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 |
---|---|
21528 | And the murdered man,slowly pronounced the magistrate,"was the betrothed husband of Miss Comyn?" |
21528 | Gives_ tó_ the moon the silv''ry foam, which breaks( Could it give the foam_ from_ the moon?) |
21528 | How so, marm? |
21528 | Is Captain Steel a rash man? |
21528 | Is he going to take me? |
21528 | No, sir,says the first mate;"what d''ye mean?" |
21528 | Now,says the leftenant,"d''ye think ye''d weather that there point two hours after this, if a gale come on from the nor''west, sir?" |
21528 | Oh,says the impertinent little devil,"but you''re only one of the common sailors, ai n''t you?" |
21528 | Sailor,says she to me, as we got under the quarter,"that there tall mast is the main- bowsprit, ai n''t it? |
21528 | Sir,says he,"do ye notice how we''ve risen the land within the last hour and a half?" |
21528 | Sir,says the Company''s man,"if I did n''t know what''s what, d''ye think I''d larn it off a gentleman as is so confounded green? |
21528 | Split me, you little beggar? |
21528 | Thank you,says she;"but, I beg your pardon, would you be kind enough for to open the winder, and look out if you see Edward? |
21528 | Well, mates,said one,"what was the up- shot of it, if the yarn''s been overhauled already? |
21528 | Well, sir,I says,"but do n''t you think the skipper will smoke your weather- roll, sir, at sea, as you did Bill Pikes an''me, you know, sir?" |
21528 | Well, well, mates,said Jack, endeavoring to conceal his flattered, feelings,"what is it to be, though?" |
21528 | Well,says the first mate,"I daresay we shouldn''t-- but what o''that?" |
21528 | What boots continual glare and strife? 21528 What is the matter, brither?" |
21528 | What was it, mate? |
21528 | What''s all this? |
21528 | Where''s your huniform, then? |
21528 | Which is the young gentleman, marm? |
21528 | Why Bob,says he,"did ye think me so green as not to know a seaman when I saw him? |
21528 | Why did you go yourself then? |
21528 | Why, master,I says,"what ud you give them mariners you speaks on, now?" |
21528 | Why,says he,"you confounded long- shore picked- up son of a green- grocer, what_ are_ you after?" |
21528 | You''re a sailor? |
21528 | And were they, were they sea- sick? |
21528 | As soon as he saw us, out the Quaker steps, and says he to Bill, in a sleepy sort of a v''ice,"Friend, thou''rt a waterman, I b''lieve?" |
21528 | By liner or steamer? |
21528 | D''ye think Old Jack answers to any other hail nor the Queen''s? |
21528 | D''ye want a boat, master?" |
21528 | God bless you, my ain dawtie, what''s a''this?" |
21528 | How did they get into the Alleghanies? |
21528 | In the main cabin or the steerage? |
21528 | Life- boats can not save their_ burning property_, and why impair their own interests for the saving a few hundred lives now and then? |
21528 | Now,"says she,"I''m sore against it-- couldn''t you say some''at to turn his mind?" |
21528 | Oh, green bud smile on me awhile, Oh, young bird, let my stay-- What joy have we, old leaf, in thee? |
21528 | Says he,"''Do ye know, Sar Chawls, is the hoshun reely green at the line--_green_ ye know, Sar Chawls,_ reely_ green?'' |
21528 | The leftenant turns over this here log to me, and, says he,"I''ll follow her to the world''s end, if need be, Bob, and cheat the old villain?" |
21528 | Thither, then, the magistrate, attended only by Mr. Comyn, proceeded; and who, think ye, found they there? |
21528 | What are the pyramids to a line of steamships? |
21528 | What d''ye think I hears him say to old Yallowchops an hour agone?" |
21528 | What would you do yourself now, supposin''the case you put a little ago?" |
21528 | Whence and how came the ruin? |
21528 | and that other is the gallant bowling you call it, do n''t you?" |
21528 | and with this he looks into his papers; and says Bill,"Well, sir, I do n''t know any myself-- do you, Bob?" |
21528 | said Jack, smiling,"what yarn, mates? |
21528 | said the man- o''-war''s- man,"are ye goin''to leave us in the lurch with a_ short yarn_?" |
21528 | said the men near the windlass, as soon as Old Jack came forward,"give us a yarn, will ye?" |
21528 | says Bill, sulky enough,"who''s the Green Hand? |
21528 | says I, lookin''back into the room--"Is it him with the cigar and the red skull- cap?" |
21528 | says I;"did ye ever see a reefer in a wherry, or sitting out''o the starn- sheets? |
21528 | says Missus Collins to me that night, before I went off,"d''ye think Edward''s tired of that ere horridsome sea yet?" |
21528 | says the mate,"d''ye think we''ve room to stow all this lumber? |
36131 | ''Do you think so?'' 36131 ''Ha, ha!--and what can she do?'' |
36131 | ''Madame,''said I to the Duchess,''since you deign to remind us of your deathless talent, may I venture to ask you to sing once more?'' 36131 ''Or to saw boards?'' |
36131 | ''Or tools?'' 36131 ''That is to say, I suppose, you will force them to do so by law?'' |
36131 | ''Very likely; but what did she make my poor sister- in- law, the queen, suffer? 36131 Ah well, Alexis,"continued the Czar,"if these two manors are hardly worth thanks, why should I wait for you to consent to the proposed union?" |
36131 | Ah-- well, well; where the devil is Nero? |
36131 | And do you know to whom he granted the domain? |
36131 | And the rank, the condition of the parties? |
36131 | And what motive,he at last said,"induces you to reject this gift?" |
36131 | And when you return from your relations, you will call on me? 36131 And whither?" |
36131 | And who is this person? |
36131 | And why does your companion stand in the Rue Saint- Dominique? |
36131 | And why? |
