What is-- that? |
30698 | What kind of an outfit did you draw, Buzz? |
30698 | What was the matter? |
30698 | What were you buzzing old Fuss Budget about? |
30698 | What''s eatin''you? |
30698 | What''s he doing here? |
30698 | What''s it supposed to be? |
30698 | What''s on your mind now, little teacher? 30698 What''s that? |
30698 | What''s this-- stuff? |
30698 | What''s wrong with that? |
30698 | When did you get here, Lieutenant? |
30698 | Where am I? |
30698 | Where can I drop you? |
30698 | Where does he come in? |
30698 | Where have you been? 30698 Where in creation did you get that gunny sack you''re wearing?" |
30698 | Where is Major Cowan? |
30698 | Where''d you get that idea? |
30698 | Where''d you pick up that little souvenir? |
30698 | Where''d you think you''d land-- in the Champs Elysees? |
30698 | Where''s Lieutenant Siddons going? |
30698 | Where''s McGee? |
30698 | Where''ve you been? |
30698 | Where? |
30698 | Who is he? |
30698 | Who is to be honored, Major? |
30698 | Who''s that? |
30698 | Why do n''t you get repatriated, Lieutenant? |
30698 | Why have n''t you? |
30698 | Why-- er-- do you really want me to? |
30698 | With Larkin? |
30698 | Wonder how I got that? |
30698 | Wonder what that is? |
30698 | Yeah? 30698 Yeah?" |
30698 | Yes, you are in command,he said, rather limply,"but why did n''t you stop McGee? |
30698 | Yes? 30698 Yes?" |
30698 | You are wondering why they are here, eh? 30698 You do n''t want''em?" |
30698 | You do, or you do not? |
30698 | You have no objection to flying in the top flight with me to- morrow? |
30698 | You here? |
30698 | You like him? |
30698 | You like joy- riding, eh? 30698 You mean-- you ran away from the hospital?" |
30698 | You sent for me, sir? |
30698 | You sent for me, sir? |
30698 | You think so, sir? 30698 You think so?" |
30698 | You want back under the old Stars and Stripes, do n''t you? 30698 You''ve checked her all over, Wilson?" |
30698 | You? |
30698 | Your plane is in good order? |
30698 | Ai n''t the air service wonderful?" |
30698 | All set?" |
30698 | Altitude was what McGee wanted, eh? |
30698 | Am I clear?" |
30698 | Am I right or wrong?" |
30698 | An old pass to Paris, for one thing?" |
30698 | And for what reason? |
30698 | And how I sent him over the lines on a mission to locate von Herzmann''s Circus?" |
30698 | And just what had been the effect of this five hour tornado of screaming shells? |
30698 | And the line of supplies? |
30698 | And what can_ we_ do about it?" |
30698 | And what comes to them to- morrow? |
30698 | And where had Siddons gone that day after landing at Vitry on the slenderest excuse? |
30698 | Any objections if I take a little joy- ride in the morning?" |
30698 | Anyone want a lift?" |
30698 | Anything else, sir?" |
30698 | Anything else?" |
30698 | Are you and Siddons goin''over on patrol, Lieutenant?" |
30698 | Are you anxious to change uniforms?" |
30698 | Are you sure?" |
30698 | As McGee climbed into his plane, Yancey"blipped"his motor and shouted,"Who said this was n''t a joy- ride?" |
30698 | At this hour? |
30698 | Big fellow, is n''t he?" |
30698 | But answer my question: What is the real reason why you have n''t thought of getting transferred into the United States forces?" |
30698 | But can you be sure that those Spads came upon the scene, at the right moment, by chance?" |
30698 | But how does all this information leak through?" |
30698 | But must it be you to take the chance? |
30698 | But no, Monsieur, they are young, and how can you make one fear discipline who daily faces death? |
30698 | But resembling whom? |
30698 | But what about passes? |
30698 | But what has that to do with the show? |
30698 | But where? |
30698 | By the way, Rawlins, do you know where we''re going?" |
30698 | By the way, Shrimp, how''d you like to fly to Paris to- morrow morning and give it the once over?" |
30698 | Could it be that man, in all his pride, was one of the least sensible of God''s creatures? |
30698 | Could that squadron, he wondered, by rare good fortune be the Circus of the famed von Herzmann? |
30698 | Danger? |
30698 | Did any of you ever see a Spad or Nieuport before?" |
30698 | Did n''t I see him go down just before I caught it?" |
30698 | Did n''t the fathead have any conception of pride of uniform and pride in a nation''s accomplishments? |
30698 | Did you boys think we were sent over here to get all messed up in this little old war? |
30698 | Did you get him?" |
30698 | Did you see how McGee took off? |
30698 | Did you see it last night?" |
30698 | Did you signal?" |
30698 | Do n''t you hear that siren? |
30698 | Do you get me, Buzz?" |
30698 | Do you remember how the Cadets of our class were sent up for solo in rickety old planes held together by wire, tape and chewing gum? |
30698 | Do you see it?" |
30698 | Do you think I have forgotten the day we were out having a look- see, five of us, and spotted five Albatrosses below? |
30698 | Do you understand?" |
30698 | Ever read any history?" |
30698 | For example, was n''t it luck that had sent them both down here on the French front to act as instructors to newly arriving American squadrons? |
30698 | Get me?" |
30698 | Had not the fight taken place in full view of the townspeople? |
30698 | Had that stupid pilot, whoever he was, forgotten what he had been told concerning Archie fire? |
30698 | Had they not already suffered enough? |
30698 | Had they not witnessed the daring and skill of these Americans? |
30698 | Harass the advancing enemy, eh? |
30698 | Have n''t you?" |
30698 | Have you been around New York much?" |
30698 | Have you ever shown them anything about looking in the sun for enemy planes?" |
30698 | Have you room?" |
30698 | He felt convinced that the''drome he had located was a new base for the squadron he had just seen, for were they not coming up from the interior? |
30698 | He took off slow because he_ knew_ you did n''t know nothin'', see?" |
30698 | He''s a good flyer, certainly, but-- what would you do with him, McGee?" |
30698 | How could he keep fooling them if he never took them any information?" |
30698 | How did you get here?" |
30698 | How do you like that-- you little shrimp?" |
30698 | How many of the old gang still here, Williams?" |
30698 | How''d you get down here? |
30698 | How''s that for impromptu poetry?" |
30698 | I reckon all you buckaroos think you know somethin''about flyin'', eh?" |
30698 | I suppose we could get the pass changed, but why fool with your luck? |
30698 | I wonder if it could be possible that he ran out of gas?" |
30698 | I wonder, Lieutenant,"he turned to McGee,"if you remember the report you made on that Hun you shot down over our''drome?" |
30698 | I wonder, Major, just when it will close?" |
30698 | I''d like to have you in my squadron, well enough, but what about the red tape?" |
30698 | If so, would they recognize him? |
30698 | If this operative, with the Americans, is back of Neuvilly, what is he doing there? |
30698 | In the nick of time, was n''t it? |
30698 | Is it broken off?" |
30698 | Is not that skill, Monsieur? |
30698 | Is that clear?" |
30698 | Is there anything else you have to take up with me now,_ Herr Hauptmann?_""Ach, yes! |
30698 | Is your head badly injured?" |
30698 | Know the way?" |
30698 | Larkin ran toward the group near the hangar entrance,"Where''s McGee?" |
30698 | Like to tour France, eh? |
30698 | Luck? |
30698 | Luck? |
30698 | M.P., eh? |
30698 | Major Cowan, how about you?" |
30698 | McGee was on the point of calling out,"When shall I call, sir?" |
30698 | Merely that he had noticed McGee and was on the alert? |
30698 | Mullins, how would you handle him? |
30698 | Neat enough, eh? |
30698 | Nerves, eh? |
30698 | Never can tell, can you? |
30698 | New York? |
30698 | Nice morning for my little jaunt, is n''t it?" |
30698 | No hedge hopping, eh? |
30698 | Now what in the world did he mean by that? |
30698 | Of all the good men in the squadron, why should that traitorous scoundrel be included and other loyal deserving pilots be left behind? |
30698 | Oh, so that was it? |
30698 | Oh, well-- such is war, eh? |
30698 | Or did he mean that he too had seen the enemy? |
30698 | Perhaps even another bit of iron to dangle on my coat, eh? |
30698 | Perhaps, the major suggested, with an understanding smile, this one had rather fly alone,_ hein_? |
30698 | Phlegmatic old Buzz, McGee thought, what was the use of getting excited over an instructor''s job? |
30698 | Rather original idea, do n''t you think? |
30698 | Rawther jolly prospect, what?" |
30698 | Red colored, and to change the subject, asked,"What about Hampden? |
30698 | Remember that day, Buzz?" |
30698 | Repatriated?" |
30698 | Say, do you know why he took her off so gentle? |
30698 | Say, who started this talk, anyhow? |
30698 | Say, who won this fight? |
30698 | See that American sergeant over there-- the one who carried the flag down the aisle and jumped up on the stage?" |
30698 | See that black fellow over there in French Colonial O.D.? |
30698 | So Larkin was back already? |
30698 | So McGee had forgotten all about his doleful sermon against dog- fighting? |
30698 | So the stupid Americans had thought to lead the German High Command astray by such a clumsy movement? |
30698 | So you still need instruction? |
30698 | Something like, eh? |
30698 | Sure they were here, but why get excited about it? |
30698 | That''s pretty close for a green squadron, do n''t you think?" |
30698 | The Boche is breaking through, eh? |
30698 | The trouble? |
30698 | The war''s lookin''up, eh?" |
30698 | Then Siddons said:"Are you going over to have a look at your fallen adversary, Lieutenant?" |
30698 | These youthful ones, would they never learn that this was a serious business? |
30698 | Those Boche planes? |
30698 | To his country? |
30698 | Top hole, is n''t it?" |
30698 | Two hated Englanders, eh? |
30698 | Understand, Buzz? |
30698 | Very well again, but where were the Spads? |
30698 | Very well, but where were those ships? |
30698 | Want to go?" |
30698 | Was n''t it old Omar who handed out that gag,''Ah, make the most of what we yet may spend, before we too into the dust descend''?... |
30698 | Was the maw of the monster there to the eastward bottomless and insatiable? |
30698 | We''ll go into action soon, do n''t you think?" |
30698 | What about Siddons?" |
30698 | What about the troops under Washington that took the breastworks at Yorktown without a single round of powder-- just bayonets? |
30698 | What about the war of 1812, when we had no army and the English thought we had no navy? |
30698 | What are you driving at?" |
30698 | What brought him here, and what sort of stories will he tell... when he gets back home? |
30698 | What could be simpler than to send forth von Herzmann with the full strength of his justly famous Circus to intercept these untried Americans? |
30698 | What did it hold? |
30698 | What do you make of that long range gun that is shelling this very city? |
30698 | What do you see in that fellow to like, Hamp?" |
30698 | What do you think of that?" |
30698 | What do you think this is-- a football game?" |
30698 | What do you think, brother? |
30698 | What do you want-- all the luck?" |
30698 | What happened? |
30698 | What happened?" |
30698 | What homes did they come from, and who is waiting for them? |
30698 | What is it you want?" |
30698 | What mattered it, to them, that the priceless art treasures of the Louvre had been removed to the safety of the southern interior? |
30698 | What mattered it? |
30698 | What sort of a flyer is this instructor?" |
30698 | What was it?" |
30698 | What went before? |
30698 | What would Cowan do? |
30698 | What would any of these green pilots do in such a dog fight? |
30698 | What''s eatin''you, anyway? |
30698 | What''s so funny about hiding my uniform so I''ll get bawled out again by Old Fuss Budget for wearing this misfit?" |
30698 | What''s that?" |
30698 | What''s the big idea?" |
30698 | What''s up, Rawlins?" |
30698 | What''s wrong with this uniform?" |
30698 | Where had he seen that face? |
30698 | Where have you been since then?" |
30698 | Where is he now? |
30698 | Where is he?" |
30698 | Where was the enemy? |
30698 | Where was the equipment at Valley Forge? |
30698 | Where was this bloomin''war that seemed so difficult to win? |
30698 | Where were the German lines? |
30698 | Where were the roads that led men back to the land of living, green things? |
30698 | Where would the next one be? |
30698 | Where''s Larkin?" |
30698 | Where''s McGee, I asked you?" |
30698 | Where''s that uniform?" |
30698 | Where''ve you been?" |
30698 | Where? |
30698 | Which one of you will give me a confirmation?" |
30698 | Who ever heard of an old war pilot? |
30698 | Who''s the Britisher over there snooping around with Cowan?" |
30698 | Why did you leave?" |
30698 | Why do n''t you get uniforms?" |
30698 | Why do n''t you hang this thing on a church steeple, Lieutenant, and get one of those Spads?" |
30698 | Why had he even thought he would have to make the trial alone? |
30698 | Why should he want to be with us?" |
30698 | Why should n''t he talk-- especially when he had so much to learn about this strange place? |
30698 | Why worry? |
30698 | Why?" |
30698 | Will he tell about what he did, or will he talk about what he saw and what others did?" |
30698 | Wonder how all of us got here? |
30698 | Wonder how they got here?" |
30698 | Would they see the ringed cockades on his wings, or would eager anti- aircraft gunners start blazing away? |
30698 | Yeah? |
30698 | Yes, he had given his destination-- La Ferte sous Jouarre, but is not that on a direct line for Paris, Monsieur? |
30698 | You are going to nab him?" |
30698 | You have read, doubtless, how in the olden times hostages were held?" |
30698 | You know the cost-- should you fail?" |
30698 | You mean Germany?" |
30698 | You or the other fellow?" |
30698 | You say the French questioned him?" |
30698 | You understand?" |
31561 | ''Do I want a son- in- law nearly as old as I am?'' 31561 A kind of matrimonial sandwich, eh? |
31561 | A what? 31561 A what?" |
31561 | Am I in? 31561 Amazed, eh? |
31561 | And they were to have been married a week from to- day, you say? 31561 And this silk gauze affair, what is this?" |
31561 | Any of his folks been here? 31561 Are they all about to get married, I wonder?" |
31561 | Are you an idiot? 31561 Ben, what are you doing up this time of night? |
31561 | But did your friend say who wrote them? 31561 But how much have I paid you altogether? |
31561 | But she got married, of course, did n''t she? |
31561 | But what I want to get at is this: How did I come to get here? 31561 But what do you care about Hosley? |
31561 | Ca n''t you imagine, Jim? |
31561 | Can you tell me where I''ll find the grave noted on this slip of paper? |
31561 | Could we not win him over to our view of Jim? 31561 Did you grease that thing?" |
31561 | Do n''t you find it lonesome? |
31561 | Do n''t you know that a wedding is a ceremonial affair, where all the grand formalities must be observed? |
31561 | Do n''t you remember four years ago we stopped there overnight? 31561 Do you believe that is a real Rogues''Gallery picture?" |
31561 | Do you know that you wrote enough letters to my girls to have married me off a dozen times or more? 31561 Do you suppose you''ll ever get that much?" |
31561 | Electricity? 31561 Gabrielle, are you really to be married against your father''s wishes, my dear?" |
31561 | Gabrielle, my dear,asked Mrs. Tescheron softly,"are you sure this Mr. Hosley is the strong, brave man you think he is? |
31561 | Getting ready to plant? |
31561 | Got it with you? |
31561 | Got no blank checks with you, I suppose? |
31561 | Hair? |
31561 | Hanging or wedding, I''m to be there-- is that agreed? |
31561 | Hard or soft? |
31561 | Has your old heart grown cold, shriveled up, or what''s the matter? |
31561 | Have you anybody to recommend you? |
31561 | How about those flowers? |
31561 | How are you so cock- sure his name is George Marshall? |
31561 | How can you account for the base treachery of that man? |
31561 | How could you? 31561 How do I? |
31561 | How far down is it? |
31561 | How is it she brings flowers to me? |
31561 | How much did you get out of Tescheron? 31561 How much does the interest amount to at six per cent.? |
31561 | How much of a balance have you there? |
31561 | How much? |
31561 | How old is pa? |
31561 | How would the cash do, captain? |
31561 | I wonder would he turn up his nose at me, an Inspector of Offensive Trades? |
31561 | I? 31561 If it''s a love- letter, ought we to trifle with it?" |
31561 | Ill? 31561 In the hospital? |
31561 | In where? |
31561 | Is that all he said? |
31561 | Is that so? 31561 Is the pickle coming?" |
31561 | Jim, I have never doubted you-- I never could doubt you, for do I not know your heart as you know mine? |
31561 | Jim, do n''t you think it splendid? |
31561 | Jim, do you know that you have this prospective father- in- law all twisted? 31561 Jim, if that wedding comes off next Wednesday, will you forgive me?" |
31561 | Jim, why did n''t you learn how to write letters, so that you could send some to me like that? 31561 Jim, why do n''t you laugh?" |
31561 | Miss Tescheron, I come to right a great wrong, for which I am wholly responsible; will you hear me? |
31561 | Mr. Obreeon,said I,"about what would compensate you for your trouble in gathering up those letters?" |
31561 | Mr. Smith, alias Mr. Van Riper, alias Mr. Stewart, what name have you your bank account under, these days? |
31561 | Must I to the lees Drain thy bitter chalice, Pain? 31561 Not too thick to please the girls, did I?" |
31561 | On what does pa base his opposition? |
31561 | Say, boss, does Mr. Benjamin Hopkins live up here? |
31561 | Say, ca n''t you tell me what sort of a looking dub he is? |
31561 | Say, have n''t you seen anybody around his room coming to see him? |
31561 | Say, was it as bad as that, do you think? |
31561 | Says you''re old enough to be her father, does n''t he? |
31561 | Shall Autocrats Rule Us? |
31561 | Since two o''clock to- day, eh? 31561 So he has fooled you, too? |
31561 | Sorrow? 31561 South Street?" |
31561 | Tell me what it is, then-- is it that miserable fancied conspiracy against me? 31561 That''s it, but he''s off; and how would you get around it, anyway-- by postponing it?" |
31561 | Then you are really friendly to Mr. Hosley, and may look for him when you leave here? |
31561 | Well, I was n''t to blame for that, was I? |
31561 | Well, it would seem cruel to take your love- letters, you know, Mr. Hopkins, and read them to the other nurses to laugh over, now would n''t it? |
31561 | What a heavy lace insertion-- Valenciennes, a good part of it, is n''t it, Gabrielle? |
31561 | What about her? 31561 What are those papers you put back in your pocket?" |
31561 | What are you going there for, Ben? |
31561 | What became of it? |
31561 | What can you be thinking of? 31561 What can you do now? |
31561 | What did he look like? 31561 What do you call this, Ben?" |
31561 | What do you care so long as the girls were pleased? 31561 What do you think of that, Ben?" |
31561 | What do you think of those beans, Jim? |
31561 | What does this all mean-- this opposition of Tescheron, this sudden action of Gabrielle? |
31561 | What floor? |
31561 | What funeral? |
31561 | What has he done to brag about? 31561 What is it to be worn over? |
31561 | What sort of a looking man is that fellow, George Marshall, who was hurt? |
31561 | What would he have done without Lord Byron? |
31561 | What-- to forgive me? |
31561 | What? 31561 When did you leave Gabrielle?" |
31561 | When is it to come off? |
31561 | Where is Hosley? 31561 Where to in Hoboken, my dear Gabrielle? |
31561 | Where''s his office? |
31561 | Which would you rather go to-- a wedding or a hanging? |
31561 | Who sent them? |
31561 | Who''d give it? |
31561 | Why ca n''t I go in and talk to him? 31561 Why do n''t you use a spade and get somewhere?" |
31561 | Why do you bother about him, Jim? 31561 Why does it take so many clothes to get married?" |
31561 | Why is it they ca n''t make coffee in a hospital? |
31561 | Why should he ask if you are in jail? 31561 Why, who in the world could have written this nonsense?" |
31561 | Why, you are going up to Ninety- sixth Street, are n''t you? |
31561 | Why, you are not thinking of paying it, are you? |
31561 | Yes; you bring him here to- morrow, and I''ll tell him-- see? |
31561 | You are supposed to deal in justice here, are you not, Miss Tescheron? |
31561 | You keep house alone? |
31561 | You know that young lady, Miss Tescheron-- Miss Gabrielle Tescheron? |
31561 | You will be my good friend, will you not? |
31561 | You would n''t have us scuffle through it in old shoes and walking skirts, would you? |
31561 | You wrote this letter-- you wrote the others-- do you deny it? |
31561 | You''ll square me against him? |
31561 | About one thousand eight hundred dollars, is n''t it?" |
31561 | Agreed, eh?" |
31561 | All I ask of you, my dear, is, are you sure? |
31561 | And are you only a jail- bird? |
31561 | And does she heedless hear my groan? |
31561 | And how does she come to send them to you? |
31561 | And is she ever, ever lost? |
31561 | And must I think it!--is she gone, My secret heart''s exulting boast? |
31561 | And say-- how much do you keep out of it, Smith?" |
31561 | And was I not an inhuman wretch, who touched with the sting of sarcasm, ridicule and scorn the vital things that interest normal beings? |
31561 | And what did you have against Mr. Hosley before that hour, pray?" |
31561 | And what matters it? |
31561 | And yet you say he is a rubber- neck for a cracker house?" |
31561 | Any bull''s- eyes?" |
31561 | Are n''t you getting tired of the company of these stuffed birds, though? |
31561 | Are n''t you going to stir? |
31561 | Are there any more?" |
31561 | Are there no other joys in life but the top notes of the birdies and the murmurings of the awakening forest? |
31561 | Are you comfortable now?" |
31561 | Are you not anxious to question me? |
31561 | Are you telling me the truth?" |
31561 | As to Flanagan and Tom Martin-- did I treat? |
31561 | Both the woman and her husband--""Why, did he really win her heart with them, and did they get married?" |
31561 | But tell me, why do you doubt my sincerity? |
31561 | But why do n''t you put out a few letters for yourself?" |
31561 | But why had Tescheron placed such confidence in Smith, whom he had known for such a short time? |
31561 | But, on the other hand, had he not fooled me for ten years? |
31561 | CHAPTER X What is this unerring clairvoyance that prompts devoted hearts in moments of danger, in crises demanding supernatural judgment? |
31561 | CHAPTER XVII What should I do with myself? |
31561 | Ca n''t you hurry home, Margaret? |
31561 | Can there be no healing balm benign in a woman''s tender sympathy? |
31561 | Come, Gabrielle, do tell me now, wo n''t you?" |
31561 | Could that be possible? |
31561 | Could there be aught of guile in that embrace? |
31561 | Could this companion to whom I would have trusted my life have deserted me at the moment of danger when I lay there overcome by smoke? |
31561 | Could you not be satisfied with less shopping and less dressmaking?" |
31561 | Did I think I could manage his affairs with so much lost time? |
31561 | Did n''t the nurse hurry us from the hospital that day because she said Mr. Hopkins had told her you were a rogue? |
31561 | Did n''t we pass through almost the same experience? |
31561 | Did n''t you see them? |
31561 | Did we send her many or was she easily won?" |
31561 | Did you ever go through the woods with a native New Yorker? |
31561 | Did you ever price roses like that? |
31561 | Do n''t you know you made a bad break the last time?" |
31561 | Do n''t you know''The Pain Killer''used to be full of it when advertisements ran low?" |
31561 | Do n''t you realize what your position is if this crime is revealed? |
31561 | Do n''t you see that both father and he have been impressed by the story of those villainous detectives, who would do anything for money?" |
31561 | Do n''t you see you did, Ben? |
31561 | Do n''t you think it lovely? |
31561 | Do rogues show such heroism? |
31561 | Do they?" |
31561 | Do you blame me? |
31561 | Do you deny it?" |
31561 | Do you feel well to- day?" |
31561 | Do you know how she died? |
31561 | Do you see? |
31561 | Do you think he will get well?" |
31561 | Do you think that is a friendly attitude to take toward an agent who has increased the range of your powers of fascination?" |
31561 | Does it make you tired, Jim?" |
31561 | Does it seem reasonable? |
31561 | Does n''t that beat you? |
31561 | Had n''t the detectives been at work a whole six hours? |
31561 | Has Miss Tescheron confided his whereabouts to you? |
31561 | Has Miss Tescheron spoken to you about him?" |
31561 | Has he committed some crime that you would track him down?" |
31561 | Has n''t he been here to see me? |
31561 | Has n''t he been here to see me? |
31561 | Has n''t he written to me?" |
31561 | Has n''t he written to me?'' |
31561 | Have I given you license to interfere in my affairs? |
31561 | Have I not watched you both? |
31561 | Have n''t you had all you want of that fire, without talking it all over again with that man?" |
31561 | Have these charges raised no suspicion in your mind against me? |
31561 | Have you no pity for me, Margaret? |
31561 | He charges me with some crime-- but in heaven''s name, what crime? |
31561 | He deserted me in my hour of need-- but go on with your dusting; what matters it? |
31561 | He has reformed so much since--""Are n''t you ready yet, my dear? |
31561 | He has told you, has he not? |
31561 | He was not able to resist the lady when she asked:"Why do n''t you speak for yourself, John?" |
31561 | He--""Tell me, if you thought of reading them to Mr. Hosley, where is he? |
31561 | Her first question was put to a policeman on guard near the edge of the crowd:"Officer, please tell me if there were any persons injured at the fire?" |
31561 | Hopkins?" |
31561 | Hosley?" |
31561 | How could you allow a woman to separate you from your old pal? |
31561 | How did he know where I had gone that night to be enlightened? |
31561 | How did she find time to pursue a course in medicine? |
31561 | How did that happen? |
31561 | How do you find the state of the country to- night?" |
31561 | How far did the whale throw Jonah? |
31561 | How far from here is his room?" |
31561 | How had he been able to assume that childish air and play the part with me, a shrewd, calculating observer of men, whose advice he always sought? |
31561 | How is it possible for me to reconcile these statements? |
31561 | How long have I been here? |
31561 | How long must I stay here?" |
31561 | How many in your family?" |
31561 | How much more fortunate he is than the poor fellow in the next room-- his friend, I believe you said?" |
31561 | How shall we banish the terrors that arise in lonely hours? |
31561 | How so? |
31561 | How so?" |
31561 | I shall send your parrot over to- morrow and have Bridget come to talk over the housekeeping affairs with you, shall I?" |
31561 | I think he is perfectly friendly, do n''t you? |
31561 | I will--""But you will stay there with me, Gabrielle, will you not?" |
31561 | I wish_ I_ might come in somewhere:-- Has Margaret forgotten_ me_, And love I now in vain? |
31561 | I''ll bet the old chap is well off, and do you want to know why he dresses so fine and keeps cologne on his handkerchief?" |
31561 | I--""Are you a fool?" |
31561 | I--""How long have you had them out?" |
31561 | If he were dead, killed in the fire, Miss Tescheron would have told the nurse, for had she not brought me flowers? |
31561 | If you really do n''t fear the publicity, why did you engage me at all? |
31561 | In the meantime I am made unhappy by his present attitude-- how can I help it? |
31561 | Is Smith also your lawyer? |
31561 | Is he a jail- bird? |
31561 | Is he awake?" |
31561 | Is he in jail? |
31561 | Is he in jail? |
31561 | Is it near Stukeville, ma''am?" |
31561 | Is it that girl down- town?" |
31561 | Is it worth while, do you think, to sacrifice mother''s comfort, perhaps her health?" |
31561 | Is n''t it an attractive picture, Jim?--full of that''soothing, fond complaining''for them, and comedy for the rest of us? |
31561 | Is n''t it natural for me to ask about him? |
31561 | Is n''t that so? |
31561 | It is the bluest- looking woman I ever saw; how did they come to let it in?" |
31561 | Jim, did you ever feel so hungry before when you settled down there?" |
31561 | Jim, you never teased me by stealing a lock of my hair, did you? |
31561 | LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS PAGE CUPID''S MIDDLEMAN_ Frontispiece_"WHY, WHO IN THE WORLD COULD HAVE WRITTEN THIS NONSENSE?" |
31561 | Let me into all of that, wo n''t you?" |
31561 | Let the whole world forsake me, and you remain true, what care I? |
31561 | May I call to- morrow evening? |
31561 | May I not read a few to them?" |
31561 | May I?" |
31561 | My nurse in your room, too?" |
31561 | No? |
31561 | No?" |
31561 | Now, what do you think of that? |
31561 | Of course, I understood how anxious Tescheron was to get damaging evidence against Hosley; but what had Smith shown him? |
31561 | Of course, there is naught but fear to account for these distressing delusions, but is it not as real when it wounds as the dagger''s point? |
31561 | Of course, they did it unconsciously; but Fate wisely predisposes, I believe--""Well, what has this all got to do with Gabrielle?" |
31561 | Pretty late, ai n''t it?" |
31561 | Really one ca n''t help laughing, and as we do n''t know whose letters these are, why should n''t we laugh? |
31561 | Really, are you fooling? |
31561 | Remembering our happy days together, why should their inspiration not sustain me now? |
31561 | Say, mister, what time is it?" |
31561 | Say, that''s a lot of money, though-- over five thousand dollars, you say?" |
31561 | Shall I get it for you?" |
31561 | Should I bring a birth certificate?" |
31561 | Should I not write to her and thank her for sending flowers to me when I was ill? |
31561 | Should we not try?" |
31561 | Sincerely, JAMES H. April 17,---- Dear Margaretta: How long are you to be gone? |
31561 | Smith, are you lying to me? |
31561 | So why should he be careful about the mere card of an undertaker? |
31561 | So, that is the way it was, eh? |
31561 | So? |
31561 | Still, it is funny to stand aside and see two people in love, is n''t it, Jim? |
31561 | Still, why did he squirm and appear so uneasy when I went out? |
31561 | Strange, ai n''t it? |
31561 | Such a dresser you never saw, and what is he? |
31561 | Tell me, Gabrielle, are you sure?" |
31561 | Tell me, Jim, how Gabrielle could keep you away? |
31561 | Tell me, what should be done? |
31561 | The first thing he asked almost was:''Where is Hosley? |
31561 | Then came the last"but"of all-- Why did n''t he come to see me, or why had I not heard from him? |
31561 | Then why send a sick man to the hospital? |
31561 | This seemed to shock her rudely, but she quickly recovered and asked:"Why look for a man in whom you have no interest? |
31561 | Tidy up this room, Bridget, and if anybody calls, say we are away visiting for a few days--""In Hoebroken, ma''am?" |
31561 | Time? |
31561 | To me, it is most foolish and absurd; but why argue with father if we would convince him? |
31561 | Was Gabrielle surprised at this? |
31561 | Was I not in the world simply to be tempered and hardened by all the adversities to which a heart may be subjected? |
31561 | Was he hurt? |
31561 | Was he hurt? |
31561 | Was he killed? |
31561 | Was he killed? |
31561 | Was it his ghost hovering near, longing to return to its earthly habitation, and propose a housekeeping merger with me? |
31561 | Was it not the grateful thing to do? |
31561 | Was it only because he had so much to tell me about his disappointment over the interview with Mr. Tescheron? |
31561 | Was it part of my work for the city? |
31561 | Was she not with you at the hospital?" |
31561 | Was sincerity to be doubted when so emphasized? |
31561 | Was there to be a cremation in the Browning case? |
31561 | Were they to be my torturers to the death? |
31561 | What about the morality of the city man? |
31561 | What am I here for except to escape the scandal that would attach to my family? |
31561 | What asylums that you have been in do you prefer-- eh?" |
31561 | What chance had a man with women, handicapped as I was? |
31561 | What could I say up against a know- it- all combination? |
31561 | What did old Tescheron want of me? |
31561 | What do you make of it? |
31561 | What do you think of them?" |
31561 | What does Hygeia think? |
31561 | What flat? |
31561 | What has he done? |
31561 | What has time to do with love? |
31561 | What he had to say was published in a bulletin or a report-- let me see, was it from the Department of Agriculture? |
31561 | What kind of records did they keep in their office if they could n''t bunch a choice bouquet of crime for a fellow willing to pay for it? |
31561 | What match was he, what adversary I, for Cupid, lacking the inspiration the god gave to his faithful adherents? |
31561 | What matters it? |
31561 | What say I? |
31561 | What was it worth to keep out of the electric chair? |
31561 | What was the secret? |
31561 | What was the use? |
31561 | What will he think of me?" |
31561 | What would be the outcome? |
31561 | What would you recommend in a case of this kind?" |
31561 | When two bachelors are so wedded, is it possible for one to deceive the other? |
31561 | When, Margaretta, do you return? |
31561 | When? |
31561 | Where am I in?" |
31561 | Where did the electricity come from?" |
31561 | Where did they appear? |
31561 | Where do you suppose I came in? |
31561 | Where?" |
31561 | Which house?" |
31561 | Who is Hosley, pray? |
31561 | Who tossed me from the window? |
31561 | Why are you so foolish now to worry about him? |
31561 | Why did you go to any expense whatever? |
31561 | Why did you not wait till to- morrow and talk this thing over?" |
31561 | Why do you ask if they concern him? |
31561 | Why do you ask me is he in jail, and all those questions? |
31561 | Why do you begin to talk about jail so soon?" |
31561 | Why do you care if they concern me?" |
31561 | Why do you lie there, Marie? |
31561 | Why had I been left to strangers? |
31561 | Why had he not sent notes hourly to learn of my condition? |
31561 | Why had he taken no further interest in me? |
31561 | Why had n''t he insisted on sleeping on the mat just outside the door if they would not let him in? |
31561 | Why had she not kept the coach to take her to Bellevue? |
31561 | Why have you not told me?" |
31561 | Why not brighten the dull moments? |
31561 | Why should I lie for six weeks in a hospital without Jim Hosley coming to see me? |
31561 | Why should a man of my temperament take a hand in love, war or diplomacy? |
31561 | Why should n''t Hygeia enjoy them with me? |
31561 | Why should they? |
31561 | With me in the next room? |
31561 | With whom did he live? |
31561 | Would it be in order for a small angel to have a pickle to cut his wings on? |
31561 | Would it ever come? |
31561 | Would it not seem cruel to have it published that jealousy, founded on love- letters the man never wrote, turned the woman from him at the very altar? |
31561 | Would luck ever come? |
31561 | Would n''t it be fine, mother, if we could tame father? |
31561 | Would you mind reading it aloud? |
31561 | Would you mind telling me, to satisfy my curiosity, just how much this thing has cost you?" |
31561 | Yes? |
31561 | You also noticed that no one who understands the sawmill business ever goes near it to give it a friendly tap just when it is looking that way? |
31561 | You are not angry with me, are you, Margaret?''" |
31561 | You have heard that gentle hum of the buzz- saw? |
31561 | You have seen how still it runs and how its feathery edge seems calm during the lull in the sawmill? |
31561 | You must be strong while I tell you this, will you? |
31561 | You still doubt? |
31561 | You will not withhold them, will you, Margaret? |
31561 | You''ll not be gone long, ma''am? |
31561 | [ Illustration:"WHY, WHO IN THE WORLD COULD HAVE WRITTEN THIS NONSENSE?" |
18909 | Ai n''t goin''to see the celebration? |
18909 | And is mine one? |
18909 | And so you saw them-- when? 18909 And where are they? |
18909 | Are you not tired with rolling and never Resting to sleep? 18909 Backward?" |
18909 | Birds can fly, An''why ca n''t I? 18909 But if some maid with beauty blest, As pure and fair as Heaven can make her, Will share my labor and my rest Till envious Death shall overtake her? |
18909 | But if some maiden with a heart On me should venture to bestow it, Pray should I act the wiser part To take the treasure or forego it? 18909 But what if, seemingly afraid To bind her fate in Hymen''s fetter, She vow she means to die a maid, In answer to my loving letter? |
18909 | But why do I talk of Death,-- That phantom of grisly bone? 18909 Could we send him a short message? |
18909 | Dear Pig, are you willing to sell for one shilling Your ring? |
18909 | Do you know the Blue- Grass country? |
18909 | Has some saint gone up to heaven? |
18909 | How many are you, then,said I,"If they two are in heaven?" |
18909 | How many? 18909 If seven maids with seven mops Swept it for half a year, Do you suppose,"the Walrus said,"That they could get it clear?" |
18909 | Lady Moon, Lady Moon, where are you roving? |
18909 | Lady Moon, Lady Moon, whom are you loving? |
18909 | Lady Moon, Lady Moon, whom are you loving? |
18909 | Now why weep ye so, good people? 18909 Now, who will buy my apples?" |
18909 | Oh, he''s a fanatic,the others rejoined,"Dispense with the ambulance? |
18909 | Sisters and brothers, little Maid, How many may you be? |
18909 | Some whisky, rum or gin? |
18909 | The night is fine,the Walrus said,"Do you admire the view? |
18909 | Well, well,said he,"explain to me and I''ve no more to say; Can you go anywhere to- morrow and come back from there to- day?" |
18909 | What does it want? |
18909 | What if, aweary of the strife That long has lured the dear deceiver, She promise to amend her life, And sin no more; can I believe her? 18909 What if, in spite of her disdain, I find my heart entwined about With Cupid''s dear, delicious chain So closely that I ca n''t get out? |
18909 | What''s that? |
18909 | Where did it come from? |
18909 | Who planted this old apple- tree? |
18909 | Whom should I marry? 18909 Why do n''t you laugh? |
18909 | Will you trust me, Katie dear,-- Walk beside me without fear? 18909 You did? |
18909 | Your name? |
18909 | _ We Are Seven--A simple Child, That lightly draws its breath, And feels its life in every limb, What should it know of death? 18909 --and I seized the little lad;How can you dare to rob your wife and your little helpless child?" |
18909 | 9''? |
18909 | A Child''s Thought of God They say that God lives very high; But if you look above the pines You can not see our God; and why? |
18909 | A funeral? |
18909 | Ai n''t I always been a pardner to you? |
18909 | Ai n''t I always been your friend? |
18909 | Ai n''t he a funny old Raggedy Man? |
18909 | Ai n''t he the beanin''est Raggedy Man? |
18909 | Ai n''t nu''h''n but_ rocks_? |
18909 | Ai n''t you satisfied at all? |
18909 | All my pennies do n''t I spend In getting nice things for you? |
18909 | Am I blind or lame? |
18909 | Am I lazy or crazy? |
18909 | An''that t''other thing? |
18909 | An''then that feller looked around An''seed me there, down on the ground, An''--was he mad? |
18909 | An''w''y fer is you''s little foot tied, Little cat? |
18909 | And Sis?--has she grown tall? |
18909 | And is n''t it, my boy or girl, The wisest, bravest plan, Whatever comes, or does n''t come, To do the best you can? |
18909 | And mother-- does she fade at all? |
18909 | And now she watches the pathway, As yester eve she had done; But what does she see so strange and black Against the rising sun? |
18909 | And oft the young lads shouted, when they saw the maid at play:"Ho, good- for- nothing Brier- Rose, how do you do to- day?" |
18909 | And shall this man dictate to us? |
18909 | And suppose the world do n''t please you, Nor the way some people do, Do you think the whole creation Will be altered just for you? |
18909 | And tell me now, what makes thee sing, With voice so loud and free, While I am sad, though I''m a king, Beside the river Dee?" |
18909 | And the brown thrush keeps singing,"A nest do you see, And five eggs hid by me in the juniper tree? |
18909 | And what does he say, little girl, little boy? |
18909 | And what is so rare as a day in June? |
18909 | And what meaneth that stifled murmur of wonder and amaze? |
18909 | And what shall_ I_ say, if a wretch should propose? |
18909 | And when they were alone, the angel said,"Art thou the king?" |
18909 | And whom bury ye today? |
18909 | And would n''t it be nicer For you to smile than pout, And so make sunshine in the house When there is none without? |
18909 | And would n''t it be nobler To keep your temper sweet, And in your heart be thankful You can walk upon your feet? |
18909 | And would n''t it be pleasanter To treat it as a joke, And say you''re glad"''Twas Dolly''s And not your head that broke"? |
18909 | And would n''t it be wiser Than waiting like a dunce, To go to work in earnest And learn the thing at once? |
18909 | And your age?" |
18909 | Any memory of his sermon? |
18909 | Are n''t we picking up folks just as fast as they fall? |
18909 | Art thou a mourner? |
18909 | Art thou afraid?" |
18909 | Away with a bellow fled the calf, And what was that? |
18909 | Aye? |
18909 | Bearing his load on the rough road of life? |
18909 | Before her stood fair Bregenz, once more her towers arose; What were the friends beside her? |
18909 | Bob kept askin''for a job, And the Boss, he says:"What kind?" |
18909 | Boy, whah''s de raisin''I give you? |
18909 | Brave Adm''r''l, say but one good word: What shall we do when hope is gone? |
18909 | Brave Adm''r''l, speak; what shall I say?" |
18909 | Bright jewels of the mine? |
18909 | But here the pitcher twirled again-- was that a rifle shot? |
18909 | But the treasures-- how to get them? |
18909 | But vot off dot? |
18909 | But where was the child delaying? |
18909 | But who that fought in the big war Such dread sights have not seen? |
18909 | But why does a sudden tremor seize on them as they gaze? |
18909 | Cain''t tell w''en dey''s ripe? |
18909 | Can you hear?" |
18909 | Come you back to Mandalay, Where the old flotilla lay: Ca n''t you''ear their paddles chunkin''from Rangoon to Mandalay? |
18909 | Come, haste"? |
18909 | Did dey pisen you''s tummick inside, Little cat? |
18909 | Did dey pound you wif bricks, Or wif big nasty sticks, Or abuse you wif kicks, Little cat? |
18909 | Did he die like a craven, Begging those torturing fiends for his life? |
18909 | Did it hurt werry bad w''en you died, Little cat? |
18909 | Did the gosling laugh? |
18909 | Did you kiss me and call me"Mother"--and hold me to your breast, Or is it one of the taunting dreams that come to mock my rest? |
18909 | Do n''t I give you lots of cake? |
18909 | Do n''t ye see I have her with me-- my poor sainted little Belle?'' |
18909 | Do n''t you hear? |
18909 | Do you not know me? |
18909 | Do you see her little hand beckoning? |
18909 | Do you see o''er the gilded cloud mountains Sister''s golden hair streaming out? |
18909 | Do you think that Katie guessed Half the wisdom she expressed? |
18909 | Do you think, sir, if you try, You can paint the look of a lie? |
18909 | Does half my heart lie buried there In Texas, down by the Rio Grande? |
18909 | Does he see the ruddy wine Shiver in its crystal goblet, or do those grave eyes divine Something sadder yet? |
18909 | Does he see the waxen bloom Tremble in its vase of silver? |
18909 | Does no voice within Answer my cry, and say we are akin?" |
18909 | Does the leetle, chatterin'', sassy wren, No bigger''n my thumb, know more than men? |
18909 | Dost reel from righteous retribution''s blow? |
18909 | Dost thou behold thy lost youth all aghast? |
18909 | En wut you s''posen Brer Bascom, yo''teacher at Sunday school,''Ud say ef he knowed how you''s broke de good Lawd''s Gol''n Rule? |
18909 | Exceeding peace had made Ben Adhem bold, And to the Presence in the room he said,"What writest thou?" |
18909 | Firstly? |
18909 | For angels have golden tresses And eyes like sister''s, blue? |
18909 | Have I been here long? |
18909 | Have the loving voice and the Helping Hand brought back my wandering son? |
18909 | He asks me questions sooch as dese: Who baints mine nose so red? |
18909 | Here hath been dawning another blue day: Think, wilt thou let it slip useless away? |
18909 | His brothers had walked but a little way When Jotham to Nathan chanced to say,"What on airth is he up to, hey?" |
18909 | Ho, ho, pale brother,"said the Wine,"Can you boast of deeds as great as mine?" |
18909 | How answer his brute question in that hour When whirlwinds of rebellion shake the world? |
18909 | How gan I all dese dings eggsblain To dot schmall Yawcob Strauss? |
18909 | How many ages in time? |
18909 | How many days in a week? |
18909 | How many hours in a day? |
18909 | How many minutes in an hour? |
18909 | How many months in a year? |
18909 | How many seconds in a minute? |
18909 | How many weeks in a month? |
18909 | How many years in an age? |
18909 | I breathed a song into the air, It fell to earth, I knew not where; For who has sight so keen and strong, That it can follow the flight of song? |
18909 | I do''want no foolin''--you hear me? |
18909 | I staggered faintly in, Fearing--_what_? |
18909 | I''ll light on the libbe''ty- pole, an''crow; An''I''ll say to the gawpin''fools below,''What world''s this''ere That I''ve come near?'' |
18909 | If a storm should come and awake the deep What matter? |
18909 | If by easy work you beat, Who the more will prize you? |
18909 | If the men_ were_ so wicked, I''ll ask my papa How he dared to propose to my darling mamma; Was he like the rest of them? |
18909 | In the laugh that rings so gayly through the richly curtained room, Join they all, save one; Why is it? |
18909 | Is his heaven far to seek for those who drown?" |
18909 | Is it possible? |
18909 | Is it worth while that we battle to humble Some poor fellow down into the dust? |
18909 | Is it worth while that we jeer at each other In blackness of heart that we war to the knife? |
18909 | Is n''t it true? |
18909 | Is the pudding done? |
18909 | Is this a hoax? |
18909 | Is this the dream He dreamed who shaped the suns And pillared the blue firmament with light? |
18909 | Is you boun''fuh ter be a black villiun? |
18909 | Is you''s purrin''an''humpin''-up done? |
18909 | Is your heart an ocean so strong and deep I may launch my all on its tide? |
18909 | Jest fold our hands an''see the swaller, An''blackbird an''catbird beat us holler? |
18909 | Maggie, sister''s an angel, Is n''t she? |
18909 | May I carry, if I will, All your burdens up the hill?" |
18909 | Men who had fought ten to one ere that day? |
18909 | Morgan-- Morgan is waiting for me; Oh, what will Morgan say?" |
18909 | Must we give in,"Says he with a grin,"''T the bluebird an''phoebe Are smarter''n we be? |
18909 | My labor never flags; And what are its wages? |
18909 | No? |
18909 | Not Sunday? |
18909 | Now ai n''t you ashamed er yo''se''lf sur? |
18909 | Now if from here to Morrow is a fourteen- hour jump, Can you go to- day to Morrow and come back to- day, you chump?" |
18909 | Now the smiles are thicker-- wonder what they mean? |
18909 | Now, Maggie, I''ve something to tell you-- Let me lean up to you close-- Do you see how the sunset has flooded The heavens with yellow and rose? |
18909 | Now, tell me, Are you guilty of this, or no?" |
18909 | Now_ my_ hair is n''t golden, My eyes are n''t blue, you see-- Now tell me, Maggie, if I were to die, Could they make an angel of me? |
18909 | O masters, lords and rulers in all lands, How will the Future reckon with this man? |
18909 | O masters, lords and rulers in all lands, Is this the handiwork you give to God, This monstrous thing distorted and soul- quenched? |
18909 | Oh, let us be married,--too long we have tarried,-- But what shall we do for a ring?" |
18909 | Oh, w''y did n''t yo wun off and hide, Little cat? |
18909 | Oh, when its aged branches throw Thin shadows on the ground below, Shall fraud and force and iron will Oppress the weak and helpless still? |
18909 | Or does she seem to pine and fret For me? |
18909 | Remember the story of Elihu Burritt, An''how he clum up to the top, Got all the knowledge''at he ever had Down in a blacksmithing shop? |
18909 | Rouse thee from thy spell; Art thou a sinner? |
18909 | Said I,"I guess you know it all, but kindly let me say, How can I go to Morrow, if I leave the town to- day?" |
18909 | Said I,"I want to go to Morrow; can I go to- day And get to Morrow by to- night, if there is no delay?" |
18909 | Said I,"My boy, it seems to me you''re talking through your hat, Is there a town named Morrow on your line? |
18909 | Say, stummick, what''s the matter, You had to go an''ache? |
18909 | Say, what''s the matter with you? |
18909 | Secondly? |
18909 | Seek''st thou the plashy brink Of weedy lake, or marge of river wide, Or where the rocking billows rise and sink On the chafed ocean- side? |
18909 | Shall I tell you where and when? |
18909 | Shall he? |
18909 | Shall not the roaring waters their headlong gallop check? |
18909 | Shall she let it ring? |
18909 | Shall we be trotting home again?" |
18909 | Should it be A dashing damsel, gay and pert, A pattern of inconstancy; Or selfish, mercenary flirt? |
18909 | Slave of the wheel of labor, what to him Are Plato and the swing of Pleiades? |
18909 | So shalt thou rest, and what if thou withdraw In silence from the living, and no friend Take note of thy departure? |
18909 | So she resolutely walked up to the wagon old and red--"May I have a dozen apples for a kiss?" |
18909 | Suppose that some boys have a horse, And some a coach and pair, Will it tire you less while walking To say,"It is n''t fair"? |
18909 | Suppose you''re dressed for walking, And the rain comes pouring down, Will it clear off any sooner Because you scold and frown? |
18909 | Suppose your task, my little man, Is very hard to get, Will it make it any easier For you to sit and fret? |
18909 | Suppose, my dear, I take my knife, And cut the rope to save my life?" |
18909 | THEN DID HE BLENCH? |
18909 | Tell me dat, Did dey holler at all when you cwied? |
18909 | Tell me, darling, will you be The wife of Bobby Shaftoe?" |
18909 | That old familiar tree, Whose glory and renown Are spread o''er land and sea-- And wouldst thou hew it down? |
18909 | The Baby Where did you come from, baby dear? |
18909 | The Pilgrims came to Plymouth Rock In fourteen ninety- two, An''the Indians standin''on the dock Asked,"What are you goin''to do?" |
18909 | The Tree bore his blossoms, and all the birds sung:"Shall I take them away?" |
18909 | The Tree bore his fruit in the midsummer glow: Said the child,"May I gather thy berries now?" |
18909 | The Wind, he took to his revels once more; On down In town, Like a merry- mad clown, He leaped and halloed with whistle and roar,"What''s that?" |
18909 | The church, a phantom, vanished soon; What saw the teacher then? |
18909 | The old man-- is he hearty yet? |
18909 | The weather was bitter cold, The young ones cried and shivered--( Little Johnny''s but four years old)-- So what was I to do, sir? |
18909 | Then I felt myself pulled once again, and my hand caught tight hold of a dress, And I heard,"What''s the matter, dear Jim? |
18909 | Then said,"Who art thou, and why com''st thou here?" |
18909 | Then why should I sit in the scorner''s seat, Or hurl the cynic''s ban? |
18909 | There were men with hoary hair Amidst that pilgrim band: Why had they come to wither there Away from their childhood''s land? |
18909 | There, do n''t hold my hands, Maggie, I do n''t feel like tearing it now; But-- where was I in my story? |
18909 | They scrape away a little snow; What''s this? |
18909 | Tom was only a moderate drinker; ah, sir, do you bear in mind How the plodding tortoise in the race left the leaping hare behind? |
18909 | Und vhere der plaze goes vrom der lamp Vene''er der glim I douse? |
18909 | Up spoke our own little Mabel, Saying,"Father, who makes it snow?" |
18909 | W''y is dat? |
18909 | Waking or asleep, Thou of death must deem Things more true and deep Than we mortals dream, Or how could thy notes flow in such a crystal stream? |
18909 | Was that thunder? |
18909 | Was there a man dismay''d? |
18909 | Was there a soldier who carried the Seven Flinched like a coward or fled from the strife? |
18909 | We shall be so kind in the after while, But what have we been to- day? |
18909 | We shall bring to each lonely life a smile, But what have we brought to- day? |
18909 | We shall give out gold in princely sum, But what did we give to- day? |
18909 | What ails you, Hal? |
18909 | What does little baby say In her bed at peep of day? |
18909 | What fields, or waves, or mountains? |
18909 | What is the use of heapin''on me a pauper''s shame? |
18909 | What love of thine own kind? |
18909 | What means this great commotion? |
18909 | What means this stir in Rome? |
18909 | What objects are the fountains Of thy happy strain? |
18909 | What plant we in this apple- tree? |
18909 | What plant we in this apple- tree? |
18909 | What plant we in this apple- tree? |
18909 | What recked he? |
18909 | What recked those who followed? |
18909 | What shall the tasks of mercy be, Amid the toils, the strifes, the tears Of those who live when length of years Is wasting this apple- tree? |
18909 | What shapes of sky or plain? |
18909 | What sought they thus afar? |
18909 | What the long reaches of the peaks of song, The rift of dawn, the reddening of the rose? |
18909 | What thou art we know not; What is most like thee? |
18909 | What was done? |
18909 | What whistle''s that, yelling so shrill? |
18909 | What''s he got on? |
18909 | What? |
18909 | When can their glory fade? |
18909 | When pain and sickness made me cry, Who gazed upon my heavy eye, And wept, for fear that I should die? |
18909 | When sleep forsook my open eye, Who was it sung sweet lullaby And rocked me that I should not cry? |
18909 | When the sun goes down with a flaming ray And the dear friends have to part? |
18909 | When you were home, old comrade, say, Did you see any of our folks? |
18909 | Where breathes the foe but falls before us, With Freedom''s soil beneath our feet, And Freedom''s banner streaming o''er us? |
18909 | Where now the solemn shade, Verdure and gloom where many branches meet; So grateful, when the noon of summer made The valleys sick with heat? |
18909 | Where should I fly to, Where go to sleep in the dark wood or dell? |
18909 | Who fathoms the Eternal Thought? |
18909 | Who has seen the wind? |
18909 | Who is he That every man in arms should wish to be? |
18909 | Who knows whither the clouds have fled? |
18909 | Who knows? |
18909 | Who loosened and let down this brutal jaw? |
18909 | Who made him dead to rapture and despair, A thing that grieves not and that never hopes, Stolid and stunned, a brother to the ox? |
18909 | Who ran to help me when I fell And would some pretty story tell, Or kiss the part to make it well? |
18909 | Who sat and watched my infant head When sleeping in my cradle bed, And tears of sweet affection shed? |
18909 | Who talks of scheme and plan? |
18909 | Who taught my infant lips to pray, To love God''s holy word and day, And walk in wisdom''s pleasant way? |
18909 | Who vos it cuts dot schmoodth blace oudt Vrom der hair ubon mine he d? |
18909 | Who won the war? |
18909 | Who won the war? |
18909 | Who won the war? |
18909 | Who won the war? |
18909 | Who won the war? |
18909 | Who won the war? |
18909 | Who''s to blame?" |
18909 | Who, Harry? |
18909 | Who? |
18909 | Whose breath blew out the light within this brain? |
18909 | Whose heart hath ne''er within him burned, As home his footsteps he hath turned From wandering on a foreign strand? |
18909 | Whose the fault then? |
18909 | Whose was the hand that slanted back this brow? |
18909 | Why ai n''t you a friend o''mine? |
18909 | Why do n''t you tell me like a man: What is the matter with our folks?" |
18909 | Why do yonder sorrowing maidens scatter flowers along the way? |
18909 | Why is the Forum crowded? |
18909 | Why look so pale and so sad, as for ever Wishing to weep?" |
18909 | Why should people of sense stop to put up a fence, While the ambulance works in the valley?" |
18909 | Why, sir, you''re crying as hard as I; what-- is it really done? |
18909 | Why, what''s the mattter, friend? |
18909 | Will he dare it, the hero undaunted, that terrible, sickening height, Or will the hot blood of his courage freeze in his veins at the sight? |
18909 | Will he fall? |
18909 | Wu''dat you got under dat box? |
18909 | Wut you say? |
18909 | Yet through that summer morning I lingered near the spot: Oh, why do things seem sweeter if we possess them not? |
18909 | You Moon, have you done something wrong in heaven, That God has hidden your face? |
18909 | You say,"Oh, yes"; you think so? |
18909 | Your feet were bleeding as You walked our pavements-- How did we miss Your footprints on our pavements?-- Can there be other folk as blind as we? |
18909 | _ A soft hand stroked it as I went by._ What makes your cheek like a warm white rose? |
18909 | _ Alfred, Lord Tennyson._ The Tree The Tree''s early leaf buds were bursting their brown;"Shall I take them away?" |
18909 | _ Alice Cary._ The Wind Who has seen the wind? |
18909 | _ Alice Cary._ Who Won the War? |
18909 | _ Alice Gary._ Little Birdie What does little birdie say, In her nest at peep of day? |
18909 | _ Charles F. Adams._ To- day We shall do so much in the years to come, But what have we done to- day? |
18909 | _ Charles Wolfe._ How Many Seconds in a Minute? |
18909 | _ Christina G. Rossetti._ To- day Here hath been dawning another blue day: Think, wilt thou let it slip useless away? |
18909 | _ Edwin Markham._ Poorhouse Nan Did you say you wished to see me, sir? |
18909 | _ Fannie Windsor._ What is Good"What is the real good?" |
18909 | _ Felicia Hemans._ Bobby Shaftoe"Marie, will you marry me? |
18909 | _ Frederick Whitttaker._ A Boy and His Stomach What''s the matter, stummick? |
18909 | _ From the same box as the cherubs''wings._ How did they all just come to be you? |
18909 | _ Give you a song?_ No, I ca n''t do that, my singing days are past; My voice is cracked, my throat''s worn out, and my lungs are going fast. |
18909 | _ God spoke, and it came out to hear._ Where did you get those arms and hands? |
18909 | _ God thought about me, and so I grew._ But how did you come to us, you dear? |
18909 | _ I found it waiting when I got here._ What makes your forehead so smooth and high? |
18909 | _ Joseph Bert Smiley._ Is It Worth While? |
18909 | _ Lord Houghton._ Breathes There the Man With Soul So Dead? |
18909 | _ Lord Houghton._ Lady Moon"Lady Moon, Lady Moon, where are you roving?" |
18909 | _ Love made itself into hooks and bands._ Feet, whence did you come, you darling things? |
18909 | _ Marion Short._ The Owl Critic"Who stuffed that white owl?" |
18909 | _ Out of the everywhere into the here._ Where did you get your eyes so blue? |
18909 | _ Out of the sky as I came through._ What makes the light in them sparkle and spin? |
18909 | _ Rose Hartwick Thorpe._ Kate Shelly Have you heard how a girl saved the lightning express-- Of Kate Shelly, whose father was killed on the road? |
18909 | _ Rudyard Kipling._ Whistling in Heaven You''re surprised that I ever should say so? |
18909 | _ Some of the starry spikes left in._ Where did you get that little tear? |
18909 | _ Something better than anyone knows._ Whence that three- cornered smile of bliss? |
18909 | _ Three angels gave me at once a kiss._ Where did you get that pearly ear? |
18909 | _ William Cullen Bryant._ Character of the Happy Warrior Who is the happy Warrior? |
18909 | _ William Cullen Bryant._ My Mother Who fed me from her gentle breast And hushed me in her arms to rest, And on my cheek sweet kisses prest? |
18909 | _( From"The Lay of the Last Minstrel")_ Breathes there the man with soul so dead Who never to himself hath said, This is my own, my native land? |
18909 | ai n''t it fun to just wade in and help myself? |
18909 | and where? |
18909 | der you think dat I''s bline? |
18909 | do n''t be tazin''me,"said she, With just the faintest sigh,"I''ve sinse enough to see you''ve come, But what''s the reason why?" |
18909 | do n''t you see it is? |
18909 | do n''t you see? |
18909 | do n''t you see? |
18909 | each pain her hurt and woe? |
18909 | he shouted, long and loud; And,"Who wants my potatoes?" |
18909 | how de yeou like flyin''? |
18909 | oh, my baby-- did-- you-- come All the way-- alone-- my darling-- just to lead-- poor-- papa-- home?'' |
18909 | shall Providence be blamed?" |
18909 | shouted she;"Why, do you see it?" |
18909 | so mournful? |
18909 | the teacher said, Filled with a new surprise;"Shall I behold his name enrolled Among the great and wise?" |
18909 | was there ever so merry a note? |
18909 | what ignorance of pain? |
18909 | what to do? |
18909 | when shall they all meet again?" |
18909 | who ever yeered tell er des sich? |
18909 | why so soon Depart the hues that make thy forests glad; Thy gentle wind and thy fair sunny noon, And leave thee wild and sad? |
18909 | wot_ do_ they understand? |
6333 | ''How air you feelin''now?'' 6333 ''Sary,''says he,''wot''s that a- cookin''?'' |
6333 | ''Waal, Doctor,''says Dock Smith,''what do you think''bout it?'' 6333 And did you really find it by the body of the murdered man?" |
6333 | And for what? 6333 Before I deliver sentence on you, Abner Barrow,"he said with an old man''s kind severity,"is there anything you have to say on your own behalf?" |
6333 | Bill Holbrook? |
6333 | But what did this woman do-- my wife, the woman I misused and beat and dragged down in the mud with me? 6333 But you''re not ready to swear to that?" |
6333 | Could ye explain the sun''s motion around the earth? |
6333 | Do you propose to grant us independence? |
6333 | Do you propose to grant us independence? |
6333 | Done with him,says I, kinder mad like;"what more do you want me to do with him? |
6333 | How do you know it? |
6333 | No, put on by his wife,said my friend;"and there was this--""Hold on,"I interrupted;"put on by his wife, did you say?" |
6333 | Now, Simpson, what do you mean by that? |
6333 | Pat, do you know what hangs on your word? 6333 Please stop this fighting"? |
6333 | Please stop this fighting? |
6333 | There,says I, well satisfied with myself,"will that do for ye?" |
6333 | Well, why then, an armistice? |
6333 | Well, why, then, an armistice? |
6333 | What are you picking''simmons for? |
6333 | What for,Aguinaldo would say;"do you propose to retire?" |
6333 | What for? |
6333 | What is that? |
6333 | What is that? |
6333 | What''s that? |
6333 | Who is here so_ base_ that would be a_ bondman_? |
6333 | Why not answer it yourself? |
6333 | Why read ye not the changeless truth, The free can conquer but to save? |
6333 | You knew it was there? |
6333 | ''R----,''said he,''you were brought up on a farm, were you not? |
6333 | 1 Armed, say you? |
6333 | 2 Where dwellest thou? |
6333 | 3 Should he have asked Aguinaldo for an armistice? |
6333 | 5 And what have we to oppose them? |
6333 | A MAN''S A MAN FOR A''THAT BY ROBERT BURNS Is there for honest poverty That hings his head, an''a''that? |
6333 | Again, education imparts knowledge, and who has greater need to know economics, history, and natural science than the man of large business? |
6333 | Aguinaldo would say;"do you propose to retire?" |
6333 | And I appeal to you, gentlemen, what cause there now is to alter our sentiments? |
6333 | And a day less or more At sea or ashore, We die-- does it matter when? |
6333 | And do you now cull out a holiday? |
6333 | And do you now put on your best attire? |
6333 | And do you now strew flowers in his way That comes in triumph over Pompey''s blood? |
6333 | And fixed his eyes upon you? |
6333 | And from whom, I repeat? |
6333 | And from whom? |
6333 | And have indignation, and anger, and terror no power to affect the human countenance or the human frame? |
6333 | And here let me ask in sober reason, what language more opprobrious, what actions more exasperating, than those used on this occasion? |
6333 | And is this the mode by which a tribunal of justice reconciles contradictions? |
6333 | And now what have we to say? |
6333 | And what evidence, gentlemen of the jury, does the Crown offer to you in compliance with these sound and sacred doctrines of justice? |
6333 | And what have we to oppose them? |
6333 | And what sort of business do we mean? |
6333 | And who was he? |
6333 | And with that dread burden, are you ready to tell this jury that the hat, to your certain knowledge, belongs to the prisoner?" |
6333 | And, seeing the production of such evidence, might they not feel fear and alarm? |
6333 | Are all thy conquests, glories, triumphs, spoils, shrunk to this little measure? |
6333 | Are kings only grateful, and do not republics forget? |
6333 | Are the tempter and the tempted the same in your eyes? |
6333 | Are then free institutions wrong or inexpedient? |
6333 | Are there no grades in your estimations of guilt? |
6333 | Are these the traditions by which we are exhorted to stand? |
6333 | Are we to have a place in that honorable company? |
6333 | Are you afraid of it? |
6333 | As a mere item of personal comfort is it not worth having? |
6333 | BRITAIN AND AMERICA From an address in the House of Commons, March, 1865 BY JOHN BRIGHT Why should we fear a great nation on the American Continent? |
6333 | BY ALFRED LORD TENNYSON"Shall we fight or shall we fly? |
6333 | BY D. W. VOORHEES Who is John E. Cook? |
6333 | BY OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES Has there any old fellow got mixed with the boys? |
6333 | Brutus and Cæsar: what should be in that"Cæsar"? |
6333 | But does the soldier step out of his ranks to seek his revenge? |
6333 | But had the words on the other hand a similar tendency? |
6333 | But in all this what have we accomplished? |
6333 | But was anything done on the part of the assailants similar to the conduct, warnings, and declarations of the prisoners? |
6333 | But what avail these words? |
6333 | But what could be better of its kind than this? |
6333 | But what is literature? |
6333 | But when, after your long meal, you go home in the wee small hours, what do you expect to find? |
6333 | But when, after your long meal, you go home in the wee small hours, what do you expect to find? |
6333 | But will not some one set up a stone for my memory at Fort Adams or at Orleans, that my disgrace may not be more than I ought to bear? |
6333 | But, says Lowell, if he had been five feet three, we should have said, Who_ cares_ where you go? |
6333 | By the Irish traditions? |
6333 | Can gentlemen assign any other possible motive for it? |
6333 | Can it be that a jury of Christian men will find no discrimination should be made between them? |
6333 | Can you be your own taskmaster? |
6333 | Could we have done that in the sight of God or man? |
6333 | Could we have left them in a state of anarchy and justified ourselves in our own consciences or before the tribunal of mankind? |
6333 | Could we have required less and done our duty? |
6333 | Did n''t I bring him from the east to the west? |
6333 | Did not the people repeatedly come within the points of their bayonets and strike on the muzzles of the guns? |
6333 | Do they always yield the best government? |
6333 | Do we grow in it, or do we shrink in it? |
6333 | Do we lose the zest we''ve known before? |
6333 | Do we not know, Mr. President, that it is a law never to be repealed that falsehood shall be short- lived? |
6333 | Do we want a cause, my Lords? |
6333 | Do we want a tribunal? |
6333 | Do you ask who he was? |
6333 | Do you moind the poetry there? |
6333 | Do you not know me? |
6333 | Do you think I am partial? |
6333 | Do you want a criminal, my Lords? |
6333 | Does common sense, does the law expect impossibilities? |
6333 | Does he sit down in sullenness and despair? |
6333 | Does it hurt us or help us? |
6333 | Fellow citizens, is this Faneuil Hall doctrine? |
6333 | For what was this France of ours, if you please? |
6333 | From top to toe? |
6333 | Gentlemen, is the happiness of a sensitive and confiding female to be trifled away by such shallow artifices as these? |
6333 | Gentlemen, what does this mean? |
6333 | Had they already vanished? |
6333 | Had you rather Cæsar were living, and die all slaves, than that Cæsar were dead, to live all free men? |
6333 | Has Great Britain any enemy in this quarter of the world, to call for all this accumulation of navies and armies? |
6333 | Has not this made the passage far more real and human to you than all the thought you have devoted to it? |
6333 | Has society a right to be afraid of it? |
6333 | Hast thou never seen That woman since? |
6333 | Have we anything new to offer upon the subject? |
6333 | Have we anything new to offer upon the subject? |
6333 | Have you got it in yourselves to control yourselves? |
6333 | Have you got the will- power in you to regulate your own conduct? |
6333 | Have you learned to control yourselves? |
6333 | Have you not grown rich with these pains in your stomach? |
6333 | Have you the sense and the resolution to regulate your own conduct? |
6333 | He called out sharply,"What are you doing here?" |
6333 | He came in, flung his riding- whip and hat on the table, was told the circumstances, and, taking up the hat, said to the witness,"Whose hat is this?" |
6333 | He makes it his business to be so; this wretched France is in the straitjacket, and if she stirs-- Ah, what is this spectacle before our eyes? |
6333 | Hence arises a most touching question--"Where are the girls of my youth?" |
6333 | How different is the complexion of the cause? |
6333 | How is it with free political institutions? |
6333 | How much need was there for my desire that you should suspend your judgment till the witnesses were all examined? |
6333 | How shall we accomplish it? |
6333 | I noticed he had a scar on the side of his foot, and asked him how he got it, to which he responded, with indifference:--"Oh, that? |
6333 | I said,"Now, wait a minute, give me time to realize that; do I understand that in this hotel I am going to sit where I like?" |
6333 | I said,"Why these weeps?" |
6333 | I say:"Why not? |
6333 | I''the city of kites and crows!-- Then thou dwellest with daws, too? |
6333 | II But here a distressing doubt strikes me; how will the manager get back? |
6333 | If he had been five feet three, we should have said,''Who cares where you go?''" |
6333 | If he ordered his pap bottle, and it was n''t warm, did you talk back? |
6333 | If in the years of the future they are established in government under law and liberty, who will regret our perils and sacrifices? |
6333 | If men will not act for themselves, what will they do when the benefit of the effort is for all? |
6333 | If so, upon what basis should he have requested it? |
6333 | If so, upon what basis should he have requested it? |
6333 | If the defendants were innocent, would they not feel indignation at this unjust accusation? |
6333 | If they saw an attempt to produce false evidence against them, would they not be angry? |
6333 | If we can benefit these remote peoples, who will object? |
6333 | If you break the Whig party, sir, where am I to go?" |
6333 | If you break up the Whig party, where am_ I_ to go?" |
6333 | In the morning the landlord said,--"How do you feel-- old hoss-- hay?" |
6333 | In the present case, how great was the prepossession against us? |
6333 | In the very Cradle of Liberty did no son survive to awake its slumbering echoes? |
6333 | In this new revolution, thus established forever, who shall decide which is the sun and which is the moon? |
6333 | Is each one, without respect to age or circumstances, to be beaten with the same number of stripes? |
6333 | Is fame a travesty, and the judgment of mankind a farce? |
6333 | Is freedom dangerous? |
6333 | Is it a danger? |
6333 | Is it a dream? |
6333 | Is it a good thing for you or a bad thing? |
6333 | Is it a nightmare? |
6333 | Is it an injury? |
6333 | Is it fair play, Mr. Speaker, is it what you call''English fair play''that the press of this city will not let my voice be heard?" |
6333 | Is it the faculty or the players themselves? |
6333 | Is not active business a field in which mental power finds full play? |
6333 | Is not this consciousness a great asset to have in your mind and memory? |
6333 | Is the beguiled youth to die the same as the old offender who has pondered his crimes for thirty years? |
6333 | Is the goal too far?--Too hard to gain? |
6333 | Is there nothing that can agitate the frame or excite the blood but the consciousness of guilt? |
6333 | Is this an electioneering juggle, or is it hypocrisy''s masquerade? |
6333 | It is alleged that I wish to sell the independence of my country; and for what end? |
6333 | Jones asked him what was the matter, and whether he was afraid of the warrior upon the stage? |
6333 | Little more worth remembering occurred during the play, at the end of which Jones asked him which of the players he had liked best? |
6333 | Lud have mercy upon such foolhardiness!--Whatever happens, it is good enough for you.--Follow you? |
6333 | May I not ask if there have not been too often between us petty quarrels, which happily do not wound the heart of the nation? |
6333 | Mayor,''my young one, how are you to- night? |
6333 | Meg''s mother, of course, wanted to know all about it, and then she said,"Noo, laird, what are you gaun to do with the prisoner?" |
6333 | Mr. President, did you ever see a more self- satisfied or contented set of men than these that are gathered at these tables this evening? |
6333 | My Lords, is it a prosecutor you want? |
6333 | My Lords, what is it that we want here to a great act of national justice? |
6333 | Not one now, to mock your own grinning? |
6333 | Now what answer has New England to this message? |
6333 | Now, Pat, did you see that name in the hat?" |
6333 | Now, if this be so, whence does he derive the right to appropriate them for partial and local objects? |
6333 | Now, in the names of all the gods at once, Upon what meat doth this our Cæsar feed, That he is grown so great? |
6333 | Now, my friends, can this country be saved on that basis? |
6333 | Now, what shall I do about it?'' |
6333 | O you hard hearts, you cruel men of Rome, Knew you not Pompey? |
6333 | Or shall he first my pictured volume scan Where London lifts its hot and fevered brow For cooling night to fan?" |
6333 | Pale or red? |
6333 | Published in"The Drama; Addresses by Henry Irving,"William Heinemann, London, publisher, 1893 BY HENRY IRVING What is the art of acting? |
6333 | Shall we always be youthful, and laughing, and gay, Till the last dear companion drops smiling away? |
6333 | Shall we resort to entreaty and humble supplication? |
6333 | Shall we resort to entreaty and humble supplication? |
6333 | Shall we try argument? |
6333 | Shall we try argument? |
6333 | Should he have asked Aguinaldo for an armistice? |
6333 | Sir, does he suppose it in his power to exhibit a Carolina name so bright as to produce envy in my bosom? |
6333 | Sure it is not armor, is it?" |
6333 | The joy of running?--The kick of the oar When the ash sweeps buckle and bend? |
6333 | The point I wish to make is this: McKinley gave Rowan a letter to be delivered to Garcia; Rowan took the letter and did not ask,"Where is he at?" |
6333 | The praise of men they dared despise, They set the game above the prize, Must we fear to look in our fathers''eyes, Nor reap where they have sown? |
6333 | The question has to be put again and again to the young speaker, What is your point? |
6333 | The question is, Which of the two is it safer and wiser to trust? |
6333 | The remembrance often makes me ask--"Where are the boys of my youth?" |
6333 | Then saw you not His face? |
6333 | They shouted thrice: what was the last cry for? |
6333 | Thy shores are empires, changed in all save thee: Assyria, Greece, Rome, Carthage,--what are they? |
6333 | To think alike as to men and measures? |
6333 | To whom do you go for counsel? |
6333 | Upon what basis could he have brought about a cessation of hostilities? |
6333 | Was it for a change of masters? |
6333 | Was it not ordained of old that truth only shall abide for ever? |
6333 | Was it snowing I spoke of? |
6333 | Was the crown offered him thrice? |
6333 | Was the spirit of the Revolution quite extinct? |
6333 | Was this the object of my ambition? |
6333 | We baffled the aspirations of a people for liberty"? |
6333 | Well, what about this Forefathers''Day? |
6333 | Whar have you been for the last three year That you have n''t heard folks tell How Jimmy Bludso passed in his checks The night of the"Prairie Belle"? |
6333 | What barricade of wrong, injustice, and oppression has ever been carried except by force? |
6333 | What can overturn such a proof as this? |
6333 | What conquest brings he home? |
6333 | What does he do-- this hero in gray, with a heart of gold? |
6333 | What does it do for us? |
6333 | What had this young man done to merit immortality? |
6333 | What have we to say? |
6333 | What have we? |
6333 | What is freedom for? |
6333 | What is freedom for? |
6333 | What is our duty? |
6333 | What is the matter with this seat?" |
6333 | What is the point in some larger division of the speech? |
6333 | What is the point in the sentence? |
6333 | What is the point, or purpose, of the speech as a whole? |
6333 | What is the sum of our work? |
6333 | What more cutting and provoking to a soldier? |
6333 | What more do you want?" |
6333 | What more will they get? |
6333 | What on earth has become of them?" |
6333 | What other assurance that the virtue of the people is equal to any emergency of national life? |
6333 | What other evidence will be needed of the value of republican institutions? |
6333 | What other test of the strength and vigor of our government? |
6333 | What shall our action be? |
6333 | What should he say to him? |
6333 | What should he say to him? |
6333 | What terms shall we find which have not been already exhausted? |
6333 | What terms shall we find which have not been already exhausted? |
6333 | What traditions? |
6333 | What tributaries follow him to Rome, To grace in captive bonds his chariot- wheels? |
6333 | What was the second noise for? |
6333 | What was your action in the darkest hour of your country''s fortunes, when she was engaged in the deadly struggle from which she has just emerged? |
6333 | What words more galling? |
6333 | What, indeed, would Bœotes think of this new constellation? |
6333 | What, looked he frowningly? |
6333 | What, sir, was the conduct of the South during the Revolution? |
6333 | When could they say till now, that talked of Rome, That her wide walls encompass''d but one man? |
6333 | When has a battle for humanity and liberty ever been won except by force? |
6333 | When he called for soothing syrup, did you venture to throw out any remarks about certain services unbecoming to an officer and a gentleman? |
6333 | When was there so much iniquity ever laid to the charge of any one? |
6333 | When went there by an age, since the great flood, But it was fam''d with more than with one man? |
6333 | Whence come these powers and attainments-- either to the educated or to the uneducated-- save through practice and study? |
6333 | Where is he? |
6333 | Where shall we have his earliest wondering look Into my magic book? |
6333 | Where''s that? |
6333 | Wherefore rejoice? |
6333 | Who could have imagined that four years would make that enormous difference? |
6333 | Who determine the only scientific test which reflects the hardest upon the other? |
6333 | Who is here so base that would be a bondman? |
6333 | Who is here so rude that would not be a Roman? |
6333 | Who is here so vile that will not love his country? |
6333 | Who is it that makes football a dangerous and painful sport? |
6333 | Who is to gainsay it? |
6333 | Who now boasts that he opposed Lincoln? |
6333 | Who offered him the crown? |
6333 | Who says we are more? |
6333 | Who will not rejoice in our heroism and humanity? |
6333 | Who would think, by looking into the king''s face, that he had ever committed a murder?" |
6333 | Who''s fool then? |
6333 | Why dost thou lead these men about the streets? |
6333 | Why has God made men free, as he has not made the plants and the animals? |
6333 | Why have I groped among these ashes? |
6333 | Why should that name be sounded more than yours? |
6333 | Why should we be so weak or wicked as to offer this idle apology for ravaging a neighboring Republic? |
6333 | Why should we? |
6333 | Why was_ he_ singled out? |
6333 | Why was_ he_ singled out? |
6333 | Why, gentlemen, who_ does_ trouble himself about a warming- pan? |
6333 | Why, then, conquer it? |
6333 | Why, what would be the answer of the rustic to this nonsensical monition? |
6333 | Why, you were with him, were you not? |
6333 | Will any one say that the heaviest judgment which you can render is any adequate punishment for these crimes? |
6333 | Will not all this serve to show every honest man the little truth to be attained in partial hearings? |
6333 | Will she permit the prejudices of war to remain in the hearts of the conquerors, when it has died in the hearts of the conquered? |
6333 | Will she withhold, save in strained courtesy, the hand which straight from his soldier''s heart Grant offered to Lee at Appomattox? |
6333 | Will you bear with me while I tell you of another army that sought its home at the close of the late war? |
6333 | Will you? |
6333 | Would you not spurn at that spiritless institution of society which tells you to be a subject at the expense of your manhood? |
6333 | Yes, we''re boys,--always playing with tongue or with pen,-- And I sometimes have asked,--Shall we ever be men? |
6333 | You pull''d me by the cloak; would you speak with me? |
6333 | You surely will not be so foolish and so indiscreet as to part with the pains in your stomach?" |
6333 | You''eathen, where the mischief''ave you been? |
6333 | and for what end? |
6333 | and for what end? |
6333 | and for what? |
6333 | dear sir, do n''t you hear him?" |
6333 | didst thou never hear Of the old prediction that was verified When I became the Doge? |
6333 | does no voice within Answer my cry, and say we are akin?" |
6333 | dost thou lie so low? |
6333 | has not your situation since you were first attacked been improving every year? |
6333 | have you not risen under them from poverty to prosperity? |
6333 | in this land of France where none would dare to slap the face of his fellow, this man can slap the face of the nation? |
6333 | is he frightened now or no? |
6333 | is that thing still going?" |
6333 | my gorge rises at it.--Where be your gibes now? |
6333 | quite chop- fallen? |
6333 | through a marble wilderness? |
6333 | was it personal ambition that could influence me? |
6333 | who brags of his voting against Grant? |
6333 | your flashes of merriment, that were wo nt to set the table in a roar? |
6333 | your gambols? |
6333 | your songs? |
12924 | ;How does it bring to us a renewal of life?" |
12924 | ;How does it make the meaning of things clearer for us? |
12924 | A speck? |
12924 | And I to thee, by Heaven, My light steel life have given; When shall the knot be tied? 12924 And dost thou suffer, my brother?" |
12924 | And how is this, my little chit? |
12924 | And how is this? |
12924 | Art thou a Lombard, my brother? 12924 Art thou a Romagnole?" |
12924 | Art thou from Tuscany, brother? 12924 But canst thou marvel that, freeborn, With heart and soul unquelled, Throne, crown, and sceptre I should scorn, By thy permission held? |
12924 | But what fear''st thou? |
12924 | But what good came of it at last? |
12924 | But what with you Has one to do? |
12924 | Great chiefs, why sink in gloom your eyes? 12924 I might have bowed before, but where Had been thy triumph now? |
12924 | Not always, sir; but what of that? |
12924 | O chuse, O chuse, Lady Marg''ret,he said,"O whether will ye gang or bide?" |
12924 | O wha is this has done this deed, And tauld the king o''me, To send us out, at this time of the year, To sail upon the sea? 12924 O where will I get a gude sailor, To take my helm in hand, Till I get up to the tall top- mast, To see if I can spy land?" |
12924 | What are the bugles blowin''for? |
12924 | What makes that front- rank man fall down? |
12924 | What makes the rear- rank breathe so''ard? |
12924 | What makes you look so white, so white? |
12924 | What''s that so black agin the sun? |
12924 | What''s that that whimpers over''ead? |
12924 | What''s that? |
12924 | Where can her dazzling falchion be? 12924 Where shall that land, that spot of earth be found?" |
12924 | Wherefore curl''st thou my hair? 12924 ( 2) How long an interval elapsed between the writing of the above two poems? 12924 ( 3) What is the story in the poem, and in what manner is it told? 12924 ( 4) How does Tennyson all through the poem make it a parable of human life? 12924 ***** BREATHES THERE THE MAN? 12924 ***** MEN AND BOYS The storm is out; the land is roused; Where is the coward who sits well housed? 12924 ***** WHAT CONSTITUTES A STATE? 12924 ***** WHAT IS THE GERMAN''S FATHERLAND? 12924 ***** WHERE ARE THE MEN? 12924 Ah, what avails the silver horn, And what the slender spear? 12924 All? 12924 Along the battery- line her cry Had fallen among the men, And they started back;--they were there to die; But was life so near them, then? 12924 And have they fixed the where and when, And shall Trelawney die? 12924 And murder sullies in heaven''s sight The sword he draws:-- What can alone ennoble fight? 12924 And must thy lyre, so long divine, Degenerate into hands like mine? 12924 And shall Trelawney die? 12924 And shall Trelawney die? 12924 And shall Trelawney die? 12924 And shall we not proclaim That blood of honest fame Which no tyranny can tame By its chains? 12924 And what man, seeing this, And having human feelings, does not blush, And hang his head, to think himself a man? 12924 And what wealth then shall be left us, when none shall gather gold To buy his friend in the market, and pinch and pine the sold? 12924 And whence be the grapes of the wine- press that ye tread? 12924 And where are they? 12924 And where are ye to- day? 12924 And where are ye, O fearless men? 12924 And where is that band who so vauntingly swore That the havoc of war and the battle''s confusion A home and a country should leave us no more? 12924 And where is the bosom- friend, dearer than all? 12924 And wherefore doth your rout send forth a joyous shout? 12924 And you? 12924 Approach, thou craven, crouching slave; Say, is not this Thermopylae? 12924 Are the gleaming snows and the poppies red All that is left of the brave of yore? 12924 Are there none to fight as Theseus fought, Far in the young world''s misty dawn? 12924 Art thou the son of Tamburlaine, And fear''st to die, or with a curtle- axe To hew thy flesh, and make a gaping wound? 12924 Bavaria, or the Styrian''s land? 12924 Be we men, And suffer such dishonor? 12924 Before thy song( with shifted rhymes To suit my name) did I undo The persian? 12924 Bright jewels of the mine? 12924 Brother, wert thou born of it? 12924 But Jessie said,The slogan''s done; But winna ye hear it noo,_ The Campbells are comin''_? |
12924 | But for whom shall we gather the gain? |
12924 | But in the tent that night awake, I ask, if in the fray I fall, Can I the mystic answer make, When the angelic sentries call? |
12924 | But what are the deeds of to- day, In the days of the years we dwell in, that wear our lives away? |
12924 | But where to find that happiest spot below, Who can direct, when all pretend to know? |
12924 | But who shall break the guards that wait Before the awful face of Fate? |
12924 | But who that fought in the big war Such dread sights have not seen? |
12924 | By their right arms the conquest must be wrought? |
12924 | Ca n''t you see I am dying? |
12924 | Can dungeons, bolts, or bars confine thee? |
12924 | Can sin, can death, your worlds obscure? |
12924 | Clan- Alpine''s best are backward borne-- Where, where was Roderick then? |
12924 | Come-- is not this a griper, That while your hopes are danced away,''Tis you must pay the piper? |
12924 | Dead? |
12924 | Dearest love, do you remember When we last did meet, How you told me that you loved me Kneeling at my feet? |
12924 | Deep drank Lord Marmion of the wave, And, as she stooped his brow to lave,--"Is it the hand of Clare,"he said,"Or injured Constance, bathes my head?" |
12924 | Did a father''s first command Teach thee love or scorn of it? |
12924 | Did an Irish mother''s hand Guide thee in the morn of it? |
12924 | Did the hero''s evil prophecies come true? |
12924 | Did we dare, In our agony of prayer, Ask for more than He has done? |
12924 | Did you mind the loud cry When, as turning to fly, Our men sprang upon them, determined to die? |
12924 | Do our numbers multiply But to perish and to die? |
12924 | Do they thrill the soul of the years no more? |
12924 | Do we dream? |
12924 | Do you love it or slavery best? |
12924 | Does any change in style or trend of thought indicate the lapse of time? |
12924 | Does any falter? |
12924 | Does he ever admit that he judged them harshly? |
12924 | Does it astonish thee that I approved My warrior''s purpose, since a hostile fate Attempted to dethrone, not only me, But all Valhalla''s gods? |
12924 | Does it astonish thee that I should wish Quickly to rid myself of such a foe? |
12924 | Does thy land''s reviving spring, Full of buds and blossoming, Fail to make thy cold heart cling, Breathing lover''s vows for it? |
12924 | Dost think that cunning or that cowardice Could e''er have carved these wrinkles on my brow? |
12924 | Dost thou bring to me What thou didst promise? |
12924 | Ef I turned mad dogs loose, John, On_ your_ front parlor stairs, Would it just meet your views, John, To wait an''sue their heirs? |
12924 | Else why so swell the thoughts at your Aspect above? |
12924 | Fear ye foes who kill for hire? |
12924 | Fitz- Eustace where? |
12924 | Fond impious man, think''st thou yon sanguine cloud, Raised by thy breath, has quenched the orb of day? |
12924 | For whom did he cheer and laugh else, While Noll''s damned troopers shot him? |
12924 | From the cold and frost collect them? |
12924 | From the vale On they come!--and will ye quail? |
12924 | Gone? |
12924 | HAKON.--Asleep? |
12924 | Has earth a clod Its Maker meant not should be trod By man, the image of his God, Erect and free, Unscourged by Superstition''s rod To bow the knee? |
12924 | Has he for you? |
12924 | Has he grown sick of his toils and his tasks? |
12924 | Has he to you in like manner through his poem given a truer conception of the nature and use of poetry? |
12924 | Has our love all died out? |
12924 | Has the curse come at last which the fathers foretold? |
12924 | Has the past no goading sting That can make thee rouse for it? |
12924 | Has the poem for you a music of its own which haunts you like a remembered vision? |
12924 | Hast been successful? |
12924 | Hast thou chosen, O my people, on whose party thou shalt stand, Ere the Doom from its worn sandals shakes the dust against our land? |
12924 | Have its altars grown cold? |
12924 | He counted them at break of day-- And when the sun set, where were they? |
12924 | Heard ye the din of battle bray, Lance to lance, and horse to horse? |
12924 | Hope ye mercy still? |
12924 | How has this poem influenced you? |
12924 | How is the story continued in"Sixty Years After"? |
12924 | How long shall they reproach us, where crowd on crowd they dwell,-- Poor ghosts of the wicked city, the gold- crushed hungry hell? |
12924 | How long the indolence, ere thou dare Achieve thy destiny, seize thy fame; Ere our proud eyes behold thee bear A nation''s franchise, nation''s name? |
12924 | How many hast thou broken? |
12924 | How soon, who knows? |
12924 | How wouldst thou tremble then, my lord, if thou Shouldst see it on his body? |
12924 | I met with Napper Tandy, and he tuk me by the hand, And he said,"How''s poor ould Ireland, and how does she stand?" |
12924 | If so, do you agree with him altogether? |
12924 | If the work be really poetry, its study ought to give a help toward the solution of the first great problems:"What is poetry?" |
12924 | If, amid the din of battle, Nobly you should fall, Far away from those who love you, None to hear you call, Who would whisper words of comfort? |
12924 | Is it Prussia, or the Swabian''s land? |
12924 | Is it Switzerland? |
12924 | Is it a moment''s cool halt that he asks Under the shade of the trees? |
12924 | Is it the Mark where forges blaze? |
12924 | Is it the gurgle of water whose flow Ofttimes has come to him, borne on the breeze, Memory listens to, lapsing so low, Under the shade of the trees? |
12924 | Is it the land which princely hate Tore from the Emperor and the State? |
12924 | Is it the lightning''s quivering glance That on the thicket streams, Or do they flash on spear and lance The sun''s retiring beams? |
12924 | Is it the thunder''s solemn sound That mutters deep and dread, Or echoes from the groaning ground The warrior''s measured tread? |
12924 | Is it where the Master''s cattle graze? |
12924 | Is it where the grape glows on the Rhine? |
12924 | Is the effect of the rhythm optimistic as opposed to the pessimism of the"Triumph of Time,"and why? |
12924 | Is the emotional side of the hero as finely balanced as the intellectual side? |
12924 | Is the sable warrior fled? |
12924 | Is there never a one of ye knows how to pray, Or speak for a man as his life ebbs away? |
12924 | Is this all our destiny below,-- That our bodies, as they rot, May fertilize the spot Where the harvests of the stranger grow? |
12924 | Is this the end? |
12924 | Is''t Yon churchyard''s bowers? |
12924 | Is''t death to fall for Freedom''s right? |
12924 | It''s you thet''s to decide; Ai n''t_ your_ bonds held by Fate, John, Like all the world''s beside? |
12924 | King Charles, and who''ll do him right now? |
12924 | King Charles, and who''s ripe for fight now? |
12924 | King Charles, and who''s ripe for fight now? |
12924 | King Charles, and who''s ripe for fight now? |
12924 | Lies not our father Cold and silent in death? |
12924 | Living on its first and best, Art thou but a thankless guest Or a traitor foe for it, If thou lovest, where''s the test? |
12924 | Mother Earth, are the heroes dead? |
12924 | Mother Earth, are the heroes gone? |
12924 | Must we ask a mother''s blessin''from a strange and distant land? |
12924 | Must we but blush? |
12924 | Must we but weep o''er days more blest? |
12924 | My sword, why clatter so? |
12924 | Never again shall my brothers embrace me? |
12924 | No more shall freedom smile? |
12924 | Now Tories all, what can ye say? |
12924 | Now, look at me Full in the eyes; consider well my brow: Hast thou among the thralls e''er met such looks? |
12924 | Now, my boys, what think ye of a wound? |
12924 | O Erin, must we leave you, driven by a tyrant''s hand? |
12924 | O Paddy dear, an''did you hear the news that''s goin''round? |
12924 | O lonely Himalayan height, Gray pillar of the Indian sky, Where saw''st thou last in clanging fight Our wingèd dogs of Victory? |
12924 | O loved ones lying far away, What word of love can dead lips send? |
12924 | O shade of the mighty, where now are the legions That rushed but to conquer when thou led''st them on? |
12924 | O, wherefore come ye forth, in triumph from the north, With your hands and your feet and your raiment all red? |
12924 | OLAF.--But wilt thou first not look at Olaf''s head? |
12924 | Of two such lessons, why forget The nobler and the manlier one? |
12924 | Oh, why and for what are we waiting, while our brothers droop and die, And on every wind of the heavens a wasted life goes by? |
12924 | Once more, I say,--are ye resolved? |
12924 | Or have the lips of a sister fair Been baptized in their waves of light? |
12924 | Or shall the darkness close around them, ere the sun- blaze breaks at last upon thy story? |
12924 | Or stand they chance with hunting- shirts, Or hardy veteran feet, sir? |
12924 | Or teach as gray- haired Nestor taught? |
12924 | Or that I should retain my right Till wrested by a conqueror''s might? |
12924 | Or where the Danube''s surges roar? |
12924 | Or whips thy noble spirit tame? |
12924 | Or who a friend or foe can meet So generous as an Irishman? |
12924 | Page, squire, or groom, one cup to bring, Of blessèd water from the spring, To slake my dying thirst?" |
12924 | Pomerania''s strand? |
12924 | Say, darkeys, hab you seen de massa, Wid de muffstash on he face, Go long de road some time dis mornin'', Like he gwine leabe de place? |
12924 | Says he,"''Tis a snug little island; Sha''n''t us go visit the island?" |
12924 | Shall Britons languish, and be men no more? |
12924 | Shall I bring these songs together? |
12924 | Shall I now the end unfasten Of this ball of ancient wisdom? |
12924 | Shall I now these boxes open, Boxes filled with wondrous stories? |
12924 | Shall hateful tyrants, mischiefs breeding, With hireling hosts, a ruffian band, Affright and desolate the land, While peace and liberty lie bleeding? |
12924 | Shall it be love or hate, John? |
12924 | Shall mine eyes behold thy glory, O my country? |
12924 | Shall mine eyes behold thy glory? |
12924 | Shall not the self- same mould Bring forth the self- same men? |
12924 | Shall the ear be deaf that only loved thy praises, when all men their tribute bring thee? |
12924 | Shall the mouth be clay that sang thee in thy squalor, when all poets''mouths shall sing thee? |
12924 | Sighs the worn spirit for respite or ease? |
12924 | Sisters and sire, did ye weep for its fall? |
12924 | Small was the band that escaped from the slaughter, Flying for life as the tide''gan to flow; Hast thou no pity, thou dark rolling water? |
12924 | Somebody''s hand hath rested here-- Was it a mother''s, soft and white? |
12924 | Stay in thy chamber near, My love; what wilt thou here? |
12924 | Sword, on my left side gleaming, What means thy bright eye''s beaming? |
12924 | Systematic study such as that suggested above will help in answering the questions,"What charm has this poem for us?" |
12924 | That I deceived a dreamer who despised The mighty gods,--does that astonish thee? |
12924 | That''s all very true: what more could he do? |
12924 | That''s hallowed ground where, mourned and missed, The lips repose our love has kissed;-- But where''s their memory''s mansion? |
12924 | The fight,-- How goes it, say?" |
12924 | The lily calmly braves the storm, And shall the palm- tree fear? |
12924 | The mellow note of bugles? |
12924 | The sturdy trooper straight repeated,"When all the village cheers us on, That you, in tears, apart are seated? |
12924 | Then what is man? |
12924 | There are three words to speak:_ We will it_, and what is the foeman but the dream- strong wakened and weak? |
12924 | There were men with hoary hair Amidst that pilgrim- band: Why had they come to wither there, Away from their childhood''s land? |
12924 | These ancestral lays unravel? |
12924 | These waters blue that round you lave, O servile offspring of the free,-- Pronounce what sea, what shore is this? |
12924 | They are gone; there is none can undo it, nor save our souls from the curse: But many a million cometh, and shall they be better or worse? |
12924 | They fly, or, maddened by despair, Fight but to die,--"Is Wilton there?" |
12924 | They strike at the life of the State: Shall the murder be done? |
12924 | Thou who tread''st its fertile breast, Dost thou feel a glow for it? |
12924 | To incantations dost thou trust, And pompous rites in domes august? |
12924 | To whom used my boy George quaff else, By the old fool''s side that begot him? |
12924 | Turn those tracks toward Past or Future, that make Plymouth rock sublime? |
12924 | Up came the reserves to the mellay infernal, Asking where to go in,--through the clearing or pine? |
12924 | Wait''st thou his sign? |
12924 | Was Locksley Hall an inland or a seashore residence, and why? |
12924 | Was it moonlight so wondrously flashing? |
12924 | Was it well for Amy to marry as she did? |
12924 | Was there a man dismayed? |
12924 | We have a right to ask of each poem three questions:"How does it charm our senses? |
12924 | We have no slaves at home.--Then why abroad? |
12924 | We know thee and we love thee best; For art thou not of British blood? |
12924 | We''ll cross the Tarnar hand to hand, The Exe shall be no stay; We''ll side by side from strand to strand, And who shall bid us nay? |
12924 | Westphalia? |
12924 | Wha can fill a coward''s grave? |
12924 | Wha for Scotland''s king and law Freedom''s sword will strongly draw, Freeman stand, or freeman fa''? |
12924 | Wha sae base as be a slave? |
12924 | Wha will be a traitor knave? |
12924 | What are the thoughts that are stirring his breast? |
12924 | What can he tell who treads thy shore? |
12924 | What cares he? |
12924 | What cares he? |
12924 | What cares he? |
12924 | What cares he? |
12924 | What constitutes a state? |
12924 | What hallows ground where heroes sleep? |
12924 | What health to France, if France be she, Whom martial progress only charms? |
12924 | What is the German''s fatherland? |
12924 | What is the German''s fatherland? |
12924 | What is the German''s fatherland? |
12924 | What is the German''s fatherland? |
12924 | What is the German''s fatherland? |
12924 | What is the German''s fatherland? |
12924 | What is the German''s fatherland? |
12924 | What is the mystical vision he sees? |
12924 | What light is thrown on the character of his love by his outbursts against Amy? |
12924 | What man is there so bold that he should say,"Thus, and thus only, would I have the Sea"? |
12924 | What matter if our feet are torn? |
12924 | What matter if our shoes are worn? |
12924 | What means this restless glow? |
12924 | What of the bow? |
12924 | What of the cord? |
12924 | What of the men? |
12924 | What of the shaft? |
12924 | What profit now that we have bound The whole round world with nets of gold, If hidden in our heart is found The care that groweth never old? |
12924 | What profit that our galleys ride, Pine- forest like, on every main? |
12924 | What sought they thus afar? |
12924 | What suggestions are there regarding the characters of Amy and Edith? |
12924 | What the roll Of drums? |
12924 | What then? |
12924 | What though no monument epitaphed Be built above each grave? |
12924 | What though no sculptured shaft Immortalize each brave? |
12924 | What to him are all our wars?-- What but death- bemocking folly? |
12924 | What to him is friend or foeman, Rise of moon or set of sun, Hand of man or kiss of woman? |
12924 | What''s hallowed ground? |
12924 | What''s hallowed ground? |
12924 | What''s the mercy despots feel? |
12924 | What, Morris, a tear? |
12924 | What, was it a dream? |
12924 | When can their glory fade? |
12924 | When obedience to parental wishes and love are in conflict, which should be followed? |
12924 | When was ever his right hand Over any time or land Stretched as now beneath the sun? |
12924 | When wilt thou take thy bride?" |
12924 | When, doffed his casque, he felt free air, Around''gan Marmion wildly stare:--"Where''s Harry Blount? |
12924 | Where are the brave, the strong, the fleet? |
12924 | Where are the men who went forth in the morning, Hope brightly beaming in every face? |
12924 | Where be your tongues that late mocked at heaven and hell and fate? |
12924 | Where hast thou got it? |
12924 | Where is my cabin door, fast by the wildwood? |
12924 | Where is our English chivalry? |
12924 | Where is the grave of Sir Arthur O''Kellyn? |
12924 | Where is the mother that looked on my childhood? |
12924 | Where sea- gulls skim the Baltic''s brine? |
12924 | Where the sand drifts along the shore? |
12924 | Who found me in wine you drank once? |
12924 | Who gave me the goods that went since? |
12924 | Who guards to- day my stream divine?" |
12924 | Who helped me to gold I spent since? |
12924 | Who made the law thet hurts, John,_ Heads I win-- ditto tails_? |
12924 | Who now shall lead thy scattered children forth, And long- accustomed bondage uncreate? |
12924 | Who raised me the house that sank once? |
12924 | Who would soothe your pain? |
12924 | Whose banner do I see, boys? |
12924 | Whose heart has ne''er within him burned, As home his footsteps he hath turned From wandering on a foreign strand? |
12924 | Whose love do you think was the greatest, Amy''s, or his, or the Squire''s? |
12924 | Why are the lines of this poem so easily carried in the memory? |
12924 | Why called Trochaic Octameter? |
12924 | Why champ your teeth in pain? |
12924 | Why change the titles of your streets? |
12924 | Why did I cross the deep? |
12924 | Why in the scabbard rattle, So wild, so fierce for battle? |
12924 | Why is the later one less popular? |
12924 | Why is this metre peculiarly adapted to the sentiment of"Locksley Hall"? |
12924 | Why rest with babes and slaves? |
12924 | Why talk so dreffle big, John, Of honor when it meant You did n''t care a fig, John, But jest for_ ten per cent_? |
12924 | Why the de''il dinna ye march forward in order? |
12924 | Why, then, and for what are we waiting? |
12924 | Why? |
12924 | Will Gaul or Muscovite redress ye? |
12924 | Will ye give it up to slaves? |
12924 | Will ye look for greener graves? |
12924 | Will ye to your_ homes_ retire? |
12924 | Wilt thou strike a blow for it? |
12924 | World, art thou''ware of a storm? |
12924 | Would it be fair to judge of Amy and her husband by what he says of them in his first anguish? |
12924 | Would they not feel their children tread With clanging chains above their head? |
12924 | Yet are red heels and long- laced skirts, For stumps and briars meet, sir? |
12924 | You have the Pyrrhic dance as yet,-- Where is the Pyrrhic phalanx gone? |
12924 | You have the letters Cadmus gave,-- Think ye he meant them for a slave? |
12924 | You wonder why we''re hot, John? |
12924 | Young Romance raised his dreamy eyes, O''erhung with paly locks of gold,--"Why smite,"he asked in sad surprise,"The fair, the old?" |
12924 | Your stage- plays and your sonnets, your diamonds and your spades? |
12924 | _( Chorus)__ King Charles, and who''ll do him right now? |
12924 | _( Chorus)__ King Charles, and who''ll do him right now? |
12924 | a soldier''s spirit in you all? |
12924 | am I all alone In the dreary night and the drizzling rain? |
12924 | and seest thou, dreaming in pain, Thy mother stand in the piazza, searching the list of the slain?" |
12924 | and silent all? |
12924 | and where art thou, My country? |
12924 | and wouldst thou know Why we should call it Father Land? |
12924 | and"How does it put a deeper meaning into the events it records?" |
12924 | and"What is its revelation to the life of our senses, our hearts, and our souls?" |
12924 | are not your beings pure? |
12924 | can a Roman senate long debate Which of the two to choose, slavery or death? |
12924 | can it be That this is all remains of thee? |
12924 | can man resign thee, Once having felt thy generous flame? |
12924 | cried the caliph;"is it, friend, a secret blow? |
12924 | do ye hear him where he comes? |
12924 | do ye know him as he comes, In thunder of the cannon and roll of the drums, As we go marching on? |
12924 | he cried,"my bleeding country save!-- Is there no hand on high to shield the brave? |
12924 | he gruffly said, A moment pausing to regard her;--"Why weepest thou, my little chit?" |
12924 | how shall I thank thee for all? |
12924 | is this the end? |
12924 | know ye not, Who would be free themselves must strike the blow? |
12924 | long abandoned by pleasure, Why did it dote on a fast- fading treasure? |
12924 | men, and wash not The stain away in blood? |
12924 | must this last? |
12924 | must thou yield For every inch of ground a son? |
12924 | run you not, then, Just where you please and when?" |
12924 | say we,-- White, yaller, black, an''brown, John; Now which is your idee? |
12924 | say, does that star- spangled banner yet wave O''er the land of the free, and the home of the brave? |
12924 | shall ne''er again The smile of thy most holy face, From thine ethereal dwelling- place, Rejoice the wretched, weary race Of discord- breathing men? |
12924 | silent still? |
12924 | the foe Who madly seeks your overthrow, Dread not his rage and power; What though your courage sometimes faints? |
12924 | was it the night- wind that rustled the leaves? |
12924 | was there ever such a knight, in friendship or in war, As our sovereign lord, King Henry, the soldier of Navarre? |
12924 | what means the trampling of horsemen on our rear? |
12924 | what mortal hand Can e''er untie the filial band That knits me to thy rugged strand? |
12924 | what shall men say of thee, Before whose feet the worlds divide? |
12924 | what solemn scenes on Snowdon''s height Descending slow their glittering skirts unroll? |
12924 | what treachery is here? |
12924 | who comes there? |
12924 | who goes there?" |
12924 | why do n''t ye proceed? |
12924 | why left I my hame? |
12924 | why left I the land Where my forefathers sleep? |
12924 | will they scorn Tre, Pol, and Pen? |
12924 | will they scorn Tre, Pol, and Pen? |
12924 | will they scorn Tre, Pol, and Pen? |
12924 | wilt thou never replace me In a mansion of peace, where no perils can chase me? |
12924 | would not grow warm When thoughts like these give cheer? |
9888 | ''Bully and warm, ai n''t it?'' 9888 ''Why, Jenny,''says I''what can_ I_ do?'' |
9888 | Ai n''t you two married? |
9888 | America? |
9888 | An actor? |
9888 | And after all,she said,"you''ll be_ The_ McTavish, wo n''t you?" |
9888 | And if we do n''t make it by midnight? |
9888 | And if we smash and are kilt? |
9888 | And if you had n''t liked me this way, would you have turned me out of house and home? |
9888 | And now what? |
9888 | And what happened? |
9888 | And where did you gather it all? |
9888 | And you? |
9888 | Any messages for your sister? |
9888 | Any middle name? |
9888 | Are my hands empty? |
9888 | Are n''t you in something of a hurry? |
9888 | Are there two of you? |
9888 | Are these the matters on which you are so eager to meet her? |
9888 | Are we to dine? |
9888 | Are you proposing to me? |
9888 | Are you quizzing me,she said,"or are you outlining your honest and mad intentions? |
9888 | Are you serious, sir? |
9888 | Are you sick, Fitzhugh? |
9888 | Are you yourself to- day,asked Miss Eve, her eyes filling,"or are you just unusually horrid?" |
9888 | At twenty- two? |
9888 | But are n''t there usually two gangways-- one for the crew and one for the owner''s guests? |
9888 | But are n''t you going to wait till I can go with you? |
9888 | But do n''t you intend to pay it back? |
9888 | But tell me: suppose you gentlemen deliberately absented yourselves for a few days-- wouldn''t it restore confidence? 9888 But you,"said Forrest to the earl,"what would you do if you were stone- broke?" |
9888 | But,he repeated gently,"that do n''t read like a letter that a brute of a son would write to a brute of a father; now, does it?" |
9888 | But,said I,"were n''t you afraid the bulldogs would get you?" |
9888 | But,said his mother,"what''s the difference? |
9888 | But--"But what? |
9888 | Ca n''t you climb up? |
9888 | Ca n''t you get a berth? |
9888 | Ca n''t you think of anything but how smart people are? |
9888 | Ca n''t you? |
9888 | Can I help? |
9888 | Can you make it? |
9888 | Can you make me something that looks like a drink, and is n''t? |
9888 | Can you see that he gets that? |
9888 | Can you work the lift yourself? 9888 Captain,"said I,"how are we off for boats?" |
9888 | Childkin, is it the memory of those white grapes that tempts your appetite? |
9888 | Could I have this room to myself for a little while? |
9888 | Did I deal? 9888 Did grandpa pull for you, or did you have to find yourself?" |
9888 | Did he say anything about me? |
9888 | Did you know that Colland McTavish should have been_ The_ McTavish? |
9888 | Did you or did n''t you let me have some flour and bacon on tick? |
9888 | Did your father make his money in Shetland sweaters? |
9888 | Do I look like a consumptive? |
9888 | Do any of you own a boat? |
9888 | Do n''t I? |
9888 | Do n''t you think it''s hard to be a genuine aunt and to have to spend Christmas alone in a strange place? |
9888 | Do n''t_ you_ think it would be rather awful? |
9888 | Do they have a watchman? |
9888 | Do they take up their gangways at night? |
9888 | Do you believe in blood? |
9888 | Do you believe that blood will--_must_ tell? |
9888 | Do you know what''s in that trunk? |
9888 | Do you know who I am that you treat me like a barmaid? |
9888 | Do you know who I am? |
9888 | Do you know, too, why I turned white in the chapel? |
9888 | Do you mean,said Brett,"that you do n''t know which is the correct thing to do, or that you think I ca n''t steer?" |
9888 | Do you read Tennyson? |
9888 | Do you read Tennyson? |
9888 | Do you see seven or eight men in the corner,she said,"who look as if they were surrounding a punch- bowl?" |
9888 | Do you see,said he,"way down yonder over the tops of the trees a dead limb sticking up?" |
9888 | Do you think I care? |
9888 | Do you think we shall ever get anywhere? |
9888 | Do you think you''ve got fever? |
9888 | Do you think, sir,he drawled,"that I have made the best selection under the circumstances? |
9888 | Do you think,said McTavish,"that your sister will get me a chance to see_ The_ McTavish?" |
9888 | Do you understand what cousinship with me means to you? |
9888 | Do you want to live on what you earn? |
9888 | Do you wish to draw me,_ Master?_I said. |
9888 | Do you yell? |
9888 | Does all that hair grow on your head? |
9888 | Enough to make up for the years when there has been nothing? |
9888 | For the idea? |
9888 | Frankly, Mr. Forrest,said the earl,"are n''t the twins loathsome? |
9888 | Glory? |
9888 | Going to spend Christmas with Uncle, are you? |
9888 | Good Heavens!--when? |
9888 | Gryce,he said,"what do you know about yachts?" |
9888 | Has any one here ever caused a panic or averted one? 9888 Have I,"said Ballin, smiling a little doubtfully,"ever had the pleasure of meeting you before? |
9888 | Have n''t you a couple of row- boats? 9888 Have one?" |
9888 | Have you documentary proof of this astonishing statement? |
9888 | Have you,said Mr. Holiday,"any of your rebuilding fund with you?" |
9888 | He said that, did he? |
9888 | Hello what? |
9888 | Honestly?... 9888 Houses-- lands?" |
9888 | How are you,I said,"and what are you doing?" |
9888 | How do I know? |
9888 | How do you do? |
9888 | How far to Carcasonne House? |
9888 | How long have you been abroad? |
9888 | How much money do you earn? |
9888 | How was it found out then? |
9888 | How,said McTavish, not without insinuation,"could one get to know one''s cousin?" |
9888 | How? |
9888 | I am frightened,she said;"have I given myself to a djinn?" |
9888 | I beg your pardon, sir,he said,"were you looking for some one?" |
9888 | I do n''t see her,I said, and, I hope, anxiously;"you do n''t suppose--""Is n''t the_ Hobo_ there?" |
9888 | I forgot to ask you where you are going? |
9888 | I says,''On what bank?'' 9888 I wonder,"Pedder mused,"how it ever occurred to a blind, deaf mute that severing his wrist with his teeth would induce death?" |
9888 | I wonder,he mused,"if The McTavish would let me do it? |
9888 | I? |
9888 | If I were going to visit the_ Sappho_,he asked,"would I approach the gangway from the stern or from the bow?" |
9888 | If you are equal to a short, muddy walk,I said,"I will show him to you-- Morning, little Miss Tombs-- want to see brother and young Fitch? |
9888 | In that case,said Merriman,"what can I do for you?" |
9888 | In what way? |
9888 | Is The McTavish your cousin? |
9888 | Is he in trouble? 9888 Is it being a bad lot to have a red nose?" |
9888 | Is that horse in your cellar or in mine? |
9888 | Is that your home? |
9888 | Is that your name, or do you have them? |
9888 | Is there anything, Mr. McTavish,he said,"in this world that a rich man like you may want?" |
9888 | It saved the missus and the kids-- so what''s the odds? |
9888 | It will be easier, wo n''t it,she said,"if you have my hair to hold by? |
9888 | Jim,she said as they began to descend into the place,"life''s only a moment out of eternity, is n''t it?" |
9888 | M. A. Saterlee, the cattle man-- do you know him? |
9888 | MA''AM? |
9888 | Ma''am? |
9888 | Ma''am? |
9888 | Madam,said the judge,"is what the prisoner has told us, in so far as it concerns you, true?" |
9888 | Madam,said the judge,"may I ask you to rise?" |
9888 | Man,she continued earnestly,"you have looked in his face and you tell me it will be a dance to prove him The McTavish?" |
9888 | Mary,I said,"do you remember how my father told Ellen and me to go back in a year and a day, and look in the boot?" |
9888 | May I drive him? |
9888 | May I inquire,he drawled,"what reason the late lamented gave for supposing that I would honor his wuffless paper?" |
9888 | May I, Ma''am? |
9888 | McDonald,she cried,"can you make Beem- Tay in the hour?" |
9888 | Miss Burton is the punch- bowl? |
9888 | Miss MacNish--? |
9888 | More wealth? |
9888 | Mrs. Sam,said Tombs hollowly,"do you realize that this accident may mean_ ruin_ for some of us?" |
9888 | Must I? |
9888 | My dear sir,said he,"I saw a play last winter in which the question is asked,''Do you believe in Fairies?'' |
9888 | My sister writes--"What does she write? |
9888 | Nonsense,said Miss Hampton;"would you and I balk if we were in their places?" |
9888 | Now ai n''t that ridiculous? |
9888 | Now, who''s quibbling? |
9888 | Now,said he,"how should I go about getting an interview with The McTavish?" |
9888 | Oh, Sam,cried Sally,"you do n''t think she may have been run down by one of the Sound steamers and sunk?" |
9888 | Oh,said McTavish,"if I''ve hurt your feelings-- why, I''ll go on with what I began, and take the consequences, shall I?" |
9888 | Really-- truly?--ought I? |
9888 | Sally--? |
9888 | Sam,said Mrs. Randall,"what has happened to my husband?" |
9888 | Sammy,said Tombs very sweetly,"have you got another thousand up your sleeve?" |
9888 | Shall I tell Mr. Ballin that you are here, sir? |
9888 | She said that? |
9888 | Sir? |
9888 | So she has a conscience? |
9888 | So you bought the last bunch? |
9888 | Tell me,said the American,"is it true that Miss McTavish is down on strangers?" |
9888 | The colonel tells me that you have offered to serve Spain if he will give you your life? |
9888 | The man Ruddy Boyd used violence to make you go with him? |
9888 | The money made everything smooth, did it? |
9888 | Then why have you told me? |
9888 | They''ll float at high tide, wo n''t they? |
9888 | Train D- railed? |
9888 | Two more what? |
9888 | Was it your ancestor,he said,"who''was a bra''gallant, and who raid at the gluve''?" |
9888 | Was this the stone you came to see? |
9888 | Well,said Mr. Callender, with snapping eyes,"can you play well enough to be an interesting opponent, or ca n''t you?" |
9888 | Well,said his mother,"would you mind very much if we drove to the d''Orient now and called on the Burtons?" |
9888 | Well,said she,"what then? |
9888 | Well,she said, laughing,"are n''t you going to put me down?" |
9888 | Well? |
9888 | What about''em? |
9888 | What about''em? |
9888 | What are we to do? |
9888 | What bank were you teller in? |
9888 | What can have happened? |
9888 | What did grandpa start on? |
9888 | What did you talk about? |
9888 | What did you use to do for a living-- before? |
9888 | What did you wish? |
9888 | What did your wife do while you were away? |
9888 | What do you mean? |
9888 | What do you want me to say? |
9888 | What do_ you_ think? |
9888 | What does it matter? |
9888 | What good would it do him to get there before? |
9888 | What have you been doing since-- Sacramento? |
9888 | What is Gila River? |
9888 | What is your name? |
9888 | What shall I call the account? |
9888 | What time is it? |
9888 | What was said? |
9888 | What would a Campbell have done? 9888 What would you call fine practice?" |
9888 | What would you like? 9888 What''s he doing?" |
9888 | What''s the matter with_ us_? |
9888 | What''s the use? |
9888 | What''s your pleasure, gents? |
9888 | What, would all you rich young people do if you had n''t a sou in the world? |
9888 | What? |
9888 | What? |
9888 | What? |
9888 | What? |
9888 | What? |
9888 | What_ is_ it? |
9888 | What_ is_ your name? |
9888 | When did you get out? |
9888 | When the market looks fussy, why not sell out, and wait for better times? |
9888 | Where are such to be had? |
9888 | Where is your own meeserable conscience, Traquair? |
9888 | Where you want to git? |
9888 | Where''s Ellen? |
9888 | Where? |
9888 | Which is Miss Burton? |
9888 | Who told you that, Sam? |
9888 | Who''s coming? |
9888 | Why are we stopping? |
9888 | Why are you looking at your boots? |
9888 | Why did you let them cut it so short then? |
9888 | Why do n''t you make the trump, Sam? |
9888 | Why do n''t you stand up for us, father? |
9888 | Why do you all try to make her out such a bad lot? |
9888 | Why do you warn him? |
9888 | Why foolish? |
9888 | Why inhuman? |
9888 | Why not? |
9888 | Why not? |
9888 | Why wo n''t you get up? |
9888 | Why, where''s the ferry? |
9888 | Why,he said tolerantly,"do I look as savage as all that?" |
9888 | Why,said Brett, diffidently but unabashed,"you could start in early to- morrow morning, could n''t you, and bull the market?" |
9888 | Why,said he,"has this chapel been allowed to fall to pieces?" |
9888 | Why? |
9888 | Why? |
9888 | Why? |
9888 | Why? |
9888 | Why? |
9888 | Why? |
9888 | Will Monday never come? |
9888 | Will you and Powers dine with me? |
9888 | Will you be making any changes,asked Traquair,"when you come into your own?" |
9888 | Will you come back in an hour-- you, alone, cousin? |
9888 | Will you kindly tell me,said Mrs. Randall,"what my husband is doing out there on that float?" |
9888 | Will you sit for me? |
9888 | Will you wish to read all the inscriptions? |
9888 | Wo n''t it be fun,said Fitz,"to go home?" |
9888 | Would n''t he sail right in and do the wrong thing, just as everybody has done all winter? |
9888 | Would n''t you be cross,said the young man,"if you had to look forward to sitting up all night in a cold smoking compartment?" |
9888 | Would n''t you know she was a woman? |
9888 | Would the law,asked McTavish,"oust Miss McTavish and stand me in her shoes?" |
9888 | Would you have me break my word to a servant? |
9888 | Would you leave me alone with them? |
9888 | Would you like me to try, sir? |
9888 | Would you rather have cash or a check? |
9888 | Would you rather we turned back? |
9888 | Writing a sermon? |
9888 | Yes? |
9888 | Yes? |
9888 | Yes? |
9888 | You are, I take it, the prisoner''s wife? |
9888 | You did n''t come to accuse me of being a looker- on? |
9888 | You do n''t mind? 9888 You do n''t remember the Burtons, do you, Fitz?" |
9888 | You have made up your mind, then,said Traquair,"to claim your own?" |
9888 | You have n''t ever experienced it, have you? |
9888 | You mean that slim hedge- fence in lavender? |
9888 | You poor things,said Sally,"I hope to Heaven you can; but how?" |
9888 | You were on the_ Monitor_, were n''t you? |
9888 | You wonder-- what? |
9888 | You wretched boy, do you mean to tell me that you have n''t your pajamas on? |
9888 | Young man,said Mr. Holiday, seating himself,"what makes you look so cross?" |
9888 | _ Where is my husband?_said she. |
9888 | ''Ai n''t you goin''to do nothin''?'' |
9888 | ''Come for that twenty, Lou?'' |
9888 | ''How about that twenty?'' |
9888 | ''How about that twenty?'' |
9888 | *****"What''s he doing now?" |
9888 | And I suppose Freddie and Euphemia will carry on and raise Cain when they find there''s no Santy Claus in Painsville?" |
9888 | And if the latter, wo n''t you tell me why? |
9888 | And in a tough voice( really an excellent piece of acting):"What''s yours, kid?" |
9888 | And now if you will put me down--?" |
9888 | And she said:"Would it be good for_ me_?" |
9888 | And then they did a great deal of whispering, and finally Mr. Holiday said:"But suppose they balk?" |
9888 | And what answer will you give?" |
9888 | And where had he learned it? |
9888 | Are you sure?... |
9888 | Are you the housekeeper?" |
9888 | At dinner that night Williams senior said suddenly:"Fitz, what you do want to do?" |
9888 | Ballin?" |
9888 | Billoo answered;"where is it?" |
9888 | But I do n''t_ know_--do I? |
9888 | But is your conscience up to a heavy load?" |
9888 | But look here, sir, are you really up against it?" |
9888 | But mamma and I,"she said,"are devoted to fiacres-- not smart, are they?" |
9888 | But on the present occasion he asked:"As how?" |
9888 | But tell me, can you shoot that thing as magically as you play tricks with it?" |
9888 | But then it was absolutely impossible for Shakespeare to do what he did with the English language, was n''t it? |
9888 | But they''re still building; and besides, what if the_ Hobo_ does break down? |
9888 | But what''s your first name?" |
9888 | But what,"and again the smile flickered--"what would The McTavish say if she saw us-- her cousin and her housekeeper-- dawdling along arm in arm?" |
9888 | But when I got Sally alone I said to her:"Now, Sally, answer prettily: do you or do you not know what plausible weather is?" |
9888 | But why not? |
9888 | CONTENTS_ The Spread Eagle Targets The Boot The Despoiler One More Martyr"Ma''am?" |
9888 | Ca n''t you, ma''am?" |
9888 | Callender?" |
9888 | Can you do it?" |
9888 | Can you make it?" |
9888 | Can you swim, Ma''am?" |
9888 | Did Lincoln use the broad A at Gettysburg? |
9888 | Did Mary tell you that I''ve just been re- elected sheriff?" |
9888 | Did Mr. Holiday think there was any danger of being delayed by the snow? |
9888 | Did you have a breakdown?" |
9888 | Do n''t you know it? |
9888 | Do n''t you suppose that Washington himself held forth in the molten, golden tones of Virginia? |
9888 | Do you know how much hunger and longing and loving can be crowded into a few days? |
9888 | Do you know how you feel in spring-- the day the first crocuses come out? |
9888 | Do you know where I wish it was?" |
9888 | Do you mind if I talk to you?" |
9888 | Do you see that shadow half way up-- on the left-- about three feet off? |
9888 | Do you think Adams said_ bought_ and_ caught_? |
9888 | Do you think that would be wrong?" |
9888 | Do you think your father thought I was a bloody murderer? |
9888 | Does she look like you?" |
9888 | Else what are savings- banks for, and thrift, and a knowledge of furs?" |
9888 | Ever been to Ohio Penitentiary, mister? |
9888 | For Fitz said, averting his beautiful eyes:"You''re a funny little pill, are n''t you?" |
9888 | Forrest?" |
9888 | Guilty or not guilty?" |
9888 | Had I not that very morning seen in a Piccadilly window a photograph of almost all of her? |
9888 | Had it been as cold as this in the old barn? |
9888 | Had n''t I better take you up?" |
9888 | Had she seen a rabbit? |
9888 | Hang them there, on the foot of the bed by the crook of the stem-- is it strong enough to hold them? |
9888 | Hans,"said Lou Garou, addressing that juror directly,"did I or did n''t I come to see you that Saturday?" |
9888 | Have n''t you any shred of courage in your great, hulking body? |
9888 | Have you ever heard a tiger roar-- full steam ahead? |
9888 | Have you ever known one of those tremendously clever deaf people whom you may talk with for a long time before discovering that they are deaf? |
9888 | Have you pumped my coachman? |
9888 | Have you that gift for games?" |
9888 | He kept croaking"What?" |
9888 | He listened until she had finished and then:"What tune is that?" |
9888 | Holiday?" |
9888 | I ask you,''Do you believe in Gypsies?''" |
9888 | I asked, forcing a smile,"to merit such terrible punishment?" |
9888 | I said to Leslie very eagerly,"Were you saved?" |
9888 | I said,"is that all?" |
9888 | I said,''What manner of woman is Miss McTavish?'' |
9888 | I''ve been looking for you for weeks, and--""What is it that I can do for you?" |
9888 | I, of course, had my doubts of that; but I kept countenance, and said,''well, what''s that one about?'' |
9888 | In one window there was a great olive branch in a glass jar-- do you remember? |
9888 | In the same absurd way that one man says to another whom he knows perfectly well,"What-- is this you?" |
9888 | Is n''t he as dead, even if she loved him, as if he had really died? |
9888 | It looks as if they had, does n''t it? |
9888 | It was n''t the psychological moment for either of us to break our necks, was it?" |
9888 | It would be, would n''t it? |
9888 | It''s better, because, after all, you ca n''t turn sounds into words, can you?'' |
9888 | Look at me.... Is it true?... |
9888 | May I ask you to look after them for me?" |
9888 | McTavish?" |
9888 | McTavish?" |
9888 | Miss McTavish is out now-- would you like to look about a little?" |
9888 | Mr. Merriman laughed savagely,"What are they saying of me these days?" |
9888 | Mrs. Burton was much cheered by Mrs. Williams''s visit, as who that struggles is not by the notice of the rich and the mighty? |
9888 | My mother nearly went insane--""What had you done?" |
9888 | Nevis?" |
9888 | None of''em''s here-- what''s the use of_ me_ being scared?''" |
9888 | Now ai n''t that funny?'' |
9888 | Now that side of it would n''t have entered the law''s head, would it?" |
9888 | Now what do you think they''d be worth to you?" |
9888 | Ruddy was in his ditch( having shovelled out the snow), and I says,''Ruddy, how about that twenty?'' |
9888 | Shall we go and see?" |
9888 | She says,''Think you''d better?'' |
9888 | She was wrecked--""Coast of Java-- in''80, was n''t it?" |
9888 | So I laughs, too, and says,''It do seem kind of funny, and how about it?'' |
9888 | So you knew all along?" |
9888 | That''s what you''re driving at, is n''t it?" |
9888 | Then he said:"By the way, Mary, do n''t you and the children ever get hungry between meals? |
9888 | Then she said in an injured and astonished tone:"_ Why?_""The Scotch Scot,"said McTavish,"is shrewd, but cautious. |
9888 | Then what do you think the lightning did? |
9888 | Then you''re to let me have the ten pound?" |
9888 | Traquair?" |
9888 | Was he the oldest son?" |
9888 | Was n''t it curious, my seeing that tablet the first thing when we came in? |
9888 | We''ve only to cut it from its moorings, and sail it across-- May we have it?" |
9888 | What creature but a parrot devotes such long hours to the acquirement of perfection in each trivial stage of progress? |
9888 | What creature remembers so faithfully and so well? |
9888 | What if Dorothy''s mother_ is_ an actress and has been divorced twice? |
9888 | What ought I to do?" |
9888 | What was it? |
9888 | What would you do--_if you knew_ that he was he, and that you were only you?" |
9888 | What''s the matter with them?" |
9888 | What''s the matter?" |
9888 | What''s to be done? |
9888 | Where are you going?" |
9888 | Which is your house?" |
9888 | Why do n''t you talk to me as if I were your son? |
9888 | Why should I?... |
9888 | Why that cruel, tight cap down over her ears? |
9888 | Why, in heaven''s name, should you ask The McTavish to marry you-- at first sight?" |
9888 | Why, what time is it? |
9888 | Will anybody come and have a look at the fine young storm that I''m having served?" |
9888 | Will you go further and tell me how I am to do it?" |
9888 | Will you have to swim and tow me?" |
9888 | Will you offer me your hand now?" |
9888 | Will you?" |
9888 | Wo n''t somebody play my hand? |
9888 | Wo n''t you give me work?''" |
9888 | Wonder what Gila River''s doing?" |
9888 | Would n''t we come? |
9888 | Would n''t you all be the richer for an absence now and then?" |
9888 | You do n''t like that idea?" |
9888 | You do n''t more than half believe me, do you?" |
9888 | You never had a son, did you? |
9888 | You see, if they knew that you had been allowed to go free it would counteract your usefulness, would n''t it?" |
9888 | You think I am in a hurry? |
9888 | and then-- aren''t you going to be very late to your business? |
9888 | asked Powers,"before attacking the_ Merrimac_?" |
9888 | do you?" |
9888 | exclaimed the lady,"are you bound for Carcasonne House? |
9888 | queried the proprietor of the Life- Saving Station,"or was you just out for a walk?" |
9888 | said Ballin,"were you a part of that hectic flush that to myself I only refer to as''Sacramento''?" |
9888 | she cried,"not gone yet? |
9888 | she said suddenly, and, after a pause:''Where''s my nigger?'' |
9888 | what shall I do? |
31092 | Are we wanted in the Union? |
31092 | How deep is the water? |
31092 | How many are there of you? |
31092 | I am called to sup,he wrote,"but where to breakfast? |
31092 | If, to please the people,he said,"we offer what we ourselves disapprove, how can we afterward defend our work? |
31092 | Shall we not fire, sir? |
31092 | What shall I bring you for a present? |
31092 | What was to have been your reward in case you succeeded? |
31092 | What will your people do with me if they catch me? |
31092 | Why not? |
31092 | 10. Who lived north of the Ohio? |
31092 | 10. Who was Count de Grasse? |
31092 | 11. Who answered Jackson''s call for assistance? |
31092 | 12. Who came from outside New Orleans to help defend the city? |
31092 | 12. Who had possession of Stony Point? |
31092 | 12. Who was Hamilton the"hair buyer"? |
31092 | 12. Who was Jacataqua? |
31092 | 14. Who was Dr. Bowditch? |
31092 | 17. Who led the attack on Stony Point? |
31092 | 18. Who was Samuel Doak? |
31092 | 2. Who was Lafayette? |
31092 | 22. Who was the orator at the laying of the corner stone of Bunker Hill Monument? |
31092 | 27. Who succeeded Ferguson in command? |
31092 | 27. Who were the Creoles? |
31092 | 28. Who helped Clark make friends? |
31092 | 33. Who, next to Washington, was the most noted man at the Philadelphia convention? |
31092 | 37. Who was chosen president of the Philadelphia convention? |
31092 | 39. Who announced Clark''s arrival at Vincennes? |
31092 | 5. Who was sent to the Mediterranean Sea? |
31092 | 57. Who was the first President, and who the first Vice President, of the new nation? |
31092 | 7. Who was Moultrie? |
31092 | 7. Who was the"Iron Duke"? |
31092 | After all, the main question was, What shall be done? |
31092 | At what hour was the attack to be made? |
31092 | At what time did Clark reach the village? |
31092 | At what time of year did Clark start for Vincennes? |
31092 | But how? |
31092 | By what means did the delegates at Philadelphia succeed in agreeing on a form of federal government? |
31092 | CHAPTER II, PAGE 18 A MIDWINTER CAMPAIGN 1. Who led the patriots to victory at Saratoga, New York? |
31092 | CHAPTER XI, PAGE 156 A DARING EXPLOIT 1. Who were the Barbary pirates? |
31092 | Can you describe some of the incidents of Lafayette''s visit? |
31092 | Can you find such a man for me this very afternoon?" |
31092 | Can you name some others of the delegates to the Philadelphia convention? |
31092 | Could he do it? |
31092 | Did Clark have trouble in getting into the town of Kaskaskia? |
31092 | Did Hale receive a trial? |
31092 | Did anybody think well of Clark''s plan of campaign? |
31092 | Did not Wolfe{ 32} take equally desperate chances and win deathless renown? |
31092 | Did the patriots have plenty of powder? |
31092 | Did the pioneers have other enemies besides the Indians? |
31092 | Do n''t you suppose the recapture of the Philadelphia was talked of every day? |
31092 | Do you know a good use for palmetto logs? |
31092 | Do you think Clark was a hero? |
31092 | Do you wonder that the grateful people of the sturdy young republic were eager to receive him as their guest? |
31092 | How could he ever go home without taking Quebec? |
31092 | How did Arnold reach the city of Quebec? |
31092 | How did Arnold try to make friends of the Indians? |
31092 | How did Captain Bainbridge treat the dying Captain Lambert? |
31092 | How did Captain Hull win a hat from Captain Dacres? |
31092 | How did Captain Isaac Hull get away from the British fleet? |
31092 | How did Clark get possession of the fort? |
31092 | How did Clark introduce himself? |
31092 | How did Clark plan to defend Kentucky? |
31092 | How did Commodore Preble treat Decatur after his capture of the Tripolitan gunboats? |
31092 | How did Congress show its gratitude for Lafayette''s services during the Revolution? |
31092 | How did Decatur deceive the pirate officer? |
31092 | How did General Clinton take it all? |
31092 | How did Hale disguise himself? |
31092 | How did Lafayette live at Valley Forge? |
31092 | How did Lafayette show his affection for Washington? |
31092 | How did Lexington, Kentucky, get its name? |
31092 | How did Morgan escape from the Indian? |
31092 | How did Morgan outwit Lord Cornwallis? |
31092 | How did Pakenham begin his operations? |
31092 | How did Sir Edward fare when he marched out to get a look at the Americans? |
31092 | How did Washington and others begin to work out the problem of our national existence? |
31092 | How did Washington and others feel about the second compromise? |
31092 | How did Washington become so wealthy? |
31092 | How did Washington convince the delegates of their duty? |
31092 | How did Washington look when at the meeting at Newburgh, New York? |
31092 | How did Washington treat his slaves? |
31092 | How did Washington''s slaves treat him? |
31092 | How did Wayne divide his army to make the attack? |
31092 | How did Wayne look? |
31092 | How did our navy compare with England''s in 1812? |
31092 | How did relief finally come to Quebec? |
31092 | How did some of the delegates wish to deal with the great problem of the national government? |
31092 | How did the Americans show their good discipline? |
31092 | How did the British fleet fare at Chesapeake Bay? |
31092 | How did the British plan to attack the fort? |
31092 | How did the British soldiers act in Connecticut? |
31092 | How did the British treat Arnold and his men? |
31092 | How did the Hessians like Morgan''s riflemen? |
31092 | How did the army get along in crossing the Horseshoe Plain? |
31092 | How did the guests enjoy President Washington''s grand dinners? |
31092 | How did the patriots of the South get on in 1780? |
31092 | How did the people get news of the surrender? |
31092 | How did the pirates discover the Americans? |
31092 | How did the riflemen look as they came into town? |
31092 | How did the states begin to treat each other? |
31092 | How does the Constitution compare in size with our modern war ships? |
31092 | How early did Jackson''s men go to their posts on that last Sunday morning? |
31092 | How far away were the patriots when Ferguson camped at King''s Mountain? |
31092 | How far did Arnold have to go to get provisions? |
31092 | How goes the battle inside the fort? |
31092 | How had Arnold got information about Canada? |
31092 | How had our country changed when Lafayette came in 1824? |
31092 | How is Morgan''s valor commemorated? |
31092 | How is the Constitution said to have received the name"Old Ironsides"? |
31092 | How is the surrender of Cornwallis commemorated? |
31092 | How large an army did Washington have in Virginia? |
31092 | How long a march was it to Boston? |
31092 | How long a march was it to Kaskaskia? |
31092 | How long did it take to cross the plain of the Wabash River? |
31092 | How long did the Continental Congress continue to act? |
31092 | How long did the Philadelphia convention continue in session? |
31092 | How long did the engagement on Sunday morning continue? |
31092 | How long did the fight last? |
31092 | How long did the fight on board the Philadelphia last? |
31092 | How long did the siege of Yorktown continue? |
31092 | How long did the war last? |
31092 | How long had a soldier to serve before he could buy a bushel of wheat? |
31092 | How long had this campaign lasted? |
31092 | How long were the riflemen in getting from Cowpens to King''s Mountain? |
31092 | How many cannon did Moultrie have? |
31092 | How many cannon were the British able to fire at one time? |
31092 | How many cups of flour in half a pint? |
31092 | How many men answered Morgan''s call? |
31092 | How many men did the British have in the final action, and how many did the Americans have? |
31092 | How many men did the British lose in the final action, and how many did the Americans lose? |
31092 | How many men volunteered for the dangerous undertaking? |
31092 | How many men were chosen to go to Stony Point? |
31092 | How many of Decatur''s men were injured? |
31092 | How many of the British escaped from Stony Point? |
31092 | How many soldiers were in the garrison at Stony Point? |
31092 | How many soldiers were there in Cornwallis''s army? |
31092 | How many states were represented at Philadelphia? |
31092 | How might Sir Henry Clinton have changed the history of Yorktown? |
31092 | How much land did Washington have? |
31092 | How much of an army did Clark have for his campaign? |
31092 | How much of our country did Lafayette visit? |
31092 | How much of the original ship Constitution still exists? |
31092 | How obedient were the states to the Articles of Confederation? |
31092 | How old was General Anthony Wayne at this time? |
31092 | How old was George Rogers Clark at this time? |
31092 | How successful was the meeting at Annapolis? |
31092 | How successful were the pirates in firing at the Americans? |
31092 | How was England affected by our troubles? |
31092 | How was Ferguson killed? |
31092 | How was Hale executed? |
31092 | How was Lafayette received at the University of Virginia? |
31092 | How was Morgan remembered by Washington and other leaders? |
31092 | How was Stony Point defended? |
31092 | How was it decided to count the slaves? |
31092 | How was the Philadelphia guarded? |
31092 | How was the alarm sounded to the people of New Orleans? |
31092 | How was the army divided? |
31092 | How was the attack to be made? |
31092 | How was the expedition to reach Canada? |
31092 | How was the first President of the United States dressed when he made his formal visit to Congress? |
31092 | How was the news received by the prime minister of England, and by the king? |
31092 | How was the weather on the day of the battle? |
31092 | How was"Old Hickory"honored? |
31092 | How was"Old Ironsides"used at Newport? |
31092 | How wealthy was Washington? |
31092 | How were the British reënforced on Christmas day? |
31092 | How were the Continental and French troops received at Philadelphia? |
31092 | How were the backwoodsmen dressed? |
31092 | How were the soldiers treated at Newburyport and at Fort Western? |
31092 | How were the walls of the fort made? |
31092 | In how many battles did Morgan take part? |
31092 | In what did Washington''s greatness consist? |
31092 | Like a flash, he seized Decatur by the collar and shook him, shouting,"Aye, sir, why did you not bring me out more?" |
31092 | Meanwhile, where was Sir Henry Clinton? |
31092 | Of how much use was Pakenham''s redoubt? |
31092 | QUESTIONS FOR REVIEW CHAPTER I, PAGE 1 THE HERO OF VINCENNES 1. Who was Daniel Boone? |
31092 | Should he not make at least one desperate attempt? |
31092 | To what two political parties did the Constitution give rise? |
31092 | Was Clark brave? |
31092 | Was Hale a patriot? |
31092 | Was it strange that Washington''s heart was heavy? |
31092 | Was it wise for Hale to spend the night at"Mother Chick''s"tavern? |
31092 | Was some poor fellow chilled to the bone? |
31092 | Were the British well situated at this time? |
31092 | Were the men short of food? |
31092 | Were the slaves to be counted as persons or as goods? |
31092 | What are pioneers? |
31092 | What arms did the backwoodsmen have? |
31092 | What authority did the Continental Congress have? |
31092 | What battle began the war of the Revolution? |
31092 | What can you say of Morgan''s marriage? |
31092 | What can you say of Moultrie''s after life? |
31092 | What can you say of Washington''s charity? |
31092 | What can you say of Washington''s dignity? |
31092 | What can you say of Washington''s education? |
31092 | What can you say of Washington''s gravity? |
31092 | What can you say of imprisonment for debt? |
31092 | What can you say of the Articles of Confederation? |
31092 | What can you say of the scenes connected with the fiftieth anniversary of the battle of Bunker Hill? |
31092 | What condition of affairs was troubling Washington at this time? |
31092 | What did Arnold do to save his army? |
31092 | What did Burgoyne think of Morgan''s regiment? |
31092 | What did Commodore Preble do when the Philadelphia was captured? |
31092 | What did Cornwallis now do? |
31092 | What did England and France do to our merchantmen? |
31092 | What did General Clinton think of Washington? |
31092 | What did General Lambert do after the battle? |
31092 | What did Gladstone say of the Constitution? |
31092 | What did Hale do when he learned of the battle of Lexington? |
31092 | What did Hamilton do when he heard of Clark''s conquest? |
31092 | What did Jacataqua do? |
31092 | What did Jasper do to save the flag? |
31092 | What did King George say of the Yankees? |
31092 | What did Lafayette do on his return to France? |
31092 | What did Lafayette do when peace was declared? |
31092 | What did Lafayette do with the laurel wreath presented to him at Yorktown? |
31092 | What did McDaniel think about when he was dying? |
31092 | What did Nelson say of Decatur''s deed? |
31092 | What did Pakenham use for making a redoubt? |
31092 | What did Pompey do? |
31092 | What did Sir Edward Pakenham think of the task before him? |
31092 | What did Sir Guy Carleton do to save Quebec? |
31092 | What did Tarleton do when defeat came? |
31092 | What did Tarleton do when the spy told him that Morgan had halted? |
31092 | What did Thomas Jefferson think should be done concerning the Barbary pirates? |
31092 | What did Thomas Paine, the author of the pamphlet called"Common Sense,"say of the Revolutionary War? |
31092 | What did Washington decide to do? |
31092 | What did Washington hope to do with the assistance of the French fleet? |
31092 | What did Washington say in his letter to the colonies? |
31092 | What did Washington think of slaves? |
31092 | What did Washington think of the Constitution? |
31092 | What did Washington think should be done? |
31092 | What did Wayne write to his friend? |
31092 | What did many of the people throughout the country think of the Constitution? |
31092 | What did the Americans do with the Philadelphia? |
31092 | What did the British do in May, 1779? |
31092 | What did the British marines do with Hale? |
31092 | What did the British now decide to do? |
31092 | What did the British think of the"rebels"? |
31092 | What did the Indians do who learned of Arnold''s approach? |
31092 | What did the Secretary of the Navy in 1833 intend to do with the Constitution? |
31092 | What did the little army have for food? |
31092 | What did the people do when they heard Ferguson''s threat? |
31092 | What did the people of the several states at last begin to think? |
31092 | What did the sailors say afterwards about the burning ship? |
31092 | What did the war schooner Carolina do? |
31092 | What did the young ladies say to Tarleton? |
31092 | What did they care for the rights of a feeble nation so long as each could cut off the other''s supplies? |
31092 | What did"Lafayetted"mean? |
31092 | What do you know about Wayne? |
31092 | What do you know of Colonel Tarleton? |
31092 | What do you know of Morgan''s religious life? |
31092 | What do you know of Morgan''s strength? |
31092 | What do you know of Nathanael Greene? |
31092 | What do you know of President Washington''s public receptions? |
31092 | What do you know of Washington''s fondness for fine dress? |
31092 | What do you know of Washington''s strength? |
31092 | What do you know of the gathering at Sycamore Shoals? |
31092 | What do you remember about King''s Mountain? |
31092 | What do you think of Cunningham? |
31092 | What does John Fiske say of our condition after peace was made? |
31092 | What does John Fiske say of this battle? |
31092 | What does Washington Irving say of Stony Point? |
31092 | What effect did the army life have on Morgan? |
31092 | What effect did the crushing blows of the British have on the Southern patriots? |
31092 | What effect did this victory have on the American soldier? |
31092 | What further troubles occurred in 1786? |
31092 | What had become of the lawless men of the Franklin and Holston settlements? |
31092 | What had been Lafayette''s career in his own country? |
31092 | What happened to Jackson''s defenses? |
31092 | What happened to Montgomery, Arnold, and Morgan? |
31092 | What happened to Sir Edward Pakenham, and to Generals Gibbs and Keane? |
31092 | What happened to the Siren? |
31092 | What happened to the frigate Philadelphia and her crew? |
31092 | What happened to the men- of- war when they were changing their positions? |
31092 | What have we already learned about Morgan at Saratoga, New York? |
31092 | What have we already learned about Sir Henry Clinton? |
31092 | What have we already learned about the Holston settlements? |
31092 | What have we already learned of Gates? |
31092 | What have we already learned of Rochambeau? |
31092 | What have you already learned about General Greene? |
31092 | What hindered Clark''s march? |
31092 | What is a carrying place? |
31092 | What is a compromise? |
31092 | What is a drumhead court- martial? |
31092 | What is a dugout? |
31092 | What is a federation? |
31092 | What is a ketch? |
31092 | What is a pasha? |
31092 | What is a privateer? |
31092 | What is a receiving ship? |
31092 | What is a"forlorn hope"? |
31092 | What is blackmail? |
31092 | What is said of Captain Stewart''s seamanship in the last battle of"Old Ironsides"? |
31092 | What is the name of the state that grew out of the Franklin and Holston settlements? |
31092 | What is wampum? |
31092 | What kept Washington from financial ruin? |
31092 | What kind of boy had Hale been? |
31092 | What kind of education did Morgan have? |
31092 | What kind of example has Washington set us? |
31092 | What kind of fighters were the Tripolitan pirates said to be? |
31092 | What kind of home did Hale have? |
31092 | What kind of horseman was Washington? |
31092 | What kind of life did Hale lead when captain in the army? |
31092 | What kind of life did the pioneers lead in the wilderness? |
31092 | What kind of man was Governor Nelson? |
31092 | What kind of man was needed to carry out Washington''s plan? |
31092 | What kind of men were delegates to the Continental Congress? |
31092 | What kind of men were sent to the Philadelphia convention? |
31092 | What kind of place was Stony Point? |
31092 | What kind of place was this Stony Point? |
31092 | What kind of regiment did Morgan command? |
31092 | What kind of spirit did the pioneers show in their pursuit of Ferguson? |
31092 | What kind of time did Decatur and his men have off the shore of Tripoli? |
31092 | What kind of times were at hand? |
31092 | What kind of welcome did Boston have in store for Captain Hull? |
31092 | What kind of welcome did we give Lafayette in 1824? |
31092 | What last attempt did Lord Cornwallis make? |
31092 | What made the Indians so hostile to the pioneers? |
31092 | What made the army diminish in numbers? |
31092 | What made the patriots skillful in firing the cannon? |
31092 | What message did Sir Henry Clinton send Lord Cornwallis? |
31092 | What name did the British give to Stony Point? |
31092 | What occurred at the tavern in Virginia? |
31092 | What opinion of us did Frederick the Great, King of Prussia, have? |
31092 | What orders did Tarleton and Ferguson receive from Lord Cornwallis? |
31092 | What part of the country did Washington need to protect? |
31092 | What power did Congress have under the Articles of Confederation? |
31092 | What power did the Articles of Confederation grant to each state? |
31092 | What prediction about our nation was made in Parliament? |
31092 | What promotion did Decatur receive? |
31092 | What question about the slaves arose? |
31092 | What reason did Nathan Hale give for volunteering to act as spy? |
31092 | What regret did Hale have? |
31092 | What share in the battle did Sir Henry Clinton and his men have? |
31092 | What sort of general was Washington? |
31092 | What sort of man was Arnold at this time? |
31092 | What sort of man was Clark? |
31092 | What sort of man was Colonel Moultrie? |
31092 | What sort of man was Ferguson? |
31092 | What sort of man was Gates? |
31092 | What sort of men were in the palmetto fort? |
31092 | What sort of patriot was Colonel Enos? |
31092 | What sort of people were the South Carolinians? |
31092 | What sort of place was"The Cedars"? |
31092 | What sort of road was it to Stony Point? |
31092 | What sort of soldier was Anthony Wayne? |
31092 | What state took the lead in sending delegates to Philadelphia? |
31092 | What states are now in this region of Clark''s conquest? |
31092 | What success did the Constitution have in fighting with Tripoli? |
31092 | What threat did Ferguson send to the backwoodsmen? |
31092 | What time of year was it now? |
31092 | What time of year was it when Clark marched to Kaskaskia? |
31092 | What time of year was it when the army started? |
31092 | What trouble did they have with their boats? |
31092 | What troubles did we have with other nations during the first twenty- five years of our national life? |
31092 | What vessel is that?" |
31092 | What was Decatur''s plan for destroying the Philadelphia? |
31092 | What was England''s plan in 1814? |
31092 | What was Franklin''s opinion of the Constitution? |
31092 | What was Hale doing at the time of the battle of Lexington? |
31092 | What was Jackson''s main line of defense? |
31092 | What was Morgan besides being a great soldier? |
31092 | What was Morgan''s success due to? |
31092 | What was Washington planning to do? |
31092 | What was Washington''s appearance? |
31092 | What was Washington''s diet? |
31092 | What was Washington''s favorite amusement? |
31092 | What was Washington''s plan of attack? |
31092 | What was Washington''s reply to Lord Cornwallis? |
31092 | What was done by the Continental Congress? |
31092 | What was done with the wheel of the Java? |
31092 | What was he to do? |
31092 | What was his duty now? |
31092 | What was the Constitution''s last battle? |
31092 | What was the cause of the third compromise? |
31092 | What was the character of New Orleans? |
31092 | What was the character of the Franklin and Holston settlers? |
31092 | What was the condition of Lord Cornwallis after his victory over Greene? |
31092 | What was the condition of Morgan and his men when Tarleton appeared? |
31092 | What was the condition of Tarleton''s soldiers when they began the battle? |
31092 | What was the condition of paper money in 1780? |
31092 | What was the condition of the army when it reached Point Levi? |
31092 | What was the difference between General Charles Lee and Governor Rutledge? |
31092 | What was the duty of Morgan and his sharpshooters? |
31092 | What was the effect of Lafayette''s manner and example? |
31092 | What was the effect of Moultrie''s victory? |
31092 | What was the effect of having Colonel Murfree and his men appear in front of the fort? |
31092 | What was the effect of the victory at King''s Mountain? |
31092 | What was the exploit of the Enterprise? |
31092 | What was the first compromise in framing the Constitution? |
31092 | What was the hardest battle that"Old Ironsides"had? |
31092 | What was the last honor shown the departing guest? |
31092 | What was the nationality of Lafayette? |
31092 | What was the object in dragging sails and buckets in the water? |
31092 | What was the result of the war of 1812? |
31092 | What was the riflemen''s plan of attack? |
31092 | What was the second compromise in framing the Constitution? |
31092 | What was the third compromise? |
31092 | What was the use of fighting against such odds? |
31092 | What was the watchword? |
31092 | What was their plan? |
31092 | What weapons were to be used in attacking Stony Point? |
31092 | What were General Gates''s"Northern laurels"? |
31092 | What were Jackson''s first intrenchments made of? |
31092 | What were the people of Kaskaskia doing? |
31092 | When did Boone live? |
31092 | When did Lafayette first come to this country? |
31092 | When did Lafayette make his third trip to this country? |
31092 | When did Morgan again take part in the war? |
31092 | When did Sir Henry Clinton begin to open his eyes? |
31092 | When did the British fleet arrive at the delta of the Mississippi? |
31092 | When did the army reach Point Levi? |
31092 | When did the men learn where they were going? |
31092 | When he could{ 143} not collect this beggarly sum, is it any wonder that he deserted or rebelled? |
31092 | When he shouted,"Come, boys, who''s for the camp before Cambridge?" |
31092 | When the Revolution began, why did Washington wish to attack Canada? |
31092 | When the flour was gone, what did the army do for food? |
31092 | When was Morgan appointed captain? |
31092 | When was Morgan made a brigadier general? |
31092 | When was Morgan made a colonel? |
31092 | When was the Constitution launched? |
31092 | When was the Constitution to become law? |
31092 | When was"Old Ironsides"taken to Charlestown? |
31092 | When was"Old Ironsides"taken to Newport? |
31092 | Where did Clark plan to begin his campaign? |
31092 | Where did Lord Cornwallis finally make his headquarters? |
31092 | Where did Lord Cornwallis have his headquarters? |
31092 | Where did Morgan get the names"old wagoner,""wagoner,"and"teamster"? |
31092 | Where did the captain of the Halifax send Hale? |
31092 | Where did the patriot army now take up its quarters? |
31092 | Where is Petersburg, Virginia? |
31092 | Where is Yorktown? |
31092 | Where was Daniel Morgan''s home? |
31092 | Where was Hale buried? |
31092 | Where was Sir Henry Clinton at this time? |
31092 | Where was Washington at this time? |
31092 | Where was the British fleet all this time? |
31092 | Where was the Constitution built? |
31092 | Where was the Illinois country? |
31092 | Where was the main part of the patriot army at this time? |
31092 | Where was the money got to buy supplies for the army? |
31092 | Which was the first state to sign the Constitution? |
31092 | Who was the best man to perform this desperate exploit? |
31092 | Whom did Clark have as guides? |
31092 | Whom did Washington send to receive Cornwallis''s sword? |
31092 | Whom do you consider our greatest patriot? |
31092 | Why did Arnold leave Quebec? |
31092 | Why did Arnold''s leg deserve to be buried with the honors of war? |
31092 | Why did Clark avoid the Mississippi River? |
31092 | Why did Clark decide to push on to Vincennes? |
31092 | Why did Clark go back a second time to Virginia? |
31092 | Why did Clark go back to Virginia? |
31092 | Why did Congress accept Lafayette''s services? |
31092 | Why did Congress decide to rebuild the Constitution? |
31092 | Why did England model some of her ships after"Old Ironsides"? |
31092 | Why did England try to keep the Americans from going west? |
31092 | Why did England wish to punish North Carolina first of all? |
31092 | Why did Ferguson choose King''s Mountain for his camp? |
31092 | Why did General Clinton send out raiders? |
31092 | Why did Governor Dinwiddie object to promoting Morgan? |
31092 | Why did Jacataqua decide to go with the troops? |
31092 | Why did Jackson plan to attack the British at once? |
31092 | Why did Knowlton find it hard to get a man for Washington''s purpose? |
31092 | Why did Lafayette first come to this country? |
31092 | Why did Lord Campbell wish to capture Charleston? |
31092 | Why did Lord Cornwallis wish a truce for so long a time? |
31092 | Why did Morgan again retire from service? |
31092 | Why did Morgan choose Cowpens for his battle ground? |
31092 | Why did Morgan leave the army for a while? |
31092 | Why did Morgan return to the army? |
31092 | Why did Morgan stop driving army wagons? |
31092 | Why did Morgan wish to fight the bully? |
31092 | Why did Sir Henry Clinton delay the attack upon North Carolina? |
31092 | Why did Washington call his house"a well resorted tavern"? |
31092 | Why did Washington like Benedict Arnold? |
31092 | Why did Washington need a fleet? |
31092 | Why did Washington send troops to Long Island? |
31092 | Why did Washington withdraw from New York? |
31092 | Why did it take Lafayette so long to go from New York to Boston? |
31092 | Why did news travel so slowly in those days? |
31092 | Why did not Clark allow his men to storm the fort? |
31092 | Why did not Cornwallis take part in the surrender? |
31092 | Why did not Hamilton march from Vincennes to Kaskaskia? |
31092 | Why did not Jasper accept promotion? |
31092 | Why did not Lord Cornwallis retreat from Yorktown? |
31092 | Why did not Morgan meet Tarleton at once? |
31092 | Why did not Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, Patrick Henry, and Samuel Adams attend the Philadelphia convention? |
31092 | Why did not Washington follow up Clinton''s raiders? |
31092 | Why did not Washington hold Stony Point? |
31092 | Why did the British destroy Norfolk? |
31092 | Why did the British lose so many officers in the battle? |
31092 | Why did the Continental Congress decline in power? |
31092 | Why did the armies hurry away from Yorktown? |
31092 | Why did the backwoodsmen not find Ferguson at Gilberttown? |
31092 | Why did the battle of Cowpens make Morgan so famous? |
31092 | Why did the colonies band together in 1774? |
31092 | Why did the patriots hasten the siege of Yorktown? |
31092 | Why did the patriots wait so long before attacking the city? |
31092 | Why did the people care so little about a federation, or federal government? |
31092 | Why did the people care so much about"Old Ironsides"? |
31092 | Why did the people of Charleston suppose the fort had surrendered? |
31092 | Why did we buy the good will of the Barbary pirates? |
31092 | Why did we not declare war on Great Britain before 1812? |
31092 | Why do we admire Washington? |
31092 | Why do we owe such a debt of gratitude to the builders of"the good ship Constitution"? |
31092 | Why do you think they did so? |
31092 | Why is the victory a sad one to think of? |
31092 | Why not cross the James River and retreat to a safe place in North Carolina? |
31092 | Why run the risk of almost certain defeat? |
31092 | Why should we continue to preserve"Old Ironsides"? |
31092 | Why was Clark''s campaign so important? |
31092 | Why was General Jackson so busy just before Christmas? |
31092 | Why was Morgan well thought of by the village people? |
31092 | Why was Stephen Decatur chosen to destroy the Philadelphia? |
31092 | Why was Washington instructed to add six war ships to our navy? |
31092 | Why was Wayne called"Mad Anthony"? |
31092 | Why was a fort built on Sullivan''s Island? |
31092 | Why was it easy to get soldiers for this campaign? |
31092 | Why was it important for the Americans to have possession of King''s Ferry? |
31092 | Why was it so hard to reach the Dead River? |
31092 | Why was it the Americans were so successful in burning the Philadelphia? |
31092 | Why was not a new wheel put on"Old Ironsides"? |
31092 | Why was the Fourth of July in 1788 so glorious? |
31092 | Why was the ascent of the Dead River so difficult? |
31092 | Why was the soldier put to death for loading his gun? |
31092 | Why was the young minister sent through the Clove? |
31092 | Why was this battle so fierce? |
31092 | Why were both England and France so jealous of us a century ago? |
31092 | Why were the Americans obliged to burn the Philadelphia? |
31092 | Why were the bands of pioneers put under one supreme commander? |
31092 | Why were the battles of"Old Ironsides"so important to us as a nation? |
31092 | Why were the pioneers so long in hearing of the battle of Lexington, which was fought in April? |
31092 | Would you call Hale a hero? |
31092 | exclaimed the governor,"to a camp boxer and a teamster?" |
31092 | { 127} Yes, but what about Sir Henry Clinton, the British commander in chief in New York? |
7010 | The owlet Atheism, hooting at the glorious sun in heaven, cries out,''Where is it?'' |
7010 | What are you making? |
7010 | + Adverbs of Degree are those that generally answer the question+, To what extent? |
7010 | + Adverbs of Manner are those that generally answer the question+, In what way?_ SENTENCE- BUILDING. |
7010 | + Example+.--King Agrippa, believest thou the prophets? |
7010 | + Hints for Oral Instruction+.--In the sentence,_ The robin''s eggs are blue_, the noun_ robin''s_ does what? |
7010 | + Observation Lesson+.--Of what are the lines above a picture? |
7010 | + Observation Lesson+.--When the interrogative word is subject or a modifier of it, is the order natural, or transposed? |
7010 | + Paragraphs+.--Does every sentence in the first paragraph aid in picturing the helplessness of the old grandfather? |
7010 | + Paragraphs+.--Which paragraph puts before you the dog as a whole? |
7010 | + T+.--A_ spoken word_ then is the sign of what? |
7010 | + T+.--Did you see the thing when you were thinking of it? |
7010 | + T+.--Do you see any connection between these ideas? |
7010 | + T+.--Does this complement express the quality of the subject, or does it name the same thing that the subject names? |
7010 | + T+.--Does_ Florida_ alone, tell where he marched? |
7010 | + T+.--Does_ into_ alone, tell where he marched? |
7010 | + T+.--If they stand for the same idea, how do they differ? |
7010 | + T+.--If we call the other word_ bud_ a_ spoken_ word, what shall we call this? |
7010 | + T+.--In the sentence,_ A man who is wise will be honored_, the word_ who_ stands for what? |
7010 | + T+.--Is_ Florida_ joined directly to the predicate, as rapidly was in Lesson 25? |
7010 | + T+.--It is equivalent then to what part of speech? |
7010 | + T+.--It then performs the office of what? |
7010 | + T+.--Letters then are the signs of what? |
7010 | + T+.--Then what part of speech is it? |
7010 | + T+.--This clause then performs the office of what part of speech? |
7010 | + T+.--What does it do? |
7010 | + T+.--What does_ falling_ do? |
7010 | + T+.--What is the object complement of_ teach_? |
7010 | + T+.--What is the principal word of the group? |
7010 | + T+.--What little word comes in to unite the modifier to_ marched?_+ P+.--_Into_. |
7010 | + T+.--What office then does it perform? |
7010 | + T+.--What office then does this clause perform? |
7010 | + T+.--What tells where De Soto marched? |
7010 | + T+.--What then are the words_ too_ and_ hastily?_+ P+.--Adverbs. |
7010 | + T+.--What then is the attribute complement? |
7010 | + T+.--What then is the subject of_ is taught_? |
7010 | + T+.--What then is_ too?_+ P+.--An adverb. |
7010 | + T+.--What word names the owner or possessor? |
7010 | + T+.--What word names the things owned or possessed? |
7010 | + T+.--What word tells how hastily? |
7010 | + T+.--What word_ does_ tell what is thought of leaves? |
7010 | + T+.--What_ part of speech_ is_ much?_+ P+.--An adjective. |
7010 | + T+.--When I say,_ Falling leaves rustle_, does_ falling_ tell what is thought of leaves? |
7010 | + T+.--When I say,_ God is_, what does_ is_ express? |
7010 | + T+.--When I utter the two words_ bud_ and_ swelling_, thus:_ bud swelling_, do you see any connection in the ideas they stand for? |
7010 | + T+.--Why is_ too_ in the first sentence an adverb? |
7010 | + T+.--Why? |
7010 | + T--+Suppose that a boy should inform me that all of the boys on that seat had whispered, what would he say? |
7010 | + T.--+If I should accuse several of you of whispering, and one should speak for himself and for the others whispering with him, what would he say? |
7010 | + T.--+If I should ask who whispered, and some boy should promptly confess, what would he say? |
7010 | + T.--+If I should tell that boy to close his book, when his book was already closed, what would he say without mentioning the word book? |
7010 | + T.--+Suppose that I had_ spoken to_ that boy and had accused him of whispering, how should I have addressed him without mentioning his name? |
7010 | + T.--+Suppose that, without using his name, I had told you what he did, what should I have said? |
7010 | + T.--+What then do these letters, taken separately, picture to your eye? |
7010 | + T.--+What word would be used instead of the name of the boy_ to_ whom I spoke? |
7010 | + T.--+What word would have been used instead of the name of the boy_ of_ whom I spoke? |
7010 | + T.--+What word would he use instead? |
7010 | + T.--+Would he mention his own name? |
7010 | + Teacher+.--What did you learn in the previous Lesson? |
7010 | + Teacher+.--When I pronounce the two words_ star_ and_ bud_ thus:_ star bud_, how many ideas, or mental pictures, do I call up to you? |
7010 | + The Description+.--How does the description above impress you? |
7010 | + The Paragraphs+.--What have you learned about the sentences that make up one paragraph? |
7010 | + The Uses of Words and Groups of Words+.--What is the order of subject and predicate in the first sentence of this selection? |
7010 | +_ Adverbs of Time_ are those that generally answer the question+,_ When?__+ Adverbs of Place are those that generally answer the question+, Where? |
7010 | +_ Adverbs of Time_ are those that generally answer the question+,_ When?__+ Adverbs of Place are those that generally answer the question+, Where? |
7010 | 30. Who wrote the Declaration of Independence? |
7010 | A phrase modifying a predicate is equivalent to what? |
7010 | A phrase modifying a subject is equivalent to what? |
7010 | A_ spoken_ word is the sign of what? |
7010 | A_ written_ word is the sign of what? |
7010 | After having been told that your answers were correct, would it be a disappointment to be told that they were not all correct? |
7010 | Are a habit, a result of it, and a cause of it related in thought, or meaning? |
7010 | Are only characteristic parts and features selected? |
7010 | Are prepositions and interjections subdivided? |
7010 | Are the adjectives that precede the name of this object of the same rank? |
7010 | Are the clauses separated by the semicolon as closely connected as those divided by the comma? |
7010 | Are the paragraphs more, or less, closely related than the sentences of each paragraph? |
7010 | Are these few features enough to give you a distinct and vivid picture of Rab? |
7010 | Are these letters, taken separately, signs to you of anything? |
7010 | Are those that follow of the same rank? |
7010 | Ask yourself the question, Artists do what? |
7010 | Ask yourself the question, What swim, sink, hunt, etc.? |
7010 | Besides the first word, what words begin with capitals in each of these three groups? |
7010 | Can a noun be an attribute complement? |
7010 | Can any other class of pronouns be used to connect clauses? |
7010 | Can girls skate? |
7010 | Can the order anywhere be changed without throwing the story out of joint? |
7010 | Can the pronoun_ I_ be used to stand for the one spoken to?--the one spoken of? |
7010 | Can you illustrate this classification? |
7010 | Can you name them? |
7010 | Did you sleep good? |
7010 | Do the sentences of the first paragraph all help to tell of a certain habit of angleworms? |
7010 | Do the sentences of the second paragraph tell what results from this habit? |
7010 | Do the sentences of the third paragraph tell what is thought to be the cause of this habit? |
7010 | Do these touches of fancy or imagination help the picture? |
7010 | Do these two words express two ideas merely associated, or do they express a thought? |
7010 | Do they all_ mean_ the same thing? |
7010 | Do they show that the author was in love with her work? |
7010 | Do those that she does mention suggest to you everything else? |
7010 | Do we ordinarily speak of looking anything? |
7010 | Do you find any choice in the four positions of this phrase? |
7010 | Do you not think that each sub- topic must suggest some thoughts that the general topic alone would not suggest? |
7010 | Do you think that such a_ framework_ helps a writer to tell his story? |
7010 | Does Mary sing? |
7010 | Does he instruct? |
7010 | Does he try to get us to do something? |
7010 | Does it assert action? |
7010 | Does it contain an unnecessary sentence? |
7010 | Does not some of the charm of a description lie in the reader''s having something left him to supply? |
7010 | Does the relative pronoun distinguish by its_ form_ the speaker, the one spoken to, and the one spoken of? |
7010 | Does the semicolon show that this connection is close? |
7010 | Does this clause read so closely as not to need a comma before_ who_? |
7010 | Does_ bowed_ assert action? |
7010 | Does_ brook hidden_, in 3, contain a predicate? |
7010 | Does_ coming_ express action? |
7010 | Does_ forgetful_ describe the persons represented by_ who_? |
7010 | Does_ the whistles completed_ make complete sense? |
7010 | Does_ to grasp_ assert action? |
7010 | For what do interrogative pronouns stand? |
7010 | Has the North Pole been reached? |
7010 | Have you ever heard stories badly told? |
7010 | Have you got time to help me? |
7010 | Have you not had some experience that you can work up into a good story? |
7010 | Have you now two sentences, or one? |
7010 | How are adjectives regularly compared? |
7010 | How are adverbs compared? |
7010 | How are sentences classified with respect to form? |
7010 | How are sentences classified with respect to meaning? |
7010 | How are the forms_ mine, yours_, etc., now used? |
7010 | How are the parts marked? |
7010 | How are the two kinds of_ consonant_ sounds made? |
7010 | How are these adjective clauses connected with one another? |
7010 | How are they separated on the page? |
7010 | How are_ vowel_ sounds made? |
7010 | How can girls skate? |
7010 | How do they differ? |
7010 | How do they help? |
7010 | How do they help? |
7010 | How do they stretch? |
7010 | How do you determine the case of an explanatory noun or pronoun? |
7010 | How do you determine the number, gender, and person of pronouns? |
7010 | How does a participle differ from a predicate verb? |
7010 | How does a verb agree with its subject? |
7010 | How does it differ from the others as to punctuation and the first letter? |
7010 | How is a noun parsed? |
7010 | How is this shown by the punctuation? |
7010 | How many capitals do you find in each of the names just mentioned? |
7010 | How many cases are there? |
7010 | How many degrees of comparison are there? |
7010 | How many different kinds of participles are there? |
7010 | How many genders are there? |
7010 | How many modes are there? |
7010 | How many modifications have nouns and pronouns? |
7010 | How many modifications have verbs? |
7010 | How many numbers are there? |
7010 | How many paragraphs do you find in the selection above? |
7010 | How many parts of speech are there? |
7010 | How many persons are there? |
7010 | How many tenses are there? |
7010 | How many voices are there? |
7010 | How many, when it is in the middle? |
7010 | How much trouble one has, do n''t they? |
7010 | If one of these noun clauses were not itself divided into clauses by the comma, would the semicolon be needed? |
7010 | If so, what were the faults? |
7010 | If this clause were placed after its principal clause, would the comma be needed? |
7010 | If(_ h_) were an answer to the question, When did you meet him? |
7010 | In how many ways are the genders distinguished? |
7010 | In the expression,_ Peter, turning, said_, what word expresses an action as_ assumed_, and which_ asserts_ an action? |
7010 | In the sentence,_ The squirrel ran up a tree_, what word shows the relation of the act of running, to the tree? |
7010 | In the sentence,_ We started at sunrise_, what phrase is used like an adverb? |
7010 | In this group of words used as object complement can you find a subject, a predicate, and a complement? |
7010 | In this same paragraph what words are quoted exactly as the old man uttered them? |
7010 | In what two ways may nouns be used as modifiers? |
7010 | In which is a question merely referred to? |
7010 | In which is a question quoted just as it would be asked? |
7010 | In which of the above sentences is a quotation interrupted by a parenthetical clause? |
7010 | In( 8) do you find a period after_ Miss_?--after_ Mrs._? |
7010 | In_ who are looking reproach_, what is the object complement of_ are looking_? |
7010 | Into what classes are letters divided? |
7010 | Into what may a participial phrase be expanded? |
7010 | Into what may a phrase used as an adverb be expanded? |
7010 | Into what may an adjective be expanded? |
7010 | Into what may some participles be changed? |
7010 | Is a preposition needed before_ day?_ In the same sentence_ years_ is used adverbially to modify the adjective_ old_. |
7010 | Is one of these divisions itself divided into parts by commas? |
7010 | Is the body of water mentioned in( 1) known as_ Michigan_, or_ Lake Michigan_? |
7010 | Is the interest in a story best kept up by first telling the important points and then the unimportant particulars? |
7010 | Is the last sentence now joined to the first as a modifier, or are they two separate sentences? |
7010 | Is the order of these paragraphs the right one? |
7010 | Is the picture complete? |
7010 | Is the same thought expressed in both? |
7010 | Is the town mentioned in( 2) named_ Jersey_, or_ Jersey City_? |
7010 | Is_ Chicago_, or_ City of Chicago_ the name of the steamer mentioned in( 2)? |
7010 | Is_ Irish_, or_ Irish Sea_ the name of the body of water mentioned in( 4)? |
7010 | It is not because he can not conjugate the verb or decline the pronoun that he falls into such errors as"How many sounds_ have_ each of the vowels?" |
7010 | Let the pupils compare"I proved it to be_ him_"with"I proved that it was_ he;_""_ Whom_ did you suppose it to be?" |
7010 | Letters are the signs of what? |
7010 | May a verb consist of more than one word? |
7010 | May the subject be modified? |
7010 | May we not find"sermons in stones and good in everything"? |
7010 | Nouns and pronouns denoting possession may sometimes be changed into what? |
7010 | Of what do you think when you hear the word_ bud_? |
7010 | Of what is something thought? |
7010 | Of what two parts does a sentence consist? |
7010 | Of what use are the phrases_ at first_ and_ toward the brook_ in sentence 2? |
7010 | Omitting_ till_, would this group of words be a sentence? |
7010 | Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction? |
7010 | Should, then, some mark of wider separation be put between the main divisions of 2? |
7010 | The clause_ beyond... stomach_ goes with what word? |
7010 | The group of words_ as deeply as Toddie was( imbedded)_ is joined to what? |
7010 | The group_ almost motionless_ describes what things? |
7010 | The group_ close beneath the mouths of their burrows_, used like a single adverb, tells what? |
7010 | The infinitive phrase modifies what? |
7010 | The infinitive phrase modifies what? |
7010 | The interrogative pronoun stands for the unknown name, and asks for it; as,_ Who_ comes here? |
7010 | The phrase beginning with_ at_ and ending with_ earth_ does what? |
7010 | The question is,"Can law make people honest?" |
7010 | The subject of inquiry was, Who invented printing? |
7010 | To what four different things did we call attention in Lesson 1? |
7010 | Verbs are the only words that do what? |
7010 | We give the following questions to illustrate our method of conducting an+ Observation Lesson+.--Are_ city_ and_ Albany_ both names? |
7010 | We have often occasion for thanksgiving, Now this is to be done how? |
7010 | We must ask, What are we living for? |
7010 | Were you there? |
7010 | What adjectives are sometimes called articles? |
7010 | What adjectives can not be compared? |
7010 | What are all names? |
7010 | What are auxiliaries? |
7010 | What are consonants? |
7010 | What are modifications of the parts of speech? |
7010 | What are parts of speech? |
7010 | What are prepositions? |
7010 | What are sometimes substituted for nouns? |
7010 | What are such classes called? |
7010 | What are such words called? |
7010 | What are the cautions for the position of the adverb? |
7010 | What are the cautions for the use of the adverb and the adjective? |
7010 | What are the number and the person of a verb? |
7010 | What are the principal parts of a verb? |
7010 | What are the subject and the predicate of this added sentence? |
7010 | What are the words_ an_ or_ a_, and_ the_ called by some grammarians? |
7010 | What are vowels? |
7010 | What by adding the idea of color? |
7010 | What by adding the idea of form? |
7010 | What by adding the idea of number? |
7010 | What called up this idea? |
7010 | What can you say of_ hidden?_ Find a noun in 3 used to complete the predicate and make the meaning of the subject plainer. |
7010 | What comparisons do you find? |
7010 | What conjunction connects these? |
7010 | What conjunction introduces each of these clauses? |
7010 | What conjunction joins on another expression that by itself would make a complete sentence? |
7010 | What conjunction joins them together? |
7010 | What connects each to_ man_? |
7010 | What connects this group to_ looked_? |
7010 | What did you hear? |
7010 | What difference can you discover in meaning? |
7010 | What difference is found in the punctuation of these several groups? |
7010 | What different offices may a noun perform? |
7010 | What do astronomers teach? |
7010 | What do the horses stretch? |
7010 | What do you call it? |
7010 | What do you call it? |
7010 | What do you discover in the names found in( 11)? |
7010 | What do you say I have in my hand? |
7010 | What do you see? |
7010 | What do you understand by a compound predicate? |
7010 | What do you understand by a compound subject? |
7010 | What do you understand by a participle? |
7010 | What do you understand by natural language? |
7010 | What does each of the other paragraphs describe? |
7010 | What does the group of words_ for hours_ do? |
7010 | What does the last phrase of(_ j_) modify? |
7010 | What does the second_ their_ go with? |
7010 | What does_ by looking down into their burrows_ tell? |
7010 | What does_ home_ do? |
7010 | What does_ is_ assert of teaching? |
7010 | What does_ just_ do? |
7010 | What does_ occasionally_ do? |
7010 | What does_ of shrieks_ modify? |
7010 | What does_ often_ do? |
7010 | What does_ one day_ do in the third paragraph? |
7010 | What does_ same_ go with? |
7010 | What does_ suddenly_ do? |
7010 | What does_ suddenly_ go with? |
7010 | What does_ those_ mean? |
7010 | What does_ till he has fed his horses_ do? |
7010 | What five as the subject of a school composition? |
7010 | What four as the title of a poem? |
7010 | What girls can skate?_ You are happy. |
7010 | What group of adjectives modifies_ place_? |
7010 | What group of eight words tells in what way Mr. Darwin noticed this fact? |
7010 | What group of words goes with_ was diverted_ to tell when? |
7010 | What group of words in( 6) is treated as an individual name? |
7010 | What group of words is joined to_ looked_ to tell on what occasion or how often? |
7010 | What help to the narrative do these descriptive touches give? |
7010 | What in form? |
7010 | What in( 8)? |
7010 | What is English Grammar? |
7010 | What is English grammar? |
7010 | What is a clause? |
7010 | What is a complex sentence? |
7010 | What is a compound sentence? |
7010 | What is a conjunction? |
7010 | What is a conjunction? |
7010 | What is a declarative sentence? |
7010 | What is a dependent clause? |
7010 | What is a diagram? |
7010 | What is a diagram? |
7010 | What is a letter? |
7010 | What is a modifier? |
7010 | What is a modifier? |
7010 | What is a noun? |
7010 | What is a noun? |
7010 | What is a participle? |
7010 | What is a phrase? |
7010 | What is a phrase? |
7010 | What is a preposition? |
7010 | What is a pronoun? |
7010 | What is a pronoun? |
7010 | What is a sentence? |
7010 | What is a sentence? |
7010 | What is a simple sentence? |
7010 | What is a verb? |
7010 | What is a verb? |
7010 | What is a word? |
7010 | What is an adjective? |
7010 | What is an adjective? |
7010 | What is an adverb? |
7010 | What is an adverb? |
7010 | What is an attribute complement? |
7010 | What is an attribute complement? |
7010 | What is an exclamatory sentence? |
7010 | What is an idea? |
7010 | What is an imperative sentence? |
7010 | What is an independent clause? |
7010 | What is an infinitive? |
7010 | What is an interjection? |
7010 | What is an interjection? |
7010 | What is an interrogative sentence? |
7010 | What is an object complement? |
7010 | What is an object complement? |
7010 | What is artificial language, or language proper? |
7010 | What is artificial language? |
7010 | What is comparison? |
7010 | What is conjugation? |
7010 | What is declension? |
7010 | What is gender? |
7010 | What is it? |
7010 | What is mode? |
7010 | What is number? |
7010 | What is poetry? |
7010 | What is synopsis? |
7010 | What is taught by astronomers? |
7010 | What is tense? |
7010 | What is the analysis of a sentence? |
7010 | What is the analysis of a sentence? |
7010 | What is the difference between the two expressions,_ ripe apples_ and_ apples are ripe_? |
7010 | What is the first step in parsing? |
7010 | What is the foundation on which every sentence is built? |
7010 | What is the modified predicate? |
7010 | What is the modified subject? |
7010 | What is the name of the island mentioned in( 3)?--in( 4)? |
7010 | What is the object complement of this verb? |
7010 | What is the office of the dependent clause in the next sentence? |
7010 | What is the office of_ minute_ in the second sentence of the first paragraph? |
7010 | What is the office of_ the_,_ ejected_, and the group_ over the burrows_? |
7010 | What is the predicate of a sentence? |
7010 | What is the principal office of a verb? |
7010 | What is the rule for forming the possessive case? |
7010 | What is the rule for the exclamation point? |
7010 | What is the rule for writing abbreviations? |
7010 | What is the rule for writing individual names? |
7010 | What is the subject of a sentence? |
7010 | What is the subject of_ look_ in 4? |
7010 | What is_ Old Testament_ the particular name of? |
7010 | What long adjective clause is joined to_ those_ by_ who_? |
7010 | What long group of words made up of two sentences tells why the beasts are looking reproach? |
7010 | What long phrase describes_ place_? |
7010 | What mark of punctuation between? |
7010 | What modification have adjectives? |
7010 | What must every predicate contain? |
7010 | What must every predicate contain? |
7010 | What names in( 7) usually denote relationship? |
7010 | What new subject begins with page 95? |
7010 | What new use of the period have you discovered in this exercise? |
7010 | What new way of varying the meaning of words is introduced in Lesson 78? |
7010 | What noun by three adjectives two of which are of the same rank? |
7010 | What noun follows this verb to tell what Mr. Darwin noticed? |
7010 | What noun is modified by three adjectives of different rank? |
7010 | What object is pictured by the help of five adjectives? |
7010 | What offices does an infinitive phrase perform? |
7010 | What offices does the infinitive phrase perform? |
7010 | What offices may be performed by a phrase? |
7010 | What other change do you find necessary? |
7010 | What other office has this connective? |
7010 | What other word can you use? |
7010 | What other words can I use to modify_ coin_? |
7010 | What part of speech is used as subject and object? |
7010 | What parts of speech are explained in the preceding Lessons? |
7010 | What parts of speech may connect clauses? |
7010 | What peculiar use of capitals do you discover in these lines of poetry? |
7010 | What phrase is joined to_ was imbedded_ to tell where? |
7010 | What preposition could be put in? |
7010 | What rule for the period? |
7010 | What rule for the use of capital letters have you learned? |
7010 | What states border on the Gulf of Mexico? |
7010 | What then do you think of placing this phrase at the end? |
7010 | What things that the author imagined but did not really see are mentioned in the third paragraph? |
7010 | What three kinds of expressions are spoken of in Lessons 3 and 4? |
7010 | What three words in this exercise are used together as the title of a book? |
7010 | What two long noun clauses aroused to complete_ should remember_? |
7010 | What two parts must every sentence have? |
7010 | What two sentences does_ and_ here bring together? |
7010 | What two sentences does_ but_ here bring together? |
7010 | What two words are used to join 3 and 4 together? |
7010 | What whole sentence does_ this_ take the place of? |
7010 | What word here helps to bring two sentences together? |
7010 | What word is here joined to_ sails_ to tell the_ direction_ of sailing? |
7010 | What word is here joined to_ sails_ to tell the_ manner_ of sailing? |
7010 | What word is here joined to_ sails_ to tell the_ time_ of sailing? |
7010 | What word is there one- half of which is_ p''s_? |
7010 | What word may be used for the phrase,_ to that place?_+ P+.--_There_. |
7010 | What word may be used for the phrase_ of the morning?_+ P+.--_Morning_. |
7010 | What word modifies_ much_ by telling how much? |
7010 | What word tells how she decided? |
7010 | What word, then, makes an adjective modifier of this sentence and joins it to_ feet_? |
7010 | What words are used only in the nominative case? |
7010 | What words are used only in the objective case? |
7010 | What words in( 9) and( 10) are used as names of the Deity? |
7010 | What, by a clause? |
7010 | What, different offices may an adjective perform? |
7010 | What, then, joins this group, and makes it do the work of an adverb? |
7010 | When I say,_ Plants grow_, is_ grow_ the name of anything? |
7010 | When a verb has two or more subjects, how does it agree? |
7010 | When is_ a_ used, and when_ an?_ Give examples of their misuse. |
7010 | When is_ a_ used? |
7010 | When is_ an_ used? |
7010 | When the interrogative word is an adverb, what is the order? |
7010 | When the interrogative word is object or attribute complement, or a modifier of either, what is the order? |
7010 | When the phrase is at the beginning or at the end of the sentence, how many commas do you need to set it off? |
7010 | When there is no interrogative word, what is the order? |
7010 | When was America discovered? |
7010 | Where do they stretch their shoulders? |
7010 | Where may the antecedent of an interrogative pronoun generally be found? |
7010 | Where must this paragraph naturally stand? |
7010 | Where was you when I called? |
7010 | Where, and in what kind of house, do you think this picture was seen? |
7010 | Which are_ individual_ names? |
7010 | Which course will you choose? |
7010 | Which is the largest city in the world? |
7010 | Which is the longer of the rivers of America? |
7010 | Which is the more northerly, Maine, Oregon, or Minnesota? |
7010 | Which of the following expressions contain words that have_ no connection_, which contain words_ merely associated_, and which are_ sentences_? |
7010 | Which of the names just written are_ class_ names? |
7010 | Which of these four objects has Mr. Beecher in the paragraphs we quote? |
7010 | Which paragraph describes Rab''s character? |
7010 | Which question would you call_ direct?_ Which,_ indirect_? |
7010 | Which question would you call_ direct?_ Which,_ indirect_? |
7010 | Which word tells what is thought? |
7010 | Which words indicate the time of sailing? |
7010 | Which words of these groups are regarded as the most important? |
7010 | Which, the manner? |
7010 | Which, the place? |
7010 | Who did you ask for? |
7010 | Who did you mean, when you said that? |
7010 | Who did you see? |
7010 | Who did you speak to just now? |
7010 | Who is there? |
7010 | Who was that? |
7010 | Who will catch this? |
7010 | Whom did you say that it was? |
7010 | Whom did you see? |
7010 | Why are such expressions as_ a wooden pretty bowl_ faulty? |
7010 | Why are the days shorter in winter? |
7010 | Why are they so called? |
7010 | Why do they stretch with more energy? |
7010 | Why is a comma used before_ forgetful_? |
7010 | Why is this a_ sentence?_ Ans.--Because it expresses a thought. |
7010 | Why is_ an enthusiastic, noisy, large crowd_ faulty? |
7010 | Why is_ hastily_ an adverb? |
7010 | Why is_ hear, o israel_, wrong? |
7010 | Why is_ i may be Mistaken_ wrong? |
7010 | Why is_ them books_ wrong? |
7010 | Why is_ too_ in the second sentence an adverb? |
7010 | Why stand we here idle? |
7010 | Why? |
7010 | Why? |
7010 | Why? |
7010 | Why? |
7010 | With a good framework clearly before you, must not your story move along in an orderly way from a beginning to an end? |
7010 | With respect to what, do we classify words( Lesson 14)? |
7010 | With what kind of letter~(4)~_ each_ of these names~begin~? |
7010 | With what mark~(4)~ imperative_ sentences_~end~? |
7010 | Would it help you to have clearly before you from the beginning the object you are seeking to accomplish? |
7010 | You are here told to see what? |
7010 | ] spoken by Moses? |
7010 | _ Across a large fern_ is joined like an adverb to what? |
7010 | _ Bowed under the heavy collar_ describes what? |
7010 | _ By a piercing shriek of delight_ does what? |
7010 | _ By some exquisite ferns_ is joined to what? |
7010 | _ Coming home with sacks of grain_ does what? |
7010 | _ Does_ either landlord or tenant profit by this bill? |
7010 | _ In a great deal of agony_ modifies what? |
7010 | _ Of the worm''s body_ modifies what? |
7010 | _ That bore the"Jacks"_ does what? |
7010 | _ That seem to grasp the firm earth_ goes with what? |
7010 | _ Then_ and_ very often_ do what? |
7010 | _ What_ did he attempt? |
7010 | _ What_ is base? |
7010 | _ What_ is this? |
7010 | _ When... stomach_ modifies what verb? |
7010 | and do they therefore stimulate your fancy or imagination? |
7010 | are You going home? |
7010 | crooked| five| some| all| What words here modify_ boys_ by adding the idea of size? |
7010 | or would you prefer some other wording of it? |
7010 | with"_ Who_ did you suppose it was?" |
14182 | Doth not,saith this kind of slanderer,"his temper incline him to do thus? |
14182 | I see another law in my members, warring against the law of my mind? |
14182 | Is it not monstrous,he asks,"that Calne, with 173 voters, should return a member, while Glasgow returns only two, with a constituency of 20,000?" |
14182 | O, yet a nobler task awaits thy hand, For what can war but endless war still breed? |
14182 | What could have been done more? |
14182 | Why contend,say they,"for a little territory that you do not need?" |
14182 | A treaty is a bargain between nations, binding in good faith; and what makes a bargain? |
14182 | Again, how is"Thy will be done as in heaven, so in earth,"understood? |
14182 | Again:"He doeth well,"saith the sycophant,"it is true; but why, and to what end? |
14182 | Am I asked, would you render the judges superior to the legislature? |
14182 | Am I borne out in this declaration by the clause referred to? |
14182 | And can it be more justifiable to fight for my goods than for my life?" |
14182 | And can we have a safer model in forming ours? |
14182 | And gentlemen, what has been the result? |
14182 | And he added,"How then shall they call on him in whom they have not believed? |
14182 | And how is his name hallowed in us, except while it makes us holy? |
14182 | And how shall they believe in him of whom they have not heard? |
14182 | And if we have, are we not to make use of it in judging of the expediency or inexpediency of the treaty? |
14182 | And is it not quite clear, that to such persons, God can not be said to be their God? |
14182 | And is not Christ worth the seeking? |
14182 | And now, gentlemen, what is about to happen? |
14182 | And now, gentlemen, what is the condition of the great body of the people? |
14182 | And what event of weightier intrinsic importance, or of more extensive consequences, was ever selected for this honorary distinction? |
14182 | And what has occurred? |
14182 | And what is that? |
14182 | And what is the result to Athens? |
14182 | And what object of consideration more pleasing than this can be presented to the human mind? |
14182 | And what would the bride''s guardian and conductor say, the divine and blessed Paul? |
14182 | And why was this, save that thine own head might not suffer-- thine own conscience might not be wounded? |
14182 | And why? |
14182 | And, since free labor is inevitable, will you have it in its worst forms or in its best? |
14182 | And, with this, what have you done? |
14182 | Another point is this, whether and how far a private person may aid another in distress? |
14182 | Are all that hear me this day certain they shall be saved? |
14182 | Are despots alone to be approached for unfeeling indifference to the tears and blood of their subjects? |
14182 | Are gentlemen disposed to risk the consequences? |
14182 | Are not these, my lord, very afflicting thoughts? |
14182 | Are our ears so deafened? |
14182 | Are our eyes so blinded? |
14182 | Are our hearts so hardened? |
14182 | Are our noble predecessors''souls got so far into the English cabbage stock and cauliflowers that we should show the least inclination that way? |
14182 | Are our tongues so faltered? |
14182 | Are republicans unresponsible? |
14182 | Are the very clods where we tread entitled to this ardent preference because they are greener? |
14182 | Are there not Christians enough to kill? |
14182 | Are there not associations which, overleaping the recent past, carry us back to times when, over North and South, this flag was honored alike by all? |
14182 | Are there not many who live, to all appearances, as unconscious of his existence as we fancy the inferior animals to be? |
14182 | Are there not many who never think of God or care about his service? |
14182 | Are they to be bound by popular election? |
14182 | Are we come to exult that Northern hands are stronger than Southern? |
14182 | Are we going to fight because we can not agree upon the mode of disposing of our neighbor''s lands? |
14182 | Are we sufficient for the comprehension of the sublimest spiritual truths, and unequal to material and temporal ones? |
14182 | Are you not yet weary of contest? |
14182 | As Mrs. Surratt came forward, he asked her this question,"Do you know this man?" |
14182 | At the end of a war there must be a negotiation, which is the very point we have already gained; and why relinquish it? |
14182 | Because then it was most rightly and most truly said,"How shall they call on him in whom they have not believed?" |
14182 | Blush ye not, speaking lies against the divine oracles? |
14182 | But am I reduced to the necessity of proving this point? |
14182 | But have they maturely considered the whole subject? |
14182 | But how, even for so short a time, can I be separated from my beloved ones? |
14182 | But if at that period this would be unreasonable, what makes it otherwise now? |
14182 | But if he is God, and the throne of his kingdom is everlasting, in what way could God advance? |
14182 | But if, at the same time, it does not belong to the courts of the United States, where does it lead the people? |
14182 | But is it in this house only that we find these indications of the want of maturity in our views upon this subject? |
14182 | But is this view of delight only and not of discovery-- of contentment, and not of benefit? |
14182 | But she returned not,""Is there no balm in Gilead? |
14182 | But the greatest question of all is, How will that decision affect the country as a whole? |
14182 | But to the eye of reason what can be more clear than that all men have an equal right to happiness? |
14182 | But what good do we wish for ourselves, when we say,"Thy will be done as in heaven, so in earth?" |
14182 | But what is the effect of it? |
14182 | But what is the right of a huntsman to the forest of a thousand miles over which he has accidentally ranged in quest of prey? |
14182 | But what mysterious distribution of character has the craft of statesmen, more fatal than priestcraft, introduced? |
14182 | But what purpose can arguments of this kind answer? |
14182 | But when did the President of the Senate ever undertake to call the two houses together to witness the opening and counting of the votes? |
14182 | But when hear we such questions? |
14182 | But, after all this,"shall they fall and not arise? |