36131 | But do you know how the Czar would regard such pleasantry? 36131 But if it is his own fault-- if he has been imprudent?" |
36131 | But the Count,said d''Harcourt,"is he forgotten?" |
36131 | But,said Taddeo,"what is the danger of which you spoke just now?" |
36131 | By G-- d, there''s a country for you,said he;"can property be safe for a moment in such a country? |
36131 | Can we have been overheard? |
36131 | Did I tell you, or did I not,said Dick,"that I would not have these horrid disreputable clubs of yours playing just before my lodge gates?" |
36131 | Digby, old fellow, can you lend me £ 100? |
36131 | Do you know her handwriting? |
36131 | Do you not wish me to go with you? |
36131 | Do you say so? |
36131 | Does the nation take a nap to- night? |
36131 | Handsome elevation-- classical, I take it-- eh? |
36131 | Hartley and Simpson you say? |
36131 | Her name? |
36131 | How so? |
36131 | Is it permitted me to take with me my daughter? |
36131 | Is there any one with him? |
36131 | It is he, is it not? |
36131 | Leave you? |
36131 | May I ask,he said, in a dry cold tone, after he had recovered himself a little,"May I ask what my daughter can have to do with this affair?" |
36131 | May not that proceed from an attempt to disguise her hand? |
36131 | Might I presume to inquire the name of Monsieur your grandfather? |
36131 | Might it not be better for you,asked Vernon,"to express your doubts in regard to this letter to Mr. Hastings himself? |
36131 | My friend,said he,"why are you so sad? |
36131 | Of what dowager do you speak? |
36131 | Oh, my dear father, what is this? |
36131 | Or from an attempt on the part of some other to imitate it,rejoined Marlow;"but this is very strange, Mr. Vernon; may I read this through?" |
36131 | Shall I follow your_ eccelenza_? |
36131 | She has been weeping,said Mr. Hastings to himself;"can I have been mistaken?" |
36131 | Something more painful than even fear, I believe,replied Mr. Vernon;"Mr. Hastings has a daughter, I believe?" |
36131 | The Prince said,''Do you know, Aminta, that the Count is the only person in Paris whom I have to beg to come to see you? 36131 The condition?" |
36131 | Then what could have induced her to report those words to the government? |
36131 | Then when will Mr. Hastings be set free? |
36131 | Then you know all? |
36131 | This brooch is yours? |
36131 | This is the hour of consultation, my dear Doctor,said the Viscount to Von Apsberg;"where are the patients?" |
36131 | Those men-- those fellows at Rugby-- where did you meet with them? |
36131 | To me? |
36131 | Were any other persons near? |
36131 | What are you waiting for? |
36131 | What danger? |
36131 | What do you want? |
36131 | What has happened to my son? |
36131 | What have slippers and hair- brushes to do with attics? |
36131 | What physician will cure so many diseases? |
36131 | What shall I have done with them? |
36131 | What would Henri say, and how could she excuse this strange visit? |
36131 | What, the Count of Anteroches, who commanded the French guards at the battle of Fontenoy? 36131 What, then, is the matter?" |
36131 | What? |
36131 | What_ is_ the meaning of this? |
36131 | Where could it have come from, Monsieur? |
36131 | Where was he? |
36131 | Where''s George? 36131 Who bade you watch me?" |
36131 | Who? 36131 Whom do you watch?" |
36131 | Why should I not go home? 36131 Why these marks of respect? |
36131 | Why, really, my dear Harley, this man was no great friend of yours-- eh? |
36131 | Why,exclaimed the boyard,"should I not tell a friend what probably he will learn to- day, if indeed he is ignorant of it now? |
36131 | Will not the Marquis be here to- night? |
36131 | Yes; you know my cousin, Sophy Clark? 36131 You appear to be not in a very good humor, to- day, boyard.... Would you fall into disfavor with the Czar?" |
36131 | You know me, then? |
36131 | You know us, then? |
36131 | You think so, eh, Michailowitz? 36131 [ 5]"You have heard him spoken of, then?" |
36131 | _ Carbonarism!_"Are you sure of this? |
36131 | 118,"Who''ll turn Grindstone?" |
36131 | A cruel idea, however, pursued me, what was the secret shut up in the paper he would not suffer me to read? |
36131 | And how did the gay Mrs. Harrison, knowing and perceiving herself to be thus loved, make use of her knowledge? |
36131 | And now, can you guess who I am?" |
36131 | And while, on the dullest of dull questions, Audley Egerton thus, not too lively himself, enforced attention, where was Harley L''Estrange? |
36131 | Answer me this, thou solemn right honorable-- Hast thou climbed to the heights of august contemplation? |
36131 | As the bold boyard has truly said, it is I who have brandished the sword, and I ask who is the Russian who dares cite me to his tribunal?" |
36131 | Because it pleases some robber to wait near my hotel, to rob me? |
36131 | Benjamin-- who?'' |
36131 | But is it the"Jolly Old Fellow,"or the"King of Terrors,"or the"easeful death"of which the poet was enamored? |
36131 | But surely I have heard-- my wife at least has-- that you and Richard Westlake were engaged? |
36131 | But the last took his hand, and said, in a voice at once tremulous and soothing,"Is it possible that I see once more an old brother in arms? |
36131 | But what can a descendant of Dante, for instance, ever know of the drolleries of Sam Weller? |
36131 | Ca n''t you think of a purse of a thousand louis?" |
36131 | Can any place be more pleasant than the bedchamber of a pretty woman?" |
36131 | Can it be that, though he did not dance, he is more fatigued than his wife?" |
36131 | Can it be, like d''Harcourt just now, that you have any doubt or scruple about our cause? |