14182 | But, if so, how can you expect that it will be of so much more use hereafter as to make it worth dissolving the Union? |
14182 | But, if that be true, what is the use of asking for the protection anyhow, much less in the Constitution? |
14182 | But, if we pass to the other condition, is it any more reasonable? |
14182 | But, say those who hide the absurdity under the cover of ambiguous phrases, Have we no discretion? |
14182 | But, sir, if it were a compromise, what is there in compromise that is discreditable either to men or to nations? |
14182 | By disregarding the mode and forms prescribed by the constitution for amending it? |
14182 | By nominees of the sovereign power? |
14182 | Byrhtnoth, angry and resolute, gave him this answer:--"Hearest thou, pirate, what this folk sayeth? |
14182 | Can any thing essential, any thing more, than mere ornament and decoration be added to this by robes or diamonds? |
14182 | Can anything tend more to make men think themselves mean, or degrade to a lower point their estimation of virtue and their standard of action? |
14182 | Can not men be saved without so much ado? |
14182 | Can the gentlemen relieve themselves from this dilemma? |
14182 | Can they take it upon them to say that an Indian peace, under these circumstances, will prove firm? |
14182 | Can you give the colonies any security that such a period will never come? |
14182 | Can you talk to them of transgressing their powers, when no one has a right to judge of those powers but themselves? |
14182 | Contemplate the mangled bodies of your countrymen, and then say, What should be the reward of such sacrifices? |
14182 | Could he look with affection and veneration to such a country as his parent? |
14182 | Did I say that we brought back the same banner that you bore away, noble and heroic sir? |
14182 | Did ever so many hearts, in so brief a time, touch two such boundless feelings? |
14182 | Did he ever do it? |
14182 | Did he grudge us this? |
14182 | Did the government express any disapprobation of such conduct? |
14182 | Did the protection we received annul our rights as men, and lay us under an obligation of being miserable? |
14182 | Did they not agree to go to King Street, and attack the main guard? |
14182 | Did you not know that whether of you shall be slain, the loss would be the great seignor''s?" |
14182 | Dismissing, therefore, the justice of our cause, as incontestable, the only question is, What is best for us to pursue in our present circumstances? |
14182 | Do not these make light of Christ and salvation? |
14182 | Do not those men make light of Christ and salvation that shun the mention of his name, unless it be in a vain or sinful use? |
14182 | Do not those then make light of Christ and salvation that think of them so seldom and coldly in comparison of other things? |
14182 | Do the angels need books, and interpreters, and readers? |
14182 | Do they forget that they interdicted representative government? |
14182 | Do we exult over fallen cities? |
14182 | Do we not ask rain of him, to- day, and yesterday, and the day before? |
14182 | Do you not see the men who delivered the Delphian temple invested not only with that glory but with the leadership against Persia? |
14182 | Do you want more war? |
14182 | Does not the South need peace? |
14182 | Does not the power of the legislature become absolute and omnipotent? |
14182 | Does not this open wide the door for the admission of the plea of"reasonable doubt"? |
14182 | Does the power reside in the States? |
14182 | Doth not that soul make light of all these that thinks his ease more worth than they? |
14182 | For a mountain is a height, and what is higher than heaven? |
14182 | For are there as many ages yet remaining as have already passed away? |
14182 | For is not he who attempts to murder me more injurious than he who barely attempts to rob me? |
14182 | For shall we receive the Eucharist when we shall have come to Christ himself, and begun to reign with him forever? |
14182 | For to whom doth he say,"Say, Our Father, which art in heaven?" |
14182 | For what are debts, but sins? |
14182 | For what rights of a citizen will be deemed inviolable when a State renounces the principles that constitute their security? |
14182 | For when did he not reign? |
14182 | For when this life shall have passed away, shall we ask for daily bread then? |
14182 | Further, it seems to me, we may make another question, whether you are satisfied that their real intention was to kill or maim, or not? |
14182 | God will judge impartially; why should not we do so? |
14182 | Good men and angels will cry out:"How long, O Lord, how long, wilt thou not avenge?" |
14182 | Had he not a right to kill the man? |
14182 | Had she a single eye to our advantage? |
14182 | Has it checked your progress in any one department of human effort? |
14182 | Has it crippled your resources? |
14182 | Has it impaired your energies? |
14182 | Has it paralyzed your industry? |
14182 | Has nothing been gained? |
14182 | Has our blood been expended in vain? |
14182 | Has the legislature of a State a right to declare an act of Congress void? |
14182 | Has this long and weary period of strife been an unmingled evil? |
14182 | Hath a nation changed their gods, which are yet no gods?" |
14182 | Have the principles, on which you ground the reproach upon cabinets and kings, no practical influence, no binding force? |
14182 | Have they forgotten that the Lacedemonians had the right to vote in the assemblies only when they held helots? |
14182 | Have we not said,"Our Father, which art in heaven,"and the rest which follows? |
14182 | Have you gone to them, and told them the doubtfulness of your case, and asked their help in the judging of your condition? |
14182 | Have you nobody to inquire of, that might help you in such a work? |
14182 | He( Smith) stepped to the door of the parlor and said,"Mrs. Surratt, will you step here a minute?" |
14182 | His young companions in the chase or the gymnasium? |
14182 | How are these acts proven? |
14182 | How are you to meet the case of the representation of South Lancashire in reference to its boroughs? |
14182 | How can this difficulty be got over? |
14182 | How did he give them up? |
14182 | How did she set about it? |
14182 | How have they treated them? |
14182 | How is a second chamber to be constituted? |
14182 | How is this? |
14182 | How is this? |
14182 | How many letters hast thou indited to holy men, imploring their prayers, not that thou mightest obtain these human--nuptials, shall I call them? |
14182 | How many ways of proceeding lie open before us? |
14182 | How stands the case, then? |
14182 | How then ought he to forgive who is himself forgiven, when he forgiveth all who oweth nothing that can be forgiven him? |
14182 | How were the obligations of this treaty fulfilled? |
14182 | How will these despisers of Christ and salvation be able one day to look him in the face, and to give an account of these neglects? |
14182 | How, then, does this take place? |
14182 | How, then, is it to be treated? |
14182 | How? |
14182 | I ask those who remind us of them, if it is at such government they would arrive? |
14182 | I ask, further, when such attempts have been made, have they not failed of success? |
14182 | I immediately inquire to what extent does the authority of Congress, in relation to commercial treaties, reach? |
14182 | I trust it is neither too presumptuous nor too late to ask, Can you put the dearest interest of society at risk without guilt, and without remorse? |
14182 | If he can be so mistaken about those facts, may he not be in regard to that whole transaction? |
14182 | If he goeth to clear himself from the matter of such aspersions:"What need,"saith this insidious speaker,"of that? |
14182 | If so, may they not adopt means which they believe will tend to produce a concurrence? |
14182 | If the people were willing to part with commerce, can the government dispense with it? |
14182 | If we can not speak the law as it is, where is our liberty? |
14182 | If we do mark what is done in many( might I not say, in most?) |
14182 | If we have passed through fire and water, so that neither did the fire consume us, nor the water drown us, whose is the glory? |
14182 | If we reject the treaty, will our peace be as safe as if we executed it with good faith? |
14182 | In spite of this mock solemnity, I demand, if the House will not concur in the measure to execute the treaty, what other course shall we take? |
14182 | In that period will they be still bound to acknowledge that supremacy over them which we now claim? |
14182 | In the highest possible sense of the terms; but who can tell what that highest possible sense of the terms is? |
14182 | In what manner are they to be elected? |
14182 | Is David dead? |
14182 | Is Hampden dead? |
14182 | Is Washington dead? |
14182 | Is any man that ever was fit to live dead? |
14182 | Is it a narrow affection for the spot where a man was born? |
14182 | Is it feared that the government will oppress the conquered States? |
14182 | Is it feared that the rights of the States will be withheld? |
14182 | Is it not grown so common a thing to asperse causelessly that no man wonders at it, that few dislike, that scarce any detest it? |
14182 | Is it not our great interest to place our judges upon such high ground that no fear can intimidate, no hope seduce them? |
14182 | Is it not safe to abide by such examples? |
14182 | Is it not the sport and divertisement of many to cast dirt in the faces of all they meet with? |
14182 | Is it not true that thou didst fix a punishment for him, and threaten him with death by torments? |
14182 | Is it not, as most men do, out of ill design? |
14182 | Is it ours, so that we should exult in it as if it belonged to us? |
14182 | Is it possible that this will should not be done? |
14182 | Is it to be neglected or ridiculed? |
14182 | Is memory dead? |
14182 | Is not everlasting salvation worth more than all this? |
14182 | Is not her Majesty in danger by such a method? |
14182 | Is not the monarchy in danger? |
14182 | Is not the nation''s peace and tranquillity in danger? |
14182 | Is such an instance to be found? |
14182 | Is the aid of the legislature necessary in all cases whatsoever, to give effect to a commercial treaty? |
14182 | Is the legislative sanction necessary to give it effect? |
14182 | Is the only benefit which our constancy till death has obtained for our country, that it should be sunk into a deeper and more ignominious vassalage? |
14182 | Is there a word on record of conversation between Booth and Mrs. Surratt? |
14182 | Is there any language of reproach pungent enough to express your commentary on the fact? |
14182 | Is there anything in Mrs. Surratt''s mind and course of life to show that she was prepared for the commission of this crime? |
14182 | Is there no historic pride? |
14182 | Is there no physician there? |
14182 | Is there one among you who can hear the simple and pathetic energy of these expressions without tenderness and admiration? |
14182 | Is this immense wealth always to be exposed as a prey to the rapacity of freebooters? |
14182 | Is this necessary except in this life? |
14182 | Is this to be the one idea which is to mold the policy of the government, when that gentleman and his friends shall control it? |
14182 | Is truth ever barren? |
14182 | It cried to the Lord,"Wherefore am I deposed?" |
14182 | Let us inquire also against whom she has protected us? |
14182 | Lord, when didst thou see these good things in us? |
14182 | May I not, then, well express the hope that never again may we or ours be called upon so to celebrate this anniversary? |
14182 | Must they always continue an appendage to our government and follow it implicitly through every change that can happen to it? |
14182 | Nay, does not the Lord himself say to some who now walk in the spirit of Jeremiah,"Hast thou seen what the virgin of Israel hath done unto me?" |
14182 | Need I say that we fly in the face of that resolution when we pretend that the acts of that power are not valid until we have concurred in them? |
14182 | Now, consider: How does Demosthenes answer to these conditions? |
14182 | Of such a father what shall we ask? |
14182 | On what protection does this vast property rest? |
14182 | Or how shall they hear without a preacher? |
14182 | Or how shall they preach except they be sent?" |
14182 | Or what promotion is it to the Everlasting to have put on the temporal? |
14182 | Or what was there wanting to him who was sitting on his Father''s throne? |
14182 | Or, if his life should not be invaded, what would its enjoyments be in a country odious in the eyes of strangers and dishonored in his own? |
14182 | Our peaceful triumphs? |
14182 | Our peaceful triumphs? |
14182 | Our understandings have been addressed, it is true, and with ability and effect; but, I demand, has any corner of the heart been left unexplored? |
14182 | Q,--Anything besides the carbines and ammunition? |
14182 | Q.--All three together? |
14182 | Q.--For what purpose, and for how long, did he ask you to keep these articles? |
14182 | Q.--How long a rope? |
14182 | Q.--How much ammunition was there? |
14182 | Q.--Was her question to you first, whether they were still there, or what was it? |
14182 | Q.--Were they concealed in that condition? |
14182 | Q.--Were they put in that place? |
14182 | Q.--Were those articles left at your house? |
14182 | Q.--What did they bring to your house, and what did they do there? |
14182 | Q.--What did they bring to your house? |
14182 | Q.--You say that he asked you to conceal those articles for him? |
14182 | Question.--"Was her question to you first, whether they were there, or what was it?" |
14182 | Shall a philanthropist say to a banker, who defends himself against a robber,"Why do you need so much money?" |
14182 | Shall he forbid the oaks of the forest to fall before the ax of industry, and to rise again, transformed into the habitations of ease and elegance? |
14182 | Shall he forbid the wilderness to blossom like a rose? |
14182 | Shall he not as well discern the riches of Nature''s warehouse as the beauties of her shop? |
14182 | Shall he not be able thereby to produce worthy effects and to endow the life of man with infinite commodities?" |
14182 | Shall it be ignorant, impertinent, indolent, or shall it be educated, self- respecting, moral, and self- supporting? |
14182 | Shall not we then argue for that which our progenitors have purchased for us at so dear a rate, and with so much immortal honor and glory? |
14182 | Shall the hazard of a father unbind the ligaments of a dumb son''s tongue; and shall we hold our peace, when our_ patria_ is in danger? |
14182 | Shall the liberal bounties of Providence to the race of man be monopolized by one of ten thousand for whom they were created? |
14182 | Shall the lordly savage not only disdain the virtues and enjoyments of civilization himself, but shall he control the civilization of a world? |
14182 | Shall we complain of our nature-- shall we say that man ought to have been made otherwise? |
14182 | Shall we hesitate to go forward with the work? |
14182 | Shall we, dreading to become the blind instruments of power, yield ourselves the blinder dupes of mere sounds of imposture? |
14182 | She might have said she did not know Payne-- and who within the sound of my voice can say they know him now? |
14182 | Should not the consideration of these things vivify these dry bones of ours? |
14182 | Should not the memory of our noble predecessors''valor and constancy rouse up our drooping spirits? |
14182 | Since this flag went down on that dark day, who shall tell the mighty woes that have made this land a spectacle to angels and men? |
14182 | Some of you will, perhaps, ask in amazement: Is a man to be indicted for his temperament? |
14182 | Some unforeseen Providence will fall out, that may cast the balance; some Joseph or other will say,"Why do ye strive together, since ye are brethren?" |
14182 | Suppose there shall be an interruption in the count, as has occurred in our history, can the President of the Senate do it? |
14182 | That the body whom they are to check has the power to destroy them? |
14182 | That_ mendax__ infamia_ from the press, which daily coins false facts and false motives? |
14182 | The evil spirit is cast out: why should not this nation cease to wander among tombs, cutting itself? |
14182 | The manner of the reprehension was in these words:"How durst you undertake to fight one with the other? |
14182 | The question arises, who is most responsible-- a peer for life whose dignities are not descendible, or a peer for life whose dignities are hereditary? |
14182 | The question is, Are you satisfied the people made the attack in order to kill the soldiers? |
14182 | The question was asked Lloyd, During this conversation, was the word''carbine''mentioned? |
14182 | The question was then asked,"Can you swear on your oath, that Mrs. Surratt mentioned the words''shooting irons''to you at all?" |
14182 | The single test has been, is it oratory? |
14182 | The slaveholding States will secede, and what then? |
14182 | The true question is, shall the judiciary be permanent, or fluctuate with the tide of public opinion? |
14182 | Their specific was to despoil churches and plunder landlords, and what has been the result? |
14182 | Then Justice, with an angry countenance, and meditating on a grief which she had not expected, said to her father,"Am not I thy daughter Justice? |
14182 | Then shall the righteous answer and say, Lord, why hast thou prepared such glory and such good things? |
14182 | Then they also shall answer and say, Lord, why hast thou prepared such punishments for us? |
14182 | They met each other as if each would ask the other,"Am I awake, or do I dream?" |
14182 | This principle admitted, does any constitution remain? |
14182 | To others I will urge, Can any circumstance mark upon a people more turpitude and debasement? |
14182 | Trembling and astonished, Paul cries out,"Lord, what wilt thou have me to do?" |
14182 | Truth, when she heard this, was excessively angry, and looking sternly at her father,"Am not I,"said she,"thy daughter Truth? |
14182 | Under what clause of the constitution is the right to exercise this power set up? |
14182 | Was the man true, was he brave, was he earnest, was all we thought of then;--not, did he vote or think with us, or label himself with our party name? |
14182 | Was there ever such a combination of negligence and blundering? |
14182 | We are asked, sir, if the judges are to be independent of the people? |
14182 | We read in the book of holy Job,"Is not the life of man upon earth a temptation?" |
14182 | Well, what is a treaty? |
14182 | Were there not more than three persons in Dock Square? |
14182 | Were these colonies backward in giving assistance to Great Britain, when they were called upon in 1739 to aid the expedition against Carthagena? |
14182 | Were we to hear our character as a people ridiculed with indifference? |
14182 | What additional proof of confidential relations between Weichmann and Booth could the court desire? |
14182 | What advance, then, of promotion, and reward of virtue, or generally of conduct, is proved from this in our Lord''s instance? |
14182 | What advancement, then, was it to the Immortal to have assumed the mortal? |
14182 | What am I to fear? |
14182 | What are the acts she has done? |
14182 | What are the objects to be accomplished? |
14182 | What argument, therefore, do we want to show the equity of our conduct; or motive of interest to recommend it to our prudence? |
14182 | What becomes, then, of the lively narrative of the right honorable gentleman, and what becomes of the inference and conclusions which he drew from it? |
14182 | What can any tempter from without, whether the devil or the devil''s minister, do against thee? |
14182 | What check can there be when the power designed to be checked can annihilate the body which is to restrain? |
14182 | What debts? |
14182 | What do men commonly please themselves in so much as in carping and harshly censuring, in defaming and abusing their neighbors? |
14182 | What does he mean but this? |
14182 | What does reason, what does argument avail, when party spirit presides? |
14182 | What does this signify? |
14182 | What effect must all these things have on those who have lived viciously? |
14182 | What excuse, then, remains to thee, or to any one else, when he utters such language as this? |
14182 | What follows? |
14182 | What happened in this country? |
14182 | What happened? |
14182 | What hast thou done upon earth? |
14182 | What have they done? |
14182 | What impudent servant ever carried his insane audacity so far as to fling himself upon the couch of his lord? |
14182 | What influence can be exercised by a chamber of nominees? |
14182 | What is a Legislature? |
14182 | What is patriotism? |
14182 | What is the best foundation of independence? |
14182 | What is the earth? |
14182 | What is the express language of the treaty? |
14182 | What is this twenty millions in money, and how is it to be paid? |
14182 | What means"to know"? |
14182 | What more? |
14182 | What nation in so short a time has seen so many? |
14182 | What other form of government, indeed, can so well deserve our esteem and love? |
14182 | What possible motive has the government to narrow the base of that pyramid on which its own permanence depends? |
14182 | What power of the House is relinquished? |
14182 | What power of the Senate is relinquished? |
14182 | What power that both should possess is withheld? |
14182 | What reward can be great to the Everlasting God and King, in the bosom of the Father? |
14182 | What then becomes of the equal measure of power in the two houses over this subject? |
14182 | What was the position of the American government? |
14182 | What will, at that period, be the duty of the colonies? |
14182 | What would you say, or rather what would you not say? |
14182 | What, but this? |
14182 | What, gentlemen, is the first quality which is required in a second chamber? |
14182 | What, however, are his qualifications in respect to sagacity and to power of speech? |
14182 | What, the alienations and jealousies, the discords and contentions, and the causes of them? |
14182 | What, then, are we called upon to do? |
14182 | What, then, do we pray for? |
14182 | What, then, has he hereby taught us? |
14182 | What, then, ought we to do for the death of the soul? |
14182 | What, then, shall hinder the rebuilding of the Republic? |
14182 | When Payne, according to Weichmann''s testimony, inquired,"Where is my mustache?" |
14182 | When did he begin to reign? |
14182 | When the Gospel pierceth the heart indeed, they cry out,"Men and brethren, what shall we do to be saved?" |
14182 | When the certificates have been opened, when the votes have been counted, can the President of the Senate declare the result? |
14182 | When was there a time in the history of the government that there was no North side of this Chamber and of the other? |
14182 | When, sir, did millions of people, as a single man, rise in organized, deliberate, unimpassioned rebellion against justice, truth, and honor? |
14182 | When, then, were these things spoken of him, but when he came in the flesh, and was baptized in Jordan, and the spirit descended on him? |
14182 | Where are the names of the chief men, of the noble families of Stuarts, Hamiltons, Grahams, Campbels, Gordons, Johnstons, Humes, Murrays, Kers? |
14182 | Where are the two great officers of the crown, the constables and marshals of Scotland? |
14182 | Where is it unjust? |
14182 | Where is the collision here? |
14182 | Where will this end, my lord? |
14182 | Where, then, is the reason for hesitation at calling it a riot? |
14182 | Wherefore have we come hither, pilgrims from distant places? |
14182 | Who among you, my countrymen, that is a father, would claim authority to make your child a slave because you had nourished him in infancy? |
14182 | Who can explain, who can worthily so much as conceive, how much he loveth us? |
14182 | Who can foretell the judgment of this commission upon any question of law or fact? |
14182 | Who does not delight in oratory? |
14182 | Who has an omnipotent hand to restore a million dead, slain in battle or wasted by sickness, or dying of grief, broken- hearted? |
14182 | Who has omniscience to search for the scattered ones? |
14182 | Who shall enumerate their value to the millions yet unborn? |
14182 | Who shall judge whether we govern equitably or not? |
14182 | Who shall recount our martyr''s sufferings for this people? |
14182 | Who shall restore the lost to broken families? |
14182 | Who will accuse me of wandering out of the subject? |
14182 | Who will say that I exaggerate the tendencies of our measures? |
14182 | Who would venture upon a voyage in a ship each plank and timber of which might withdraw at its pleasure? |
14182 | Who, after this, will say that republicans are ungrateful? |
14182 | Whom did he wish us to call our father, save his own father? |
14182 | Whose rights are endangered by it? |
14182 | Why did Christ bow his head on the cross? |
14182 | Why did he not go to Mrs. Surratt and communicate his suspicions at once? |
14182 | Why did this civil war begin? |
14182 | Why is it, then, persevered in, and the other rejected? |
14182 | Why need I delay you by my words and by my tears? |
14182 | Why need I say more? |
14182 | Why need any eye turn from this spectacle? |
14182 | Why require protection where you will have nothing to protect? |
14182 | Why should it not come, clothed and in its right mind, to"sit at the feet of Jesus"? |
14182 | Why will you protect your citizens and their property upon land, and leave them defenseless upon the ocean? |
14182 | Why, then, is it that harmony is not restored? |
14182 | Why, then, is not the health of the daughter of my people recovered?" |
14182 | Why? |
14182 | Why? |
14182 | Why? |
14182 | Will a change of parties make the nation more happy? |
14182 | Will any one answer by a sneer, that all this is idle preaching? |
14182 | Will any one deny that we are bound, and I would hope to good purpose, by the most solemn sanctions of duty, for the vote we give? |
14182 | Will it be called day by day when there will be one eternal day? |
14182 | Will it be pretended that the State courts have the exclusive right of deciding upon the validity of our laws? |
14182 | Will it be whispered that the treaty has made a new champion for the protection of the frontiers? |
14182 | Will reflecting men not perceive, then, the wisdom of accepting established facts, and, with alacrity of enterprise, begin to retrieve the past? |
14182 | Will the tendency to Indian hostilities be contested by any one? |
14182 | Will they be still bound to unconditional submission? |
14182 | Will they say, though a judge has no power to pronounce a law void, he has a power to declare the constitution invalid? |
14182 | Will this again be necessary in the life to come? |
14182 | Will you gather up the unexploded fragments of this prodigious magazine of all mischief, and heap them up for continued explosions? |
14182 | Will you give them letters of marque and reprisal to pay themselves by force? |
14182 | Will you go to war to avenge their injury? |
14182 | Will you have men as drudges, or will you have them as citizens? |
14182 | Will you interpose and frustrate that hope, leaving to many families nothing but beggary and despair? |
14182 | Will you pay the sufferers out of the treasury? |
14182 | Will you say afterwards that their existence depends upon the legislature? |
14182 | Will you say that we now govern equitably, and that there is no danger of such revolution? |
14182 | Without this protection what would be the condition of the Northern inventor? |
14182 | Would not the quick ears of Weichmann have heard the remark had it been made? |
14182 | Would not this be so? |
14182 | Would you render them independent of the legislature? |
14182 | You I can comfort; but how can I speak to that twilight million to whom his name was as the name of an angel of God? |
14182 | You want to know if we have a government; if you have any authority to collect revenue; to wring tribute from an unwilling people? |
14182 | __"Are you certain?" |
14182 | and art not thou called merciful? |
14182 | and what is it that you neglect? |
14182 | are thou not called just? |
14182 | art not thou called true? |
14182 | but what saith he? |
14182 | companies, what is it but one telling malicious stories of, or fastening odious characters upon, another? |
14182 | did I name you? |
14182 | do you not prejudge yourself guilty? |
14182 | had he not fair opportunity and strong temptation to it? |
14182 | hath he not acted so in like cases? |
14182 | have not others made as fair a show? |
14182 | may he not dissemble now? |
14182 | may he not recoil hereafter? |
14182 | may not his interest have swayed him thereto? |
14182 | must I needs mean you? |
14182 | rather this dishonorable defilement--but that thou mightest not fall away from the Lord Jesus? |
14182 | shall he turn away and not return?" |
14182 | shall it be said that we waver in the view of those who begin by trying to expunge the sacred memory of the fourth of July? |
14182 | that ask of his service as Judas of the ointment, What need this waste? |
14182 | that provide outward necessaries so carefully for their families, but do so little to the saving of their souls? |
14182 | the single question, is there eloquence? |
14182 | to bespatter any man with foul imputations? |
14182 | what is it you run after? |
14182 | why do you then assume it to yourself? |
29583 | ''And are you going there again?'' 29583 ''And then?'' |
29583 | ''Must he?'' 29583 ''My country? |
29583 | ''Seceded? 29583 ''Well, what does the laugh mean?'' |
29583 | ''What do you mean?'' 29583 ''Where?'' |
29583 | ''Whom does it concern?'' 29583 ''You do not? |
29583 | A good doctor? |
29583 | Ah, Colonel, did I understand you to say thirty- two? |
29583 | Ah, what do you mean? |
29583 | All? 29583 An Uncle John''s big property,"the old woman went on--"Dick is to have all dat, too, you tink?" |
29583 | And after I_ do_ tell you, if I can,said the Doctor, eyeing the suspicious- looking mass,"I suppose that I am to be told why you wish to know?" |
29583 | And as there seems nothing to be done, in the way of putting out the fire, saving anybody or killing anybody, suppose we go back to the Hill? |
29583 | And how have you found it all out, so soon? |
29583 | And now, old fellow, think you are strong enough to get back to the Hill? |
29583 | And so you know them, and you know_ him_, and he is a good man, is he? 29583 And that is all you know, is it, sister?" |
29583 | And the Potomac army-- that is going to advance pretty soon, as I hear-- is_ that_ all right in the respect you have named? |
29583 | And the other lady-- Miss Harris, is she in the company? |
29583 | And what am I? |
29583 | And what are they doing up at the''big house,''as you call it? |
29583 | And what are we to do about our mystery? |
29583 | And what are you going to do? |
29583 | And what did he say? |
29583 | And what did you mean? |
29583 | And what does the masquerade mean? |
29583 | And what then, sir? |
29583 | And what was that? |
29583 | And what was the appearance of the moon when fully obscured? |
29583 | And who are_ they_? |
29583 | And who was the red woman? |
29583 | And who will go in first, then? |
29583 | And you can give no reason for this peculiar feeling? |
29583 | And you did not write us a word about your coming? |
29583 | And your bank account? |
29583 | And your name? |
29583 | Another sermon, eh, Joseph? |
29583 | Any relation to Miss Bell, who accompanied us the other day on that-- that expedition? |
29583 | Anything of consequence? |
29583 | Anything wanted, Miss? |
29583 | Are you hurt, Tom? 29583 Are you sober?" |
29583 | But how? |
29583 | But the Kearney elopement-- was not_ that_ romantic without any drawback? 29583 But this is not the''trouble''you spoke of, is it?" |
29583 | But to return: Where was I? 29583 But what could_ he_ have been to_ her_?" |
29583 | But what have you got, out- of- doors? |
29583 | But where is my sister, and what was the music? |
29583 | But where is that gentleman from the South? |
29583 | But who are you that know_ me_? |
29583 | But who could help it? 29583 But why this lady in particular?" |
29583 | But would that poison produce any effect if applied outwardly? |
29583 | But_ what_? |
29583 | Can this be possible? |
29583 | Can you tell me whether Mrs.---- lives on any of the floors of this house? |
29583 | Captain,said the Colonel,"really I would rather--""Rather that I should talk about the present war, than anything in Scripture? |
29583 | Colonel Bancker? 29583 Come here a moment, will you?" |
29583 | Crazy? 29583 Did nothing occur between you, to make any change in her behavior towards you?" |
29583 | Disturb me? 29583 Do I not? |
29583 | Do I not? |
29583 | Do n''t you see how bright that fire through the trees is getting? 29583 Do they allow such actions as that-- right here in public, and in the very presence of the officers?" |
29583 | Do they? |
29583 | Do you call Colonel Bancker low company, father? |
29583 | Do you hear what she says? 29583 Do you know what you have been saying to me? |
29583 | Do you mean to say that_ you_ have no superstitions whatever, Doctor? |
29583 | Do you not think so, Colonel? |
29583 | Do you see a policeman? |
29583 | Do you see what there is on that bulletin? |
29583 | Do you think so? |
29583 | Do you think that it is of yourself alone that I am speaking? 29583 Do? |
29583 | Do? |
29583 | Does she too begin to share so bitterly in the-- in the--"In the prejudice? 29583 Egbert, eh? |
29583 | Egbert, eh? |
29583 | Eh? 29583 Eh? |
29583 | Eh? 29583 Eh?" |
29583 | Eh? |
29583 | Excuse my touching upon your grief,said Bell,"but I suppose that you will wish black? |
29583 | Fifty- four? |
29583 | For_ my_ sake? |
29583 | Give that up altogether?--or will you agree to take a hand in at personal investigation? |
29583 | Going to the house soon? |
29583 | Gone? |
29583 | Great God!--can such beauty be real? |
29583 | Has there been an incubus suddenly lifted from his breast? |
29583 | Has you tried, honey? |
29583 | Have I given you a strange and fearful picture? 29583 Have I yet more to give?" |
29583 | Have I yet more to give? |
29583 | Have we met with any accident? |
29583 | Have you ever been at Niagara, Marion? |
29583 | Have you not_ heard_ from him since? |
29583 | Have you seen almost enough? |
29583 | Her last living relative? |
29583 | Her mother? 29583 Hey? |
29583 | How can I ever meet him, after that-- when he knows that I have heard him spoken of in so terrible a manner? |
29583 | How can I leave him unburied? 29583 How can you talk so flippantly of things so deplorable?" |
29583 | How do I know it? 29583 How do you feel, brother?" |
29583 | How do you know but he may be married? |
29583 | How do you know this?--woman, how do you know this? |
29583 | How long do you remain? |
29583 | How_ can_ you be so absurd? |
29583 | I believe that you are an Englishman by birth? 29583 I suppose you have not heard the telegraphic reports from Washington, this morning?" |
29583 | I will_ try_--Miss Harris-- may I not say Josephine? |
29583 | I wonder whether we shall be stopped on our way back, or not? 29583 I, father? |
29583 | If they are not soldiers, why do they wear these trappings of the battle- field? |
29583 | If they are soldiers, why are they loitering here when their comrades are being overpowered and slaughtered? |
29583 | Impudence? 29583 Indeed I and how?" |
29583 | Interests?--in conflict? 29583 Is she not_ very_ sick?" |
29583 | Is_ that_ all the effect it produces upon you? 29583 Mammy-- you do n''t''member ole Mammy?" |
29583 | Marion Hobart gone? 29583 Marion, who is that?" |
29583 | May I ask your name, Miss----? |
29583 | Mean? 29583 Mean? |
29583 | Meaning_ me_? |
29583 | Miss Hobart, will you be so kind as to read the news to me? |
29583 | Miss Mary Crawford, I presume? 29583 Mrs. Halstead not sick? |
29583 | Must you? |
29583 | My resolution? |
29583 | No objection to looking a little older? |
29583 | No, did you? |
29583 | No? |
29583 | Not full yet, eh? |
29583 | Not one? 29583 Not_ better_ than a brother, eh, cousin Josey?" |
29583 | Nothing?--not even to set a watch upon the two houses we have named? |
29583 | Now, is he a mimic? 29583 Oh, dey does n''t, eh, honey? |
29583 | Oh, have you? |
29583 | Oh, how can that be possible? |
29583 | Oh, my cousin yonder? 29583 Oh, you ca n''t go, eh?" |
29583 | Or a Virginia Unionist, faithful among the faithless, and too brave to be afraid anywhere? |
29583 | Poison? 29583 See? |
29583 | Seen_ me_? |
29583 | She? |
29583 | So Dick am rich, am he, honey? 29583 So mother is still in the city, is she? |
29583 | Spose de good doctor so good that he nebber get well? 29583 Tell me: is there any point in which your interests would run counter to each other? |
29583 | The big house? 29583 The granddaughter of that man? |
29583 | The words of falsehood? |
29583 | Think so? |
29583 | Think so? |
29583 | Think? |
29583 | Thirty- nine_ what_, sir? |
29583 | This is all so strange I-- what_ can_ you mean? |
29583 | This is really the case? |
29583 | This letter for me, and from_ him_? 29583 To Europe?" |
29583 | To run away and be married? 29583 Too much? |
29583 | Trouble? |
29583 | Trying to get up again, eh, old fellow? 29583 Union men? |
29583 | Use? 29583 Was that whistle intended for_ me_, sir?" |
29583 | Well sir, and what am I to answer? |
29583 | Well, Mary? 29583 Well, Miss Emily Owen, what have you to say to all this?" |
29583 | Well, what is it? 29583 Well, what is the''besides''?" |
29583 | Well, what of her? |
29583 | Well, when do you get off? |
29583 | Well,said Leslie, laughing,"what am I to understand? |
29583 | Well? |
29583 | Well? |
29583 | Well? |
29583 | Well? |
29583 | Well? |
29583 | Well? |
29583 | Well? |
29583 | Were you walking back towards the bridge? 29583 What ails you? |
29583 | What am I doing? 29583 What are you going to do?" |
29583 | What are you to- night? |
29583 | What can I think? |
29583 | What can you know of_ me_, and what interest can you take in me? |
29583 | What consequence? |
29583 | What do you mean? 29583 What do you mean? |
29583 | What do you mean? |
29583 | What do you mean? |
29583 | What do you want? |
29583 | What has become of your modesty? 29583 What if she should be a little secesh?" |
29583 | What is he like? 29583 What is it you want? |
29583 | What is offensive? 29583 What is that?" |
29583 | What is the matter? 29583 What is the matter?" |
29583 | What is the matter? |
29583 | What is the matter? |
29583 | What more could I do, I should like to know? |
29583 | What next, I wonder? 29583 What shall I do? |
29583 | What shall I do? |
29583 | What sorcery have you practised upon that poor girl, to drive her into this state of distraction, red fiend? |
29583 | What was my resolution? |
29583 | What would you say now, Susy, if I could put back some of the light into Miss Mary Crawford''s eyes? |
29583 | What? 29583 What? |
29583 | What? 29583 What?" |
29583 | What_ is_ the use of all that, Tom? |
29583 | When did all this occur? |
29583 | Where is Mary? |
29583 | Where is Provost Marshal Kennedy, I wonder? |
29583 | Where shall I meet you next, Ralston? |
29583 | Which you regard as among the most foolish things of your life? 29583 Who are they?" |
29583 | Who is gone? |
29583 | Who is it? |
29583 | Who spoke? |
29583 | Who was_ who_? |
29583 | Who''s_ he_? 29583 Whose farm is this?" |
29583 | Why curse it, woman, what are you talking about? 29583 Why did n''t she come along? |
29583 | Why do n''t you call him''Eg.,''as you do sometimes? 29583 Why do n''t you go, then?" |
29583 | Why do you speak so lightly when I am so wretched? |
29583 | Why do you speak so? |
29583 | Why this, sir? |
29583 | Why, she does not come here now- a- days; and what can you want of her? |
29583 | Why, you do not mean to say that you would fight him? |
29583 | Will you understand me when I say that two of the dearest friends I have in the world are your cousins Isabel and_ Richard Crawford_? |
29583 | Will you, honey? |
29583 | Wonder? 29583 Would you like to see Niagara?" |
29583 | Would you? |
29583 | Yes, Uncle, what can I do for you? |
29583 | Yes,said Emily,"we--""Write?" |
29583 | Yes? |
29583 | You are a newspaper man still? |
29583 | You are going to- day, then? |
29583 | You are ready to go with me? |
29583 | You believe that you can reach the Union camp in safety? |
29583 | You call me brave, do you? |
29583 | You call yourself a lawyer, honey, and do such things as dat''are? 29583 You could n''t exactly inform me_ where_, could you?" |
29583 | You do not know the young man? |
29583 | You go to theatres: is he fond of theatrical performances? |
29583 | You have been in Europe, have you not? 29583 You have been in the front parlor some time?" |
29583 | You have no confidence in supernatural revelations in any relation of life? |
29583 | You have seen nothing frightful-- dreadful-- terrible? |
29583 | You heard the story those men were telling? |
29583 | You know where the livery stable round the corner is, on Houston? |
29583 | You mean that I must think your love silly, unless I happen to be in love myself? |
29583 | You meddling fool!--what can that draft do to_ me_? 29583 You say that the Union troops have won the fight to- day?" |
29583 | You think that a singular person? |
29583 | You want Mary and de property bofe? |
29583 | You wo n''t? 29583 You''member what Aunt Synchy is, now?" |
29583 | You_ are_ to marry him, after this warning? |
29583 | _ My_ cruelty? 29583 _ You?_"and the country girl looked at her as if a pair of horns had suddenly sprouted from under the dark hair. |
29583 | ''But then, if this is so, why does Mason remain, and why is the fact kept in the dark?'' |
29583 | ''Myself or some other?'' |
29583 | 9.--"Who has not heard of the celebrated Madame Prewster, who can be consulted with entire satisfaction? |
29583 | Am I going back soon enough? |
29583 | Am I mistaken?" |
29583 | And I suppose you think that our regiment lost heavily, Colonel? |
29583 | And I wonder what becomes of all the extra rations that are drawn for them every day? |
29583 | And are its missiles of death and the diseases to which its exposures give rise, especially commissioned to repay past crimes and by- gone errors? |
29583 | And are worms therefore never to be trodden upon? |
29583 | And how impossible it seemed that he_ could_ be uttering other words than those of entire truth? |
29583 | And how''s your cat?" |
29583 | And is this inconsistent? |
29583 | And may not the_ houses_ indeed come into judgment? |
29583 | And may that not be what ails her?" |
29583 | And now what had caused the shadow on the matronly face of Mrs. Owen, and the pout on the red lip of Emily? |
29583 | And that I am a true friend?" |
29583 | And was not the long dissertation at the beginning of this chapter, to prove the applicability of the spy system to war time, an absolute necessity? |
29583 | And what was that which she held in her hand, and the removal of which had produced so wonderful a transformation? |
29583 | And whither did that carriage roll? |
29583 | And yet, why not? |
29583 | And yet-- what shall be said of the facts-- uncolored and undeniable facts-- narrated in a subsequent chapter? |
29583 | And you-- are you staying here?" |
29583 | And you? |
29583 | Are you crazy?" |
29583 | Are you listening?" |
29583 | Are you satisfied?" |
29583 | Are you sick? |
29583 | Are you_ sure_ the Union troops have won the victory?" |
29583 | At all events, I went down- stairs and opened the parlor- door, bold as a sheep, when-- what do you think happened? |
29583 | Besides, if I quarrelled with him, who made me? |
29583 | But I wonder what becomes of the extra pay issued to seven hundred men, when there are only three hundred entitled to receive it? |
29583 | But he added a mental enquiry that was by no means shaped into words:"_ Did_ I say to him that I was going to Europe? |
29583 | But how badly are you hurt, Jack? |
29583 | But how was it to be obtained? |
29583 | But is_ she_ his wife? |
29583 | But tell me-- what_ can_ be the matter?" |
29583 | But they are not married? |
29583 | But what can a kind- hearted old lady do, with two young ones and one a model of her sex, tugging at her apron- strings? |
29583 | But what do you mean?" |
29583 | But what do you mean?--that I should get a doctor to-- to-- put him out of the way?" |
29583 | But what has all that to do with to- day, and why were you pointing towards the door?" |
29583 | But what is it all, Cousin Joe?" |
29583 | But what was it that Tom Leslie saw, more than is revealed to the natural eyes, looking on that scene when he had contemplated it for a few moments? |
29583 | But where is Uncle?--I have not seen_ him_ yet?" |
29583 | But why repeat the story that has no variety except in horror? |
29583 | But, by the way, did you ever read that singular novel,''Border War,''by a South- western writer, Jones, published several years ago?" |
29583 | Can we see her?" |
29583 | Colonel Bancker-- as you_ try_ to call yourself?" |
29583 | Come, Mrs. Owen, is supper ready?" |
29583 | Could anything be more shameful?--anything more despicable? |
29583 | Could he play a part if he should attempt it?" |
29583 | Could human presumption go farther? |
29583 | Could this man still have one virtue remaining? |
29583 | Davis, Yancey and Company?" |
29583 | Did n''t I just tell you that I had half made up my mind to take him? |
29583 | Did they know each other or only something_ of_ each other? |
29583 | Did you come all the way alone?" |
29583 | Did you know him?" |
29583 | Do n''t you see that?" |
29583 | Do n''t you think so, Colonel?" |
29583 | Do n''t you think that is possible, cousin Joe? |
29583 | Do n''t you think that will do, dear?" |
29583 | Do you guess the riddle? |
29583 | Do you hear me? |
29583 | Do you hear?" |
29583 | Do you mean to insult both your father and myself?" |
29583 | Do you not recognize him?" |
29583 | Do you not remember me?" |
29583 | Do you remember one day, five or six weeks ago, when I came into your house a little in a hurry, with a bunch of violets for Dick?" |
29583 | Do you see that tree?" |
29583 | Do you see?" |
29583 | Do you think you can lean against that tree and keep from fainting until I run and see whether my little joker went in the right direction?" |
29583 | Do you understand me? |
29583 | Do you understand, Miss Hobart?" |
29583 | Do you understand_ now_?'' |
29583 | Does it hook?" |
29583 | Does the music disturb you?" |
29583 | Does this sound like sneering at the wife''s pride and devotion? |
29583 | Does war indeed have a mission beyond the national good or evil for which it is instituted? |
29583 | Does you hear, honey?" |
29583 | Done you know dem policers are sneakin''aroun''ebberywhere, up de stairways as well as ebberywhere else? |
29583 | Egbert Crawford, Tombs lawyer, when he said to Aunt Synchy,"What more could I do, I should like to know?" |
29583 | Eh, Egbert?" |
29583 | Eh, Leslie, is that you? |
29583 | Eh, did n''t I?" |
29583 | Eh, honey?" |
29583 | Eh? |
29583 | Eh?" |
29583 | Eh?" |
29583 | Eh?" |
29583 | Emily,_ I have myself once married a man whom I loathed, and I know what it means!_""You, Aunt? |
29583 | Everything else in our surroundings has changed-- why not he? |
29583 | Fortunately, he did not recognize me-- perhaps, thanks to this hat--(it_ is_ an immense hat, is n''t it, Harding?) |
29583 | Gentlemen-- gentlemen-- how can I leave my poor grandfather unburied?" |
29583 | Getting up a bogus regiment, or something of that kind, is n''t he?" |
29583 | Good heavens, what are you saying, Josephine? |
29583 | Got any pigs and chickens? |
29583 | Grave or gay?" |
29583 | Had he_ more_ to do with the Police? |
29583 | Had there been, for once, no carriage in waiting at the livery? |
29583 | Had they met before, and if so, when and where? |
29583 | Had we no brave men, then, that only these apologies for men are exhibited? |
29583 | Halstead?" |
29583 | Halstead?" |
29583 | Has he gone off to make arrangements with the fortune- teller, I wonder, so as to play a trick upon us when we get there?" |
29583 | Hate me-- he?" |
29583 | Have I a right to her, now? |
29583 | Have I said enough?" |
29583 | Have n''t been long-- have I?" |
29583 | Have not the days following Manassas, and the Seven Days before Richmond, and Fredericksburgh, been hours in a national Gethsemane? |
29583 | He must be one of the three-- but which?" |
29583 | He was your lover, of course?" |
29583 | Her frightened companion made an effort to do so, and she went on:"You believe that I have been right in what I have said, do you not? |
29583 | His pen has not been idle, even in his happiness-- may not that have done_ his_ appointed work? |
29583 | His uniform was becoming dangerous, but how give it up? |
29583 | How can that be managed?" |
29583 | How do you like it? |
29583 | How do you like me?" |
29583 | How old_ are_ you?" |
29583 | How should she get out of the room? |
29583 | How to get it, even then? |
29583 | How was_ that_? |
29583 | How will that do, Aunt Synchy-- you old black anatomy? |
29583 | Hum-- where''s Dalton?" |
29583 | I am a Virginian, and no d-- d Yankee-- does anybody want to fight me?'' |
29583 | I got the chambermaid to enquire, and she found that a tall man came with a close carriage--""A tall man? |
29583 | I know there is no law here in my behalf; but as a_ man_ answering to a_ man_, what have you to say to this?" |
29583 | I said literature-- do you see that desk littered with papers, you ungrateful wretch?" |
29583 | I say, Mr. Leslie, you are not an unscrupulous destroyer of female innocence-- one of those dreadful fellows we read about in the books, are you?" |
29583 | I shall see you again?--you will not leave West Falls until-- until--""Until_ you are safe_? |
29583 | I wonder if there are any more regiments in the same condition?" |
29583 | I wonder if this place is haunted-- just a little?" |
29583 | If he was a coward, why would he have placed himself in a position which must by- and- by be one of danger? |
29583 | If there was such an emphasis, did Richard Crawford hear and recognize it? |
29583 | If this was possible then, why not now?" |
29583 | If we have gone so fast already, how fast may we go by- and- bye? |
29583 | If we put them_ en train_ for that pleasant consummation, shall it not be held sufficient? |
29583 | Is he close by us?" |
29583 | Is it Marion Hobart, or may he not have been married before?" |
29583 | Is it possible that I can ever be lifted out of this pit of despair?" |
29583 | Is the old man living still?" |
29583 | Is this to be a wholesale attack, then, on our national courage? |
29583 | It seems you_ have_ seen him; and why were my orders not obeyed?" |
29583 | Johnson? |
29583 | Josephine broke into the theme at once:"Who was he?" |
29583 | Leslie!--what have I said? |
29583 | Leslie?" |
29583 | Let me see-- you were not at Fair Oaks, were you?" |
29583 | Madame does not often receive more than one at once, but will do so for this distinguished company, if they wish?" |
29583 | May I ring for it, for an hour?" |
29583 | May I tax you so far?" |
29583 | Men faithful to the country and the old flag?" |
29583 | Modesty, where were you about this time? |
29583 | Never? |
29583 | Newport-- Purgatory-- Dumpling Rocks-- everywhere-- what fish we caught and what a jolly month we had-- didn''t we? |
29583 | Next year? |
29583 | No change, except age, could take away the charm from the rich chestnut auburn( is there not such a color?) |
29583 | No want of courage? |
29583 | No, I do not mean how he looks, for you know that I saw him for a moment; but what is his disposition? |
29583 | No? |
29583 | Not much, eh?" |
29583 | Not_ content_, but_ pleased_? |
29583 | Now if I had met_ Miss Crawford_ at Newport two years ago, who knows but affairs might have been different? |
29583 | Now you can have some idea what I have suffered to- night, when I saw the same pit opening for_ you_? |
29583 | Of course you are not going away until after dinner?" |
29583 | Oh, what can it all mean?" |
29583 | Once more, what was it? |
29583 | One man behind him, indeed, leaned over and said:"Lost your girl, eh?" |
29583 | One of the women spoke:"It will come to- morrow at midnight?" |
29583 | Perhaps you want a better look? |
29583 | Perhaps you would like to have_ that_, while I am at it?" |
29583 | Send the vixen packing, bag and baggage, with a boxed ear for a parting present, as she might have done with all propriety? |
29583 | Shall I renew it? |
29583 | Shall I walk with you? |
29583 | Shall he too look on what I have to reveal, or will you behold it alone?'' |
29583 | She had been absent from the house less than an hour-- what could have occurred to her, within that space of time, to change their relative positions? |
29583 | She is a little of an oddity, and a very_ pretty_ little oddity-- don''t you think so, Richard?" |
29583 | Should he permit_ her_ to be subjected to the same influences? |
29583 | Sly Joe!--why did she use the plural number,--"friends,"and"they"? |
29583 | Smith and Jones did_ not_"come on"at the instant, and what they caught from the two officers was the following:"Not_ one_ in a week?" |
29583 | Somebody must be making something out of it-- eh? |
29583 | Stop-- answer me one question-- has he gone?" |
29583 | Superintendent, you consider all this of no consequence?" |
29583 | Suppose I should lose my faith in fortune- telling before I ever had any experience in that direction-- wouldn''t it be dreadful?" |
29583 | Suppose brother and myself were going to Niagara and should ask you to go with us-- would you be pleased to go?" |
29583 | TWO FRIENDS-- A RENCONTRE BEFORE NIBLO''S-- THREE MEETINGS WITH A MAN OF MARK-- MOUNT VERNON AND THE INAUGURATION-- FRIEND OR FOE TO THE UNION? |
29583 | Tell me, quick, what is it that has happened?" |
29583 | Tell me-- is there a sad secret of your life connected with that song? |
29583 | Tell us what you saw?" |
29583 | That is all, grandfather, is it not? |
29583 | That is-- I mean to ask-- are you alone?" |
29583 | That look said so plainly:"_ Can_ you indeed help me? |
29583 | That you have been testing the skill of this seeress, or that you are about to do so?" |
29583 | The characters here introduced may live and move, but relieved against what? |
29583 | The instant after, she asked:"Is he here still? |
29583 | There is an old adage that some of us may have read in the primer( or was it the hymn- book?) |
29583 | They had accidentally touched, when drifting down the stream of life, and who should thenceforth have power to separate them? |
29583 | They never intended to go back; for were not the elections coming within a few months? |
29583 | They seem to have had neither scouts nor spies, and what else than failure_ could_ be the result?" |
29583 | This difference goes much farther even than the regulation( can such a thing be regulated?) |
29583 | Thompson? |
29583 | Tired?" |
29583 | To- morrow? |
29583 | Was ever a heroine so placed, even by English romancers or French dramatists? |
29583 | Was not here a corroboration of the theory of the Rue la Reynie Ogniard? |
29583 | Was not_ there_''courage''for you?" |
29583 | Was there ever a man( or woman) who did not look in through a half- closed curtain, precisely because there is no propriety whatever in doing so? |
29583 | Was there something ominous in this sudden disturbance of the Sabbath quiet? |
29583 | Was this on account of the near approach of the hour of her marriage? |
29583 | We were just going down to Taylor''s for a little lunch, when this awkward affair occurred: may we ask you to join us, gentlemen?" |
29583 | Well, do you happen to remember what I told you and Dick on that occasion?" |
29583 | Were their voices only for others, and did eye speak to eye, lip to lip, and heart to heart, when they were alone together? |
29583 | Were they haggling, as robbers have been known to do after successful operations in plundering, over the division of the spoils? |
29583 | Were they well founded? |
29583 | What business had you to look at him? |
29583 | What business is that of yours, woman? |
29583 | What can be his position, and what is his business here at the present moment, I wonder?" |
29583 | What did he find here, and from her? |
29583 | What did the outraged wife? |
29583 | What did you see, Tom?" |
29583 | What do you mean, sir?" |
29583 | What do you see there?--tell me frankly-- truth or deception?" |
29583 | What do you think of it?" |
29583 | What do you want now? |
29583 | What does it all mean?" |
29583 | What have we here? |
29583 | What have you seen? |
29583 | What if another meeting with that mysterious woman was at hand?--if the scenes of the Rue la Reynie Ogniard were about to be re- enacted? |
29583 | What is this?" |
29583 | What kept him so long? |
29583 | What made you fall?" |
29583 | What makes you think that she is_ gone_, as you call it?" |
29583 | What matter how many words they spoke, or what formed the burden of those words? |
29583 | What matter, thereafter, how many times they were pressed together, or how long that pressure lingered? |
29583 | What next? |
29583 | What shall I do? |
29583 | What shall I do? |
29583 | What shall I do?" |
29583 | What was it like, if you saw it over the Falls?" |
29583 | What was it you were saying, Miss Harris?" |
29583 | What was it, indeed, that Josephine Harris had dimly discovered? |
29583 | What was it? |
29583 | What was that something? |
29583 | What was the name?" |
29583 | What was there in his glance, that met the eye of Joe Harris, as he did so-- and gave her so plain a confirmation of her worst suspicions? |
29583 | What would be the end of this? |
29583 | What, then, was the fatal secret? |
29583 | What_ was_ the cause of this sudden emotion? |
29583 | When will that marriage vow be spoken? |
29583 | Where are you hit?" |
29583 | Where had he put it? |
29583 | Where? |
29583 | While his right wing fell back before an attack in force, his left might swing in towards Richmond and even take the city-- who could say? |
29583 | Who has not, I wonder?" |
29583 | Who is married or dead, or whom do you intend to kill, or what is it?" |
29583 | Who knows but they might behave the better for it, when out of your sight altogether? |
29583 | Who knows, except God in heaven? |
29583 | Who was the young man from whom your father took you away? |
29583 | Why did not she come along?" |
29583 | Why did you not let me know that you were going away?" |
29583 | Why does she answer my letters no more?" |
29583 | Why not now? |
29583 | Why will people, even those belonging to the most irreproachable classes of society, indulge in these little fibs upon occasion? |
29583 | Why, cousin Josey, where did all these stories come from, then?" |
29583 | Will you go with me, Joe? |
29583 | Will you go with us?" |
29583 | Will you help me?" |
29583 | Will you swear it?" |
29583 | Will you take another, to make an old man die happier?" |
29583 | Will you?" |
29583 | Will you?--That''s a good girl?" |
29583 | Wo n''t he get well too soon, now, and perhaps be up at West Falls before I am more than half ready for him?" |
29583 | Worcester is lost, and with it a kingdom: is he to be henceforth a crownless king and a hunted fugitive, or has the future its compensations? |
29583 | Would they come out and get away, after all, before the coming of the other vehicle? |
29583 | Would you have thought me so prudent?" |
29583 | Yet what could the poor girl do, except to wait the crash and be ready to act as peacemaker when the worst came to the worst? |
29583 | Yet who were the conquered eventually? |
29583 | You are defeated and a fugitive?" |
29583 | You are not glad to know that the man you once loved, and who yet loves you so dearly, is true and loyal? |
29583 | You are not going out anywhere to- morrow evening?" |
29583 | You is too smart an do n''t believe in de Obi?" |
29583 | You know that?" |
29583 | You look better and feel better within the last hour--""Eh, what?" |
29583 | You want to go? |
29583 | You wear a Colonel''s uniform-- where is your regiment, sir? |
29583 | You were here to see the eclipse, then?" |
29583 | You will wear mourning?" |
29583 | Your bandage-- is it all right? |
29583 | Your eyes are younger than mine-- how many of those rebels are there?" |
29583 | _ His_ forgiveness?" |
29583 | _ I_ have not, at least; have_ you_, Bell?" |
29583 | _ McDowell''s_ army?" |
29583 | _ What_ is her name?" |
29583 | a close carriage?" |
29583 | an you am poor? |
29583 | and was it not necessary to plough the political field with those very harmless swords in order to raise a fall crop of offices? |
29583 | and what is that?" |
29583 | and why, I should like to know?" |
29583 | asked others when that halt was longer protracted; and"Are we_ never_ going to get on?" |
29583 | asked the other? |
29583 | but the_ shape_ of that head!--oh father of that man, what right had you to visit your own sins upon a succeeding generation in such a manner? |
29583 | can that be possible?" |
29583 | cried the father with one son remaining of his six brave boys;"Have I yet more to give?" |
29583 | did I not hear cannon again? |
29583 | did you hear that?" |
29583 | do you know him?" |
29583 | do you think I can not penetrate that thin disguise-- that old man''s hair and those false wrinkles? |
29583 | echoed the widow whose last stay was to be taken from her; and"Have I yet more to give?" |
29583 | eh? |
29583 | eh?" |
29583 | gone where-- gone how?" |
29583 | oh, my God, what shall I do?" |
29583 | or does he keep watch of me and know my every movement, through the mysterious agency of the woman of the Rue la Reynie Ogniard?" |
29583 | or had Harding concluded to go to sleep on the road? |
29583 | poison?" |
29583 | queried Bell; and"Well?" |
29583 | said Harding,"is that really the emblem?" |
29583 | said Leslie in return,"what else can he be?" |
29583 | said Leslie, involuntarily pulling up his collar at the words"distinguished company,"while"Good gracious-- how did they know that_ we_ were coming?" |
29583 | said the Captain,"have n''t you made a mistake in your man? |
29583 | the young girl cried in alarm;"what has happened-- what have I said?--tell me: are you in sudden pain?" |
29583 | was there muttering thunder in the heavens?--thunder from a sky hitherto all bright blue? |
29583 | well, what do you make of him? |
29583 | what do you want?'' |
29583 | what has happened to my country?'' |
29583 | what is the matter?" |
29583 | what more can there be, whether I am to believe you or not?" |
29583 | what of her? |
29583 | what shall I do?" |
29583 | what''s the matter, Dick? |
29583 | who are you and what do you want here?" |
29583 | who should have circulated false reports?" |
29583 | who was addressing_ you_?" |
29583 | why do n''t you recognize him, Bell? |
29583 | why should there be anything of this involved? |
29583 | why what is the matter?" |
29583 | you are not afraid to trust me with him, are you?" |
29583 | you have n''t been in there, have you?" |
6963 | And must the world wait longer yet? |
6963 | And why not? 6963 And why?" |
6963 | And your father''s name? |
6963 | Are not those thoughts divine? |
6963 | Are you mad, you Malouins? 6963 Can you give a traveler a night''s lodging?" |
6963 | How does the water Come down at Lodore? |
6963 | If you were a servant, would you not be ashamed that a good master should catch you idle? 6963 O majestic friend,"he murmured, addressing the Great Stone Face,"is not this man worthy to resemble thee?" |
6963 | So, what signifies wishing and hoping for better times? 6963 The willow leaves with a soft cheek upon the lulling tide, Forgot the lifting winds"--What does this mean? |
6963 | What is this that ye do, my children? 6963 What is your name, my good woman?" |
6963 | What prophecy do you mean, dear mother? |
6963 | What shall I say, brave Admiral, say, If we sight naught but seas at dawn? |
6963 | Where''s Brom Dutcher? |
6963 | Where''s Van Bummel, the schoolmaster? |
6963 | Wherefore are you sad? |
6963 | Who are you, my strangely gifted guest? |
6963 | furious--What is a furious battle? |
6963 | waking ken--Who can tell us the meaning of our dreams? |
6963 | ***** EMMET''S VINDICATION MY LORDS: What have I to say why sentence of death should not be pronounced on me, according to law? |
6963 | A light brigade? |
6963 | And do you think to see me crouch and cower before a tamed and shattered senate? |
6963 | And had I seen Niagara? |
6963 | And hopest thou hence unscathed to go? |
6963 | And if the war must go on, why put off the declaration of independence? |
6963 | And must thy lyre, so long divine, Degenerate into hands like mine? |
6963 | And was there, indeed, such a resemblance as the crowd had testified? |
6963 | And what have we to oppose to them? |
6963 | And what if behind me to westward the wall of the woods stands high? |
6963 | And what is so rare as a day in June? |
6963 | And what was the Great Stone Face? |
6963 | And where are they? |
6963 | And"What mockery or malice have we here?" |
6963 | Another short but busy little fellow pulled him by the arm, and, rising on tiptoe, inquired in his ear,"Whether he was Federal or Democrat?" |
6963 | Are fleets and armies necessary to a work of love and reconciliation? |
6963 | Are there not other youths as fair as Gabriel? |
6963 | Are you bought by English gold? |
6963 | Are you cowards, fools, or rogues? |
6963 | Are you, then, your own master? |
6963 | Art thou so near unto me, and yet I can not behold thee? |
6963 | Art thou so near unto me, and yet thy voice does not reach me? |
6963 | At sunset what appealed more strongly to him? |
6963 | At what time was the costume described in the seventh stanza worn? |
6963 | Away went Gilpin-- who but he? |
6963 | Be we men, And suffer such dishonor?--Men, and wash not The stain away in blood? |
6963 | Brave Admiral, say but one good word: What shall we do when hope is gone?" |
6963 | Brave Admiral, speak, what shall I say?" |
6963 | Burn the fleet, and ruin France? |
6963 | But no such word Was ever spoke or heard: For up stood, for out stepped, for in struck, amid all these,-- A captain? |
6963 | But when shall we be stronger? |
6963 | But where, thought I, is the crew? |
6963 | But yet his horse was not a whit Inclined to tarry there; For why? |
6963 | By the"gray"? |
6963 | By whom was it written? |
6963 | Can gentlemen assign any other possible motive for it? |
6963 | Can you name anything besides,"tongue and pen"with which men may be said to play? |
6963 | Can you think of another title which might be given to it? |
6963 | Can you think of any bodies of water which might be called"enchanted gulfs"? |
6963 | Can your general appeal to them in the hour of extremest danger? |
6963 | Colts grew horses, beards turned gray, Deacon and deaconess dropped away, Children and grandchildren-- where were they? |
6963 | Cromwell, I charge thee, fling away ambition: By that sin fell the angels: how can man, then, The image of his Maker, hope to win by''t? |
6963 | Did you ever see one? |
6963 | Do we mean to submit, and consent that we shall be ground to powder, and our country and its rights trodden down in the dust? |
6963 | Do you hear anything? |
6963 | Do you imagine, then, that it is the land tax which raises your revenue? |
6963 | Do you know I can scarcely look over this little cliff without getting giddy?" |
6963 | Do you like it? |
6963 | Do you like the selection? |
6963 | Do you like this poem? |
6963 | Do you like this poem? |
6963 | Do you see any change in the water?" |
6963 | Do you think Holmes expects his readers to believe this story? |
6963 | Does birth or station in life determine the man? |
6963 | Does nobody know poor Rip Van Winkle?" |
6963 | Does the poet say a man is"king of men"because he is poor? |
6963 | Does the rhythm in this poem sustain this definition? |
6963 | Does this poem call your attention chiefly to the horse, the rider, or the message? |
6963 | Drunk? |
6963 | Explain, what Whittier means by saying the family looked on nothing they could call their own after the heavy snow? |
6963 | Fear ye foes who kill for hire? |
6963 | For instance, in the lines"Not a drum was heard, not a funeral note As his corse to the rampart we hurried,"_ why_ do we read slowly? |
6963 | From this poem what can you tell of the home of the skylark? |
6963 | From this poem, in what would you say Poe''s poetry excels? |
6963 | From this story what do you think of Poe''s powers of imagination and description? |
6963 | Had Irving greater opportunity for observing"the monsters of the deep"than is afforded people crossing the ocean at the present day? |
6963 | Has Great Britain any enemy, in this quarter of the world, to call for all this accumulation of navies and armies? |
6963 | Have I not conquered your armies, fired your towns, and dragged your generals at my chariot wheels, since first my youthful arms could wield a spear? |
6963 | Have we anything new to offer upon the subject? |
6963 | Have we shown ourselves so unwilling to be reconciled that force must be called in to win back our love? |
6963 | Have ye brave sons? |
6963 | Have ye fair daughters? |
6963 | Have you ever seen a ship launched? |
6963 | Have you ever seen one? |
6963 | Have you so soon forgotten all lessons of love and forgiveness? |
6963 | He counted them at break of day-- And when the sun set, where were they? |
6963 | Hear ye yon lion roaring in his den? |
6963 | Hope ye mercy still? |
6963 | How could he mark thee for the silent tomb, My proud boy, Absalom? |
6963 | How could it be interpreted as showing spite against"the boys"? |
6963 | How could my fathers sell that which the Great Spirit sent me into the world to live upon? |
6963 | How did Hawthorne come to know that Niagara is a wonder of the world? |
6963 | How did he avenge his son? |
6963 | How did he make his escape? |
6963 | How did the leper explain his refusal of the alms tossed him? |
6963 | How did the poet defend"gray temples at twenty"? |
6963 | How did the sight of the leper affect the young knight when he"flashed forth"from his castle? |
6963 | How do you know? |
6963 | How do you think Holmes felt toward the laughing"boy"? |
6963 | How do you think Yussouf had won his title of"The Good"? |
6963 | How does Holmes account for the fact"that a chaise breaks down, but does n''t wear out"? |
6963 | How does he resemble"the last leaf on the tree"? |
6963 | How does it affect the thought? |
6963 | How does the hero account for his apparent age? |
6963 | How does the poem impress you? |
6963 | How does the poet account for his lack of fear of the marshes now? |
6963 | How does the repetition of"chatter"influence the melody of the first line in the sixth stanza? |
6963 | How does the smith"scourge"the anvil? |
6963 | How does the soul build mansions? |
6963 | How does the"Encyclopedia Britannica"account for the vortex? |
6963 | How does this description compare with his description of the"monsters of the deep"? |
6963 | How is a ship launched? |
6963 | How long did the king''s son look at the discarded sword before using it? |
6963 | How long was the family"snow- bound"? |
6963 | How many days do you think Irving was on the ocean? |
6963 | How many messengers were there? |
6963 | How much of this poem is fun? |
6963 | How much of this story was a dream? |
6963 | How shall we ever be able to pay them? |
6963 | How strong was this love? |
6963 | I ask, sir, what means this martial array, if its purpose be not to force us to submission? |
6963 | If I should leave the land of my fathers, whither shall I fly? |
6963 | If Shelley had never experienced sadness could he have written this beautiful poem of gladness? |
6963 | If the battle represents life, and the craven and the king''s son are types of the people in the world, what do you think the swords represent? |
6963 | If we can preserve peace, who shall set bounds to our prosperity, or to our success? |
6963 | If we had no dark days do you think we could appreciate the bright days? |
6963 | If we had no sadness could we appreciate the songs of gladness? |
6963 | If we postpone independence, do we mean to carry on or to give up the war? |
6963 | If we think only of being happy shall we be very helpful to others? |
6963 | In line 96 to end, what does Shelley say would be the result if a poet could feel such joy as the little bird seems to feel? |
6963 | In music the teacher sometimes calls for expressions of preference among songs:"What song shall we sing, children?" |
6963 | In the eighth? |
6963 | In the first stanza why"pathless woods"and"lonely shore"? |
6963 | In the following what is omitted? |
6963 | In the fourth stanza what contrast does Byron make? |
6963 | In the marsh region what is"lord of the land"? |
6963 | In the midst of his bewilderment, the man in the cocked hat demanded who he was, and what was his name? |
6963 | In the ninth? |
6963 | In the poem what tells you the nest is near the ground? |
6963 | In the seventh stanza what two words are contrasted? |
6963 | In this region when does the flood tide come? |
6963 | In what directions must a dome be extended to make it"more vast"? |
6963 | In what lines do the words and the rhythm suggest the sound of the brook? |
6963 | In what part of the castle does this conversation take place? |
6963 | In what respects does the room described differ from one in your home? |
6963 | In what way is the hero''s memory perpetuated? |
6963 | In what way would a"yawning seam"tempt the sea? |
6963 | In which lines is this suggestion most marked? |
6963 | In which three words rhyme? |
6963 | Into what parts is the poem divided? |
6963 | Into what two parts does the poem divide? |
6963 | Is Sparta dead? |
6963 | Is it a foolish dream, an idle and vague superstition? |
6963 | Is it love the lying''s for? |
6963 | Is it not the same virtue which does everything for us here in England? |
6963 | Is it that insidious smile with which our petition has been lately received? |
6963 | Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
6963 | Is not he the very picture of your Old Man of the Mountain?" |
6963 | Is the old Grecian spirit frozen in your veins, that you do crouch and cower like base- born slaves beneath your master''s lash? |
6963 | Is the poet true to nature in what he says of them? |
6963 | Is this Marmion''s personal pride or pride of country( patriotism)? |
6963 | Is this the fruit of my toils, of my vigils and prayers and privations? |
6963 | Is this the part of wise men, engaged in a great and arduous struggle for liberty? |
6963 | Is''t possible? |
6963 | Line 12--What two words require emphasis? |
6963 | Line 13--With what is"watery plain"contrasted? |
6963 | Line 14--With what is"thy"contrasted? |
6963 | Line 2--What is meant by"old in story"? |
6963 | Line 22--What word requires emphasis? |
6963 | Line 3--Why does the poet use"shakes"? |
6963 | Line 46--What was the result? |
6963 | Line l3--To what does"they"relate? |
6963 | Line l5--Why does the poet use"roll"? |
6963 | Must we but weep o''er days more blest? |
6963 | Of its nature? |
6963 | Of two such lessons, why forget The nobler and the manlier one? |
6963 | Of what are cypress trees a symbol? |
6963 | Of what did their library consist? |
6963 | Of what does Holmes say their new garlands were made? |
6963 | Of what does the first stanza treat? |
6963 | Of what is the poet thinking when he speaks of the"restless sands''incessant fall"? |
6963 | Of what is the raven a symbol? |
6963 | Of whom did the circle gathered around the fire consist? |
6963 | Of whom is Holmes thinking when he says"Let them smile"? |
6963 | Of whom is Sir Launfal a type? |
6963 | Oh, looking from some heavenly hill, Or from the shade of saintly palms, Or silver reach of river calms, Do those large eyes behold me still? |
6963 | Oh, what is abroad in the marsh and the terminal sea? |
6963 | On what principle did he expect to do this? |
6963 | Or has an angel passed, and revealed the truth to my spirit?" |
6963 | Or that it is the mutiny bill which inspires it with bravery and discipline? |
6963 | Over whom did the Turk dream he gained a victory? |
6963 | Part Second? |
6963 | Reach the mooring? |
6963 | Rip bethought himself a moment, and inquired,"Where''s Nicholas Vedder?" |
6963 | Rip had but one question more to ask; and he put it with a faltering voice:--"Where''s your mother?" |
6963 | Safe in thy immortality, What change can reach the wealth I hold? |
6963 | Seek''st thou the plashy brink Of weedy lake, or marge of river wide, Or where the rocking billows rise and sink On the chafed ocean- side? |
6963 | Shall I go to the south, and dwell among the graves of the Pequots? |
6963 | Shall we always be youthful, and laughing, and gay, Till the last dear companion drops smiling away? |
6963 | Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction? |
6963 | Shall we not then be glad, and rejoice in the joy of our children?" |
6963 | Shall we resort to entreaty and humble supplication? |
6963 | Shall we try argument? |
6963 | So daring in love, and so dauntless in war, Have ye e''er heard of gallant like young Lochinvar? |
6963 | So in reading,"What selection shall we read?" |
6963 | Tears came into her eyes, and she said, with a tremulous accent,"Gone? |
6963 | Tell me, are they not as deserving of your confidence and reward as those of which any patrician of them all can boast? |
6963 | That fellow''s the"Speaker,"--the one on the right;"Mr. Mayor,"my young one, how are you tonight? |
6963 | That it is the annual vote in the committee of supply which gives you your army? |
6963 | The calender, amazed to see His neighbor in such trim, Laid down his pipe, flew to the gate, And thus accosted him:"What news? |
6963 | The orator bustled up to him, and, drawing him partly aside, inquired"on which side he voted?" |
6963 | The question for us is, what determines the key? |
6963 | The second stanza? |
6963 | The second? |
6963 | The second? |
6963 | The seventh stanza? |
6963 | The sixth stanza describes the Scottish martial music-- What purpose does this stanza serve in the poem? |
6963 | The sixth? |
6963 | The third stanza relates to the sun; what comparisons are made? |
6963 | Then the pilots of the place put out brisk and leapt on board;"Why, what hope or chance have ships like these to pass?" |
6963 | This is the forest primeval; but where are the hearts that beneath it Leaped like the roe, when he hears in the woodland the voice of the huntsman? |
6963 | This is the house of the Prince of Peace, and would you profane it Thus with violent deeds and hearts overflowing with hatred? |
6963 | Thy shores are empires changed in all save thee-- Assyria, Greece, Rome, Carthage, what are they? |
6963 | To die, to sleep; To sleep? |
6963 | To what besides the building of a chaise might this principle be applied? |
6963 | To what does the poet compare the breaking down of the chaise? |
6963 | To what does the poet compare the extent of the marshes of Glynn? |
6963 | To what does the stranger compare himself? |
6963 | To what does"tattered ensign"refer? |
6963 | To what mythological characters does he refer when he speaks of the"threads the fatal sisters spun"? |
6963 | To what tribes does the stranger refer? |
6963 | To whom beside the king does he say he is laureate? |
6963 | To whom is the poet speaking? |
6963 | Upon the clouds? |
6963 | Upon the sunshine? |
6963 | Upon whom would a monarch confer the privilege of wearing his signet ring? |
6963 | Waking or asleep Thou of death must deem Things more true and deep Than we mortals dream-- Or how could thy notes flow in such a crystal stream? |
6963 | Was his heroism greater because he was alone? |
6963 | Was it snowing I spoke of? |
6963 | Was there a man dismay''d? |
6963 | Was this done for the sake of the rhythm, or the thought, or for both? |
6963 | Welcome home again, old neighbor-- Why, where have you been these twenty long years?" |
6963 | Well pleased,( for when did farmer boy Count such a summons less than joy?) |
6963 | Were my long desires fulfilled? |
6963 | What are coral reefs? |
6963 | What are the"island barges"? |
6963 | What are they more commonly called? |
6963 | What are"the arts of war and peace"? |
6963 | What can you say about this description? |
6963 | What can you say of the fire- bells of today? |
6963 | What can you tell of the author? |
6963 | What can you tell of the coastal plain in Georgia? |
6963 | What catalogue do you think Holmes meant? |
6963 | What chance can mar the pearl and gold Thy love hath left in trust with me? |
6963 | What change has taken place in the method of ocean travel since he made this voyage? |
6963 | What characteristics had Evangeline? |
6963 | What characteristics of the marshes does the poet point out? |
6963 | What claim does Marmion make for one"who does England''s message"? |
6963 | What comparison does the Master use in speaking of the model? |
6963 | What comparison is found in the first stanza? |
6963 | What comparison is found in the seventh stanza? |
6963 | What comparisons are found in lines fifty to fifty- five? |
6963 | What comparisons are found in the fourth stanza? |
6963 | What country is the home of these poets? |
6963 | What did he bring? |
6963 | What did the benign lips seem to say? |
6963 | What do stanzas three and four tell? |
6963 | What do the stars shining through the cypress trees symbolize? |
6963 | What do these lines mean? |
6963 | What do we call one"who do England''s message"at Washington? |
6963 | What do we call such expressions as"Night''s silvery veil"? |
6963 | What do we mean by"figure of speech?" |
6963 | What do you know about Oliver Wendell Holmes from this poem? |
6963 | What do you know of the habits of people who live in tents? |
6963 | What do you learn from Jonas Ramus''s description of the whirlpool? |
6963 | What do you learn from this poem? |
6963 | What do you learn of Yussouf''s character from the second and third stanzas? |
6963 | What do you suppose Yussouf''s"one black thought"had been? |
6963 | What do you think he means by this? |
6963 | What do you think is the great lesson of this poem? |
6963 | What do you think of Irving''s powers of description? |
6963 | What do you think of his reasoning? |
6963 | What do you think the garlands which the poet imagines his classmates"have shed"represent? |
6963 | What do you think the parson found, When he got up and stared around? |
6963 | What do"matin"and"gloaming"signify? |
6963 | What does Douglas forget when he threatens Marmion? |
6963 | What does Hawthorne say is necessary in order to appreciate nature? |
6963 | What does Irving say is a"glorious monument of human invention"? |
6963 | What does Longfellow say that one thought can do? |
6963 | What does Longfellow say the flag of the ship will be to the wanderer? |
6963 | What does Whittier tell us about the brook? |
6963 | What does the Great Stone Face symbolize? |
6963 | What does the bending of the bow signify? |
6963 | What does the building of the ship symbolize? |
6963 | What does the cold grim castle represent? |
6963 | What does the fifth stanza tell you? |
6963 | What does the fifth stanza tell? |
6963 | What does the first stanza tell? |
6963 | What does the first stanza tell? |
6963 | What does the first stanza tell? |
6963 | What does the poet learn from the waterfowl? |
6963 | What does the poet mean by the"outgrown shell"of the soul? |
6963 | What does the refrain add to this poem? |
6963 | What does the second stanza mean to you? |
6963 | What does the second stanza tell you? |
6963 | What does the skylark mean to Shelley? |
6963 | What does the third stanza tell you? |
6963 | What does the word nautilus mean? |
6963 | What does the word"dewy"suggest as to the habits of the bird? |
6963 | What does this add to the poem? |
6963 | What does this fact suggest to you? |
6963 | What does this sketch tell you of Irving''s own character? |
6963 | What does"snow- bound"mean? |
6963 | What effect did the dream or vision have upon Sir Launfal? |
6963 | What effect did the moonlight have upon the night? |
6963 | What effect does the poet fancy this has upon the anvil? |
6963 | What effect on the poet had the"dusks of the oak"at noon? |
6963 | What effect on the reader did Hawthorne seek in this story? |
6963 | What emotions made the stranger''s face"grand"? |
6963 | What fancy does the poet carry out in the next stanza? |
6963 | What feelings did Niagara produce in Hawthorne? |
6963 | What fields or waves or mountains? |
6963 | What finally became her sole hope and wish? |
6963 | What flowers does the poet mean in the eighth line? |
6963 | What forfeit did Hervé Riel propose in case he failed to pilot the ships safely in? |
6963 | What gives it its musical quality? |
6963 | What great men can you mention who are pictured in this dress? |
6963 | What had a life of sorrow taught Evangeline? |
6963 | What had he done to you? |
6963 | What had he gained? |
6963 | What had he lost while on his search? |
6963 | What has done away with the necessity for such service? |
6963 | What has the reading of this poem done for you? |
6963 | What impression of Lochinvar do the opening stanzas give you? |
6963 | What impressions of Sir John Moore do you get from reading this poem? |
6963 | What influence had this Face upon the valley? |
6963 | What influences prompted this? |
6963 | What is Whittier''s idea of a shipbuilder''s work? |
6963 | What is a brigade? |
6963 | What is a cataract? |
6963 | What is a"century- circled oak"? |
6963 | What is added to the picture of the last leaf by the words"Is the spring"? |
6963 | What is added to the poem by alliteration? |
6963 | What is his full name? |
6963 | What is it that gentlemen wish? |
6963 | What is it to be"laureate"? |
6963 | What is meant by lines 15 and 16? |
6963 | What is meant by"charging an army"? |
6963 | What is night''s silvery veil? |
6963 | What is the effect on one''s feelings when he"considers that the vapor and the foam are as everlasting as the rocks which produce them"? |
6963 | What is the fitness in selecting a village near the mountains? |
6963 | What is the lesson of the poem? |
6963 | What is the meaning of the last nine lines? |
6963 | What is the meaning of the reference to"Pisa''s leaning miracle"? |
6963 | What is the meaning of"Night''s Plutonian shore"? |
6963 | What is the narrator''s feeling for Sir John Moore? |
6963 | What is the peculiarity of the eighth line of the first stanza? |
6963 | What is the purpose of the fifth stanza? |
6963 | What is the significance of the last stanza? |
6963 | What is the theme of this poem? |
6963 | What is the"painted shell"? |
6963 | What is the"red streamer that heralds the day"? |
6963 | What is"The meteor of the ocean air"? |
6963 | What kind of beings-- were"sea- maids"supposed to be? |
6963 | What kind of chaise did the Deacon decide to build? |
6963 | What kind of sword had the craven? |
6963 | What kind of sword had the king''s son? |
6963 | What kinds of bells does the poet seek to reproduce the sound of? |
6963 | What kinds of people are described? |
6963 | What kinds of scenery are described? |
6963 | What led her to devote herself to the service of others? |
6963 | What lesson of heroism does this poem give you? |
6963 | What line gives the key- note to Hervé Riel''s character? |
6963 | What line tells you how vain and hopeless was this charge? |
6963 | What line tells you? |
6963 | What lines do you think best show the poet''s appreciation of beauty in nature? |
6963 | What lines give you the most beautiful picture? |
6963 | What lines tell you of his humility? |
6963 | What lines tell you that obedience is the first duty of the soldier? |
6963 | What lines tell you the time of day? |
6963 | What lines tell you? |
6963 | What love of thine own kind? |
6963 | What makes a man a king among his fellowmen? |
6963 | What makes lines 13 and 14 so musical? |
6963 | What makes the description of the old man so vivid? |
6963 | What makes you think so? |
6963 | What matter how the night behaved? |
6963 | What matter how the north- wind raved? |
6963 | What members of the family are not described in the poem? |
6963 | What message did Paul Revere bear? |
6963 | What message did the voice of the thunder convey to Evangeline? |
6963 | What messenger put the household again in touch with the outside world? |
6963 | What might be the"trophies of a conqueror"? |
6963 | What might the"new garlands"represent? |
6963 | What mythological characters are meant by"the heathen Nine"? |
6963 | What name do we give to such a speech? |
6963 | What nation attacked the Russians? |
6963 | What nation is meant by the Franks? |
6963 | What objects are the fountains Of thy happy strain? |
6963 | What of that? |
6963 | What other authors have you read that have similar powers? |
6963 | What other poem have you read which describes a brook in Winter? |
6963 | What other poem have you read which describes the launching of a ship? |
6963 | What other"immortal names"do you know? |
6963 | What part of Marmion''s claim does Douglas recognize? |
6963 | What part of the description of the Great Stone Face do you like the best? |
6963 | What picture does the poem give you of the home of Evangeline? |
6963 | What picture does the prelude to Part Second give you? |
6963 | What picture does the sixth stanza give you? |
6963 | What picture have you of Napoleon from reading this poem? |
6963 | What pictures do the following words make to you:"wilderness,""moor,""lea,""fell,""heather- bloom"? |
6963 | What pictures do you find in the selection? |
6963 | What pictures do you get from the fifth stanza? |
6963 | What purpose do the introductory lines to Part First serve? |
6963 | What purpose do you think Hawthorne had in creating these characters? |
6963 | What purpose does the fourth stanza serve? |
6963 | What purpose does the prelude to each part serve? |
6963 | What reason is given for the death of Annabel Lee? |
6963 | What relation has Niagara to the geography of the country, its animal and vegetable life, its trade and industry? |
6963 | What reward did he claim? |
6963 | What shapes of sky or plain? |
6963 | What ships were seeking harbor? |
6963 | What song did the"nice youngster"write? |
6963 | What tells you that the linen- draper lived over his shop? |
6963 | What tells you the praise given Roland? |
6963 | What tells you this? |
6963 | What tells you? |
6963 | What tells you? |
6963 | What tempted him into the whirlpool? |
6963 | What terms shall we find, which have not been already exhausted? |
6963 | What thou art we know not; What is most like thee? |
6963 | What thought must have been in the mind of those who gave the chambered nautilus this name? |
6963 | What three observations did the hero make? |
6963 | What time of day is indicated in the first and second stanzas? |
6963 | What time of life is meant by the"gold"? |
6963 | What two comparisons are found in the first stanza? |
6963 | What two things have you found out? |
6963 | What virtues would men living in this way most admire? |
6963 | What was he that you followed with your sword? |
6963 | What was his purpose in writing it? |
6963 | What was probably the nature of the"good news"carried by the messengers? |
6963 | What was the conduct of the South during the Revolution? |
6963 | What was the mission of the boy who rode alone? |
6963 | What was the occasion of the ride? |
6963 | What was the office of the Crier? |
6963 | What was the significance in early times of the garland or wreath upon the head? |
6963 | What was the significance of Sevastopol? |
6963 | What was the theory of Kircher? |
6963 | What was the"Almanac''s cheat"? |
6963 | What was to be done? |
6963 | What were his"lamp''s supernal powers"? |
6963 | What were the characteristics of Father Leblanc? |
6963 | What were the characteristics of the ideal? |
6963 | What were the conditions under which Sir Launfal set out in search of the Holy Grail? |
6963 | What wonder if Sir Launfal now Remembered the keeping of his vow? |
6963 | What word is omitted from the line of the song quoted by Holmes? |
6963 | What word shows that he was there of his own choice? |
6963 | What word used figuratively tells you of the rider''s speed? |
6963 | What words name them? |
6963 | What words seem to be especially appropriate? |
6963 | What words tell you that he was greatly needed in the thick of the conflict? |
6963 | What words tell you the source of Ernest''s power? |
6963 | What would they have? |
6963 | What would you advise us to do?" |
6963 | What''s the mercy despots feel? |
6963 | What, are you hurt, lieutenant? |
6963 | What, silent still? |
6963 | What? |
6963 | What? |
6963 | When does Yussouf show himself most noble? |
6963 | When shall these eyes behold, these arms be folded about thee?" |
6963 | Where are Douglas''s soldiery and servants? |
6963 | Where are Marmion''s followers during this time? |
6963 | Where are they found? |
6963 | Where breathes the foe but falls before us, With Freedom''s soil beneath our feet, And Freedom''s banner streaming o''er us? |
6963 | Where do you think the scene of this poem was laid? |
6963 | Where does Holmes say should be the grave of Old Ironsides? |
6963 | Where in the poem does Southey first use lines in which two words rhyme? |
6963 | Where is Koordistan? |
6963 | Where is the scene of the poem laid? |
6963 | Where on thy dewy wing, Where art thou journeying? |
6963 | Where was the craven when he decided his sword was useless? |
6963 | Where,--and may the gods bear witness,--where, but in the spirit of man, is nobility lodged? |
6963 | Which bells has he described best? |
6963 | Which description in this selection do you like best? |
6963 | Which do you like best? |
6963 | Which do you like best? |
6963 | Which is most pathetic? |
6963 | Which is the greater memorial, a monument of stone or bronze, or such a poem as this? |
6963 | Which is the most beautiful stanza? |
6963 | Which lines are especially musical and pleasing? |
6963 | Which lines are most pleasing? |
6963 | Which lines are the most beautiful? |
6963 | Which lines best describe the Acadians? |
6963 | Which lines do this most successfully? |
6963 | Which lines do you like best? |
6963 | Which lines do you like best? |
6963 | Which lines do you think are most beautiful? |
6963 | Which lines give you the best picture of Acadie? |
6963 | Which lines in Longfellow''s description of the contract and the evening scene at the farmer''s are the most beautiful? |
6963 | Which lines or stanzas are most spirited? |
6963 | Which lines show this? |
6963 | Which lines tell you? |
6963 | Which man appears to greater advantage in this scene? |
6963 | Which of the above descriptions impressed you most? |
6963 | Which of these two thoughts do you suppose first occurred to the poet? |
6963 | Which one of the group can you see most plainly? |
6963 | Which picture in the poem do you like best? |
6963 | Which poem do you like better? |
6963 | Which stanza do you like best? |
6963 | Which stanza do you like best? |
6963 | Which stanza do you like best? |
6963 | Which stanza do you like best? |
6963 | Which stanza do you like best? |
6963 | Which stanza do you like best? |
6963 | Which stanza do you like best? |
6963 | Which stanza is most amusing? |
6963 | Which stanza is most musical and pleasing? |
6963 | Which stanza or stanzas do you like best? |
6963 | Who can blame them? |
6963 | Who can contemplate a state of the world like this, and not feel his heart exult at the prospect? |
6963 | Who does Holmes tell us have given expression to this fancy? |
6963 | Who had"blundered"? |
6963 | Who is Allah? |
6963 | Who says we are more? |
6963 | Who tells the story of the poem? |
6963 | Who was Aladdin? |
6963 | Who was Gabriel? |
6963 | Who was Midas? |
6963 | Who was the king to whom Southey was poet- laureate? |
6963 | Who was"laureate"? |
6963 | Who were John Hancock and Samuel Adams? |
6963 | Who were the Titans? |
6963 | Who were the"porpoises"and who the"sharks"? |
6963 | Who were"the boys"? |
6963 | Who wrote it? |
6963 | Who, that is a sincere friend to it, can look with indifference upon attempts to shake the foundation of the fabric? |
6963 | Whom should you call the hero of this tale? |
6963 | Whose heart hath ne''er within him burned, As home his footsteps he hath turned From wandering on a foreign strand? |
6963 | Why choose a village at all? |
6963 | Why did Burns use the word"coward- slave"? |
6963 | Why did Lowell choose a leper to confront Sir Launfal? |
6963 | Why did not Ernest think so? |
6963 | Why did people think John Gilpin rode for a wager? |
6963 | Why did so many people think that each of these men was the image of the Great Stone Face? |
6963 | Why did the angels"covet"and"envy"the lovers? |
6963 | Why did the author realize so clearly the extent of the journey he had undertaken? |
6963 | Why do you think so? |
6963 | Why do you think so? |
6963 | Why does not the lover feel separated from Annabel Lee? |
6963 | Why does the poet call the bust of Pallas"pallid"? |
6963 | Why does the poet repeat"I am drawn"? |
6963 | Why does the poet use all these rhymes? |
6963 | Why does the poet use"splendor"instead of"sun- set,"and"summits"instead of"mountains"? |
6963 | Why does this poem endure? |
6963 | Why is the lark called an emblem of happiness? |
6963 | Why is this poem called"Opportunity"? |
6963 | Why is"downy"used to describe"cloud"? |
6963 | Why lingers on these dusty rocks The young bride of the sea? |
6963 | Why stand we here idle? |
6963 | Why was Hawthorne''s first impression of Niagara a disappointment? |
6963 | Why"lulling tide"? |
6963 | Why, but you are now well enough: how came you thus recovered? |
6963 | Why, then, pure seeker of the good and true, shouldst thou hope to find me, in yonder image of the divine?" |
6963 | Why, then, should we defer the declaration? |
6963 | Why? |
6963 | Why? |
6963 | Why? |
6963 | Why? |
6963 | Why? |
6963 | Why? |
6963 | Why? |
6963 | Why? |
6963 | Why? |
6963 | Why? |
6963 | Why? |
6963 | Why? |
6963 | Why? |
6963 | Why? |
6963 | Why? |
6963 | Why? |
6963 | Why? |
6963 | Why? |
6963 | Why? |
6963 | Why? |
6963 | Why? |
6963 | Why? |
6963 | Why? |
6963 | Why? |
6963 | Will dead ancestors or motionless statues fight battles? |
6963 | Will it be the next week, or the next year? |
6963 | Will it be when we are totally disarmed, and when a British guard shall be stationed in every house? |
6963 | Will not these heavy taxes quite ruin the country? |
6963 | Will ye give it up to slaves? |
6963 | Will ye look for greener graves? |
6963 | Will ye to your_ homes_ retire? |
6963 | With what does Part First deal? |
6963 | With what line does Lowell begin the account of Sir Launfal''s vision? |
6963 | Yes, we''re boys,--always playing with tongue or with pen,-- And I sometimes have asked,--Shall we ever be men? |
6963 | Yet am I not of those who imagine some evil intention Brings them here, for we are at peace; and why then molest us?" |
6963 | You have the Pyrrhic dance as yet-- Where is the Pyrrhic phalanx gone? |
6963 | You have the letters Cadmus gave-- Think you he meant them for a slave? |
6963 | a lieutenant? |
6963 | a mate,--first, second, third? |
6963 | and discourse fustian with one''s own shadow? |
6963 | and silent all? |
6963 | and speak parrot? |
6963 | and squabble? |
6963 | and where art thou My country? |
6963 | is Gabriel gone?" |
6963 | my fancie, whither wilt thou go? |
6963 | others Who have hearts as tender and true, and spirits as loyal? |
6963 | remembering thee, Am I not richer than of old? |
6963 | shouted the hasty and somewhat irascible blacksmith;"Must we in all things look for the how, and the why, and the wherefore? |
6963 | swagger? |
6963 | swear? |
6963 | thought Rip--"what excuse shall I make to Dame Van Winkle?" |
6963 | what ignorance of pain? |
6963 | what madness has seized you? |
6963 | what news? |
6963 | why dream and wait for him longer? |
6963 | your tidings tell; Tell me you must and shall; Say why bareheaded you are come, Or why you come at all?" |
12423 | A plurality? |
12423 | Against it? |
12423 | And what should be done with the freedmen? |
12423 | Are the states"sovereign states"? |
12423 | Are they still self- evident? |
12423 | At Boston? |
12423 | At the close of January, 1777, what places were held by the British? |
12423 | But the real question was, should slaves who had no vote be counted as a part of the population? |
12423 | But what should be done with California and with New Mexico? |
12423 | But which of them should be President? |
12423 | By Hamilton? |
12423 | By whom? |
12423 | CHAPTER 26 §§ 276, 277.--_a._ What is meant by the Era of Good Feeling? |
12423 | CHAPTER 33 THE COMPROMISE OF 1850[ Sidenote: Should Oregon and Mexican cessions be free soil?] |
12423 | Can the taxing power and the legislative power be separated? |
12423 | Chase? |
12423 | Compromise as to Apportionment.--Should the members of the House of Representatives be distributed among the states according to population? |
12423 | Could it not be set aside on the ground that there was no longer a French monarchy? |
12423 | Could the Southerners have done otherwise than fire on the flag? |
12423 | Could the Spanish war have been avoided? |
12423 | Could these states have been neutral? |
12423 | Could they have been avoided? |
12423 | Did Lee and other officers who resigned necessarily believe in the right of secession? |
12423 | Did Mexico begin the war? |
12423 | Did a white man in the North and in the South have proportionally the same representation in the House? |
12423 | Did the British government act wisely? |
12423 | Did the"spoils system"originate with Jackson? |
12423 | Do the same objections hold against the present Stamp tax? |
12423 | Do the same reasons exist to- day? |
12423 | Do we still keep to the Monroe Doctrine in all respects? |
12423 | Do you consider such a method wise or not? |
12423 | Do you consider such a system better or worse than the Spoils System? |
12423 | Do you think his action justifiable? |
12423 | Do you think that a President should"reign"? |
12423 | Do you think that laws made by a legislature so elected were binding? |
12423 | Do you think that railroads should be carried on by the state or by individuals? |
12423 | Do you think that roads should be built at national expense? |
12423 | Exactly what was the condition as to Cuba? |
12423 | Explain carefully the plan of the campaign to Corinth Why was Corinth important? |
12423 | For what did Garrison contend, and how did he make his views known? |
12423 | For whom would you have voted had you had the right to vote in 1824? |
12423 | From what parts of the country did the volunteers come? |
12423 | Had sea power been in Southern hands, could the Union have been saved? |
12423 | Had slavery disappeared in the North because people thought that it was wrong? |
12423 | Had you lived in 1840, for whom would you have voted? |
12423 | How and why had the center of population changed since 1791? |
12423 | How are Williams''s ideas as to religious freedom regarded now? |
12423 | How are manufactures protected? |
12423 | How could the Articles of Confederation be amended? |
12423 | How did Hamilton set to work to defeat Adams? |
12423 | How did Hobson try to prevent the escape of the Spanish fleet? |
12423 | How did Jackson oppose the South Carolinians? |
12423 | How did Jackson try to ruin the United States Bank? |
12423 | How did Jackson try to stop speculation? |
12423 | How did Jefferson''s inauguration illustrate his political ideas? |
12423 | How did Lee secure the removal of McClellan''s army from the James? |
12423 | How did Lee try to compel the withdrawal of Grant? |
12423 | How did Parliament punish the colonists of Massachusetts and Boston? |
12423 | How did Sherman''s occupation of Raleigh affect Lee? |
12423 | How did South Carolina oppose the Act of 1832? |
12423 | How did Spain get the Floridas? |
12423 | How did Townshend try to raise money? |
12423 | How did Whitney''s cotton gin change these conditions? |
12423 | How did all these affairs affect the relations between the United States and Great Britain? |
12423 | How did he carry it out? |
12423 | How did it fit him for this work? |
12423 | How did its formation make the election of Polk possible? |
12423 | How did some states treat other states? |
12423 | How did the British army get to Yorktown? |
12423 | How did the Carolina proprietors treat their colonists? |
12423 | How did the Compromise postpone the conflict over slavery? |
12423 | How did the Cuban rebellion come to an end? |
12423 | How did the McCormick reaper solve the difficulty in wheat growing? |
12423 | How did the Pequod War affect the colonists on the Connecticut? |
12423 | How did the United States acquire Louisiana? |
12423 | How did the accession of Charles II affect the colonies? |
12423 | How did the battle of Bennington affect the campaign? |
12423 | How did the choice of Washington as first President influence popular feeling toward the new government? |
12423 | How did the favoring the"pet banks"increase speculation? |
12423 | How did the holding these lands benefit the United States? |
12423 | How did the king interfere with these claims? |
12423 | How did the new government encourage manufacturing? |
12423 | How did the new government of England regard Massachusetts? |
12423 | How did the repeal of the Sherman Law affect confidence in the future of business? |
12423 | How did their action influence the election? |
12423 | How did these inventions make large cities possible? |
12423 | How did they show their opposition? |
12423 | How did they treat American ships? |
12423 | How did they treat the Indians? |
12423 | How did they try to injure one another? |
12423 | How did this act of Napoleon''s set the Monroe Doctrine at defiance? |
12423 | How did this expedition affect the later growth of the United States? |
12423 | How did this plan differ from the Stamp tax? |
12423 | How did this turn the scale of war? |
12423 | How do they influence the opinions of the people? |
12423 | How does his speech show the increase of the love of the Union? |
12423 | How far did he succeed? |
12423 | How far has later history proved the truth of his words? |
12423 | How had Grant shown his fitness for high command? |
12423 | How had Sherman''s victories affected the blockade? |
12423 | How had Washington and Adams filled offices? |
12423 | How had it fared with Grant? |
12423 | How had railroads increased, and what improvements had been made? |
12423 | How had the demands of the Southerners concerning slavery increased? |
12423 | How had the population of the states changed since 1790? |
12423 | How had the question of slavery already divided the country? |
12423 | How had the use of steamboats increased? |
12423 | How had the war altered Lincoln''s power as President? |
12423 | How has machinery influenced the history of the United States? |
12423 | How is this right secured to citizens of the United States? |
12423 | How must bribery in political life affect a government? |
12423 | How was Congress able to pass a bill over the President''s veto? |
12423 | How was Jackson fitted to meet difficulties? |
12423 | How was Mason and Dixon''s line famous later? |
12423 | How was it affected by his death? |
12423 | How was it connected with the"spoils system"? |
12423 | How was it finally captured? |
12423 | How was it known that Jefferson''s election was the wish of the voters? |
12423 | How was it proposed to overcome this difficulty? |
12423 | How was it regarded by Englishmen? |
12423 | How was it settled? |
12423 | How was it settled? |
12423 | How was its capture accomplished? |
12423 | How was slavery as an institution abolished throughout the United States? |
12423 | How was the Constitution ratified? |
12423 | How was the Emancipation Proclamation justified? |
12423 | How was the Republican party formed? |
12423 | How was the South dependent upon the North? |
12423 | How was the action of the Republicans regarded by Washington? |
12423 | How was the dispute finally settled? |
12423 | How was the idea of the Association carried out? |
12423 | How was the injury to our shipping during the Civil War connected with Great Britain? |
12423 | How was the institution of slavery abolished? |
12423 | How was the matter finally settled? |
12423 | How was the matter settled? |
12423 | How was the matter settled? |
12423 | How was the news of this affair received in America? |
12423 | How was the rebellion suppressed? |
12423 | How was this ground hallowed? |
12423 | How was this matter settled? |
12423 | How was this proposal regarded by Americans? |
12423 | How were Roman Catholics treated in England? |
12423 | How were the British connected with this Indian trouble? |
12423 | How were the slaves contraband? |
12423 | How were their hopes disappointed? |
12423 | How were these candidates nominated? |
12423 | How would this act affect the growth of the colonies? |
12423 | How would you have acted had you been a United States officer called to carry out the Fugitive Slave Law? |
12423 | How would you have voted on this question? |
12423 | If a bill is vetoed by the President, how can it still be made a law? |
12423 | If such proposals were carried out, what would be the effect on the Union? |
12423 | If you had been a Representative in 1824, for whom would you have voted? |
12423 | In the United States? |
12423 | In what European war were the Swedes and the Dutch engaged? |
12423 | In what other question similar to this had South Carolina led? |
12423 | In what respects was Jackson fitted for President? |
12423 | In what respects was Jackson unlike the early Presidents? |
12423 | In what respects were the colonial governments alike? |
12423 | In what respects were they unlike? |
12423 | In which colony would you have liked to live, and why? |
12423 | In whose hands do appointments to federal offices lie? |
12423 | Is a stamp tax a good kind of tax? |
12423 | Is it better to settle disputes by arbitration or by war? |
12423 | Is it still the basis of government? |
12423 | Is it the same to- day? |
12423 | Is this period more important or less important than the period of war which preceded it? |
12423 | Is this wise? |
12423 | Of Congress? |
12423 | Of Scott''s campaign? |
12423 | Of the Supreme Court? |
12423 | Of what advantage has the telegraph been to the United States? |
12423 | Of what advantage to the South were the negroes? |
12423 | Of what use are newspapers? |
12423 | Of what value was this region to the United States? |
12423 | On America? |
12423 | On France? |
12423 | On the other colonies? |
12423 | On what land did the Swedes settle? |
12423 | On what matters did Roger Williams disagree with the rulers of Massachusetts? |
12423 | Passage of the Ordinance of 1787.--What should be done with the lands which in this way had come into the possession of the people of all the states? |
12423 | Pierce? |
12423 | Precisely what is meant by"reconstruction"? |
12423 | Should a man be given an office simply because he has helped his party? |
12423 | Should city governments be conducted as business enterprises? |
12423 | Should it be free soil or should it be slave soil? |
12423 | Should the United States be a"world power"? |
12423 | Sumner? |
12423 | The Independent Treasury System.--What should be done with the government''s money? |
12423 | The South? |
12423 | The Wilmot Proviso, 1846.--What should be done with Oregon and with the immense territory received from Mexico? |
12423 | The mistakes? |
12423 | The"stay laws"? |
12423 | They were reddish in color and interested Columbus-- for were they not inhabitants of the Far East? |
12423 | To how much honor are the Northmen entitled as the discoverers of America? |
12423 | To what party did Tyler belong? |
12423 | To what was the prosperity of Virginia due? |
12423 | To what was the refusal to receive Pinckney equivalent? |
12423 | To what was this great success due? |
12423 | To whom did Charles give this territory? |
12423 | Under the spoils system what would naturally follow? |
12423 | Under what conditions were the remaining seceded states readmitted? |
12423 | Upon people''s minds? |
12423 | Upon the British? |
12423 | Upon the growth of cities? |
12423 | Upon what would its enforcement depend? |
12423 | Was Bacon a rebel? |
12423 | Was Douglas a patriot? |
12423 | Was Douglas''s declaration in harmony with the decision of the Supreme Court? |
12423 | Was Henry''s criticism true? |
12423 | Was a slave a person or a thing? |
12423 | Was he a traitor? |
12423 | Was his inaugural conciliatory to the South? |
12423 | Was it true or false? |
12423 | Was it wise to have one man in command of all the armies? |
12423 | Was it wise to let the Southerners work out their questions for themselves or not? |
12423 | Was the South justified in thinking that the North would yield? |
12423 | Was the United States Bank like the national banks of the present day? |
12423 | Was the burning of the public buildings justifiable? |
12423 | Was the doctrine of popular sovereignty necessarily favorable to slavery? |
12423 | Was the offer of the British government enough? |
12423 | Was the plan a wise one from the British point of view? |
12423 | Was the reduction of the navy wise? |
12423 | Was the territory Ralegh named Virginia just what is now the state of Virginia? |
12423 | Was their action wise? |
12423 | Was there any reason for the fear on the part of business men? |
12423 | Was there the least injustice in the treatment of Andrà ©? |
12423 | Was this a good way to settle important questions? |
12423 | Was this bank like one of the national banks of to- day? |
12423 | Was this important? |
12423 | Were all the Southern whites slave owners? |
12423 | Were its principles like or unlike those of the Republican party of Jefferson''s time? |
12423 | Were the Massachusetts colonists rebels? |
12423 | Were the New England colonies difficult to govern? |
12423 | Were the Southern states in any particular danger? |
12423 | Were the colonies independent when the Declaration of Independence was adopted? |
12423 | Were the harbors well defended? |
12423 | Were the people of the South generally in favor of secession? |
12423 | Were the years 1857- 61 more or less"critical"than the years 1783- 87? |
12423 | Were there any good points in the slave system? |
12423 | Were these ideas new? |
12423 | What action did Great Britain take? |
12423 | What action did President Taylor take? |
12423 | What action did the American settlers in California take? |
12423 | What action did the British merchants take? |
12423 | What action did the government take? |
12423 | What advantage has Alaska been to the United States? |
12423 | What advantage would the occupation of New York give the British? |
12423 | What advantages did it possess for the Spaniards? |
12423 | What advantages did the founders of Massachusetts have over those of New Plymouth? |
12423 | What advantages had Grant not possessed by McClellan? |
12423 | What aid had Great Britain given to the Confederates? |
12423 | What are customs duties? |
12423 | What are some of the problems now before the American people? |
12423 | What are the advantages and disadvantages of a tariff? |
12423 | What are the important duties of citizens? |
12423 | What are the important points in his Farewell Address? |
12423 | What are the three great compromises of the Constitution? |
12423 | What arrangements were made for the comfort and health of the people? |
12423 | What attitude did California take on the slavery question? |
12423 | What attitude had Mexico taken on slavery? |
12423 | What attracted the Dutch to the region discovered by Hudson? |
12423 | What candidates were named? |
12423 | What caused the trouble with the Indians? |
12423 | What change in the control of the Senate had taken place? |
12423 | What changes did Andros make in New England? |
12423 | What changes did William and Mary make in the colonial governments? |
12423 | What changes would their admission make in Congress? |
12423 | What charges were made against Adams? |
12423 | What classes of people were there in Virginia? |
12423 | What common interest did all the states have? |
12423 | What complaints did the people of Virginia make? |
12423 | What compromise did Buchanan suggest? |
12423 | What conditions make a large navy necessary? |
12423 | What custom was established by these early Presidents? |
12423 | What danger is there in such power? |
12423 | What declaration was made by the Republican party as to slavery? |
12423 | What departments were decided upon? |
12423 | What did France lose? |
12423 | What did Franklin say about the feeling in the colonies? |
12423 | What did Lincoln say about the Union? |
12423 | What did Maryland contend? |
12423 | What did Seward mean by saying that there was a"higher law"than the Constitution? |
12423 | What did Sherman''s army accomplish on its way to the sea? |
12423 | What did Spain gain? |
12423 | What did Squanto do for the Pilgrims? |
12423 | What did he say about slavery? |
12423 | What did he think of the Kansas- Nebraska Act? |
12423 | What did the British government hope to accomplish in the tea business? |
12423 | What did the Stamp Act Congress do? |
12423 | What did the allies propose as to America? |
12423 | What did the election of Grant show? |
12423 | What difference did_ one year_ make in the population of California? |
12423 | What difficulties in the United States showed the necessity of a stronger government? |
12423 | What dispute had long existed with Great Britain? |
12423 | What dispute with Mexico arose? |
12423 | What divisions took place in the Democratic party? |
12423 | What do Perry''s and McDonough''s victories show? |
12423 | What do the existing pueblos teach us about the Indians of Coronado''s time? |
12423 | What do you consider the most decisive battle of the war? |
12423 | What do you think of Lincoln''s action? |
12423 | What do you think of Napoleon''s treatment of the United States? |
12423 | What do you think of Sir Thomas Dale? |
12423 | What do you think of Weyler''s policy? |
12423 | What do you think of the action of the English mill operatives? |
12423 | What do you think of the justice of removing Schuyler? |
12423 | What do you think of the provision as to debts? |
12423 | What do you think of the provision relating to the use of the army? |
12423 | What do you think of the wisdom and justice of such a plan? |
12423 | What do you think of the wisdom of his actions? |
12423 | What do you think of the wisdom of the compromise as to apportionment? |
12423 | What do you think of the wisdom of the plan? |
12423 | What do you think of the wisdom of this policy? |
12423 | What do you think of these suggestions? |
12423 | What doctrine did Douglas apply to Kansas and Nebraska? |
12423 | What does it show as to Thomas''s ability? |
12423 | What does the Senate represent? |
12423 | What does the name show? |
12423 | What does this show about the feeling of both parties toward the government? |
12423 | What effect did it have upon business? |
12423 | What effect did the Kansas- Nebraska Act have on the settlement of Kansas? |
12423 | What effect did the control of the Mississippi have upon the Confederacy? |
12423 | What effect did the_ Monitor- Merrimac_ fight have on McClellan''s campaign? |
12423 | What effect did these laws have on Massachusetts? |
12423 | What events at first seemed to disprove Franklin''s prophecy? |
12423 | What events in any colony have shown that its people desired more liberty? |
12423 | What events showed Greene''s foresight? |
12423 | What extreme parties were there in the North and the South? |
12423 | What fact hindered the growth of cotton on a large scale in colonial times? |
12423 | What government did England have after the execution of Charles I? |
12423 | What government did the colonies really have? |
12423 | What government was formed by them? |
12423 | What great change was made by Congress in the Declaration? |
12423 | What had Blair done for the Union? |
12423 | What had Lincoln said in his inaugural? |
12423 | What had been the feeling of most of the colonists toward England? |
12423 | What had caused the growth of the Northern cities? |
12423 | What had caused the growth of the Northwest? |
12423 | What had the Republican party declared about slavery in the states? |
12423 | What help did the Southerners hope to obtain from Great Britain and France? |
12423 | What important discoveries did Lewis and Clark make? |
12423 | What important matters have been definitely settled during the past one hundred years? |
12423 | What influence did the telegraph have? |
12423 | What influence has the railroad had upon the Union? |
12423 | What is a blockade? |
12423 | What is a blockade? |
12423 | What is a bribe? |
12423 | What is a caucus? |
12423 | What is a compromise? |
12423 | What is a constitution? |
12423 | What is a majority? |
12423 | What is a privateer? |
12423 | What is a rebel? |
12423 | What is a veto? |
12423 | What is a"despotism"? |
12423 | What is a"joint resolution"? |
12423 | What is a"party machine"? |
12423 | What is an"unfriendly act"? |
12423 | What is contraband of war? |
12423 | What is declared to be the basis of government? |
12423 | What is meant by his"kitchen cabinet"? |
12423 | What is meant by saying that Parliament was"the supreme power in the British Empire"? |
12423 | What is meant by the phrase"assumption of the state debts"? |
12423 | What is meant by the phrase"change of base"? |
12423 | What is meant by the phrase"public credit"? |
12423 | What is meant by the phrase"unconditional surrender"? |
12423 | What is meant by the word"demonetization"? |
12423 | What is meant by the"Merit System"? |
12423 | What is meant by the"rising spirit of nationality"? |
12423 | What is meant by toleration? |
12423 | What is meant by"arbitration"? |
12423 | What is meant by"squatter sovereignty"? |
12423 | What is sedition? |
12423 | What is the Civil Service? |
12423 | What is the advantage of such an exhibition? |
12423 | What is the case to- day in your own state? |
12423 | What is the difference between a national and a federal government? |
12423 | What is the difference between a tax laid by a tariff on imported goods and an internal revenue tax? |
12423 | What is the difference between internal revenue taxes and customs duties? |
12423 | What is the force of the writ of_ habeas corpus_? |
12423 | What is the meaning of the phrase"too conspicuous"? |
12423 | What is the meaning of the word"Puritan"( see § 43)? |
12423 | What is the"supreme law of the land"? |
12423 | What is treason? |
12423 | What is"reciprocity"? |
12423 | What is"tariff reform"? |
12423 | What kind of a governor was Stuyvesant? |
12423 | What land did Columbus think that he had reached? |
12423 | What law had been made as to fugitive slaves? |
12423 | What laws were made about the commerce of the colonies? |
12423 | What more should have been promised? |
12423 | What oath did Lincoln take? |
12423 | What oath had the officers of the United States army and navy taken? |
12423 | What of its justice? |
12423 | What other Italians sailed across the Atlantic before 1500? |
12423 | What other colony was united with Connecticut? |
12423 | What other states followed South Carolina? |
12423 | What party came into power in 1841? |
12423 | What places were captured? |
12423 | What policy did Horace Greeley uphold? |
12423 | What policy did each uphold? |
12423 | What position did the Union army keep as regards the Confederates? |
12423 | What position does Washington hold in our history? |
12423 | What power did the Alien Act give the President? |
12423 | What power does the Constitution give Congress over a territory? |
12423 | What power had Congress over the mails? |
12423 | What power has Congress over the Judiciary? |
12423 | What principles did they stand for? |
12423 | What privileges did the patroons have? |
12423 | What privileges were the settlers to have? |
12423 | What promises had the Spaniards made to the Cubans and how had they kept them? |
12423 | What quality in Grant was conspicuous at Shiloh? |
12423 | What question arose concerning the site of the national capital? |
12423 | What reasons did Otis give for his opposition to the writs of assistance? |
12423 | What reasons were given for keeping an army in America? |
12423 | What resulted from this division? |
12423 | What results followed? |
12423 | What right had the King of Great Britain to veto a Virginia law? |
12423 | What rights did the Supreme Court declare a slave could not possess? |
12423 | What scandal arose in connection with the Union Pacific Railway? |
12423 | What slave states were not affected by this proclamation? |
12423 | What statement did Davis make as to Lincoln? |
12423 | What steps had already been taken by Congress toward freeing the slaves? |
12423 | What suggestions were made by some in the North for the ending of slavery? |
12423 | What territory did England gain in 1763? |
12423 | What the House? |
12423 | What third party was formed? |
12423 | What trouble arose with Maryland about the boundary line? |
12423 | What trouble broke out in Cuba? |
12423 | What troubles arose in the South? |
12423 | What truths are declared to be self- evident? |
12423 | What two methods does the Constitution provide for its amendment? |
12423 | What two new states were admitted in 1791- 92? |
12423 | What two parties were fighting in England? |
12423 | What two points were especially emphasized in their constitution? |
12423 | What valuable work was done at Valley Forge? |
12423 | What view did Webster take? |
12423 | What view did she take of slavery? |
12423 | What was Bragg''s object in invading Kentucky? |
12423 | What was Grant''s wish? |
12423 | What was Jefferson''s policy toward expenses? |
12423 | What was Johnson''s attitude toward reconstruction? |
12423 | What was Lee''s object in invading Pennsylvania? |
12423 | What was done with the surplus? |
12423 | What was the Force Act? |
12423 | What was the Liberty party? |
12423 | What was the Massachusetts Circular Letter? |
12423 | What was the Sherman Silver Law? |
12423 | What was the advantage of having Washington act as President of the Convention? |
12423 | What was the cause of Garfield''s murder? |
12423 | What was the cause of King Philip''s War? |
12423 | What was the chief wish of the Spanish explorers? |
12423 | What was the effect of Burgoyne''s surrender on Great Britain? |
12423 | What was the effect of St. Leger''s retreat to Canada? |
12423 | What was the effect of the blockade on the South? |
12423 | What was the effect of this measure? |
12423 | What was the effect on Northern opinion of the attack on Fort Sumter? |
12423 | What was the extent of Oregon in 1845? |
12423 | What was the extent of Oregon in 1847? |
12423 | What was the force of the Emancipation Proclamation? |
12423 | What was the force of the Tenure of Office Act, and why was it passed? |
12423 | What was the great difference mentioned in § 196? |
12423 | What was the great objection to it? |
12423 | What was the great question settled by this war? |
12423 | What was the great task before the people? |
12423 | What was the important work of Madison? |
12423 | What was the new point in Monroe''s message? |
12423 | What was the object of Burgoyne''s campaign? |
12423 | What was the object of the Continental Congress? |
12423 | What was the object of the Dutch West India Company? |
12423 | What was the object of the Mayflower Compact? |
12423 | What was the plan of Taylor''s campaign? |
12423 | What was the real object of Sherman''s march to the sea? |
12423 | What was the real significance of Cleveland''s first election? |
12423 | What was the reason for the American successes? |
12423 | What was the result of Buchanan''s attempt to send supplies to Fort Sumter? |
12423 | What was the result of Gage''s attempt to seize the arms at Concord? |
12423 | What was the result of Hamilton''s intrigues? |
12423 | What was the result of Hood''s attacks? |
12423 | What was the result of each of these battles? |
12423 | What was the result of the battle of the Cowpens? |
12423 | What was the result of the declaration as to slaves? |
12423 | What was the result of the election? |
12423 | What was the result of the election? |
12423 | What was the result of the election? |
12423 | What was the result of the expedition? |
12423 | What was the result of the seizure of the_ Liberty_? |
12423 | What was the result of their actions? |
12423 | What was the result of these economies? |
12423 | What was the result of these wars? |
12423 | What was the result of this battle? |
12423 | What was the result of this expedition? |
12423 | What was the result of this rebellion? |
12423 | What was the work of a Committee of Correspondence? |
12423 | What was the"Whiskey Ring"? |
12423 | What was the"draft,"and why was it necessary? |
12423 | What was their attitude on slavery? |
12423 | What was their hope in threatening secession? |
12423 | What was there peculiar in Lincoln''s election? |
12423 | What were Jefferson''s objections to a third term? |
12423 | What were Lincoln''s leading characteristics? |
12423 | What were Lincoln''s personal views as to slavery? |
12423 | What were its advantages? |
12423 | What were some of the duties of the President? |
12423 | What were the Non- importation agreements? |
12423 | What were the Virginia Resolves of 1769? |
12423 | What were the advantages of Webster''s"Dictionary"? |
12423 | What were the arguments in favor of the extension of slavery? |
12423 | What were the chief difficulties in the way of reconstruction? |
12423 | What were the chief weaknesses of the Confederation? |
12423 | What were the early steamboats like? |
12423 | What were the effects of the battle upon the Americans? |
12423 | What were the effects of the seizure of Ticonderoga on the siege of Boston? |
12423 | What were the effects of this union? |
12423 | What were the four most important things in Jefferson''s administrations? |
12423 | What were the good points in Jackson''s administration? |
12423 | What were the great objections to the New Jersey plan? |
12423 | What were the issues in the campaign of 1868? |
12423 | What were the provisions of the Fifteenth Amendment? |
12423 | What were the results of his treatment of the Indians? |
12423 | What were the results of the French alliance? |
12423 | What were the results of the battle of Guilford? |
12423 | What were the results of the war? |
12423 | What were the results of this action? |
12423 | What were the results of this invention? |
12423 | What were the theories on which the Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions were based? |
12423 | What were the"best roads"in 1800? |
12423 | What were the"border states"? |
12423 | What were the"tender laws"? |
12423 | What work did the Jesuits do for the Indians? |
12423 | What would Jackson probably have done had he been President? |
12423 | What would be the arguments in Congress for and against this"proviso"? |
12423 | What would be the result of a grand march through Georgia to the seacoast, and then northward through the Carolinas to Virginia? |
12423 | When and how had Louisiana changed hands since its settlement? |
12423 | When did it end? |
12423 | When did the Revolution begin? |
12423 | When signed? |
12423 | When was the Declaration adopted? |
12423 | Where did the United States government keep its money? |
12423 | Where have we found Madison prominent before? |
12423 | Where have you already found the ideas expressed in Calhoun''s_ Exposition_? |
12423 | Where is it now? |
12423 | Where is the nation''s money kept to- day? |
12423 | Where was Fort Duquesne? |
12423 | Where was there the greatest density of population? |
12423 | Where were the negotiations for peace carried on? |
12423 | Which country, England, France, or Spain, had the best claim to the Mississippi valley? |
12423 | Which ideas prevail to- day? |
12423 | Which method has always been followed? |
12423 | Which method is followed to- day? |
12423 | Which of these acts was most severe? |
12423 | Which of these favored the North? |
12423 | Which party would you have joined had you lived then? |
12423 | Which side had the greater advantages? |
12423 | Which side really won in the Parson''s Cause? |
12423 | Who had directed the war before? |
12423 | Who should be the Republican standard bearer? |
12423 | Who was Charles Lee? |
12423 | Who was Mrs. Stowe? |
12423 | Who was chosen? |
12423 | Who was elected? |
12423 | Who was finally chosen? |
12423 | Who were nominated? |
12423 | Who were some of the important writers? |
12423 | Who were the Hessians? |
12423 | Who were the candidates for President in 1824? |
12423 | Who were the candidates in 1852? |
12423 | Who were the leading Republican candidates? |
12423 | Who were the leading candidates for the presidency in 1896? |
12423 | Who were the"Mugwumps"? |
12423 | Who won the battle of Bunker Hill? |
12423 | Who would be excluded by the Maryland Toleration Act? |
12423 | Whose business is it to decide on the constitutionality of a law? |
12423 | Why are Lawrence''s words so inspiring? |
12423 | Why are such writs prohibited by the Constitution of the United States? |
12423 | Why are the Hawaiian Islands important to the United States? |
12423 | Why are these steps important? |
12423 | Why could he not carry them out? |
12423 | Why could not Admiral Dewey remain at Hong Kong? |
12423 | Why did Charles and James dislike the growing liberty of the colonies? |
12423 | Why did Chase call this bill"a violation of faith"? |
12423 | Why did Congress determine to attack Canada? |
12423 | Why did Congress give Washington sole direction of the war? |
12423 | Why did Connecticut need a charter when she already had a constitution? |
12423 | Why did Davis advocate war on Northern soil? |
12423 | Why did England wish to conquer New Netherland? |
12423 | Why did General Miles land on the southern coast? |
12423 | Why did Grant impose trust in him? |
12423 | Why did Hamilton want a Bank of the United States? |
12423 | Why did Jackson dislike and distrust the United States Bank? |
12423 | Why did Lincoln inform the governor of South Carolina of his determination to succor Fort Sumter? |
12423 | Why did New Jersey and Delaware oppose the Virginia plan? |
12423 | Why did Texas wish to join the United States? |
12423 | Why did Verrazano explore the northeastern coasts? |
12423 | Why did Washington decline a third term? |
12423 | Why did colonists come to Pennsylvania? |
12423 | Why did he not succeed? |
12423 | Why did money become scarce in the summer of 1893? |
12423 | Why did not Congress have any real power? |
12423 | Why did not the people of New Amsterdam wish to fight the English? |
12423 | Why did people wish to buy Western lands? |
12423 | Why did she not give more assistance? |
12423 | Why did slaveholders feel the need of more slave territory in the Union? |
12423 | Why did so many people live near tide water? |
12423 | Why did the British attack at this point? |
12423 | Why did the British object to the boundary line laid down in the Treaty of 1783? |
12423 | Why did the Connecticut people feel the need of one? |
12423 | Why did the Democrats nominate Greeley? |
12423 | Why did the Dutch East India Company wish a northern route to India? |
12423 | Why did the New Haven settlers found a separate colony? |
12423 | Why did the Pilgrims come to America? |
12423 | Why did the Republicans sympathize with the French Revolution? |
12423 | Why did the Southerners object to the admission of Maine? |
12423 | Why did the capture of the_ Chesapeake_ cause so much delight in England? |
12423 | Why did the colonists refuse to buy the tea? |
12423 | Why did the impeachment fail? |
12423 | Why did the plan fail? |
12423 | Why did the struggle between England and France begin in the Ohio valley? |
12423 | Why did the value of paper money keep changing? |
12423 | Why did"prices go down with a rush"? |
12423 | Why do you select these? |
12423 | Why do you select these? |
12423 | Why do you select these? |
12423 | Why had Washington and Adams paid them? |
12423 | Why had it not been enforced? |
12423 | Why had manufacturing received so little attention before the Revolution? |
12423 | Why had the control of the House passed to the free states? |
12423 | Why had this feeling changed? |
12423 | Why had this led to the separation of the West and the East? |
12423 | Why had this progress been confined mainly to the North? |
12423 | Why is Civil Service Reform so difficult? |
12423 | Why is Sir Edwin Sandys regarded as the founder of free government in the English colonies? |
12423 | Why is he the greatest of all Americans? |
12423 | Why is it called a massacre? |
12423 | Why is it deserved? |
12423 | Why is it memorable? |
12423 | Why is it so important? |
12423 | Why is the Connecticut constitution famous? |
12423 | Why is the education of our people so important? |
12423 | Why is the period covered by this division so important? |
12423 | Why is the right of petition so important? |
12423 | Why is this Ordinance so important? |
12423 | Why is this book so important? |
12423 | Why is this chapter called the"Reign of Andrew Jackson"? |
12423 | Why should disputes as to elections for President go to the House? |
12423 | Why should not steam be used to haul wagons over a railroad? |
12423 | Why should slavery be allowed west of the Mississippi River? |
12423 | Why should the Southerners have felt so strongly about this election? |
12423 | Why should the people have shown loyalty to the states rather than to the United States? |
12423 | Why should the speculator get one dollar for that which had cost him only thirty or forty cents? |
12423 | Why should these petitions be considered as insulting to slaveholders? |
12423 | Why should they not pay a part of the cost of maintaining it? |
12423 | Why these? |
12423 | Why was Blaine so strongly opposed? |
12423 | Why was Cabot''s voyage important? |
12423 | Why was Charleston so difficult to capture? |
12423 | Why was Chattanooga important? |
12423 | Why was France wise to make peace with the United States? |
12423 | Why was Harrison chosen President? |
12423 | Why was Harrison defeated in 1892? |
12423 | Why was Jefferson asked to write the Declaration? |
12423 | Why was Johnson impeached? |
12423 | Why was Lincoln nominated? |
12423 | Why was Lincoln''s death a terrible loss to the South? |
12423 | Why was McClellan placed in command of the Army of the Potomac? |
12423 | Why was Mrs. Hutchinson expelled from Massachusetts? |
12423 | Why was Petersburg important? |
12423 | Why was Washington appointed to chief command? |
12423 | Why was Washington"stiff and aristocratic"? |
12423 | Why was a Navy Department necessary? |
12423 | Why was an attempt for a higher tariff made in 1828? |
12423 | Why was he unpopular? |
12423 | Why was it a failure? |
12423 | Why was it difficult for the government to carry on its business without a bank or a treasury? |
12423 | Why was it fought so bitterly? |
12423 | Why was it important south of this line? |
12423 | Why was it important? |
12423 | Why was it important? |
12423 | Why was it necessary for Lincoln to follow Northern sentiment? |
12423 | Why was it passed? |
12423 | Why was it unsuccessful? |
12423 | Why was its position important? |
12423 | Why was not the North united upon this war? |
12423 | Why was opposition to the nomination of Grant so strong? |
12423 | Why was silver demonetized? |
12423 | Why was slavery no longer of importance north of this line? |
12423 | Why was the Association so important? |
12423 | Why was the Holy Alliance formed? |
12423 | Why was the New World called America and not Columbia? |
12423 | Why was the North growing rich faster than the South? |
12423 | Why was the Shenandoah Valley so important? |
12423 | Why was the appointment of Clay a mistake? |
12423 | Why was the battle so important? |
12423 | Why was the change made in 1850 so important? |
12423 | Why was the colony prosperous? |
12423 | Why was the conquest of Vicksburg so difficult? |
12423 | Why was the destruction of the tea at Boston necessary? |
12423 | Why was the difference so great? |
12423 | Why was the effect of these victories so great? |
12423 | Why was the founding of William and Mary College important? |
12423 | Why was the navy better prepared for war than the army? |
12423 | Why was the question about the territories so important? |
12423 | Why was the scene of action transferred to the South? |
12423 | Why was the slavery contest"irrepressible"? |
12423 | Why was the voyage of the_ Oregon_ important? |
12423 | Why was there a conflict over the clause as to commerce? |
12423 | Why was there a dispute about the election of 1876? |
12423 | Why was there little question whether Oregon would be slave or free? |
12423 | Why was there so much bribery and corruption at this time? |
12423 | Why was there so much confusion in the army? |
12423 | Why was there so much opposition to Grant''s reëlection? |
12423 | Why was there such hesitation in the North? |
12423 | Why was this change so important? |
12423 | Why was this discovery of importance? |
12423 | Why was this doctrine so dangerous? |
12423 | Why were not more soldiers sent to McClellan? |
12423 | Why were the American people on the Atlantic seacoast alarmed? |
12423 | Why were the British attacks directed against these three portions of the country? |
12423 | Why were the Southerners so afraid of any discussion of slavery? |
12423 | Why were the Southerners so alarmed by Nat Turner''s Rebellion? |
12423 | Why were the Spaniards poor neighbors? |
12423 | Why were the Virginians so divided? |
12423 | Why were the elections of 1866 important? |
12423 | Why were the people of South Carolina so opposed to any limitation of slavery? |
12423 | Why were the protective tariffs of no benefit to the Southerners? |
12423 | Why were the seizures of Cairo and Paducah and the battle of Mill Springs important? |
12423 | Why were the soldiers needed after Dewey''s victory? |
12423 | Why were the soldiers stationed at New York? |
12423 | Why were there no executions for treason at the close of the Civil War? |
12423 | Why were there so few large cities in the slave states? |
12423 | Why were there so many loyalists? |
12423 | Why were these views opposed in the North? |
12423 | Why were they passed? |
12423 | Why were they so successful? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | With what result? |
12423 | With what result? |
12423 | Would Washington have accepted the title of king? |
12423 | Would a state be likely to nullify an act of Congress now? |
12423 | Would it not then be fair for the people of the United States as a whole to pay them? |
12423 | Would not this unopposed march show the people of the North, of the South, and of Europe that further resistance was useless? |
12423 | _ b._ What matters occupied the attention of the people? |
12423 | _ b._ What people in the United States would welcome the purchase of Florida? |
12423 | _ b._ What propositions were made by the Hartford Convention? |
12423 | _ b._ What work did the privateers do? |
12423 | _ b._ Why did not this success of the Americans have more effect on the peace negotiations? |
12423 | _ b._ Why is it called the Second War of Independence? |
12423 | _ b._ Why was the news of the treaty so long in reaching Washington? |
12423 | _ c._ What does this section show you as to Jackson''s character? |
12423 | _ c._ What shows the sudden increase in Western migration? |
12423 | _ c._ What was settled by the war? |
12423 | _ c._ Why did Washington issue the Proclamation of Neutrality? |
12423 | _ c._ Why were the free states gaining faster than the slave states? |
12423 | c. What is meant by the statement that"he took possession"of the new land? |
12423 | c. What is sea- power? |
12423 | c. What other band of Spaniards nearly approached Coronado''s men? |
12423 | c. What portions of the world were known to Europeans in 1490? |
12423 | d. What effect did the defeat of Spain have upon_ our_ history? |
12423 | d. What other places were explored by the Spaniards? |
12423 | d. What reason had the Spaniards for attacking the French? |
12423 | voted? |
12423 | voted? |
12423 | § 106.--What colonies claimed land west of the Alleghany Mountains? |
12423 | § 273.--_a._ Why was so little advance made at first toward a treaty of peace? |
12423 | § 274.--_a._ Were the Federalists or the Republicans more truly the national party? |
12423 | § 280.--_a._ Why was Florida a danger to the United States? |
12423 | § 333.--How did the Mexicans regard the admission of Texas? |
12423 | §§ 271, 272.--_a._ Why were most of the naval conflicts during the first year of the war? |
12423 | §§ 376, 377.--_a_ Could one state dissolve the Union? |
12423 | §§ 394, 395.--_a_ Why did Lee invade Maryland? |
36580 | Alone? 36580 And you?" |
36580 | Another woman? 36580 Do n''t you remember?" |
36580 | Do n''t''ee see? |
36580 | Head screw? |
36580 | How do the ideas underlying plays come into being? 36580 Just what is tragi- comedy, then?" |
36580 | Lose his head? |
36580 | My fault? |
36580 | One Messer Chiappino is your leader? 36580 To my daughter? |
36580 | Well? |
36580 | What do you mean? |
36580 | What job, Bill? |
36580 | What the devil''s a plot except to stuff in fine things? |
36580 | What''s the matter,queried the critic,"anything gone wrong?" |
36580 | What? |
36580 | Where''s Philly, my mare? |
36580 | Why make her? |
36580 | Why not laugh tonight, Hajji? 36580 Why? |
36580 | You-- my son? |
36580 | You? |
36580 | [ 2] Once for all, what istruckling to an audience"? |
36580 | ''Tis a naughty little varlet; who knows that he has not been set on to bring this tale?" |
36580 | ''Where have I seen this story before?'' |
36580 | ( Abu Bakr) When does the sun set?" |
36580 | (_ Addressing a porter who passes, followed by travelers._) Monsieur, at what time does the train start for Lyons? |
36580 | (_ Addressing the official who is near the ticket window._) Monsieur, at what time does the through train start for Lyons? |
36580 | (_ Aloud._) New music? |
36580 | (_ Aloud._) That music, Miss Thornhaugh? |
36580 | (_ Beats down their swords._)_ Enter Tybalt__ Tybalt._ What, art thou drawn among these heartless hinds? |
36580 | (_ Dora sits thoughtfully, Colonel bending over her; a pause._) Wo n''t you play something? |
36580 | (_ Doubtfully._) But can you pay his fee? |
36580 | (_ Exeunt Ambassadors._)_ Giov._ What do the deade do, uncle? |
36580 | (_ Exeunt._) Except for a few lines of rhetoric, could the account in Scene 3 be shortened? |
36580 | (_ Exeunt._) So far as the situation is concerned we might go directly from York''s"fealty to the new made King"to his"What seal is that?" |
36580 | (_ Exit Taylor._)_ Sir John._ So, how d''ye like my Shapes now? |
36580 | (_ Exit._)_ Simo._ For example now, would n''t any one who knew you think you were at the bottom of this? |
36580 | (_ Going towards door; Sir Brice following him up._)_ Sir Brice._ You refuse? |
36580 | (_ Going._)_ Countess._ What means he now? |
36580 | (_ Horse''s hoofs heard starting off._)_ Third Picket''s Voice._(_ Off stage._) Who goes there? |
36580 | (_ Indicating the door right._)_ Lady D._ Where is Mr. Harabin? |
36580 | (_ Looks out._) Why, is n''t that Mr. Rosmer on the mill path again--? |
36580 | (_ No answer._)_ Policeman B._ Will we put up a notice here on the barrel? |
36580 | (_ Pause._) What game? |
36580 | (_ Peeps out between the curtains and the window frame._) But let us see whether--_ Madam Helseth._ Will he venture across the foot- bridge? |
36580 | (_ Points to the cards._)_ Sir Brice._(_ Getting flurried._) My wife and child? |
36580 | (_ She looks pensively at the key._) Ought I to throw it away? |
36580 | (_ Sleeps._)_ Bayes._ Does not that, now, surprise you, to fall asleep in the nick? |
36580 | (_ Summing up._) Claret cup, syphon, one Scotch, and one Irish? |
36580 | (_ Swoons away by his uncle''s body._) Do I still live to press the suffering bosom of the earth? |
36580 | (_ The waiter stops, with a sinking heart._) My father was a witness of what passed to- day, was he not, Mrs. Clandon? |
36580 | (_ They resume their attitudes; a pause._) The weather has been very warm today, has it not? |
36580 | (_ To Blond._) There is n''t any method of getting off that balcony is there? |
36580 | (_ To Bohun._) Anything special for you, sir? |
36580 | (_ To Crampton._) Irish for you, sir, I think sir? |
36580 | (_ To Henriette._) Well, little daughter, are you satisfied?... |
36580 | (_ To Katherine._) Do n''t we? |
36580 | (_ To Mrs. Clandon, timidly, but expectantly._) Anything for you, ma''am? |
36580 | (_ To Rosalie, who enters._) Well? |
36580 | (_ To a group._) Will not some one help me to put on my praying shawl? |
36580 | (_ To his wife._) You brought the opera glasses? |
36580 | (_ Trying ring on Moll''s finger._)_ Yel._ What''s your posy, now, sir? |
36580 | (_ Turns and embraces her._)_ Indiana._ Have I then at last a father''s sanction on my love? |
36580 | (_ Whispers._) You perceive my mind? |
36580 | )[ 66] Why is it that the citation from Shakespeare in the left- hand column is less satisfactory than that in the right- hand? |
36580 | )_ If I talk to him, this outrage meane? |
36580 | )_ Where is the traitor Becket? |
36580 | )__ David._ How is he feeling today? |
36580 | *****_ Lady Windermere._(_ Moves up._) Lord Darlington, will you give me back my fan, please? |
36580 | --"Of what? |
36580 | A door down stage left.__ Enter footman left showing in Lady Darby__ Lady Darby._(_ A lady of about fifty._) Where is Lady Susan now? |
36580 | A report of a cannon as the curtain rises.__ Jennie._(_ R., going up to door C._) Did you hear that? |
36580 | After that-- who knows?" |
36580 | Air:"O, dear, what can the matter be?" |
36580 | All this-- all this-- and-- and what for? |
36580 | All''s cleared-- a stage For trial of the question kept so long: Judge you-- Is love or vanity the best? |
36580 | Am I a married man or a bachelor? |
36580 | Am I addressing one of the foreign war correspondents? |
36580 | Am_ I_ the man?" |
36580 | And I have said no word of this to him: Am_ I_ the man?" |
36580 | And I presume you know what that unfortunate movement led to? |
36580 | And after all, where is the sin in seeing him just once, if at a distance? |
36580 | And how been made archbishop hadst thou told him,"I mean to fight mine utmost for the Church, Against the King?" |
36580 | And how did they get to the settle? |
36580 | And now, my revolters and good friend what do you want? |
36580 | And she came to the train at what hour? |
36580 | And the Am_ I_ the man?" |
36580 | And the corporal says, looking over his shoulder quick and short,''Does he understand?'' |
36580 | And then, as all wait for his excuses, he shifts the burden of speech to his mother with the words,"Has n''t her ladyship anything to say?" |
36580 | And what are we to do with this whole Burke''s Peerage,--the Prime Minister, the Countess, the Slave? |
36580 | And wherefore should she seek The life of Rosamund de Clifford more Than that of other paramours of thine? |
36580 | And will you? |
36580 | And wilt thou pluck my fair son from mine age, And rob me of a happy mother''s name? |
36580 | And yet which is the worst, I wonder, to be at the mercy of a man who loves one, or the wife of a man who in one''s own house dishonors one? |
36580 | And, now, pray, what does please you? |
36580 | Answer you, Sirs? |
36580 | Answer you? |
36580 | Archbishop? |
36580 | Are n''t they lovely? |
36580 | Are n''t you satisfied? |
36580 | Are reports about you and the boys the days long and lonesome? |
36580 | Are the days When the time came, it was hard for long and lonesome? |
36580 | Are the following straight translations from the old French farce,_ Pierre Patelin_,[64] as easy to speak as the revisions? |
36580 | Are the phrasing and thought really his, or Robert Browning''s? |
36580 | Are you now persuaded That Talbot is but shadow of himself? |
36580 | Are your parents living? |
36580 | Are_ you_? |
36580 | As Dumas the younger well said,"How can you tell what road to take unless you know where you are going? |
36580 | At every turn of their dialogue we should be wondering:"Why does not Talbot strike now? |
36580 | At what court? |
36580 | Beauty the lover''s gift-- Lord, what is a lover, that it can give? |
36580 | Bertha? |
36580 | Besides, what danger can a dying woman, One too who longs for death, bring on your head? |
36580 | Besides, what''s the good of a railway guide? |
36580 | Bobby, did he bite you? |
36580 | Brown._ But after taking the but arsenal, why did n''t you flee to the we shall meet together in that mountains, as we thought you would? |
36580 | Brown._ Do they treat_ Brown._ How did you first get you well here, John? |
36580 | But how if I expect the blow, how if I see the storm brewing and threatening for some time about my head or his? |
36580 | But sacrifice? |
36580 | But suppose she wo n''t tell us? |
36580 | But they do n''t play it, do they? |
36580 | But we''re forgetting dinner-- Langford, will you take my wife? |
36580 | But what would my word have been what would my assertions have in opposition to yours? |
36580 | But what? |
36580 | But why should I not look? |
36580 | But will he love me always, this man to whom I am giving my life? |
36580 | But, pray you, tell me Is she sole child to the King? |
36580 | By it, dully._) Who? |
36580 | By the masse I was about to say something, Where did I leave? |
36580 | Call me a hag? |
36580 | Calls off, is he at home? |
36580 | Can Phædra, sick''ning of a dire disease Of which she will not speak, weary of life And of herself, form any plots against you? |
36580 | Can any one feel much doubt what form of drama is_ The Importance of Being Earnest_? |
36580 | Can he save the situation, if he delays? |
36580 | Can there be any question that Shakespeare''s assigned speeches are somehow clearer, more dramatic? |
36580 | Can there be any question which scene holds the attention better? |
36580 | Can you not see that the work of_ falsification_, which a play demands is, of all tasks, the most ungrateful? |
36580 | Chasuble looks astounded._) I mean, of course, you are continually christening, are n''t you? |
36580 | Clandon._(_ Politely._) Sit down, wo n''t you? |
36580 | Colonel bends over Dora at piano._) Going to play any of it now? |
36580 | Consequently we must expect them inside the temple at the beginning of the fifth act, or are they already back again? |
36580 | Could Gaoler send for his litter? |
36580 | Cozzens?" |
36580 | Crowd._ Where did he get his money? |
36580 | Dane''s Defence_,[1] in its third act? |
36580 | Did Shakespeare write the opening lines of_ Measure For Measure_, he the master of exquisitely musical and perfectly chosen dramatic speech? |
36580 | Did n''t we come of our own accord? |
36580 | Did people under such circumstances speak in this way? |
36580 | Did the Sultan not keep you to supper?" |
36580 | Did they speak to each other? |
36580 | Did you feel a yearning for your money? |
36580 | Did_ he? |
36580 | Discern''st thou aught in that? |
36580 | Do I embrace my father? |
36580 | Do I understand aright? |
36580 | Do n''t you believe in-- music-- at first sight? |
36580 | Do these jousts and triumphs hold? |
36580 | Do you know what I am doing? |
36580 | Do you mean the fashion or the side? |
36580 | Do you mean to have no substitute for it? |
36580 | Do you not think of dramatising the story of Faste? |
36580 | Do you sleep any, John? |
36580 | Do you sleep any, John? |
36580 | Do you smoke? |
36580 | Do you turn aside? |
36580 | Do you wish to have it checked? |
36580 | Does the ending, however, show that Hanna is entirely selfish? |
36580 | Does the play signify that the man who chooses to follow women rather than his art is lost? |
36580 | Does this sound like an individual woman or like the author using one of his characters for the sounding phrases of his own thinking? |
36580 | Door bangs._)_ Sutton enters from the dining- room__ Sutton._ Is Master Dick in danger, sir? |
36580 | Dorrison._ Will you give Mrs. Pinchbeck your arm, Colonel? |
36580 | Dream, Or prophecy, that? |
36580 | Duke, did you ever think that the Prime Minister was very fond of the Countess? |
36580 | Emily, my dear, has your aunt been-- I mean has your aunt lost her wits? |
36580 | Enter Ditto, R._)_ Ditto._(_ Petulantly._) Do you realize this is your birthday? |
36580 | Erlynne._(_ C._) How do dropped your fan, Lady you do again, Lord Windermere? |
36580 | Erlynne._(_ C._) How do you do, again, Lord Windermere? |
36580 | Erlynne._(_ C._) How do(_ Picks it up and hands it you do again, Lord Windermere? |
36580 | Even if he belong to the group, relatively very small in the mass of humanity, most interested by"Why did these people do this?" |
36580 | Even when reading some story aloud, do we not often find troublesome full directions as to just how the speakers delivered their lines? |
36580 | Even with you as with the world? |
36580 | Executioner.__ E._"Do n''t you see why I have pardoned him?" |
36580 | Exit Second Footman at door left._)_ Lady D._(_ Going affectionately to Inez, shaking hands very sympathetically._) My dear Mrs. Quesnel, you know? |
36580 | Exit Wilson.__ Lady Eastney._(_ Shaking hands._) You''re busy? |
36580 | Fainall, d''ye hear him? |
36580 | Fainall._ But, dear Millamant, why were you so long? |
36580 | Finally, do we not gain greatly by the characterization of the Duchess in the last lines of the scene? |
36580 | First-- has she seen you? |
36580 | Fitz Urse__ Eleanor._ Dost thou love this Becket, this son of a London merchant, that thou hast sworn a voluntary allegiance to him? |
36580 | Gaoler:"Does it feel comfortable?" |
36580 | Gaoler:"Free? |
36580 | Gent._ And why so? |
36580 | Gent._ But what''s the matter? |
36580 | Gent._ How long is this ago? |
36580 | Gent._ None but the King? |
36580 | Gent._ What''s his name and birth? |
36580 | Gribert, you mean? |
36580 | H._ And did he send it? |
36580 | H._ Eh? |
36580 | H._ From Llandudno? |
36580 | H._ That''s likely, is n''t it? |
36580 | H._ Then what do you mean telling me he''s not got a motor car? |
36580 | H._ What for? |
36580 | H._ What would she be doing coming round by Manchester? |
36580 | H._ What? |
36580 | H._ You''re not afraid of the lightning? |
36580 | Hajji recognizes him Sheikh._ What is he doing there? |
36580 | Hajji:"I am free too, am I?" |
36580 | Hard upon this comes the question:"What will people who have been like these and have passed through this experience do immediately, and thereafter?" |
36580 | Has Hajji not come back yet? |
36580 | Has he gone in to her?" |
36580 | Has he seen her? |
36580 | Have I not chid thee oft, And thou wilt cease not, serving without end? |
36580 | Have n''t you seen her at all? |
36580 | Have these conditions of Nature anything to do with Schilling''s death? |
36580 | Have we more sons? |
36580 | Have you the heart? |
36580 | He asks himself,''What, under such circumstances, can have been going on in our minds?'' |
36580 | He attempts to do so by way of the door.__ Jane._(_ Frightened._) W- w- where are you going? |
36580 | He indicates the ladder with his foot and his eyes._) Who is it? |
36580 | He says to Hajji-- How would Hajji like to become a great power in the state? |
36580 | He starts and stares aghast on seeing King Argimenes__ King Argimenes._ Who are you? |
36580 | Hence the soliloquies:"Thus do I ever make my fool my purse,"as well as"And what''s he, then, that says I play the villain?" |
36580 | Her support? |
36580 | Here--_ Ulrich._ Here? |
36580 | Hev yo''got suthin''fo''me t''night? |
36580 | His bounteous hand to give, and make my heart a present worthy of Bevil''s generosity? |
36580 | His voice is soft and his manner stealthy and mechanical._) Where is Boycott, my friend? |
36580 | How can an audience be expected to know what a dramatist has not settled for himself, the chief of his interests among several? |
36580 | How can one act in that way without reflection, without reason? |
36580 | How can these contrarieties agree? |
36580 | How could we learn from the text that"Duke"is John Hathaway? |
36580 | How dare he appeal to the Executioner, after betraying him to the Sultan? |
36580 | How dare he break into the women''s quarters and then ask for mercy? |
36580 | How decide what to emphasize? |
36580 | How did Claude enter in the following extract from a recent play? |
36580 | How did it get into my hands? |
36580 | How is he to win this attention? |
36580 | How is the transition from one to the other to be gained? |
36580 | How many bedrooms? |
36580 | How many lectures last over an hour? |
36580 | How many of them must be set forth in Act I, and how many may be set apart for"later exposition"? |
36580 | How may all this needed characterization best be done? |
36580 | How may it be given its quickest and fullest development?" |
36580 | How may these qualities, clearness, right emphasis, and consequent movement be gained? |
36580 | How much of the following scene in the original do we think at first sight we can spare? |
36580 | How much story does a play require? |
36580 | How much? |
36580 | How now Ofelia, what''s the news with you? |
36580 | How old are you? |
36580 | How shall I answer, as I ought, this tenderness, so uncommon even in the best of parents? |
36580 | How shall I appear before God? |
36580 | How should a baron love a beggar on horseback, with the retinue of three kings behind him, outroyaltying royalty? |
36580 | How should we know? |
36580 | Hundreds and hundreds of times he told me that.--It would have been very nice, Duke, if Dad had n''t died, would n''t it? |
36580 | I fear, I fear,--_ Duch._ What should you fear? |
36580 | I have n''t forgotten anything? |
36580 | I have n''t seen her? |
36580 | I hear the three old women praying all the time; are they together? |
36580 | I must be brief; lest resolution_ Arth._ What, must I die? |
36580 | I should give_ Helmer._ Well? |
36580 | I should say are you fond of lightning? |
36580 | I so been worth in opposition to yours? |
36580 | I speake not only for eyes Are you more stubborn hard than priviledge, hammered iron? |
36580 | I suppose you know how to christen all right? |
36580 | I''m glad_ she_[ Hopeful I''m glad( Hopeful) or the thin cat?] |
36580 | I. following.__ The Sultan._"Where is the woman? |
36580 | If she wo n''t let the girl escape, at least wo n''t she take the girl to a sanctuary? |
36580 | If so, do they not mitigate the effect upon him of the women? |
36580 | If that does n''t make them sit up, what will?" |
36580 | If that is n''t story, what is it? |
36580 | If we let the dialogue of a play merely state necessary facts, what is the result? |
36580 | If we were as good as we seem, what would the world be? |
36580 | Impossible? |
36580 | In all creative courses the problem is not,"What can we make these students take from us, the teachers?" |
36580 | In another still worse tragedy where one of the principal characters died quite casually, a spectator asked his neighbor,"But what did she die of?" |
36580 | In real life do we surely find out about people at our first, second, or even third meeting? |
36580 | In the answer to the question,"What have they been?" |
36580 | In this situation, what should I do? |
36580 | In_ Othello_, why does Shakespeare bring forward Iago at the end of an act as chorus to his own villainy? |
36580 | Inspired with what new hope, Under what favor''d skies think you to trace His footsteps? |
36580 | Is Richard, Duke of Gloucester, at the opening of_ Richard III_, much more than a re- christened Chorus? |
36580 | Is all dramatic material,_ theatric?_ No, for_ theatric_ does not necessarily mean_ sensational, melodramatic, artificial_. |
36580 | Is he merely telling a story for its own sake, satisfied if the incidents be increasingly interesting till the final curtain falls? |
36580 | Is he not honest? |
36580 | Is he not like thee? |
36580 | Is he not thine own? |
36580 | Is his setting significant for one scene only or has it symbolic values for the whole play? |
36580 | Is it not a mental state rather than physical action which moves us here? |
36580 | Is it not fair A wrathfull doome, and most writ? |
36580 | Is it not odd that most adaptations of successful stories and most novelizations of successful plays are failures? |
36580 | Is it possible? |
36580 | Is it really? |
36580 | Is it without story? |
36580 | Is n''t it? |
36580 | Is n''t the following the real climax? |
36580 | Is not my teeming date drunk up with time? |
36580 | Is not play- writing an art of falsification rather than truth?" |
36580 | Is she a of Nature''s gentlemen, the worst great friend of yours? |
36580 | Is she the niece of"Duke"? |
36580 | Is this extract as interesting as the following? |
36580 | Is this the Talbot, so much fear''d abroad That with his name the mothers still their babes? |
36580 | It is like the cry of the animal goaded beyond endurance._)_ Mary._(_ Screeching._) Call my coffee poison, will ye? |
36580 | It pointed finely the immediate cry of Everyman, O wretched caitiff, whither shall I flee, That I might scape this endless sorrow? |
36580 | It sought to convey, first, last, and always, the facts of the episode or incident represented:"Whom seek ye here, O Christians? |
36580 | It''s done already? |
36580 | Jest or prophecy there? |
36580 | Just before Mrs. Erlynne enters, we have:_ Lady Windermere._ Will you hold my fan for me, Lord Darlington? |
36580 | Just here arises the ever present query,"Why struggle to write what the public does not readily and quickly accept? |
36580 | Just what is it? |
36580 | Just what is meant by this"illustrative action"so often mentioned? |
36580 | Just what is the suspense created near the beginning of the play and developed throughout from sub- climaxes to a final climax? |
36580 | Just what, however, is this action which in drama is so essential? |
36580 | Let me see-- long and slender, and neatly jointed; Just such another gentlewoman-- that''s your daughter, sir? |
36580 | Let traitor be; For how have fought thine utmost for the Church, Save from the throne of thine archbishoprick? |
36580 | Likely to recommend the play to a manager trying to judge from a manuscript the dramatic sense of its unknown author? |
36580 | Lord, have I not made violent haste? |
36580 | Luitolfo is dead then, one may conclude? |
36580 | Madam Helset enters from the right with a basket of table linen._)_ Madam Helset._ I suppose I had better begin to lay the tea- table, ma''am? |
36580 | Make an Archbishop of a soldier? |
36580 | Mariamne, see you? |
36580 | Mariamne, see you? |
36580 | Mary shakes in terror._)_ Sergeant._(_ Bellowing and pointing to the fluid trickling on the floor._) Have you tried to poison us, you God damn hag? |
36580 | Mary, then: a maid, a sister, a girl friend, some one engaged to Tom?] |
36580 | Massey._ Walter would like to hear something, would n''t you, Walter? |
36580 | May I look at it? |
36580 | May we not say that the Vagret family provides a third story? |
36580 | Millamant._ Ay, that''s true-- O but then I had-- Mincing, what had I? |
36580 | Millamant._ How so? |
36580 | Millamant._ Mirabell, did you take exceptions last night? |
36580 | Miss Blank writes,"The line, which was either incorrectly spoken or heard, was not,''How does one know one is one''s self?'' |
36580 | Must we give up this idea? |
36580 | My friend Boycott, do you hear me? |
36580 | My love I can not; that is too divine: And against fate what mortal dares repine? |
36580 | Never to speak to her again, to feel her cheek against mine? |
36580 | Never?" |
36580 | No.--The Baroness? |
36580 | Not fight-- tho''somehow traitor to the King-- My truest and mine utmost for the Church? |
36580 | O farewell honest souldier, who_ Mar._ O, farewell honest souldiers, hath relieved you? |
36580 | O good Horatio, what a thou shouldst die, wounded name What a scandale wouldst thou Things standing thus unknowne, leave behinde? |
36580 | O''Malley._ Do you know if Mr. Warren is in this hotel? |
36580 | O''Malley._(_ Showing him a visiting card._) Pardon, is this your card? |
36580 | ORIGINAL REVISION_ Elise._(_ Looking up from her__ Elise._ Is he coming? |
36580 | ORIGINAL REVSION_ Servant._ Shall I not help_ Servant._ Shall I not help your lordship to your rest? |
36580 | Of the two contending forces, the Church and the Crown, which makes for good, and which for evil? |
36580 | Of what am I afraid, then? |
36580 | Oh, would it were that now? |
36580 | Old Woman._ Is he not the Sultan? |
36580 | On my word she''s a drunken reckless creature, not at all a fit person to take charge of a woman in her first labour: am I to fetch her all the same? |
36580 | On the other hand, who refuses to see_ The Merchant of Venice_ because of the inherent improbability of the exaction of the pound of flesh by Shylock? |
36580 | Ophelia, what''s the matter? |
36580 | Or are we like to have? |
36580 | Or, What good love may I perform for you? |
36580 | Our gentry baffled, and our name disgraced? |
36580 | Phil''s gran''mothah? |
36580 | Plebeian._ Are you a married man or a bachelor? |
36580 | Plebeian._ As a friend or an enemy? |
36580 | Plebeian._ What is your name? |
36580 | Plebeian._ Where do you dwell? |
36580 | Plebeian._ Whither are you going? |
36580 | Pray, Madam, do you pin up your hair with all your letters? |
36580 | Pray, how much may you know of what has taken place in Faenza since that memorable night? |
36580 | Roche._(_ As he mixes the drink._) What d''ye think-- what d''ye think that silly, infatuated feller''s goin''to do? |
36580 | Rosmer._ And you too? |
36580 | Rosmer._ Are you sure of that? |
36580 | Rosmer._ Did he? |
36580 | Rosmer._ What was it you told me once, Madam Helset? |
36580 | SCENE,_ Covent Garden__ Enter Lord Rake, Sir John,& c., with Swords drawn__ Lord Rake._ Is the Dog dead? |
36580 | Sanctuary? |
36580 | Secondly, what are they feeling and thinking in the situations which have occurred to him? |
36580 | See here-- Who''s with Dick? |
36580 | Shall I accuse my love or blame my fate? |
36580 | Shall I fall off-- to please the King once more? |
36580 | Shall a man not have_ half_ a life of his own? |
36580 | Sheikh._ Why should he have to suffer, and Sheikh be pardoned, when Sheikh is the cause of all of Hajji''s woe? |
36580 | Shockin'', ai n''t it? |
36580 | Shuddered with fear or with longing? |
36580 | Sir John, Lady Brute, and Belinda rising from the Table__ Sir John._ Will it so, Mrs. Pert? |
36580 | Sir, I have your permission to retire? |
36580 | Sir, be confident, What is''t distracts you? |
36580 | So much as frown on you? |
36580 | Soon after, Madam Helseth enters from the right._)_ Madam Helseth._ I suppose I''d better begin to lay the table, Miss? |
36580 | South Africa? |
36580 | St. Roche._ Demailly? |
36580 | St. Roche._(_ Taking the tumbler, her eyes never meeting his._) Well, what is he going to do? |
36580 | Stenborg enters; has met him on the stairs; displeased; wants to know what he came back for? |
36580 | Sternhold? |
36580 | Strone? |
36580 | Suppose she tells us to mind our own business? |
36580 | Thanks.... A useful thing, a fan, is n''t it? |
36580 | That dolefully to deed thus is What have I defended[ offended] thee? |
36580 | That is, does it always create emotion in an onlooker? |
36580 | That reminds me, you mentioned christenings I think, Dr. Chasuble? |
36580 | That thou shouldst help me? |
36580 | That_ Becket._ Am I the man? |
36580 | The Magistrate? |
36580 | The Mosque of the Carpenters, where the venerable priest is? |
36580 | The Old Woman says:"Who are you? |
36580 | The cloaks? |
36580 | The disease is vicious and ca n''t be checked._)_ Marian._(_ Anxiously._) You mean my husband will die? |
36580 | The gates are forced._)_ Enter Soldiers_ How say you, madam? |
36580 | The gentle sister of the cruel sons Of Pallas shared not in their perfidy; Why should you hate such charming innocence? |
36580 | The soldiers are in double lines on either side.__ Fitzroy._(_ To Hale._) Nathan Hale, have you anything to say? |
36580 | The test for a would- be writer of plays, choosing among several starting points, should be, not,"Is this true?" |
36580 | The third time appears the iteration,... that same handkerchief? |
36580 | The two men stand close to each other for a moment or two._)_ Sir Brice._ You''ve come to settle your little account, I suppose? |
36580 | Then why are we sitting here? |
36580 | There are deserters? |
36580 | Throw away the key? |
36580 | To live without any government at all? |
36580 | To- night, with these rake- hell soldiers abroad?" |
36580 | Very simply she goes straight to Raymond.__ Raymond._(_ Very simply to Laurence._) Well? |
36580 | Was he born in what the Radical papers call the purple of commerce, or did he rise from the ranks of the aristocracy? |
36580 | Was it simply the tale of a weak man? |
36580 | Was there a purse there? |
36580 | Was-- was it you, sir? |
36580 | We could n''t believe the first reports about you and the boys_ Brown._ Do you know where he is? |
36580 | We could n''t find each other again.... Where is our baggage? |
36580 | We do not need, in the first speech of Elise, anything more than the query,"Yes?" |
36580 | We have become more shame? |
36580 | We should find different names for these divisions,--perhaps, Induction and Finale? |
36580 | Well?" |
36580 | Wells._ You want the truth? |
36580 | Wells._(_ Enthusiastically._) Wonderful? |
36580 | What am I saying? |
36580 | What are the particulars? |
36580 | What are you going to say to Fanny when she comes? |
36580 | What are your politics? |
36580 | What can I say to him? |
36580 | What d''ye think he was telling me the other day? |
36580 | What danger shun you, Or shall I say what grief? |
36580 | What device will make the narrative, under the circumstances, plausible? |
36580 | What did he think was attractively dramatic in his material? |
36580 | What didst not like? |
36580 | What do I bring him? |
36580 | What do we cut for? |
36580 | What do you take me for? |
36580 | What does she_ Serena._ Aunt Deborah had a want? |
36580 | What doth he with a bond That he is bound to? |
36580 | What exactly does this constantly repeated word"Scene"mean? |
36580 | What for? |
36580 | What game have you on hand, that you hunt in couples? |
36580 | What good deede shall we first remember? |
36580 | What has Hajji decided? |
36580 | What has happened to her? |
36580 | What has happened? |
36580 | What has it to do with me? |
36580 | What has n''t she courage for? |
36580 | What if I call my play_ The Irony of Life_?" |
36580 | What is Silvia''s face, but I may spy More fresh in Julia''s with a constant eye? |
36580 | What is her age? |
36580 | What is her last name? |
36580 | What is his relation to Phronie? |
36580 | What is it, in these women, that-- different as they are-- menaces the man and the artist Schilling? |
36580 | What is it? |
36580 | What is my own desert? |
36580 | What is the age of Keith Sanford and what are the relations of each of these to Professor Ward himself? |
36580 | What is the central interest of his proposed play? |
36580 | What is the matter, Aumerle? |
36580 | What is the relation of illustrative action to dramatic situation? |
36580 | What is the result? |
36580 | What is the trouble with the text in the left- hand column-- from an early draft of a play dealing with John Brown and his fortunes? |
36580 | What is your income? |
36580 | What is your object? |
36580 | What is your object? |
36580 | What ist? |
36580 | What meanes these sad and melancholy moodes? |
36580 | What must they be to give rise to such a situation-- not each by himself, but when brought together under the conditions of the scene? |
36580 | What news from Oxford? |
36580 | What number in Belgrave Square? |
36580 | What o''clock is it now? |
36580 | What ought to be done? |
36580 | What shall I do? |
36580 | What shall he do? |
36580 | What shall he give the Young Beggar? |
36580 | What should be the length of an act? |
36580 | What should they come here for? |
36580 | What think you of merely the outside of the House? |
36580 | What tongue should tell the If thou did''st ever hold me in story of our deaths, thy hart, If not from thee? |
36580 | What was it that converted the Becket of Toulouse into the Becket of Clarendon-- the splendid warrior- diplomatist into the austere prelate? |
36580 | What was the aim of this earliest dramatic dialogue? |
36580 | What were it as you wrote down that day, mistress?" |
36580 | What were you talking about? |
36580 | What white horses? |
36580 | What will they think of you? |
36580 | What will you give me now For that same handkerchief? |
36580 | What woman in the whole world? |
36580 | What woman knows? |
36580 | What would my piety be if I pardoned the dagger that tried to kill the descendant of the Prophet? |
36580 | What would other people do? |
36580 | What would ye have of me? |
36580 | What''s that? |
36580 | What''s the matter? |
36580 | What''s the postmark? |
36580 | What, then, is the difference between story and plot? |
36580 | What, then, is the work a real scenario should do? |
36580 | What, then, was lacking? |
36580 | What? |
36580 | When doe they wake? |
36580 | When was it posted? |
36580 | When was she taken there? |
36580 | Where did Hajji get this? |
36580 | Where did Old Woman leave her? |
36580 | Where do I dwell? |
36580 | Where is Zira? |
36580 | Where is the value of the street at the side? |
36580 | Where lies the difficulty? |
36580 | Where''s his mother? |
36580 | Where''s that post- card? |
36580 | Where''s the blunt? |
36580 | Where? |
36580 | Which do you know? |
36580 | Which is more popular with the masses, the man of action or the thinker? |
36580 | Which is the chief essential in good drama? |
36580 | Which is the clearer, which depends more on illustrative action? |
36580 | Which is the more alive today? |
36580 | Whither am I going? |
36580 | Who and what are they? |
36580 | Who are the violets now That strew the green lap of the new come spring? |
36580 | Who bade you stoop? |
36580 | Who but me could think of sleeping on such a night? |
36580 | Who can be so imprudent as to sing that air of Alsace? |
36580 | Who can solve the riddle? |
36580 | Who goes there? |
36580 | Who has the umbrellas? |
36580 | Who is dependent on the Sheikh? |
36580 | Who is he that he does not know of Hajji? |
36580 | Who is he? |
36580 | Who is he? |
36580 | Who is this"Anne"? |
36580 | Who is to do Richelieu? |
36580 | Who knows if the king, your father, Wishes the secret of his absence known? |
36580 | Who opens his mouth to speak such ugly words? |
36580 | Who should be trusted now, when one''s right hand Is perjured to the bosom? |
36580 | Who was Hajji before the Executioner looked with favor on him? |
36580 | Who was your father? |
36580 | Who would not suffer from it? |
36580 | Whom do I want to deceive here? |
36580 | Why call you for a sword? |
36580 | Why can I not make the sun set-- I-- the Sultan? |
36580 | Why could n''t you have died in Florence? |
36580 | Why did he smite me? |
36580 | Why did you drag yourself here all these miles-- to end it_ here_? |
36580 | Why dost thou ask? |
36580 | Why fall? |
36580 | Why go far afield searching for the phrase that shall give charm, grace, beauty? |
36580 | Why have certain monologues such a great effect? |
36580 | Why is he not cloak from chair, puts here, to wake by passionate words cloak on crossing to door some fire within me? |
36580 | Why is it unsatisfactory? |
36580 | Why is there so much emphasis on the awesomeness of Nature on the island? |
36580 | Why lie to myself? |
36580 | Why not Hajji? |
36580 | Why not study their unthinking likes and dislikes and give them what they want?" |
36580 | Why not take her to the Mosque? |
36580 | Why should he have any say in regard to Zira?" |
36580 | Why should he not act out the lines,"I take up my pen, stare into space, listen attentively,--bend over the paper... and nothingness, nothingness"? |
36580 | Why should not Heaven have so inspired the King? |
36580 | Why should not young Hermiston escape clear out of the country? |
36580 | Why should they not, then? |
36580 | Why was I so frightened? |
36580 | Why waste time on a separate scene for the lover? |
36580 | Why, if no change of scene be required, is not a play of one long act desirable? |
36580 | Why, then, should they not write at will either in the form of stories or of plays? |
36580 | Why, too, are"facial play and gestures"more objectionable than the conventional aside? |
36580 | Why? |
36580 | Why? |
36580 | Wife._ So early? |
36580 | Wife:"What have we here?" |
36580 | Will he let me go away at all? |
36580 | Will not your honours bear me company? |
36580 | Will that do? |
36580 | Will this be a good place for a placard? |
36580 | Will you still kill me?" |
36580 | Will you? |
36580 | Wilt please your lordships to withdraw a little? |
36580 | Wilt thou conceal this dark conspiracy? |
36580 | Wilt thou not hide the trespass of thine own? |
36580 | With Phryne, Or Lais, or thy Rosamund, or another? |
36580 | With all this against him, can he save it in any case?" |
36580 | With the concomitants of action and voice, the words take on finality and equal:"What greater proof could I have? |
36580 | With the disappearance of the scrappy effect, is not the result clearer? |
36580 | With which ought we to sympathize? |
36580 | Wo n''t you come_ Lady Plymdale._ My Dear too? |
36580 | Woe, how shall I now put on my praying shawl? |
36580 | Yea, look''st thou pale? |
36580 | Yes or no? |
36580 | Yet at the end of the play one queried:"What is the meaning of it all?" |
36580 | Yet why deride this refuge of the dramatist? |
36580 | You are now going to become an author? |
36580 | You are very happy tonight, are n''t you? |
36580 | You do n''t feel hurt? |
36580 | You do n''t think_ that_, eh? |
36580 | You have a town house, I hope? |
36580 | You know today is my birthday? |
36580 | You mean Dr. William Crawford, the famous specialist? |
36580 | You remember perfectly? |
36580 | You remember the play I told you about, and that splendid situation for my heroine?" |
36580 | You-- will-- not-- relent? |
36580 | Young Beggar._ Young Beggar:"What do I get for siding with you?" |
36580 | Young ones and pretty ones, I wager....(_ Laughter._) Who speaks thus? |
36580 | [ 27] How may we know whether our motivation is good or not? |
36580 | [ 3] Has he, like Brieux in_ Damaged Goods_[4] or_ The Cradle_,[5] an idea he wishes to convey, and so must write a problem play? |
36580 | [ 40] Is anything in_ Shore Acres_, by James A. Herne, more memorable than the last scene? |
36580 | [ 4]_ Idem._ CHAPTER II THE ESSENTIALS OF DRAMA: ACTION AND EMOTION What is the common aim of all dramatists? |
36580 | [ 55] Is not the irony of this group of unsatisfied or dissatisfied people singing"Count your many blessings,"fully climactic? |
36580 | [ 58] Though a new twist is given our emotions, is not something lost to the artistry of the play? |
36580 | [ 6] Ah, heart, heart why wilt thou not break? |
36580 | [ 8] If physical action in and of itself is so often dramatic, is all physical action dramatic? |
36580 | [ Hajj is gagged here:]"At once?" |
36580 | [_ Hajji( Alone)._]"So this is why I was pardoned this morning? |
36580 | \ How dare Hajji come and ask him questions? |
36580 | _ Abr._ Do you bite your thumb at us, sir? |
36580 | _ Abr._ Quarrel, sir? |
36580 | _ Abraham._ Do you bite your thumb at us, sir? |
36580 | _ Actress._ Come here? |
36580 | _ Amin._ I had spoke at first, But that--_ Mel._ But what? |
36580 | _ Anne._ And did you ever think that perhaps the Prime Minister would like to_ marry_ the Countess? |
36580 | _ Anne._ How? |
36580 | _ Anne._ Well, why does n''t he? |
36580 | _ Anne._(_ Reads._)"By the time the grilse come ashore--"_ Musgrave._(_ To himself._) Grilse? |
36580 | _ Ant._ How? |
36580 | _ Ant._ Say a man never marry, nor have children, What takes that from him? |
36580 | _ Ant._ What sayd you? |
36580 | _ Ant._ Where? |
36580 | _ Arth._ Are you sick, Hubert? |
36580 | _ B._ Why did the girl fall in love with that fellow, I wonder? |
36580 | _ Bar._ Have you had quiet guard? |
36580 | _ Barnardo._ Whose there? |
36580 | _ Beat._ They have them? |
36580 | _ Beat._ You have the tablets? |
36580 | _ Beat._(_ As if struck by a sudden idea._) How did you get free? |
36580 | _ Beat._(_ To Patty._) Where''s Grizel? |
36580 | _ Beatrice._(_ Aside._) Not this serpent gone yet? |
36580 | _ Becket._ Am I the man? |
36580 | _ Becket._ Am I the man? |
36580 | _ Becket._ But dost thou think the King Forced mine election? |
36580 | _ Becket._ Friend, am I so_ Becket._ Friend, am I so much better than thyself much better than thyself That thou shouldst help me? |
36580 | _ Becket._ Have you thought of one? |
36580 | _ Becket._ How should I know? |
36580 | _ Becket._ Well-- will you move? |
36580 | _ Becket._ Where, my liege? |
36580 | _ Belinda._ Yes, I have work''d very hard; how do you like it? |
36580 | _ Bill._ The gentleman? |
36580 | _ Braun._ Has she given no hint of any intention to go? |
36580 | _ Braun._(_ After a moment of reflection._) Has there been no change in the course of the week? |
36580 | _ Brown._ Do any feel disgrace You are, in our eyes, a noble or shame? |
36580 | _ Brown._ Do you know where he is? |
36580 | _ Burgundy._ Is it even so? |
36580 | _ Catherine._(_ Alone, the key in her hand._) Oh, what is she doing? |
36580 | _ Chris._ Ask her where she''s been? |
36580 | _ Chris._ Have you thought she may not come at all? |
36580 | _ Cinna._ What is my name? |
36580 | _ Clayton._ Called? |
36580 | _ Clayton._ How do you know it was n''t? |
36580 | _ Clayton._ Well? |
36580 | _ Clayton._ What libretto? |
36580 | _ Clayton._ What was it? |
36580 | _ Clayton._ Where is it? |
36580 | _ Col._ About? |
36580 | _ Col._ Are you fond of thunder-- I mean fond of music? |
36580 | _ Col._ Ca n''t you really? |
36580 | _ Countess._ Is this the scourge of France? |
36580 | _ Countess._ Laughest thou, wretch? |
36580 | _ Countess._ Why, art not thou the man? |
36580 | _ Daup._ Do you know him? |
36580 | _ Davus._ Of what, sir? |
36580 | _ De Lota._ Are you? |
36580 | _ De Lota._ Do you mind? |
36580 | _ Denstroude._(_ On the steps, pausing and looking back._) You cycle at Battersea tomorrow morning? |
36580 | _ Dick._ Hello-- what''s this Alec? |
36580 | _ Dick._ Of course, but where did it come from? |
36580 | _ Dick._ She-- gave it to-- them--? |
36580 | _ Dick._(_ Quietly._) What time do you expect her back? |
36580 | _ Ditto._(_ Stacking packages._) Do n''t you wish you were getting these birthday presents, Katherine? |
36580 | _ Dora._ Does it? |
36580 | _ Duch._ Alas, sir, is it to be ever thus? |
36580 | _ Duch._ All? |
36580 | _ Duch._ Beauteous? |
36580 | _ Duch._ Dare not? |
36580 | _ Duch._ Fye, fie, what''s all this? |
36580 | _ Duch._ He shall be none; We''ll keep him here; then what is that to him? |
36580 | _ Duch._ How doe you affect it? |
36580 | _ Duch._ How? |
36580 | _ Duch._ In a winding sheete? |
36580 | _ Duch._ There needs small conjuration, when your finger May doe it: thus, is it fit? |
36580 | _ Duch._ We''ll try: you are-- so to speak-- my subject yet? |
36580 | _ Duch._ What did I say? |
36580 | _ Duch._ What doe you thinke of marriage? |
36580 | _ Duch._ What is the matter, my lord? |
36580 | _ Duch._ What is the matter? |
36580 | _ Duch._ Why, York, what wilt thou do? |
36580 | _ Duch._ Why, what is it, my lord? |
36580 | _ Dunstan._ Not-- part-- from me? |
36580 | _ E._"Were you Sheikh or just a robber, then?" |
36580 | _ E._"What new slave?" |
36580 | _ Elinor._(_ To Vedah._) Are n''t we? |
36580 | _ Elise._ Yes? |
36580 | _ Elise._ Yes? |
36580 | _ Emilia._ Oh, is that all? |
36580 | _ Emilia._ What will you do with''t, that you have been so earnest To have me filch it? |
36580 | _ Enter Antonio__ Duchess._ I sent for you; sit downe: Take pen and incke, and write: are you ready? |
36580 | _ Enter Barnardo and Francisco,_ Enter two Centinels_ two Centinels__ 1._ Stand: who is that? |
36580 | _ Enter Capulet in his gown and Lady Capulet__ Capulet._ What noise is this? |
36580 | _ Enter Horatio and Marcellus__ Enter Horatio and Marcellus__ Fran._ I think I heare them, stand ho, who is there? |
36580 | _ Enter Lorenzo and Dominic_ O father Dominic, what news? |
36580 | _ Enter a Taylor, with a Bundle under his Arm__ Bully._ How now; what have we here? |
36580 | _ Executioner_:"What are you doing in the bath at this time of night?" |
36580 | _ First Blind Man._ He has n''t come yet? |
36580 | _ Fitz Urse._ Do you hear that? |
36580 | _ Fool._ Well, what dost thou call this very pretty thing? |
36580 | _ Georgie._ Was n''t it? |
36580 | _ Georgie._ Why? |
36580 | _ Gre._ Do you quarrel, sir? |
36580 | _ H._"Have I begun well?" |
36580 | _ H._"Just a robber at the time-- just a robber-- And your mother-- do you remember her?" |
36580 | _ H._(_ with enormous swagger_)"Captain?" |
36580 | _ Henriette._ For what purpose? |
36580 | _ Henriette._ What impressions? |
36580 | _ Henry._ How dost thou know I am not wedded to her? |
36580 | _ Herbert._ I do think the King Was potent in the election, and why not? |
36580 | _ Herbert._ Is it so much heavier_ Herbert._ Is it so much heavier than thy Chancellor''s robe? |
36580 | _ Herbert._ Not heavier than_ Herbert._ Not heavier than thine armour at Thoulouse? |
36580 | _ Herbert._ To please the King? |
36580 | _ Herod._ Mariamne, hear you this? |
36580 | _ Herod._(_ Taking the scroll-- at foot of steps._) Mariamne, hear you this? |
36580 | _ Hoover._ Do n''t know-- but grand opera-- I remember that and libretto--_ Clayton._ You threw it away? |
36580 | _ Hoover._ To Elinor? |
36580 | _ Hoover._ What is it? |
36580 | _ Hoover._ What''s the matter? |
36580 | _ Hoover._ With whom? |
36580 | _ Iago._ A thing for me? |
36580 | _ Iago._ Did Michael Cassio, when you woo''d my lady, Know of your love? |
36580 | _ Iago._ Hast stolen it from her? |
36580 | _ Iago._ Honest, my lord? |
36580 | _ Iago._ My noble lord,--_ Othello._ What dost thou say, Iago? |
36580 | _ Iago._ Think, my lord? |
36580 | _ Iago._ What handkerchief? |
36580 | _ Iago._ What handkerchief? |
36580 | _ Iago._(_ Snatching it._) Why, what is that to you? |
36580 | _ Inez._ And will you say that I am here too? |
36580 | _ Jack._ May I ask you then what you would advise me to do? |
36580 | _ Jane._ Break it down? |
36580 | _ Jane._ Ill? |
36580 | _ Jean._ Well? |
36580 | _ Jean._ What are they doing? |
36580 | _ Jean._ What? |
36580 | _ Johnson._ But, pray, then, how comes it to pass that they know one another no better? |
36580 | _ Johnson._ Pray, sir, who are those so very civil persons? |
36580 | _ Jul._ O, cry you mercy, sir, I have mistook;_ Pro._ But how cam''st thou by this ring? |
36580 | _ Katherine._(_ Cheerily._) Why should n''t I be, Mrs. Brice? |
36580 | _ King Argimenes._ Why do you come here? |
36580 | _ King Richard._ Give me the_ Olivia._ Why, what would you? |
36580 | _ Lady Bracknell._ In what locality did this Mr. James, or Thomas, Cardew come across this ordinary hand- bag? |
36580 | _ Lady Bracknell._ Lady Bloxham? |
36580 | _ Lady Bracknell._ The cloak- room at Victoria Station? |
36580 | _ Lady Bracknell._ Where did the gentleman who had a first- class ticket for this seaside resort find you? |
36580 | _ Lady Bracknell._(_ Makes a note in her book._) In land or investments? |
36580 | _ Lady Brute._(_ Aside._) Do n''t answer him.--Well, what do you advise me? |
36580 | _ Lady Jedburgh._ What a fascinating woman Mrs. Erlynne_ Lady Plymdale._ Really? |
36580 | _ Lady Plymdale._ Really? |
36580 | _ Lady Windermere._(_ Standing_(_ Lady Windermere discovered_ by the fireplace._) Why does n''t at fireplace, L., crosses he come? |
36580 | _ Lau._ What ought he to have to drink? |
36580 | _ Lord Darlington._ No? |
36580 | _ Lord Rake._ The Doctor''s Gown!--Hark you, Knight, you wo n''t stick at abusing the Clergy, will you? |
36580 | _ Lord Windermere._ What do_ Lord Windermere._ What do you mean by coming here this you mean by coming here this morning? |
36580 | _ Luitolfo._ Do you see? |
36580 | _ Lukyn._ Come on? |
36580 | _ Lukyn._ What do you mean? |
36580 | _ Lukyn._ You''ll dare to lock us up all night? |
36580 | _ Lukyn._(_ Horrified._) By George, is it? |
36580 | _ Madam Helseth._ Do you feel the draught, Miss, where you''re sitting? |
36580 | _ Madame Perrichon._ Are you going on in that strain? |
36580 | _ Man- servant._(_ Standing over the bag._) Is there anything more, ma''am--? |
36580 | _ Maravon._ You have probably never heard of the"Lampadophories,"have you? |
36580 | _ Maria._ What can I say? |
36580 | _ Mary._ The kitten, Miss_ Mary._ The kitten, Miss Strone? |
36580 | _ Mirabell._ Does that please you? |
36580 | _ Natalie._(_ Impatiently._) Well? |
36580 | _ Nina._(_ Looking at a cheque._) What is this cheque? |
36580 | _ Nora._ And I? |
36580 | _ Nora._ And how did it turn_ Nora._ Millions of women have out? |
36580 | _ Nora._ How, saved? |
36580 | _ Nora._ You mean I would_ Nora._ You mean I would never have accepted such a never have accepted such a sacrifice? |
36580 | _ Noyes._ My fathah? |
36580 | _ Noyes._(_ Looking at his hands._) Such as-- trade? |
36580 | _ Othello._ What dost thou think? |
36580 | _ Othello._ Why of thy thought, Iago? |
36580 | _ Peasant._ What wouldst thou now, my sad one, ever fraught With toil to lighten my toil? |
36580 | _ Percy._ What do you think I said? |
36580 | _ Perrichon._ And my panama? |
36580 | _ Perrichon._ And the carpet bag? |
36580 | _ Perrichon._ What do you mean? |
36580 | _ Pickle Herring._ You see and you see, and what do you see? |
36580 | _ Pol._ And then sir, doos a this, What was I about to say, a doos, what was I about to say? |
36580 | _ Pol._ Wherefore should you do this? |
36580 | _ Policeman B._ Would the barrel be a good place to put a notice up? |
36580 | _ Polonius._ Mad for thy love? |
36580 | _ Polonius._ What said he? |
36580 | _ Potter._ John Mildmay the master of this house? |
36580 | _ Pro._ How? |
36580 | _ Pro._ Where is that ring, boy? |
36580 | _ Rains._ Is this all? |
36580 | _ Rainsford._ With me, sir? |
36580 | _ Ray._ Has the temperature been taken? |
36580 | _ Ray._ His face is flushed? |
36580 | _ Ray._ How much? |
36580 | _ Ray._ The cough? |
36580 | _ Ray._ The doctor gave you a prescription? |
36580 | _ Ray._ The fever? |
36580 | _ Rebecca._ Do_ you_ believe in them? |
36580 | _ Rebecca._ Now what_ is_ all this about the white horse, Madam Helseth? |
36580 | _ Rebecca._ What makes you fancy that? |
36580 | _ Rebecca._(_ Hastily._) Where? |
36580 | _ Rebecca._(_ Looks at her._) The dead? |
36580 | _ Rebecca._(_ Looks out._) That man there? |
36580 | _ Rosalie._ Madame has not slept? |
36580 | _ Rosmer._ White horses? |
36580 | _ Ruth._ What do you want here? |
36580 | _ S._"The deed?" |
36580 | _ Sabine._ Have n''t you noticed that she is beginning to look like a governess? |
36580 | _ Sam._(_ Aside to Gre._) Is the law of our side, if I say ay? |
36580 | _ Second Blind Man._ Where is the mad woman, and her child? |
36580 | _ Senator Morse._... What great motive--? |
36580 | _ Several_ Man''s...._ Others_ The living one''s.... And we? |
36580 | _ Severine._ But he was alone? |
36580 | _ Severine._ It is some one whom I know? |
36580 | _ Severine._ She? |
36580 | _ Severine._ Tell me, is it true? |
36580 | _ Severine._ Valentine? |
36580 | _ Severine._ Who was the woman? |
36580 | _ Simms._(_ Grumbling._) Fo''dat young good- fo''-nuffin hawg- grubbah t''swallow w''en he done come home? |
36580 | _ Sir Brice._ No? |
36580 | _ Sir Brice._ Simple cutting? |
36580 | _ Sir Brice._(_ Stopping him._) Once for all, will you give me a chance of paying back the six thousand pounds that Lady Skene has borrowed from you? |
36580 | _ Sir John._ Is there? |
36580 | _ Sir Will._ Not mine, sure? |
36580 | _ Sir Will._ What signifies his affection to me, or how can I be proud of a place in a heart where every sharper and coxcomb find an easy entrance? |
36580 | _ Smith._ Where''s the necessity of that, Mr. Bayes? |
36580 | _ Talbot._ Here is the Talbot; who would speak with him? |
36580 | _ The Sheikh from the"Who uses my name in vain?" |
36580 | _ The Very Old Blind Man._ Does any one know where we are? |
36580 | _ Theramenes._ And where, prince, will you look for him? |
36580 | _ Theramenes._ May I, then, learn the meaning of your flight? |
36580 | _ Third Blind Man._ And the beautiful blind girl, where is she? |
36580 | _ Third Blind Man._ Where are you sitting?--Will you come over by us? |
36580 | _ Third Blind Man._ Why did he separate us? |
36580 | _ Ulrich._ Do n''t you understand, my dear Jean? |
36580 | _ Val._(_ Rising._) Rise? |
36580 | _ Verdelet._(_ Aside to Poirier._) Are you going to allow him to make fun of you like that? |
36580 | _ W._"And be strangled myself?" |
36580 | _ W._"Escape?" |
36580 | _ W._"So she''s your daughter? |
36580 | _ W._"Your daughter?" |
36580 | _ Waiter._(_ Brightening perceptibly._) Coffee, miss? |
36580 | _ Witwoud._ Is that the way? |
36580 | _ Yel._ Go to,--you''ll pardon me? |
36580 | _ Yel._ Have you the wideness of her finger, sir? |
36580 | _ Yel._ How, how? |
36580 | _ Yel._ Of what weight, sir? |
36580 | _ Yel._ Say you so, sir? |
36580 | _ Yel._ Will you, i''faith? |
36580 | _ Yel._ You''ll steal away some man''s daughter: am I near you? |
36580 | _ York._ What seal is that, that hangs without thy bosom? |
36580 | _ Young For._ Do you not know me? |
36580 | _ letters._) Is he coming? |
36580 | and, Where put out the eies of Arthur lies your grief? |
36580 | anything happened to Hopeful? |
36580 | both mine eyes? |
36580 | but also the change to that infinitely more dramatic"And I?" |
36580 | but"Can any blow he will strike overcome the seemingly effective plans of the Countess?" |
36580 | but"Will my audience believe it true on sight or because of the treatment I can give it?" |
36580 | but''How is one to know which is one''s real self when one feels so different with different people?''" |
36580 | but, first,"Does place or time, or do both at all determine the action of the piece?" |
36580 | but,"Which of these students has any creative power that is individual? |
36580 | do they eate, Heare musicke, goe a hunting, and bee merrie, As wee that live? |
36580 | door? |
36580 | drop Out at mine eyes in tender womanish_ Hub._ No newes of death, but tears.-- tidings of more hate, Can you read it? |
36580 | found-- I mean--_ Natalie._(_ Impatiently._) Well? |
36580 | given my own wife''s name up to disgrace and shame--? |
36580 | great friend of yours? |
36580 | he finds the transitional scenes which take him back into an earlier episode; in the answer to"What will they become?" |
36580 | her at all? |
36580 | holds then? |
36580 | in time to which the procession enters.__ Macaire._ Well, friends, what cheer? |
36580 | instrument, These eyes that never did, nor To sound the tromp that causeth never shall hell triumph? |
36580 | is it not? |
36580 | is there time? |
36580 | is there time?" |
36580 | is this the man? |
36580 | jun._ Mass, that''s true: posy? |
36580 | jun._ Pardon you? |
36580 | jun._ Shall I make bold With your finger, gentlewoman? |
36580 | jun._ What, sir? |
36580 | long expostulation, Heapes up more griefe, than_ Hub._ Is this your promise? |
36580 | makes he thee his out mine eyes? |
36580 | morning? |
36580 | my sovereign lord, why wilt thou My lord, my life, not speak With full great grief, To me that am thy mother in pain for Hanges as a thief, thy wrong? |
36580 | noise is this? |
36580 | nor,"May it with ingenuity be guessed from the settings and costumes?" |
36580 | not eight hours out of twenty- four? |
36580 | on Thursday, wo n''t you come too? |
36580 | play by a letter from Whom shall they get? |
36580 | secondly,"Will any intelligent observer be vague as to place or time, as the play develops?" |
36580 | shall I leave behind me? |
36580 | silence._) Do they treat you well here John? |
36580 | sister?] |
36580 | son? |
36580 | sowing in my closset, Lord Hamlet with his doublet_ Corambis._ Why, what''s the all unbrac''d, matter my Ofelia? |
36580 | such a change in nature, So great an alteration in a_ Polonius._ With what i''th Prince, name of God? |
36580 | than thy Chancellor''s robe? |
36580 | the news? |
36580 | the women are opposite us? |
36580 | thine armour at Thoulouse? |
36580 | thou as they proceede, Conclude their judgement with so_ Arth._ Is there no remedy? |
36580 | thy blood? |
36580 | turn thy back and run? |
36580 | what do you here alone? |