36131 | Can nothing be done? |
36131 | Can you show it me? |
36131 | Come, what has happened to you?--on half pay?" |
36131 | Could I, in the moment of execution, place the instrument in the trembling hands of a charlatan? |
36131 | Could his cup be fuller? |
36131 | Could it not be made to grind coffee or pepper?'' |
36131 | David Strauss among the pilgrims to the tomb of the poets?" |
36131 | Do tell me if this is true?" |
36131 | Do you hesitate at the dangers?" |
36131 | Do you mean to say that? |
36131 | Do you think I can forget the abominable things she said, the falsehoods she told? |
36131 | Do you think you could thrust him into some small place in the colonies, or make him a King''s Messenger, or something of the sort?" |
36131 | Has not the only share I ever took in politics been to aid in placing King William upon the throne, and consistently to support his government since? |
36131 | Hast thou dreamed of a love known to the angels, or sought to seize in the Infinite the mystery of life?" |
36131 | Hast thou gazed on the stars with the rapt eye of song? |
36131 | Have you quite forgotten all the duties of gallantry in thus permitting the happy couple to wait at the door of the marriage- house? |
36131 | Have you seen a ghost?" |
36131 | He advanced towards me, and seizing my arm convulsively, said, Signora, who gave you a right to examine my papers? |
36131 | How does he occupy himself? |
36131 | I am wrong, am I not? |
36131 | I have begged without shame for myself; shall I be ashamed, then, to beg for her?" |
36131 | I suppose Monsieur has not yet seen_ Little Necker_?'' |
36131 | Indeed, I know nothing can be done: he has his half- pay?" |
36131 | Is it not worth while for the New- York merchants to set up in Union or Washington Square, the great statue of Memphis? |
36131 | It would have been cruel to ask for her hospitality, and how could we offer to pay our score? |
36131 | Look out of the window-- what do you see?" |
36131 | Mademoiselle Crepineau, the Argus of this house, saw only three men come in; what will she think when she sees four leaving? |
36131 | May I be permitted to look at that letter in your hand, to see how much was really told, how much suppressed?" |
36131 | May I calculate upon having the letter in two days?" |
36131 | My husband is not at all displeased at it; tell me, do you think he loves me still? |
36131 | Not_ pretty_ Mary Kingsford now, then?" |
36131 | Now, lean upon me; I see you should be at home-- which way?" |
36131 | Oh, Lord L''Estrange?" |
36131 | On her appearance he said,"I must go to Berlin_ incog._--will you go with me? |
36131 | Pray what else could we have done under the circumstances? |
36131 | Shall we go on? |
36131 | So lucky for me, is it not, since I_ must_ go to service? |
36131 | So you have a long journey before you?" |
36131 | Tell me, Count Monte- Leone-- you were there-- what was it?'' |
36131 | The battle- field inflicted shame upon our race-- is it with shame that our hearts throb in following these Arctic heroes? |
36131 | Then laying his hand lightly on his friend''s shoulder, he said,"Is it for you, Audley Egerton, to speak sneeringly of boyish memories? |
36131 | Upon Mary replying that she did not comprehend him, his look became absolutely ferocious, and he exclaimed;"Oh, that''s your game, is it? |
36131 | Was there no beauty in this? |
36131 | Waters and Emily quite well?" |
36131 | We wonder if a single British reviewer will introduce, with such a paragraph, his extracts from the Letters on America, by M. XAVIER MARMIER? |
36131 | Were they seven Esquimaux chiefs, or seven African mumbo- jumbos? |
36131 | What actor would be_ always_ on the stage? |
36131 | What alteration did it produce in her conduct and bearing towards her admirer? |
36131 | What are our parents always, and no doubt wisely repeating to us? |
36131 | What does the prosecutor say the brooch is worth?" |
36131 | What else draws your thoughts from blue- books and beer- bills, to waste them on a vagrant like me? |
36131 | What else is it that binds us together? |
36131 | What else warms my heart when I meet you? |
36131 | What need we more? |
36131 | What shall it be?" |
36131 | What were they, if human? |
36131 | What!--hesitate? |
36131 | What, then, is the cause of the fatality which has thus ever attended African colonization by Europeans? |
36131 | What, then, will be the fate of the French and English colonies in temperate Africa? |
36131 | Whence, then, this curious hearthstone? |
36131 | Whither does he go? |
36131 | Who gave you this information?" |
36131 | Who is he? |
36131 | Who would have suspected this from the author of"Lefevre"and"The Sentimental Journey?" |
36131 | Why did he stay? |
36131 | Why did he, usually so calm and cold, become so much enraged?" |
36131 | Why is this? |
36131 | Why should I know any thing about it?" |
36131 | Why should he hope always to please those who have only a vague susceptibility of natural observation for their standard of criticism? |
36131 | Why, dear mother, should I conceal from you, that the presence of the Count causes always an invincible distress? |
36131 | Why? |
36131 | Will any one tell me that Brutus was not justified in stabbing Cæsar? |
36131 | Will any one tell me that William Tell was not justified in all that he did against the tyrant of his country? |
36131 | Will you allow me to have this letter? |
36131 | Will you find him a place in the Stamp Office?" |
36131 | Would not the rabble of Paris do well to inquire a little before exclaiming so loudly against the privileges of the aristocracy? |
36131 | You do not forget my commission, with respect to the exile who has married into your brother''s family?" |