36580 | what is his Christian name? |
36580 | what need you be so boisterous- rough? |
36580 | what, in blacke? |
36580 | where the Sheikh gives_ H._"You mean when I was-- Sheikh?" |
36580 | where? |
36580 | which replaces Nora''s"How, saved?" |
36580 | who hath relieved you? |
36580 | who is within there? |
36580 | why was I so long? |
36580 | you do, again, Lord Windermere? |
36580 | your Honour to take the benefite of the faire evening? |
36580 | your lordship to your rest? |
36580 | | But Zira? |
36580 | | But his enemy''s money? |
36580 | | Has he lost his power? |
36580 | | What has Sultan done to Executioner? |
36580 | | Who was Zira''s mother? |
35523 | A companion''s worse off than a governess, is n''t she? |
35523 | A glass of wine, Jack? |
35523 | A government appointment? |
35523 | A promise, father? |
35523 | A-- woman, Slummers? |
35523 | About myself? 35523 About the poor squire? |
35523 | Afraid-- of whom? |
35523 | Ah, then, no doubt, you noticed that his appearance and manner does not correspond with the station he occupies? |
35523 | Ah, yes; she is fond of diamonds, is she not? |
35523 | All sons are not so? |
35523 | Alone, yes; why not? 35523 Always lived here?" |
35523 | Am I fortunate enough to find you free for this, Lady Earlsley? |
35523 | Am I ready? |
35523 | Am I so like? |
35523 | Am I? |
35523 | An adventure? |
35523 | An angel? |
35523 | And I may come and see you? 35523 And are you quite well?" |
35523 | And are you really going to stay? |
35523 | And have you any brothers and sisters? |
35523 | And have you no friends with whom you could go and live? |
35523 | And he has never found her? |
35523 | And he is rich? |
35523 | And how do you do, Miss Rolfe? 35523 And how long have you been up, my dear?" |
35523 | And is that all you learned? |
35523 | And no one suspects anything? |
35523 | And now you are going to Arkdale? |
35523 | And of course we shall see you at the Square? |
35523 | And of course you offered to help her? |
35523 | And poacher too, eh? 35523 And she?" |
35523 | And that means Miss Wild Bird, too, I suppose? |
35523 | And then? |
35523 | And was Lady Bell kind? |
35523 | And what are you going to do? 35523 And what are your plans, Lady Bell?" |
35523 | And what have you been doing since I left town? |
35523 | And what may be your business with him? |
35523 | And what public meeting have you come from now? |
35523 | And where have you been? 35523 And where was the ball?" |
35523 | And you did n''t see her? |
35523 | And you did n''t speak to Lady Bell? |
35523 | And you got back? |
35523 | And you have been all this time going? |
35523 | And you knew me? |
35523 | And you love her, do n''t you? 35523 And you spoke to her?" |
35523 | And you were going to stay at Arkdale? 35523 And you, my dear?" |
35523 | And-- and Una? 35523 And-- and have you quite forgotten?" |
35523 | Another half hour,he muttered,"and the fool would have been too late? |
35523 | Any-- any other news, Slummers? |
35523 | Anything I want? |
35523 | Are these pictures of friends of yours? |
35523 | Are they not? |
35523 | Are we ready? |
35523 | Are you angry? |
35523 | Are you aware of the time, and that Lady Bell''s hall porter is uttering maledictions for our tardiness? |
35523 | Are you coming with us? |
35523 | Are you expecting any one? |
35523 | Are you going to change your mind and scalp me, after all? |
35523 | Are you going to row the outrigger down, Savage? |
35523 | Are you going to scalp me after all? |
35523 | Are you human? |
35523 | Are you hurt? |
35523 | Are you really bitten? |
35523 | Are you taking a wise step in seeking for a situation which is considered menial? |
35523 | Are you totally indifferent to her happiness? |
35523 | Are you trying to find an excuse for not coming? |
35523 | Are you very tired, Una? |
35523 | Are you warm enough, my darling? |
35523 | Are you? |
35523 | Arkdale? 35523 As how?" |
35523 | Ashamed? |
35523 | At least, Mr. Hudsley,he said,"we part as friends, notwithstanding this hasty resolution of yours?" |
35523 | Bad or good? |
35523 | Beautiful, eh? |
35523 | Because-- have you never heard of Ralph Davenant? |
35523 | Been on the war trail, Jack? |
35523 | But I say, Len, what has come to us? 35523 But how,"went on Una, after thinking a moment,"how did his friend know anything about me? |
35523 | But now-- now what are you to do? |
35523 | But shall I never see you again? |
35523 | But there must be some reason for it? 35523 But why?" |
35523 | But why? |
35523 | But, Mr. Jack,said Jobson, with a deeply respectful air of surprise,"you do n''t think of going right away at once, sir?" |
35523 | But, my dear Jack, why not? 35523 But-- but,"he said,"how did you come here? |
35523 | But-- but----he said, with a little flush and a shifting glance,"how did you know where I was?" |
35523 | But-- why not? |
35523 | Can I not? 35523 Can you ask-- can you expect me to believe it?" |
35523 | Can you doubt it? |
35523 | Can you guess-- you sweet, innocent flower-- what makes me so happy? |
35523 | Can you keep a secret, Lady Bell? |
35523 | Can you not guess? |
35523 | Can you tell us the road to the cottage of Gideon Rolfe, the woodman, my man? |
35523 | Chance,said the girl, sadly--"an evil or a good chance for me-- which? |
35523 | Come, is n''t that carrying the high and imposing rather too far, old fellow? 35523 Dead?" |
35523 | Deceived? 35523 Depends on what?" |
35523 | Did I speak? |
35523 | Did anyone see you come in? |
35523 | Did he mean it? |
35523 | Did n''t one of those clever fellows say of a certain woman that to know her was a liberal education? |
35523 | Did n''t you know that you had pitched me on an ants''nest? 35523 Did they also tell you that I lived in the woods up a tree, and existed on wild animals?" |
35523 | Did you ever know anything fail me? |
35523 | Did you fall? |
35523 | Did you notice his face as he went through? 35523 Did you see-- I mean, what was I doing?" |
35523 | Did you send Dick for me, father? |
35523 | Did you speak? |
35523 | Did you take me for a ghost? |
35523 | Did you think that I should hurt you? |
35523 | Do I not? |
35523 | Do I not? |
35523 | Do I? |
35523 | Do I? |
35523 | Do n''t you believe in the happiness of the married state, then? |
35523 | Do n''t you see? 35523 Do n''t you think that he is very handsome?" |
35523 | Do they not? |
35523 | Do what? |
35523 | Do you admire them? 35523 Do you ask me why, Jack? |
35523 | Do you come from-- him? |
35523 | Do you deny that the young man Jack Newcombe is near her? |
35523 | Do you know it? 35523 Do you know it?" |
35523 | Do you know they call him the Savage, and that it is quite an achievement on my part to get him here? 35523 Do you know what I would do if-- if the squire had left me any money?" |
35523 | Do you like them? |
35523 | Do you mean that she was never in London before? 35523 Do you mean that you ask_ me_?" |
35523 | Do you mean to hint that Stephen is n''t to be relied upon? |
35523 | Do you mean to say that Una is an heiress? |
35523 | Do you mean to say that you have never been outside this forest? |
35523 | Do you not know? |
35523 | Do you remember Earlsley? |
35523 | Do you remember the day you swam across the mill- pond, and fished my little boy out, Master Jack? |
35523 | Do you suppose anyone would have forgotten to tell me if your man had told them that the squire was dying? 35523 Do you suppose that I do n''t know that your man was instructed to keep it from me? |
35523 | Do you think I am afraid? |
35523 | Do you think I have not made preparations? 35523 Do you think so? |
35523 | Do you think they do n''t know the difference between mistress and servants there? 35523 Do you want me to go?" |
35523 | Do you? 35523 Do you?" |
35523 | Do you? |
35523 | Does he not? 35523 Does she know?" |
35523 | Eh, what? |
35523 | Eh-- uncle? 35523 Eh?" |
35523 | Eh? |
35523 | Everything? |
35523 | Fanny, will you make room beside you for Miss Rolfe? |
35523 | Father, tell me why you spoke so angrily to him-- why do you not want him to come to Warden again? |
35523 | Father, what has he done to make you hate him so? |
35523 | For him, do you mean? |
35523 | For him? |
35523 | For his? |
35523 | For myself? |
35523 | For what am I giving up what is most precious in life? |
35523 | From your son? |
35523 | Girl,he exclaimed, in low, harsh accents,"has the curse fallen upon you-- already? |
35523 | Going to walk? |
35523 | Gone? |
35523 | Good- bye-- you will write or come to me-- when? |
35523 | Grant that,said Gideon,"where could she better be hidden than here? |
35523 | Half an hour? |
35523 | Halloa,said Jack, in his blunt way,"what''s the matter?" |
35523 | Happy? 35523 Has a carriage left just now-- five minutes ago?" |
35523 | Has anyone of your name ever yet done his duty? |
35523 | Has he spoiled your dress, my dear? |
35523 | Has the time I looked forward to with fear and dread come at last? |
35523 | Has-- has he come? |
35523 | Has-- has that old idiot gone? |
35523 | Hate you? 35523 Have I? |
35523 | Have you any other testimonials besides this note of Lady Challoner''s? |
35523 | Have you come into a fortune? 35523 Have you dined, Stephen? |
35523 | Have you hurt yourself? |
35523 | Have you no fear, Una? 35523 Have you seen him? |
35523 | He is a great friend of yours? |
35523 | He wished me to assist him, but I had rather that he should do it alone-- perhaps you would go through the house with him? |
35523 | He''s always addressing public meetings, is n''t he? |
35523 | Hello, who''s this? |
35523 | Her mother and father? |
35523 | Here I am again, you see, Mr. Dagle; and where is Mr. Newcombe? 35523 Here still, Stephen?" |
35523 | Hidden things? |
35523 | Hitting below the belt is not considered fair, is it, Master Jack? |
35523 | Home already? |
35523 | How am I? |
35523 | How are the squaws and wigwams? 35523 How can I do it? |
35523 | How could I do otherwise? 35523 How could she possibly have been there?" |
35523 | How could you think it? 35523 How did he know of my existence?" |
35523 | How did you come to be run over? |
35523 | How did you know that I wanted a maid? |
35523 | How did you know that? |
35523 | How do you do, Jack? 35523 How do you do, Lady Earlsley?" |
35523 | How do you do, Mrs. Davenant, and how do you do, Wild Bird? |
35523 | How do you do, my dear mother? 35523 How do you do? |
35523 | How do you do? |
35523 | How do you know she can not? |
35523 | How is that? 35523 How long would he be now, dear?" |
35523 | How should I be? 35523 How will you put an end to this?" |
35523 | How''s that for an adventure? |
35523 | Hurt me? 35523 I am changed, am I not? |
35523 | I am so glad,she said;"why are you not?" |
35523 | I am very sorry,he said, grasping her arm;"but what can I do? |
35523 | I hear you were at Lady Bell''s dance last night; why did you let her hide you so completely? |
35523 | I said her mother and father, did I not? 35523 I saw that the blinds in the upper windows were down, and I went to the next door, and asked if anyone was ill.""Well?" |
35523 | I see,she said, musingly; then she looked down at him and added, suddenly:"You were to have been the heir?" |
35523 | I shall find you at the''Bush?'' |
35523 | I suppose I sha n''t be able to show up, because of Moss, Len? |
35523 | I understand,she faltered;"and when will you be back, Stephen?" |
35523 | I will not forget tomorrow-- how could I? |
35523 | I wonder what she will say, how she will look? |
35523 | I wonder whether Stephen will come down this evening? |
35523 | I wonder-- ahem-- who''ll be the next squire? |
35523 | I''ve a scarf somewhere-- where is it? |
35523 | I-- I hope I shall find your bill of costs among the papers? |
35523 | I-- I-- you wo n''t be away long, Stephen? 35523 I-- why should n''t I be in earnest?" |
35523 | Is he an old man? |
35523 | Is he ill? |
35523 | Is he so very bad and wicked? |
35523 | Is it all off? |
35523 | Is it not sufficient that I wish it, Una? |
35523 | Is it possible that any one could want anything more than is here? 35523 Is it really you? |
35523 | Is it? |
35523 | Is it? |
35523 | Is it? |
35523 | Is she ill-- dead? |
35523 | Is she not? |
35523 | Is she then so-- so accustomed to having her own way? |
35523 | Is that why he is dressed in black-- and you, too? 35523 Is that you, Jack?" |
35523 | Is there a secret? |
35523 | Is there anything to drink? |
35523 | Is this so much to ask you? |
35523 | Is''t you, Gideon? |
35523 | Is-- is Mr. Newcombe so badly off? 35523 Is-- is she well, Len?" |
35523 | Is-- is this really mine? |
35523 | Is-- is this the world? |
35523 | Is-- is-- Jack here? |
35523 | Isn''t-- isn''t it cold? |
35523 | It is something to do with Jack? |
35523 | It is you, really you? 35523 It was a noble deed, was n''t it? |
35523 | It would n''t matter much, would it? |
35523 | Jack is too high- minded to be guilty of such meanness; but is it not possible to marry for love and money, too, Lady Bell? |
35523 | Jack, what do you mean? |
35523 | Jack,she breathed, softly,"will you kiss me for the first and last time?" |
35523 | Kind? |
35523 | Lately? |
35523 | Laura, my dear Laura,murmured Stephen, in his most dulcet tones,"why are you angry with me?" |
35523 | Like a savage? |
35523 | Lonely, is it? |
35523 | Matter? 35523 Money trouble?" |
35523 | Mr. Rolfe,he said, and his voice was broken and hollow,"why you bear me such deadly enmity I can not imagine, and you will not tell me?" |
35523 | Must you go, Jack? |
35523 | Must you go, Lady Bell? 35523 My child,"exclaimed Mrs. Davenant,"have you been up all night? |
35523 | My darling,he murmured, holding her at arm''s length;"what magic charm do you possess that enables you to grow more beautiful every time I see you? |
35523 | My darling,he whispered,"do you know what you are giving me-- your precious self-- and to whom you are giving it?" |
35523 | My dear Jack, is n''t that rather sudden-- rather premature? |
35523 | My dear Jack,he exclaimed, reproachfully,"what have you been doing?" |
35523 | My dear Laura,he said, still holding the candle,"how did you come here? |
35523 | My dear,she said, in a low voice,"where did you learn to sing like that?" |
35523 | My uncle wants me? |
35523 | No, according to the rules; but what do you mean by the question? 35523 No,"he replied, slowly, and as if uncertain what to say--"he is not ill.""Then why did he not go?" |
35523 | No? |
35523 | Not of Mr. Davenant, who has been so kind? |
35523 | Now, Jack? |
35523 | Now, then, old man, where''s the cigars? 35523 Now,"he said, taking the glass from her,"tell me all about it-- how you came, and why? |
35523 | Of whom do you speak? |
35523 | Oh, Lady Bell, is it? |
35523 | Oh, has he? |
35523 | Oh, they do, do they; and who is this most fortunate young lady? |
35523 | On Una? |
35523 | On me? |
35523 | On whom? |
35523 | Out with it; what is it? |
35523 | Perhaps you remember last night''s tragic occurrence, then? |
35523 | Perhaps you will tell me for what reason? |
35523 | Quite penniless, Jack? |
35523 | Rich, my dear? |
35523 | Right, did you? 35523 Rum old boy, is n''t he? |
35523 | School? 35523 See those two men who have just come in? |
35523 | Shall I ever forget? 35523 Shall I get you one?" |
35523 | Shall I go, mother? |
35523 | Shall we tell him, Dally? 35523 She has accepted you?" |
35523 | So Stephen did n''t send? 35523 Squire, do you know me? |
35523 | Stephen Davenant? |
35523 | Still writing, old man? |
35523 | Strange? |
35523 | Surprised? |
35523 | Tell me,she murmured,"which Una do you like best?" |
35523 | That communication,Stephen continued,"concerns a certain young lady----""He told you?" |
35523 | That is Earl''s Court,he said;"a beautiful place, is n''t it? |
35523 | That is, after I have gone to rest for a little while longer; I am in no hurry; wo n''t you sit down, Una? 35523 That''s what I ca n''t make out; can you?" |
35523 | That? 35523 The day before yesterday? |
35523 | The first is-- is in whose favor? |
35523 | The key? |
35523 | The one you do not like? |
35523 | The rubies? |
35523 | The women? |
35523 | The world, my dear? |
35523 | Then I have your promise? 35523 Then how-- how did you learn to read? |
35523 | Then why are you going there now? |
35523 | Then why do you keep me in the draughty hall for half an hour? 35523 Then you have not forgotten?" |
35523 | Then you think the squire was wandering in his mind at last? |
35523 | There are some things in the breakfast room I brought from London, will you go and see to them? |
35523 | They are engaged? |
35523 | This will find you? |
35523 | Till death, were you going to say? |
35523 | To London-- we are going to London? |
35523 | To London? |
35523 | To help me dress? |
35523 | To what harm do you allude? |
35523 | To whom? |
35523 | To yours? |
35523 | To-- where did you say? |
35523 | Two, did he say? |
35523 | Una,he said,"what is the meaning of this? |
35523 | Una,she breathed,"what is it?" |
35523 | Una? 35523 Under yours?" |
35523 | Was Lady Bell there? |
35523 | Was anything the matter? |
35523 | Was it rude of me? |
35523 | Was it? |
35523 | Was she angry? |
35523 | Well, Stephen Davenant''s conduct is rather peculiar-- isn''t it? |
35523 | Well, darling? |
35523 | Well, did he tell you any more than that? |
35523 | Well, did you see her? |
35523 | Well, ma''am,he said-- and"ma''am"sounded in her ears and in Una''s almost like"mother"--"and how are you? |
35523 | Well, my dear Jack,said Stephen with a smile, and rubbing his hands softly,"is it not rather for you to go on? |
35523 | Well, my dear, have you got the rubies? |
35523 | Well, my dear,said Mrs. Davenant,"have you enjoyed yourself? |
35523 | Well, you will come and see how you like it, wo n''t you? |
35523 | Well,he exclaimed, with a short laugh--"well, what business is it of anyone''s but mine and Una''s? |
35523 | Well,he said, with a little, awkward laugh;"but-- are you jealous? |
35523 | Well,rose the voice from the bed, hollow and broken,"have you got them?" |
35523 | Well,she said,"where is my ice?" |
35523 | Well? |
35523 | Well? |
35523 | Well? |
35523 | Well? |
35523 | Well? |
35523 | Well? |
35523 | Were you going to say, will I give you something to help you to remember? |
35523 | Were you run over-- are you hurt? |
35523 | Wermesley? |
35523 | What Saxon king was it who offered fivepence for every wolf''s head? 35523 What am I to do, Len?" |
35523 | What am I to do? 35523 What am I to do?" |
35523 | What are we all going to do? |
35523 | What are we going to do now? |
35523 | What are you afraid of? 35523 What are you doing-- dining? |
35523 | What are you reading there, Len? |
35523 | What are you up to now, Savage? 35523 What can I do?" |
35523 | What can I do? |
35523 | What can he do, and-- why do n''t he go? |
35523 | What can you have to tell me about him that is so dreadful, if he is alive and happy? |
35523 | What did I tell you? |
35523 | What do men-- well- born and high- bred men like you----"What will you take to drink? |
35523 | What do they do? 35523 What do you mean? |
35523 | What do you mean? |
35523 | What do you mean? |
35523 | What do you mean? |
35523 | What do you mean? |
35523 | What do you mean? |
35523 | What do you say to punctuality, ma''am? |
35523 | What do you think, cook? |
35523 | What do you think? |
35523 | What does it matter? 35523 What end could he have in view here?" |
35523 | What has come to you, Jack? 35523 What has happened?" |
35523 | What has he done? |
35523 | What have I said? |
35523 | What have you been doing to look so fresh and happy? |
35523 | What have you been doing, Jack? |
35523 | What have you got to say for yourself? |
35523 | What have you written? |
35523 | What is he saying? |
35523 | What is it you are saying? 35523 What is it? |
35523 | What is it? 35523 What is it? |
35523 | What is it? 35523 What is it? |
35523 | What is it? |
35523 | What is it? |
35523 | What is it? |
35523 | What is the matter? |
35523 | What is the matter? |
35523 | What is your business? |
35523 | What key? |
35523 | What shall I do, Len? 35523 What should be? |
35523 | What the deuce do you mean by leaving a man in the lurch like this? |
35523 | What will you do? |
35523 | What''s he stopping for? |
35523 | What''s her name? 35523 What''s the matter, old man?" |
35523 | What''s the matter-- tired? |
35523 | What''s the matter? |
35523 | What''s the next train? |
35523 | What''s this? |
35523 | What, this young lady, Laura Treherne? |
35523 | What? |
35523 | When can you come? 35523 When is it to be, Stephen?" |
35523 | Where are you going now? |
35523 | Where are you going? |
35523 | Where are you staying? 35523 Where are you?" |
35523 | Where did you hear it? |
35523 | Where do I-- live? |
35523 | Where do you live? |
35523 | Where has it all gone? 35523 Where have you been to- night?" |
35523 | Where have you been? |
35523 | Where is Stephen? |
35523 | Where is Una? |
35523 | Where is Una? |
35523 | Where is he? |
35523 | Where is she? |
35523 | Where is your authority? |
35523 | Where to, my lady? |
35523 | Where to? |
35523 | Where will you take her? |
35523 | Which? |
35523 | Who can tell? 35523 Who is it-- do you know?" |
35523 | Who is that? |
35523 | Who is the beauty this? |
35523 | Who says so? |
35523 | Who told you he was here? |
35523 | Who was it? |
35523 | Who will not come? |
35523 | Who''s that? |
35523 | Why are men so wicked? |
35523 | Why are you not satisfied? 35523 Why are you waiting?" |
35523 | Why did n''t you stop when I called to you just now? |
35523 | Why did n''t you tell me that he was dying? |
35523 | Why did n''t you tell me that you had a lady-- ladies with you? |
35523 | Why did n''t you? |
35523 | Why did they leave the cottage so suddenly? |
35523 | Why did you go without breakfast this morning? |
35523 | Why did you leave me so long without a word? |
35523 | Why did you run from me? |
35523 | Why do you ask, my good man? |
35523 | Why do you not tell him so? |
35523 | Why do you pity him? |
35523 | Why do you say''Poor Jack?'' |
35523 | Why do you tell me this? |
35523 | Why does he not come to see me? |
35523 | Why for? |
35523 | Why may we not----she paused, then, having raised her eyes, she continued--"why may she not know?" |
35523 | Why not? 35523 Why not? |
35523 | Why not? |
35523 | Why not? |
35523 | Why not? |
35523 | Why poor? |
35523 | Why should I not? 35523 Why should he be so anxious to make me his wife? |
35523 | Why should he love me so? |
35523 | Why should she do that? 35523 Why-- again?" |
35523 | Why-- why do they look at me so? |
35523 | Why? |
35523 | Why? |
35523 | Why? |
35523 | Will Mary Burns do, my lady? 35523 Will somebody give me a piece of cake? |
35523 | Will you have any more? |
35523 | Will you have some more claret? |
35523 | Will you not ride? |
35523 | Will you not shake hands on-- on such an occasion? |
35523 | Will you please let me know? 35523 Will you tie it, please?" |
35523 | Will you wait a few minutes? 35523 Will you?" |
35523 | Will your ladyship wear the pendant? |
35523 | Wins what? 35523 With Stephen''s mother?" |
35523 | Wo n''t anybody sing? |
35523 | Wo n''t you go up and dress, Stephen? |
35523 | Would he dine with me if I had only ginger beer to offer him? |
35523 | Would he? 35523 Would you like me to? |
35523 | Would you like to get out for a quarter of an hour, darling? |
35523 | Wrong, how do you mean? |
35523 | Yes,said Jack, fiercely,"I am going; I am a fool, but how can a man stand against such a perpetual old nuisance as you are? |
35523 | Yes; are other girls so shut in and kept from seeing the world that one reads so pleasantly of? |
35523 | Yes; how old are you? |
35523 | Yes; the little bird also whispered that you had----"Drank too much champagne? 35523 You are Gideon Rolfe? |
35523 | You are Una''s guardian? |
35523 | You are a woodman? |
35523 | You are answered, young sir; now, what do you want? |
35523 | You are not going away again, then? |
35523 | You are really going? 35523 You ask me to be your wife, Jack?" |
35523 | You do n''t like it? |
35523 | You expected to see a man seven feet high in his ducal robes? |
35523 | You followed Slummers-- well? |
35523 | You have been ill? |
35523 | You have come to inquire about your daughter? |
35523 | You have never read any novels-- any novels of present day life? |
35523 | You have quarreled? |
35523 | You here? 35523 You intend to keep her secret?" |
35523 | You know him, father? |
35523 | You know him? 35523 You know him?" |
35523 | You live with him? |
35523 | You mean that-- that he was falling in love with me? |
35523 | You mean to say that you would not accept any situation? |
35523 | You quarrel, do you mean? |
35523 | You think he was delirious----"Do n''t you, Mr. Hudsley? 35523 You think me ungrateful?" |
35523 | You think the forest is lonely? |
35523 | You want to know how I came back, and why? 35523 You want to know how it comes about that Miss Rolfe is under my mother''s charge-- under my charge, I may say?" |
35523 | You want to see the_ modus operandi_? 35523 You were his dearest friend,"she said to Leonard,"can you not guess where he has gone?" |
35523 | You will come and see me? |
35523 | You will come with us, Stephen? |
35523 | You will have some tea? |
35523 | You will not take my word? |
35523 | You will tell him? |
35523 | You would? |
35523 | You, I suppose, Mr. Davenant, will go down to your place in Wealdshire-- what is it called? |
35523 | You-- you are not playing a joke with me, my dear Jack? 35523 You-- you do n''t think there is any other-- any other later will?" |
35523 | You-- you mean to tell me that he has left me? |
35523 | You-- you saw my shadow? |
35523 | You-- you will come again? |
35523 | You-- you----"Will take care of your bird? 35523 Your answer, dear Bell?" |
35523 | Your grandfather has no suspicion? |
35523 | ''Could I get her a cab?'' |
35523 | ''Well, Master Jack,''says I,''bean''t you got enough apples at the Hurst, but you must come and plague me?'' |
35523 | ''Where?'' |
35523 | ''Why should you do that?'' |
35523 | --for Una had started and turned to her with a sudden flash of intense interest in her eyes--"did you know him? |
35523 | A gentleman, did thee say?" |
35523 | After all, what did I deserve?" |
35523 | After all, what harm is done? |
35523 | After all, why should you resist my uncle''s wish? |
35523 | Ah, no, you could not, if you have not been out of the forest-- how strange it seems!--but you have heard of him, perhaps?" |
35523 | Ah----""What is the matter?" |
35523 | Am I dreaming?" |
35523 | Am I dreaming?" |
35523 | Am I to give the credit to you for this?" |
35523 | And I see you do not wish your real name to transpire?" |
35523 | And Lady Bell? |
35523 | And Stephen? |
35523 | And are n''t you glad to see me?" |
35523 | And did not his mother, the timid, gentle woman who had already won Una''s heart, speak of him as great and good? |
35523 | And have you your lion? |
35523 | And he does not live in the same house with you?" |
35523 | And how is-- how are they all?" |
35523 | And is that all you are going to tell me of your wanderings?" |
35523 | And is this what was the gloomy old Hall?" |
35523 | And much good it would do me if I succeeded? |
35523 | And now, as I feel rather tired, would you mind coming up to my rooms? |
35523 | And she has gone, you say?" |
35523 | And still more mysterious, what was the meaning of Stephen''s conduct on the lawn? |
35523 | And what about supper?" |
35523 | And what do you think she said?" |
35523 | And what woman could resist his handsome face and frank, manly way? |
35523 | And when do I not think of her?" |
35523 | And where on earth have you been?" |
35523 | And yet he could not but be good and generous, for was it not to him that she owed all that had happened to her? |
35523 | And yet-- it''s the squire''s handwriting, for it''s his seal, and what was it lying outside the terrace for? |
35523 | And you have lived in the world all the time?" |
35523 | And you? |
35523 | And, Jack, this must make no difference between us; you will come and see me?" |
35523 | And, by the way, will you choose a paper for the smoking- room down there? |
35523 | Any news? |
35523 | Anything bitten you?" |
35523 | Anything else?" |
35523 | Are there no trees?" |
35523 | Are they fine, do you think?" |
35523 | Are they gay and full of people, with theaters and parks, and ladies riding and driving, and crowds in the streets?" |
35523 | Are you alone?" |
35523 | Are you angry with me for speaking so-- so boldly?" |
35523 | Are you enjoying it?--are you happy?" |
35523 | Are you fond of dancing?" |
35523 | Are you fond of jewels, lace, books?--what are you specially fond of?" |
35523 | Are you married?" |
35523 | Are you out of your mind?" |
35523 | At least, we shall be together, shall we not?" |
35523 | Been going it in the forest, or what?" |
35523 | Besides, why should you say''No?'' |
35523 | But had he secured it? |
35523 | But how did he know you were back? |
35523 | But look, do you see that tall lady there, dancing with the short man with whiskers? |
35523 | But what am I to do? |
35523 | But where? |
35523 | But will you come now? |
35523 | But, Jack, do n''t you see why I am so pleased-- why this makes me so happy? |
35523 | But, mother, you will not forget what I said during our drive? |
35523 | But-- but"--he mused, his lips twitching, his eyes moving restlessly to and fro--"what shall I do with her? |
35523 | But-- but-- what was it I was saying? |
35523 | By the way, are you engaged?" |
35523 | By the way-- where did you go to school?" |
35523 | Child, can you tell me that, secluded and lonely as your life has been, it has been an unhappy one?" |
35523 | Come, Jack, you wo n''t refuse assistance when it comes from the hand of her Majesty? |
35523 | Come, that is very satisfactory; and Jack-- Jack is my cousin-- well, very nearly cousin, you know, I hope he has made himself useful and agreeable?" |
35523 | Could he keep her much longer? |
35523 | Davenant?" |
35523 | Davenant?" |
35523 | Davenant?" |
35523 | Davenant?" |
35523 | Davenant?" |
35523 | Davenant?--has she just come out of a convent? |
35523 | Dick knows where to find me now, he comes straight to the pond, though he hates frogs''music; do n''t you, Dick?" |
35523 | Did I take too much, Len?" |
35523 | Did n''t my man give you my message? |
35523 | Did n''t you notice any sign of a move about the place the first night you were there?" |
35523 | Did the fool think I was a ghost? |
35523 | Did you let her see that you cared for her? |
35523 | Did you see Jack?" |
35523 | Did you think I should not come back? |
35523 | Do any o''you remember that roan mare as the old parson had? |
35523 | Do n''t I tell you she''s one of the Earlsley lot? |
35523 | Do n''t I tell you she''s worth a million?" |
35523 | Do n''t you feel well, Jack?" |
35523 | Do n''t you?" |
35523 | Do you choose her dress for her?" |
35523 | Do you disobey me?" |
35523 | Do you know I meant to give you a hiding when I came up to you?" |
35523 | Do you know what I am going to do?" |
35523 | Do you know what he wants me to do?" |
35523 | Do you know what part of the forest it is in?" |
35523 | Do you know what will happen when London finds that she is in its midst?" |
35523 | Do you love me?" |
35523 | Do you remember how queer he was that night he came back from the country, Arkroyd?" |
35523 | Do you think I am blind? |
35523 | Do you think I shall succeed?" |
35523 | Do you think I shall want to gamble? |
35523 | Do you think I should get lost, or have you seen any wolves in Warden Forest, father? |
35523 | Do you think it possible to keep her imprisoned in this wood for the whole of her days?" |
35523 | Do you think that he was conscious of what he was saying? |
35523 | Do you think that if I were as penniless as one of Lady Southerly''s daughters, I should receive as much attention? |
35523 | Do you think that it is by choice that I have kept you hidden from the world? |
35523 | Do you think the person who took the message delivered it properly? |
35523 | Do you think,"and she looked calmly at the anxious, nervous face,"do you think I shall be happy?" |
35523 | Do you trust me so entirely? |
35523 | Do you understand? |
35523 | Do you want me to catch cold?" |
35523 | Do you?" |
35523 | Do_ you_ want to be rich?" |
35523 | Does she agree to all this?" |
35523 | Does that sound strange to you?" |
35523 | Eh, Jack? |
35523 | First, who are Una''s parents?" |
35523 | For him? |
35523 | For you will come, will you not? |
35523 | Gideon Rolfe inclined his head as if to corroborate this, then he said:"Will you come inside, madam, and partake of some refreshment?" |
35523 | Go on; anything else?" |
35523 | Great Heaven, was he actually driven to accept Stephen''s charity? |
35523 | Had Jack Newcombe found the will, and, if not, where was it? |
35523 | Had Stephen''s nature undergone this marvelous change? |
35523 | Had he enjoyed the pull up? |
35523 | Has anything happened to Lady Bell? |
35523 | Has he bewitched you? |
35523 | Have n''t you been to Arkdale or Wermesley?" |
35523 | Have you been asleep?" |
35523 | Have you been ill?" |
35523 | Have you been to the Square yet this morning?" |
35523 | Have you decided to cut the world or have heiresses become unnecessary? |
35523 | Have you done as I told you?" |
35523 | Have you ever done that, Wild Bird?" |
35523 | Have you got it bad, Len?" |
35523 | He had better hear it from my lips, and-- you quite see, Jack?" |
35523 | He is your son; why do you doubt him?" |
35523 | He looked at it; it bore Lady Isabel Earlsley''s name, and on the back was written:"To inquire whether Mr. Newcombe was hurt last night?" |
35523 | He said that he must and would have some money, that if you did not pay him he would----""Well?" |
35523 | He was a rich man, was he not?" |
35523 | He''s still alive, I hope?" |
35523 | He-- he-- doesn''t he look rather superior for his station, and why does he look so stern and forbidding?" |
35523 | How are Hetley, and Dalrymple, and the rest of them? |
35523 | How are you this morning?" |
35523 | How came he here?" |
35523 | How came he to be in Lady Bell''s ball- room? |
35523 | How can they sit there laughing and chattering like a set of monkeys?" |
35523 | How could one be unhappy in Warden? |
35523 | How could you do it?" |
35523 | How did he know of your existence?" |
35523 | How did you come here? |
35523 | How did you come to be run over?" |
35523 | How did you guess that? |
35523 | How do you do? |
35523 | How do you spell it?" |
35523 | How far?" |
35523 | How had she frightened the pretty girl, and why had she declined to kiss her? |
35523 | How is little Ned?" |
35523 | How is that for an adventure? |
35523 | How long has she been gone?" |
35523 | How long have we lived in Warden, father?" |
35523 | How long will she escape notice in London? |
35523 | How much do you owe him?" |
35523 | How should he answer her?--how warn and caution her without destroying the innocence which, like the sensitive plant, withers at a touch? |
35523 | How the conjurer is going to perform the wonderful feat? |
35523 | How was she to explain to this frank, beautiful girl the laws of etiquette? |
35523 | I can do anything now, or what is the use of this money? |
35523 | I got out at Wermesley, meaning to walk to Arkdale; but that appears to be easier said than done, eh?" |
35523 | I hope, I fervently hope, that he has not willfully----""Did you tell him I was dying?" |
35523 | I looked at it as I gave it to the porter; and where do you think it was from?" |
35523 | I may ask that much, Jack?" |
35523 | I mean shall I come here to-- what do you call it-- Warden?" |
35523 | I mean,"she went on to Una,"that if I were your husband I would give you the sapphire set; though a lover would be more suitable, would it not?" |
35523 | I saw him at Lady Bell''s-- he is a friend of hers----""But why did n''t you tell me?" |
35523 | I suppose you are quite old friends already, eh, mother?" |
35523 | I think I may speak for my cousin-- may I not, Jack?" |
35523 | I thought she went to meet you?" |
35523 | I trust you have been happy?" |
35523 | I wonder if anybody has, ever since the world began, hit upon a short cut? |
35523 | I wonder whether you will be happy?" |
35523 | I-- I can hear voices-- an old man''s voice-- what is it?" |
35523 | If any harm comes to you----""Harm?" |
35523 | If not in the house, where then? |
35523 | If not, I''ll walk a little way with you; or will you come toward my rooms?" |
35523 | If you or Mr. Hudsley want me-- where is Hudsley?" |
35523 | Is it all a dream in her eyes, dimmed as they are by happy tears? |
35523 | Is it any good halloing, I wonder? |
35523 | Is it because he thinks that I am beautiful? |
35523 | Is it likely that if anyone had the accursed thing they would keep it hidden? |
35523 | Is it not so?" |
35523 | Is it not strange that for all these years I have never been outside Warden?" |
35523 | Is it really you, Jack?" |
35523 | Is it yours, Stephen?" |
35523 | Is n''t it right, Dally?" |
35523 | Is n''t she with you? |
35523 | Is she at Earl''s Court?" |
35523 | Is that you, Jack?" |
35523 | Is the station near?" |
35523 | Is there a man in this room as can say he''ll be a penny the worse for Squire Ralph''s death? |
35523 | Is there any more champagne, Lady Earlsley? |
35523 | Is there anything more exquisite on earth than the voice of a young girl? |
35523 | Is there anything you can suggest?" |
35523 | Is your Cousin Stephen-- is that his name?--there?" |
35523 | It is a secret which he says shall go down to the grave with him, unless----""Unless what?" |
35523 | It is so, is it not?" |
35523 | It was a pretty piece, too, was n''t it, Ark?" |
35523 | It''s often the case, is n''t it?" |
35523 | Jack Newcombe?" |
35523 | Laura, you will not leave me with such words on your lips?" |
35523 | Len, I''ve seen the most beautiful-- the most-- Len, do you believe in witches? |
35523 | Let me give you some ham-- some tongue, then?" |
35523 | Let me see, is there anything else?" |
35523 | May I ask your reasons for this abrupt withdrawal?" |
35523 | May I say that there are no signs of such an ill result in your face?" |
35523 | Mr. Rolfe, I hope you feel that, in trusting your daughter to my charge, that she will at least have a happy home, if I can make one for her?" |
35523 | Mrs. Davenant shuddered, or was it the play of the fire- light? |
35523 | Mrs. Davenant, do n''t you think I am very stupid to commit suicide in this way?" |
35523 | My friends----""You do not care for your friends to know that you are in a situation? |
35523 | My poor Laura, why did you come?" |
35523 | Newcombe?" |
35523 | Newcombe?" |
35523 | Newcombe?" |
35523 | Newcombe?" |
35523 | Newcombe?" |
35523 | No, I shall not forget until I am dead; perhaps not then; who knows?" |
35523 | No, why should you?" |
35523 | Not very lucid, Len, is it? |
35523 | Now, do n''t you want to know all their names and all about them?" |
35523 | Now, then, ca n''t I help pack up?" |
35523 | Now, then, what have you learned?" |
35523 | Oh, Stephen, do you remember when we met first?" |
35523 | Oh, Stephen, why have you hidden things from me?" |
35523 | Oh, Una, do you know what it means-- this that you are going to do? |
35523 | Oh, by- the- way, speaking of worries, can you recommend me a maid? |
35523 | Oh, he is not ill?" |
35523 | Oh, why do you keep me in suspense?" |
35523 | On what? |
35523 | Or is it all a mistake, and are you another Una than the Una of Warden Forest?" |
35523 | Perhaps the little bird told you everything else?" |
35523 | Perhaps you have seen her set of sapphires?" |
35523 | Putting her head, with a thousand pounds of jewels on it, through the window, she said, in clear tones:"What is the matter, Jackson?" |
35523 | Rather, why_ should_ he? |
35523 | Rolfe?" |
35523 | Rolfe?" |
35523 | Seriously, where have you been, old man?" |
35523 | She glanced at Una lingeringly:"I must n''t ask, I suppose?" |
35523 | She is simply lovely; her eyes haunt me-- who is she?" |
35523 | She is the Countess of Pierrepoint, and he is the Duke of Garnum----""A duke?" |
35523 | She waited for him to ask for an invitation; then, pressing her lip with her fan, said:"Will you join us?" |
35523 | She''s here in London, and who do you think she is staying with? |
35523 | Should she never see him again? |
35523 | So much for me; now for yourself, Una?" |
35523 | Some of the crown jewels or some of the Queen''s venison? |
35523 | Sometimes it would be:"Well, what are you going to do today? |
35523 | Speak? |
35523 | Stephen unlocked his wrist, bent down, and murmured, in his soft, silky voice:"Uncle, do you know me?" |
35523 | Stephen, if I had had a mother, do you think I should have deceived her also?" |
35523 | Stephen?" |
35523 | Suppose-- I say suppose-- that I refuse to deliver her up to your care?" |
35523 | Tell me why you are going to Arkdale?" |
35523 | That is n''t a colony, is it, though? |
35523 | That is so, Mr. Stephen, is it not?" |
35523 | That is your name, is n''t it? |
35523 | The countess looked at her earnestly, and Sir Arkroyd muttered to Dalrymple:"Where did she come from?" |
35523 | The dying man heard it, however, and opening his eyes, said, almost inaudibly:"Is that you, Hudsley?" |
35523 | Then you are twenty- one?" |
35523 | Then you-- then you-- am I addressing the Squire of Hurst Leigh?" |
35523 | Then, after a pause, she said:"Are you rich?" |
35523 | Then, where was she? |
35523 | Too late!--why do you say-- too late? |
35523 | Una-- I may call you Una?" |
35523 | Unless I had unquestionable control over the young lady, how could I answer for her safety? |
35523 | Until then-- will you take any refreshment?" |
35523 | Wait a moment there, will you?" |
35523 | Was Lady Bell''s heartache produced by the absence of Jack Newcombe? |
35523 | Was Mrs. Davenant afraid of her son? |
35523 | Was he dreaming, or had his senses taken leave of him? |
35523 | Was he dreaming, or was it really she? |
35523 | Was he dreaming, or was this a different Stephen to the one he knew and disliked? |
35523 | Was it her beauty or her frankness-- the latter so different to the cut- and- dried and measured manner of the ordinary women of society? |
35523 | Was it love; love at first sight? |
35523 | Was it love? |
35523 | Was it possible that one so base as her father declared him to be could look as this youth had looked, speak as he had spoken? |
35523 | Was it possible that the girl was ignorant of her marvelous beauty? |
35523 | Was it possible that the old man had actually left the wood-- thrown up his livelihood-- because of his( Jack''s) visit to the cottage? |
35523 | Was it real, or was it one of the visionary heroes of her books created into life from her own dreaming brain? |
35523 | Was she glad to see you? |
35523 | Was the old man delirious, or had he, Stephen, really played the part of sycophant, toady and boot- licker all these years for nothing? |
35523 | Was there any significance in the speech? |
35523 | Was-- was anyone dead? |
35523 | We were reading about it the other night, do n''t you remember?" |
35523 | Well, old man?" |
35523 | Well, what''s to be done?" |
35523 | Were you not playing when I came in?" |
35523 | What about the commissionership, or whatever it is, Stephen?" |
35523 | What am I to do with you? |
35523 | What are stupid rubies compared with an angel?" |
35523 | What are they doing? |
35523 | What are you doing here with a candle, and behaving like a lunatic?" |
35523 | What are you to do? |
35523 | What brings you here?" |
35523 | What can her eyes and her voice be to me? |
35523 | What can you mean? |
35523 | What could I do when you left me?" |
35523 | What could Stephen gain by this generosity? |
35523 | What could it mean? |
35523 | What did I do with it? |
35523 | What did it mean? |
35523 | What did it mean? |
35523 | What did you say, Lady Bell? |
35523 | What do I care for Lady Bell, or Lady anyone else? |
35523 | What do I care whether she is illegitimate or not? |
35523 | What do you make of it?" |
35523 | What do you mean?" |
35523 | What do you say to Hurst Leigh?" |
35523 | What do you say to taking the coach to Guildford, getting a snack there, and back in the evening?" |
35523 | What do you say, Ark, shall we join him? |
35523 | What do you think could be wrong? |
35523 | What does the rest matter?" |
35523 | What fate has sent him here to- night?" |
35523 | What good could he do? |
35523 | What had happened? |
35523 | What had she done? |
35523 | What has happened? |
35523 | What has he done to make you angry?" |
35523 | What have I done? |
35523 | What have you been doing?" |
35523 | What have you got inside there that you keep so close, eh? |
35523 | What have you to say?" |
35523 | What have you to say?" |
35523 | What is he saying to him? |
35523 | What is her name?" |
35523 | What is that-- milk?" |
35523 | What is the matter-- another maid run away?" |
35523 | What is the matter?" |
35523 | What mystery enveloped the little group of persons buried in the depths of a wood, living apart from the world? |
35523 | What on earth are you talking about? |
35523 | What on earth brings you to town? |
35523 | What on earth did he mean by going off like that? |
35523 | What other way can one punish the scoundrel who repays hospitality by treachery? |
35523 | What right had she there-- she, the ignorant, untaught forest girl, among these grand people? |
35523 | What right has he to pretend to be invincible? |
35523 | What shall I give you?" |
35523 | What should I care what she thinks? |
35523 | What should he say to Leonard, the faithful friend, when he got home and was asked how he had parted from Una? |
35523 | What should he write? |
35523 | What should she do? |
35523 | What sort of a place was it?" |
35523 | What took her to Hurst Leigh that night, I wonder? |
35523 | What was he hunting for with such intense eagerness as to make him fly at Jack like a madman? |
35523 | What was he to do? |
35523 | What was it that her father knew that should make him hate the youth so? |
35523 | What was it-- kiss- in- the- ring?" |
35523 | What was the use of his going? |
35523 | What was to be done with a boy like that? |
35523 | What were you afraid of-- that I should cut you out at the last moment? |
35523 | What will become of me? |
35523 | What would Stephen say-- would he be displeased or gratified? |
35523 | What would Stephen say? |
35523 | What would life be without it?" |
35523 | What would you choose? |
35523 | What''s the fear? |
35523 | What''s the matter?" |
35523 | What''s the matter?" |
35523 | What''s your will with me?" |
35523 | When did n''t I want it? |
35523 | Where am I? |
35523 | Where are you?" |
35523 | Where could it be? |
35523 | Where did we live before we came to Warden?" |
35523 | Where did you get all the flowers from? |
35523 | Where had he been, and what had he been doing? |
35523 | Where has the man gone? |
35523 | Where have you been?" |
35523 | Where is he?" |
35523 | Where is she-- Laura Treherne? |
35523 | Where was that will-- the real, true, valid will-- which left everything away from him to Una? |
35523 | Where was the will? |
35523 | Where were you? |
35523 | Where''s the other part of it, and what was the other part like? |
35523 | Who could resist that bewitching smile? |
35523 | Who else have I to think of-- except my mother, my dear mother? |
35523 | Who is she-- where is she?--what is she? |
35523 | Who was it?" |
35523 | Who was that I heard with you?" |
35523 | Who''s that in the back room, ma''am?" |
35523 | Why are you changed-- why do you shrink from me?" |
35523 | Why can not we have a picnic every day?" |
35523 | Why did he not seize it and go? |
35523 | Why did you leave me without a word? |
35523 | Why did you not tell me you were with your uncle? |
35523 | Why did you start?" |
35523 | Why do n''t you blow your candle out, and not chuck your slippers at it? |
35523 | Why do you mock a dying man? |
35523 | Why do you not put the horses to?" |
35523 | Why do you not speak? |
35523 | Why do you not wipe it off? |
35523 | Why do you trust him so?" |
35523 | Why does he wish me to go into the world he hates and fears so much? |
35523 | Why does she wear so long a dress? |
35523 | Why had he not driven down with them? |
35523 | Why has he changed so suddenly?" |
35523 | Why not? |
35523 | Why not?" |
35523 | Why should he accuse and insult him, and drive her away as if from the presence of some wild animal who was seeking to devour her? |
35523 | Why should he write? |
35523 | Why should he?" |
35523 | Why should her father be angry with the youth? |
35523 | Why should n''t he go to Warden Forest on his way back? |
35523 | Why should n''t he? |
35523 | Why should not he marry for love as well as money? |
35523 | Why should the poor girl ever learn the truth, when such knowledge can only bring her shame and mortification?" |
35523 | Why was this one man, with the handsome face and the musical voice, more wicked than the rest? |
35523 | Why were all men wicked? |
35523 | Why, Gideon, what has happened to thee?" |
35523 | Why, Una, did your father allow you to come? |
35523 | Why, man, are you afraid to let me in? |
35523 | Why, who was she? |
35523 | Why-- why did Lady Bell smile at him like that? |
35523 | Why-- why did you give that_ post obit_?" |
35523 | Why-- why should not I?" |
35523 | Why----""Oh, Stephen, is it really you? |
35523 | Will he tell the old man? |
35523 | Will you be my wife?" |
35523 | Will you come, Miss Rolfe?" |
35523 | Will you go up to your room? |
35523 | Will you have a pipe? |
35523 | Will you have everything ready?" |
35523 | Will you have some more cream, Lady Earlsley?" |
35523 | Will you kindly permit me to enter your cottage and rest?" |
35523 | Will you tell me all you know, Stephen?" |
35523 | Will you-- will you be so kind as to let me know if it is anything serious?" |
35523 | Wonder whether the robins will be good enough to cover me over in the proper nursery- book style? |
35523 | Would you like to go, my dear?" |
35523 | Would you like to have it warmed a little?" |
35523 | You are on a visit?" |
35523 | You do n''t look quite the thing?" |
35523 | You do n''t mean to say that you wo n''t let me come in?" |
35523 | You do n''t understand?" |
35523 | You do, do you not?" |
35523 | You have been to Earl''s Court?" |
35523 | You have n''t got the-- document in your pocket all the time?" |
35523 | You have n''t met anyone, have you?" |
35523 | You have not been unhappy, Una?" |
35523 | You have not mentioned my name to anyone?" |
35523 | You have sealed up all papers and jewels? |
35523 | You knew him well?" |
35523 | You know as well as I do that I would spend every hour of my life by Una''s side if I could; but what can I do?" |
35523 | You know him, do n''t you?" |
35523 | You say I am beautiful, but you are so partial; do you think I am beautiful enough to cause any man to risk his all in life for my sake?" |
35523 | You see how this unmans me-- can you not understand how great must be the danger from which I wish to save you? |
35523 | You think their pride would be greater than your own?" |
35523 | You think these are pretty things; what will you say when you see the great sights-- sights which we Londoners think nothing of?" |
35523 | You understand? |
35523 | You understand?" |
35523 | You understand?" |
35523 | You understand?" |
35523 | You understand?" |
35523 | You understand?" |
35523 | You want me? |
35523 | You will be calm, my dear Jack?" |
35523 | You will have some refreshments after your journey, my dear Jack?" |
35523 | You will join us, of course, Jack?" |
35523 | You will not forget tomorrow?" |
35523 | You will tell me, will you not? |
35523 | You wo n''t object to a government appointment?" |
35523 | You would like to come?" |
35523 | You''ve got half a dozen plans, but I-- what am I to do? |
35523 | Your name is Stephen Davenant?" |
35523 | and how was his friend Leonard Dagle? |
35523 | and was he in those eccentric but charming rooms of his in the Temple still? |
35523 | exclaimed Jack,"what''s the matter? |
35523 | exclaimed Len, again;"and-- and is that all?" |
35523 | exclaimed Mrs. Fellowes,"what are you talking about?" |
35523 | has everyone disappeared?" |
35523 | he exclaimed,"can it be you? |
35523 | he murmured,"where is he now?" |
35523 | he said,"is he dead?" |
35523 | how do you do?" |
35523 | is that you, Jack?" |
35523 | said Jack,"the house on fire?" |
35523 | she said;"who is that?" |
35523 | what have you done with the will?" |
35523 | what is it?" |
35523 | what would Mr. Gideon Rolfe say if I gave his daughter to a beggar? |
35523 | what''s that?" |
35523 | where is_ she_? |
35523 | who wants to be rich? |
35523 | who''s that?" |
35523 | you ca n''t marry on nothing-- now, can you? |
35523 | you will not leave me?" |
7211 | And what is death? 7211 And what''s that to you?" |
7211 | And who''s your masther? |
7211 | But why do I talk of death, That Phantom of grizzly bone? 7211 Can you? |
7211 | Did n''t I see you give that gentlewoman a leather for four- pence, this blessed minit? |
7211 | Did you, sir, throw up a black crow? |
7211 | From whose, I pray? |
7211 | Have not,says Quintilion,"our hand''s the power of exciting, of restraining, of beseeching, of testifying approbation, admiration, and shame? |
7211 | His? 7211 Huff,"and"kauff;"and, pardonnez- moi, how you call d- o- u- g- h--"duff,"--eh? |
7211 | I say, whose house is that there here? |
7211 | I want a letter, sir, if you plase,said I"And whom do you want it for?" |
7211 | Is it Squire Egan you dare say goose to? |
7211 | Is it where the feathery palm- trees rise, And the date grows ripe under sunny skies? 7211 Kauff,"eh? |
7211 | Now who be ye, would cross Lochgyle, This dark and stormy water? |
7211 | O Squire Egan''s your masther? |
7211 | Plow"doe"kauff;and one more r- o- u- g- h--what you call General Taylor,--"Rauff and Ready?" |
7211 | Ruff,ha? |
7211 | Sir, did you tell? |
7211 | Then, sir, I fancy, if you please to try These in my hand will better suit your eye? |
7211 | What consarn is that of yours? |
7211 | What price was Ellsworth''s, young and brave? 7211 What reward have I then, for all my labor?" |
7211 | What sort of eyes can you have got? |
7211 | What''s your boy''s name, good wife, And in what good ship sailed he? |
7211 | What''ud I pay''levenpence for? |
7211 | What, he again? 7211 Where is my cabin- door, fast by the wild wood? |
7211 | Where may I find him? |
7211 | Who do you want it for? |
7211 | Who gave you the directions? |
7211 | Who rules the Duke? 7211 Who rules the king? |
7211 | Why is that man expiring? |
7211 | Why wait we longer, mocked, betrayed, By open foes, or those afraid To speed thy coming through my aid? 7211 Why you stupid rascal,"said he,"if you do n''t tell me his name, how can I give you his leather?" |
7211 | Yes,says I;"Have you anything to say agin it?" |
7211 | ( Are those torn clothes his best?) |
7211 | -- What would''st thou think of him who thus could drive thy comrade from the door? |
7211 | --"And pray, sir, what was''t?" |
7211 | --"I do n''t know what it is,"Replied his friend.--"No? |
7211 | --"Well come, sir, if you please, Here is another sort; we''ll e''en try these; Still somewhat more they magnify the letter, Now, sir?" |
7211 | --"what is he gone? |
7211 | --Nay, ruler of the rebel deep, What matters wind or wave? |
7211 | --Who says this? |
7211 | A wife, sir, did you say? |
7211 | AM I FOR PEACE? |
7211 | Abhor the sword-- stigmatize the sword? |
7211 | Abhor the sword-- stigmatize the sword? |
7211 | Abhor the sword-- stigmatize the sword? |
7211 | About my own boy John? |
7211 | Ah oui; I understand, it is"dauff,"--eh? |
7211 | All this? |
7211 | Ambition? |
7211 | An American no longer? |
7211 | And I ask, What good does anything do? |
7211 | And are gentlemen insensible to their deeds, to the value of them in animating the country in the hour of peril hereafter? |
7211 | And are we prepared to barter these hopes, this sublime moral empire, for conquests by force? |
7211 | And by what definition do you award the name to the creator of an epic, and deny it to the creator of a country? |
7211 | And can he bear, think you, can he bear the sympathizing agonies of a distressed wife? |
7211 | And do we owe all this to the kind succor of the mother- country? |
7211 | And does not Fame speak of me, too? |
7211 | And even if we condescend so far, still can we be justified in taking them, unless we have clear proof that they are criminals? |
7211 | And for what? |
7211 | And hopest thou hence unscathed to go? |
7211 | And how have their fortunes and their power increased, but as the commonwealth has been ruined and impoverished? |
7211 | And how? |
7211 | And if we conquer, what is our policy? |
7211 | And is it possible that neither of these causes, that not all combined, were able to blast this bud of lope? |
7211 | And is the old flag flying still That o''er your fathers flew, With bands of white and rosy light, And field of starry blue? |
7211 | And is there any part of your conduct in which you are, or wish to be, without law to God, and not under the law of Jesus Christ? |
7211 | And is there, amidst this universal wreck, nothing stable, nothing abiding, notating immortal, on which poor, frail, dying man can fasten? |
7211 | And is this all that remains of him?--During a life so transitory, what lasting monument then can our fondest hopes erect? |
7211 | And is this the way, sir, that you are to show yourselves the advocates of order? |
7211 | And murder sullies in Heaven''s sight The sword he draws:-- What can alone ennoble fight? |
7211 | And must I never see thee more, My pretty, pretty, pretty lad? |
7211 | And now what would he do, what would he be if he were here to- day? |
7211 | And now, may I make so bold as to ask whose name I shall enter in my books? |
7211 | And now, my good sir, what may your trouble be? |
7211 | And pray, sir, what in the world is equal to it? |
7211 | And shall we, sir, the pride of our age, the terror of Europe, submit to this humiliating sacrifice of our honor? |
7211 | And since we must fight it through, why not put ourselves in a state to enjoy all the benefits of victory if we gain the victory? |
7211 | And so you ran off, did you? |
7211 | And so you turned sailor to get there? |
7211 | And the thing the farmer uses, how you call him, p- l- o- u- g- h,--"pluff,"is it? |
7211 | And they who founded, in our land, The power that rules from sea to sea, Bled they in vain, or vainly planned To leave their country great and free? |
7211 | And thus the question which had been so often asked, Will the negroes fight? |
7211 | And we who wear thy glorious name, Shall we, like cravens, stand apart, When those whom thou hast trusted, aim The death- blow at thy generous heart? |
7211 | And what does this allusion to the slow coach mean? |
7211 | And what good does that do? |
7211 | And what have we to oppose to them?--Shall we try argument? |
7211 | And what is a conqueror? |
7211 | And what is our country? |
7211 | And what is religion? |
7211 | And what is the amount of this debt? |
7211 | And what is the nature of the times in which we live? |
7211 | And what man, seeing this, And having human feelings, does not blush, And hang his head, to think himself a man? |
7211 | And what were the women of the United States in the struggle of the Revolution? |
7211 | And what would be its termination? |
7211 | And what''s in prayer, but this twofold force,-- To be forestalled, ere we come to fall, Or pardoned being down? |
7211 | And what? |
7211 | And where are the foes who so vauntingly swore That the havoc of war and the battle''s confusion, A home and a country should leave us no more? |
7211 | And where are ye to- day? |
7211 | And where are ye, O fearless men? |
7211 | And where did this seemingly great power go for its support and refuge? |
7211 | And where is the bosom- friend, dearer than all? |
7211 | And who commanded,--and the silence came,--"Here let the billows stiffen, and have rest"? |
7211 | And who, I pray, is to judge of their necessity? |
7211 | And why should I speak low, sailor? |
7211 | And why? |
7211 | And will you preach insurrection to men like these? |
7211 | And will you? |
7211 | And yet, of those lost words is not our whole America one immortal record and reporter? |
7211 | And, if the war must go on, why put off longer the Declaration of Independence? |
7211 | And, sir, is that spirit to be charged here, in this hall where we are sitting, as being"discreditable"to our country''s name? |
7211 | Are despots alone to be reproached for unfeeling indifference to the tears and blood of their subjects? |
7211 | Are men fed with chaff and husks? |
7211 | Are not the streets better paved, houses repaired and beautified?" |
7211 | Are republicans irresponsible? |
7211 | Are they dead that yet act? |
7211 | Are they dead that yet move upon society, and inspire the people with nobler motives and more heroic patriotism? |
7211 | Are they dead that yet speak louder than we can speak, and a more universal language? |
7211 | Are they dead, too? |
7211 | Are they not intended for disorganization in our very midst? |
7211 | Are they not intended to animate our enemies? |
7211 | Are they not intended to destroy our zeal? |
7211 | Are they not intended to dull our weapons? |
7211 | Are we in peace? |
7211 | Are we in war, or under a necessity, as at this time, to enter into a war? |
7211 | Are we not yet revenged?" |
7211 | Are we proposing to disturb it? |
7211 | Are we to resort to the sword when we get defeated at the ballot- box? |
7211 | Are we, then, so much alike? |
7211 | Are women to have no opinions or actions on subjects relating to the general welfare? |
7211 | Are you a native, sir? |
7211 | Are you girded for the fight? |
7211 | Are you good men and true? |
7211 | Are you more stubborn- hard than hammered iron? |
7211 | Are you really prepared to determine, but not to hear, the mighty cause, upon which a Nation''s hopes and fears hang? |
7211 | Are you sick, Hubert? |
7211 | Are your vigilance, your police your common powers of observation, to be extinguished by putting an end to the horrors of war? |
7211 | Arrah, sir, why would I let you be chated, when he was selling them before my face for four- pence a- piece? |
7211 | Ashamed of these tokens and titles, and envious of the flaunting robes of imbecile idleness and vanity? |
7211 | Ashamed to toil, art thou? |
7211 | Ask Him, if your knotted scourges, Matches, blood- extorting screws, Are the means that duty urges Agents of His will to use? |
7211 | Be we men, And suffer such dishonor?--men, and wash not The stain away in blood? |
7211 | Bernard,"quoth Alphonso,"What means this warlike guise? |
7211 | Bought it? |
7211 | Bright jewels of the mine? |
7211 | But I did not call him to order, why? |
7211 | But I have had vat you call e- n- o- u- g- h,--ha? |
7211 | But I would ask, does the recollection of Bunker''s Hill, Saratoga, and Yorktown, afford no pleasure? |
7211 | But if he bar New England out in the cold, what then? |
7211 | But is such to be the fate of Massachusetts,--of New England? |
7211 | But shall you escape the common fate of the instrument of evil? |
7211 | But strew his ashes to the wind Whose sword or voice has served mankind-- And is he dead, whose glorious mind Lifts thine on high? |
7211 | But take the subject in the other way; take it on the grounds stated by the right honorable gentleman over the way, and how does it stand? |
7211 | But the question is asked, Shall we vote money for this purpose? |
7211 | But the right to take ten pounds, implies the right to take a thousand; and what must be the wealth that avarice, aided by power, can not exhaust? |
7211 | But to him, mouldering in his narrow and humble habitation, what are they? |
7211 | But what from traitor''s blood should spring, Save traitor like to thee? |
7211 | But what had we done? |
7211 | But what is politics? |
7211 | But what is this good for? |
7211 | But what need that I exhort you? |
7211 | But what will all their efforts avail? |
7211 | But when shall we be stronger? |
7211 | But where are they? |
7211 | But who are they that our dastardly enemies thus despise?--the consuls, or you, Romans? |
7211 | But will his country receive him? |
7211 | But you take a little more punch after that? |
7211 | But, considered simply as an intellectual production, who will compare the poems of Homer with the Holy Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments? |
7211 | By allowing it to continue even for one hour, do not my right honorable friends weaken-- do they not desert their own arguments of its injustice? |
7211 | By that sin fell the angels: how can man, then, The image of his Maker, hope to win by''t? |
7211 | Ca n''t you be cool like me? |
7211 | Call you that chivalry? |
7211 | Can gentlemen assign any other possible motive for it? |
7211 | Can he endure the formidable presence of scrutinizing, sneering domestics? |
7211 | Can it be that America, under such circumstances, can betray herself? |
7211 | Can it be that she is to be added to the catalogue of republics, the inscription upon whose ruins is: THEY WERE, BUT THEY ARE NOT? |
7211 | Can ministers still presume to expect support in their infatuation? |
7211 | Can not this state of probation be as well undergone without adding to the catalogue of human sufferings? |
7211 | Can parliament be so dead to its dignity and duty, as to give their support to measures thus obtruded and forced upon them? |
7211 | Can sin, can death your worlds obscure? |
7211 | Can they take it upon them to say, that an Indian peace, under these circumstances, will prove firm? |
7211 | Can we cast our votes with their view, and against our own? |
7211 | Can you not come another day?" |
7211 | Can you persuade yourselves that political men and measures are to undergo no review in the judgment to come? |
7211 | Can you say nothing else but money, money, money? |
7211 | Can you, sir, lightly contemplate these consequences? |
7211 | Compassion!--What compassion? |
7211 | Cut off from all hope of royal clemency what are you, what can you be, while the power of England remains, but outlaws? |
7211 | Did I say, better? |
7211 | Did Rolla ever counsel dishonor to his friend? |
7211 | Did he break your head, then? |
7211 | Did it remain their long? |
7211 | Did n''t you pay what he asked? |
7211 | Did not great Julius bleed for justice''sake? |
7211 | Did the battle of Thermopylà ¦ preserve Greece but once? |
7211 | Did the gentleman never hear of the deed of Jael, who slew the dreaded enemy of her country? |
7211 | Did they bring"discredit"on their sex by mingling in politics? |
7211 | Did they never get beaten before? |
7211 | Did you arrive there safely? |
7211 | Did you never hear of Demosthenes, sir, the Athenian orator? |
7211 | Did you say nothing of a crow at all?" |
7211 | Did you take them? |
7211 | Do I love them? |
7211 | Do not men toil? |
7211 | Do the men of England care not, mother, The great men and the high, For the suffering sons of Erin''s isle, Whether they live or die? |
7211 | Do they not, in pointing out places and persons, discharge the duty of adverbs and pronouns? |
7211 | Do we mean to submit to the measures of Parliament, Boston Port Bill and all? |
7211 | Do we mean to submit, and consent that we ourselves shall be ground to powder, and our Country and its rights trodden down in the dust? |
7211 | Do we want a cause, my Lords? |
7211 | Do we want a proof and illustration of all this? |
7211 | Do we want a tribunal? |
7211 | Do ye fear him? |
7211 | Do ye not know his companions? |
7211 | Do ye not know his whole house-- insolent-- impure-- gamesters-- drunkards? |
7211 | Do ye not know this Antony? |
7211 | Do ye not read them, deep cut, defying the tooth of time, on all the marble of our greatness? |
7211 | Do you belong to this house, friend? |
7211 | Do you confess so much? |
7211 | Do you know where Marblehead is? |
7211 | Do you like my voice, James? |
7211 | Do you remind me that we did not return your escaped slaves? |
7211 | Do you reply that in many instances they have violated this compact, and have not been faithful to their engagements? |
7211 | Do you suppose he plans for an imaginary line to divide South Carolina from New York and Massachusetts? |
7211 | Do you think I''ll take a fee for telling you what you know as well as myself? |
7211 | Do you think I''m a fool?" |
7211 | Do you think it wise or humane at this moment to insult them, by sticking up in a pillory the man who dared to stand forth as their advocate? |
7211 | Do you think that single point worth the sacrifice of everything else? |
7211 | Do you think that the benefit they receive should be poisoned by the stings of vengeance? |
7211 | Do you think those yells will be forgotten? |
7211 | Do you want a criminal, my Lords? |
7211 | Does a railroad or canal do good? |
7211 | Does any one ask for the signs of this approaching era? |
7211 | Does anything do any good? |
7211 | Does he not feel that it is as honorable to owe it to these, as to being the accident of an accident? |
7211 | Does he not remember Cornelia, the mother of the Gracchi, who declared that her children were her jewels? |
7211 | Does the honorable gentleman rely on the report of the House of Lords for the foundation of his assertion? |
7211 | Does your resolution fail you for this? |
7211 | Dost thou love thy wife and children? |
7211 | Dr. Ay; pray, sir, are you a glutton? |
7211 | Dr. Do you eat no honey, or jelly, or jam, at breakfast? |
7211 | Dr. Do you take any wine during dinner? |
7211 | Dr. Not above twice a week? |
7211 | Dr. Of course you sleep well and have a good appetite? |
7211 | Dr. Then, perhaps, you are a drunkard? |
7211 | Dr. You are from the West country, I should suppose, sir? |
7211 | Dr. You take a glass of ale and porter with your cheese? |
7211 | Else why so swell the thoughts at your Aspect above? |
7211 | Fear ye foes who kill for hire? |
7211 | First, who think you the most desartless man to be constable? |
7211 | For what is the significance of this prayer? |
7211 | For whither shall he go? |
7211 | From what did it separate his province? |
7211 | Gentlemen, is the happiness of a sensitive and confiding female to be trifled away by such shallow artifices as these? |
7211 | Gentlemen, what does this mean? |
7211 | Give up the Union? |
7211 | Gleams not an eye? |
7211 | HOW''S MY BOY? |
7211 | Had she a brother? |
7211 | Had she a sister? |
7211 | Had you rather CÃ ¦ sar were living, and die all slaves; than that CÃ ¦ sar were dead, to live all freemen? |
7211 | Has Great Britain any enemy in this quarter of the world, to call for all this accumulation of navies and armies? |
7211 | Has He bid you buy and sell us, Speaking from His throne, the sky? |
7211 | Has earth a clod Its Maker meant not should be trod By man, the image of his God, Erect and free, Unscourged by Superstition''s rod To bow the knee? |
7211 | Has he completely done? |
7211 | Has he forgotten Esther, who, by her petition saved her people and her country? |
7211 | Has he forgotten the Spartan mother, who said to her son, when going out to battle,"My son, come back to me with thy shield, or upon thy shield?" |
7211 | Has it not here begun the master- work of man, the creation of a national life? |
7211 | Has it not, in general, contributed to the administering of that government wisely and well since? |
7211 | Has the gentleman done? |
7211 | Has the human race gone mad? |
7211 | Hast thou a charm to stay the morning star In his steep course? |
7211 | Hast thou children? |
7211 | Hast thou, my child, forgot, ere this, A mother''s face, a mother''s tongue? |
7211 | Hath Cassius lived To be but mirth and laughter to his Brutus, When grief and blood ill- tempered, vexeth him? |
7211 | Have any alarms been occasioned by the emancipation of our Catholic brethren? |
7211 | Have not some of these upstarts built private houses and seats, vying with the most sumptuous of our public palaces? |
7211 | Have the principles on which you ground the reproach upon cabinets and kings no practical influence, no binding force? |
7211 | Have we anything new to offer on the subject? |
7211 | Have we disturbed it? |
7211 | Have we gained nothing by the war? |
7211 | Have we suffered a defeat at Blenheim? |
7211 | Have you anything here to repair these damages? |
7211 | Have you considered the resistance, the difficulty, the danger of the attempt? |
7211 | Have you counted up the cost? |
7211 | Have you guarded well the coast? |
7211 | Have you marked and trenched the ground, Where the din of arms must sound, Ere the victor can be crowned? |
7211 | Have you marshalled all your host? |
7211 | Have you not love enough to bear with me, When that rash humor, which my mother gave me, Makes me forgetful? |
7211 | Have you not marked how the human heart bowed to the supremacy of his power, in the undissembled homage of deferential horror? |
7211 | Have you not marked when he entered, how the stormy wave of the multitude retired at his approach? |
7211 | Have you the heart? |
7211 | He has paid his health, his conscience, his liberty for it; and will you envy him his bargain? |
7211 | He hath brought many captives home to Rome, Whose ransoms did the general coffers fill: Did this in CÃ ¦ sar, seem ambitious? |
7211 | He will tell you, did I say? |
7211 | Hear ye yon lion roaring in his den? |
7211 | Hem!--if it''s not an impertinent question, may I ask which way you are travelling? |
7211 | Hope ye mercy still? |
7211 | How came he to die? |
7211 | How came he to the brink of that river? |
7211 | How came this change to pass? |
7211 | How can fleeting words of human praise gild the record of their glory? |
7211 | How can we eat what is not eatable? |
7211 | How could I look to you, mother, How could I look to you, For bread to give to your starving boy, When you were starving too? |
7211 | How could my father sell that which the Great Spirit sent me into the world to live upon? |
7211 | How dare you breathe that air which wafted to the ear of Heaven the groans of those who fell a sacrifice to your accursed ambition? |
7211 | How dared he cross it? |
7211 | How do things go on at home? |
7211 | How from Rebellion''s broken reed We saw his emblem fall, As soon his cursà © d poison- weed Shall drop from Sumter''s wall? |
7211 | How have they deserved it? |
7211 | How have you passed your life? |
7211 | How is each of tile thirty States to defend itself? |
7211 | How long Will he live thus? |
7211 | How long was it before his empire was a dream, his dynasty extinguished in blood, and an enemy on his throne? |
7211 | How many of the richest are reduced, by disease, to a worse condition than this? |
7211 | How shall I define it? |
7211 | How shall I find words to describe its momentous magnificence and its beatific lustre? |
7211 | How shall it be separated? |
7211 | How sinned against you? |
7211 | How so? |
7211 | How the black war- ships came And turned the Beaufort roses''bloom To redder wreaths of flame? |
7211 | How weigh the gift that Lyon gave, Or count the cost of Winthrop''s grave? |
7211 | How will she pay for it? |
7211 | How''s my boy-- my boy? |
7211 | How''s my boy-- my boy? |
7211 | How''s my boy-- my boy? |
7211 | How''s my boy-- my boy? |
7211 | How''s my boy-- my boy? |
7211 | How, if he will not stand? |
7211 | How, if they will not? |
7211 | I am asked, What good will the monument do? |
7211 | I am met with the great objection, What good will the Monument do? |
7211 | I an itching palm? |
7211 | I ask gentlemen, sir, what means this martial array if its purpose be not to force us to submission? |
7211 | I ask why not"traitor,"unqualified by any epithet? |
7211 | I ca n''t approve this hawid waw;-- Why do n''t the parties compromise? |
7211 | I do n''t approve this hawid waw; Those dweadful bannahs hawt my eyes; And guns and drums are such a baw-- Why do n''t the pawties compwamise? |
7211 | I drink a good deal of beer Dr. What quantity of port do you drink? |
7211 | I durst not? |
7211 | I have a bad"cuff,"--eh? |
7211 | I have always insisted that the people of the Northern States were in no manner responsible for slavery in the Southern states; and why? |
7211 | I have likewise sent for a barber, Old F. What, is he to teach you to shave close? |
7211 | I knew the voice of Peace,--"Is there no respite?--no release?-- When shall the hopeless quarrel cease? |
7211 | I must be brief, lest resolution drop Out at mine eyes, in tender womanish tears.-- Can you not read it? |
7211 | I pause for a reply,--- None? |
7211 | I pity the dumb victim at the altar-- But does the robed priest for his pity falter? |
7211 | I thought ten thousand swords must have leaped from their scabbards to avenge even a look that threatened her with insult? |
7211 | I trust it is neither too presumptuous nor too late to ask, Can you put the dearest interest of society at risk, without guilt and without remorse? |
7211 | I''d rack thee, though I knew A thousand lives were perishing in thine-- What were ten thousand to a fame like mine? |
7211 | I''m not their mother-- How''s my boy-- my boy? |
7211 | I''ve dared him oft, before the Paynim spear; Think ye he''s entered at my gate-- has come to seek me here? |
7211 | I-- the child of rank and wealth,-- Am I the wretch who clanks this chain, Bereft of freedom, friends, and health? |
7211 | If I should leave the land of my fathers, whither shall I fly? |
7211 | If I withdraw the charge, will then Your ramrod do the same?" |
7211 | If not-- what matters? |
7211 | If on the ground of injustice it ought to be abolished at last, why ought it not now? |
7211 | If we know him to be a thief, shall we not lay hands on him? |
7211 | If we postpone independence, do we mean to carry on, or to give up, the war? |
7211 | If, sir, freedom of speech is not to remain to us, what is the government worth? |
7211 | In peace, her sails fleck all the seas; Her mills shake every river; And where are scenes so fair as these God and her true hands give her? |
7211 | In the West country it is impossible, I hear to dine without punch? |
7211 | In the name of the immortal gods, what is it, Romans, you would have? |
7211 | In view of our moral, social, and political responsibilities, can we do this? |
7211 | In war, her claim who seek to rob? |
7211 | In what code of honor did you get your authority for that? |
7211 | In what do the struggles in which England has heretofore sympathized, differ from that which is now convulsing America? |
7211 | Inform me, friend, is Alonzo, the Peruvian, confined in this dungeon? |
7211 | Is Sparta dead? |
7211 | Is character valuable? |
7211 | Is his heart still? |
7211 | Is it come to this? |
7211 | Is it dangerous for nations to live in amity with each other? |
7211 | Is it fanaticism for her to believe as your Madison believed, that"slavery is a dreadful calamity?" |
7211 | Is it fanaticism for her to believe with your Henry Clay, that"slavery is a wrong, a grievous wrong, and no contingency can make it right?" |
7211 | Is it humanity? |
7211 | Is it law? |
7211 | Is it my fault that I was Geffrey''s son? |
7211 | Is it not an obligation to the service of God, founded on his authority, and extending to all our relations, personal and social? |
7211 | Is it not fair writ? |
7211 | Is it not so? |
7211 | Is it not the acknowledgment of a wish and object to create political strength, by uniting political opinions geographically? |
7211 | Is it not the science and the exercise of civil rights and civil duties? |
7211 | Is it that insidious smile with which our petition has been lately received? |
7211 | Is it thus we are to understand you?" |
7211 | Is it worth anything? |
7211 | Is knowledge the pearl of price in your estimation? |
7211 | Is life so dear, or peace so sweet as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
7211 | Is man possessed of talents adequate to the great occasion? |
7211 | Is mere animal life-- feeding, working, and sleeping like an ox-- entitled to be called good? |
7211 | Is mere wealth, as an ultimate end,--gold and silver, without an inquiry as to their use,--are these a good? |
7211 | Is not our own history one witness and one record of what it can do? |
7211 | Is not the city enlarged? |
7211 | Is not this the very essence of local feeling and local regard? |
7211 | Is peace a rash system? |
7211 | Is splendid folly the measure of its inspiration? |
7211 | Is that all they did to you? |
7211 | Is the mischief in you? |
7211 | Is the old Grecian spirit frozen in your veins, that ye do crouch and cower like base- born slaves, beneath your master''s lash? |
7211 | Is there a man who could not desire a participation in the national glory acquired by the war? |
7211 | Is there a right of secession in the separate States, singly or collectively, other than the right of revolution? |
7211 | Is there any good in this, stopping here? |
7211 | Is there no hand on high to shield the brave? |
7211 | Is there no remedy? |
7211 | Is there still the chill of winter and the gloom of night over thee, Fatherland? |
7211 | Is there, as ye sometimes tell us, Is there One who reigns on high? |
7211 | Is this Union a Commonwealth, a State, or is it merely a confederacy or a copartnership? |
7211 | Is this a dagger, which I see before me, The handle toward my hand? |
7211 | Is this fancy, or is it fact? |
7211 | Is this reason? |
7211 | Is this the Flower of Liberty? |
7211 | Is this the part of wise men, engaged in the great and arduous struggle for liberty? |
7211 | Is this visionary? |
7211 | Is this your promise? |
7211 | Is this, then, a time to remove the foundations, when the earth itself is shaken? |
7211 | Is wisdom its base and summit?--that which it recedes from, or tends toward? |
7211 | Is''t Yon churchyard''s bowers? |
7211 | Is''t death to fall for freedom''s right? |
7211 | Is''t possible? |
7211 | John saw Versailles from Marlà ©''s height, And cried, astonished at the sight,"Whose fine estate is that there here?" |
7211 | Let it then be built up again; here, if anywhere, on these shores of a new world, of a new civilization But how, I may be asked, is it broken down? |
7211 | Lives there a man who has confidence enough to deny it? |
7211 | Loop up her tresses Escaped from the comb, Her fair auburn tresses; While wonderment guesses Where was her home? |
7211 | March off from what? |
7211 | March off from whom? |
7211 | May I thy peril share? |
7211 | May it please your highness To hear me speak his good now? |
7211 | May one be pardoned, and retain the offence? |
7211 | Moves not a hand? |
7211 | Mr. H. After what? |
7211 | Mr. H. And why were they over- worked, pray? |
7211 | Mr. H. Did he, faith? |
7211 | Mr. H. Heard of what? |
7211 | Mr. H. How came he to get so much horse- flesh? |
7211 | Mr. H. My father gone too? |
7211 | Must I budge? |
7211 | Must I endure all this? |
7211 | Must I give way and room to your rash choler? |
7211 | Must I observe you? |
7211 | Must I stand and crouch Under your testy humor? |
7211 | Must the feet of slaves Pollute this glorious scene? |
7211 | Must you with hot irons burn out both mine eyes? |
7211 | My Lords, is it a prosecutor you want? |
7211 | My Lords, the Commons will share in every fate with yon? |
7211 | My Lords, what is it that we want here to a great act of national justice? |
7211 | My boy John-- He that went to sea-- What care I for the ship, sailor? |
7211 | My labor never flags; And what are its wages? |
7211 | My wife, sir? |
7211 | Next tripping came a courtly fair, John cried, enchanted with her air,"What lovely wench is that there here?" |
7211 | No treason was in Sancho''s blood-- No stain in mine doth lie: Below the throne what knight will own The coward calumny? |
7211 | No? |
7211 | No? |
7211 | None ever bore a lovelier child: And art thou now forever gone? |
7211 | Now, sir, what human stomach can stand this? |
7211 | Now, sir, what was the conduct of your own allies to Poland? |
7211 | Now, sir, why can not we have peace, I ask, upon the compromise measures of 1850? |
7211 | Now, when shall come peace? |
7211 | O cruel fate, wilt thou never replace me In a mansion of peace, where no perils can chase me? |
7211 | O landsman, art thou false or true? |
7211 | O, that she knew she were!-- She speaks, yet she says nothing: what of that? |
7211 | O, where treads the foot that would falter for thee? |
7211 | Of England who, with disinterested ardor, fought the battle of the Greeks against the Turks? |
7211 | Of England, who has so often raised her voice on behalf of bleeding, crusaded, denationalized Poland? |
7211 | Of cawce, the twoilet has its chawms; But why must all the vulgah crowd Pawsist in spawting uniforms In cullaws so extremely loud? |
7211 | Of what was your lading composed? |
7211 | Old F. How much had I to pay the cooper, the other day, for barreling you up in a large tub, when you resolved to live like Diogenes? |
7211 | Old F. What reputation, what honor, what profit can accrue to you from such conduct as yours? |
7211 | Old F. What, do you mean to read by the foot? |
7211 | Old F. Will you listen, and be silent? |
7211 | On the side of two hundred and fifty thousand traitors and tyrants, or on the side of four millions of slaves? |
7211 | Or brighten your lives with its glory?-- Our women-- O say, shall they shriek in despair, Or embrace us from conquest, with wreaths in their hair? |
7211 | Or the hands to be folded, till triumph is won And the eagle looks proud, as of old, to the sun? |
7211 | Or was there a dearer one Still, and a nearer one Yet, than all other? |
7211 | Or would he conduct this war so feebly that the whole world would smile at us in derision? |
7211 | Or, What good love may I perform for you? |
7211 | Or, are one million of subjects stronger than three millions? |
7211 | Or, as the law says, how can we think what is not thinkable? |
7211 | Or, do you wish to prepare them for the revocation of these improvident concessions? |
7211 | Or, has the stability of the government, or has that of the country been weakened? |
7211 | Or, how can we drink what is not drinkable? |
7211 | Out of this warlike conflict, when shall come peace? |
7211 | Pardon me; this sounds like a dark dream, like the offspring of a hypochondriac imagination; and yet-- have I been unjust in what I have said? |
7211 | Peace, in such a crisis-- the cry of our opponents-- how is it to be attained? |
7211 | Pray let me ask you Can you read at all?" |
7211 | Pray, sir, who is the lady? |
7211 | R- o- u- g- h is"ruff,"and b- o- u- g- h is"buff,"--ha? |
7211 | Roll-- roll!--"Brothers, what do ye here, Slowly and sadly as ye pass along, With your dull march and low funereal song?" |
7211 | Roll-- roll!--"What is it that ye beat?" |
7211 | Rome, republican Rome, whose eagles glanced in the rising and setting sun,--where and what is she? |
7211 | SHALL CALIFORNIA BE RECEIVED? |
7211 | Say, pilot, what this fort may be, Whose sentinels look down From moated wails that show the sea Their deep embrasures''frown? |
7211 | Shall I be frighted when a madman stares? |
7211 | Shall I be paid with counters? |
7211 | Shall I go to the south, and dwell among the graves of the Pequots? |
7211 | Shall a son of yours ever sit upon the throne? |
7211 | Shall he betake himself to the fireside? |
7211 | Shall he dedicate himself to the service of his country? |
7211 | Shall not rather some monster of your blood efface the memory of your virtues, and make Rome, in bitterness of soul, curse the Flavian name? |
7211 | Shall private men respect the boundaries of private property, and shall a man pay no respect to the boundaries of his country''s rights? |
7211 | Shall the American people, then, be divided? |
7211 | Shall the children of the men of Marathon become slaves of Philip? |
7211 | Shall the majesty of the Senate and people of Rome stoop to wear the chains forging by the military executors of the will of Julius CÃ ¦ sar? |
7211 | Shall these once slaves but now freemen be remanded back to bondage? |
7211 | Shall traitors lay that greatness low? |
7211 | Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction? |
7211 | Shall we not count the days and hours that are suffered to intervene, and to delay the accomplishment of such a work? |
7211 | Shall we resort to entreaty and humble supplication? |
7211 | Shall we send a flag of truce? |
7211 | Shall we, then, delay to repair these injuries, and to begin rendering justice to Africa? |
7211 | Shall you see a peaceful old age? |
7211 | Should I have answered Caius Cassius so? |
7211 | Sir A. Ay, a wife-- why did I not mention her before? |
7211 | Sir, are they not words of brilliant, polished treason, even in the very Capitol of the Confederacy? |
7211 | Sir, does he suppose it in his power to exhibit a Carolina name so bright as to produce envy in my bosom? |
7211 | Sir, what are the remedies that are proposed for the present condition of things, and what have they been from the beginning? |
7211 | Sir,--How comes this Junius to have broken through the cobwebs of the law, and to range uncontrolled, unpunished, through the land? |
7211 | Sisters and sire, did ye weep for its fall? |
7211 | So soon art thou, like us, brought low?" |
7211 | Soldier, hast thou a wife? |
7211 | Soldier, imagine thou wert doomed to die a cruel death, in a strange land,--what would be thy last request? |
7211 | Some have sneeringly asked,"Are the Americans too poor to pay a few pounds on stamped paper?" |
7211 | Standeth each man at his post? |
7211 | Steward, How are you, my old boy? |
7211 | Still in thought as free as ever, What are England''s rights, I ask, Me from my delights to sever, Me to torture, me to task? |
7211 | Still, what are you, but a robber-- a base dishonest robber? |
7211 | Suppose ye that the loyal people of this country will submit to such injustice? |
7211 | Tell me, politician, how long did this shadow of a colony, on which your conventions and treaties had not smiled, languish on the distant coast? |
7211 | Tell me, ye who make your pious pilgrimage to the shades of Vernon, is Washington indeed shut up in that cold and narrow house? |
7211 | Tell me, ye who tread the sods of yon sacred height, is Warren dead? |
7211 | Tell me, you traitors, Davis, Pickens, Stephens, and Floyd? |
7211 | That''s hallowed ground-- where mourned and missed, The lips repose our love has kissed;-- But where''s their memory''s mansion? |
7211 | The Egyptian smote her; and who now sits on the throne of the Ptolemies? |
7211 | The Syrian smote her; the smiter died in agonies of remorse; and where is his kingdom now? |
7211 | The age that gloried in thy birth, Shall it behold thee overthrown? |
7211 | The blows of the boldest will carry the day,-- Who''s ready? |
7211 | The breakers roar,--how bears the shore? |
7211 | The clause which does away with trial by jury,--what, in the name of Heaven is it, if it is not the establishment of a revolutionary tribunal? |
7211 | The glory acquired by our gallant tars on the sea, by our Jacksons and our Browns on the land is that nothing? |
7211 | The hunters and their families? |
7211 | The question is, Are we to be stricken down by those who, when they can no longer govern, threaten to destroy? |
7211 | The question is, What will satisfy them? |
7211 | The question now arises, How is he to be guided in the right use of his powers of speech in the delivery of a given piece? |
7211 | The sachems and the tribes? |
7211 | The voice, the glance, the heart I sought,--give answer, where are they? |
7211 | The wealth of seas, the spoils of war? |
7211 | Then I''ll look up; My fault is past.--But, O, what form of prayer Can serve my turn? |
7211 | Then pray, sir, what will you have? |
7211 | Then what is man? |
7211 | Then what reason have they? |
7211 | There came a man into his shop one day--"Are you the spectacle contriver, pray?" |
7211 | There were men with hoary hair Amidst that Pilgrim band; Why have they come to wither there, Away from their childhood''s land? |
7211 | These speeches of his, sown broadcast over the land-- what clear, distinct meaning have they? |
7211 | They are already designating the next victim: must we wait until he has fallen? |
7211 | They are forcing slavery upon the Territories: must we wait until they have succeeded? |
7211 | They ceased to live for ideas, and where are they now? |
7211 | They have added Slave States by a coup d''Ã © tat: shall we wait until they have added Cuba and Mexico? |
7211 | They have violated one solemn compact: how many more must they break before we assert our right? |
7211 | Think ye to fly your fate? |
7211 | This day and all which it stands for,--did it not give us these? |
7211 | This day-- shall ye blush for its story? |
7211 | This, you say, is your every day life; but, upon great occasions, you perhaps exceed a little? |
7211 | Thou choicest gift of Heaven, and wanting which Life is as nothing; hast thou then forgot Thy native home? |
7211 | Thy shores are empires, changed in all save thee-- Assyria, Greece, Rome, Carthage, what are they? |
7211 | To be slaves to such as he, to such as these, were it not the fullest measure of misery conjoined with the fullest measure of disgrace? |
7211 | To go from sacred history to profane, does the gentleman there find it"discreditable"for women to take any interest or any part in political affairs? |
7211 | To incantations dost thou trust, And pompous rites in domes august? |
7211 | To look through plate- glass windows, and pity the brown soldiers,--or sneer at the black ones? |
7211 | To put gilt bands on coachmen''s hats? |
7211 | To sweep the foul sidewalks with the heaviest silks which the toiling artisans of France can send us? |
7211 | To the question,"What have the People ever gained but by Revolution?" |
7211 | To what are we to impute these disorders, and to what cause assign the decay of a State so powerful and flourishing in past times? |
7211 | Try what repentance can: what can it not? |
7211 | Très bien,"huff;"and snuff you spell s- n- o- u- p- h? |
7211 | Up from the ground he sprang and gazed,--but who could paint that gaze? |
7211 | Vat you call H- o- u- g- h,--eh? |
7211 | WHO''S READY? |
7211 | Was he? |
7211 | Was it the winter''s storm, beating upon the houseless heads of women and children? |
7211 | Was it to be rich that you grew pale over the midnight lamp, and distilled the sweetness from the Greek and Roman springs? |
7211 | Was it, then, to raise a fortune, that you consumed the sprightly hours of youth in study and retirement? |
7211 | Was that country a desert? |
7211 | Was that done like Cassius? |
7211 | Was there a man dismayed? |
7211 | Was there ever a bolder captain of a more valiant band? |
7211 | Was there ever a greater appearance of prosperity? |
7211 | Was this ambition? |
7211 | We are asked, what have we gained by the war? |
7211 | We have grown rich for what? |
7211 | We have no slaves at home-- then why abroad? |
7211 | Well, Andy, you went to the postoffice, as I ordered you? |
7211 | Well, how did you save my honor, Andy? |
7211 | Well, sir; but how many will there be at table? |
7211 | Well, what did you find? |
7211 | Well, you told him then, did you? |
7211 | Were he a member of this House, what might not be expected from his knowledge, his firmness, and integrity? |
7211 | Were it otherwise, how could millions find it in their lawgiver, friend, and prophet? |
7211 | Were they devoted exclusively to the duties and enjoyments of the fireside? |
7211 | Were you brought up in this place, sir? |
7211 | What States are to secede? |
7211 | What act has been omitted or been done? |
7211 | What am I to be? |
7211 | What answer will you return to this appeal? |
7211 | What are these but the sister families of one greater, better, holier family,--our country? |
7211 | What breaks the heart of the drunkard''s wife? |
7211 | What care I for the men, sailor? |
7211 | What cause, what excuse do disunionists give us for breaking up the best government on which the sun of heaven ever shed its rays? |
7211 | What clogs my heavy breath? |
7211 | What considerate man can enter a school and not reflect with awe, that it is a seminary where immortal minds are training for eternity? |
7211 | What desperate valor climbed the steeps and filled the moats at Badajos? |
7211 | What did your captain do? |
7211 | What do I mean by national glory? |
7211 | What do I say? |
7211 | What do we understand to have been the conduct of this magnanimous hero, with whom, it seems, Bonaparte is not to be compared? |
7211 | What does Mr. Jefferson Davis plan? |
7211 | What evidence do they present of this? |
7211 | What extended Rome, the heart of banditti, into universal empire? |
7211 | What fairer prospect of success could be presented? |
7211 | What fear we then? |
7211 | What flower is this that greets the morn, Its hues from heaven so freshly born? |
7211 | What fold is this the sweet winds kiss, Fair- striped and many- starred, Whose shadow palls these orphaned walls, The twins of Beauregard? |
7211 | What good can passion do? |
7211 | What good cause have they now that has not existed under every administration? |
7211 | What good would that do? |
7211 | What had we done? |
7211 | What had we of the North usurped that belonged to you? |
7211 | What hallows ground where heroes sleep? |
7211 | What has poor Ireland done, mother, What has poor Ireland done, That the world looks on, and sees us starve, Perishing, one by one? |
7211 | What have I done of which you can complain? |
7211 | What have we done? |
7211 | What hill is that, yonder? |
7211 | What if her eyes were there, they in her head? |
7211 | What if this cursà © d hand Were thicker than itself with brother''s blood; Is there not rain enough in the sweet heavens To wash it white as snow? |
7211 | What interest of the South has been invaded? |
7211 | What is gained and what is lost, When the foe your lines have crost? |
7211 | What is genius? |
7211 | What is good? |
7211 | What is it that gentlemen wish? |
7211 | What is it then to hold the Christian world, and that for centuries? |
7211 | What is it to him but a wide- spread prospect of suffering, anguish and death? |
7211 | What is our present situation? |
7211 | What is that glorious recollection, which thrills through his frame and suffuses his eyes? |
7211 | What is the contest in Virginia now? |
7211 | What is then the difference, but that as you were born a king, and I a private man, you have been able to become a mightier robber than I? |
7211 | What is this wondrous world of his residence? |
7211 | What is to be his fate? |
7211 | What is to become of the army? |
7211 | What is to become of the navy? |
7211 | What is to become of the public lands? |
7211 | What is to remain American? |
7211 | What is your present situation there? |
7211 | What justice has been denied? |
7211 | What kind of a dinner do you make? |
7211 | What marvel is it, then, that gentlemen opposite should deal in such vehement protestations? |
7211 | What matters it, that a man be poor, if he carry into his poverty the spirit, energy, reason, and virtues of a man? |
7211 | What matters it, that a man must, for a few years, live on bread and water? |
7211 | What means more adequate to accomplish the sublime end? |
7211 | What means this implacable fury?" |
7211 | What meant the thunder stroke? |
7211 | What more is necessary than for the people to preserve what they have themselves created? |
7211 | What more would Senators have? |
7211 | What motive, then, could have such influence in their bosom? |
7211 | What name? |
7211 | What of that charge? |
7211 | What passion can not Music raise and quell? |
7211 | What passion can not Music raise and quell? |
7211 | What provision of the Federal Constitution had we violated? |
7211 | What provocation more do we propose to wait for? |
7211 | What reason can you give the nations of the earth to justify it? |
7211 | What rests? |
7211 | What right has the North assailed? |
7211 | What sands were colored with his blood? |
7211 | What sign hast thou to show? |
7211 | What sir, have they gained the principles of justice from us? |
7211 | What sought they thus, afar? |
7211 | What tears can widows weep Less bitter than when brave men fall? |
7211 | What terms shall we find which have not been already exhausted? |
7211 | What the land and houses too? |
7211 | What then? |
7211 | What think you is the duty of England in this life- or- death contest between the North and the South? |
7211 | What will convince them? |
7211 | What would he have? |