36131 | You have no objection to accompany me to the superintendent?" |
36131 | You know,"he continued with an affected calmness,"the domain of the crown adjacent to my lands in Tula?" |
36131 | You remember Dimitri Arsenieff?" |
36131 | You think me foolish and strange-- but what can I do? |
36131 | [ Illustration]"Who is there that did not love some stream in his youth? |
36131 | de Staël completely quarrel with me now?'' |
36131 | do you uncover to me?" |
36131 | he exclaimed,"what could be the cause of that? |
36131 | if Rome was as big as Wittenberg? |
36131 | if the Italian women were more beautiful than the German? |
36131 | la Baronne de Staël is then a supreme power?'' |
36131 | or because some bravo wishes,_ a la Venitienne_, to make a dagger- sheath of my heart? |
36131 | said he,--"abandon you, when the hour of danger has come?--desert the field of battle when the combat is about to begin? |
36131 | said the bitter fool;"does it mean that you are no longer emperor?" |
36131 | what could make you ask such a question? |
36131 | what is there so urgent that you trouble thus, my dear Pignana?" |
36131 | why did you not keep me with you? |
36131 | why does not he come to the door?" |
36131 | you exclaim in a mingled tone of surprise and incredulity,"Dr. Strauss in Weimar? |
33965 | ''One of your fellows, Monsieur? 33965 ''What is it?'' |
33965 | ''What, then, has this professor in a red coat come for?'' 33965 ''Why, then, do you not name your maids of honor?'' |
33965 | ''Why,''said Madame Aiguillon, eagerly,''will not Madame de Beauharnais obtain a better one?'' 33965 A tinker?" |
33965 | About what? |
33965 | Ah, ha,said Marlow, trying to laugh likewise;"so you think she advanced the money, do you?" |
33965 | Aminta,said Maulear, looking at her,"what is the matter? |
33965 | And can,asked the Duke,"such experiments be made without inconvenience or danger to the subjects?" |
33965 | And do you wish,said the doctor,"to know what the Marquis de Maulear is engaged in now?" |
33965 | And have you faith, papa, in the power of the doctor? |
33965 | And seems full of talent Not yet at the University? 33965 And why have you lost it?" |
33965 | Answer me, my dear, frankly-- is your papa rich? |
33965 | Are you quite certain? |
33965 | Are you sure it is a gentleman? |
33965 | Are you sure that in questioning you, as I am about to, I have no other object but to relieve you of uneasiness in relation to the Marquis? |
33965 | Beef, sir? |
33965 | But are you sure,said Marie to Von Apsberg,"are you sure she will not suffer?" |
33965 | But is the uncle really so rich? |
33965 | But what am I to do with them? |
33965 | But what''s the matter? |
33965 | By the way, what was that clerk''s name you mentioned? |
33965 | By what art is it,he says, in one of them,"that you have been able to captivate all my faculties? |
33965 | Did they go through the key- hole? |
33965 | Do n''t you want to cry, my dear? 33965 Do you read in my heart any malevolence or hostility to you?" |
33965 | Felina,said the Count, gently and sadly,"did you wish to die?" |
33965 | Ha-- well-- what now? |
33965 | Has any new evil happened? |
33965 | Has the boy been talking to you of his expectations? |
33965 | He is better, then, sir? |
33965 | Helen, where''s my purse? |
33965 | I wonder what Mrs. M''Catchley_ will_ say? |
33965 | I wonder,said Marlow, musingly,"if there was any relationship between this Tom Cutter and John Ayliffe''s mother?" |
33965 | I? 33965 In the name of Heaven,"exclaimed Marlow, as he read that letter,"what can have possessed the woman with so much malice towards poor Emily Hastings?" |
33965 | Is he not the Just? |
33965 | Is he very ill-- very? |
33965 | Is that all you have? |
33965 | Is? |
33965 | Leave this place-- leave me? |
33965 | On me? |
33965 | On which arm? |
33965 | Shaking your head at me? 33965 Shall I send for Dr. Dosewell, sir?" |
33965 | Then you will be mine? |
33965 | W-- hew,whistled the tinker,"your nephew is it, sir? |
33965 | What do you mean, sir? |
33965 | What does I do''ere? |
33965 | What fault, what crime have they committed to draw down such sorrows on their heads? 33965 What have they done to merit all this?" |
33965 | What is he about, then? |
33965 | What is the matter, Marlow? |
33965 | What is the matter? |
33965 | What is your object there? |
33965 | What long black cloth is that? 33965 What now is life to me?" |
33965 | What o''clock is it? |
33965 | What the devil are you doing on my property, lurking by my hedge? 33965 What''s her name?" |
33965 | When did you leave your mistress? |
33965 | Who are_ you_? |
33965 | Who run? |
33965 | Why do so, then, my father? |
33965 | Why not? |
33965 | Will the health and happiness of the Marquise be endangered,said he,"if she continue longer in this condition?" |
33965 | Will the_ Marquise_ permit me to call on her again? |
33965 | Will you answer my questions? |
33965 | You are very strange and mysterious to- day, Marlow,said the beautiful girl,"what does all this mean?" |
33965 | You then have confidence in me? |
33965 | You''re not ashamed of me, then, in spite of what has happened? |
33965 | ''What is the matter?'' |
33965 | An act of taste? |
33965 | And Mrs. M''Catchley, stretching forth her parasol, exclaimed,"Dear me, Mr. Avenel, what can they be all crowding there for?" |
33965 | And could this be really the Saviour''s garment? |
33965 | And then, when you were on your last legs, did I not give you £ 200 out of my own purse to go to Canada? |
33965 | And were the cures real which had been reported in all the journals as wrought by it? |
33965 | And what course would they take, should the evil work be accomplished? |
33965 | Are you mad? |
33965 | As he led Mrs. M''Catchley after the dance, into the lawn, he therefore said tenderly:"How shall I thank you for the favor you have done me?" |
33965 | Ask her pardon!--what for? |
33965 | At the same moment that this sight was presented to them, they heard the man who had gone on exclaim in English,"Ah, Mistress Ayliffe, how do you do? |
33965 | At what hour to- morrow does the next coach to London pass?" |
33965 | Avenel?" |
33965 | Avenel?" |
33965 | But I suppose, from what I hear, he''ll get clear now?" |
33965 | But life is cheap; the population of Japan is probably near thirty million,--and who should care for a few dozen mariners? |
33965 | But ought we to regard Americans unfortunate because they have no literature of their own? |
33965 | But what large mind was ever deterred from a great purpose by difficulties? |
33965 | But what matters the relative weakness of this poetry? |
33965 | But why is it, that among these three or four hundred writers, only three or four are known beyond the Atlantic? |
33965 | Can this man be my enemy? |
33965 | Come, does that suit you?" |
33965 | Dear Henri,"said she, in a beseeching air, as if she knelt before him--"husband, what is the value of your money, if you love me? |
33965 | Did not you run into debt, and spend your fortune? |
33965 | Did not you turn( I shudder to say it) a common stage- player, sir? |
33965 | Did you not see just now that instead of reproaching the gamester who had ruined her, she experienced only a tender emotion for the husband she loved? |
33965 | Do you believe me, Emily?" |
33965 | Do you intend to disobey me? |
33965 | Do you know what was the character of the first poetic publications in the United States? |
33965 | Do you know what was the literature of those men full of the spirit of the Bible? |
33965 | Do you not seem to lie in the shade of a European forest? |
33965 | Do you see how the gables grow? |
33965 | Do you see, Count, how horrible all this is? |
33965 | Dosewell._--"Old what, sir?" |
33965 | Dosewell._--"Where look for liberality, if men of science are illiberal to their brethren?" |
33965 | Dosewell_,( courteously).--"We country doctors bow to our metropolitan superiors; what would you advise? |
33965 | Dosewell_,( with some displeasure).--"What would you advise, then, in order to prolong our patient''s life for a month?" |
33965 | Eh, child?" |
33965 | For if the old faith was so fast, so glowing, and so immortal in the old church, how could I ever say better_ no_ church than_ one_ only?" |
33965 | From your cool beds in the rivers, Blow, fresh winds, and gladness bring To the locks that wait to hide you-- What have I to do with spring? |
33965 | Had they met together like traitors, like madmen, to tear asunder the body politic over which they were the appointed guardians? |
33965 | Has the Duchess a confidant? |
33965 | Have all those Misses and Mistresses who write poems, dramas and sonnets, any features of resemblance with our female authors? |
33965 | Have you ever seen the landscapes of Theodore Rousseau? |
33965 | Have you preserved this young man''s letter, or have you destroyed it, Emily?" |
33965 | Hazleton''s?" |
33965 | He asked them if a national bond were absolutely nothing, that they held it now so cheap? |
33965 | He thought he was sure enough of me; but what did I do? |
33965 | He turned to Leonard:"You have written to this woman, then?" |
33965 | Henri, Henri, why do you approach this dark water? |
33965 | Henri, you would not commit perjury? |
33965 | His nails and hair are never cut-- for who may mutilate a god? |
33965 | How dare you come here to disgrace me in my own house and premises, after my sending you fifty pounds? |
33965 | How have I injured him?" |
33965 | How on earth could a man puzzle himself about ricks and tinkers, when all his cares and energies were devoted to a_ déjeûné dansant_? |
33965 | I am going to London-- shall I call on your relations, and tell some of them to join you?" |
33965 | I said before, ay or no; and your kindness so emboldens me that I say it again-- ay or no?" |
33965 | If he do so-- if he should venture upon any occasion to reproach you, my Emily--""For what?" |
33965 | If such be the moral necessities which give birth to poetry, how is it that America has not an original literature? |
33965 | In it she says of the famous holy coat of Treves:"It was not comprehended-- what did that show? |
33965 | In this little story is there not an averted tragedy as sad as Eugene Aram''s? |
33965 | Is it that there is no poetry in these subjects? |
33965 | Is not this the exact state of your affairs?" |
33965 | Low and shocking,--what shall we do? |
33965 | Marie blushed; was not this blush caused, perhaps, by the coming of the doctor?--Was it caused by René''s kiss? |
33965 | Martin?" |
33965 | May I tell them what you say?" |
33965 | Morgan._--"A complete what?" |
33965 | On such occasions, what epic poet would not describe the robe and tunic of a hero? |
33965 | Sad eyes behold thee, and angels are weeping O''er thy forsaked and desolate sleeping; Art thou not indolent!--Art thou not lost? |
33965 | She had even said point- blank to Mr. Avenel,"Why do n''t you give a_ Déjeûné dansant_?" |
33965 | Should I, however, go on, and contract a debt which I could not discharge? |
33965 | Suppose one of their arguments had been planted in his soul; how did he know that he could ever have got it rooted out? |
33965 | That she has made me the object of jeer and ridicule with that d----d cotton gown, and those double- d----d thick shoes? |