7211 | What would he have? |
7211 | What would they have? |
7211 | What''s banished, but set free, From daily contact of the things I loathe? |
7211 | What''s hallowed ground? |
7211 | What''s that to you, sir? |
7211 | What''s the matter? |
7211 | What''s the matter? |
7211 | What''s the mercy despots feel? |
7211 | What, are you recruiting here, eh? |
7211 | What, sir, was the conduct of the South during the Revolution? |
7211 | What, the soldier on duty here? |
7211 | What? |
7211 | When can their glory fade? |
7211 | When do you breakfast, and what do you take at it? |
7211 | When have they deserved it? |
7211 | When shall we have one interest, and one common country? |
7211 | When shall we see an end of discord? |
7211 | When the soldiers were destitute of clothing, or sick, or in prison, from whence did relief come? |
7211 | When the traveller pauses on the plains of Marathon, what are the emotions which most strongly agitate his breast? |
7211 | When was there so much iniquity ever laid to the charge of any one? |
7211 | When we asked a three- fifths representation in Congress for our slaves, was it not granted? |
7211 | Whence should come our fighting men if the bugle should blow? |
7211 | Where are the bones of the robber and his host? |
7211 | Where are the villages, and warriors, and youth? |
7211 | Where bound? |
7211 | Where did the gentleman get this principle? |
7211 | Where did you learn this maxim? |
7211 | Where didst thou leave them? |
7211 | Where does he sleep? |
7211 | Where have they deserved it? |
7211 | Where have you been? |
7211 | Where is Concord, and Lexington, and Princeton, and Trenton, and Saratoga, and Bunker Hill, but in the North? |
7211 | Where is it to stop? |
7211 | Where is the cultivated field, in redeeming which from the wilderness, their vigor has not been displayed? |
7211 | Where is the eagle still to tower? |
7211 | Where is the flag of the republic to remain? |
7211 | Where is the good in counting twelve millions, instead of six, of mere feeding, working, sleeping animals? |
7211 | Where is the justice, then, or where is the law, that protects a member of Parliament more than any other man from the punishment due to his crimes? |
7211 | Where is the line to be drawn? |
7211 | Where is the mother that looked on my childhood? |
7211 | Where is the new police? |
7211 | Where shall that land, that spot of earth be found? |
7211 | Where slept thy thunderbolts? |
7211 | Where will you levy your taxes? |
7211 | Where, then, sir, is this war, which is prolific of all these horrors, to be carried? |
7211 | Whereto serves mercy, But to confront the visage of offence? |
7211 | Which is it? |
7211 | Which shall yield? |
7211 | Who are the Northern laborers? |
7211 | Who bade the sun Clothe you with rainbows? |
7211 | Who can blame them? |
7211 | Who can estimate the results produced by the incomparable efforts of a single mind? |
7211 | Who can tell how far and fast they will travel? |
7211 | Who can tell what Greece owes to this first- born of song? |
7211 | Who can tell what will be the character of the next 15th of March? |
7211 | Who could guess If ever more should meet those mutual eyes, Since upon night so sweet such awful morn could rise? |
7211 | Who filled thy countenance with rosy light? |
7211 | Who gave you your invulnerable life, Your strength, your speed, your fury, and your joy Unceasing thunder, and eternal foam? |
7211 | Who has welcomed in her cities, and cherished in her homes, the illustrious patriot Louis Kossuth? |
7211 | Who is Blennerhassett? |
7211 | Who is here so base, that would be a bondman? |
7211 | Who is here so rude, that would not be a Roman? |
7211 | Who is here so vile, that will not love his country? |
7211 | Who is it that causes to blow the loud winds of winter, and that calms them again in summer? |
7211 | Who is it that rears up the shade of those lofty forests, and blasts them with the quick lightning at his pleasure? |
7211 | Who is so foolish, I beg everybody''s pardon, as to expect to see any such thing? |
7211 | Who is to judge concerning the frequency of these demands? |
7211 | Who is to judge whether the money is properly expended? |
7211 | Who made thee parent of perpetual streams? |
7211 | Who made you glorious as the gates of heaven Beneath the keen full moon? |
7211 | Who rules the President? |
7211 | Who rules the rebel States? |
7211 | Who sank thy sunless pillars deep in earth? |
7211 | Who shall put asunder the best affections of the heart, the noblest instincts of our nature? |
7211 | Who sir, I ask, was he? |
7211 | Who was he? |
7211 | Who was her father? |
7211 | Who was her mother? |
7211 | Who will accuse me of wandering out of the subject? |
7211 | Who will hesitate to give his mite to avert such awful results? |
7211 | Who will say that I exaggerate the tendencies of our measures? |
7211 | Who would n''t give it to you? |
7211 | Who''ll prove it, at his peril, on my head? |
7211 | Who''s armed and who''s mounted? |
7211 | Who''s ready? |
7211 | Who''s ready? |
7211 | Who, sir, were these men? |
7211 | Who, then, is Aaron Burr, and what the part which he has borne in this transaction? |
7211 | Who, with living flowers Of loveliest blue, spread garlands at your feet? |
7211 | Whom do you want, sir,--your coachman or your cook? |
7211 | Whose best wishes and earnest prayers have ever attended the efforts in the cause of freedom of Mazzini and Garibaldi? |
7211 | Whose heart hath never within him burned, As home his footsteps he hath turned, From wandering on a foreign strand? |
7211 | Whose were the arms that drove your bayonets at Vimiera through the phalanxes that never reeled to the shock of war before? |
7211 | Why can not we rise to noble conceptions of our destiny? |
7211 | Why caught each man his blade? |
7211 | Why did all- creating Nature Make the plant for which we toil? |
7211 | Why did he pause? |
7211 | Why did it dote on a fast- fading treasure? |
7211 | Why did you ask the question, then? |
7211 | Why disturb them? |
7211 | Why do we hesitate? |
7211 | Why do we not feel, that our work as a nation is to carry freedom, religion, science, and a noble form of human nature over this continent? |
7211 | Why does a man''s heart palpitate when he is on the point of committing an unlawful deed? |
7211 | Why echoed every street With tramp of thronging feet All flying to the city''s wall? |
7211 | Why is injustice to be suffered to remain for a single hour? |
7211 | Why is it necessary now to overturn them? |
7211 | Why is it that our bright waters all stained and our green fields reddened with fraternal blood? |
7211 | Why is it that the heart of loyal America throbs, heavily oppressed with anxiety and gloom, for the future of the country? |
7211 | Why is it that the land resounds with the measured tread of a million of armed men? |
7211 | Why is that other writhing with agony? |
7211 | Why not? |
7211 | Why ought the slave trade to be abolished? |
7211 | Why should''st thou faint? |
7211 | Why stand we here idle? |
7211 | Why then, why then, sir, do we not as soon as possible change this from a civil to a national war? |
7211 | Why trembled wife and maid? |
7211 | Why was it that she was able, in four days from that in which this cry reached her, to add a new glory to the day of Lexington? |
7211 | Why, gentlemen, who does trouble himself about a warming- pan? |
7211 | Why, sir, what does the gentleman understand by"political subjects?" |
7211 | Why, then, should we defer the Declaration? |
7211 | Why, what difference does that make? |
7211 | Why, what would be the result? |
7211 | Will a jury weaken this our nation''s hope? |
7211 | Will any one answer by a sneer, that all this is idle preaching? |
7211 | Will he shrink from armed insurrection? |
7211 | Will his State justify it? |
7211 | Will his children receive instructions from the lips of a disgraced father? |
7211 | Will it be the next week, or the next year? |
7211 | Will it be when we are totally disarmed; and when a British guard shall be stationed in every house? |
7211 | Will its better public opinion allow it? |
7211 | Will she employ in her councils, or in her armies, the man at whom the"slow unmoving finger of scorn"is pointed? |
7211 | Will the Senator yield to rebellion? |
7211 | Will the Tribunes make up your losses to you? |
7211 | Will the last, and worst, prove luckier? |
7211 | Will the trading and moneyed interests, so powerful in the Northern cities, do their duty? |
7211 | Will they by their verdict pronounce to the youth of our country, that character is scarce worth possessing? |
7211 | Will ye give it up to slaves? |
7211 | Will ye look for greener graves? |
7211 | Will ye to your homes retire? |
7211 | Will you deny him this redress? |
7211 | Will you hang your head and blush in his presence, because he outshines you in equipage and show? |
7211 | Will you make this the exception? |
7211 | Will you put out mine eyes?-- These eyes, that never did, nor never shall, So much as frown on you? |
7211 | Will you shrink from such a meeting? |
7211 | Wilt thou never come, O Death? |
7211 | With pure heart, newly stampt from nature''s mint,( Where did he learn that squint?) |
7211 | Without it, what is man? |
7211 | Woman''s weakness shall not shame me-- why should I have tears to shed? |
7211 | Would any one deny that we are bound, and I would hope to good purpose, by the most solemn sanctions of duty for the vote we give? |
7211 | Would you burst the good people you dog? |
7211 | Would you, for instance, be rich? |
7211 | Yankee landlords do not belong to their house''s[ Aloud] You seem young for a landlord: may I ask how old you are? |
7211 | Yes, Jack, the independence I was talking of is by a marriage-- the fortune is saddled with a wife; but I suppose that makes no difference? |
7211 | Yes; of whom? |
7211 | Yet religion has nothing to do with politics? |
7211 | Yet what can it, when one can not repent? |
7211 | Yet, sir, I presume you would not wish me to quit the army? |
7211 | You all did love him once, not without cause: What cause withholds you then to mourn for him? |
7211 | You are? |
7211 | You blockhead, what did he say to that? |
7211 | You come back from sea And not know my John? |
7211 | You got the letter, then, did you? |
7211 | You then, after this slight repast, take some tea and bread and butter? |
7211 | [ Aloud] Did you accept the invitation? |
7211 | [ Aloud] Where were you born, sir? |
7211 | a greater face of plenty? |
7211 | a greedy dog; why, what did he get he liked so well? |
7211 | and Where lies your grief? |
7211 | and again ratified and strengthened in the Fugitive Slave Law of 1850? |
7211 | and cut left!-- For the parry who needs? |
7211 | and how came it set on fire? |
7211 | and tell me what is this? |
7211 | and what claim founded in justice and right has been withheld? |
7211 | and what were they carrying water for? |
7211 | are not your beings pure? |
7211 | are these acquisitions to brag of? |
7211 | art thou the Thracian robber, of whose exploits I have heard so much? |
7211 | caitiffs, do ye fear? |
7211 | comes there, from the pyramids, And from Siberian wastes of snow, And Europe''s hills, a voice that bids The world he awed to mourn him? |
7211 | cowards, have ye left me to meet him here alone? |
7211 | cried the King,"who is guilty of this crime?" |
7211 | do you not feel the goads and stings of conscious guilt pierce through your savage bosoms? |
7211 | durst not tempt him? |
7211 | ere Freedom found a grave, Why slept the sword, omnipotent to save? |
7211 | for the treasure you must have; and what price she may next demand, who shall tell? |
7211 | for what do you throw away these inestimable blessings-- for what would you exchange your share in the advantages and honor of the Union? |
7211 | good does that do? |
7211 | has the bigoted malignity of any individuals been crushed? |
7211 | have I not as good a right to catechize you, as you had to catechize me? |
7211 | have ye flown? |
7211 | he mutters Brokenly now-- that was a difficult breath-- Another? |
7211 | heard you not Port Royal''s doom? |
7211 | how dare you tread upon the earth which has drank in the blood of slaughtered innocents, shed by your wicked hands? |
7211 | how didst thou pass the guard? |
7211 | is it"duff?" |
7211 | is my hour elapsed? |
7211 | is not this a presage of the dawn Of freedom o''er the world? |
7211 | is the fellow providing an entertainment for my lord mayor and the court of aldermen? |
7211 | is war a state of probation? |
7211 | more bad news? |
7211 | must I stay?" |
7211 | must the bowels of Great Britain be torn out her best blood be spilled-- her treasures wasted-- that you may make an experiment? |
7211 | or is he to cower, and shrink, and fall to the ground? |
7211 | said I;"and a bigger letther than this? |
7211 | said he,"tell me, where mean you to move? |
7211 | says I? |
7211 | silent motionless, ye stand? |
7211 | that better land?" |
7211 | the fishing- place disturbed by his saw- mills? |
7211 | the morning now is bright, Though cloudy it begun; Why ca n''t we aim above as if We had called out the sun?" |
7211 | the settlers will remain in security? |
7211 | then it is"ploe,"like"doe?" |
7211 | then"Row and Ready?" |
7211 | to color meerschaums? |
7211 | to dredge our maiden''s hair with gold- dust? |
7211 | to flaunt in laces, and sparkle in diamonds? |
7211 | to float through life, the passive shuttlecocks of fashion, from the avenues to the beaches, and back again from the beaches to the avenues? |
7211 | to reduce the speed of trotting horses a second or two below its old minimum? |
7211 | to the whole North? |
7211 | upon those whose relatives have been slain, to compensate the murderers? |
7211 | upon those whose whole property has been stolen, to reward the thieves? |
7211 | was it disease? |
7211 | was it hard labor and spare meals? |
7211 | was it the tomahawk? |
7211 | what art can teach, What human voice can reach The sacred Organ''s praise? |
7211 | what danger of nature or man not defied? |
7211 | what do you say provoked you to the point where forbearance ceased to be a virtue? |
7211 | what doubt we to incense His utmost ire? |
7211 | what fire? |
7211 | what is that flame, which now bursts on his eye? |
7211 | what is that sound which now larums his ear? |
7211 | what light through yonder window breaks? |
7211 | what mean those yells and cries? |
7211 | what more shall honor claim? |
7211 | what need you be so boisterous rough? |
7211 | what torches? |
7211 | what, weep you when you but behold Our CÃ ¦ sar, vesture wounded? |
7211 | where thy rod, That smote the foes of Sion and of God? |
7211 | whose funeral''s that?" |
7211 | why, what do the people say, pray? |
7211 | will you join in the strife For country, for freedom, for honor, for life? |
7211 | with eyes so fair, What was thy delighted measure? |
7211 | you great blockhead!--If I could, what need Of paying you for any''helps to read?''" |
47476 | And I lay upon my deer- skins all one moon of falling leaves( Who hath care for song or corn- dance, when the voice within her grieves? 47476 And do we fall short,"said Burke, getting mad,"When it''s touch and go for life?" |
47476 | And hark what the General orders, For I could not catch his words; But what means that hurry and movement, That clash of muskets and swords? |
47476 | And so as his mighty''headlands''Are scarcely a league away, What say you to landing, sweetheart, And having a washing- day? 47476 And the rest?" |
47476 | And who art thou? |
47476 | And you''re sure we shall take her? |
47476 | Are they out of that strait accurst? |
47476 | Are you not hit? |
47476 | Are you ready, California, Arizona, Idaho? 47476 But what of my lady?" |
47476 | But what of that? 47476 But when won the coming battle, What of profit springs therefrom? |
47476 | But you? |
47476 | Can it be? |
47476 | Did we count on this? 47476 Do you know the Blue- Grass country?" |
47476 | Do you know, sir, whom you have thus addressed? 47476 Giles Corey,"said the Magistrate,"What hast thou heare to pleade To these that now accuse thy soule Of crimes and horrid deed?" |
47476 | Glory to share? |
47476 | Hath he let vultures climb his eagle''s seat To make Jove''s bolts purveyors of their maw? 47476 Hearts are mourning in the North, While the sister rivers seek the main, Red with our life- blood flowing forth-- Who shall gather it up again? |
47476 | Hearts of oakare British seamen? |
47476 | His policy--how does it hap? |
47476 | His policy? |
47476 | Home, home-- where''s my baby''s home? 47476 How can he fight,"they whispered,"with only half a crew, Though they be rare to do and dare, yet what can brave men do?" |
47476 | How many? |
47476 | How so? 47476 Is Oregon worth saving?" |
47476 | Is it a chapel bell that fills The air with its low tone? |
47476 | Is it not like the ancient tale they tell of Phaeton, Whose ignorant hands were trusted with the horses of the sun? 47476 Is the doom sealed for Hesper? |
47476 | Is there never one in all the land, One on whose might the Cause may lean? 47476 Is there no hope?" |
47476 | Let me of my heart take counsel: War is not of life the sum; Who shall stay and reap the harvest When the autumn days shall come? |
47476 | Like the herdsman of Tekoa, in Israel of old, Shall we see the poor and righteous again for silver sold? |
47476 | Load double,cried Corse,"every cannon; Who cares for their ten to our one?" |
47476 | MR. JOHNSON''S POLICY OF RECONSTRUCTIONSOME COMMENT FROM THE BOYS IN BLUE"His policy,"do you say? |
47476 | Major, your men? |
47476 | My Dawn? 47476 My cargo? |
47476 | Nor soberness availeth aught; for who hath suffered worse, Through persecutions undeserved, than good Rebecca Nurse? 47476 Not of you?" |
47476 | Now who will buy my apples? |
47476 | Now, what shall I bring for a bridal gift When my home- bound pennant flies? 47476 O cacique, brave and trusty guide, Are we not near the spring, The fountain of eternal youth that health to age doth bring?" |
47476 | Patience? |
47476 | She be----,says the farmer, and to her he goes, First roars in her ears, then tweaks her old nose,"Hallo, Goody, what ails you? |
47476 | Sure? 47476 THE DAYS OF''FORTY- NINE"You are looking now on old Tom Moore, A relic of bygone days; A Bummer, too, they call me now, But what care I for praise? |
47476 | Tell us, tell us why you look so? |
47476 | The Flag? |
47476 | The river widens,said the men;"Are we not near the spring, The fountain of eternal youth that health to age doth bring?" |
47476 | Then in whose name the summons? |
47476 | Well, who comes next? |
47476 | What if,''mid the cannons''thunder, Whistling shot and bursting bomb, When my brothers fall around me, Should my heart grow cold and numb? |
47476 | What is it that you say,-- Where do I hail from pray, What is my cargo, eh? 47476 What is this I am told about Lee''s arrest,-- Is it true?" |
47476 | What make we, murmur''st thou? 47476 What makes you look so dull? |
47476 | What saw I? |
47476 | What say ye now, my comrades? |
47476 | What shall I say, brave Admiral, say, If we sight naught but seas at dawn? |
47476 | What ship is that? |
47476 | What''s the trouble? |
47476 | What''s this, about''Marthy Virginia''s hand''? |
47476 | What''s your report? |
47476 | Where be the smiling faces, and voices soft and sweet, Seen in thy father''s dwelling, heard in the pleasant street? 47476 Where go they?" |
47476 | Where is our little drummer? |
47476 | Who are they? 47476 Who dares"--this was the patriot''s cry, As striding from the desk he came--"Come out with me, in Freedom''s name, For her to live, for her to die?" |
47476 | Who will go to Deerfield Meadows and bring the ripened Grain? |
47476 | Who''ve ye got there? |
47476 | Whom have you there? |
47476 | Why touch upon such themes? |
47476 | Why, Jack, old man, so blue and sad? 47476 Ye, at whose ear the flatterer bends, Who were my kindred before all others,-- Hath he set your hearts afar, my friends? |
47476 | ''Tis the front wall besieged-- have the rebels rushed in? |
47476 | ''Twas by Fayal, where Portugal Still flaunts her Blue- and- White; What cares their Floyd for Portugal Or what cares he for right? |
47476 | ''Twas our policy, boys, from our muster- day, Through skirmish and bivouac, march and fray--"His policy,"do you say? |
47476 | ( Shall the music bang and blow?) |
47476 | ( Who but the dead were there?) |
47476 | ( Who would hesitate?) |
47476 | ( we could hardly speak, we shook so),--"Are they beaten? |
47476 | (?) |
47476 | (_ Aside._) HATHORNE Who did these things? |
47476 | ), Did they pause for a life, For a sweetheart or wife? |
47476 | ), Right into the camp of the Sioux( What was the muster? |
47476 | ), They gather and swoop, They come like a flood, Maddened with blood, They shriek, plying the knife( Was there one begged for his life? |
47476 | ), Who can their courage recount? |
47476 | ***** Would you hear of the river fight? |
47476 | --"But Braddock of Fontenoy, stubborn and grim, Who but he carved a cross on the wilderness rim? |
47476 | --"Men, what will_ you_ do?" |
47476 | --What meant its iron stroke? |
47476 | --What tears can widows weep Less bitter than when brave men fall? |
47476 | --have I not learned it, Under the crushing years? |
47476 | A MESSAGE[ July 1, 1882] Was there ever message sweeter Than that one from Malvern Hill, From a grim old fellow,--you remember? |
47476 | A NEW SONG[ 1780]"Has the Marquis La Fayette Taken off all our hay yet?" |
47476 | A Yankee ship and a Yankee crew-- Constitution, where ye bound for? |
47476 | A dream? |
47476 | A pariah, bearing the Nation''s hate? |
47476 | A rebel? |
47476 | A third-- a fourth-- Gunboat and transport in Indian file Upon the war- path, smooth from the North; But the watch may they hope to beguile? |
47476 | AFTER THE WAR After the war-- I hear men ask-- what then? |
47476 | ANNE HUTCHINSON''S EXILE[ March 28, 1638]"Home, home-- where''s my baby''s home? |
47476 | ARE they beaten?" |
47476 | ARTHUR LEE(?). |
47476 | Above the wrecks that strewed the mournful past, Was the long dream of ages true at last? |
47476 | Across the rolling prairie rings-- A gun? |
47476 | Afraid of the music?" |
47476 | Ah France-- how could our hearts forget The path by which came Lafayette? |
47476 | Ah, memories crowding so thick and fast, Ye were the first; is this the last? |
47476 | Ah, not for him we weep; What honor more could be in store for him? |
47476 | Ah, where are they Who bade the hostile surges stay, When the black forts of Monterey Frowned on their dauntless line? |
47476 | Ai nt it cute to see a Yankee Take sech everlastin''pains, All to get the Devil''s thankee Helpin''on''em weld their chains? |
47476 | All day-- all day and all night; and the morning? |
47476 | Alone? |
47476 | And Beaujeu the Gay? |
47476 | And Owen? |
47476 | And Travis, great Travis, drew sword, quick and strong; Drew a line at his feet...."Will you come? |
47476 | And can not pride be sold? |
47476 | And can your ship these strokes sustain? |
47476 | And did he slink, or did he shrink From that relentless ring? |
47476 | And do her castles no more bloom With legends rare and olden? |
47476 | And do you stand in the doorways now as when your own went forth? |
47476 | And life once over, who shall tell the rest? |
47476 | And lifting up his head( The drums and trumpets rattle), And to his army said,"I pray how goes the battle?" |
47476 | And must these sons of Brittany Be clouded, set in western skies, And fall a savage sacrifice? |
47476 | And now poor Westmoreland is lost, Our forts are all resigned, Our buildings they are all on fire,-- What shelter can we find? |
47476 | And now the foe hath won the day, Methinks their words are these:"Ye cursed, rebel, Yankee race, Will this your Congress please? |
47476 | And now, is the tree to blossom? |
47476 | And shall the slanderer''s demon breath Avail with one like me, To dim the sunshine of my faith And earnest trust in thee? |
47476 | And shall their memory ever grow pale? |
47476 | And shall this count for nothing? |
47476 | And the Tagals-- dare they face Such a desperate company? |
47476 | And the kind who forged these fetters? |
47476 | And the mower thinks to him Cry both bell and drum,"Morgan Stanwood, where art thou? |
47476 | And then began the sailors''jests:"What thing is that, I say?" |
47476 | And then-- why ask me? |
47476 | And there''s a quicker way than sleep?... |
47476 | And through the leagues above her She looked aghast, and said:"What is this living ship that comes Where every ship is dead?" |
47476 | And valiant Harrison, Commander of the Christian force? |
47476 | And was the earth a star? |
47476 | And watched the trials which have made Thy human spirit strong? |
47476 | And we sometimes walked together in the pleasant summer weather,--"Please to tell us what his name was?" |
47476 | And we who have toiled for freedom''s law, have we sought for freedom''s soul? |
47476 | And were they right who fought the fight for Texas by his side? |
47476 | And what are these new forces, With long, black, streaming hair? |
47476 | And what were conquerors before to him whose eye Had seen the world a star, and found the star a world? |
47476 | And when our boats all fillèd were With officers and soldiers, With as good troops as England had, To oppose who dare controul us? |
47476 | And where and what was"CRO- A- TÀN"? |
47476 | And where is that band who so vauntingly swore That the havoc of war and the battle''s confusion A home and a country should leave us no more? |
47476 | And who will bring white peace That he may sleep upon his hill again? |
47476 | And whose the chartered claim to speak The sacred grief where all have part, Where sorrow saddens every cheek And broods in every aching heart? |
47476 | And why should Titus Hooper die, Ay, die-- without a rope? |
47476 | And within? |
47476 | And ye, who dwell by the golden Peak, Has the subtle whisper glided by? |
47476 | And you, amid the master- race, Who seem so strangely out of place, Know ye who cometh? |
47476 | Angel, or wraith, or woman?" |
47476 | Are all the common ones so grand, And all the titled ones so mean? |
47476 | Are not two millions enough per day? |
47476 | Are the things so strange and marvellous you see or have seen? |
47476 | Are the works, think you, strong? |
47476 | Are these the stern troopers who madly Rode straight at the battery''s hell? |
47476 | Are they men who guard the passes, On our"left"so far away? |
47476 | Are they palsied or asleep? |
47476 | Are they panic- struck and helpless? |
47476 | Are they_ men_ who fought to- day? |
47476 | Are we good for no more than to prance in a ball, When the drums beat the charge and the clarions call?" |
47476 | Are you blowing your fingers because they are cold, Or catching your breath ere you take a hold? |
47476 | Are you here to slay and eat us? |
47476 | Are you ready, men of Maine?" |
47476 | Are you too grand to fight traitors small? |
47476 | Arrested for what?" |
47476 | As they could not get before us, how could they look us in the face? |
47476 | At dawn of day they moored their ship, And dared the breakers''roar: What meant it? |
47476 | BACON''S EPITAPH, MADE BY HIS MAN[ October 1, 1676] Death, why so cruel? |
47476 | BRITANNIA TO COLUMBIA What is the voice I hear On the wind of the Western Sea? |
47476 | Bear of her lash the stroke, And prop her throne? |
47476 | Before us, pillared in the sky, We saw the statue soar Of Washington, serene and high:-- Could traitors view that form, nor fly? |
47476 | Beneath my throne the martyrs cry; I hear their voice, How long? |
47476 | Bold Boyd led on his steady band, With bristling bayonets burnish''d bright: Who could their dauntless charge withstand? |
47476 | Brave Admiral, say but one good word: What shall we do when hope is gone?" |
47476 | Brave Admiral, speak, what shall I say?" |
47476 | Brave Wadsworth boldly kept the field Till their last bullets flew; Then all were prisoners forced to yield, What could the general do? |
47476 | Bright jewels of the mine? |
47476 | But ah, Thaddeus Posset, why Should thy poor soul elope? |
47476 | But hark!--from wood and rock flung back, What sound comes up the Merrimac? |
47476 | But not without-- no, from below it comes: What pulses up from solid earth to wreck A vengeful word on towers and lofty domes? |
47476 | But over them, lying there shattered and mute, What deep echo rolls? |
47476 | But stay, what was the muster? |
47476 | But the Fifes-- can ye not hear their lusty shriek? |
47476 | But the treasures-- how to get them? |
47476 | But to refuse the challenge? |
47476 | But what are the acts which this chief has achieved? |
47476 | But what is that which greets mine eye? |
47476 | But what, my sons, can princes do, No armies to command? |
47476 | But where were his lieutenants? |
47476 | But who cared for dead or for dying? |
47476 | But who shall break the guards that wait Before the awful face of Fate? |
47476 | But who shall declare The_ End_ of the Affair? |
47476 | But why for him vain marbles raise? |
47476 | COLE Now, Simon Kempthorn, what say you to that? |
47476 | CRISPUS ATTUCKS[ March 5, 1770] Where shall we seek for a hero, and where shall we find a story? |
47476 | CUBA TO COLUMBIA[ April, 1896] A voice went over the waters-- A stormy edge of the sea-- Fairest of Freedom''s daughters, Have you no help for me? |
47476 | CUBA[ 1870] Is it naught? |
47476 | Can he strike? |
47476 | Can it be she is thinking of them, Her face is so proud and so still, And her lashes are moistened with tears? |
47476 | Can liberty be priced and sold? |
47476 | Can she forget The million graves her young devotion set, The hands that clasp above, From either side, in sad, returning love? |
47476 | Can the cold sculpture speak his praise? |
47476 | Can the innocent be guilty? |
47476 | Can this be Rain- in- the- Face? |
47476 | Can this be the voice of him Who fought on the Big Horn''s rim? |
47476 | Canst thou hear me? |
47476 | Charred tree- stumps in the moonlight dim, Or paling rude, or leafless limb? |
47476 | Come-- is not this a griper, That while your hopes are danced away,''Tis you must pay the piper? |
47476 | Could he dare Disdain the Paradise of opening joy Which beckons the fresh heart everywhere? |
47476 | Could he outlive the shame? |
47476 | Could it succeed? |
47476 | Could patriots see, nor gladly die For Baltimore? |
47476 | Could such sweetest heads Lie scalped among the slain? |
47476 | Could such tidings be? |
47476 | Could there on our unworthy earth be found Naught to befit his worth? |
47476 | Could traitors trust a traitor? |
47476 | Cruel, haughty, and cold, He ever was strong and bold; Shall he shrink from a wooden stem? |
47476 | Dare the livid leaden rain? |
47476 | Dare they not risk_ one_ shot; To make report grandiloquent Of aid they rendered not? |
47476 | Dare you doubt it? |
47476 | De Soto asked his men;"Shall we, before these traitors, Go backward, baffled, then; Or, sword in hand, attack the foe Who crouches in his den?" |
47476 | Death, why so cruel? |
47476 | Death? |
47476 | Did he bid all the stars in our banner float? |
47476 | Did he die like a craven, Begging those torturing fiends for his life? |
47476 | Did he hear the Voice on his lonely way That Adam heard in the cool of day? |
47476 | Did he preach-- did he pray? |
47476 | Did not our hero fall Gallantly slain? |
47476 | Did nothing predict you should yet behold Our banner come back this way? |
47476 | Did she drift to polar oceans? |
47476 | Did the bolts of heaven blast her? |
47476 | Did the hurricanes o''erwhelm her With her starry banner and her tall masts three? |
47476 | Did we dare, In our agony of prayer, Ask for more than He has done? |
47476 | Did we leave behind The graves of our kin, the comfort and ease Of our English hearths and homes, to find Troublers of Israel such as these? |
47476 | Did you hear that shout? |
47476 | Did"our untried navy lads"obey? |
47476 | Do I know it for a fact, sir? |
47476 | Do n''t you think''tis a scandalous, saucy reflection, That merits the soundest, severest correction? |
47476 | Do they sleep who wait the fray? |
47476 | Do thy dark brows yet crave That swift and angry stave-- Unmeet for this desirous morn-- That I have striven, striven to evade? |
47476 | Do we breathe this breath of Knowledge Purely to enjoy its zest? |
47476 | Do you blanch at their fate? |
47476 | Do you hear the yelping of Blanche and Tray? |
47476 | Do you love it or slavery best? |
47476 | Do you not hear the drum? |
47476 | Do you not hear the rusty chain Clanking about my feet? |
47476 | Do you not know a heavier doom awaits you, If you refuse to plead, than if found guilty? |
47476 | Do you not see them? |
47476 | Does any falter? |
47476 | Does love die, and must honor perish When colors and causes are lost? |
47476 | Does the spectacle furnish you any delight, Jefferson D.? |
47476 | ELLSWORTH[ May 24, 1861] Who is this ye say is slain? |
47476 | ETHIOPIA SALUTING THE COLORS Who are you dusky woman, so ancient hardly human, With your woolly- white and turban''d head, and bare bony feet? |
47476 | Earth''s mightiest deigned to wear it,--why not he?" |
47476 | Ef_ I_ turned mad dogs loose, John, On_ your_ front- parlor stairs, Would it jest meet your views, John, To wait an''sue their heirs? |
47476 | Ellsworth, shall we call in vain On thy name to- day? |
47476 | End in this the prayers and tears, The toil, the strife, the watchings of our younger, better years? |
47476 | FIRSTFRUITS IN 1812[ August 19, 1812]_ What is that a- billowing there Like a thunderhead in air? |
47476 | FREE AMERICA[ 1774] That seat of Science, Athens, And earth''s proud mistress, Rome; Where now are all their glories? |
47476 | Face the shrapnel''s iron hail? |
47476 | Fallen? |
47476 | Fear ye foes who kill for hire? |
47476 | Fear? |
47476 | Firm, my lads; who breaks the line thus? |
47476 | For fifteen miles, they follow''d and pelted us, we scarce had time to pull a trigger; But did you ever know a retreat performed with more vigor? |
47476 | For rock and shallow bar the stream:"O Pilot, can this be the strait that leads to the Eastern Sea?" |
47476 | For shame ye take no care, my boys, How stands the glass around? |
47476 | For the brethren''s sake Daniel Periton dared to ride Full in front of the threatening tide, And what if the dam do yield? |
47476 | Freedom-- have I not earned it, Toiling with blood and tears? |
47476 | From such a perfect text, shall Song aspire To light her faded fire, And into wandering music turn Its virtue, simple, sorrowful, and stern? |
47476 | From such rascals as these may we fear a rebuff? |
47476 | GLOYD(_ coming forward_) Here am I. HATHORNE Tell the Court; Have you not seen the supernatural power Of this old man? |
47476 | Gather the ravens, then, in funeral file For him, life''s morn yet golden in his hair? |
47476 | Girded well with her ocean crags, Little our mother heeds their noise; Her eyes are fixed on crimsoned flags: But you-- do you hear it, Yankee boys? |
47476 | Give thanks, and rob thy own afflicted poor? |
47476 | God, was Thy wrath without pity, To tear the strong heart from our city, And cast it away? |
47476 | HATHORNE And did you not then say That they were overlooked? |
47476 | HATHORNE Did you not On one occasion hide your husband''s saddle To hinder him from coming to the Sessions? |
47476 | HATHORNE Did you not carry once the Devil''s Book To this young woman? |
47476 | HATHORNE Did you not hear it whisper? |
47476 | HATHORNE Did you not say the Devil hindered you? |
47476 | HATHORNE Did you not say the Magistrates were blind? |
47476 | HATHORNE Did you not say your husband told you so? |
47476 | HATHORNE Did you not scourge her with an iron rod? |
47476 | HATHORNE Do you think She is bewitched? |
47476 | HATHORNE Doth he you pray to say that he is God? |
47476 | HATHORNE Goodman Corey, Say, did you tell her? |
47476 | HATHORNE Have you not dealt with a Familiar Spirit? |
47476 | HATHORNE Have you signed it, Or touched it? |
47476 | HATHORNE How did you know the children had been told To note the clothes you wore? |
47476 | HATHORNE Is it not true, that fourteen head of cattle, To you belonging, broke from their enclosure And leaped into the river, and were drowned? |
47476 | HATHORNE Then answer me: When certain persons came To see you yesterday, how did you know Beforehand why they came? |
47476 | HATHORNE Then tell me, Why do you trouble them? |
47476 | HATHORNE What does he say? |
47476 | HATHORNE What does it say to you? |
47476 | HATHORNE What is it? |
47476 | HATHORNE What then was the Book You showed to this young woman, and besought her To write in it? |
47476 | HATHORNE What was the bird that this young woman saw Just now upon your hand? |
47476 | HATHORNE Who hurt her then? |
47476 | HATHORNE Who is your God and Father? |
47476 | HATHORNE Who made these marks Upon her hands? |
47476 | HATHORNE Whom would you pray to? |
47476 | HOW STANDS THE GLASS AROUND? |
47476 | Ha''n''t they made your env''ys w''iz? |
47476 | Ha''n''t they sold your colored seamen? |
47476 | Had Earth no charm to stay the Boy From the martyr- passion? |
47476 | Had they in terror fled? |
47476 | Had winter''s ocean inland rolled An eagre''s deadly spray, That overwhelmed the island''s breadth And swept them all away? |
47476 | Had ye no graves at home Across the briny water, That hither ye must come, Like bullocks to the slaughter? |
47476 | Has Rhineland lost her grape''s perfume, Her waters green and golden? |
47476 | Has Whittier put his yearning wrath away? |
47476 | Has he grown sick of his toils and his tasks? |
47476 | Has he learned through affliction''s teaching what our Crispus Attucks knew-- When Right is stricken, the white and black are counted as one, not two? |
47476 | Has our love all died out? |
47476 | Has the Lord looked upon thee in ire, And willed thou be chastened by fire, Without any ruth? |
47476 | Has the curse come at last which the fathers foretold? |
47476 | Has the old word"Union"no meaning, pray? |
47476 | Has the seed of crime Reached its flowering- time, That it shoots to this audacious height? |
47476 | Hath he made ye alien, my brothers, Day and night?" |
47476 | Hath he the Many''s plaudits found more sweet Than Wisdom? |
47476 | Have I not known thee well, and read Thy mighty purpose long? |
47476 | Have its altars grown cold? |
47476 | Have our soldiers got faint- hearted, and in noiseless haste departed? |
47476 | Have the snowy surfs not struggled Many centuries in vain That their lips might seal the Union? |
47476 | Have they not in the North Sea''s blast Bowed to the waves the straining mast? |
47476 | Have they quailed? |
47476 | Have those scalping Indian devils come to murder us once more?" |
47476 | Have we learned at last that human right is not a part but the whole? |
47476 | Have you any notion, you landsmen, Who have seen a field- fight won, Of canister, grape- shot, and shrapnel Hurled out from a ten- inch gun? |
47476 | Have you but seen a tiger caged And sullen through his barriers glare? |
47476 | Have you never a dash for brave Mordecai Gist, With his heart in his throat, and his blade in his fist? |
47476 | Have you not seen him do Strange feats of strength? |
47476 | Have you not seen my children slain, Whether in cell or street? |
47476 | He has his fame; But that mad dash at death, how name? |
47476 | Hear ye not the singing Of the bugle, wild and free? |
47476 | Hear ye not? |
47476 | Hear ye not? |
47476 | Hear ye the chains of slaves, Now clanking round your graves? |
47476 | Heard ye the trumpet sound? |
47476 | Heard you not the bugle blow?" |
47476 | Her watch- fires beacon the misty height:-- Why are her friends and lovers sleeping? |
47476 | Hewing a highway through greenwood and glen, Foot- free for cattle and heart- free for men?" |
47476 | Hope ye mercy still? |
47476 | How can we bear the dreadful spear, The tomahawk and knife? |
47476 | How could a hundred souls be caught Straight out of life, nor find Device through which to mark their fate, Or leave some hint behind? |
47476 | How could he answer nay? |
47476 | How could poet ever tower, If his passions, hopes, and fears, If his triumphs and his tears, Kept not measure with his people? |
47476 | How could the haze of doubt hang low Upon the road of Rochambeau? |
47476 | How dare you tell a lie in this assembly? |
47476 | How did I get there? |
47476 | How do you think the man was dressed? |
47476 | How fallen? |
47476 | How fallen? |
47476 | How fared it then, who may dare tell? |
47476 | How fought the King? |
47476 | How if it never break? |
47476 | How long must we wait? |
47476 | How long, O sister, how long Shall the fragile thread be spun? |
47476 | How long, how long, Ere thou avenge the blood of Thine Elect? |
47476 | How spake our captain to his comrades then? |
47476 | How the glad tidings of joy should run Which tell of the birth of Washington? |
47476 | How the orders are issued and ready to send For Lee, and the men in his staff- command, To be under arrest,--now the war''s at an end?" |
47476 | How they tossed their years to be Into icy waters of a winter sea That we whom they loved-- that the world which they loved should be free? |
47476 | How was the Union to be reconstructed? |
47476 | How were the people of the South to be regarded? |
47476 | How will the country stand the news? |
47476 | How will the merchants pay their dues? |
47476 | How wondrous is the spell They work upon the manly heart, Who knoweth not full well? |
47476 | I CLOTHO How long, O sister, how long Ere the weary task is done? |
47476 | I hear the church- bells ring, O say, what may it be?" |
47476 | I hear the sound of guns, Oh say, what may it be?" |
47476 | I prithee stand and gaze about the sea: What seest? |
47476 | I see a gleaming light, Oh say, what may it be?" |
47476 | II His oceans call across the land:"How long, how long, fair Panama, Wilt thou the shock of tides withstand, Nor heed us sobbing by the strand? |
47476 | II"An empire to be lost or won? |
47476 | III"An empire to be lost or won? |
47476 | IX But is there hope to save Even this ethereal essence from the grave? |
47476 | If I to- morrow were accused, what further could I plead Than those who died, whom neither judge nor minister would heed? |
47476 | If, amid the din of battle, Nobly you should fall, Far away from those who love you, None to hear you call, Who would whisper words of comfort? |
47476 | In the pause of the thunder rolling low, A rifle''s answer-- who shall know From the wind''s fierce hurl and the rain''s black blow? |
47476 | Is FAME your aspiration? |
47476 | Is GLORY your ambition? |
47476 | Is Neckar''s vale no longer fair, That German hearts are leaving? |
47476 | Is Sumter worth the getting? |
47476 | Is Whitman, the strong spirit, overworn? |
47476 | Is earth too poor to give us Something to live for here that shall outlive us? |
47476 | Is honor more than merchandise? |
47476 | Is it Columbia''s sons I spy? |
47476 | Is it a moment''s cool halt that he asks Under the shade of the trees? |
47476 | Is it cowardice or collusion? |
47476 | Is it death? |
47476 | Is it life? |
47476 | Is it naught That the South- wind brings her wail to our shore, That the spoilers compass our desolate sister? |
47476 | Is it naught? |
47476 | Is it naught? |
47476 | Is it naught? |
47476 | Is it not true, that on a certain night You were impeded strangely in your prayers? |
47476 | Is it peace? |
47476 | Is it possible? |
47476 | Is it possible? |
47476 | Is it strife? |
47476 | Is it that you have never Felt the oppressor''s hand, Fighting, with fond endeavor, To cling to your own sweet land? |
47476 | Is it the gurgle of waters whose flow Ofttime has come to him, borne on the breeze, Memory listens to, lapsing so low, Under the shade of the trees? |
47476 | Is it the wind whose gathering shout is heard With voice of peoples myriad like the leaves? |
47476 | Is it the wind? |
47476 | Is it to shoot red squirrels you have your howitzer planted There on the roof of the church, or is it to shoot red devils? |
47476 | Is it treachery or fear brings you here?" |
47476 | Is it true that COLUMBIANS were barter''d for gold? |
47476 | Is it true that an army so gallant were_ sold_? |
47476 | Is it true that our soldiers were wrongfully us''d? |
47476 | Is it true that they''ve been by their GENERAL abus''d? |
47476 | Is not Thy hand stretched forth Visibly in the heavens, to awe and smite? |
47476 | Is the bowl of agony filled? |
47476 | Is the moon so dazzling bright That our cruisers''battle- gray Melts into the misty light?... |
47476 | Is the mud knee- deep in valley and gorge? |
47476 | Is the whole matter too heavy a charge? |
47476 | Is there a lower yet and another? |
47476 | Is there nothing to show of his glittering hoard? |
47476 | Is this a time for pray''r? |
47476 | Is this a time to worship God? |
47476 | Is this our mission? |
47476 | Is this the end? |
47476 | Is yet no movement made?" |
47476 | It''s a fact o''wich ther''s bushels o''proofs; Fer how could we trample on''t so, I wonder, Ef''t worn''t thet it''s ollers under our hoofs?" |
47476 | It''s you thet''s to decide; Ai n''t_ your_ bonds held by Fate, John, Like all the world''s beside? |
47476 | Italy? |
47476 | JOHN BURNS OF GETTYSBURG Have you heard the story that gossips tell Of Burns of Gettysburg? |
47476 | JUST ONE SIGNAL[ May 1, 1898] The war- path is true and straight, It knoweth no left or right; Why ponder and wonder and vacillate? |
47476 | KING OF THE BELGIANS How spoke the King, in his crucial hour victorious? |
47476 | Keep the ghost of that wife, foully slain, in your view,-- And what could you, what should you, what would you do? |
47476 | Know you not what fate awaits you, Or to whom the future mates you? |
47476 | LEE''S PAROLE"Well, General Grant, have you heard the news? |
47476 | Lashed with her hounds, must we Run down the poor who flee From Slavery''s hell? |
47476 | League after league they hugged the coast, And their Captain never left his post:"O Pilot, see you yet the strait that leads to the Eastern Sea?" |
47476 | Less of flinching, stouter strain, Fiercer combat-- who could ask? |
47476 | Let the great bells toll Till the clashing air is dim, Did we wrong this parted soul? |
47476 | Let''s bear with her humors as well as we can; But why should we bear the abuse of her man? |
47476 | Lives the soldier who ceases to cherish The blood- stains and valor they cost? |
47476 | Look hard in the blindfold visage( He ca n''t look back), and inquire( He has stood there nearly a quarter), If he does n''t begin to tire? |
47476 | Love her? |
47476 | MALVERN HILL[ July 1, 1862] Ye elms that wave on Malvern Hill In prime of morn and May, Recall ye how McClellan''s men Here stood at bay? |
47476 | MARE LIBERUM You dare to say with perjured lips,"We fight to make the ocean free"? |
47476 | MARTHA Where should I have a book? |
47476 | Must Hesper join the wailing ghosts of names?" |
47476 | Must I be humble, then, Now when my heart hath need of pride? |
47476 | Must the globe be always girded Ere we get to Bramah''s priest? |
47476 | Must they die, and die in vain, Like a flock of shambled sheep? |
47476 | Must we obey that voice? |
47476 | Must we say to her,"Strive no more,"With the lips wherewith we loved her and kissed her? |
47476 | Must we wear slavery''s yoke? |
47476 | Must ye see them trample her, and be calm As priests when a virgin is led to slaughter? |
47476 | Must ye wait, Till they ravage her gardens of orange and palm, Till her heart is dust, till her strength is water? |
47476 | Must ye wait? |
47476 | Must ye wait? |
47476 | Must you have a nation to cope withal? |
47476 | NED BRADDOCK[ July 9, 1755] Said the Sword to the Ax,''twixt the whacks and the hacks,"Who''s your bold Berserker, cleaving of tracks? |
47476 | Neighbor and friend and brother Flocked to his side in vain,--"What, can it be that they long for me To ruin their cause again? |
47476 | Never a broadsword to bar him the way? |
47476 | Never a bush where a Huron may hide, Or the shot of a Shawnee spit red on his side?" |
47476 | Never?--what hideous growth Is sprouting through clod and clay? |
47476 | No angry passion shakes the state Whose weary servant seeks for rest, And who could fear that scowling hate Would strike at that unguarded breast? |
47476 | No balm in Gilead? |
47476 | No jewel to deck the rude hilt of his sword-- No trappings-- no horses?--what had he, but now? |
47476 | No more thy hand be laid Upon the sword- hilt smiting sore? |
47476 | No? |
47476 | Not as we hoped; but what are we? |
47476 | Nothing more, did I say? |
47476 | Now Tories all, what can ye say? |
47476 | Now in a fright, he starts upright, Awaked by such a clatter; He rubs both eyes, and boldly cries,"For God''s sake, what''s the matter?" |
47476 | Now must we fight again, John? |
47476 | Now who will bar the foeman''s path, to gain a breathing space, Till Houston and his scattered men shall meet him face to face? |
47476 | Now, good men of the law, who is at fault, The one who begins or resists the assault? |
47476 | Now, who may she be?" |
47476 | Now? |
47476 | O''er Missouri sounds the challenge-- O''er the great lakes and the plain;"Are you ready, Minnesota? |
47476 | O''er what quenched grandeur must our shroud be drawn? |
47476 | ON LAYING THE CORNER- STONE OF THE BUNKER HILL MONUMENT[ June 17, 1825] Oh, is not this a holy spot? |
47476 | ON THE DEFEAT OF HENRY CLAY[ June 8, 1848] Fallen? |
47476 | Off Santiago, when from beleaguer Rushed forth Cervera, daring and eager, Who stood Spain''s onset? |
47476 | Oh, Planter of seed in thought and deed has the year of right revolved, And brought the Negro patriot''s cause with its problem to be solved? |
47476 | Oh, curs''d rebellion, these are thine, Thine all these tales of woe; Shall at thy dire insatiate shrine Blood never cease to flow? |
47476 | Oh, is it not to widen man Stretches the sea? |
47476 | Oh, must the sea- bird''s idle van Alone be free? |
47476 | Oh, the battle!--was there ever better won? |
47476 | Oh, what will Morgan say?" |
47476 | Oh, wherefore, soldiers, would you fight The bayonets of a winter storm? |
47476 | Once more and the signal is flying--"How many the wounded and dead?" |
47476 | One dear little thing, As I kissed her sweet lips, did I dream of the King?-- Of the King or his minions? |
47476 | One only doubt was ours, One only dread we knew,-- Could the day that dawned so well Go down for the Darker Powers? |
47476 | One puffs and sweats, the other mutters why Ca n''t you promove your work so fast as I? |
47476 | One, peering aft, wild- staring, Points through the torches flaring:"Spook of the storm, or human? |
47476 | Or are you waiting to hear the news; To hold up your hands in mute surprise, When France and England shall"recognize"? |
47476 | Or is it the surge from the viewless shore That swells to bear me to my crown? |
47476 | Or shall the Evil triumph, and robber Wrong prevail? |
47476 | Or stand they chance with hunting- shirts, Or hardy veteran feet, sir? |
47476 | Or suppose him worse than you; what then? |
47476 | Our_ boys_ are brave and gentle, And their brows are smooth and white; Have they grown to_ men_, Manassas, In the watches of a night? |
47476 | Out on a crag walked something-- what? |
47476 | Palsy those arms that wield the unerring rifles? |
47476 | Parole they gave and parole they broke, What matters the cowardly cheat, If the captain''s bride was satisfied With the one prize laid at her feet? |
47476 | Peace, peace, he cried, but righteous God, How can there be true peace, When war and tumult stalk at night, And deeds of blood increase? |
47476 | Pity the shorts? |
47476 | Pray, do you think it quite right, Leaving your duties out yonder, to risk your dear self in the fight?" |
47476 | Robe and sceptre and crown-- what are these for holding? |
47476 | SALEM[ A.D. 1692] Soe, Mistress Anne, faire neighboure myne, How rides a witch when night- winds blowe? |
47476 | SAN FRANCISCO Who now dare longer trust thy mother hand? |
47476 | Said the Blade to the Ax,"And shall none say him Nay? |
47476 | Said the Sword to the Ax,"Where''s your Berserker now? |
47476 | Sanchez of Segovia, come and try: What seest? |
47476 | Save them from direful destruction would no men? |
47476 | Saw men ever such a sight? |
47476 | Say, are you guilty? |
47476 | Say:"Will ye harry her in our sight? |
47476 | See you no boats of armed men? |
47476 | See you no boats or vessels yet? |
47476 | Semiramis? |
47476 | Shall I pity them? |
47476 | Shall I spare? |
47476 | Shall Justice, Truth, and Freedom turn the poised and trembling scale? |
47476 | Shall he leave Cavité''s lee, Hunt the Yankee fleet at sea? |
47476 | Shall it be love, or hate, John? |
47476 | Shall not the living God of all the earth, And heaven above, do right? |
47476 | Shall she live, or shall she languish? |
47476 | Shall she sink, or shall she rise? |
47476 | Shall the broad land o''er which our flag in starry splendor waves, Forego through us its freedom, and bear the tread of slaves? |
47476 | Shall the iron arm of science Like a sluggard rest? |
47476 | Shall the mariner forever Double the impending capes, While his longsome and retracing Needless course he shapes? |
47476 | Shall the price be paid and the honor said, and the word of outrage stilled? |
47476 | Shall the shout of your trumpet unleash us too late? |
47476 | Shall we desert them, slain, And proffer them to Spain As alien mendicants,--these martyrs of our Maine? |
47476 | Shall we have more speeches, more reviews? |
47476 | Shall we on with his ashes? |
47476 | Shall we our freedom give away, And all our comfort place, In drinking of outlandish tea, Only to please our taste? |
47476 | Shall we take for a sign this Negro slave with unfamiliar name-- With his poor companions, nameless too, till their lives leaped forth in flame? |
47476 | Shall we to more continuance make pretence? |
47476 | Should a deck so polluted again Ever ring to the tread of our true Northern men? |
47476 | Should not the dove so white Follow the sea- mew''s flight, Why did they leave that night Her nest unguarded? |
47476 | Shrink then that band of freemen, at the onslaught? |
47476 | Sighs the worn spirit for respite or ease? |
47476 | Since we so great a plenty have, Of all that''s for our health, Shall we that blasted herb receive, Impoverishing our wealth? |
47476 | Sir Richard loosed his helm, and stretched Impatient hands abroad:--"Have ye no trust in man?" |
47476 | Sisters, daughters, mothers, think you, Would your heroes now or then, Dying, kiss your pictured faces, Wishing they''d been better men? |
47476 | Six lads hurt!--and the colors there? |
47476 | Slowly the stores of life are spent, Yet hope still battles with despair; Will Heaven not yield when knees are bent? |
47476 | So she resolutely walked up to the wagon old and red;"May I have a dozen apples for a kiss?" |
47476 | Some gorger in the sun? |
47476 | Some more substantial boon Than such as flows and ebbs with Fortune''s fickle moon? |
47476 | Some one must do that work of fear; What man of men would volunteer? |
47476 | Some prowler with the bat? |
47476 | Sons of New England, here and there, Wherever men are still holding by The honor our fathers left so fair,-- Say, do you hear the cowards''cry? |
47476 | Sons of New England, in the fray, Do you hear the clamor behind your back? |
47476 | Speak, Ximena, speak and tell us, who has lost, and who has won? |
47476 | Stay one moment; you''ve heard Of Caldwell, the parson, who once preached the Word Down at Springfield? |
47476 | Still as he fled,''twas Irving''s cry, And his example too,"Run on, my merry men-- for why? |
47476 | Still as the Old World rolls in light, shall ours in shadow turn, A beamless Chaos, cursed of God, through outer darkness borne? |
47476 | Still shall she wave her bloody hand And threatening banners o''er this land, To Britain''s fell disgrace? |
47476 | Still shall this motley, murderous crew Their deep, destructive arts pursue, And general horror spread? |
47476 | Strike him? |
47476 | Strikes chill the breast dread fear? |
47476 | Sweetheart, and all the mongrel pack? |
47476 | TARDY GEORGE[ January, 1862] What are you waiting for, George, I pray? |
47476 | THE CALL TO THE COLORS"Are you ready, O Virginia, Alabama, Tennessee? |
47476 | THE CONSTITUTION''S LAST FIGHT[ February 20, 1815] A Yankee ship and a Yankee crew-- Constitution, where ye bound for? |
47476 | THE DEAD Think you the dead are lonely in that place? |
47476 | THE DOWNFALL OF PIRACY[ November 22, 1718] Will you hear of a bloody Battle, Lately fought upon the Seas? |
47476 | THE EAGLE OF CORINTH[ October 3, 4, 1862] Did you hear of the fight at Corinth, How we whipped out Price and Van Dorn? |
47476 | THE FALL OF TECUMSEH[ October 5, 1813] What heavy- hoofed coursers the wilderness roam, To the war- blast indignantly tramping? |
47476 | THE PILGRIM FATHERS The Pilgrim Fathers,--where are they? |
47476 | THE RETURN Golden through the golden morning, Who is this that comes With the pride of banners lifted, With the roll of drums? |
47476 | THE RIFLEMAN''S SONG AT BENNINGTON Why come ye hither, stranger? |
47476 | THE VARUNA[ Sunk April 24, 1862] Who has not heard of the dauntless Varuna? |
47476 | Talk of thy glorious liberty, and then Bolt hard the captive''s door? |
47476 | Tattnall nods, and we go forward, find a gun no longer fought-- What is peace to us when all its crew lie dead? |
47476 | Tell it? |
47476 | Tell me, ye who scanned The stars, Earth''s elders, still must noblest aims Be traced upon oblivious ocean- sands? |
47476 | Tell us, of your knightly grace, Tell us, left you not some trace Leading to that wellspring true Where old souls their age renew? |
47476 | That his hundred years have earned for him a place in the human van Which others have fought for and thought for since the world of wrong began? |
47476 | That nothing is told while the clinging sin remains part unconfessed? |
47476 | That our torches destroyed what our fathers had raised On that beautiful isle, is it matter of blame? |
47476 | That something hindered you? |
47476 | That the health of the nation is perilled if one man be oppressed? |
47476 | That the houses we dwelt in, the church where they praised The God of our Fathers, we gave to the flame? |
47476 | That we smiled when there lay Smoking ruins next day, And nothing was left of the town but its name? |
47476 | That you would open their eyes? |
47476 | The British captain raged and swore; but then what could he do? |
47476 | The South says,"_ Poor folks down!_"John, An''"_ All men up!_"say we,-- White, yaller, black, an''brown, John: Now which is your idee? |
47476 | The black festoons that stretch for miles, And turn the streets to funeral aisles? |
47476 | The black mouths belch and thunder, and the shrapnel shrieks and flies; Where are the fain and the fearless, the lads with the dauntless eyes? |
47476 | The buck stands still in the timber--"Is''t the patter of nuts that fall?" |
47476 | The cannon''s sudden, sullen boom, The bells that toll of death and doom, The rolling of the drums, The dreadful car that comes? |
47476 | The enemy? |
47476 | The first boat melts; and a second keel Is blent with the foliaged shade-- Their midnight rounds have the rebel officers made? |
47476 | The first that the general saw were the groups Of stragglers, and then the retreating troops; What was done? |
47476 | The flags half- mast that late so high Flaunted at each new victory? |
47476 | The foal of the wild mare whinnies--"Did he hear the Comanche call?" |
47476 | The fratricidal strife begun, when will its end be heard? |
47476 | The ghostly vessels trembled From ruined stern to prow; What was this thing of terror That broke their vigil now? |
47476 | The kindly natives came with gifts Of corn and slaughtered deer; What room for savage treachery Or foul suspicion here? |
47476 | The lily calmly braves the storm, And shall the palm- tree fear? |
47476 | The men that would disrupt the State By such base plots as theirs-- frauds, thefts, and lies-- What code of honor do they recognize? |
47476 | The place was our own; could we hold it? |
47476 | The rebel forts belch fire and death, But what care we for them? |
47476 | The shadows of night fell cold and gray As I rode, with never a break or pause; But what was the use, when my name was Dawes? |
47476 | The solid tramp of infantry, the rumble of the great jolting gun, The sharp, clear order, and the fierce steeds neighing,"Why''s not the fight begun?" |
47476 | The starved and the weak In their hour of woe Are calling, land, on thee; Then why delay in thy dauntless sway? |
47476 | The tale? |
47476 | The two- edged sword, how came it in her hand? |
47476 | Their epitaph!--who reads? |
47476 | Their monument!--where does it stand? |
47476 | Then all was silent, till there smote my ear A movement in the stream that checked my breath: Was it the slow plash of a wading deer? |
47476 | Then did he blench? |
47476 | Then ship and fortress gazed with anxious stare, Until the Cumberland''s cannon, silence breaking, Thundered its guardian challenge,"Who comes there?" |
47476 | Then to the stout sea- captains the sheriff, turning, said,--"Which of ye, worthy seamen, will take this Quaker maid? |
47476 | Then up stept this young hero, John Paulding was his name,"Sir, tell us where you''re going, And, also, whence you came?" |
47476 | Then, as we greet him, what shall be ours to render? |
47476 | Then, cried the traitor, from his sulphurous cell,"Do you surrender?" |
47476 | There at Suez, Europe''s mattock Cuts the briny road with skill, And must Darien bid defiance To the pilot still? |
47476 | There is only one test of contract: is it willing, is it good? |
47476 | There were men with hoary hair Amidst that pilgrim band; Why have they come to wither there, Away from their childhood''s land? |
47476 | These are around her; but where are her foes? |
47476 | These multitudes of solemn men, Who speak not when they meet, But throng the silent street? |
47476 | They bore him to the surgeon, A busy man was he:"A drummer boy-- what ails him?" |
47476 | They coolly said unto their lords,"Our dresses all are new; What on earth would be the use of going back with you? |
47476 | They kill''d a goose, they kill''d a hen, Three hogs they wounded in a pen-- They dash''d away, and pray what then? |
47476 | They strike at the life of the State: Shall the murder be done? |
47476 | Think ye I made this ball A field of havoc and war, Where tyrants great and tyrants small Might harry the weak and poor? |
47476 | Think you this a cause for marvel? |
47476 | This crown shall crown their struggle and their ruth? |
47476 | Thrice happy people, ne''er shall feel The force of unrelenting steel; What brute would give the ox a stroke Who bends his neck to meet the yoke? |
47476 | Thus a divided duty we Perceive in this hard matter-- Free trade, or sable brothers free? |
47476 | To burnish your buttons, to brighten your guns; Or wait you for May- day and warm spring suns? |
47476 | To feed with our fresh life- blood the Old World''s cast- off crime, Dropped, like some monstrous early birth, from the tired lap of Time? |
47476 | To run anew the evil race the old lost nations ran, And die like them of unbelief of God, and wrong of man? |
47476 | To scour your cross- belts with fresh pipe- clay? |
47476 | Trust her? |
47476 | UNDER THE SHADE OF THE TREES What are the thoughts that are stirring his breast? |
47476 | Up came the reserves to the mellay infernal, Asking where to go in,--through the clearing or pine? |
47476 | V Whither leads the path To ampler fates that leads? |
47476 | VIII Was it for this our fathers kept the law? |
47476 | WASHINGTON Where may the wearied eye repose When gazing on the Great; Where neither guilty glory glows, Nor despicable state? |
47476 | WHAT''S IN A NAME? |
47476 | WHEN THIS CRUEL WAR IS OVER Dearest love, do you remember When we last did meet, How you told me that you loved me, Kneeling at my feet? |
47476 | Wait you for gold and credit to go, Before we shall see your martial show; Till Treasury Notes will not pay to forge? |
47476 | Want a weapon? |
47476 | Want a weapon? |
47476 | Want to tackle_ me_ in, du ye? |
47476 | Want you a thousand more cannon made, To add to the thousand now arrayed? |
47476 | Want you more men, more money to pay? |
47476 | Was I more than these? |
47476 | Was a pirate- fleet her captor? |
47476 | Was dying all they had the skill to do? |
47476 | Was ever a death- march so grand and so solemn? |
47476 | Was ever valor held so cheap in Glory''s mart before In all the days of chivalry, in all the deeds of war? |
47476 | Was fear of hell, or want of faith, Or the brute''s common dread of death The passion that began a chase, Whose goal was ruin and disgrace? |
47476 | Was his ear at fault that brook and breeze Sang in their saddest of minor keys? |
47476 | Was it for this that he had braved The warring storms of mount and sky? |
47476 | Was it he shouted Union from every throat Through the long war''s weary day? |
47476 | Was it like that? |
47476 | Was it moonlight so wondrously flashing? |
47476 | Was it that I might fall most suddenly From honor''s summit to the sink of scandal? |
47476 | Was it war or peace? |
47476 | Was that the tread of many feet, Which downward from the hillside beat? |
47476 | Was the fort by traitors won? |
47476 | Was there a man who in fear held his breath? |
47476 | Was there a soldier who carried the Seven Flinched like a coward or fled from the strife? |
47476 | Was there succor? |
47476 | We begin to think it''s nater To take sarse an''not be riled;-- Who''d expect to see a tater All on eend at bein''biled? |
47476 | We ca n''t never choose him o''course,--thet''s flat; Guess we shell hev to come round,( do n''t you?) |
47476 | We see the foeman''s musketeers Deployed upon his right, And on his left the cavalry Stand, hungry for the fight; But that blank centre-- what? |
47476 | We send up three times to ask If we sha''n''t begin our task? |
47476 | We speak, though low:"That blastful furnace can they thread?" |
47476 | We''ll brook no more delay; Why give the traitors time and means To fortify the way With stolen guns, in ambuscades? |
47476 | Were not those brave old races? |
47476 | Were we on the door- step here, Parting for a day, Would we utter words as though Parting were for aye? |
47476 | Were you not half dismayed, There in the century''s night, Till to your view a sister''s aid Came, like a flash of light? |
47476 | What Briton, undaunted, that pants to be free, But warms at the mention of brave De Launcey? |
47476 | What Terror starts to the day? |
47476 | What all our lives to save thee? |
47476 | What angry booming doth the trembling ear, Glued to the stone wall, hear-- So deep, no air Its weight can bear? |
47476 | What answer do you make to this, Giles Corey? |
47476 | What answer make you? |
47476 | What are you waiting for, tardy George? |
47476 | What are you waiting for, tardy George? |
47476 | What are you waiting for, tardy George? |
47476 | What blazon on her shield, In the clear Century''s light Shines to the world revealed, Declaring nobler triumph, born of Right? |
47476 | What boots the loss of freemen''s blood Beside imperilled gold? |
47476 | What bright dread angel Thou, Dazzling the waves before Thy station great? |
47476 | What brings us thronging these high rites to pay, And seal these hours the noblest of our year, Save that our brothers found this better way? |
47476 | What can I do or say? |
47476 | What cares he? |
47476 | What cares he? |
47476 | What cares he? |
47476 | What cares he? |
47476 | What crown is this, high hung and hard to reach, Whose glory so outshines our laboring speech? |
47476 | What crown of rich words would he set for all time on this day? |
47476 | What devil tempts thee to descend To conquest, robbery and crime? |
47476 | What did the King, in bitter defeat and sorrow? |
47476 | What do you see in your visions at night, Jefferson D., Jefferson D.? |
47476 | What else could she do, with her fair Northern name? |
47476 | What ever''scaped Oblivion''s subtle wrong Save a few clarion names, or golden threads of song? |
47476 | What forms were those which darkly stood Just on the margin of the wood? |
47476 | What glory or honor to gain While the nation is shouting hosannas, Uniting her sons to fight Spain? |
47476 | What gray heads look up at us sadly? |
47476 | What hangs upon the breeze? |
47476 | What hath he said? |
47476 | What have we left? |
47476 | What held they all in their love and pride? |
47476 | What holds he in his hand? |
47476 | What hurried rider, this, With jaded horse and garb amiss, Whose look some woe proclaims, Ere he his mission names? |
47476 | What if conquest, subjugation, Even greater ills become?" |
47476 | What if our men be driven? |
47476 | What is his crown, the noblest of all for wearing? |
47476 | What is it fateful woman, so blear, hardly human? |
47476 | What is it in these who shall now do the storming That makes every Georgian spring to his feet? |
47476 | What is the mystical vision he sees? |
47476 | What is the shame that clothes the skin To the nameless horror that lives within? |
47476 | What is your pride for? |
47476 | What looms upon our starboard bow? |
47476 | What matter if our feet are torn? |
47476 | What matter if our shoes are worn? |
47476 | What mean the gladness of the plain, This joy of eve and morn, The mirth that shakes the beard of grain And yellow locks of corn? |
47476 | What means this dance, this Powow dance? |
47476 | What means this great commotion? |
47476 | What means this pageant, then? |
47476 | What meant the"U. S."upon every cap-- Upon every button, belt, and strap? |
47476 | What men Like you weaklings to- day had durst cope with_ us_ then? |
47476 | What more? |
47476 | What oaths confirm your broken faith? |
47476 | What pleasant song or story Did she love from your lips to hear?" |
47476 | What recked he? |
47476 | What recked those who followed-- Men who had fought ten to one ere that day? |
47476 | What reminder Of one red man in that land? |
47476 | What saith the herald of the Lord? |
47476 | What say you? |
47476 | What sea- worn barks are those which throw The light spray from each rushing prow? |
47476 | What shall be found upon history''s page? |
47476 | What sought they thus afar? |
47476 | What sounds are these But chants and holy hymns?" |
47476 | What speaks he now, in the hour of faith victorious? |
47476 | What splendors crown thy brow? |
47476 | What stay the warriors''matchless might? |
47476 | What tears wash out the stain of death? |
47476 | What then? |
47476 | What though their shot fall round us here, yet thicker than the hail? |
47476 | What though they faced no storm of iron hail That freedom and the right might still prevail? |
47476 | What thought our Admiral then, Looking down on his men? |
47476 | What to him are all our wars, What but death- bemocking folly? |
47476 | What to him is friend or foeman, Rise of moon, or set of sun, Hand of man, or kiss of woman? |
47476 | What tongue the fearful sight may tell? |
47476 | What voice is beseeching thee For the scholar''s lowliest place? |
47476 | What was done Who could know? |
47476 | What was it passed like an ominous breath-- Like a shiver of fear, or a touch of death? |
47476 | What was it the mournful wood- thrush said? |
47476 | What was it? |
47476 | What was the choice he made, that all fear surmounted? |
47476 | What was the gift he won, in the fire that tried him? |
47476 | What was to be done with the three millions of negroes who had been given their freedom? |
47476 | What were our lives without thee? |
47476 | What whispered the pine- trees overhead? |
47476 | What will the bears- at- forty do? |
47476 | What wolf has been prowling My castle within?" |
47476 | What words can drown that bitter cry? |
47476 | What''s the mercy despots feel? |
47476 | What, No? |
47476 | What, sighing? |
47476 | When Gallic hosts, ungrateful men, Our race meant to extermine, Pray did committees save us then, Or Hancock, or such vermin? |
47476 | When God or man''s the choice, Must we postpone Him, who from Sinai spoke? |
47476 | When Lovewell''s men are dying fast, And Paugus''tribe hath felt the rod? |
47476 | When empires must be wound, we bring the shroud, The time- old web of the implacable Three: Is it too coarse for him, the young and proud? |
47476 | When stands it?" |
47476 | When there is Peace? |
47476 | When was ever His right hand Over any time or land Stretched as now beneath the sun? |
47476 | When we have bled at every pore, Shall we still strive for gear and store? |
47476 | When, undismayed amid the shock Of war, like Cerro Gordo''s rock, They stood, or rushed more madly on Than tropic tempest o''er San Juan? |
47476 | Whence come they? |
47476 | Whence comes our symbol? |
47476 | Where I have eaten the bread and drunk the wine So many times at our Lord''s Table with you? |
47476 | Where are the foemen? |
47476 | Where be the youths whose glances, the summer Sabbath through, Turned tenderly and timidly unto thy father''s pew? |
47476 | Where breathes the foe but falls before us, With Freedom''s soil beneath our feet, And Freedom''s banner streaming o''er us? |
47476 | Where for words of hope they listened, the long wail of despair? |
47476 | Where is John Gloyd? |
47476 | Where stood they on that morn? |
47476 | Where the far nations looked for light, a blackness in the air? |
47476 | Where''s Boyd? |
47476 | Where''s my barge? |
47476 | Where''s the widow or maid with a mouth to be kist, When Burr comes a- wooing, that long would resist? |
47476 | Which is prouder, they or we, Thinking of Cavité''s lee? |
47476 | Whispered low the dying soldier, pressed her hand and faintly smiled; Was that pitying face his mother''s? |
47476 | Who against these to the floor led on the Lecomptonite legions? |
47476 | Who are you? |
47476 | Who avert the murderous blade? |
47476 | Who bore what we suffered, our wound and our pain,-- Bore them with patience, and dares them again? |
47476 | Who causes thus the thunder The doom of men to speak? |
47476 | Who could Antietam''s wreath foretell? |
47476 | Who could fail with him? |
47476 | Who dare again to say we trace Our lines to a plebeian race? |
47476 | Who from its bed of primal rock First wrenched thy dark, unshapely block? |
47476 | Who had fired the earliest gun? |
47476 | Who has not heard of the deeds she has done? |
47476 | Who holds his life as less than naught when home and honor call, And counts the guerdon full and fair for liberty to fall? |
47476 | Who is dead? |
47476 | Who is losing? |
47476 | Who is the owner? |
47476 | Who is there willing to offer his life? |
47476 | Who is''t must plead our cause? |
47476 | Who led on to the war the anti- Lecomptonite phalanx? |
47476 | Who made the law thet hurts, John,_ Heads I win-- ditto tails_? |
47476 | Who met and tossed her? |
47476 | Who now must heal those wounds, or stop that blood The Heathen made, and drew into a flood? |
47476 | Who reckon of life or limb? |
47476 | Who shall hold that magic key But the child of destiny, In whose veins has mingled long All the best blood of the strong? |
47476 | Who shall not hear, while the brown Mississippi Rushes along from the snow to the sun? |
47476 | Who shall rejoice With a righteous voice, Far- heard through the ages, if not she? |
47476 | Who shall tell? |
47476 | Who speaks? |
47476 | Who speaks? |
47476 | Who speaks? |
47476 | Who speaks? |
47476 | Who speaks? |
47476 | Who speaks? |
47476 | Who told you of the clothes? |
47476 | Who was their comrade, their brave color- bearer? |
47476 | Who were those men-- their leader who? |
47476 | Who will shield the captive knight? |
47476 | Who will shield the fearless heart? |
47476 | Who would not follow a leader whose blood Has swelled, like our own, the battle''s red flood? |
47476 | Who would recommend submission? |
47476 | Who would soothe your pain? |
47476 | Who, undoubting, worship boldness, And, if baffled, bolder rise, Shall we lag when grandeur beckons To this good emprize? |
47476 | Who, who will ride from Walla- Walla, Four thousand miles for Oregon? |
47476 | Whom have we here-- shrouded in martial manner, Crowned with a martyr''s charm? |
47476 | Whose hand, of curious skill untaught, Thy rude and savage outline wrought? |
47476 | Whose hand? |
47476 | Whose voice answers not again? |
47476 | Whose voice? |
47476 | Whose was the right and the wrong? |
47476 | Why caught each man his blade? |
47476 | Why cling to those moth- eaten banners? |
47476 | Why cross the cold blue ocean? |
47476 | Why does the course Of the mill- stream widen? |
47476 | Why does your spectre haunt and hurt this person? |
47476 | Why drag again into the light of day The errors of an age long passed away?" |
47476 | Why echoed every street With tramp of thronging feet-- All flying to the city''s wall? |
47476 | Why leave, strong men, the Fatherland? |
47476 | Why lulls Britannia''s thunder, That waked the wat''ry war? |
47476 | Why not? |
47476 | Why rising by the roadside here, do you the colors greet? |
47476 | Why should I ask? |
47476 | Why should the dreary pall Round him be flung at all? |
47476 | Why should the white invader spare A dusky heathen band? |
47476 | Why should we seek inglorious rest, Or sink, with thoughtless ease oppress''d, While war insults so near? |
47476 | Why start the listeners? |
47476 | Why stays the gallant Guerrière, Whose streamers waved so fair? |
47476 | Why talk so dreffle big, John, Of honor when it meant You did n''t care a fig, John, But jest for_ ten per cent_? |
47476 | Why the hot haste he made? |
47476 | Why wag your head with turban bound, yellow, red and green? |
47476 | Why was I seated by my prince''s side, Honor''d, caress''d like some first peer of Spain? |
47476 | Why waves there no banner My fortress above?" |
47476 | Why, soldiers, why, Should we be melancholy, boys? |
47476 | Why, soldiers, why? |
47476 | Why? |
47476 | Wich of our onnable body''d be safe?" |
47476 | Will it be heaven? |
47476 | Will it be hell? |
47476 | Will nobody answer those women who cry As the awful warnings thunder by? |
47476 | Will nobody speak? |
47476 | Will the swordfish brave the whale, Doubly girt with boom and chain? |
47476 | Will ye give it up to slaves? |
47476 | Will ye look for greener graves? |
47476 | Will ye to your homes retire? |
47476 | Will you condemn me in this house of God, Where I so long have worshipped with you all? |
47476 | Will you condemn me on such evidence,-- You who have known me for so many years? |
47476 | Will you dance with me?" |
47476 | Will you go? |
47476 | Will you take My life away from me, because this girl, Who is distraught, and not in her right mind, Accuses me of things I blush to name? |
47476 | Willing to march to this music of strife,-- Cannon for drum and torpedo for fife? |
47476 | Wilt thou not put the scorn And instant tragic question from thine eyes? |
47476 | Wilt thou, upon whose loving breast Our noblest chiefs are sleeping, Yield thy dead patriots''place of rest To scornful alien keeping? |
47476 | With a loud speaking- trumpet,"Whence came you?" |
47476 | With fear- paled cheeks? |
47476 | With the lessening smoke and thunder, Our glasses around we aim,-- What is that burning yonder? |
47476 | Wo n''t you move an inch or two-- to keep the stars away from him? |
47476 | Women of France, do you see them pass to the battle in the North? |
47476 | Would we? |
47476 | Would ye have them hear to his words-- The words that may spread like fire? |
47476 | Would you ask for my descent? |
47476 | Would you hear more? |
47476 | Wouldst leap ashore, Heart? |
47476 | Wrapt not in Eastern balms, But with thy fleshless palms Stretched, as if asking alms, Why dost thou haunt me?" |
47476 | Wut shall we du? |
47476 | Wut''s the use o''meetin''-goin''Every Sabbath, wet or dry, Ef it''s right to go amowin''Feller- men like oats an''rye? |
47476 | X Who now shall sneer? |
47476 | Yankee Doodle, Doodle, do, Whither are you flying,"A cocked hat we''ve been licked into, And knocked to Hades,"crying? |
47476 | Ye, that vanquish pain and distance, Ye, enmeshing Time with wire, Court ye patiently forever Yon Antarctic ire? |
47476 | Yea, when the sick world cries, how can he sleep? |
47476 | Yet are red heels and long- laced skirts, For stumps and briars meet, sir? |
47476 | Yet when shall we know Another like this of the Alamo? |
47476 | You said all our paper was not worth a penny:(''Tis nothing but rags, quoth honest Will Tryon: Are rags to discourage the sons of the lion?) |
47476 | You who have bound a girth Of new hope round the Earth, Should its firm bond be loosened here, what were your struggle worth? |
47476 | You wonder why we''re hot, John? |
47476 | Your mind what madness fills? |
47476 | Zenobia? |
47476 | [ May 2, 1863]"Who''ve ye got there?" |
47476 | [ September 12, 1759] How stands the glass around? |
47476 | _ Are_ they beaten? |
47476 | _ Maria!_ Star? |
47476 | _ Retreat!_ Was the word e''er more bitterly said, Saint Leger, Saint Leger, Than when to the North- land your leaguer you led? |
47476 | _ What is that a- billowing there Like a thunderhead in air? |
47476 | _ Would the pale- faces find_, he said,_ Where lurks their fiercest foe? |
47476 | _ Would_ the fleet get through? |
47476 | _ Wut_''ll git your dander riz? |
47476 | _ Wut_''ll make ye act like freemen? |
47476 | _"And am I glad I''m home? |
47476 | _"And were the cooties thick? |
47476 | a day for us to sow The soil of new- gained empire with slavery''s seeds of woe? |
47476 | ai nt it terrible? |
47476 | alas, what choice,-- The lust that shameth, the sword that slayeth? |
47476 | an eagle, that treads yon giddy height? |
47476 | and must I lie still, While that drum and that measured trampling Move from me far down the hill? |
47476 | and that you left This woman here, your wife, kneeling alone Upon the hearth? |
47476 | and what are we? |
47476 | and,"What_ will_ his mother do?" |
47476 | are such as ye The guardians of our liberty? |
47476 | are they far or come they near? |
47476 | are they ghosts or men? |
47476 | are ye cravens?" |
47476 | are ye not Likewise the chosen of the Lord, To do His will and speak His word? |
47476 | art thou fled? |
47476 | asked The treaty- makers from the coast; And him the church with questions tasked, And said,"Why did you leave your post?" |
47476 | at last he cried,--"What to me is this noisy ride? |
47476 | can those British tyrants think, Our fathers cross''d the main, And savage foes, and dangers met, To be enslav''d by them? |
47476 | canst thou see? |
47476 | cries the old woman,"and must I comply? |
47476 | did he think we would run? |
47476 | did she watch beside her child? |
47476 | did thy stars On their courses smite his cars; Blast his arm, and wrest his bars From the heaving tide? |
47476 | did you follow me, Armstrong? |
47476 | do I hear again the roar Of the tides by the Indies sweeping down? |
47476 | do the stormers quail? |
47476 | do they thrill, The brave two hundred scars You got in the River- Wars? |
47476 | do you mean to make war with milk and the water of roses? |
47476 | exultantly he saith!-- Did they falter? |
47476 | hast thou seen In all thy travel round the earth Ever a morn of calmer birth? |
47476 | he cried,"Have ye no faith in God? |
47476 | he shouted long and loud; And"Who wants my potatoes?" |
47476 | held Opinion''s wind for Law? |
47476 | how long Shall heaven look on and not take part With the poor old man and his fluttering heart, Tarred and feathered and carried in a cart? |
47476 | how long Shall such a priesthood barter truth away, And in Thy name, for robbery and wrong At Thy own altars pray? |
47476 | how long will he keep us, To see if he quail or no? |
47476 | is it not The holiest spot of all the earth? |
47476 | is it not enough? |
47476 | is it well To leave the gates unguarded? |
47476 | is that church, which lends Strength to the spoiler, thine? |
47476 | is this the nation whose thundering arms were hurled, Through Europe, Afric, India? |
47476 | lay thy poor head on my knee; Dost thou know the lips that kiss thee? |
47476 | must I come on bended knee? |
47476 | my Dawn? |
47476 | no word, my Sparkling- Water? |
47476 | nor like an owl Thus hoot your doleful humors; What fiend possesses you to howl Such crazy, coward rumors?" |
47476 | or coward paleness Whiten the blanch''d cheek? |
47476 | perhaps some friend May ask, incredulous;"and to what good end? |
47476 | preach, and kidnap men? |
47476 | quoth Pitt,"what the devil''s the matter? |
47476 | says he,"what shall we do? |
47476 | shall it open wide? |
47476 | shall teach us to receive The mystic meaning of our peace and strife? |
47476 | shall that sudden blade Leap out no more? |
47476 | she said;"Why dost thou join our ghostly fleet Arrayed in living red? |
47476 | the Sea- Queen''s isle? |
47476 | the signal lifted; rippling through the fleet it ran; Was there ever deadlier venture? |
47476 | then what followed? |
47476 | they dance the Powow dance, What horrid yells the forest fill? |
47476 | they say-- That gallops so wildly Williamsburg way? |
47476 | to his gods swells a desolate call; Hath his grave not been hollowed, and woven his pall, Since they passed o''er the river? |
47476 | was it the night- wind that rustled the leaves? |
47476 | was n''t that a pity? |
47476 | was there ever bolder plan? |
47476 | we said,"That he from whom we hoped so much, is dead, Most foully murdered ere he met the foe?" |
47476 | what is that we hear? |
47476 | what is this? |
47476 | what matters where A true man''s cross may stand, So Heaven be o''er it here as there In pleasant Norman land? |
47476 | what means that sudden clang From the distant town? |
47476 | what shade art thou Of sorrow or of blame Liftest the lyric leafage from her brow, And pointest a slow finger at her shame? |
47476 | what shall I do? |
47476 | what sounds are these that come Sullenly over the Pacific seas,-- Sounds of ignoble battle, striking dumb The season''s half- awakened ecstasies? |
47476 | what to do? |
47476 | what was that, like a human shriek From the winding valley? |
47476 | whence should they ever arise In our hearts, O my children, the while We can remember the past? |
47476 | where is he? |
47476 | who bragged so bold In the sad war''s early day, Did nothing predict you should ever behold The Old Flag come this way? |
47476 | who is winning? |
47476 | who is winning? |
47476 | whom you hold so dear That you do no harm and give no fear, As you tenderly take them by the gorge-- What are you waiting for, tardy George? |
47476 | whose navy ruled a world? |
47476 | would not grow warm When thoughts like these give cheer? |
47476 | would ye die, my jewel?" |
6434 | By whose authority? |
6434 | Has he proved a coward or a traitor? |
6434 | What can you do? |
6434 | Who is so foolish as to believe that there are people on the other side of the world, walking with their heels upward, and their heads hanging down? 6434 Who run?" |
6434 | ''Do I understand you to say that you have struck?'' |
6434 | 103 What efforts were made to resist the law? |
6434 | 111. Who was"Poor Richard"? |
6434 | 112. Who were the"Green Mountain Boys"? |
6434 | 122. Who succeeded General Schuyler? |
6434 | 134. Who is said to have used the words,"A little more grape, Captain Bragg"? |
6434 | 150. Who was the"old man eloquent"? |
6434 | 154. Who was elected second President? |
6434 | 156. Who was the inventor of the cotton- gin? |
6434 | 166. Who were the"Silver Greys"? |
6434 | 177. Who are the"Mormons"? |
6434 | 183. Who were the"Filibusters"? |
6434 | 184. Who were the Presidential candidates? |
6434 | 195. Who was President in 1812--1832--1846--1850--1861? |
6434 | 196. Who was elected fifteenth President? |
6434 | 20. Who said,"I would rather be right than be President"? |
6434 | 23 Did Columbus waver? |
6434 | 270. Who was elected President? |
6434 | 281. Who became President on the death of Lincoln? |
6434 | 31. Who was President from 1787( the adoption of the Constitution) to 1789? |
6434 | 31. Who were the Huguenots? |
6434 | 33. Who said,"I am not worth purchasing, but such as I am the king of England is not rich enough to buy me"? |
6434 | 39. Who entered New York harbor next after Verrazani? |
6434 | 42. Who, in a frail canoe, on a stormy night, visited an Indian wigwam to save the lives of his enemies? |
6434 | 51. Who fired the first gun in the French and Indian war? |
6434 | 54. Who was called the"Great Pacificator"? |
6434 | 58. Who was"Rough and Ready"? |
6434 | 59. Who was the"Sage of Monticello"? |
6434 | 75. Who drafted the Declaration of Independence? |
6434 | 75. Who were the Huguenots? |
6434 | 76. Who secured its adoption in the Convention? |
6434 | 79. Who was the"bachelor President"? |
6434 | 89. Who used the expression,"We have met the enemy, and they are ours"? |
6434 | 93 Commerce? |
6434 | A bill of attainder? |
6434 | A navy? |
6434 | A rain? |
6434 | A stone wall? |
6434 | ARTICLE V. What provisions are made with regard to a trial for capital offences? |
6434 | After this fort had been taken, a British officer entering asked,"Who commands here?" |
6434 | After whom ought this continent to have been named? |
6434 | Alexander Hamilton? |
6434 | Algiers? |
6434 | Amusing story of the longevity of the Indians? |
6434 | An ex- post- facto law? |
6434 | And even if a ship could perchance get around there safely, how could it ever get back? |
6434 | And then, how can a ship get there? |
6434 | Andrew Jackson? |
6434 | Appellate jurisdiction? |
6434 | Appointment of ambassadors? |
6434 | Are earth- works permanent? |
6434 | Are there any remains of this people now existing? |
6434 | Are these stories credible? |
6434 | At the South? |
6434 | At the north? |
6434 | At what date does the history of this country begin? |
6434 | Authors and inventors? |
6434 | Bankruptcies? |
6434 | Before whom did he lay his plan? |
6434 | Bill of attainder? |
6434 | Borrowing money? |
6434 | Boston? |
6434 | By annexation? |
6434 | By conquest? |
6434 | By what battle was each invasion checked? |
6434 | By what coincidence is Georgia linked with Washington? |
6434 | By what event can you recollect it? |
6434 | By what incident or peculiarity can you recollect each one? |
6434 | By what name is it commonly known? |
6434 | By what peculiarity can you recollect it? |
6434 | By what peculiarity can you recollect it? |
6434 | By what peculiarity was it distinguished? |
6434 | By what providential circumstance did the Americans escape? |
6434 | By what route were the goods from the East obtained? |
6434 | By what two battles was the contest at the south closed? |
6434 | By whom and on what occasion were the words used,"Millions for defence, but not one cent for tribute"? |
6434 | By whom and under what circumstances was the expression used,"Give me liberty or give me death"? |
6434 | By whom was the Albemarle colony settled? |
6434 | By whom was the Carteret colony settled? |
6434 | By whose advice? |
6434 | California? |
6434 | Calling forth the militia? |
6434 | Can a Congressman hold another office at the same time?] |
6434 | Can a criminal be forced to witness against himself? |
6434 | Can a criminal or an apprentice escape by fleeing into another state? |
6434 | Can a person be tried twice for the same crime? |
6434 | Can a religious test be exacted?] |
6434 | Can a ship sail up hill?" |
6434 | Can he receive any other emolument from the national or any state government? |
6434 | Can the citizens of one state bring a suit against another state?] |
6434 | Can the salary of a President be changed during his term of office? |
6434 | Can their salary be changed during their term of office?] |
6434 | Captain Pring? |
6434 | Cause of Brook''s assault on Sumner? |
6434 | Cause of Pontiac''s war? |
6434 | Cause of Shays''s rebellion? |
6434 | Cause of it? |
6434 | Cause of the battles of Iuka and Corinth? |
6434 | Cause? |
6434 | Cause? |
6434 | Cause? |
6434 | Cause? |
6434 | Cause? |
6434 | Central America? |
6434 | Champions of each party? |
6434 | Character of the settlers? |
6434 | Coinage of money? |
6434 | Coining money? |
6434 | Col. George, of the Second Minnesota, being asked,"How long can you hold this pass?" |
6434 | Columbus''s idea? |
6434 | Condition of affairs in the border States? |
6434 | Condition of agriculture? |
6434 | Condition of the State? |
6434 | Condition of the army at the south? |
6434 | Condition of the colonies? |
6434 | Condition of the country? |
6434 | Counterfeiting? |
6434 | Daniel Webster? |
6434 | Declaring war? |
6434 | Defines the duties of the President, Name these duties with regard( 1) to Congress,( 2) to ambassadors, and( 3) to United States officers? |
6434 | Did England improve them? |
6434 | Did he discover the main- land? |
6434 | Did he have any idea of God? |
6434 | Did he know that he had found a new continent? |
6434 | Did he make any valuable discoveries? |
6434 | Did he remain true to his party? |
6434 | Did his discoveries antedate those of Columbus? |
6434 | Did the English government support educational interests? |
6434 | Did the Puritans obey it? |
6434 | Did the Puritans tolerate other Churches? |
6434 | Did the king treat him fairly? |
6434 | Did they have any more privileges than the Jamestown colonists? |
6434 | Difficulty with France? |
6434 | Direct tax? |
6434 | Does the enumeration of certain rights in the Constitution have any effect upon those not enumerated?] |
6434 | Dongan? |
6434 | Duration of King William''s war? |
6434 | Duties( taxes on imported or exported articles)? |
6434 | Effect of these fights? |
6434 | Effect of these victories? |
6434 | Effect of these victories? |
6434 | Effect of this campaign? |
6434 | Effect of this event? |
6434 | Effect upon New England? |
6434 | Effect upon the federalist party? |
6434 | Effect? |
6434 | Effects of the French and Indian war? |
6434 | Eight clauses now follow, enumerating the_ powers denied to Congress._ What prohibition was made concerning the slave trade? |
6434 | Ex- post- facto law? |
6434 | Excises( taxes on articles produced in the country)? |
6434 | Exports from any state? |
6434 | Extent of the public lands granted? |
6434 | Fate of Jumonville? |
6434 | Fate of Pontiac? |
6434 | Fate of the colony? |
6434 | Fate of the colony? |
6434 | Feeling at the North? |
6434 | Filling vacancies?] |
6434 | Florida? |
6434 | For how many years have the United States been involved in war? |
6434 | For how many years was the Revolutionary War carried on mainly at the North? |
6434 | For what crimes and in what way may any United States officer be removed from office?] |
6434 | For what did he search? |
6434 | For what did the nation wait? |
6434 | For what incident is it noted? |
6434 | For what is Ethan Allen noted? |
6434 | For what is Faneuil Hall noted? |
6434 | For what is John Brown noted? |
6434 | Freedom of speech and the press? |
6434 | From what States have Presidents been elected? |
6434 | From what continent did the first inhabitants of America probably come? |
6434 | George Washington? |
6434 | Georgia? |
6434 | Give an account of the life of Polk, What war now broke out? |
6434 | Give an account of the principal parties which have arisen since the Constitutional Convention of 1787? |
6434 | Government of the land and naval forces? |
6434 | Had these nations any idea of the extent of the country? |
6434 | His fate? |
6434 | His fate? |
6434 | How are representatives and direct taxes to be apportioned among the states? |
6434 | How are representatives apportioned among the several states? |
6434 | How are vacancies filled? |
6434 | How are vacancies in the House to be filled? |
6434 | How came Carolina to be divided? |
6434 | How came Delaware to be separated from Pennsylvania? |
6434 | How could he, I thought, with so large a family, and in such narrow circumstances, think of incurring so great an expense for me? |
6434 | How could the soldiers endure such misery? |
6434 | How did Clay pacify? |
6434 | How did England treat the colonies? |
6434 | How did General Fraser die? |
6434 | How did General Jackson avenge the massacre of Fort Minims? |
6434 | How did General Joseph E. Johnston thwart General McClellan''s plan? |
6434 | How did Gosnold shorten the voyage across the Atlantic? |
6434 | How did Governor Bradford reply to Canonicus''s threat? |
6434 | How did Harrison gain his popularity? |
6434 | How did Jackson act? |
6434 | How did Jackson receive the name of"Stonewall"? |
6434 | How did New Jersey come to be united to New York? |
6434 | How did Penn come to obtain a grant of this region? |
6434 | How did Penn settle the territory? |
6434 | How did Pennsylvania secure the title to its soil? |
6434 | How did Sherman capture Atlanta? |
6434 | How did Sherman drive him from these positions? |
6434 | How did a half- witted boy once save a fort from capture? |
6434 | How did he escape? |
6434 | How did he find things at Hochelaga? |
6434 | How did he overcome them? |
6434 | How did he pacify the army? |
6434 | How did he settle the boundary lines? |
6434 | How did it compare with English enterprise? |
6434 | How did it end? |
6434 | How did it happen that raw militia defeated English veterans? |
6434 | How did it turn out? |
6434 | How did relief come? |
6434 | How did religious toleration vary in the colonies? |
6434 | How did speculation become rife? |
6434 | How did that happen? |
6434 | How did the British officers treat the colonial officers? |
6434 | How did the French difficulty look during this administration? |
6434 | How did the Indians compare with them? |
6434 | How did the Navigation Act affect Massachusetts? |
6434 | How did the battle of Brandywine occur? |
6434 | How did the battle of Bull Run take place? |
6434 | How did the battle of Camden occur? |
6434 | How did the battle turn on the second day? |
6434 | How did the campaign in Pennsylvania close? |
6434 | How did the campaign open? |
6434 | How did the colonists protect themselves? |
6434 | How did the contest arise in Kansas? |
6434 | How did the naval and the land warfare compare? |
6434 | How did the people travel? |
6434 | How did the plan of working in common succeed? |
6434 | How did the style of living at the south differ from that at the north? |
6434 | How did the war in Virginia open? |
6434 | How did they get here? |
6434 | How did they regard labor? |
6434 | How divided? |
6434 | How had they treated the Boston people? |
6434 | How long did the war last? |
6434 | How long do the judges hold office? |
6434 | How long is the President''s term of office? |
6434 | How long is the term of a representative? |
6434 | How long was he President? |
6434 | How many Presidents have served two terms? |
6434 | How many States were named from their principal rivers? |
6434 | How many States were necessary? |
6434 | How many amendments have been made to the Constitution? |
6434 | How many are there from each state? |
6434 | How many attacks have been made on Quebec? |
6434 | How many colleges? |
6434 | How many colonies voted for it? |
6434 | How many expeditions have been made into Canada? |
6434 | How many inter- colonial wars were there? |
6434 | How many invasions of Kentucky did Bragg make? |
6434 | How many invasions of the North did Lee make? |
6434 | How many kinds of government? |
6434 | How many members were there in the first House of Representatives? |
6434 | How many of our Presidents have been military men? |
6434 | How many of our Presidents were Virginians? |
6434 | How many of our Presidents were poor boys? |
6434 | How many prizes were captured by privateers? |
6434 | How many rebellions have occurred in our history? |
6434 | How many subsequent voyages did Columbus make? |
6434 | How many times did the rain save him? |
6434 | How many times has Fort Ticonderoga been captured? |
6434 | How may this disability be removed?] |
6434 | How much land was granted? |
6434 | How much territory did he claim? |
6434 | How must a fact tried by a jury be re- examined?] |
6434 | How often must the Census be taken? |
6434 | How often, and when, must Congress meet? |
6434 | How soon was the Constitution ratified? |
6434 | How was Bragg''s second expedition stopped? |
6434 | How was Corinth captured? |
6434 | How was Fortress Monroe protected from capture? |
6434 | How was a charter secured? |
6434 | How was each stopped? |
6434 | How was he regarded? |
6434 | How was he relieved of this difficulty? |
6434 | How was it met? |
6434 | How was it received by the colonists? |
6434 | How was it received? |
6434 | How was it received? |
6434 | How was it settled? |
6434 | How was it settled? |
6434 | How was it settled? |
6434 | How was it terminated? |
6434 | How was it terminated? |
6434 | How was it unfitted for a new country? |
6434 | How was the Union advance on Richmond checked? |
6434 | How was the continent named? |
6434 | How was the news of Cornwallis''s surrender received? |
6434 | How was the northwestern boundary question settled? |
6434 | How was the protective tariff received? |
6434 | How was the representative population of the different states to be determined? |
6434 | How was the siege of Fort Schuyler( Stanwix) raised? |
6434 | How was the treaty received in this country? |
6434 | How was the war finally ended? |
6434 | How was this regarded at the North and at the South? |
6434 | How were the British forced to leave Boston? |
6434 | How were the Narraganset Indians kept from joining the Pequods against the whites? |
6434 | How were the difficulties ended? |
6434 | How were the ministers''salaries met? |
6434 | How were they combined into one colony? |
6434 | How were they received? |
6434 | How? |
6434 | I, Sec 2, Clause 3?] |
6434 | If a President should not be chosen by March 4, who would act as President?] |
6434 | If you include the Spanish war? |
6434 | Imports( taxes on imported articles)? |
6434 | Imposts? |
6434 | In Pennsylvania? |
6434 | In case of a vacancy, who would become President? |
6434 | In case there is no choice by the electors, how is the President elected? |
6434 | In what battle did Washington bitterly rebuke the commanding- general, and himself rally the troops to battle? |
6434 | In what battle did Washington show the most brilliant generalship? |
6434 | In what battle did both generals mass their strength on the left wing, expecting to crush the enemy''s right? |
6434 | In what battle did the Continentals gain the victory by falling back and then suddenly facing about upon the enemy? |
6434 | In what battle did the defeated general leave his wooden leg? |
6434 | In what battle was Molly Stark the watchword? |
6434 | In what battle was the left wing, when separated from the main body by a river, attacked by an overwhelming force of the enemy? |
6434 | In what battles had the opposing generals formed the same plan? |
6434 | In what cases does the Supreme Court have original jurisdiction? |
6434 | In what colony was New Jersey formerly embraced? |
6434 | In what does treason consist? |
6434 | In what estimation was he held? |
6434 | In what is the judicial power of the United States vested? |
6434 | In what spirit did Penn treat the colony? |
6434 | In what war was Lincoln a captain and Davis a lieutenant? |
6434 | In what way was the retreat conducted? |
6434 | In what were they skilled? |
6434 | In what year did these successes occur? |
6434 | In what year was it adopted?] |
6434 | In which administrations were none? |
6434 | In which was he successful? |
6434 | In whom is the executive power vested? |
6434 | In whose administration was the largest number of States admitted to the Union? |
6434 | Inferior courts? |
6434 | Is a foreign- born person eligible to the office of representative? |
6434 | Is a person so convicted liable to a trial- at- law for the same offence?] |
6434 | Is every state entitled to representation? |
6434 | Is the"union"one of states or of people? |
6434 | Issuing bills of credit( bills to circulate as money)? |
6434 | Its characteristic idea? |
6434 | Its date? |
6434 | Its effect? |
6434 | Its effect? |
6434 | Its principles? |
6434 | Its result? |
6434 | Its result? |
6434 | Its result? |
6434 | Its result? |
6434 | J. Q. Adams? |
6434 | Jackson''s? |
6434 | John C. Calhoun? |
6434 | Judges of the Supreme Court, etc.? |
6434 | Keeping troops? |
6434 | Laws with regard to drinking? |
6434 | Length of King George''s war? |
6434 | Length of Queen Anne''s war? |
6434 | Length of the French and Indian war? |
6434 | Letters of marque and reprisal? |
6434 | Limits of this epoch? |
6434 | Louisiana? |
6434 | Making any other legal tender than gold or silver? |
6434 | Making peace or war? |
6434 | Manufactures? |
6434 | Maryland? |
6434 | Massachusetts? |
6434 | Meaning of the name? |
6434 | Meaning of the word California in the sixteenth century? |
6434 | Mexico? |
6434 | Michigan? |
6434 | Monroe''s? |
6434 | Naturalization? |
6434 | New Jersey? |
6434 | New Mexico? |
6434 | New York? |
6434 | North Virginia? |
6434 | Number of vessels in the Union navy? |
6434 | Object of the war in the East? |
6434 | Occasions of quarrel? |
6434 | Of Clay''s patriotism? |
6434 | Of General Grant? |
6434 | Of how many members does the Senate of the United States consist? |
6434 | Of the luxurious living? |
6434 | Of their charge on Fort Wagner? |
6434 | Of what President was it said that"if his soul were turned inside out, not a spot could be found upon it"? |
6434 | Of what does Congress consist? |
6434 | Of what general was this said to be always true? |
6434 | Of what statesman was it said that"he was in the public service fifty years, and never attempted to deceive his countrymen"? |
6434 | Of what value were these charters? |
6434 | Of what value were they? |
6434 | Of what value? |
6434 | Of whom was it said that"he touched the dead corpse of public credit, and it sprang upon its feet"? |
6434 | On what conditions were the seceded States finally readmitted to their former position in the Union? |
6434 | On what expedition was Jackson sent? |
6434 | On what issue was Polk elected President? |
6434 | On what mountains have battles been fought? |
6434 | On what plundering tours did Arnold go? |
6434 | Oregon? |
6434 | Organizing the militia? |
6434 | Over what places has Congress exclusive legislation? |
6434 | Payments from the Treasury? |
6434 | Peaceable assembly and petition? |
6434 | Pennsylvania? |
6434 | Peru? |
6434 | Piracies? |
6434 | Post- offices and post- roads? |
6434 | Principal event? |
6434 | Principles of the democratic party? |
6434 | Provision made for public worship? |
6434 | Raising and supporting armies? |
6434 | Rapidity of its growth? |
6434 | Regulating commerce? |
6434 | Reprieves and pardons? |
6434 | Restrictions of the trustees? |
6434 | Result of the war? |
6434 | Result of the war? |
6434 | Result of this clashing between Congress and the President? |
6434 | Result? |
6434 | Result? |
6434 | Result? |
6434 | Results of these explorations? |
6434 | Results of this war? |
6434 | Since these lands became the property of the general government, a most perplexing question has been, Shall they be free? |
6434 | South Carolina? |
6434 | State militia? |
6434 | State of education in New England? |
6434 | State of party feeling? |
6434 | Stephen A. Douglas? |
6434 | Stories told of Taylor? |
6434 | Story told of Governor Nelson? |
6434 | Story told of Jackson? |
6434 | Story told of Raleigh''s smoking? |
6434 | Story told of Washington by Mr. Potts? |
6434 | Successful candidates? |
6434 | Taylor? |
6434 | Tell the story of the old"liberty bell,"How did the campaign near New York occur? |
6434 | The Boston boys? |
6434 | The Indians, feeling this, sent to the agent of the Ohio Company the pertinent query,"Where is the Indian''s land? |
6434 | The Pacific Railroad? |
6434 | The Rocky Mountains? |
6434 | The South? |
6434 | The Stamp Act? |
6434 | The Vice President''s? |
6434 | The Virginia troops under Washington? |
6434 | The chief officers of the different executive departments? |
6434 | The conditions of peace? |
6434 | The consequence of his trip? |
6434 | The democrats? |
6434 | The effect? |
6434 | The first magnetic telegraph? |
6434 | The first steamboat? |
6434 | The impairing of contracts? |
6434 | The making of treaties? |
6434 | The officer asked him"what he was waiting for?" |
6434 | The right wing? |
6434 | The second expedition? |
6434 | The"Anti- Renters"? |
6434 | The"Barnburners"? |
6434 | The"Compromise of 1850"? |
6434 | The"Free Soilers"? |
6434 | The"Hunkers"? |
6434 | The"Know- Nothings"? |
6434 | The"Unionists"? |
6434 | The"Woolly- Heads"? |
6434 | Their views? |
6434 | This, they were sure, was carrying them to destruction, for how could they ever return against it? |
6434 | Thomas Jefferson? |
6434 | Titles of nobility? |
6434 | Titles of nobility? |
6434 | To be made a separate royal province? |
6434 | To what offices are members of Congress ineligible? |
6434 | To what party did Henry Clay belong? |
6434 | To whom did Columbus apply next? |
6434 | Trade between the United States? |
6434 | Union plan of attack? |
6434 | United States office- holder receiving presents from a foreign power? |
6434 | Using tobacco? |
6434 | Views of the federalists? |
6434 | Was Bacon a patriot or a rebel? |
6434 | Was Hudson a Dutchman? |
6434 | Was Monroe a popular man? |
6434 | Was Tyler''s administration successful? |
6434 | Was Washington ever wounded in battle? |
6434 | Was all peril to our liberties over? |
6434 | Was any attempt made by the United States authorities to relieve it? |
6434 | Was civil liberty secured under Andros? |
6434 | Was it based on the principle of self- government? |
6434 | Was it popular? |
6434 | Was it successful? |
6434 | Was it successful? |
6434 | Was money plenty? |
6434 | Was religious toleration granted? |
6434 | Was the English occupation permanent? |
6434 | Was the French aid of great value? |
6434 | Was the country recovering from the effects of the war? |
6434 | Was the discovery of gold profitable? |
6434 | Was the impressment of seamen general? |
6434 | Was this delusion common at that time? |
6434 | Was this permanent? |
6434 | Was this separation total? |
6434 | Was war a necessity? |
6434 | Webster? |
6434 | Were her jewels sold? |
6434 | Were the English or Americans victorious? |
6434 | Were the people pleased with the English rule? |
6434 | Were their discoveries of any value? |
6434 | Were there any blacksmiths, carpenters, etc., among them? |
6434 | Were there many books or papers? |
6434 | Were they a progressive people? |
6434 | Were they successful? |
6434 | Were they united during this epoch? |
6434 | What French navigator was the next to ascend the St. Lawrence? |
6434 | What Indian chiefs befriended Massachusetts and Virginia in their early history? |
6434 | What Indian chiefs formed leagues against the whites? |
6434 | What Indian conflict at the West? |
6434 | What Indian difficulties occurred? |
6434 | What Indian war now arose? |
6434 | What Indians visited them in the spring? |
6434 | What President elect came to Washington in disguise? |
6434 | What President followed Washington-- Taylor-- Jefferson-- Lincoln-- J. Q. Adams-- Pierce? |
6434 | What President had not voted for forty years? |
6434 | What President introduced"rotation in office"? |
6434 | What President vetoed the measures of the party which elected him to office? |
6434 | What President was impeached? |
6434 | What President was once a tailor''s apprentice? |
6434 | What Presidents died in office? |
6434 | What Presidents were not elected to that office by the people? |
6434 | What State was added during this epoch? |
6434 | What State was admitted soon after the close of the Civil War? |
6434 | What State was admitted to the Union first after the original thirteen? |
6434 | What States were named from mountain ranges? |
6434 | What Union general was now sent to this region? |
6434 | What Union general who afterward became celebrated? |
6434 | What Vice- Presidents were afterward elected Presidents? |
6434 | What action did Jackson take concerning the United States bank? |
6434 | What action did it take? |
6434 | What action did the North take? |
6434 | What action did the colonists take? |
6434 | What action did the colonists take? |
6434 | What action was taken? |
6434 | What administrations have been most popular? |
6434 | What advantage did the Maryland charter confer? |
6434 | What are privateers? |
6434 | What are the necessary qualifications for the office of President? |
6434 | What are the necessary qualifications of an elector( or voter) for a representative? |
6434 | What are"State rights"? |
6434 | What army retreated at the moment of victory because the fog was so dense that it did not see how successful it was? |
6434 | What attack by the colonists at the south? |
6434 | What attacks were made by the colonists in return? |
6434 | What attempt was made on Louisburg? |
6434 | What authority has the President over the United States army and navy? |
6434 | What authority is given the Senate with regard to such bills? |
6434 | What authority was granted to the Council of New England? |
6434 | What base offer was made to Washington? |
6434 | What battle did General Gates win? |
6434 | What battle did he lose? |
6434 | What battle ensued? |
6434 | What battle occurred when both armies were marching to make a night attack upon each other? |
6434 | What battle took place in New York State? |
6434 | What battle was fought after peace was declared? |
6434 | What battle was fought and gained without a commanding officer? |
6434 | What battle was fought in Missouri? |
6434 | What battle was preceded by prayer? |
6434 | What battles did Washington win? |
6434 | What battles did he lose? |
6434 | What battles ensued? |
6434 | What battles had Taylor fought? |
6434 | What battles have been decided by an attack in the rear? |
6434 | What battles have been fought in Virginia? |
6434 | What battles have resulted in the destruction or surrender of an entire army? |
6434 | What battles occurred while Washington was falling back? |
6434 | What battles were fought? |
6434 | What became of Burr? |
6434 | What became of General Lee? |
6434 | What became of his companions? |
6434 | What became of the Plymouth Company? |
6434 | What became of the colony sent out the same year by the Plymouth company? |
6434 | What became of them? |
6434 | What beneficial influence did they have on the colony? |
6434 | What bills must originate in the House of Representatives? |
6434 | What body has the sole power of impeachment?] |
6434 | What body has the"power of legislation"? |
6434 | What branches of government are established under the first three articles of the Constitution? |
6434 | What business can a minority transact? |
6434 | What campaign was now planned by the aid of the French? |
6434 | What campaign was undertaken? |
6434 | What candidates for the presidency were nominated in 1873? |
6434 | What caused the battle of Monmouth to happen? |
6434 | What celebrated Indian was killed? |
6434 | What celebrated debate took place? |
6434 | What celebrated philosopher, when a boy, went without meat to buy books? |
6434 | What celebrated statesman was killed in a duel? |
6434 | What change in the government of the colony was made by the second charter? |
6434 | What change now took place in the government? |
6434 | What change was made by the third charter? |
6434 | What characterized the campaign at the north? |
6434 | What checked McClellan''s advance? |
6434 | What cities have undergone a siege? |
6434 | What city did he found? |
6434 | What city now occupies its site? |
6434 | What city now surrendered? |
6434 | What city was now captured? |
6434 | What claim did the Dutch found on this discovery? |
6434 | What class of people generally settled this country? |
6434 | What coincidence between this event and the Revolution? |
6434 | What coincidence? |
6434 | What colonel, when asked if he could take a battery, replied,"I''ll try, sir"? |
6434 | What colonies are named after a king or a queen? |
6434 | What colony was conquered by the British during this year? |
6434 | What colony was established the same year that Hooker went to Hartford? |
6434 | What colony was founded as a home for the poor? |
6434 | What course did Clay take? |
6434 | What course did Washington take? |
6434 | What course did he take with regard to the United States Bank? |
6434 | What course did the Duke of York take when he became King of England? |
6434 | What course did the proprietors take? |
6434 | What cruel act disgraced their victory? |
6434 | What curious fact illustrates the ruling sentiment of Massachusetts and of Virginia at that time? |
6434 | What customs familiar to us are of Dutch origin? |
6434 | What decided it in favor of the English? |
6434 | What decided it in favor of the English? |
6434 | What declaration is made concerning the powers neither delegated to Congress nor forbidden the states?] |
6434 | What departments were established? |
6434 | What did Columbus''s friends do for him? |
6434 | What did Webster say of Hamilton? |
6434 | What did it propose? |
6434 | What did the British do? |
6434 | What did the English now do? |
6434 | What did the French do in the spring? |
6434 | What did the United States gain by the war? |
6434 | What did the armies of the centre and north do? |
6434 | What did the colonists introduce into England on their return? |
6434 | What did their peaceful discharge prove? |
6434 | What difficulties beset the government? |
6434 | What difficulty arose with England? |
6434 | What difficulty arose with England? |
6434 | What difficulty now arose with England and France? |
6434 | What difficulty occurred with Cuba? |
6434 | What disastrous attempt was made by the British at the north? |
6434 | What discoveries did Gosnold make? |
6434 | What discoveries did Sebastian Cabot make? |
6434 | What discoveries did he make? |
6434 | What discoveries? |
6434 | What discovery did Balboa make? |
6434 | What discovery did Sir Francis Drake make? |
6434 | What distinguished generals have been unsuccessful candidates for the Presidency? |
6434 | What division arose among the people? |
6434 | What do the French names in the Mississippi valley indicate? |
6434 | What do the names New York, New England, New Hampshire, Georgia, Carolina, etc., indicate? |
6434 | What do the names San Salvador, Santa Cruz, Vera Cruz, La Trinidad, etc., indicate? |
6434 | What do you mean by"reconstruction"? |
6434 | What do you say of the naval successes? |
6434 | What do you say of the negro troops? |
6434 | What do you say of the number of the Indians? |
6434 | What do you say of the rapidity of its growth? |
6434 | What effect did they have on the English government? |
6434 | What effect was produced? |
6434 | What event closed the Mississippi campaign? |
6434 | What events attended General Burgoyne''s march south? |
6434 | What events deranged Burgoyne''s plans? |
6434 | What ex- Vice- President was tried for treason? |
6434 | What exiles settled Rhode Island? |
6434 | What expedition was undertaken against Canada? |
6434 | What fact illustrates Williams''s generosity? |
6434 | What facts strengthened his view? |
6434 | What famous despatch did Grant send? |
6434 | What famous doctrine advanced by Monroe? |
6434 | What father and son were Presidents? |
6434 | What financial measures were adopted? |
6434 | What five ex- Presidents died in the decade between 1860 and 1870? |
6434 | What followed? |
6434 | What followed? |
6434 | What form of government was finally imposed upon them? |
6434 | What fort was carried by a midnight assault? |
6434 | What four nations explored the territory of the future United States? |
6434 | What four restrictions upon the Congressional powers are made in this section? |
6434 | What gallant exploit was performed by Perry? |
6434 | What general arose from a sick- bed to lead his troops into a battle in which he was killed? |
6434 | What general died at the moment of victory? |
6434 | What general escaped by riding down a steep precipice? |
6434 | What general led the advance? |
6434 | What general rushed into battle without orders and won it? |
6434 | What general was captured by the enemy? |
6434 | What general was captured through his carelessness, and exchanged for another taken in a similar way? |
6434 | What great fires happened in''71 and''72? |
6434 | What guarantee is given with regard to excessive bail or fine and unusual punishment?] |
6434 | What guarantee is given with regard to the right of bearing arms? |
6434 | What guarantees are provided concerning religious freedom? |
6434 | What held the colonies together? |
6434 | What historical memories cluster around Santo Domingo? |
6434 | What important contemporaneous events can you name? |
6434 | What important rights are secured to the accused in case of a criminal prosecution?] |
6434 | What is a charter? |
6434 | What is a senator''s term of office? |
6434 | What is a"protective tariff"? |
6434 | What is a"witch"? |
6434 | What is meant by"Reconstruction"? |
6434 | What is provided with regard to quartering soldiers upon citizens? |
6434 | What is provided with regard to unreasonable searches and warrants? |
6434 | What is said of Calhoun? |
6434 | What is said of Mount Vernon flour? |
6434 | What is said of Osceola? |
6434 | What is said of the claims made upon the land by the heirs of these proprietors? |
6434 | What is squatter sovereignty? |
6434 | What is the American doctrine? |
6434 | What is the Fifteenth Amendment? |
6434 | What is the Fourteenth Amendment? |
6434 | What is the Thirteenth Amendment? |
6434 | What is the climate in the far north along the Mississippi Valley and the Pacific coast? |
6434 | What is the law with regard to keeping and publishing a journal of the proceedings? |
6434 | What is the law with regard to state records, judicial proceedings, etc.?] |
6434 | What is the law with regard to trial by jury? |
6434 | What is the object of this provision? |
6434 | What is"Plymouth Rock"? |
6434 | What is"squatter sovereignty"? |
6434 | What issues depended on this fight? |
6434 | What journey did Champlain make? |
6434 | What kept the interest in America alive? |
6434 | What kind of war did he wage in Virginia? |
6434 | What land did he discover? |
6434 | What leaders on each side? |
6434 | What limit is assigned?] |
6434 | What limit is there to the number of representatives? |
6434 | What line was now held by the Union army? |
6434 | What location did they select? |
6434 | What massacre occurred in Kansas? |
6434 | What measures were taken to check his advance? |
6434 | What movement did Grant make against Vicksburg? |
6434 | What movement was made by General Brown? |
6434 | What movements did they make to break through the Union lines? |
6434 | What mutiny occurred? |
6434 | What name did he give it? |
6434 | What name did they give to the region? |
6434 | What nations settled the different States? |
6434 | What naval commander captured his antagonist as his own vessel was sinking? |
6434 | What naval expeditions were made? |
6434 | What navigator shortened the voyage across the Atlantic? |
6434 | What need was felt? |
6434 | What new change was made in the government? |
6434 | What new railroad is building? |
6434 | What new trouble assailed Columbus? |
6434 | What news came in the spring? |
6434 | What noted events occurred on April 19th? |
6434 | What noted expressions of General Taylor became favorite mottoes? |
6434 | What number is needed to convict? |
6434 | What number of the members is necessary for a quorum( needed to do business)? |
6434 | What object did Penn, Lord Baltimore, and Oglethorpe each have in founding a colony in the new world? |
6434 | What offer did Queen Isabella make? |
6434 | What officer lost his life because he neglected to open a note? |
6434 | What other islands did he discover? |
6434 | What parties arose? |
6434 | What parties now arose? |
6434 | What parties were formed? |
6434 | What party adopted the views of the old federalists on the United States Bank, etc.? |
6434 | What party was arising? |
6434 | What peculiarities in the government of each? |
6434 | What penalties can be inflicted in case of conviction? |
6434 | What persecuted people settled the different colonies? |
6434 | What persons are prohibited from holding any office under the United States? |
6434 | What places captured? |
6434 | What places in Florida were captured? |
6434 | What plan did Lee now adopt? |
6434 | What plan did McClellan form? |
6434 | What plan did Washington now adopt? |
6434 | What poem has been written upon this event? |
6434 | What policy should be pursued toward the Indian? |
6434 | What political changes now took place? |
6434 | What political parties now arose? |
6434 | What portion of the continent did each explore? |
6434 | What power has Congress over the electors? |
6434 | What power has Congress over the state regulations? |
6434 | What power has Congress over the territory and propeity of the United States?] |
6434 | What power has Congress with regard to taxes? |
6434 | What power is finally given to Congress to enable it to enforce its authority? |
6434 | What power is given each House of Congress of making and enforcing rules? |
6434 | What precipitated this issue? |
6434 | What prevented Sherman''s advance into Georgia? |
6434 | What previous battle did it resemble? |
6434 | What principle did he introduce? |
6434 | What privileges has the citizen of one state in all the others? |
6434 | What prohibition was made with regard to treaties? |
6434 | What proof is required? |
6434 | What proof is there of their antiquity? |
6434 | What providential circumstance favored the attack? |
6434 | What provision for the benefit of the smaller states is attached to this article?] |
6434 | What put an end to these fears? |
6434 | What questions agitated the country at that time? |
6434 | What questions agitated the people? |
6434 | What ravages were committed by Admiral Cockburn? |
6434 | What region did Columbus think he had reached? |
6434 | What region did De Soto traverse? |
6434 | What relics of them remain? |
6434 | What religious toleration was granted in the different colonies? |
6434 | What remains of these people are found? |
6434 | What rendered Valley Forge memorable? |
6434 | What reply did Pinckney make to the base offer of the French Directory? |
6434 | What reply was made him? |
6434 | What restriction in this article has now lost all force? |
6434 | What restriction is there upon the time and place of adjournment?] |
6434 | What restrictions are laid upon the states with regard to abridging the rights of citizens?] |
6434 | What reverse happened to a part of General Harrison''s command? |
6434 | What river did he discover? |
6434 | What river was his burial place? |
6434 | What settlement did he found? |
6434 | What settlement did he make? |
6434 | What special privileges are granted to members of Congress? |
6434 | What step did Davis take? |
6434 | What story is told of Andros''s visit? |
6434 | What story is told of Colonel Miller? |
6434 | What story is told of General Reed? |
6434 | What story is told to illustrate their piety? |
6434 | What stratagems did the Indians use? |
6434 | What success did he have? |
6434 | What success did he meet? |
6434 | What success did the English meet in Acadia? |
6434 | What tea party is celebrated in our history? |
6434 | What territory has the United States acquired by purchase? |
6434 | What territory was added to the United States? |
6434 | What territory was gained by treaty? |
6434 | What territory was granted to Lord Clarendon? |
6434 | What three colonies were formed in Connecticut? |
6434 | What three ex- Presidents died on the 4th of July? |
6434 | What town and army were surrendered without firing a shot? |
6434 | What traditions about their having discovered and settled America? |
6434 | What treaties are celebrated in our history? |
6434 | What treaty was made with Spain? |
6434 | What trees are celebrated in our history? |
6434 | What two battles were fought in the"Wilderness"? |
6434 | What two colonies were intimately united to Massachusetts? |
6434 | What two contemporaneous events? |
6434 | What two distinguished generals of the same name served in the Confederate army? |
6434 | What union of the colonies was now formed? |
6434 | What valuable stores were seized? |
6434 | What vessels composed his fleet? |
6434 | What victories induced him to attempt each of these invasions? |
6434 | What was Coligny''s plan? |
6434 | What was Delaware styled? |
6434 | What was Grant''s plan for an expedition against Vicksburg? |
6434 | What was Laconia? |
6434 | What was Schuyler''s conduct? |
6434 | What was South Virginia? |
6434 | What was his favorite idea? |
6434 | What was his theory of founding a colony? |
6434 | What was its character? |
6434 | What was its effect on the colony? |
6434 | What was its effect? |
6434 | What was its object? |
6434 | What was its result? |
6434 | What was meant by saying that"Clay was in the succession"? |
6434 | What was necessary for the adoption of this Constitution? |
6434 | What was now the expectation of the Union army? |
6434 | What was the Ashburton treaty? |
6434 | What was the Compromise of 1850? |
6434 | What was the Confederate line of defence at the West? |
6434 | What was the Credit Mobilier? |
6434 | What was the Gadsden purchase? |
6434 | What was the High Commission? |
6434 | What was the Joint Electoral Commission? |
6434 | What was the Missouri Compromise? |
6434 | What was the Mutiny Act? |
6434 | What was the Navigation Act? |
6434 | What was the Secretary of State formerly called? |
6434 | What was the Wilmot proviso? |
6434 | What was the cause of his sudden death? |
6434 | What was the cause of the"Panic of''73"? |
6434 | What was the character of the Virginia colonists? |
6434 | What was the character of the history of New York under its four Dutch governors? |
6434 | What was the characteristic of his administration? |
6434 | What was the condition of the army? |
6434 | What was the condition of the country? |
6434 | What was the condition of the country? |
6434 | What was the condition of the public finances? |
6434 | What was the conduct of Berkeley? |
6434 | What was the conduct of the assembly? |
6434 | What was the difference between the Puritans and the Pilgrims? |
6434 | What was the direct cause of war? |
6434 | What was the extent of the Spanish possessions in the new world? |
6434 | What was the feeling in Spain? |
6434 | What was the great wish of maritime nations? |
6434 | What was the importance of Roanoke Island? |
6434 | What was the important event of Jefferson''s administration? |
6434 | What was the issue of the next political campaign? |
6434 | What was the most prominent event of Jefferson''s administration? |
6434 | What was the next movement? |
6434 | What was the northeast boundary question? |
6434 | What was the nullification ordinance? |
6434 | What was the object of the"American party"? |
6434 | What was the object? |
6434 | What was the opening event of the war of 1812? |
6434 | What was the peculiarity of the attack on the Port Royal forts? |
6434 | What was the plan of John Cabot? |
6434 | What was the plan of the campaign? |
6434 | What was the popular feeling toward France? |
6434 | What was the popular feeling toward Washington? |
6434 | What was the population of the United States in 1870? |
6434 | What was the principal cause of the easy capture of the fort? |
6434 | What was the problem of that day? |
6434 | What was the question of the elections? |
6434 | What was the reconstruction policy of Congress? |
6434 | What was the reconstruction policy of Johnson? |
6434 | What was the result of the battle? |
6434 | What was the result of the war? |
6434 | What was the result? |
6434 | What was the result? |
6434 | What was the situation at Richmond? |
6434 | What was the situation at the beginning of the year 1863? |
6434 | What was the size of the two armies at the close of the war? |
6434 | What was the state of education in the southern colonies? |
6434 | What was the state of geographical knowledge in Europe in the fifteenth century? |
6434 | What was the tendency of this course of conduct? |
6434 | What was the view of Sir Humphrey Gilbert? |
6434 | What was the"Dred Scott decision"? |
6434 | What was the"Fugitive Slave Law"? |
6434 | What was the"Gadsden purchase"? |
6434 | What was the"Grand Model"? |
6434 | What was the"Great Code"? |
6434 | What was the"Hartford Convention"? |
6434 | What was the"Kansas- Nebraska Bill"? |
6434 | What was the"Missouri Compromise"? |
6434 | What was the"Nullification Act"? |
6434 | What was the"O grab me Act"? |
6434 | What was the"Toleration Act"? |
6434 | What was the"Trent affair"? |
6434 | What was the"Wilmot Proviso"? |
6434 | What was the"swamp angel"? |
6434 | What was their character? |
6434 | What was their success? |
6434 | What were Lawrence''s dying words? |
6434 | What were Personal Liberty bills? |
6434 | What were Writs of Assistance? |
6434 | What were common people called? |
6434 | What were the alien and sedition laws? |
6434 | What were the effects of the Shiloh battle? |
6434 | What were the principles of the whigs? |
6434 | What were the prison ships? |
6434 | What were the relations between the proprietors and settlers? |
6434 | What were the results of French enterprise? |
6434 | What were the"alien and sedition laws"? |
6434 | What were their principles? |
6434 | What"is the Monroe Doctrine"? |
6434 | What"orders, resolutions and votes"must be submitted to the President? |
6434 | What"sole power"does the Senate possess? |
6434 | When and by whom founded? |
6434 | When and how was slavery introduced? |
6434 | When and where was he inaugurated? |
6434 | When and where was the Confederate government formed? |
6434 | When and where was the first blood shed? |
6434 | When and where was the first blood spilled? |
6434 | When and where was the"First Continental Congress"held? |
6434 | When and where was this? |
6434 | When can private property be taken for the public use?] |
6434 | When can the Senate choose a president_ pro tempore_( for the time being)? |
6434 | When did a fog save our army? |
6434 | When did a stone house largely decide a battle? |
6434 | When did the English awake to the importance of American discovery? |
6434 | When did the new government go into operation? |
6434 | When has an unnecessary delay cost a general a victory? |
6434 | When has the question of the public lands threatened the Union? |
6434 | When is the right of jury trial guaranteed? |
6434 | When must Congress protect the states?] |
6434 | When must the yeas and nays be entered on the journal? |
6434 | When only can he vote? |
6434 | When was a general blown up by a magazine, in the moment of victory? |
6434 | When was peace concluded? |
6434 | When was peace signed? |
6434 | When was the Constitution adopted? |
6434 | When was the Declaration of Independence adopted? |
6434 | When was the Erie Canal opened? |
6434 | When was the Mississippi River the western boundary of the United States? |
6434 | When was the first constitution given? |
6434 | When was the first gun of the Civil War fired? |
6434 | When was the first railroad constructed? |
6434 | When was the first settlement made? |
6434 | When was war declared? |
6434 | When were both forts captured? |
6434 | When were slaves introduced into this country? |
6434 | When, to whom, and by whom was the land granted? |
6434 | When, where, and by whom was the first permanent French settlement made in America? |
6434 | When, where, and by whom was the first permanent French settlement made in Canada? |
6434 | When, where, and by whom was the first town in the United States founded? |
6434 | When? |
6434 | When? |
6434 | When? |
6434 | When? |
6434 | Where and by whom was the first English settlement made? |
6434 | Where and by whom was the first settlement in Delaware made? |
6434 | Where and when is it probable the American continent was discovered? |
6434 | Where did Cornwallis go after the failure of his southern campaign? |
6434 | Where did Hood go? |
6434 | Where did Raleigh plant his first colony? |
6434 | Where did he go? |
6434 | Where do they occur? |
6434 | Where does our land lie?"] |
6434 | Where is Columbus''s tomb? |
6434 | Where is Labrador? |
6434 | Where is the"Cradle of Liberty"? |
6434 | Where may a crime be committed"not within a state"? |
6434 | Where most numerous? |
6434 | Where must such a trial be held? |
6434 | Where was the capital? |
6434 | Where was the first attack? |
6434 | Where was the first legislative body held? |
6434 | Where was the war mainly fought? |
6434 | Where were the Confederates located? |
6434 | Where, when, and by whom was the first English settlement made in the United States? |
6434 | Which centuries were characterized by explorations, and which century by settlements? |
6434 | Which colonies early enjoyed the greatest liberty? |
6434 | Which colony took the Bible as its guide? |
6434 | Which is the longer, the Atlantic Cable or the Pacific Railroad? |
6434 | Which is the second oldest town in the United States? |
6434 | Which nation ultimately secured the whole region? |
6434 | Which party absorbed most of the old federalists? |
6434 | Who adopted his plan? |
6434 | Who are ineligible to the office? |
6434 | Who are required to take an oath or affirmation to support the Constitution of the United States? |
6434 | Who are the presidential electors? |
6434 | Who assumed command of the army of the Potomac? |
6434 | Who choose the representatives? |
6434 | Who chooses the other officers of the Senate? |
6434 | Who claimed this region? |
6434 | Who decides upon the"elections, returns and qualifications"of the representatives and of the senators? |
6434 | Who discovered the River St. Lawrence? |
6434 | Who earned the glory of this victory and who got it? |
6434 | Who elect the officers of the House? |
6434 | Who elect the senators? |
6434 | Who explored the Mississippi valley? |
6434 | Who finally captured it? |
6434 | Who finally captured the fort? |
6434 | Who fired the first gun of this war? |
6434 | Who first settled it? |
6434 | Who fixes and pays the salaries of members of Congress? |
6434 | Who fixes the punishment? |
6434 | Who forced it to surrender? |
6434 | Who founded Salem? |
6434 | Who gained great credit? |
6434 | Who is the president of the Senate? |
6434 | Who led the first expedition? |
6434 | Who made the first attempt to carry out Cabot''s plan? |
6434 | Who made the first voyage along the Pacific coast? |
6434 | Who now took command of the Confederate army? |
6434 | Who now took command of the Union troops? |
6434 | Who now took command? |
6434 | Who obtained a grant of the territory now embraced in Connecticut? |
6434 | Who presides when the President of the United States is impeached? |
6434 | Who settled about Massachusetts Bay? |
6434 | Who settled the different parts? |
6434 | Who succeeded Johnston in command? |
6434 | Who succeeded him? |
6434 | Who succeeded him? |
6434 | Who succeeded them? |
6434 | Who took command of the Union army before Washington? |
6434 | Who used them in battle? |
6434 | Who was chosen? |
6434 | Who was elected eighteenth President? |
6434 | Who was elected eighth President? |
6434 | Who was elected eleventh President? |
6434 | Who was elected fifth President? |
6434 | Who was elected fourteenth President? |
6434 | Who was elected fourth President? |
6434 | Who was elected ninth President? |
6434 | Who was elected seventh President? |
6434 | Who was elected sixteenth President? |
6434 | Who was elected sixth President? |
6434 | Who was elected third President? |
6434 | Who was elected twelfth President? |
6434 | Who was entitled to the prefix Mr.? |
6434 | Who was his opponent? |
6434 | Who was its author? |
6434 | Who was the ablest of them? |
6434 | Who was the commanding general? |
6434 | Who was the first French navigator to reach the continent? |
6434 | Who was the first President of the United States? |
6434 | Who was the founder of Pennsylvania? |
6434 | Who was the hero of the fight? |
6434 | Who was the hero of this exploit? |
6434 | Who were elected President and Vice- President? |
6434 | Who were killed? |
6434 | Who were nominated for the Presidency? |
6434 | Who were nominated for the presidency in''77? |
6434 | Who were the Hessians? |
6434 | Who were the Northmen? |
6434 | Who were the Presidential candidates? |
6434 | Who were the Presidential candidates? |
6434 | Who were the Puritans? |
6434 | Who were the leaders of each? |
6434 | Who were the mound- builders? |
6434 | Who were the"patroons"? |
6434 | Who"ordained and established"this Constitution? |
6434 | Whose dying words were,"Do n''t give up the ship"? |
6434 | Why are these States so named? |
6434 | Why could not sailors have crossed the ocean before as well as then? |
6434 | Why did Cortez explore that region? |
6434 | Why did Lee now march North? |
6434 | Why did Lee send Early into the Shenandoah Valley? |
6434 | Why did Mrs. Hutchinson become obnoxious? |
6434 | Why did Ponce de Leon come to the new world? |
6434 | Why did Smith leave? |
6434 | Why did he retire to Yorktown? |
6434 | Why did he seek assistance? |
6434 | Why did he so name it? |
6434 | Why did he so name it? |
6434 | Why did not Webster and Clay become Presidents? |
6434 | Why did not the Indians disturb them? |
6434 | Why did the Americans fail? |
6434 | Why did the French in Canada extend their explorations westward to the Mississippi rather than southward into New York? |
6434 | Why did the Indians now become hostile? |
6434 | Why did the Pilgrims come to this country? |
6434 | Why did this fail? |
6434 | Why not? |
6434 | Why so called? |
6434 | Why so eagerly read? |
6434 | Why was Genet recalled? |
6434 | Why was Johnson impeached? |
6434 | Why was Maryland so named? |
6434 | Why was Montreal so named? |
6434 | Why was New England spared? |
6434 | Why was Virginia so named? |
6434 | Why was it made? |
6434 | Why was it oppressive? |
6434 | Why was it passed? |
6434 | Why was it so named? |
6434 | Why was not Adams re- elected? |
6434 | Why was not the colony allowed to join the New England Union? |
6434 | Why was the Fugitive Slave law obnoxious? |
6434 | Why was the battle of New Orleans unnecessary? |
6434 | Why was the charter so highly prized? |
6434 | Why was the colony named New York? |
6434 | Why was the island so called? |
6434 | Why was the tea thrown overboard? |
6434 | Why was the war now transferred to the south? |
6434 | Why was this colony popular? |
6434 | Why was this measure warmly opposed? |
6434 | Why was"Stonewall"Jackson so called? |
6434 | Why were Davis''s Strait, Baffin''s Bay, Hudson River, Frobisher''s Strait, etc., so named? |
6434 | Why were books of travel more abundant then? |
6434 | Why were the New Hampshire Grants so called? |
6434 | Why were the River St. Lawrence, Florida, St. Augustine, etc., so named? |
6434 | Why were these claims conflicting? |
6434 | Why were these now awakened? |
6434 | Why were they passed? |
6434 | Why were they so obstinately attacked and defended? |
6434 | Why, in the Missouri Compromise, was 36 degrees 30 minutes taken as the boundary between the slave and the free States? |
6434 | Why? |
6434 | Why? |
6434 | Why? |
6434 | Why? |
6434 | With what battle did it close? |
6434 | With what intent did Lord Baltimore secure a grant of land in America? |
6434 | With what intention was this colony planned? |
6434 | Writ of habeas corpus? |
6434 | Yet, how was he to aid it? |
6434 | [ Footnote: Section 4. Who prescribes the"time, place and manner"of electing representatives and senators? |
6434 | [ Footnote: What debts did the United States assume when the Constitution was adopted?] |
6434 | [ Footnote: What is the supreme law of the land? |
6434 | [ Footnote: What must Congress guarantee to every state? |
6434 | _ Section_ 1. Who are citizens of the United States? |
6434 | _ Section_ 2. Who compose the House of Representatives? |
6434 | and Dec. 21, N.S.? |
6434 | in Tennessee? |
6434 | said Gage,"have your fathers sent you here to exhibit the rebellion they have been teaching you?" |
3136 | ''But how am I to do it?'' 3136 ''Fear not,''said the student,''I have in my eye the very priest and damsel you describe; but how am I to regain admission to this tower? |
3136 | A career? |
3136 | A hanging garden on the roof? |
3136 | A place for McDonald? 3136 About her career?" |
3136 | About what? |
3136 | About what? |
3136 | Afraid of? |
3136 | Against it? 3136 Ah, did they send for me? |
3136 | Ah, do n''t you see it would be the same? 3136 Ah, so that is what you are sorry for?" |
3136 | Ai n''t you ashamed to have your granther turn the grindstone? |
3136 | Ai n''t your name Smith? |
3136 | An offer for me? |
3136 | And Evelyn? 3136 And Father Damon, is he as active as ever?" |
3136 | And Henderson? |
3136 | And I''ve been thinking that McDonald--"So you want to get rid of her? |
3136 | And Margaret? |
3136 | And McDonald? |
3136 | And Mr. Henderson? 3136 And Vicky?" |
3136 | And all the people who first invested lose their money, or the most of it? |
3136 | And busy? |
3136 | And do n''t you fear a little for our own girls, launching out that way? |
3136 | And do n''t you think American women adapt themselves happily to English life? |
3136 | And do n''t you want to see that life for yourself? 3136 And do you not wish to go?" |
3136 | And do you think it would be any better if all were poor alike? |
3136 | And does it seem a little difficult to do so? |
3136 | And give up education? |
3136 | And gold? |
3136 | And has n''t your wife some relations who are in business? |
3136 | And have you written to any one at home about my niece? |
3136 | And he did not say where he was going? |
3136 | And he will not return? 3136 And he, was he happy?" |
3136 | And here you only have to live up to mine? |
3136 | And how does it look to men? |
3136 | And how does the house get on? |
3136 | And how far do you think we could get, my dear, in the crusade you propose? |
3136 | And how goes it? |
3136 | And how many pairs can you finish in a day? |
3136 | And how much money do you want for this modest scheme of yours? |
3136 | And how was it with the Northern women who married South, as you say? |
3136 | And is n''t it a good piece of road? |
3136 | And leave Mr. Lyon without any protection here? |
3136 | And my account? |
3136 | And no such will has been found? |
3136 | And not for the sake of doing anything-- just winning? 3136 And nothing else, Margaret?" |
3136 | And now I do? |
3136 | And sell out at auction? |
3136 | And so I have your permission? |
3136 | And so you do not find it dull? |
3136 | And so you think the theatres have a moral influence? |
3136 | And so you were glad to land? |
3136 | And that daughter of his, about whom such a fuss was made, I suppose you never met her? |
3136 | And that is the reason you read here? |
3136 | And that is the use of brokers in grain and stocks? |
3136 | And the Missouri? |
3136 | And the city appears narrow and provincial? |
3136 | And the other one? |
3136 | And the story? 3136 And the teak?" |
3136 | And the vine said unto them,''Should I leave my wine, which cheereth God and man, and go to be promoted over the trees?'' 3136 And then?" |
3136 | And they are done here? |
3136 | And was your religion founded on Plymouth Rock? |
3136 | And we will put it off a year? |
3136 | And were you trying, Mr. Delancy, to persuade Miss Tavish into that sort of charity? |
3136 | And what do you do? |
3136 | And what do you want, Margaret? |
3136 | And what has changed it? |
3136 | And what time does he usually come home in the evening? |
3136 | And what will they do with him? |
3136 | And what would you do? |
3136 | And where? |
3136 | And which would have to yield? |
3136 | And who else? |
3136 | And why did n''t you come by Niagara? |
3136 | And why do n''t you writers do something about it? 3136 And why not? |
3136 | And why not? |
3136 | And why,Miss Tavish asked,"will the serpentine dances and the London topical songs do any more harm to women than to men?" |
3136 | And would n''t you help them? |
3136 | And you are going soon? 3136 And you did n''t buy an orange plantation, or a town?" |
3136 | And you do not belong to the Church? |
3136 | And you do not read much in the city? |
3136 | And you find they have no time to be agreeable? |
3136 | And you get it in Newport? |
3136 | And you have no acquaintances here? |
3136 | And you have not looked on the register? |
3136 | And you have nothing else to say, Rodney? |
3136 | And you have told her this? |
3136 | And you like it better than Newport? |
3136 | And you prefer to be that, a lawyer, rather than an author? |
3136 | And you remember Portia? |
3136 | And you think that fitted them for the seriousness of life? |
3136 | And you think that science is an aid to art? |
3136 | And you think this is different from a train out of New York? |
3136 | And you think this is enough, without any sort of religion-- that this East Side can go on without any spiritual life? |
3136 | And you think, child, that he does n''t know? 3136 And you think, therefore, that they should not have a scientific education?" |
3136 | And you want me to get a twist on old Blunt? |
3136 | And you want to endow him? |
3136 | And you were not? |
3136 | And you will ask, what now? 3136 And your husband has not come yet?" |
3136 | And your wife did n''t come? |
3136 | And( Margaret was moving as if to go)"did he say nothing-- nothing to you?" |
3136 | And, oh, ca n''t you come in to dinner tomorrow night-- just Carmen-- I think I can persuade her-- and nobody else? |
3136 | And--? |
3136 | Any more? |
3136 | Anybody else there? |
3136 | Anything else? |
3136 | Anything special turned up? |
3136 | Are n''t they beautiful? |
3136 | Are n''t they that now? |
3136 | Are n''t you lonesome-- and disgusted? |
3136 | Are not the people learning anything? |
3136 | Are the people on the border as bad as they are represented? |
3136 | Are there many people here? |
3136 | Are you afraid to speak to him? |
3136 | Are you asleep, pa? |
3136 | Are you going farther south? |
3136 | Are you going to stay here always? |
3136 | Are you interested in foundlings? |
3136 | Are you much tired, Miss Benson? |
3136 | Are you open to an offer? |
3136 | Are you quite sure you know your own mind? |
3136 | Are you real glad to see me, Phil? 3136 Are you sorry for what you have done?" |
3136 | Are you timid about the train? |
3136 | Are you? |
3136 | Arrange what? |
3136 | As New Yorkers go to Europe to get rid of their future? |
3136 | As bad as what? 3136 As for instance?" |
3136 | At the end of the season,she said,"and alone?" |
3136 | Atlantic City? 3136 Avez- vous la poussee?" |
3136 | Because the world is so big? |
3136 | Build? 3136 Burnett? |
3136 | But Henderson looks out for his friends? |
3136 | But I mean, you know, do they look to marriage as an end so much? |
3136 | But are n''t Mr. Morgan and Mr. Fairchild business men? |
3136 | But do n''t you know that the hardest thing to do is the obvious, the thing close to you? |
3136 | But do n''t you know, child,said Miss McDonald, laughing,"that we are required to love our enemies?" |
3136 | But do n''t you see that it is n''t safe for the Lamonts and Mrs. Farquhar to go there? |
3136 | But do n''t you see this affair upsets all our arrangements? 3136 But do n''t you think we are putting history and association into them pretty fast?" |
3136 | But how about the Lachine Rapids? 3136 But how did you live in those early days, way back there?" |
3136 | But how, when whatever I attempt is considered a condescension? 3136 But is n''t it a compromising distinction,"my wife asked,"to take his money without his name? |
3136 | But it is a lovely country? |
3136 | But suppose that does not interest me? |
3136 | But suppose you fall in love with a poor man? |
3136 | But the fig- tree said unto them,''Should I forsake my sweetness and my good fruit, and go to be promoted over the trees?'' 3136 But the olive- tree said unto them,''Should I leave my fatness wherewith by me they honor God and man, and go to be promoted over the trees?'' |
3136 | But was it generosity? 3136 But we are to understand that if we do not accept your terms, it''s a freeze- out?" |
3136 | But what do you care for money? |
3136 | But what does it matter about the bills if you enjoy yourself? |
3136 | But what has Congress to do with it? |
3136 | But what two have you in mind? |
3136 | But where does the news come from? |
3136 | But who caught it? |
3136 | But who wanted him to be your husband? |
3136 | But why did you think she expected me? |
3136 | But why do you want them? |
3136 | But would n''t it be a sneaking thing to take a man''s money, and refuse him the credit of his generosity? |
3136 | But you can not do away with distinctions? |
3136 | But you do n''t say you like that? 3136 But you seem, Major, to have preferred a single life?" |
3136 | But you think that mine is changed for you? |
3136 | But you wanted to comeback? |
3136 | But, dear, we do n''t pretend, do we? |
3136 | But, on Sunday? |
3136 | But,said Edith, with a flush of earnestness"but, Father Damon, is n''t human love the greatest power to save?" |
3136 | But,said Philip,"do n''t England and the Continent long for the presence of Americans in the season in the same way?" |
3136 | By- the- way, did I ever show you this? |
3136 | By- the- way,he said, after a silence,"is Henderson in town?" |
3136 | Ca n''t think? 3136 Ca n''t you stow me away anywhere? |
3136 | Celia Howard? 3136 Celia, do n''t you think it would be an ungentlemanly thing to take a social event like that?" |
3136 | Charities? 3136 Come round?" |
3136 | Confederate? |
3136 | Contest the will? |
3136 | Could n''t I,said the stranger, with the same deliberation--"wouldn''t you let me go to Charleston?" |
3136 | Could you do them any better, with all your cultivation? |
3136 | Could you take us where we would be likely to get any muskallonge? |
3136 | Critical? 3136 Diamonds or pearls?" |
3136 | Did I tell you I was in that? 3136 Did I tell you,"interposed Morgan--"it is almost in the line of your thought-- of a girl I met the other day on the train? |
3136 | Did I? 3136 Did he run?" |
3136 | Did he say anything? |
3136 | Did n''t you know they were Americans? |
3136 | Did n''t you say you knew her in Europe? |
3136 | Did she-- did Miss Benson say anything about Newport? |
3136 | Did the little pig know Jimmy? |
3136 | Did you come alone? |
3136 | Did you come in a cutter? |
3136 | Did you deny it? |
3136 | Did you ever see a work called''Evangeline''? |
3136 | Did you ever see him? |
3136 | Did you ever see so many pretty girls together before? 3136 Did you ever,"he went on,"commit the crime of using intoxicating drinks as a beverage?" |
3136 | Did you have any fighting? |
3136 | Did you read them? |
3136 | Did you recommend the president to take the money, if he could get it without using the gambler''s name? |
3136 | Did you report to the Associated Charities? |
3136 | Did you say, Mrs. Fairchild,he asked my wife,"that Miss Debree is a teacher? |
3136 | Did you see the porpoise? |
3136 | Did you see what one of the papers said about the use of wealth in adorning the city? 3136 Did you want to come to me for help?" |
3136 | Did you wish me for anything? |
3136 | Different from what? |
3136 | Disgusted? 3136 Do I? |
3136 | Do I? 3136 Do n''t remember? |
3136 | Do n''t you intend to go on with medicine? |
3136 | Do n''t you know, child, that there is society and society? 3136 Do n''t you see I am busy, child? |
3136 | Do n''t you see? 3136 Do n''t you think it better, Father Damon,"Dr. Leigh interposed,"that Gretchen should have fresh air and some recreation on Sunday?" |
3136 | Do n''t you think it would be nice to have a?.... |
3136 | Do n''t you think we could sell some strawberries next year? |
3136 | Do n''t you think, dear,she said, puzzling over the drawings,"that it would better be all sandalwood? |
3136 | Do they sell the weather? |
3136 | Do what? |
3136 | Do you believe, Mr. Morgan, that any vast fortune was ever honestly come by? |
3136 | Do you happen to know whether he knows Bilbrick, the present Collector? |
3136 | Do you know, Rodney, I hated this house at five o''clock-- positively hated it? |
3136 | Do you live here? |
3136 | Do you live in Baddeck? |
3136 | Do you make a long stay? |
3136 | Do you mean to say that Henderson and Mavick and Mrs. Henderson would have thrown me over? |
3136 | Do you mean to say there are no distinctions? |
3136 | Do you mean to say,asked Mr. Lyon,"that in this country you have churches for the rich and other churches for the poor?" |
3136 | Do you mean, Mrs. Mavick, that-- you-- want-- that I am to leave Evelyn, and you? |
3136 | Do you really want me to go, dear? |
3136 | Do you remember when I got this, Carmen? 3136 Do you think I am going to be run, as you call it, by the newspapers? |
3136 | Do you think I''d ever do that for John the Lyon''s head on a charger? |
3136 | Do you think Mr. Henderson believes in people? |
3136 | Do you think all men who are what you call operating around are like that? |
3136 | Do you think he is good enough for her? |
3136 | Do you think he would have been the one to give in if they had gone to France? |
3136 | Do you think it is the worst in the country? |
3136 | Do you think she is able to stand alone? |
3136 | Do you think that if Raphael had known nothing of anatomy the world would have accepted his Sistine Madonna for the woman she is? |
3136 | Do you think there was anything between Miss Eschelle and Mr. Lyon? 3136 Do you think we would want to wreck our own property?" |
3136 | Do you think, Father,said the girl, looking up wistfully,"that I can--can be forgiven?" |
3136 | Do you think, Mr. Mavick, that the decay of dancing is the reason our religion lacks seriousness? 3136 Do you think, Mr. Mavick, that will was ever executed?" |
3136 | Do you think,said Irene, a little anxiously, letting her hand rest a moment upon Stanhope''s,"that they will like poor little me? |
3136 | Do you trust him? |
3136 | Do you understand? 3136 Do you want me to put on my business or my evening expression?" |
3136 | Do you want to get out of it? 3136 Do you want to run right into the smallpox at Montreal?" |
3136 | Do you? 3136 Do you?" |
3136 | Do? 3136 Does Evelyn like him?" |
3136 | Does Father Damon join in this? |
3136 | Does any other stage go from here to- day anywhere else? |
3136 | Does he? |
3136 | Does she know anything of this absurd, this silly attempt? |
3136 | Does she know you are out? |
3136 | Does she know? 3136 Does the signor live near Mexico?" |
3136 | Does the world seem any larger here, Miss Debree? |
3136 | Domestication? 3136 Eh, what did he want?" |
3136 | Elevated''em, did n''t he? 3136 Executed?" |
3136 | Faith? 3136 Fish? |
3136 | Fleas? 3136 Get ready? |
3136 | Going for the government? |
3136 | Going to drop law, eh? |
3136 | Had she any friends? |
3136 | Has Mr. Lyon been here? |
3136 | Has anything gone wrong? 3136 Has anything gone wrong?" |
3136 | Have n''t I waited on you befo'', sah? 3136 Have the falls been taken in today?" |
3136 | Have to go, child? 3136 Have you answered Miss Tavish''s invitation?" |
3136 | Have you any explanations? |
3136 | Have you any memorandum of it? |
3136 | Have you any statistics on the subject? |
3136 | Have you been accustomed,he said, after a time, rather sadly,"to break the Sabbath?" |
3136 | Have you begun another? |
3136 | Have you done? |
3136 | Have you ever been dissipated, living riotously and keeping late hours? |
3136 | Have you had a good day, child? |
3136 | Have you had a worrying day? |
3136 | Have you repented of your sin? |
3136 | Have you seen him? |
3136 | Have you spoken to any of your friends? |
3136 | Have you,he went on,"ever stolen, or told any lie?" |
3136 | Have you? |
3136 | He was a--"Was he a philosopher?" |
3136 | Here? 3136 Here?" |
3136 | How about his staying quality, Stalker? |
3136 | How can you talk such nonsense? 3136 How could he help it?" |
3136 | How did it come about? |
3136 | How did little Jimmy know his pig from the other little pigs? |
3136 | How did you like it? |
3136 | How did you sleep, cap? |
3136 | How do we know what is necessary to any poor soul? 3136 How do you know that anybody is always to be unregenerate? |
3136 | How do you mean''finished''? |
3136 | How do you mean, before a magistrate? |
3136 | How does your experiment get on, Miss Tavish? |
3136 | How is it? |
3136 | How is that? |
3136 | How is this privileged person? |
3136 | How long has he been here? |
3136 | How long have they been there? |
3136 | How many are there in the coupe? |
3136 | How much for this? |
3136 | How much money was in it? |
3136 | How much of it is curiosity? |
3136 | How so? |
3136 | How so? |
3136 | How square? |
3136 | How was that? 3136 How''s that?" |
3136 | How''s that? |
3136 | How? |
3136 | How? |
3136 | How? |
3136 | How? |
3136 | How? |
3136 | I do wonder where she came from? |
3136 | I have not seen much of your life,he said one night to Mr. Morgan;"but are n''t most American women a little restless, seeking an occupation?" |
3136 | I remember-- Hunt, Sharp& Tweedle; why did n''t you keep it? |
3136 | I say, Delancy, what''s this I hear? |
3136 | I see it is interesting,said Philip, shifting his ground again,"but what is the real good of all these botanical names and classifications?" |
3136 | I suppose it has been dreadfully hot in the city? |
3136 | I suppose there is fishing here in the season? |
3136 | I suppose you have pretty well seen the island? |
3136 | I suppose, Mr. Lyon,said Margaret, demurely,"that this sort of thing is unknown in England?" |
3136 | I thought all the churches here were organized on social affinities? |
3136 | I thought perhaps some other field, for a time? |
3136 | I thought you liked him? 3136 I wanted to ask you, Mavick, as a friend, do you think Henderson is square?" |
3136 | I wish he would,said Philip; and then, having moved so that he could see Celia''s face,"Do you like Murad Ault?" |
3136 | I wonder how Henderson came to do it? |
3136 | I wonder how he knows? |
3136 | I wonder,Mr. King was saying,"if these excursionists are representative of general American life?" |
3136 | I wonder,continued Mr. Sage,"if it was ever executed? |
3136 | I-- suppose,said the earl, rising,"we shall see you again on the other side?" |
3136 | I? 3136 I? |
3136 | I? 3136 I? |
3136 | If one do n''t, what''s the use of talk? |
3136 | If the country is so bad, why send any more unregenerates into it? |
3136 | In a boat? 3136 In my new story?" |
3136 | In order to snuff myself out? 3136 Is Jim poor?" |
3136 | Is Major Fairfax in? |
3136 | Is Mr. Delancy at home? |
3136 | Is Mr. Henderson in? |
3136 | Is Mr. Meigs in the lumber business? |
3136 | Is he dead, Dr. Leigh? 3136 Is he married?" |
3136 | Is he not sometimes at home in the daytime? |
3136 | Is he recognized by respectable people? |
3136 | Is he? 3136 Is it a true book, John?" |
3136 | Is it all true? |
3136 | Is it possible? 3136 Is it so bad as that?" |
3136 | Is it too late? |
3136 | Is it true that Lyon is''epris''there? |
3136 | Is it true, sir? |
3136 | Is it true? |
3136 | Is it your American idea, then, that a church ought to be formed only of people socially agreeable together? |
3136 | Is n''t it a shame that the tomatoes are all getting ripe at once? 3136 Is n''t it all very revolutionary?" |
3136 | Is n''t it becoming? |
3136 | Is n''t it funny,she wrote,"and is n''t it preposterous? |
3136 | Is n''t it natural,spoke up Mr. Lyon, who had hitherto been silent,"that you should drift into this condition without an established church?" |
3136 | Is n''t it safe? |
3136 | Is n''t it? 3136 Is n''t that enough?" |
3136 | Is n''t that occupation enough? 3136 Is n''t that the fault mostly of the writer, who vulgarizes his material?" |
3136 | Is n''t that,Edith exclaimed,"a surrender of individual rights and a great injustice to men not in the unions?" |
3136 | Is n''t the hall just as jammed when the clever attorney of Nothingism, Ham Saversoul, jokes about the mysteries of this life and the next? |
3136 | Is n''t this a nervous sort of a place? |
3136 | Is n''t your idea of painting rather anatomical? |
3136 | Is she pretty? |
3136 | Is she trustworthy? |
3136 | Is she very ill? |
3136 | Is that the pocket- book? |
3136 | Is there any protection, Mr. Morgan, for people who have invested their little property? |
3136 | Is there any stage for Baddeck? |
3136 | Is there anything that you want from town, auntie? |
3136 | Is there nothing like a court? 3136 Is this all of it?" |
3136 | Is this stage for Baddeck? |
3136 | It does seem hard and mean, does n''t it? 3136 It is n''t anything like wrecking, is it, dear?" |
3136 | Jump? |
3136 | Just a little? 3136 Law?" |
3136 | Left the pail? 3136 Let''s go round her,"said Jack;"eh, skipper?" |
3136 | Like her-- Miss Benson? 3136 Likely?" |
3136 | Little? |
3136 | Loss of what? |
3136 | Ma, are you asleep? |
3136 | Me? 3136 Me? |
3136 | Me? |
3136 | Me? |
3136 | Mr. Burnett? 3136 Mr. Meigs? |
3136 | Mr. Morgan,suddenly asked Margaret, who had been all the time an uneasy listener to the turn the talk had taken,"what is railroad wrecking?" |
3136 | My dear,she said,"why should n''t I renege? |
3136 | My permission, Mr. Lyon? 3136 No,"said Jerry, with a little reluctance;"might as well have it all out-- eh, Henderson?" |
3136 | No? 3136 No? |
3136 | No? 3136 No? |
3136 | No? 3136 Not classic, then?" |
3136 | Not intending always to teach? |
3136 | Nothing is said about the training- school? |
3136 | Now what is it? |
3136 | Now, wherever can he be going this morning in the very midst of getting in his hay? 3136 Now, why do n''t you do it?" |
3136 | Of course you all have the poems of Burns? |
3136 | Of myself? |
3136 | Oh, I did n''t know--"What is it, dear? |
3136 | Oh, can she? 3136 Oh, indeed, is that the place? |
3136 | Oh, is that all? |
3136 | Oh, literature? 3136 Oh, the ebony and gold? |
3136 | Ohio? 3136 Old Jerry? |
3136 | Old fellow, what do you say to going to Virginia? |
3136 | Pa, are you asleep? |
3136 | Pa, what is a phalanx? |
3136 | Papa, what does he mean? |
3136 | Pardon me,he persisted,"have you no sense of incompleteness in this life, in your own life? |
3136 | Perhaps I ought to tell her your plan for her? 3136 Perhaps your daughter would have preferred to furnish it herself?" |
3136 | Picked up what you could find, corn, bacon, horses? |
3136 | Plunder seems to have been the object? |
3136 | Portia,said Evelyn;"yes, but that is poetry; and, McDonald, was n''t it a kind of catch? |
3136 | Quite an admission, was n''t it, from an American? 3136 Quoted me? |
3136 | Recognized? |
3136 | Remember the joke he played on Prof. A., freshman year? |
3136 | Rights, what''s that? |
3136 | Rumor? |
3136 | Sell what? |
3136 | Shall I send it? |
3136 | She''s so bright, and-- and interesting, do n''t you think? 3136 Sir,"cried Mr. Irving, in a burst of indignation that overcame his habitual shyness,"do you seize upon such a disaster only for a sneer? |
3136 | Sleep? |
3136 | So Brandon was a little dull? |
3136 | So men only dropped the a pluribus unum method on account of the expense? |
3136 | So soon? |
3136 | So that is another thing I pretend? 3136 So the college is not open yet?" |
3136 | So you earn fifteen cents a day? |
3136 | So you have been at the White Sulphur? |
3136 | So you put your faith in an American millionaire? |
3136 | So you remember that? |
3136 | So you want things picked out like a photograph? |
3136 | So your friend''s an artist? 3136 Sorry for what?" |
3136 | Spades, did you say? |
3136 | Spanish or French? |
3136 | Surely you are not uninterested in what is now called psychical research? |
3136 | Tell Mrs. Van Cortlandt? 3136 That flame,"he says,"you have put out, but where has it gone?" |
3136 | The Mavicks? 3136 The publishers have n''t decided?" |
3136 | The reception? 3136 Then Carmen, as you call her, was n''t the first?" |
3136 | Then her influence on him is good? |
3136 | Then it is not money that determines social position in America? |
3136 | Then she does go there? |
3136 | Then what are you girding Mr. Henderson for about his university? |
3136 | Then you do n''t care for real life? |
3136 | Then you have some curiosity to see the story? |
3136 | Then you think international marriages are a mistake? |
3136 | Then you want a romance? |
3136 | Then you would call yourself a realist? |
3136 | This is a rotation of crops, is n''t it? |
3136 | To be with us? |
3136 | To bombard Alexandria? |
3136 | To vespers? |
3136 | Very well,said the Major, at the close of the last of their talks at the club;"what are you going to do?" |
3136 | Walked? 3136 Want whom to know?" |
3136 | Was Navisson a modern lawyer? |
3136 | Was he on the Union or Confederate side? |
3136 | Was it a great change from the first? |
3136 | Was it slippery? |
3136 | Was it very dull? |
3136 | Was it? 3136 Was n''t it the Margaret Fund?" |
3136 | Was n''t she interested? |
3136 | Was she a good woman? |
3136 | Was she? 3136 Was there a later will?" |
3136 | Was there a panic on board? |
3136 | Was there anything else? |
3136 | We? 3136 Well"( the girl only wanted an excuse to say something),"I only ast, is you?" |
3136 | Well, I declare; and you could''a looked right in? |
3136 | Well, do n''t you think it would pay best to be honest, and live with your family, out of jail? 3136 Well, honestly, Miss Eschelle, do you think the negroes are any better off?" |
3136 | Well, how''s things? 3136 Well, safe?" |
3136 | Well, sweet, keeping house alone? 3136 Well, what have you against Newport?" |
3136 | Well, what is the news today? |
3136 | Well, what is your idea? |
3136 | Well, what now? |
3136 | Well, what of it? |
3136 | Well, what of that? 3136 Well, where can I go?" |
3136 | Well, why should n''t we support the working- people of Paris and elsewhere? 3136 Well, young man,"said he, rising, with a queer grin on his face,"what are you sent here for? |
3136 | Well,he said, when she came to him in the vestry, with a drop from the rather austere manner in which he had spoken,"what can I do for you?" |
3136 | Well,said Edith, not to be diverted,"but, Mr. Henderson, what is it all for-- this conflict? |
3136 | Well? |
3136 | Well? |
3136 | Well? |
3136 | Well? |
3136 | Well? |
3136 | Well? |
3136 | Were the Pilgrims and the Puritans? |
3136 | Were you amused with the dancing-- this morning? |
3136 | Were you in any engagements? |
3136 | Were you trying to make Mr. Lyon comfortable by dragging in Bunker Hill? |
3136 | What are the business hours here? |
3136 | What are you going to do? 3136 What are you looking at, Jack?" |
3136 | What are you two plotting? |
3136 | What became of him? |
3136 | What can you do for me? |
3136 | What could you expect from such a sudden proposal to a young girl, almost a child, wholly unused to the world? 3136 What did Lycurgus do then?" |
3136 | What did Pericles do to the Greeks? |
3136 | What did he say? |
3136 | What did you do in Hugh White''s regiment? |
3136 | What did you do? |
3136 | What did you expect? 3136 What do I think of the Milky Way? |
3136 | What do people generally do? |
3136 | What do they do there, uncle? |
3136 | What do you mean, Carmen? |
3136 | What do you suppose I am here for? |
3136 | What do you think of Missouri? |
3136 | What do you want? |
3136 | What does anybody after a reception call for? |
3136 | What does he do? |
3136 | What does he say? |
3136 | What does it matter? |
3136 | What for? |
3136 | What good? |
3136 | What had it in it? |
3136 | What has come over you tonight, Carmen? |
3136 | What has come over you? 3136 What has she done?" |
3136 | What have I to do with it? 3136 What have you done, what have you done to me?" |
3136 | What have you heard, Major? |
3136 | What in the world, child, made you go on so tonight? |
3136 | What is all this about forgiveness? |
3136 | What is he doing? |
3136 | What is he like? |
3136 | What is it for? |
3136 | What is it, dear? |
3136 | What is it? |
3136 | What is it? |
3136 | What is it? |
3136 | What is that for? |
3136 | What is that? |
3136 | What is the Mountain Miller? |
3136 | What is the difference between that and getting possession of a bank and robbing it? |
3136 | What is the difference, Mr. Henderson,asked Margaret,"between the gossip in the boxes and the country gossip you spoke of?" |
3136 | What is the matter, Tom? |
3136 | What is the matter? |
3136 | What is the program for tomorrow? |
3136 | What is what, dear? |
3136 | What is your name? |
3136 | What is? |
3136 | What kind of a summer have you had? |
3136 | What made you snub Mr. Lyon so often? |
3136 | What more could I do for Miss Eschelle than to leave her in such company? |
3136 | What on earth do you suppose made those girls come up here in white dresses, blowing about in the wind, and already drabbled? 3136 What sort of a pocket- book was it?" |
3136 | What sort of repairs? |
3136 | What time does the sun rise? |
3136 | What was that, Phelps? |
3136 | What way? |
3136 | What were they talking about all night? |
3136 | What woman of spirit would n''t rather mate with an eagle, and quarrel half the time, than with a humdrum barn- yard fowl? |
3136 | What would you? |
3136 | What''s got into you to look so splendid? 3136 What''s over, child?" |
3136 | What''s that? 3136 What''s that?" |
3136 | What''s that? |
3136 | What''s that? |
3136 | What''s the Island, mamma? |
3136 | What''s the name o''the mon? |
3136 | What''s this? 3136 What''s your initials? |
3136 | What, all day? |
3136 | What, left the city, quit his work? 3136 What,"continued he, in tones still more serious,"has been your conduct with regard to the other sex?" |
3136 | What? 3136 What?" |
3136 | What? |
3136 | When was the first moment you began to love me, dear? |
3136 | Where be you from? |
3136 | Where does this go, and when? |
3136 | Where is he? |
3136 | Where''s the bear? |
3136 | Where''s your pail? |
3136 | Where,we said, as we came easily, and neither uphill nor downhill, into the pleasant harbor of St. John,---"where are the tides of our youth?" |
3136 | Which would you choose? |
3136 | Which would you rather live with? |
3136 | Which? |
3136 | Which? |
3136 | Which? |
3136 | Which? |
3136 | Which? |
3136 | Who are you making that for? |
3136 | Who does? 3136 Who has died?" |
3136 | Who is good enough for whom? |
3136 | Who is he? |
3136 | Who is it? |
3136 | Who is that lovely creature? |
3136 | Who is that? |
3136 | Who is that? |
3136 | Who taught me? |
3136 | Who''s been talking? |
3136 | Who''s that? |
3136 | Who, Ault? |
3136 | Who? 3136 Who?" |
3136 | Whose trout is that? |
3136 | Why almost? |
3136 | Why did n''t he send it, then? 3136 Why did n''t you call me? |
3136 | Why do n''t he say what his business is? |
3136 | Why do n''t you applaud, child? |
3136 | Why do n''t you ask leave to read a paper, Forbes, on the relation of dress to education? |
3136 | Why do n''t you cut her? 3136 Why do n''t you go with a boy, then?" |
3136 | Why do n''t you put her into a novel? |
3136 | Why do n''t you take the other? |
3136 | Why do you smoke? |
3136 | Why insist on rash personal relations with your friend? |
3136 | Why is it called Pulpit Rock? |
3136 | Why is it that so few English women marry Americans? |
3136 | Why not? 3136 Why not? |
3136 | Why not? |
3136 | Why pretend? |
3136 | Why should n''t she be? |
3136 | Why should n''t she believe in him? |
3136 | Why were you gone so long? |
3136 | Why, Polly, where is the camel''s- hair shawl? |
3136 | Why, dearest? |
3136 | Why, my dear Lord Montague, did you ever offer her anything? |
3136 | Why, my dear, do n''t you know? |
3136 | Why, the first moment, that day; did n''t you know it then? |
3136 | Why, what has come over you, old man? |
3136 | Why,I asked the bright and light- minded colored boy who sold papers on the morning train,"do n''t you stay in the city and see it?" |
3136 | Why,asked Irene, trembling at the thought of that danger so long ago--"why did n''t you go back down the ravine?" |
3136 | Why? 3136 Why? |
3136 | Why? |
3136 | Why? |
3136 | Will I? |
3136 | Will madame have the carriage? |
3136 | Will you be my teacher? |
3136 | Will you read that? |
3136 | Will you smoke? |
3136 | Will you take us to Baddeck to- day? |
3136 | Will you? 3136 Will you? |
3136 | With Congress, do you mean? |
3136 | With whom, mamma? |
3136 | Worse? 3136 Would I rather? |
3136 | Would n''t he be satisfied with an LL.D.? |
3136 | Would n''t it be prettier hung with silken arras figured with a chain of dancing- girls? 3136 Would n''t she have come with you? |
3136 | Would n''t that be nice? |
3136 | Would n''t the money do good-- as much good as any other hundred thousand dollars? |
3136 | Would n''t the torpedo station make up for it? |
3136 | Would n''t uncle like to take a drive this charming morning? |
3136 | Would the law pay you? |
3136 | Would the little pig let him? |
3136 | Would you buy stocks that way? |
3136 | Would you mind telling me what they are? |
3136 | Would you rather be there? |
3136 | Write? |
3136 | Yes, I know; and did you see that some of the scholars had red hair and blue eyes, quite in the present style? 3136 Yes, indeed,"said Edith, looking up brightly;"does n''t it you?" |
3136 | Yes, sir,says John,"is that all?" |
3136 | Yes, yes; but I wonder if it was worth while? |
3136 | Yes-- why not? |
3136 | Yes? 3136 Yes? |
3136 | Yes? |
3136 | Yes? |
3136 | Yes? |
3136 | Yes? |
3136 | Yes? |
3136 | Yes? |
3136 | Yes? |
3136 | Yes? |
3136 | Yet you wish to be treated as a woman? |
3136 | You ai n''t got no cotton, is you? |
3136 | You are afraid they will get lost in that big house? |
3136 | You are not going to waste your ground on muskmelons? |
3136 | You are not offended? |
3136 | You are not offended? |
3136 | You are of the city, then? |
3136 | You could n''t lie along a hair? |
3136 | You did n''t tell her that I approved of all the French novels you read? |
3136 | You do n''t find it lively? |
3136 | You do n''t like trees? |
3136 | You do n''t mean that she refused you? |
3136 | You do n''t mean that you are tired of America? |
3136 | You do n''t mean, mamma, that she is going away for good? |
3136 | You do n''t tell me you''ve gone and refused him, Irene? |
3136 | You do n''t think I''d be seen going around with him? 3136 You got a living out of the farmers?" |
3136 | You got our circular? |
3136 | You have no business here: what are you after? |
3136 | You here? |
3136 | You know Mr. Henderson very well? |
3136 | You like Bar Harbor so well,he said,"that I suppose your father will be buying a cottage here?" |
3136 | You lived on the country? |
3136 | You mean for himself, for his own self? |
3136 | You mean gossiped about? |
3136 | You mean making Christianity practical? |
3136 | You mean she does not know what I offer her? |
3136 | You mean she will be sorry, whichever she chooses? |
3136 | You mean that I must go back to my labor in the city? |
3136 | You mean that young swell whose business it is to drive a four- in- hand to Yonkers and back, and toot on a horn? |
3136 | You mean to say,I asked,"that the lawyer takes what the operator leaves?" |
3136 | You promise me, dear, that you will put the whole thing out of your mind? |
3136 | You surely do not think human beings are created just for this miserable little experience here? |
3136 | You want to build a cathedral? |
3136 | You went? |
3136 | You will remain? |
3136 | You will solemnly promise me, solemnly, will you not, Stanhope, never to go there again-- never-- without me? |
3136 | You will write, dear, the moment you get there, will you not? 3136 You''d be willing to take your oath on it?" |
3136 | You''ve only recently come over, Lord Montague? |
3136 | You? 3136 Young man, did you ever use tobacco?" |
3136 | Your mother is pleased here? |
3136 | ''And you are not discouraged by the repeated failure of the predictions of the end of the world?'' |
3136 | ''And you?'' |
3136 | ''Are you afraid?'' |
3136 | ''Are you one?'' |
3136 | ''But how do you know?'' |
3136 | ''Oh, it is n''t the place?'' |
3136 | ''What was it?'' |
3136 | ''Where did they find transports?'' |
3136 | ''Why?'' |
3136 | ''Yes,''he continued, walking close up to it,''but what is it?'' |
3136 | ( I wonder what all this is about?) |
3136 | ( Suppose my squash had not come up, or my beans--as they threatened at one time-- had gone the wrong way: where would I have been?) |
3136 | ("Children, what is the meaning of''absorbed''?") |
3136 | ("Children,"asks the teacher,"what is the meaning of''twist''?") |
3136 | ), to fetch her shawl-- was there anything they could do? |
3136 | --"But what kind of perishable things?" |
3136 | A companion? |
3136 | A country? |
3136 | A forlorn fishing- station, a dreary hotel? |
3136 | A lady leaned from the carriage, and said:"What have you got, little boy?" |
3136 | A monument like your Pulpit Rock?" |
3136 | A more pertinent inquiry is, what sort of people have we become? |
3136 | A more recent letter:--"Do you remember Aunt Hepsy, who used to keep the little thread- and- needle and candy shop in Rivervale? |
3136 | A small, unpicturesque, wooden town, in the languor of a provincial summer; why should we pretend an interest in it which we did not feel? |
3136 | A white house,--a pleasant- looking house at a distance,--amiable, kindly people in it,--why should we have arrived there on its dirty day? |
3136 | A young man will catch the whole family with this flaming message, but where is that sentiment that once set the maiden heart in a flutter? |
3136 | About how do they run here as to size?" |
3136 | After a day of toil, what more natural, and what more probable for a Spaniard? |
3136 | After a few moments, in a recurring wave of strength, he looked up again, still bewildered, and said, faintly:"Where am I?" |
3136 | After all, King reflected, as the party were on their way to the Isles of Shoals, what was it that had most impressed him at Manchester? |
3136 | After all, what did it matter? |
3136 | After one campaign, must there not be time given to organize for another? |
3136 | Ai n''t that about so?" |
3136 | All our territory is mapped out as to its sanitary conditions; why not have it colored as to its effect upon the spirits and the enjoyment of life? |
3136 | All right down here?" |
3136 | Always does? |
3136 | Am I mistaken in supposing that this is owing to the discontinuance of big chimneys, with wide fireplaces in them? |
3136 | Am I to be sacrificed, broiled, roasted, for the sake of the increased vigor of a few vegetables? |
3136 | An angry voice,"What do you want?" |
3136 | And Ault? |
3136 | And Evelyn herself? |
3136 | And Father Damon, who was trying to save souls, was he accomplishing anything more than she? |
3136 | And Forbes replied:"Why did n''t you say so? |
3136 | And I can send that?" |
3136 | And I do not stick to anything? |
3136 | And I said, why not make her an intellectual woman? |
3136 | And Jack himself, happily married, with a comfortable income, why was life getting flat to him? |
3136 | And Jack, dear Jack, would he love her more? |
3136 | And Margaret, what view of the world did all this give her? |
3136 | And Miss Tavish; to whom did she fly in this peril? |
3136 | And a little''sadness''in them, was n''t there? |
3136 | And affectionate? |
3136 | And all this promenading and flirting and languishing and love- making, would it come to nothing- nothing more than usual? |
3136 | And could he guess what gown she would wear? |
3136 | And did you tell your aunt that?" |
3136 | And do n''t you think she is more beautiful than ever? |
3136 | And do n''t you think she''s a little too intellectual for society? |
3136 | And do we not all look about us in the pews, when he thus moralizes, to see who has prospered? |
3136 | And do you think we''d better have those life- size figures all round, mediaeval statues, with the incandescents? |
3136 | And had he noticed a little disposition to patronize on two or three occasions? |
3136 | And had she not reason to be? |
3136 | And have we forgotten the"murmuring pines and the hemlocks"? |
3136 | And he cries after his departing parent,"Say, father, ca n''t I go over to the farther pasture and salt the cattle?" |
3136 | And he? |
3136 | And how could he ever again stand before erring, sinful men and women and speak about that purity which he had violated? |
3136 | And how does he find out that? |
3136 | And how fares it with the intellectual man? |
3136 | And how in this generation is he equipping himself for the future? |
3136 | And how was it in the late war? |
3136 | And if it were true, why did n''t I go at once to the gate, and not lurk round there all night like another Clement? |
3136 | And if she did, what would become of her own ideals? |
3136 | And if the stage goes on in this materialistic way, how long will it be before it ceases to amuse intelligent, not to say intellectual people? |
3136 | And if this divorce is permanent, is it a good thing for literature or the stage? |
3136 | And if your story does not take the popular fancy, where will you be then?" |
3136 | And is it not pretty sport, to pull up two pence, six pence, and twelve pence as fast as you can hale and veere a line?... |
3136 | And is this because we do not like to be insulted with originality, or because in our experience it is only the commonly accepted which is true? |
3136 | And it gives specimens of this pleasant converse, as:"Comment va votre poussee?" |
3136 | And meantime what is being done for the young men who are expected to share in the high society of the future? |
3136 | And men go to work to do this, to get other people''s property, in cool blood?" |
3136 | And so far as I am concerned--""Then I have your permission?" |
3136 | And that handsome woman--Nashville?--Louisville? |
3136 | And that''s jest a make- believe? |
3136 | And the Eschelles-- do you know anything of the Eschelles?" |
3136 | And the hat? |
3136 | And the mission?" |
3136 | And then Carmen? |
3136 | And then he asked:"Is your work ended for the day? |
3136 | And then she added, more lightly,"Do n''t you know it is wrong to commit suicide?" |
3136 | And then she continued, partly to herself, partly to Miss McDonald:"He will come now, ca n''t he? |
3136 | And then suppose he should become famous-- well, not exactly famous, but an author who was talked about, and becoming known, and said to be promising? |
3136 | And then, after a moment, she asked,"Do you, Father Damon, see any sign of anything better here?" |
3136 | And then, how many would reach youth? |
3136 | And then, if one has sentiment, is there anywhere that it is more ministered to than in the city at the close of the year? |
3136 | And then, leaning forward,"Do you mean that about Mr. Henderson in the morning papers?" |
3136 | And then, not heeding the nervous start the girl gave in stepping backward,"And-- and, will you be my wife?" |
3136 | And then, quite inconsequently,"I suppose you have news from Rivervale?" |
3136 | And then, showing the drift of his thoughts,"I wonder what Carmen will do?" |
3136 | And then, to the mother:"Where is Gretchen? |
3136 | And then,''Do you bike, Miss Mavick?'' |
3136 | And to wait for what? |
3136 | And today, for the first time, he seemed to have seen the woman in her-- or was it the saint? |
3136 | And under such a tutelage and dependence, how in any event could she be able to take care of herself? |
3136 | And was Henderson a vanishing part of this pageant? |
3136 | And was Henderson unconscious of all this? |
3136 | And was it an unmanly trait that he evoked in men that sentiment of chivalry which is never wanting in the roughest community for a pure woman? |
3136 | And was she only a part of it? |
3136 | And was she serious in all her various occupations, or only experimenting? |
3136 | And was there not sometimes, not yet habitually, coming upon these faces, faces plain and faces attractive, the shade of renunciation? |
3136 | And what can a man like that want with scenery? |
3136 | And what do we gain by our present method? |
3136 | And what effect would this change in relations have upon men? |
3136 | And what is dramatic art as at present understood and practiced by the purveyors of plays for the public? |
3136 | And what is politics? |
3136 | And what of it? |
3136 | And what would become of us without Receptions? |
3136 | And what, pray, was there to appeal? |
3136 | And when it was done, and the whole thing had blown over, who cared? |
3136 | And when you came to that, why should n''t any American girl marry her equal? |
3136 | And where am I? |
3136 | And where are we to look for this if not in the youth, and especially in those to whom fortune and leisure give an opportunity of leadership? |
3136 | And where in the world are beauty, and gayety with a touch of daring, and a magnificent establishment better appreciated? |
3136 | And where is the money to come from?" |
3136 | And wherever is he going? |
3136 | And who are we?" |
3136 | And who can say that some time, in the waiting and working future, this new light might not change life altogether for this faithful soul? |
3136 | And who knows what we shall find if we get there? |
3136 | And why not, since it is absolutely necessary that the world should be amused? |
3136 | And why not? |
3136 | And why not? |
3136 | And why should n''t a man of family amuse himself? |
3136 | And why should she be expected to go back to that stage? |
3136 | And why should we presume to set up our standard of what is valuable in life, of what is a successful career? |
3136 | And why town? |
3136 | And why, so far as she was concerned, should she deny it? |
3136 | And would this change be of any injury to them in their necessary fight for existence in this pushing world? |
3136 | And yet if she had yielded to it? |
3136 | And yet might there not be an element of selfishness in this-- might not its sacrifice be a family duty? |
3136 | And yet she was but a girl; she was now practically alone, and could she resist the family and the social pressure? |
3136 | And yet suppose he should break his solemn vows and throw away his ideal, and marry Ruth Leigh, would he ever be happy? |
3136 | And yet why was it absurd? |
3136 | And you call this hypocrisy? |
3136 | And you did not see it?" |
3136 | And you do n''t object?" |
3136 | And you have not seen anybody?" |
3136 | And you made a direct proposal?" |
3136 | And you said Miss Debree was there?" |
3136 | And you wo n''t mind my repeating it-- I was a mite of a girl-- I said,''Is n''t that rather sophistical, papa?'' |
3136 | And you?" |
3136 | And, Phil, that great monster of a Mavick, who is eating up the country, is n''t he a client also?" |
3136 | And, besides, how did the vine know enough to travel in exactly the right direction, three feet, to find what it wanted? |
3136 | And, if there is steadier diet needed than venison and bear, is the pig an expensive animal? |
3136 | And, indeed, if you see what a hopeless tangle our present situation is, where else can the mind logically go?" |
3136 | And, oh, wo n''t you ask Babcock to step round here?" |
3136 | And, then, a question I never will answer,"Ten? |
3136 | And-- I wonder if you will let me say it?" |
3136 | Any news here?" |
3136 | Anything wrong?" |
3136 | Are men always gentle and considerate, and women always even- tempered and consistent, simply by virtue of a few words said to the priest? |
3136 | Are men and women essentially changed, however? |
3136 | Are n''t they in a condition that binds them half the time to do what they do n''t wish to do?" |
3136 | Are n''t we having a good time up here?" |
3136 | Are n''t you tired?" |
3136 | Are the Enoch Ardens ever wanted? |
3136 | Are the majority of women likely to be whistlers? |
3136 | Are the people who, by reason of a competence or other accidents of good- fortune, have most leisure, becoming more agreeable? |
3136 | Are the proceeds of labor more evenly distributed? |
3136 | Are the women, or are they not, taking all the virility out of literature? |
3136 | Are their husbands brigands, and are they in wait for us in the chestnut- grove yonder? |
3136 | Are there any homesteads nowadays? |
3136 | Are there mice?" |
3136 | Are there more purity, more honest, fair dealing, genuine work, fear and honor of God? |
3136 | Are there no homes where the tempter does not live with the tempted in a mush of sentimental affinity? |
3136 | Are they adapting themselves to the new conditions? |
3136 | Are they altogether in the past? |
3136 | Are they electric affinities? |
3136 | Are they not for the most part the records of the misapprehensions of the misinformed? |
3136 | Are they so different, then, from other people? |
3136 | Are they so very high and mighty?" |
3136 | Are those who start and do n''t arrive any better than those who do arrive? |
3136 | Are we any better off for the privilege of following first one inclination and then another, which is called making a choice? |
3136 | Are we exaggerating this astonishing rise, development, and spread of the chrysanthemum? |
3136 | Are we not always trying to adjust ourselves to new relations, to get naturalized into a new family? |
3136 | Are you High- Church or evangelical?" |
3136 | Are you against me?" |
3136 | Are you all tired of civilization?" |
3136 | Are you engaged in anything?" |
3136 | Are you going in?" |
3136 | Are you going to make a race of men on feminine fodder? |
3136 | Are you interested in A. and B.?" |
3136 | Are you rested?" |
3136 | Are you shocked?" |
3136 | Art is good in its way; but what about a perfect figure? |
3136 | As I look at it, you might as well ask, Does a sunset pay? |
3136 | As long as he was in the world was it right that he should isolate himself from any of its sympathies and trials? |
3136 | As quick as a flash he said,"Why do n''t you call them''The Reverdy Johnson''?" |
3136 | As the lawyers say, is it a''vinculo'', or only a''mensa et thoro?'' |
3136 | As you recall it, what was it all about? |
3136 | Ask them to let me out? |
3136 | At Capon Springs? |
3136 | At length I said,--"Polly, do you know who planted that squash, or those squashes?" |
3136 | At length Newport''s ship was loaded with clapboards, pitch, tar, glass, frankincense(?) |
3136 | At length he asked, in a softened voice,"Is the mother a Christian?" |
3136 | At length he said, in his ordinary tone,"Well, what is it?" |
3136 | Ault?" |
3136 | Balls? |
3136 | Be unhappy because Henderson was prosperous, and she could indulge her tastes and not have to drudge in school? |
3136 | Because a man was married, was he to be shut up to one little narrow career, that of husband? |
3136 | Been up to fix the Legislature?" |
3136 | Before they rose from the table, Philip asked, speaking low,"Miss Mavick, wo n''t you give me a violet from your bunch in memory of this evening?" |
3136 | Benson?" |
3136 | Blunt?" |
3136 | Brown?" |
3136 | Bullets? |
3136 | Burnett?" |
3136 | Burnett?" |
3136 | Burnett?" |
3136 | But I wonder what Boston could have done for the Jersey coast?" |
3136 | But about the crowbar? |
3136 | But by what mediation shall the culture that is now the possession of the few be made to leaven the world and to elevate and sweeten ordinary life? |
3136 | But did John like the color of her eyes? |
3136 | But do all the women like this method of spending hour after hour, day after day- indeed, a lifetime? |
3136 | But do we talk as well as our fathers and mothers did? |
3136 | But does the preacher in the pulpit, Sunday after Sunday, year after year, shrink from speaking of sin? |
3136 | But had it not been all along in the minds of the builders to ask all the world to see it, to share the delight of it? |
3136 | But has the whistling woman come to stay? |
3136 | But he almost immediately came back, and poked in his head with,--"Is you go by de diligence?" |
3136 | But how was I to know about Lyon, my dear? |
3136 | But if the fence were papered with fairy- tales, would he not stop to read them until it was too late for him to climb into the garden? |
3136 | But is it true that a woman is ever really naturalized? |
3136 | But is it well- founded, is there any more mystery about women-- than about men? |
3136 | But is n''t it singular how local and provincial society talk is everywhere? |
3136 | But is n''t this what I''m accused of doing-- shirking my duty of personal service by a contribution?" |
3136 | But is not the sunshine common, and the bloom of May? |
3136 | But is not this because he is then most opposed? |
3136 | But must not every one decide for herself what is right before God?" |
3136 | But suddenly Evelyn added:"Why do n''t you do it?" |
3136 | But the Blue Grotto? |
3136 | But the boat? |
3136 | But the inquiry has come from many cities, from many women,"Can not something be done to stop social screaming?" |
3136 | But the mind? |
3136 | But the professorship was to bear his name, and what would be the moral effect of that?" |
3136 | But then, what would become of Lenox? |
3136 | But was he well?" |
3136 | But was it not the ghost of a ship? |
3136 | But was the New England atmosphere a little cold? |
3136 | But were we not saying something about moving? |
3136 | But what avails his Conquest now he lyes Inter''d in earth a prey for Wormes& Flies? |
3136 | But what color, what charming turns of expression, what of herself, had the girl put into it, that gave him such a thrill of pleasure when he read it? |
3136 | But what could he conjure out of a register? |
3136 | But what could she do? |
3136 | But what do you do with the ebony?" |
3136 | But what had he to offer to evoke such a love? |
3136 | But what in the last analysis is the object of a government? |
3136 | But what is it in human nature that is apt to carry a man who may take a step in personal reform into so many extremes? |
3136 | But what is the relation of our general intellectual life to popular education? |
3136 | But what is the row now? |
3136 | But what procession was that moving along the southern terrace? |
3136 | But what right had he to expect that it would be favorably considered? |
3136 | But what security would there be for any calculations in life in a state of things in expectation of a revolution any moment? |
3136 | But what should he telegraph? |
3136 | But what was the good of that when one had passed beyond the reach of envy? |
3136 | But what was the other thing?" |
3136 | But what would she gain by that? |
3136 | But what, exactly, do you mean?" |
3136 | But where was Philip? |
3136 | But where,"she added, turning to King,"are the rest of your party?" |
3136 | But who can measure the inner change in her life? |
3136 | But who can say what is most effective? |
3136 | But who could it be? |
3136 | But who hoed them?" |
3136 | But who knows? |
3136 | But who was the man on the sorrel horse, and where had he gone? |
3136 | But who was to give me back my peas? |
3136 | But why do elderly people go there? |
3136 | But why not? |
3136 | But why should they disapprove of her? |
3136 | But why was it, he asked himself, that he had so many followers, his religion so few? |
3136 | But why was the separation desired? |
3136 | But will it be a rainy night? |
3136 | But would he not feel, even if no one else knew it, that he was the poet- laureate of a corporation? |
3136 | But would it be so? |
3136 | But you did n''t have any of that shirking feeling last night, did you?" |
3136 | But you know, do n''t you, dear?" |
3136 | But you went south from Fortress Monroe?" |
3136 | But you wo n''t mind? |
3136 | But, Celia, what is the matter with you? |
3136 | But, Mr. Lyon, how much good do you suppose condescending charity does?" |
3136 | But, dear, as a friend, ought n''t I to tell you?" |
3136 | But, lonely? |
3136 | But, style? |
3136 | By books? |
3136 | By land to the island of Cape Breton?'' |
3136 | By the diffusion of works of art? |
3136 | By the newspaper? |
3136 | By the way, did I tell you that Miss Lamont''s uncle came last night from Richmond? |
3136 | By what logic can I say that I should have a part in the conduct of this world and that my neighbor should not? |
3136 | By- the- way, Mr. Burnett, Hunt''s a Republican, is n''t he?" |
3136 | By- the- way, did Dr. Leigh say anything about Henderson?" |
3136 | By- the- way, what do you think of the escape suggested by the Spectrum, in the assertion that you and Evelyn had arranged to go to Europe? |
3136 | By- the- way, why not run out with me and spend the night, and we can talk the thing over?" |
3136 | CAN A HUSBAND OPEN HIS WIFE''S LETTERS? |
3136 | CAPRI"CAP, signor? |
3136 | Ca n''t it wait?" |
3136 | Ca n''t you suggest any?" |
3136 | Can I go?" |
3136 | Can I have them?" |
3136 | Can I raise all those beautiful varieties, each one of which is preferable to the other? |
3136 | Can a husband open his wife''s letters? |