33965 | The Marquise de Maulear, smiling and calm, said,"Have I not been asleep?" |
33965 | The Marquise, though, said with a vivacity which surprised him,"And does the Holy father authorize play in his states?" |
33965 | The doctor took Aminta''s hand in his and said most respectfully:[G]"Does the Marquise understand me?" |
33965 | Then with his sort of sickly smile-- for he was bland even to his child--"Will you kindly inquire when the first coach leaves?" |
33965 | There stands his bust; but the remembrance of himself, his home, his own little garden-- where is it most vivid? |
33965 | This vulgar man, of what might he not be capable? |
33965 | Vot''s the dodge-- eh?" |
33965 | Was it to revile each other, to menace, that they, grave and mature men, had come from the farthest limits of their common country? |
33965 | Was it to the gamesters or to the_ Carbonari_ that the Commissary paid his visit? |
33965 | Well, what matter? |
33965 | What could bring you so far from home?" |
33965 | What couple scampers by in such a hurry? |
33965 | What do I see at the end of this street?" |
33965 | What do you do here, I say? |
33965 | What does he say?" |
33965 | What occult horrid meaning did the word convey to ears polite? |
33965 | What pall is that? |
33965 | What was he, then? |
33965 | When he had recovered his senses, the Prince called the doctor to him, and whispered,"Do you believe all this?" |
33965 | When she hears the wild bird singing, Or the sweetly humming bee, Only says she, faintly smiling, What have you to do with me? |
33965 | Where was the calmness of deliberation with which a dignified assembly should meet to utter, and to listen? |
33965 | While returning to our quarters we were startled by the"Quien vive?" |
33965 | Whither does he go? |
33965 | Whither does he go? |
33965 | Who can tell, indeed, the good which may be done by these musical reveries and innocent caprices? |
33965 | Who will fail warmly to wish"God- speed"to a work that proposes to accomplish such rich results? |
33965 | Who would have thought it? |
33965 | Who, indeed, could visit Malmaison without experiencing such? |
33965 | Why do you ask, Marlow?" |
33965 | Why is he so sad? |
33965 | Why is his hair so disordered? |
33965 | Why should he not say"green?" |
33965 | Why should our great men, whose humanity makes them dearer, go so solemnly and sadly through all posterity? |
33965 | Why? |
33965 | Will you not seek to support your power by new family connections? |
33965 | With great anxiety, she suddenly cried,"Henri-- the Marquis-- where is he?" |
33965 | With so much energy and vigor in their faces, how is it that they never thought of putting reasonable shoes upon their feet? |
33965 | You give upas juice in hæmoptysis-- what''s the dose?" |
33965 | You have no symptom of that kind, you say?" |
33965 | You have not answered my question?" |
33965 | [ G] Madame la Marquise, se trouve- t- elle ainsi suffisament en rapport avec moi? |
33965 | and then he looked as hard at me, and roared,"I hope gentlemen, you have kept yourselves together?" |
33965 | and you say that he is Mr. Arundel''s heir?" |
33965 | are ye not indolent? |
33965 | are ye not indolent? |
33965 | are you in pain?" |
33965 | do I say? |
33965 | do you think I am a butcher-- an executioner? |
33965 | exclaimed she,"will nothing then restrain you?" |
33965 | faltered Helen, astonished and alarmed-- Was the man a conjuror? |
33965 | have you come to take me, have you come to take me?" |
33965 | he muttered;"morbid sensibility of character--_coffee_? |
33965 | is there not a mourning- cloth painted on the horizon? |
33965 | my nephew know you?" |
33965 | or do you want to drive me mad? |
33965 | said the passenger,"draw up the windows? |
33965 | said the widow, languidly, and leaving her hand in his;"who can resist you?" |
33965 | should he write to the parson; and assure the fears of his mother? |
33965 | that grenadier, who is as long as the column in Trafalgar- square?'' |
33965 | then he went to that woman''s house to play?" |
33965 | what do you mean?" |
33965 | what is life but a pilgrimage over graves?" |
33965 | why?" |
26196 | A ball? |
26196 | A mortal fiddlestick-- where''s Leonard Fairfield, I say? |
26196 | And Flavio? |
26196 | And how happy I am in your pleasure--"All then is understood? |
26196 | And may I ask who you be? |
26196 | And my child? |
26196 | And the man? |
26196 | And this piece of lace you stole? |
26196 | And this poor child? |
26196 | And this ring,said the judge,"what is it?" |
26196 | And what am I to do without it, when you turn me out of my house? |
26196 | And what do you do, lolloping there on them blessed stocks? |
26196 | And why not, madame? |
26196 | And you, sir? |
26196 | Are years then required for us to love? |
26196 | Are you ill, Rachel? |
26196 | Arrest me!--why?--upon what charge?--who is my accuser? |
26196 | As I slept? |
26196 | Augh,said the tinker, staring,"you fit with a young gentleman, did you? |
26196 | Be back soon? |
26196 | But how on earth did you get into my new stocks? |
26196 | But is not that very hard? |
26196 | But when-- how? |
26196 | But where is the Parson to find you? |
26196 | But-- but how to evade the woman who watches me? |
26196 | By what authority do you arrest me?--by what order? |
26196 | Count Monte- Leone, have you prepared yourself to reply to these accusations, or have you chosen a defender? |
26196 | Did he, and what for? |
26196 | Did you see that little old gentleman, Peter? |
26196 | Do n''t you recollect the park of Charrebourg, monsieur, and the boy who sometimes carried your game, Gabriel, who was so frequently your attendant? |
26196 | Do you mean to say, my dear madam,asked Sir Philip,"that he claims the whole of this large property? |
26196 | Do you persist in your accusation against Count Monte- Leone? |
26196 | Do you wish to see her? |
26196 | Done? |
26196 | Flavio? |
26196 | Hey!--why do n''t you come here if you want me? |
26196 | Hollo, you sir,said he, as Lenny now came in hearing,"where be you going at that rate?" |
26196 | Hollo,said Mr. Stirn,"what is all this?--what''s the matter, Lenny, you blockhead?" |
26196 | How dare you, sirrah, hold such language to me-- how_ dare_ you? 26196 I will-- thank you, thank you: but for the mercy of God, monsieur, will you suffer me to perish?" |
26196 | Is it, then, the Signorina''s birthday? |
26196 | Is it_ this_ one or the other? |
26196 | Is the marquis yet risen? |
26196 | Is there any thing to surprise one in that? |
26196 | It is not fair to disturb such a meeting; the domestic affections, eh? 26196 May I hear what the proposal is?" |
26196 | Monsieur de Blassemare, have you no honor, no pity, no manhood? 26196 My dear Hazeldean, what has happened? |
26196 | Of what, Signorina, are you afraid? 26196 Oh, pray, Monsieur Dubois, monsieur, do n''t you know me?" |
26196 | Pshaw,said the Parson;"but what''s to be done?" |
26196 | Shall I tell you? |
26196 | She sold you this piece of lace? |
26196 | Should you know him again, Peter? |
26196 | That''s the very question I wish to heaven I could answer,groaned the Squire, quite mildly and pathetically--"What on earth has come to us all? |
26196 | Then,said the Marquis,"no one can expect to please you, for who can be like you, and be as precious as you are?" |
26196 | Tonio, poor Tonio,said she,"my faithful companion and generous preserver, have you also come to congratulate me on my birthday? |
26196 | We understand each other, and you will hide nothing from me? |
26196 | What adventure pray, sir, do you speak of? |
26196 | What can you give me? |
26196 | What do you mean? |
26196 | What does it mean? |
26196 | What is she doing,said Maulear, with amazement,"what business has she in this room?" |
26196 | What is the matter? |
26196 | What then had befallen Lucille? |
26196 | What!--hungry? 26196 What''s your name, pray, and what''s your bizness?" |
26196 | What, superior to the Roman? |
26196 | Where am I going?--to the Bastile? |
26196 | Where am I? |
26196 | Where does he stay? |
26196 | Where have you gone? |
26196 | Who and whence were the Egyptians? 26196 Who brought it hither?" |
26196 | Who did it? 26196 Who gave you them leggins? |
26196 | Why do you not offer him in exchange-- for the time at all events-- your fine old house on the side of Hartwell-- Hartwell Place? 26196 Why not go thither now?" |
26196 | Why, why, you have not, great God, you have not hurt the wretched woman? |
26196 | Yes, monsieur, who was she? |
26196 | You confess, then, that you stole the lace? |
26196 | You have not done wrong? 26196 You know this woman?" |
26196 | You think so? |
26196 | Your name? |
26196 | Your names? |
26196 | _ From him_,said she, as she hastily unsealed it;"what does he say? |
26196 | _ Here!_--where is he? |
26196 | _ What_, sir? |
26196 | --then looking anxiously at Giacomo, and in a low tone, he said:"Are you sure it is my ring?" |
26196 | And does he not deserve it? |
26196 | And may I venture one thing more,--may I ask you to take care that she is not left utterly destitute?" |
26196 | And was that all? |
26196 | And whence is this desire, disappointed of its first promise, to obtain its satisfaction? |
26196 | Ask Stirn:"( then bursting out)"Stirn, you infernal rascal, do n''t you hear?--what on earth has come to us all?" |
26196 | Author, what is the title?" |
26196 | Ay, I''d ha''ta''en my davy on that: and cos vy?" |
26196 | Besides, what chance is there of my escaping from this place?" |
26196 | But how could he surprise them? |
26196 | But how shall I know you again?--what is your name?" |
26196 | But vy should you fit''cause he trespassed on the stocks? |
26196 | But where am I? |
26196 | But where is your master?" |
26196 | But who would not swallow a pill to live to a hundred and fifty- two?" |
26196 | Ca n''t you speak, lad?" |
26196 | Can it tranquilly coexist with them, and be content to see them occupy the scope which English traditions and English usage have secured for them? |
26196 | Come, come, the particulars?" |
26196 | Could any thing more undignified or uncomfortable be imagined? |
26196 | Could this possibly be De Secqville? |
26196 | Crying,''Can this be borne?'' |
26196 | Did he hide it from the jailers at the time of his incarceration, or did he obtain possession of it on his way to_ Torre- del- Greco_? |
26196 | Did their lives pass in peace and content, or were their hearts pierced by the poisoned arrows of the world? |
26196 | Do you believe me now?" |
26196 | Does thy serene eternity sublime Embrace the slaves of Circumstance and Time? |
26196 | Ever siding with the upmost, Letting downmost lie? |
26196 | For his daily cares? |
26196 | For the poverty he suffers? |
26196 | For trite examples, who would not rather elect Columbus than Americus to the place of Name- Giver for this continent? |
26196 | Girl, canst thou love me in eclipse? |
26196 | Have you known her long? |
26196 | Have you really thought of a title to My Novel?" |
26196 | How can it be, though, that I ever met Signor Rovero?" |
26196 | How could he doubt? |
26196 | How did she die?" |
26196 | How goes all at Lyons? |
26196 | How is it possible to be indulgent to error, when we are firmly persuaded that such error must lead to eternal condemnation? |
26196 | I am now going to see the poor girl, will you come with me?" |