3136 | Can any one deny that this blessed sentiment is extending in modern life? |
3136 | Can any one float in such scenes and be so contentedly idle anywhere in our happy land? |
3136 | Can it be that there is anything of more consequence in life than the great business in hand, which absorbs the vitality and genius of this age? |
3136 | Can it be used more than once? |
3136 | Can not one enjoy a rose without pulling it up by the roots? |
3136 | Can not one see it all from the citadel hill, and by walking down by the horticultural garden and the Roman Catholic cemetery? |
3136 | Can not you believe, Miss Benson, that I had some pride in having my friends see you and know you?" |
3136 | Can the lady act? |
3136 | Can there be any doubt that this lovely woman was orthodox? |
3136 | Can training give one an elegant form, and study command the services of a man milliner? |
3136 | Can we buy it with money quickly, or is it a grace that comes only with long civilization? |
3136 | Can we reform London and Paris and New York, which our own hands have made? |
3136 | Can women stop in such a career, even if they wish to stop? |
3136 | Can you get ready?" |
3136 | Can you have that without the social traditions,"she appealed to the earl,"such as you have in England?" |
3136 | Can you hear me?" |
3136 | Can you mention any class in this country whose interest it is to overturn the government? |
3136 | Can you poke it? |
3136 | Can you say how these things fed the imagination of the boy, who had few books and no contact with the great world? |
3136 | Christmas? |
3136 | Come, Henderson, speak up; what do you get out of it?" |
3136 | Could Baddeck be as attractive as this peaceful valley? |
3136 | Could any boy pass by those ripe berries? |
3136 | Could anything be more commonplace than such a parting? |
3136 | Could he go about in a long cloak and a slouch hat, curl up in doorways out of the blast, and be content in a feeling of his own picturesqueness? |
3136 | Could he help it if after the first hours of his return he felt the restraint of his home, and that the life seemed a little flat? |
3136 | Could he know what misery she was in, the daily witness of her father''s broken condition, of her mother''s uncertain temper? |
3136 | Could he say that he had become very much interested in studying a schoolteacher-- a very charming school- teacher? |
3136 | Could he sit all day on the stone pavement and hold out his chilblained hand for soldi? |
3136 | Could not the infinite possibilities of it fill the hunger of any soul? |
3136 | Could repentance, confession, penitence, wipe away this stain? |
3136 | Could she always be thinking of what they would think at Brandon? |
3136 | Could she be comparing the Londoner with the handsome American who sat by her side at the opera last night? |
3136 | Could she possibly make them her own? |
3136 | Could the girl throw herself away? |
3136 | Could there be any fitter resting- place for that most, weary, and gentle spirit? |
3136 | Could there be any happiness in life in any other course? |
3136 | Could these men have conquered the world? |
3136 | Could this be the Cape May about which hung so many traditions of summer romance? |
3136 | Could this interest any but us-- we who felt the loss because we still loved her? |
3136 | Could we say that life, after all, had not given her what she most desired? |
3136 | Cranks? |
3136 | D.W.]"Why not? |
3136 | DOES REFINEMENT KILL INDIVIDUALITY? |
3136 | Delancy?" |
3136 | Delancy?" |
3136 | Delancy?" |
3136 | Did Alice say so?" |
3136 | Did Carmen resent this? |
3136 | Did God require in His service the atrophy of the affections? |
3136 | Did Henderson believe? |
3136 | Did I love him? |
3136 | Did I make their investments? |
3136 | Did I never get caught? |
3136 | Did I see anything? |
3136 | Did I shirk any duty? |
3136 | Did Jack tell you about Henderson?" |
3136 | Did Mrs. Mavick understand what she was doing? |
3136 | Did Smith see Strachey''s manuscript before he published his Oxford tract, or did Strachey enlarge his own notes from Smith''s description? |
3136 | Did Their Pilgrimage end on these autumn heights? |
3136 | Did he comprehend? |
3136 | Did he distrust even her, as he did everybody else? |
3136 | Did he ever speak of that?" |
3136 | Did he frequent the theatre? |
3136 | Did he loaf in the coffee- houses, and spin the fine thread of his adventures to the idlers and gallants who resorted to them? |
3136 | Did he perhaps see Shakespeare himself at the Globe? |
3136 | Did he regret it? |
3136 | Did it occur to Mr. Froude to ask the man whether he would be contented with a good trade and the Ten Commandments? |
3136 | Did it rebuke the means by which the vast fortune of Henderson was accumulated, that it was defeated of any good use by the fraud of his wife? |
3136 | Did it seem like home at all? |
3136 | Did n''t I always tell you that I want to know? |
3136 | Did n''t I tell you that it is always darkest just before the dawn?" |
3136 | Did n''t I write you reams about my studies in psychology? |
3136 | Did n''t he elevate Pem?" |
3136 | Did n''t they tell you? |
3136 | Did n''t you notice that Redfern has an establishment on the Avenue? |
3136 | Did n''t you see, mother, that he was distrait the moment he espied that girl? |
3136 | Did not Mr. Tupper, that sweet, melodious shepherd of the undisputed, lead about vast flocks of sheep over the satisfying plain of mediocrity? |
3136 | Did not men always make all the money they had an opportunity to make? |
3136 | Did not the city offer her everything that she desired? |
3136 | Did she apologize, as if she had done anything to provoke it? |
3136 | Did she come in contact with any one who had not his price, who was not going or wanting to go in the general current? |
3136 | Did she get any strength, I wonder? |
3136 | Did she love him yet, as in the old happy days? |
3136 | Did she love these people? |
3136 | Did she think of him in surroundings so brilliant? |
3136 | Did she upbraid him for his manner? |
3136 | Did she wonder where I was?" |
3136 | Did she, was she beginning in any degree to return his passion? |
3136 | Did the Concord Grape ever come to more luscious perfection than this year? |
3136 | Did the public overpraise you at first? |
3136 | Did there ever come a moment of reflection as to the nature of this prosperity which was altogether so absorbing and agreeable? |
3136 | Did they not also once prefer the dance to hobbling to the spring, and the taste of ginger to sulphur? |
3136 | Did they not love flowers, and pets, and had they not a passion for children? |
3136 | Did you cut? |
3136 | Did you ever get into a diligence with a growling English- man who had n''t secured the place he wanted? |
3136 | Did you ever see Vanderbilt''s house? |
3136 | Did you ever see a female lobbyist? |
3136 | Did you ever see a woman refurnish a house? |
3136 | Did you ever see an English exquisite at the San Carlo, and hear him cry"Bwavo"? |
3136 | Did you ever see her again? |
3136 | Did you ever see her?" |
3136 | Did you ever see such a lot of cheap millinery? |
3136 | Did you fall in love with a Southern belle? |
3136 | Did you happen to hear where they have gone?" |
3136 | Did you never hear of the leading case of''repairs''of a government vessel here at Kittery? |
3136 | Did you say her eyes were gray? |
3136 | Did you see anything outdoors?" |
3136 | Did you see that wave? |
3136 | Did you sleep? |
3136 | Do n''t we all know we are trying to deceive each other and get the best of each other? |
3136 | Do n''t yer see, she''s a- slummin''?''" |
3136 | Do n''t you find it so, Mr. Henderson? |
3136 | Do n''t you get tired of that?" |
3136 | Do n''t you hate him?" |
3136 | Do n''t you know him? |
3136 | Do n''t you like Atlantic City?" |
3136 | Do n''t you see, I do n''t want to be bothered?" |
3136 | Do n''t you think Mr. Henderson would like a place here?" |
3136 | Do n''t you think it would be a good investment?" |
3136 | Do n''t you think it''s more refined, and, do n''t you know, sort of cultivated, and subdued, and Boston? |
3136 | Do n''t you think it''s nicer not to have any deceptions?" |
3136 | Do n''t you think she is very hospitable, mamma?" |
3136 | Do n''t you think so, McDonald?" |
3136 | Do n''t you think so?" |
3136 | Do n''t you think that a bright, clever woman, especially if she were pretty, would have an advantage with judge and jury?" |
3136 | Do n''t you think that would be a novelty? |
3136 | Do n''t you think the Count of Monte Cristo is the elder brother of Rochester? |
3136 | Do n''t you think there is too much leniency toward crime and criminals, taking the place of justice, in these days? |
3136 | Do n''t you think there ought to be a public official whose duty it is to enforce the law gratis which I can not afford to enforce when I am wronged?" |
3136 | Do n''t you think these novels fairly represent a social condition of unrest and upheaval? |
3136 | Do n''t you think women ought to know life? |
3136 | Do n''t you think, McDonald, it is like Scotland?" |
3136 | Do n''t you think, dear, that we have had enough domestic notoriety for one year?" |
3136 | Do not men do the same? |
3136 | Do people hesitate to change houses any more than they do to change their clothes? |
3136 | Do the young men, to any extent, join in Browning clubs and Shakespeare clubs and Dante clubs? |
3136 | Do they bite?" |
3136 | Do they in concert dig in the encyclopaedias, and write papers about the correlation of forces, and about Savonarola, and about the Three Kings? |
3136 | Do they meet for the study of history, of authors, of literary periods, for reading, and discussing what they read? |
3136 | Do they need continually to justify themselves?" |
3136 | Do they not ape what is most prosperous and successful in American life? |
3136 | Do they want spiritual help?" |
3136 | Do two living streams hesitate when they come together? |
3136 | Do we build houses for ourselves or for others? |
3136 | Do we make great entertainments for our own comfort? |
3136 | Do we not like the books that raise us to the great level of the commonplace, whereon we move with a sense of power? |
3136 | Do we often stop to think what influence, direct or other, the scholar, the man of high culture, has today upon the great mass of our people? |
3136 | Do women ever? |
3136 | Do women never think of anything but mating people who happen to be thrown together? |
3136 | Do you adapt yourself and your surroundings to him, or insist that he shall adapt himself to you? |
3136 | Do you always give some charity to your friends? |
3136 | Do you believe in her education?" |
3136 | Do you expect the millennium to begin in New York? |
3136 | Do you happen to know what Socrates was called? |
3136 | Do you know his wife?" |
3136 | Do you know that the birds and other animals those beggars have been drawing, which we thought were caricatures, are the real thing? |
3136 | Do you know what it is to want what you do n''t want? |
3136 | Do you know what you are talking about?" |
3136 | Do you know, Margaret, that I think you are just a little bit sly?" |
3136 | Do you know, Phil, that I''m getting into the supernatural? |
3136 | Do you know,"she went on,"that I feel a great deal less worldly than I used to?" |
3136 | Do you like him?" |
3136 | Do you like it? |
3136 | Do you mean that one must be more daring, as you call it, in London than in New York?" |
3136 | Do you mean that people do not dare go ahead and do things?" |
3136 | Do you object to such innocent amusement? |
3136 | Do you read French?" |
3136 | Do you remember that ugly brown- stone statue of St. Antonio by the bridge in Sorrento? |
3136 | Do you remember what Mr. Morgan said last winter?" |
3136 | Do you see him often?" |
3136 | Do you think I am queer? |
3136 | Do you think I have time to attend to every poor duck? |
3136 | Do you think I want to banish romance out of the world?" |
3136 | Do you think I''d better offer my novel, when it is done, to Tweedle?" |
3136 | Do you think a cat would lie down before it? |
3136 | Do you think any city lad could have written"Thanatopsis"at eighteen? |
3136 | Do you think any one knows really anything more about the operation in the world of electricity than he does about the operation of the Holy Ghost? |
3136 | Do you think dipping is nice?" |
3136 | Do you think fasting strengthens you to go through your work night and day?" |
3136 | Do you think it was just sentiment?" |
3136 | Do you think that my-- my prospective position would be an objection to her?" |
3136 | Do you think that religion and education are benefited in the long- run by this? |
3136 | Do you think they care anything about Father Damon''s gospel?" |
3136 | Do you think you could live with such a man twenty- four hours, even if he had his crown on?" |
3136 | Do you think you have anything to say about the use of my money, scraped up in forty years in Ingy? |
3136 | Do you think, Jack,"asked Carmen, with a sudden change of manner,"that Mr. Henderson is really the richest man in the United States?" |
3136 | Do you think, Mr. Burnett, that law would pay you?" |
3136 | Do you think, Mr. Henderson, we had better sell?" |
3136 | Do you understand poker, Mrs. Delancy? |
3136 | Do you understand why it is, Mr. Henderson, that one can enjoy the whole day and then be thoroughly dissatisfied with it?" |
3136 | Do you want me to help you any more than I am helping?" |
3136 | Do you want us to make our own clothes and starve the sewing- women? |
3136 | Do you, know if the exercises will open with prayer?" |
3136 | Does Strachey intend to say that Pocahontas was married to an Iniaan named Kocoum? |
3136 | Does anybody do anything well if his heart is not in it?" |
3136 | Does anybody regard it as anything but a sham and a burden? |
3136 | Does anything really take the place of that entire ease and confidence that one has in kin, or the inborn longing for their sympathy and society? |
3136 | Does gardening in a city pay? |
3136 | Does he examine the subject, and try to understand it? |
3136 | Does he paint? |
3136 | Does he read as much as she does? |
3136 | Does he study that bill? |
3136 | Does he take pains to inform himself by reading and conversation with experts upon its probable effect? |
3136 | Does he take portraits? |
3136 | Does it require nowadays, then, no special talent or gift to go on the stage? |
3136 | Does it take the place of duty, of conscience? |
3136 | Does literature pay?" |
3136 | Does n''t it depend?" |
3136 | Does n''t life spare anybody? |
3136 | Does n''t that depend upon whether the reform is large or petty? |
3136 | Does not each of them have to encounter misery enough without this? |
3136 | Does not the great public involuntarily respect the author rather for the sale of his books than for the books themselves? |
3136 | Does not the preacher say that? |
3136 | Does one ever do it entirely? |
3136 | Does our process too much eliminate the rough vigor, courage, stamina of the race? |
3136 | Does she dress for her lover as she dresses to receive her lawyer who has come to inform her that she is living beyond her income? |
3136 | Does she ever lose the instinct of it? |
3136 | Does she know?" |
3136 | Does she think I have no feeling? |
3136 | Does she think I would take from her as a charity what her husband knows is mine by right?" |
3136 | Does the college graduate know how to use his tools? |
3136 | Does the gate of divorce open more frequently from following the one theory than the other? |
3136 | Does the reader think these inferences not warranted by the facts? |
3136 | Does the time ever come when the distinction ceases between his family and hers? |
3136 | Does this seem to you a Lenten performance?" |
3136 | Dost thou desire fortune?'' |
3136 | Eh?" |
3136 | Else why do we take pleasure-- a pleasure so deep that it touches the heart like melancholy-- in the common drama of the opera? |
3136 | Evelyn? |
3136 | Even Father Damon--""Is he at work again? |
3136 | Even Henderson, the great Henderson, did the friends of his youth respect him? |
3136 | Even throw in goodness, a certain amount of altruism, gentleness, warm interest in unfortunate humanity-- is the situation much improved? |
3136 | Even with all her money at command, did she not know that her position was at the price of incessant effort? |
3136 | Even with these concessions, can England keep her great colonies? |
3136 | FASHION IN THE STREETS Was there ever elsewhere such a blue, transparent sky as this here in Munich? |
3136 | Fairchild?" |
3136 | Farquhar?" |
3136 | Fine Swiss wood- carving? |
3136 | Fletcher?" |
3136 | For Jack? |
3136 | For how long? |
3136 | For what does abandonment mean? |
3136 | For what had Mr. Mavick toiled? |
3136 | For what had Mrs. Mavick schemed all these years? |
3136 | For what other purpose are they set apart in elegant leisure? |
3136 | For what? |
3136 | For what?" |
3136 | For what?" |
3136 | For, as Plato says in the Phaedo,"whence come wars and fightings and factions? |
3136 | Forbes?" |
3136 | From Rivington Street?" |
3136 | GHENT AND ANTWERP What can one do in this Belgium but write down names, and let memory recall the past? |
3136 | Go? |
3136 | Granted that this miscellaneous hodge- podge is the cream of current literature, is it profitable to the reader? |
3136 | Granted that woman is the superior being; all the more, what chance is there for man if this sort of thing goes on? |
3136 | Had Evelyn reflected on the mortification that would fall upon her mother if she persisted in her unreasonable attitude? |
3136 | Had any hot fights? |
3136 | Had cohesion and gravitation given out? |
3136 | Had he a new sense to see all this? |
3136 | Had he any better opinion of men and women than her husband had? |
3136 | Had he any family? |
3136 | Had he been over the Gemmi? |
3136 | Had he not some of the beautiful auburn tresses of Cynthia Rudd in his skate, spruce- gum, and wintergreen box at home? |
3136 | Had he slept well? |
3136 | Had he, in fact, a longing to be in the streets where she had walked, among the scenes that had witnessed her beautiful devotion? |
3136 | Had his willingness to take up this work again been because it brought him nearer to her in spirit? |
3136 | Had n''t she been satisfied for almost twenty- four hours? |
3136 | Had not Miss Tavish danced for one of the guilds; and had not Carmen given Father Damon a handsome check in support of his mission? |
3136 | Had not the Hebrew prophets a vision of the punishment by prosperity? |
3136 | Had not women ceased to be romantic and ceased to indulge in vagaries of affection? |
3136 | Had she changed? |
3136 | Had she heard something? |
3136 | Had she not been coolly judging his conduct? |
3136 | Had she not come to know how success even in social life is sometimes attained--the meannesses, the jealousies, the cringing? |
3136 | Had she read the"Swiss Family Robinson"? |
3136 | Had she strength to swim it? |
3136 | Had she? |
3136 | Had that gay society danced itself off into the sea, and left not even a phantom of itself behind? |
3136 | Had the Old World anything to show more positive and uncompromising in all the elements of character than the Englishman? |
3136 | Had the hope that he should see her occasionally influenced him at all in his obedience to Father Monies? |
3136 | Had we not told everybody that we were going to Baddeck? |
3136 | Half an hour passes with only a languid exchange of family feeling, and then:"Pa?" |
3136 | Happiness, tragedy, anguish-- who can tell what is in store for her? |
3136 | Has Irene telegraphed you that she has got over her chill?" |
3136 | Has Miss Lamont said anything about going there?" |
3136 | Has a novelist the right to subject his creations to tortures that he would not dare to inflict upon his friends? |
3136 | Has any other coast town besides Plymouth had the good sense and taste to utilize such an elevation by the water- side as an esplanade? |
3136 | Has either he or the great politician or the great scholar cultivated the real sources of enjoyment? |
3136 | Has he changed? |
3136 | Has he expended or produced capital? |
3136 | Has he fled?" |
3136 | Has it come to that? |
3136 | Has that odious Ault turned up again?" |
3136 | Has the audience been creating a theatre to suit its taste, or have the managers been educating an audience? |
3136 | Has the divorce of literary art from the mimic art of the stage anything to do with this condition? |
3136 | Has uncle come home yet?" |
3136 | Have these questionings anything to do with the increasing Realism of women, and a consequent loss of ideals? |
3136 | Have they not the time? |
3136 | Have we all double natures, and do we simply conform to whatever surrounds us? |
3136 | Have we learned yet the simple art of easy enjoyment? |
3136 | Have women more time? |
3136 | Have you any idea how it got hold of the details?" |
3136 | Have you any idea how much ten millions are, or how much one million is?" |
3136 | Have you any right to enjoy yourself at all until the fag- end of the day, when you are tired and incapable of enjoying yourself? |
3136 | Have you any right to read, especially novels, until you have exhausted the best part of the day in some employment that is called practical? |
3136 | Have you discovered any material for such use?" |
3136 | Have you finished your novel?" |
3136 | Have you had a rise in the office? |
3136 | Have you heard any Street rumor?" |
3136 | Have you seen Evelyn?" |
3136 | Have you seen it?" |
3136 | Have you written to your uncle and to your aunt?" |
3136 | He added,"So you think our society is getting too sensitive and nervous, and inclined to make dangerous mental excursions?" |
3136 | He had a little money he wanted to invest--"''In our mission chapel?'' |
3136 | He had been in the war sixteen months, in Hugh White''s regiment,--reckon you''ve heerd of him? |
3136 | He has twenty- four hours''warning; but what can he do? |
3136 | He is great in his field, but is he leaving the intellectual province to woman? |
3136 | He shrugs his shoulders, raises his hands, and, with a sidewise shake of the head, and a look which says, How can you be so faithless? |
3136 | He spent that summer in the west of England, visiting"Bristol, Exeter, Bastable? |
3136 | Help from Carmen? |
3136 | Henceforth would she be less or more sensitive to the suggestion of love, to the allurements of ambition? |
3136 | Henderson?" |
3136 | Henderson?" |
3136 | Henderson?" |
3136 | Herbert, we can agree in one thing: old memories, reveries, friendships, center about that:--is n''t an open wood- fire good?" |
3136 | Herbert, what do you think women are good for? |
3136 | Here is the Gut of Canso, but where is Baddeck? |
3136 | Honest? |
3136 | Hopeless? |
3136 | Hopper?" |
3136 | How are they preparing to meet socially these young ladies who are cultivating their minds? |
3136 | How are they to take their place in the world unless they know life as men know it?" |
3136 | How are things down here?" |
3136 | How are we going to live when we are all educated, without knowing how to live? |
3136 | How are we to select the few capable men that are to rule all the rest? |
3136 | How can Johnny bring in wood when he is in that defile with Braddock, and the Indians are popping at him from behind every tree? |
3136 | How can a woman, without being misunderstood? |
3136 | How can people permit it? |
3136 | How can there be mint juleps( to go into details) without ice? |
3136 | How can they live in their narrow limits? |
3136 | How can you want it to go on?'' |
3136 | How cast away? |
3136 | How could he be?" |
3136 | How could he? |
3136 | How could it be otherwise than that our interests should diverge? |
3136 | How could it be otherwise, when all the promise of the girl was realized in the bloom and the exquisite susceptibility of the woman? |
3136 | How could it be otherwise? |
3136 | How could she have acted otherwise? |
3136 | How could she reach the high ceiling? |
3136 | How did she look? |
3136 | How did she what? |
3136 | How did the story get out? |
3136 | How do you account for the alleged personal regard for Socrates? |
3136 | How do you treat the stranger? |
3136 | How else can they be judged? |
3136 | How else should it be rated, when a very popular author, by whom Philip sat one day at luncheon, confessed that he never read books? |
3136 | How far is our popular education, which we have now enjoyed for two full generations, responsible for this state of mind? |
3136 | How is it about the war- path and all that? |
3136 | How is it gathered? |
3136 | How is she?" |
3136 | How is the lord?" |
3136 | How long did"The Country Parson"feed an eager world with rhetorical statements of that which it already knew? |
3136 | How long had Carmen waited on the social outskirts; and now she had come into her kingdom, was she anything but a tinsel queen? |
3136 | How long is it since a play has been written and accepted and played which has in it any so- called literary quality or is an addition to literature? |
3136 | How long would it take to fill the hole and drown out the woodchuck? |
3136 | How many New- Yorkers are there in New York? |
3136 | How many ages has it been so? |
3136 | How many are trying to save others-- others except the distant and foreign sinners?" |
3136 | How many hours, how many minutes, does one get of that pure content which is happiness? |
3136 | How many worlds are there, and does one ever, except by birth( in a republic), conquer them all? |
3136 | How much of our virtue do we owe to inherited habits? |
3136 | How much of privilege had been gathered and perpetuated in a century? |
3136 | How much time do we waste in futile experiment? |
3136 | How must the world look to a man in a basket, riding about on his wife''s head? |
3136 | How often do we deliberately weigh such a choice as we would that of another person, testing our inclination by solid reason? |
3136 | How should the department know that there were two places of the same name? |
3136 | How so? |
3136 | How was it possible to frame a message that should be commercial on its face, and yet convey the deepest agony and devotion of the sender''s heart? |
3136 | How was she to know that she had made a mistake, if mistake it was? |
3136 | How was she to know that this hour was a crisis in her life? |
3136 | How was she to tell? |
3136 | How were we to get out with him or without him? |
3136 | How would she receive him? |
3136 | How''ll you swap for that one o''yourn?" |
3136 | How, then, can he be expected to comprehend it when it is depicted to the life in books? |
3136 | I am sure it was no mere curiosity, but a desire to be of service, that led me to approach her and say,"Madam, where are you going?" |
3136 | I came to say good- by, and-- and--""Shall I call my aunt?" |
3136 | I could see it in her eyes, and then she turned red and confused, and at length said:"But would n''t you have rich men do good with their money?" |
3136 | I have seen the most promising paradox come to grief by a simple"Do you think so?" |
3136 | I heard one man say to another just now,''How long do you suppose Henderson will last?'' |
3136 | I hope she did n''t give you a turn?" |
3136 | I kept seeing that Spanish woman whirl around and contort, and-- do you mind my telling you? |
3136 | I lost a hundred thousand yesterday; did I whine about it? |
3136 | I mean, what are you going to do? |
3136 | I s''pose I can go round and look?'' |
3136 | I should like to stop here a week; would n''t you?" |
3136 | I suppose I can think my thoughts?" |
3136 | I suppose the girl is plain, too-- takes after her mother?" |
3136 | I suppose the topic will be Transcendentalism?" |
3136 | I suppose you go there too, being brought up a Congregationalist?" |
3136 | I suppose you have been up Green Mountain?" |
3136 | I thought you did n''t care-- didn''t care to belong to anything?" |
3136 | I wonder how she knew?" |
3136 | I wonder if I should grow worldly, seeing more of it?" |
3136 | I wonder if he belongs to Sotor, King and Co., of New York?" |
3136 | I wonder if in society they go about saying that? |
3136 | I wonder if men are as blind as they seem to be? |
3136 | I wonder if that was the time? |
3136 | I wonder what Jehoiakim did with the mealy- bug on his passion- vine, and if he had any way of removing the scale- bug from his African acacia? |
3136 | I wonder what he''s at?" |
3136 | I wonder what she was like?" |
3136 | I wonder what such people think? |
3136 | IS THERE ANY CONVERSATION Is there any such thing as conversation? |
3136 | If I want to buy anything in the market, have I got to look into every tuppenny interest concerned in it? |
3136 | If I were to lead her away, the question was, Where? |
3136 | If Margaret''s destiny had been united with such a man as John Lyon, what would have been her discernment in such a case as this? |
3136 | If a man present a smiling front to the world under extreme trial, is not that all that can be expected of him? |
3136 | If all the artificial round of calls and cards should tumble down, what valuable thing would be lost out of anybody''s life? |
3136 | If circumstances had altered, was she to blame? |
3136 | If he attempted any explanation, would it not involve the offensive supposition that his social rank was different from hers? |
3136 | If he can not be trusted in the matter of worsted- work, why should he have such distinctive liberty in the most important matter of his life? |
3136 | If he had been conscious of rectitude, would he not have relied upon his simple denial?" |
3136 | If he waited five minutes, who would believe my story of going to sleep and not hearing the drums? |
3136 | If he was coming, why did he not come? |
3136 | If he was not to blame for it, why did n''t he tell her-- why did n''t he explain? |
3136 | If it came, did it give any doubts and raise any of the old questions that used to be discussed at Brandon? |
3136 | If it has not encouraged it, has it done much to correct it? |
3136 | If it was intended to adorn the landscape, why was it ruined by piercing it irregularly with square windows like those of a factory? |
3136 | If it were pride only, how could she overcome it? |
3136 | If one of her dispensary comrades had said it, would she have been so moved? |
3136 | If she had fully realized that it was a step in that direction, would she have penned it with so little regret as she felt? |
3136 | If she was a coquette, what did it matter to him? |
3136 | If sleep did not come that night to her tired head on the pillow, what wonder? |
3136 | If the Casino is then so exclusive, why is it not more used as a rendezvous and lounging- place? |
3136 | If the working- men do not stand by each other, where are they to look for help? |
3136 | If there was a little talk about Jack''s intimacy elsewhere, was there anything uncommon in that? |
3136 | If these men had millions, could they get any more enjoyment out of life? |
3136 | If they traveled farther, were the railway carriages anything but refrigerators tempered by cans of cooling water? |
3136 | If they were rich, what more could they have? |
3136 | If they, in any case, came back, would there be any place for them? |
3136 | If this is true, why is it? |
3136 | If we can not, where is the difficulty? |
3136 | If you do not write a better novel this year, will not the public flout you and jeer you for a pretender? |
3136 | If you long to go to a place where you will have peace, why should you let what you call your reason stand in the way? |
3136 | In a word, if the world were actually all civilized, would n''t it be too weak even to ripen? |
3136 | In all this time why did he make no sign? |
3136 | In fact, what sort of a hand would the Three Kings suggest to them? |
3136 | In what other part of the world can that achievement in comfort and convenience be approached? |
3136 | In what rank? |
3136 | In what respect? |
3136 | In your experience of society, what is it that it pursues and desires? |
3136 | Indeed, what chance was there to win her at all? |
3136 | Instead, he took refuge in the usual commonplace, and asked,"Would n''t you like to have been a man?" |
3136 | Into what unknown dangers were we going? |
3136 | Invented? |
3136 | Is Christmas swelling away? |
3136 | Is a man happier, or improved in character, by the woful tale of a world''s distress and apprehension that greets him every morning at breakfast? |
3136 | Is affection as whimsically, as blindly distributed as wealth? |
3136 | Is any one deceived by it? |
3136 | Is anybody beginning to feel it a burden, this sweet festival of charity and good- will, and to look forward to it with apprehension? |
3136 | Is anything the matter?" |
3136 | Is anything wanting to this picture of the degradation of woman? |
3136 | Is education giving us this? |
3136 | Is he any better, doctor? |
3136 | Is he becoming anything but a newspaper- made person? |
3136 | Is he ever anything but a sort of tolerated, criticised, or admired alien? |
3136 | Is he ill? |
3136 | Is he late? |
3136 | Is he out?''" |
3136 | Is he well?" |
3136 | Is his mind getting to be like the newspaper? |
3136 | Is it a New York story?" |
3136 | Is it a hard lot, that of the fishermen and the mariners of the Adriatic? |
3136 | Is it a means of anything but superficial culture and fragmentary information? |
3136 | Is it a smile of anticipated, triumph, or of contempt? |
3136 | Is it a sufficient account of the genius of Cervantes and Scott that they combined in their romances a representation of the higher and lower classes? |
3136 | Is it because it is an excuse for doing what she longs to do? |
3136 | Is it better than anything else? |
3136 | Is it extravagant to speak of a tendency to make the author merely an adjunct of the publishing house? |
3136 | Is it full?" |
3136 | Is it going to rain? |
3136 | Is it in fact till we come to mediaeval times, and the chivalric age, that women are set up as being more incomprehensible than men? |
3136 | Is it in her nature to be? |
3136 | Is it invigorating, even restful? |
3136 | Is it made of India- rubber? |
3136 | Is it not agreeable to have sweet charity silver shod? |
3136 | Is it not as easy to make nothing out of what never yet existed as out of what has ceased to exist? |
3136 | Is it not necessary to have an authentic list of pasteboard acquaintances to invite to the receptions? |
3136 | Is it not necessary to keep up what is called society? |
3136 | Is it not of more importance how they represented them? |
3136 | Is it not time to look the facts squarely in the face, and conform to them in our efforts for social and political amelioration? |
3136 | Is it not time we tried, radically, a scientific, a disciplinary, a really humanitarian method? |
3136 | Is it only a legend? |
3136 | Is it only thoughtlessness? |
3136 | Is it possible that this pirate of the Street had a bit of sentiment at the bottom of his heart? |
3136 | Is it possible that we can have too many ruins? |
3136 | Is it so blue? |
3136 | Is it the Homeric story of Nausicaa? |
3136 | Is it the Princess of Paphlagonia?" |
3136 | Is it the novel?" |
3136 | Is it the smile of the daughter of Herodias, or the invitation of a''ghazeeyeh''? |
3136 | Is it things of the mind or things of the senses? |
3136 | Is it to affect me like a strain of music? |
3136 | Is it to produce the effect of a picture? |
3136 | Is it true that cultivation, what we call refinement, kills individuality? |
3136 | Is it true that in certain spiritual states, say of isolation or intense nervous alertness, we can see them as they can see each other? |
3136 | Is it true that the mental process in one sex is intuitive, and in the other logical, with every link necessary and visible? |
3136 | Is it well for woman to whistle? |
3136 | Is it worth while to repeat even its outlines? |
3136 | Is it"low"to dwell upon these things of the senses, when one is on a tour in search of the picturesque? |
3136 | Is it, then, such a discerner of right and wrong? |
3136 | Is its condition any better? |
3136 | Is n''t it Spanish?" |
3136 | Is n''t it beautiful everywhere? |
3136 | Is n''t it better that money, however acquired, should be used for a good purpose than a bad one?" |
3136 | Is n''t it indeed the golden era of letters? |
3136 | Is n''t it queer that the further we go into science the deeper we go into mystery? |
3136 | Is n''t it the highest charity to give them work? |
3136 | Is n''t it true, Mr. Burnett, that you must have a human element to make any country interesting?" |
3136 | Is n''t that a pretty story?" |
3136 | Is n''t the feeling of inequality intensified? |
3136 | Is not eternal vigilance the price of position? |
3136 | Is not life real and terrible enough, he asked himself, but that brides must cast this experience also into their honeymoon? |
3136 | Is not that something? |
3136 | Is not the popular liking for him somewhat independent of his writings? |
3136 | Is not this book pleasing because it is commonplace? |
3136 | Is not this the ideal of a watering- place life? |
3136 | Is not this, O brothers and sisters, an evil under the sun, this dinner as it is apt to be conducted? |
3136 | Is she pretty?" |
3136 | Is she sagging towards Realism or rising towards Idealism? |
3136 | Is she well this summer?" |
3136 | Is she well?" |
3136 | Is that a modern idea?" |
3136 | Is that ill- natured?" |
3136 | Is that the essence of Calvinism? |
3136 | Is the Atlantic shore the only coast where beauty may lounge and spread its net of enchantment? |
3136 | Is the New England man any better able to bear or deal with his extraordinary climate by the daily knowledge of the weather all over the globe? |
3136 | Is the book a window, through which I am to see life? |
3136 | Is the feminine nature any more difficult to understand than the masculine nature? |
3136 | Is the feminization of the world a desirable thing for a vigorous future? |
3136 | Is the oak less strong and tough because the mosses and weather- stains stick in all manner of grotesque sketches along its bark? |
3136 | Is the present condition of the stage a degeneration, as some say, or is it a natural evolution of an art independent of literature? |
3136 | Is the rage for this flower typical of this fast and flaring age? |
3136 | Is the time approaching when we shall want to get somebody to play it for us, like base- ball? |
3136 | Is there a barbaric force left in the world that we have been daintily trying to cover and apologize for and refine into gentle agreeableness? |
3136 | Is there a particular moment when we choose our path in life, when we take the right or the left? |
3136 | Is there any being quite so happy, quite so stupid, as a lover? |
3136 | Is there any difference in kind between the country worldliness and the city worldliness? |
3136 | Is there any law that a wrong must right a wrong? |
3136 | Is there any region or circumstance of life that the poet did not forecast and provide for? |
3136 | Is there any truth in it? |
3136 | Is there any way to tell a good book from a bad one? |
3136 | Is there anybody else here I know?" |
3136 | Is there anything I can do for you?" |
3136 | Is there anything in the State, or public opinion, or anywhere, that will protect your interests against clever swindling?" |
3136 | Is there no charm in social life-- no self- sacrifice, devotion, courage to stem materialistic conditions, and live above them? |
3136 | Is there no manliness left? |
3136 | Is there not something supernatural in such a love itself? |
3136 | Is there nothing outside of that envied circle which you make so brilliant? |
3136 | Is there nothing stimulating in the conflict of mind with mind? |
3136 | Is there nothing, then, in the exchange of ideas? |
3136 | Is there such a thing as a vacation in religion? |
3136 | Is this a divine gift? |
3136 | Is this a hopeless world? |
3136 | Is this a selfish spirit? |
3136 | Is this an accident, or is it a necessity of the refinement that we insist on calling civilization? |
3136 | Is this an exaggeration? |
3136 | Is this an intangible matter? |
3136 | Is this an old sermon? |
3136 | Is this philosopher contented with what life has brought him? |
3136 | Is this the brigand of whom I have read, and is he luring me to his haunt? |
3136 | Is your compact, graceful, orderly society liable to be monotonous in its gay repetition of the same thing week after week? |
3136 | It has been a terrible campaign; but where is the indemnity? |
3136 | It is quite English, is it not? |
3136 | It is right odd, is n''t it? |
3136 | It may be continued, together with word- learning, until the children are able to say( is it reading?) |
3136 | It may be that this treatment has excited the sympathy of the world, but is it legitimate? |
3136 | It said,"Why on earth does n''t that boy come home? |
3136 | It''s rather nice for a fellow, Mrs. Henderson, to have a lot of women keeping him straight, is n''t it?" |
3136 | Job had the right idea in his mind when he asked,"Is there any taste in the white of an egg?" |
3136 | Just a little more, would he have? |
3136 | King?" |
3136 | LITERATURE AND THE STAGE Is the divorce of Literature and the Stage complete, or is it still only partial? |
3136 | Let it be common, and what distinction will there be in it? |
3136 | Like to dance? |
3136 | Lord Montague stared at him as if to say,"Who the deuce are you?" |
3136 | Love and moonlight, and the soft lapse of the waves and singing? |
3136 | Love you not me?'' |
3136 | Lucky for me, was n''t it? |
3136 | Lyon?" |
3136 | Lyon?" |
3136 | Lyon?" |
3136 | Lyon?" |
3136 | Lyon?" |
3136 | Lyon?" |
3136 | Lyon?" |
3136 | Lyon?" |
3136 | Lyon?" |
3136 | Lyon?" |
3136 | Ma?" |
3136 | Major, do you happen to know a cheap lodging- house that is respectable?" |
3136 | Mamma, do n''t you think it would be only civil to ask Mr. Lyon to a quiet dinner before he goes?" |
3136 | Mandeville, why do n''t you get up a"centenary"of Socrates, and put up his statue in the Central Park? |
3136 | Marriage? |
3136 | Married? |
3136 | Mavick?" |
3136 | May I ask what corps you belong to?'' |
3136 | McDonald, what is society for?" |
3136 | Meantime, where is the agricultural fair and cattle- show? |
3136 | Mebbe you''re used to fording? |
3136 | Meigs?" |
3136 | Merely that she may become a sort of second- rate man?" |
3136 | Might he fire at a mark with an air- gun that makes no noise? |
3136 | Moral ideas? |
3136 | Morgan?" |
3136 | Mr. Henderson did not care to extend the conversation in this direction, and he asked, abruptly,"Are you finding New York agreeable, Miss Debree?" |
3136 | Mr. Lyon tried to adopt her tone, and added,"Would you like to see me an American citizen?" |
3136 | Mr. Mavick at length broke the silence with:"Did you have a good time, child?" |
3136 | Mr. Van Dusen wants to know why Maud S. is like a salamander?" |
3136 | Must I subscribe to all the magazines and weekly papers which offer premiums of the best vines? |
3136 | Must it always go on by spurts and relapses, alternate civilization and barbarism, and the barbarism being necessary to keep us employed and growing? |
3136 | Must the Congressman read it? |
3136 | Must we always have the old slow- coach merchants and planters thrown up to us? |
3136 | Must we be always either vapid or serious? |
3136 | Must we not all live our lives? |
3136 | Must you shut yourself up because you found you could n''t trust everybody? |
3136 | My dear Charmian, who wrote the successful novel of last year, do you not already repent your rash act? |
3136 | My lord, why not say to her what you feel, and make the offer you intend? |
3136 | NINTH STUDY I Can you have a backlog in July? |
3136 | Nay, what would the world be without her? |
3136 | No flaw about that, is there?" |
3136 | No? |
3136 | Nothing could be more unpleasant than a northeast wind? |
3136 | Notoriety? |
3136 | Now there''s Henderson--""What have you got against Henderson?" |
3136 | Now what is the object in life of this great, growing class that has money and leisure, what does it chiefly care for? |
3136 | Now, Evelyn, have n''t you any curiosity to see what this world we are talking about is like?" |
3136 | Now, did the summer Bostonians make this coast refined, or did this coast refine the Bostonians who summer here?" |
3136 | Now, is our present system deterrent? |
3136 | Now, what is the relation of our intellectual development to this physical improvement? |
3136 | Now, whoever is sick down there? |
3136 | Of the sympathy of Alice he was sure, but why inflict his selfish grief on her tender heart? |
3136 | Of what did they talk? |
3136 | Ohio is more like France, I suppose?" |
3136 | On the 17th he was brought ashore to answer the charge of Jehu[ John?] |
3136 | On the contrary, did she see in him what John felt himself to be? |
3136 | Once spent, does the world to each succeeding experimenter in it become old and stale? |
3136 | One day she surprised Miss McDonald by asking her if she did n''t think that rich people were the only ones not free to do as they pleased? |
3136 | One might venture into the infernal regions to rescue such a woman; but why take her there? |
3136 | One of the first questions asked by any camp- fire is,"Did ye ever see Horace?" |
3136 | One of them, to whom she had partially explained the situation, ended by asking her,"Are you going to contest the will?" |
3136 | Only, is n''t it odd, this personal dropping back into an old situation? |
3136 | Only-- well, how is that?" |
3136 | Opalescent?" |
3136 | Or a criminal? |
3136 | Or did she think that circumstances and not her own choice were responsible for her state of feeling? |
3136 | Or is it, in fact, more artistic to ignore all these, and paint only the feeble and the repulsive in our social state? |
3136 | Or is the interest of this class, for the most part, with some noble exceptions, rather in things grossly material, in what is called pleasure? |
3136 | Or is there some mistake about our ideal of civilization? |
3136 | Or the Washington manner? |
3136 | Or up this or that mountain? |
3136 | Or was he composing one of those important love- letters of state to Madame Blank which have since delighted the lovers of literature? |
3136 | Or was it merely that he had confidence in the winning character of his own qualities and was biding his time? |
3136 | Or will you make it what humanity has passionately longed for? |
3136 | Or, in other words, what effect is popular education having upon the general intellectual habit and taste? |
3136 | Or, worse than that even, that one loses his taste by over- cultivation? |
3136 | Ought the president to take the money, knowing how it was made?" |
3136 | PARIS AND LONDON SURFACE CONTRASTS OF PARIS AND LONDON I wonder if it is the Channel? |
3136 | Parson, wo n''t you please punch that fire, and give us more blaze? |
3136 | Perhaps Mrs. Cortlandt fancied his eyes were following a particular figure, for she responded,"And how did you like her?" |
3136 | Perhaps some of my youthful illusions have vanished, but should I have been happier if I had indulged them? |
3136 | Perhaps the man would like eleven commandments? |
3136 | Perhaps you are going to the Neighborhood Guild?" |
3136 | Perhaps you could n''t tell whether Miss Eschelle was a bull or a bear in this case?" |
3136 | Perhaps you saw some allusion to it in the newspapers?" |
3136 | Perhaps, however, you are fighting the devil?" |
3136 | Permit me,"and he raised her hand to his lips;"I salute-- is it not"( turning to Mrs. Mavick)--"ze princess of ze house?" |
3136 | Philip''s?" |
3136 | Philip, why do n''t you take the heroine of the Mavick ball? |
3136 | Ponsonby?" |
3136 | Presently Mr. King said to his friend, Mrs. Cortlandt,"Who is that clever- looking, graceful girl over there?" |
3136 | Presently he asked:"Do you think, Mrs. Delancy, that Dr. Leigh has any sympathy with the higher life, with spiritual things? |
3136 | Probably when the Great Assize is held one of the questions asked will be,"Did you, in America, ever write stories for children?" |
3136 | Query, Why should this have such a different effect from Porter''s? |
3136 | Recognition? |
3136 | Rumor is a big thing, especially in a panic, eh? |
3136 | SHALL WOMEN PROPOSE? |
3136 | SIXTEENTH WEEK I do not hold myself bound to answer the question, Does gardening pay? |
3136 | Sage?" |
3136 | Shall I be so unnatural, as not to give bread to the hungrie, or uncharitable, as not to cover the naked?" |
3136 | Shall I carry your wreath?" |
3136 | Shall I describe the passage of the Tete Noire? |
3136 | Shall I tell Mrs. Van Cortlandt?" |
3136 | Shall I try all the kinds of grapes, and all the sorts of pears? |
3136 | Shall he not be excused for showing a little irritation at home when things go badly? |
3136 | Shall she surprise, or shock, or only please? |
3136 | Shall vulgarity be left just vulgar, and have no apotheosis and glorification? |
3136 | Shall we go on and brave a wetting, or ignominiously retreat? |
3136 | Shall we go to Capri? |
3136 | Shall we have, then, no refined characters on the stage? |
3136 | Shall we take a boat and sail over there, and so destroy forever another island of the imagination? |
3136 | She did n''t like it much, and asked,''What is anything for?'' |
3136 | She is such a hand to set things going, do n''t you know? |
3136 | She must know, she did know-- what was the use of writing? |
3136 | She told Jack afterwards that"Mrs. Henderson cares no more for the poor of New York than she does for--""Henderson?" |
3136 | She was watching him shrewdly, and saw the flush in his face as he hurriedly asked,"Did you ever see her?" |
3136 | She, on her part, was thinking, what could Miss Eschelle mean by saying that she was afraid of him? |
3136 | Should he risk the loss of her by timidity? |
3136 | Should he tell her that he did n''t mind if her parents were what Mrs. Bartlett Glow called"impossible"? |
3136 | Should one take a cynical view of mankind because he perceives this great power of the commonplace? |
3136 | Should she nestle under the great ledge, or sit on a projecting rock with her figure against the sky? |
3136 | Should they always end well in the novel? |
3136 | Should we dare return to the great Republic, and own that we had not been into the Blue Grotto? |
3136 | Should we find any inn on Cape Breton like this one? |
3136 | Since Mr. Henderson''s death--""What difference did Henderson''s death make over here?" |
3136 | Sit and dream in the Rent Tower under the lindens that grow in its top? |
3136 | Slavery? |
3136 | So American?" |
3136 | So he stood up and raised his hand, and said to the schoolma''am,"Please, ma''am, I''ve got the stomach- ache; may I go home?" |
3136 | So these are the little places where they sleep? |
3136 | So this impossible thing, this miracle, was explained? |
3136 | Some day I will make a hit, and everybody will ask,''Who is this daring, clever Olin Brad?'' |
3136 | Some one from the office, from her lawyer? |
3136 | Some one will ask, Why not? |
3136 | Somebody ought to get up before the dew is off( why do n''t the dew stay on till after a reasonable breakfast?) |
3136 | Soon, you think? |
3136 | Speaking generally of the mass of business men-- and the mass are business men in this country-- have they any habit of reading books? |
3136 | Sudden, was n''t it? |
3136 | Suppose I should give you that sort of sympathy in the projects you set your heart on?" |
3136 | Suppose it was left to you?" |
3136 | Suppose the proposal were made to women to exchange being mysterious for the ballot? |
3136 | Suppose we can not get on, and are forced to stay here? |
3136 | Suppose, Mrs. Fletcher, a wrecker should steal your money that way?" |
3136 | THE DIRECTOIRE GOWN THE MYSTERY OF THE SEX THE CLOTHES OF FICTION THE BROAD A CHEWING GUM WOMEN IN CONGRESS SHALL WOMEN PROPOSE? |
3136 | THE DIRECTOIRE GOWN THE MYSTERY OF THE SEX THE CLOTHES OF FICTION THE BROAD A CHEWING GUM WOMEN IN CONGRESS SHALL WOMEN PROPOSE? |
3136 | THE INDETERMINATE SENTENCE-- WHAT SHALL BE DONE WITH THE CRIMINAL CLASS? |
3136 | THE LOSS IN CIVILIZATION Have we yet hit upon the right idea of civilization? |
3136 | THE RELATION OF LITERATURE TO LIFE"EQUALITY"WHAT IS YOUR CULTURE TO ME? |
3136 | Talk? |
3136 | Taverns? |
3136 | Telegraph? |
3136 | Tell us, gentle driver, is there no other way? |
3136 | That her little girl? |
3136 | That is to say, are not barbarism and vast regions of uncultivated land a necessity of healthful life on this globe? |
3136 | That is, less logical, more whimsical, more uncertain in their mental processes? |
3136 | That it was the same as dragging a mother away from her child? |
3136 | That''s not the question; but what are women who write so large a proportion of the current stories bringing into literature? |
3136 | The Atlantic shore and Europe? |
3136 | The Directoire Gown The Mystery Of The Sex The Clothes Of Fiction The Broad A Chewing Gum Women In Congress Shall Women Propose? |
3136 | The Laocoon? |
3136 | The Relation Of Literature To Life"Equality"What Is Your Culture To Me? |
3136 | The Schuyler Blunts?" |
3136 | The arms moving? |
3136 | The citizen asks his neighbor,"Did you hear the frogs last night?" |
3136 | The common victual of the others was the entrails of horses and"ulgries"( goats?) |
3136 | The conscientious publisher asks two questions: Is the book good? |
3136 | The daughter said,"Mother, who was Washington?" |
3136 | The editorial comments frequently are able enough, but is it worth while keeping an expensive mill going to grind chaff? |
3136 | The expedition went up the river to a village called Patowomek, and thence rowed up a little River Quiyough( Acquia Creek?) |
3136 | The experiments fail, the experiments succeed-- at any rate, they end-- and what remains for transmission, for the sustenance of succeeding peoples? |
3136 | The fowls of the air have peas; but what has man? |
3136 | The girl opens her eyes with a startled look, and says, feebly:"Do you think he will come?" |
3136 | The greater must include the less; but how if the less leaks out? |
3136 | The lesson went on:"Who was Alcibiades? |
3136 | The man bustled away and found his late paper, and thrust it through the grating, with the inquiry,"Can you read?" |
3136 | The mystery is not their continuance, but how did they get a start? |
3136 | The next day the newspaper asks:"Where''s Blank? |
3136 | The next generation will be pretty much what they choose to make it; and what are they doing for the elevation of young men? |
3136 | The only information we obtained about it was from its porter at the station, who replied to the question,"Is it the best?" |
3136 | The only question is, is it true to human nature? |
3136 | The other ladies looked significantly at them, and one of them said,"Do n''t you think there''s something in it? |
3136 | The oval makes a pretty effect; but what are those signs between the letters?" |
3136 | The price? |
3136 | The publisher without a conscience asks only one question: Will the book sell? |
3136 | The question is,"Can not one easier change his creed than his pew?" |
3136 | The sea had the blue of Nice; why must we always go to the Mediterranean for an aqua marina, for poetic lines, for delicate shades? |
3136 | The social oyster being opened, there appears to be two shells and only one oyster; who shall have it? |
3136 | The stage can be amusing, but can it show life as it is without the aid of idealizing literary art? |
3136 | The subject is a delicate one, and should not be confused with the broader one, what is the purpose of the higher education? |
3136 | The writer was coming to Brandon; business, to be sure, was the excuse; but why should it have been necessary to announce to her a business visit? |
3136 | The"incitements"gave him courage, so that he exclaims:"Shall I be of so untoward a disposition, as to refuse to lead the blind into the right way? |
3136 | Then I shall step into the club a minute, and--""Be in at lunch? |
3136 | Then I suppose she has money?" |
3136 | Then he said, still as if reflecting:"Is n''t it queer? |
3136 | Then you think he would rather sell than buy?" |
3136 | Then you think the red man is a born gentleman of the highest breeding? |
3136 | Then, turning his eyes for a moment, and putting out his left hand to her, he said,"Well, what is it, dear?" |
3136 | There was a chorus of voices:"Where are your blackberries?" |
3136 | There were only two questions, and they are at the bottom of all creative literature-- could he see them, could he make others see them? |
3136 | There will probably be some orator for years and years to come, at every Fourth of July, who will go on asking, Where is Thebes? |
3136 | They are the influence that keeps life elevated and sweet-- are they not? |
3136 | They could float now, but where were they going? |
3136 | They have clubs, to be sure, but of what sort? |
3136 | They invent illegal modes of expenditure; and what do they or their wives care about the law? |
3136 | They might reject him-- no doubt he was a wholly unequal match for the heiress-- but could they, to the very end, be cruel to her? |
3136 | They must needs carry looking- glasses with them;"and good reason,"says Stubbes, savagely,"for else how could they see the devil in them? |
3136 | This insures a wider distribution, but what is its effect upon the quality of literature? |
3136 | This is not much about the Alps? |
3136 | This is true, but is it the last analysis of the subject? |
3136 | This was all as true before the Mavick failure as after; but, before, what was the use of effort? |
3136 | Though you know now that the embarrassing question that everybody has to answer is,''Have you been to Alaska?'' |
3136 | Through this delicious weather why should the steamboat hasten, in order to discharge its passengers into the sweeping unrest of continental travel? |
3136 | To be admired, to be deferred to-- was there any harm in that? |
3136 | To be sure, it was pleasant coming home into an atmosphere of sincerity, of worship-- was it not? |
3136 | To give her up? |
3136 | To go away? |
3136 | To go with them, not to care, to accept Jack''s idle, good- natured, easy philosophy of life and conduct, would not that have insured a peaceful life? |
3136 | To the cool and imperturbable Mavick, who was as strong and sinewy as he was cool? |
3136 | To the gallant Major? |
3136 | To what end? |
3136 | To what purpose? |
3136 | Turn her adrift after eighteen-- what is it, seventeen?--years of faithful service?" |
3136 | WHAT IS YOUR CULTURE TO ME? |
3136 | Was Berlin much out of the way in going from Vienna to Paris? |
3136 | Was I slow? |
3136 | Was Irene really enraptured by the dear little barnacles and the exquisite sea- weeds? |
3136 | Was Jack happy in the whirl he was in? |
3136 | Was Margaret content? |
3136 | Was Mr. Henderson the sort of man to whom such a woman would be attracted? |
3136 | Was Mrs. Mavick peevish and unreasonable? |
3136 | Was Scott, then, only a reporter? |
3136 | Was Smith an indulger in that new medicine for all ills, tobacco? |
3136 | Was ever any enjoyment so keen as that with which a boy rushes out of the schoolhouse door for the ten minutes of recess? |
3136 | Was ever produced so insipid a result? |
3136 | Was everybody grasping and selfish? |
3136 | Was everybody worldly and shallow? |
3136 | Was he a type or was he a freak? |
3136 | Was he about to make a fool of himself? |
3136 | Was he alone? |
3136 | Was he always to preach against sin, to strive to extirpate it, and yet always to make it easy for the sinner? |
3136 | Was he any more charitable than Uncle Jerry? |
3136 | Was he born on the wheels? |
3136 | Was he just a narrow- minded, bigoted priest? |
3136 | Was he really hers,"truly"? |
3136 | Was he still angry with her? |
3136 | Was her action punished by the same unscrupulous tactics of the Street that originally made the fortune? |
3136 | Was her husband capable of such conduct? |
3136 | Was his figure less distinct as the days went by? |
3136 | Was it a sin, she said, to be happy and prosperous? |
3136 | Was it all true? |
3136 | Was it altogether so melancholy as it might seem? |
3136 | Was it an earthquake, or another fire? |
3136 | Was it any better in divine Florence than on the chill Riviera? |
3136 | Was it any new thing for good men to do this? |
3136 | Was it because the atmosphere was more natural and genuine? |
3136 | Was it because they were children''s voices, and innocent? |
3136 | Was it gone, that life?--gone or going out of her heart? |
3136 | Was it hers? |
3136 | Was it not Madame de Sevigne who said she had loved several different women for several different qualities? |
3136 | Was it not a wife''s duty to stand by her husband? |
3136 | Was it not almost angelic there at the moment? |
3136 | Was it not an evening spent in a cottage amid the rocks, close by the water, in the company of charming people? |
3136 | Was it not an occasion that emphasized our republican democracy? |
3136 | Was it not enough to come down to breakfast and sit at the low, broad windows and watch the shifting panorama? |
3136 | Was it not enough to talk to each other, to see each other? |
3136 | Was it not natural that she should take Henderson''s view? |
3136 | Was it not proud of him? |
3136 | Was it not, then, a pretense? |
3136 | Was it only a matter of grouping and setting, or were these people different from all others the tourists had seen? |
3136 | Was it possible she thought he could go away without seeing her? |
3136 | Was it simply shame that kept him away, or had he ceased to love her? |
3136 | Was it that Philip was too irresolute to cut either law or literature, and go in, single- minded, for a fortune of some kind, and a place? |
3136 | Was it that he began to feel that he had established a personal relation with Evelyn because she had seen him? |
3136 | Was it the music or the poetic idea that held her? |
3136 | Was it the resurrection of the body? |
3136 | Was it the"Great Consummation"of the year 18-? |
3136 | Was it too sudden? |
3136 | Was it with pleasure? |
3136 | Was it written before or after the publication of Smith''s"Map and Description"at Oxford in 1612? |
3136 | Was it? |
3136 | Was life beginning, then, or ending? |
3136 | Was life like that? |
3136 | Was n''t it an impudent speech? |
3136 | Was n''t it strange?" |
3136 | Was n''t it the use that people made of money, after all, that was the real test? |
3136 | Was n''t the thrifty George Washington always adding to his plantations, and squeezing all he could out of his land and his slaves? |
3136 | Was n''t to be in deep trouble to be sorry? |
3136 | Was not all the village talking about the reputation he had conferred on it? |
3136 | Was not everything going on as usual in the Delancy house and in the little world of which it was a part? |
3136 | Was not his object, probably, to get a reputation which his whole life belied, and to get it by obliterating the distinction between right and wrong?" |
3136 | Was not the love of beauty and of goodness the same thing? |
3136 | Was not the world beautiful? |
3136 | Was she a fool in this, as so many women are about their separate property, or was she cheated? |
3136 | Was she a little less dependent on him, in this wide horizon, than in New York? |
3136 | Was she a person to run about with idle gossip? |
3136 | Was she absorbed in the life of the season? |
3136 | Was she any more serious about the german than about the mission school? |
3136 | Was she changing-- was she changed? |
3136 | Was she content in that great world in which she moved? |
3136 | Was she content? |
3136 | Was she his? |
3136 | Was she ill, perhaps? |
3136 | Was she on the shore of such a sea, and was this new world into which she was drifting only a dream? |
3136 | Was she thinking of her own marriage? |
3136 | Was she very sorry? |
3136 | Was she very worldly? |
3136 | Was she well? |
3136 | Was she, as a woman, any more likely to be reconciled to her fate when her mirror told her, with pitiless reflection, that she was an old woman? |
3136 | Was she, perhaps, unhappy and persecuted? |
3136 | Was she, then, such a monster of ingratitude? |
3136 | Was that thunder? |
3136 | Was the Central system or the Pennsylvania system contemplating another raid? |
3136 | Was the air oppressive? |
3136 | Was the mind in a vapid condition after an evening of it? |
3136 | Was there a place in Europe from Spain to Greece, where the American could once be warm--really warm without effort-- in or out of doors? |
3136 | Was there anything illegitimate in taking advantage of such an opportunity? |
3136 | Was there anything, then, that money could not do? |
3136 | Was there ever a greater exhibition of power, while it lasted? |
3136 | Was there ever a young man who could see any reasons against the possession of the woman he loved? |
3136 | Was there ever any love worth the name that could be controlled by calculations of expediency? |
3136 | Was there ever, he said, in the past, any figure more clearly cut and freshly minted than the Yankee? |
3136 | Was there no envy? |
3136 | Was there no way to break the barrier that the little brown girl had thrown around herself? |
3136 | Was there nothing said about the airs of a country school- ma''am, the aplomb of an adventurer? |
3136 | Was there nothing, nobody, that commercialism did not think for sale and to be trafficked in? |
3136 | Was there one who would have let her go back to her waiting- fawn? |
3136 | Was this a comforting hour, do you think, for Margaret in the cathedral? |
3136 | Was this a delusion? |
3136 | Was this also a part of the restlessness of American life? |
3136 | Was this an ideal married life? |
3136 | Was this expression on her mobile face merely that of amusement at seeing a country- boy? |
3136 | Was this intruding human element always to cross the purpose of his spiritual life? |
3136 | Was this little note a severance of her present from her old life? |
3136 | Was this the enthusiasm of humanity, of which he heard so much? |
3136 | Was this the railway wrecker, the insurance manipulator, the familiar of Uncle Jerry, the king of the lobby, the pride and the bugaboo of Wall Street? |
3136 | Was this the sort of woman whom Mr. Henderson fancied? |
3136 | Was this then the summit of her ambition? |
3136 | Was this, then, the meaning of her restlessness, of her charitable activities, of her unconfessed dreams of some career? |
3136 | We can afford it-- the Countess Jeremiah, eh?" |
3136 | We could n''t carry him out; could we find our own way out to get assistance? |
3136 | We knew that if we traveled southwestward far enough we must strike that trail, but how far? |
3136 | Well, Selina?" |
3136 | Well, from the time you were a little boy, did I ever give you but one sort of advice? |
3136 | Well, granting the distinction, why are both apt to be unpleasant people to live with? |
3136 | Well, why not? |
3136 | Were all women, then, alike in parrying and fencing? |
3136 | Were our thirty- six hours of sleepless staging to terminate in a night of misery and a Sunday of discomfort? |
3136 | Were the longing and the hunger it arouses ever satisfied with anything, money for instance, any more than with fame? |
3136 | Were the neighboring buildings all tumbling in upon us, or had a bomb fallen into the neighboring crockery- store? |
3136 | Were there no contractors who amassed fortunes then? |
3136 | Were there no criticisms afterwards as the guests rolled home in their carriages, surfeited and exhausted? |
3136 | Were these empty omnibuses and carriages that discharged ghostly passengers? |
3136 | Were these men anything but specimens in a Museum of Failures? |
3136 | Were these throngs the guests that were to come, or those that had been herein other seasons? |
3136 | Were these, then, shadows, or was he a spirit himself? |
3136 | Were they all patriots in the Revolutionary War? |
3136 | Were they all such agreeable people whom he had seen there in March, or has one girl the power to throw a charm over a whole watering- place? |
3136 | Were things any better because they were on a small scale? |
3136 | What are the negro traditions about it? |
3136 | What are the relations of culture to common life, of the scholar to the day- laborer? |
3136 | What are the symptoms of decay in England? |
3136 | What are the young men of the villages and the cities doing meantime? |
3136 | What are we intellectually and morally? |
3136 | What are you doing?" |
3136 | What are you going to do with such people? |
3136 | What are you going to do with the money?" |
3136 | What are you going to do, Phil, what are you going to be?" |
3136 | What became of his fallacious hope of waiting when events were driving on at this rate? |
3136 | What can I do?" |
3136 | What can be done with those who are described as"East- Londoners"? |
3136 | What can compare with the vase of yon alabaster fountain filled with crystal water? |
3136 | What can have happened? |
3136 | What can one do in such a spot, but swim in the lake, lie on the shore, and watch the passing steamers and the changing light on the mountains? |
3136 | What can one do with this new favorite? |
3136 | What can we do, what ought we to do, for his own good and for our peace and national welfare? |
3136 | What can you do?" |
3136 | What can you expect in a country where one knows not today what the weather will be tomorrow? |
3136 | What can you expect when the people are socialists and their leaders agnostics?" |
3136 | What chance had he in such a social current? |
3136 | What chance have I, anyway? |
3136 | What church does she go to?" |
3136 | What communion had supplied the place of our artificial breeding to this man? |
3136 | What could Jenks mean by intimating that she was plain? |
3136 | What could be the spring of her incessant devotion? |
3136 | What could he reply? |
3136 | What could he say? |
3136 | What could one woman do against the accepted demoralizations of her social life? |
3136 | What could she see in him? |
3136 | What could you do with such a husband? |
3136 | What devil was tempting him to break his vows and forsake his faith? |
3136 | What did Evelyn say?" |
3136 | What did it matter? |
3136 | What did she care at the moment what Carmen thought of Henderson? |
3136 | What did she say of my uncle and aunts?" |
3136 | What did she say?" |
3136 | What did we see? |
3136 | What did you do?" |
3136 | What did you make me come here for? |
3136 | What do they do it for?" |
3136 | What do we mean by the criminal class? |
3136 | What do you mean by worse?" |
3136 | What do you propose?" |
3136 | What do you say in the Street-- freeze? |
3136 | What do you want me to do? |
3136 | What does Henderson say?" |
3136 | What does Mr. Henderson say?" |
3136 | What does he get out of his occupation? |
3136 | What does it leave on land? |
3136 | What does the Parson say? |
3136 | What does the doctor say?" |
3136 | What for? |
3136 | What for?" |
3136 | What good would it do her to go to the mission now? |
3136 | What had happened? |
3136 | What had he done? |
3136 | What had he to offer her? |
3136 | What had she done that anybody should criticise her? |
3136 | What had she done? |
3136 | What had the land question to do with the salvation of man? |
3136 | What harm? |
3136 | What has the farmer to do with the"Rose Garden of Saadi"? |
3136 | What has this to do with New England? |
3136 | What have I done? |
3136 | What have the Christians of this city done?" |
3136 | What heroine of romance are you running after now?" |
3136 | What hold had this woman on him? |
3136 | What if she met him with a royal forgiveness, as if he were a returned prodigal? |
3136 | What induced the beardless young man to make this"investment"in"three- eighths"--who can tell? |
3136 | What is a garden for? |
3136 | What is a man? |
3136 | What is a woman to do? |
3136 | What is gained, he asks, by leaving cards with all these people and receiving their cards? |
3136 | What is he that he should absorb the sweets of the universe, that he should hold all the claims of humanity second to the perfecting of himself? |
3136 | What is her name?" |
3136 | What is history? |
3136 | What is it that an intelligent public should care to hear of and talk about? |
3136 | What is news? |
3136 | What is revolution? |
3136 | What is scholarship? |
3136 | What is that? |
3136 | What is the Bible? |
3136 | What is the Boston philosophy? |
3136 | What is the essential thing, without which even the glory of a nation passes into shame, and the vastness of empire becomes a mockery? |
3136 | What is the good of sending a man to Washington at the rate of a hundred miles an hour if we are uncertain of his electric state? |
3136 | What is the good of young men of leisure if they do n''t do anything for the country? |
3136 | What is the ideal of their country which these young men cherish? |
3136 | What is the justice of damning a meritorious novelist by comparing him with Dickens, and smothering him with thoughtless and good- natured eulogy? |
3136 | What is the matter, doctor?" |
3136 | What is the object of this noble tower? |
3136 | What is the price of these rooms? |
3136 | What is the relation of culture to it? |
3136 | What is the relation of the scholar to the present phase of this movement? |
3136 | What is the use of this powder? |
3136 | What is there illogical in these positions from the premise given? |
3136 | What is there in this sound that suggests the tenderness of spring, the despair of a summer night, the desolateness of young love? |
3136 | What is this London, the most civilized city ever known? |
3136 | What is this Low Pressure itself,--it? |
3136 | What is this New England? |
3136 | What is this drama and spectacle, that has been put forth as history, but a cover for petty intrigue, and deceit, and selfishness, and cruelty? |
3136 | What is this love, this divine passion, of which we hear so much? |
3136 | What is this naturalization, however, but a sort of parable of human life? |
3136 | What is this progress, and where does it come from? |
3136 | What is this quality of truthfulness which we all recognize when it exists in fiction? |
3136 | What is wrong about it?" |
3136 | What is your objection to Newport?" |
3136 | What makes a path of this sort so perilous to a woman''s heart? |
3136 | What makes you beat about the bush so? |
3136 | What man ever does, in fact? |
3136 | What more can a man do with it? |
3136 | What more pleasing spectacle than this in a world that has such a bad name for want and misery? |
3136 | What must London be? |
3136 | What nonsense do people so situated usually talk? |
3136 | What of the''modus vivendi''of the two races occupying the same soil? |
3136 | What place? |
3136 | What pleasure, I wonder, had she in her life, and what pleasure have any of these hard- favored women in this doleful region? |
3136 | What poet could now sing of the"awful chrysanthemum of dawn"? |
3136 | What relation had he to it? |
3136 | What right had she to sit there and mourn-- as she knew her aunt did-- and sigh over her career? |
3136 | What right had they to sit in judgment on her? |
3136 | What right have we to laugh? |
3136 | What sarcasm is coming now? |
3136 | What satisfaction has a man in it if he really gets to the end of his power to improve it? |
3136 | What secret influence had he over her that made her submit to such a foolish surrender? |
3136 | What secret power has a woman to make a common phrase so glow with her very self? |
3136 | What shall it be? |
3136 | What shall the art that is older than the pyramids do for these kneeling Christians? |
3136 | What shall we do? |
3136 | What should I do? |
3136 | What should he say? |
3136 | What should she do? |
3136 | What should we do in that lonesome solitude if the guide became disabled? |
3136 | What sort of a book would a member make out of"Chips from my Workshop"? |
3136 | What sort of a girl had this treatment during seventeen years produced? |
3136 | What sort of career was it that needed the aid of Carmen and the serpentine dancer? |
3136 | What sort of haven were we to reach after our heroic( with the reader''s permission) week of travel? |
3136 | What sort of leading- strings are these that I am getting into? |
3136 | What then? |
3136 | What then? |
3136 | What then? |
3136 | What this should be would depend upon the length of life; and how should this be arrived at? |
3136 | What was English politics, what was Chisholm House, what was everybody in England compared to this noble girl? |
3136 | What was Mr. Morgan always hitting at? |
3136 | What was he in thought better than she? |
3136 | What was he noted for?" |
3136 | What was it that we saw in Washington on his knees at Valley Forge, or blazing with wrath at the cowardice on Monmouth? |
3136 | What was she, one woman with an aching heart, in the midst of it all? |
3136 | What was that you were telling about Charles Lamb, the other day, Mandeville? |
3136 | What was that? |
3136 | What was that? |
3136 | What was the flavor she missed in it all? |
3136 | What was the good of money if it did not bring social position? |
3136 | What was there in this to touch a woman of fashion, sitting there crying in her corner? |
3136 | What was there in this trivial incident that so magnified it in Philip''s mind, day after day? |
3136 | What was there to confide? |
3136 | What was there to say? |
3136 | What was this nitroglycerine, that exploded so dreadfully? |
3136 | What was this that had come to him to so shake his life? |
3136 | What was wanting to make this charming camaraderie perfect? |
3136 | What weapons had this heiress of a great fortune with which to defend herself? |
3136 | What went ye out for to see? |
3136 | What were all these paltry considerations to his love? |
3136 | What were all these to a woman''s soul? |
3136 | What were they saying? |
3136 | What were this couple talking about as they promenaded, basking in each other''s presence? |
3136 | What were you doing all day, papa?" |
3136 | What will you get out of it? |
3136 | What will you have? |
3136 | What woman would not feel a little thrill of triumph? |
3136 | What would be the condition of social life if women ceased to be anxious in this regard, and let loose the reins in an easy- going indifference? |
3136 | What would be the effect upon courtship if both the men and the women approached each other as wooers? |
3136 | What would be the effect upon the female character and disposition of a possible, though not probable, refusal, or of several refusals? |
3136 | What would the poor do without the rich? |
3136 | What would they have her do? |
3136 | What would you have? |
3136 | What would you say to this case? |
3136 | What would you see if you looked into a steam boiler? |
3136 | What you have?" |
3136 | What''s her name?" |
3136 | What''s in you, Forbes, to shy so at a good woman?" |
3136 | What''s the use of all this social nonsense? |
3136 | What''s the use of objecting? |
3136 | What, Murad Ault?" |
3136 | What, in fact, is the condition in those households where the wives do not care? |
3136 | What, in short, do the schools contribute to the creation of a taste for good literature? |
3136 | What, indeed, would one say of this little group on the hotel piazza, making its comments upon the excursionists? |
3136 | What, no, not going?" |
3136 | What, then, does the common school usually do for literary taste? |
3136 | What, then, is this thing we call conscience? |
3136 | What? |
3136 | What?" |
3136 | When Henderson came back to his box Carmen did not look up, but she said, indifferently:"What, so soon? |
3136 | When a woman makes her tedious rounds, why is she always relieved to find people not in? |
3136 | When did Alexander flourish?" |
3136 | When did he flourish?" |
3136 | When did he flourish?" |
3136 | When did he flourish?" |
3136 | When did you come? |
3136 | When he gets older, he wishes he had replied,"Ai n''t you ashamed to make either an old man or a little boy do such hard grinding work?" |
3136 | When he had finished, he said:"Well, my young friend, how did you get hold of this?" |
3136 | When it is completely subdued, what kind of weather have you? |
3136 | When one enters on the path of worldliness is there any resting- place? |
3136 | When shall we have it?" |
3136 | When she can count upon her ten fingers the people she wants to see, why should she pretend to want to see the others? |
3136 | When the two were seated in the carriage, Mrs. Mavick turned to Lord Montague:"Well?" |
3136 | When we were asked, Will you have some of the fruit? |
3136 | When will you begin?" |
3136 | When you men assume all the direction, what else is left to us? |
3136 | Whence did it come? |
3136 | Where are all"sass"and Lorraine? |
3136 | Where do these days come from in January? |
3136 | Where else do you go?" |
3136 | Where has he gone? |
3136 | Where is the office?" |
3136 | Where is the primeval, heroic force that made the joy of living in the rough old uncivilized days? |
3136 | Where now are your tree- toads, your young love, your early season? |
3136 | Where shall I go?" |
3136 | Where shall he draw the line? |
3136 | Where shall we looke to finde a Julius Caesar whose atchievments shine as cleare in his owne Commentaries, as they did in the field? |
3136 | Where was the cave? |
3136 | Where will he or she find it? |
3136 | Where will they spend their evenings? |
3136 | Where would a boy be likely to go the first thing? |
3136 | Where''s the rascal of an heir?" |
3136 | Which is different from the manner acquired by those who live a great deal in American hotels? |
3136 | Which one do you want me to make my enemy by telling him or her that the other is n''t good enough?" |
3136 | Which way? |
3136 | While you are about it-- I s''pose you''ll print it anyway?" |
3136 | Whither had it gone? |
3136 | Whither? |
3136 | Who are the kings of Wall Street, and who build the palaces up- town? |
3136 | Who are these young women to associate with? |
3136 | Who can define this charm, this difference? |
3136 | Who can do justice to a moonlight night in such a climate and such a place? |
3136 | Who can guess the thoughts of a woman at such a time? |
3136 | Who can say that other weeds, which we despise, may not be the favorite food of some remote people or tribe? |
3136 | Who can tell how much this notion of mystery in the sex stands in the way of its free advancement all along the line? |
3136 | Who could have dreamed that she understood?" |
3136 | Who did he make laws for?" |
3136 | Who does live on it, till he gets beyond the necessity of depending on it? |
3136 | Who does? |
3136 | Who has been able truly to read the thoughts of a shrinking maiden in the passing days of her youth and beauty? |
3136 | Who has fallen out, who are the new recruits, who are engaged, who will marry, who have separated, who has lost his money? |
3136 | Who has gone?" |
3136 | Who is the judge? |
3136 | Who is to decide what degree of intelligence shall fit a man for a share in the government? |
3136 | Who knows what is in a woman? |
3136 | Who publishes it?" |
3136 | Who said anything about fish?" |
3136 | Who says that a woman can not be as cruel as a man? |
3136 | Who says that the rich and the prosperous and the successful do not need pity? |
3136 | Who says that the world is not full of romance and pathos and regret as we go our daily way in it? |
3136 | Who was Grand, who was Well- Beloved, who was Desired, who was the Idol of the French, who was worthy to be called a King of the Citizens? |
3136 | Who was Pericles? |
3136 | Who was Solon?" |
3136 | Who was another great lawgiver?" |
3136 | Who was she?" |
3136 | Who was there?" |
3136 | Who were the Mavicks, anyway? |
3136 | Who would not be rich if he could? |
3136 | Who, for instance, could be sure that he would grow young gracefully? |
3136 | Whose wife is this?--and that pretty one near her, whose daughter is she?" |
3136 | Why add the pursuit of happiness to our other inalienable worries? |
3136 | Why are there no women architects? |
3136 | Why attempt it? |
3136 | Why attempt to civilize the race within our doors, while there are so many distant and alien races to whom we ought to turn our civilizing attention? |
3136 | Why can not we get a law regulating the profession which is of most vital interest to all of us, excluding ignorance and quackery? |
3136 | Why could n''t he have seen? |
3136 | Why could not the former"materialize"as well as the latter? |
3136 | Why did I not stick to teaching in that woman''s college? |
3136 | Why did he doubt now? |
3136 | Why did he say so much about Mrs. Mavick and the governess, and so little about the girl? |
3136 | Why did n''t the baroness go back to England, if she was so tired of Switzerland? |
3136 | Why did n''t the people who were sleepy go to bed? |
3136 | Why did n''t you tell me you were the child of such hopes? |
3136 | Why did you go to the hotel?" |
3136 | Why do n''t people look where they put their money?" |
3136 | Why do n''t you buy it for Henderson? |
3136 | Why do n''t you charter a Fifth Avenue stage and take your friends on a voyage to the Battery? |
3136 | Why do n''t you cut a hole in it, Miss Lamont, and let the air in?" |
3136 | Why do n''t you join Miss Tavish in this charity? |
3136 | Why do n''t you make it uncomfortable for her?" |
3136 | Why do they ask, what is the use of your learning and your art? |
3136 | Why do they depend so much upon the newspapers, when they all despise the newspapers? |
3136 | Why do we respect some vegetables and despise others, when all of them come to an equal honor or ignominy on the table? |
3136 | Why do women wear the present fascinating gowns, in which the lithe figure is suggested in all its womanly dignity? |
3136 | Why do you class reformers and philanthropists together? |
3136 | Why do you never come to see me but you bring me something? |
3136 | Why do you object to my going to see this dance?" |
3136 | Why does the lady intending suicide always throw on a waterproof when she steals out of the house to drown herself? |
3136 | Why encounter these difficulties? |
3136 | Why go on? |
3136 | Why had he been so curt with her when she went to him for help this afternoon? |
3136 | Why had he written to her? |
3136 | Why had she secretly been a little relieved from restraint when her Brandon visit ended in the spring? |
3136 | Why have n''t you been at the mission lately?" |
3136 | Why is England permitted to stretch along down our coast in this straggling and inquisitive manner? |
3136 | Why is his country recognized? |
3136 | Why is it that almost all philanthropists and reformers are disagreeable? |
3136 | Why is it that the heart hardens in prosperity? |
3136 | Why is it that to do the right thing is often to make the mistake of a life? |
3136 | Why not be a monk, and lie in the sun? |
3136 | Why not be content with his little success and buckle down to his profession? |
3136 | Why not follow his inclination, the dream of his boyhood? |
3136 | Why not go back to Moses? |
3136 | Why not in literature? |
3136 | Why not let things drift as they are? |
3136 | Why not put the whole system of criminal jurisprudence and procedure for the suppression of crime upon a sensible and scientific basis? |
3136 | Why not settle down upon the formula that to be platitudinous is to be happy? |
3136 | Why not stay here and be happy? |
3136 | Why not try it? |
3136 | Why not? |
3136 | Why not? |
3136 | Why not? |
3136 | Why not? |
3136 | Why not?" |
3136 | Why protract the story of how Margaret was lost to us? |
3136 | Why should England care to keep India? |
3136 | Why should I come back to Dresden? |
3136 | Why should anybody be obliged to feed roving strangers? |
3136 | Why should artificial conventions defeat it? |
3136 | Why should he conceal a discovery which has transformed the world to him, a secret which explains all the mysteries of nature and human- ity? |
3136 | Why should he go away from that bright blaze, and the company that sat in its radiance, to the cold and solitude of his chamber? |
3136 | Why should he not be? |
3136 | Why should it not have been Carmen? |
3136 | Why should n''t beauty have a reputation? |
3136 | Why should n''t friends help each other? |
3136 | Why should n''t he write? |
3136 | Why should n''t he, she reflected, make money? |
3136 | Why should n''t men cheat at cards? |
3136 | Why should n''t she conform and float, and not mind? |
3136 | Why should n''t she live her life, and not be hampered everlastingly by comparisons? |
3136 | Why should n''t there be color on the exterior, gold and painting, like the Fugger palaces in Augsburg, only on a great scale? |
3136 | Why should nature be in a melting mood? |
3136 | Why should not women propose? |
3136 | Why should one be debarred the privilege of pitching his crude ideas into a conversation where they may have a chance of being precipitated? |
3136 | Why should one inquire in such a paradise if things do run smoothly? |
3136 | Why should she be so disturbed? |
3136 | Why should she not enjoy it? |
3136 | Why should she sacrifice herself, if he were willing to brave the opinion of the world for her sake? |
3136 | Why should she? |
3136 | Why should she? |
3136 | Why should the beggar to whom you toss a silver dollar from your carriage feel a little grudge against you? |
3136 | Why should the royal night be wasted in slumber? |
3136 | Why should the solid hill give way at this place, and swallow up a tree? |
3136 | Why should the unscientific traveler have a thing of this kind thrown in his way? |
3136 | Why should they be at a disadvantage in an affair which concerns the happiness of the whole life? |
3136 | Why should they not have some of those wandering and joyous fancies which solace my hours?" |
3136 | Why should this childish singing raise these contrasts, and put her at odds so with her own life? |
3136 | Why should we be? |
3136 | Why should we tolerate any longer a professional criminal class? |
3136 | Why so?" |
3136 | Why so?" |
3136 | Why struggle with these things in literature and in life? |
3136 | Why travel, then? |
3136 | Why was he waiting so long? |
3136 | Why was it not a higher life to enter into the common lot, and suffer, if need be, in the struggle to purify and ennoble all? |
3136 | Why was it that she had felt a little relief when her last Brandon visit was at an end, a certain freedom in Lenox and a greater freedom in Newport? |
3136 | Why was it that this peace of nature should bring up her image, and that they should seem in harmony? |
3136 | Why was n''t Thackeray ever inspired to create a noble woman? |
3136 | Why was not Edith his confidante? |
3136 | Why will people go so far to put themselves to such inconvenience? |
3136 | Why, Stanhope, you do n''t think of going there also?" |
3136 | Why, after a heavy shower, and in the midst of it, do such multitudes of toads, especially little ones, hop about on the gravel- walks? |
3136 | Why, as an illustration, are toads so plenty after a thunder- shower? |
3136 | Why, girls do, do n''t they? |
3136 | Why, then, was he reserved with her upon the absorbing interest of his life? |
3136 | Why, then, we ask, is she constituted a woman at all? |
3136 | Why?" |
3136 | Why?" |
3136 | Why?" |
3136 | Will Halifax rise up in judgment against us? |
3136 | Will culture aid a minister in a"protracted meeting"? |
3136 | Will not a few days''planting and scratching in the"open"yield potatoes and rye? |
3136 | Will not the wise novelist seek to encounter the least intellectual resistance? |
3136 | Will not the young women by- and- by find themselves in a lonesome place, cultivated away beyond their natural comrades? |
3136 | Will she press a chrysanthemum, and keep it till the faint perfume reminds her of the sweetest moment of her life? |
3136 | Will the ability to read Chaucer assist a shop- keeper? |
3136 | Will the politician add to the"sweetness and light"of his lovely career if he can read the"Battle of the Frogs and the Mice"in the original? |
3136 | Will the public next season wear its hose dotted or striped? |
3136 | Will woman ever learn to throw a stone? |
3136 | Will you get them?" |
3136 | Will you repeat the old experiment of a material success and a moral and spiritual failure? |
3136 | Will you take me to the spring? |
3136 | Will you tell me, Mr. Burnett, what nonsense you have got into your head?" |
3136 | Will you try it?" |
3136 | Will you?" |
3136 | Will you?" |
3136 | With this center of untruthfulness, what must the life in the family be? |
3136 | Without the necessity of putting forth this energy, a survival of the original force in man, how long would our civilization last? |
3136 | Wo n''t it seem rather good to get out and see your wife and family again?" |
3136 | Wo n''t you believe me? |
3136 | Wo n''t you look out for Mr. Delancy in this deal?" |
3136 | Would Evelyn be strong enough to stem it and to wait also? |
3136 | Would I like to go into the palace? |
3136 | Would Margaret not have felt it, if she also had not been growing hard, and accustomed to regard the world in his unbelieving way? |
3136 | Would a stronger pirate arise in time to despoil him, and so act as the Nemesis of all violation of the law of honest relations between men? |
3136 | Would he be in any condition to travel in the morning? |
3136 | Would he be more likely to win her by obeying the advice of Celia, or by trusting to Evelyn''s inexperienced discernment? |
3136 | Would he cease to love her for what she had done-- for what she must do? |
3136 | Would he exchange the sweetness of that for the fleeting reputation of the most brilliant lawyer? |
3136 | Would he love her if she were as unworldly as she once was? |
3136 | Would her heart be hardened or softened by the experience? |
3136 | Would her own sex be considerate, and give her a fair field if they saw she was paying attention to a young man, or an old one? |
3136 | Would it be asking too much to see her apartments? |
3136 | Would it help matters to be personally anxious and miserable? |
3136 | Would it never put out its lights, and cease its uproar, and leave me to my reflections? |
3136 | Would it not be possible for Dr. Leigh to draw from the fund on her own checks independent of him? |
3136 | Would it not render that sporadic shyness of which we have spoken epidemic? |
3136 | Would n''t it be natural, after our misfortune? |
3136 | Would not the lover be spared time and pain if he knew, as the novelist knows, whether the young lady is dressing for a rejection or an acceptance? |
3136 | Would not the one suffer because he could not see the ocean, and the other by reason of the revengeful state of his mind? |
3136 | Would our old friend survive the night? |
3136 | Would people grow young together even as harmoniously as they grow old together? |
3136 | Would she become embittered and desperate, and act as foolishly as men often do? |
3136 | Would she care for him or the career? |
3136 | Would she have admitted this? |
3136 | Would the hotel be like that at Plaster Cove? |
3136 | Would the public be injured? |
3136 | Would they do it? |
3136 | Would you advise me to make an enemy of Mr. Mavick, knowing all that he does know about Mr. Henderson''s affairs?" |
3136 | Would you have an art- gallery here, and high- priced New York and Paris shops lining the way? |
3136 | Would you like to marry, perhaps, a Greek statue? |
3136 | Would you mind my saying that Mr. Meigs is a very presentable man?" |
3136 | Would you put an American bank president in the Retreat who should so decorate his banking- house? |
3136 | Would you put that in charge of men?" |
3136 | Would you rather be that than to write?" |
3136 | Would you remove the odium of prison? |
3136 | Wounded? |
3136 | XIX Why should not Philip trust the future? |
3136 | XVII Shall we never have done with this carping at people who succeed? |
3136 | XX Did Miss McDonald tell Evelyn of her meeting with Philip in Central Park? |
3136 | XXVI Is justice done in this world only by a succession of injustices? |
3136 | Yes, highly educated? |
3136 | Yet how much superior is our comedy of to- day? |
3136 | You are not offended?" |
3136 | You believe? |
3136 | You can do without your grip? |
3136 | You can see all that as well elsewhere? |
3136 | You did n''t really see a bear?" |
3136 | You dined first?" |
3136 | You do n''t dance? |
3136 | You found the people hospitable?" |
3136 | You know Mavick?" |
3136 | You know Paris?" |
3136 | You know what an old bachelor is who never has had anybody to shake him out of his contemplation of his family?" |
3136 | You mean life seems a little thin, as the critics say?" |
3136 | You must have noticed that she likes to be accurate?" |
3136 | You must work for a living anyway; and why, now, should you unsettle your minds? |
3136 | You prefer it?" |
3136 | You presume upon my invitation to this house, in an underhand way, to-- What right have you?" |
3136 | You remember, Evelyn, how fascinating the Arizona desert was? |
3136 | You see her?" |
3136 | You see that little island yonder? |
3136 | You see that old beau there, the one smiling and bending towards her as he walks with the belle of Macon? |
3136 | You see that old lady in the corner? |
3136 | You see those under the trees yonder? |
3136 | You see what I mean? |
3136 | You studied philology in Germany? |
3136 | You take the idea?" |
3136 | You think Providence is expelled out of New England? |
3136 | You think so? |
3136 | You think this is a mood? |
3136 | You thought I never saw anything? |
3136 | You were with her at Bar Harbor, and I suppose she never mentioned to you that she was coming here?" |
3136 | You will have a private car, well stocked, a photographer will go along, and I think-- don''t you? |
3136 | You will not care to see any one who treated your mother in this way? |
3136 | You wo n''t mind it in such an old woman?" |
3136 | You''ve seen Coquelin? |
3136 | and Will it sell? |
3136 | and are they devoting themselves to the elevation of the social tone, or to the improvement of our literature? |
3136 | and human emotion, affection, love, were they alien to the Divine intention? |
3136 | and if the water had any connection with the lake, two hundred feet below and at some distance away, why did n''t the water run out? |
3136 | and if they have, why should they spend it in this Sisyphus task? |
3136 | and is not dressing an art? |
3136 | and what, on the other hand, was the good of social position if you could not use it to get money? |
3136 | and"Did I look as well as anybody?" |
3136 | and"What is the Origin of Inequality among Men, and is it Authorized by Natural Law?" |
3136 | and, if he is here, where is the Herbert that I knew? |
3136 | are you sure of that?'' |
3136 | asked he,"and from what place do you come?" |
3136 | bond on a road that has always paid its interest promptly, for a four and a half on a system that is manipulated nobody knows how? |
3136 | cried Evelyn;"and to practice?" |
3136 | cried Mrs. Mavick, looking with amazement at her daughter,"do n''t you understand that our life is all ruined?" |
3136 | did ever a man escape himself in a retreat? |
3136 | do n''t you think they are interested in each other?" |
3136 | do you see that Paris dress? |
3136 | fifteen? |
3136 | five? |
3136 | had he public esteem? |
3136 | have you a good room? |
3136 | how many moods in a quarter of an hour, and which is the characteristic one? |
3136 | in Lincoln entering Richmond with bowed head and infinite sorrow and yearning in his heart? |
3136 | inquired Jack;"all the four facades different?" |
3136 | is Cape Breton an island?'' |
3136 | is such vanity at the bottom of even a reasonable ambition? |
3136 | no inward consciousness of an undying personality?" |
3136 | or yield so abundantly? |
3136 | reconcile this state of things with not being married and being a Presbyterian? |
3136 | said he, good humoredly;''how can Campbell mistake the matter so much? |
3136 | shall I set a price upon the tender asparagus or the crisp lettuce, which made the sweet spring a reality? |
3136 | she asked, after a moment, turning to Margaret? |
3136 | to leave us?" |
3136 | twelve?" |
3136 | was he cradled in a Pullman? |
3136 | what have I done?" |
3136 | what was there in her to attract him? |
3136 | what would become of his life if he lost the only woman in the world? |
3136 | when we have learned it shall we not want to emigrate, as so many of the Italians do? |
3136 | whence but from the body and the lusts of the body? |
3136 | where is Margaret?" |
3136 | who knows a woman''s heart? |
3136 | why did n''t the company send it? |
3136 | will you send me back?" |
3136 | with whom are they to hold high converse? |
3136 | you here?" |