26196 | I love thee-- dost thou hear my sighs? |
26196 | I thought, when alone,"is this the freedom, the liberty, the charity which suffereth long, the consideration for others, which the gospel teaches? |
26196 | I want to stop''em all, if I can, from going into the village; but how?" |
26196 | If he perceived this at first, why not have come forward hand and heart, and shouted him on to honest fortune? |
26196 | If it could speak, what would it say, Leonard Fairfield? |
26196 | Is it the first time that I have thrust myself into a hobble?--and if in a hobble of mine own choosing, why should I blame the gods?" |
26196 | It is a sign of intellectual barrenness in the writers; for what is easier than parody? |
26196 | It would be more difficult, no doubt, but is_ that_ a sufficient reason for abstaining? |
26196 | Madame understands me?" |
26196 | Marlow?" |
26196 | Now pray, what is the matter with Lenny Fairfield? |
26196 | Now what was the object of using all these powers upon him? |
26196 | Of what else could Gaetano and Aminta speak, than love? |
26196 | Or that rogues are not dishonest If they dine off plate? |
26196 | Pray, have you the papers regarding your claim with you?" |
26196 | She asked, in a faltering voice--"Who are you, sir?" |
26196 | Sir Philip watched it for several moments with a faint smile, and then said to himself,"It is the beast''s nature-- why not a woman''s?" |
26196 | Stirn._--"I dare say she was, considering what she pays for the premishes:( insinuatingly,) you does not know who did it-- eh, Lenny?" |
26196 | Ten thousand devils, what is this?" |
26196 | The boy, then, was a stranger; but what was his rank? |
26196 | The question now arises, How are these libraries to be constituted? |
26196 | The_ Ladies''Companion_ exclaims hereof:--"When will the wild and the restless learn self- distrust from the histories of kindred spirits? |
26196 | They danced under Saint Louis, under Henry IV., under Louis XIV., under Napoleon, and why should not they dance now? |
26196 | Was Mrs. Hazleton a person very susceptible, or very covetous of the tender passion? |
26196 | Was he of that grade in society in which the natural offences are or are not consonant to, or harmonious with, outrages upon stocks? |
26196 | Was that pale corpse, with its long tresses, the murdered body of the fair and beloved Lucille? |
26196 | Was the heart of her he loved unoccupied? |
26196 | Was this audacious unknown taking an inventory of the church and the Hall for the purposes of conflagration? |
26196 | Were her assassins unconsciously hurrying through the dark in company with him? |
26196 | Were they really happy in each other''s love, or were their young and pure affections chilled by the winds of adversity? |
26196 | Were they rich and noble, or poor and obscure? |
26196 | What convent?" |
26196 | What do you say to leaving the chateau with De Secqville?" |
26196 | What have they done?" |
26196 | What is this,"--and the irony of the tone vanished--"what is this, my poor boy? |
26196 | What more shall I say about them? |
26196 | What on earth has come to you all?" |
26196 | What part did she intend me to play in this drama of treason? |
26196 | What resource was left to her? |
26196 | What say you, Roland? |
26196 | What unworthy plan, what improper calculation influenced her? |
26196 | What will the Parson say? |
26196 | What, however, do you expect of a poor child, raised like myself in solitude, uncultivated, and from character and taste a dreamer? |
26196 | When did she die? |
26196 | Where is the man? |
26196 | Who to erring woman''s sorrow Would with taunts reply? |
26196 | Who was the woman that screamed? |
26196 | Who would give a cause his efforts When the cause is strong, But desert it on its failure, Whether right or wrong? |
26196 | Who would give his pen to blacken Freedom''s page of light? |
26196 | Who would have imagined that the obscure author of a small pamphlet,"Le Souper de Beaucaire,"would subsequently become the Emperor Napoleon? |
26196 | Who would lend his arm to strengthen Warfare with the right? |
26196 | Who would lend his tongue to utter Praise of tyranny? |
26196 | Who would pass him in the footway With averted eye? |
26196 | Who would say Success and Merit Ne''er part company? |
26196 | Who would say that Vice is Virtue In a hall of State? |
26196 | Who would scorn his humble fellow For the coat he wears? |
26196 | Who, when vice or crime repentant, With a grief sincere Asked for pardon, would refuse it-- More than heaven severe? |
26196 | Why did she encourage me? |
26196 | Why did she not avow her love of young Brignoli? |
26196 | Why did she not tell me the truth yesterday, when I asked her? |
26196 | Why did she speak of hope? |
26196 | Why this fluttering of thy wings? |
26196 | Why this longing, clay- clad spirit? |
26196 | Why this striving to discover Hidden and transcendent things? |
26196 | Will it leave them to their free development? |
26196 | Will you be accessory to a_ murder_? |
26196 | Will you fly with me to- morrow night?" |
26196 | Will you punish me by silence, and not deign to tell me what I may fear or hope?" |
26196 | With facts like these before us, how can we talk of libraries of 700,000 or 800,000 volumes in the ancient world? |
26196 | Would it attract you in a catalogue?" |
26196 | Would they dare to cross the terrace again? |
26196 | Would you, brother? |
26196 | Would you, brother? |
26196 | Would you, brother? |
26196 | Would you, brother? |
26196 | Would you, brother? |
26196 | Would you, brother? |
26196 | Would you, brother? |
26196 | You do n''t mean to say that good Lenny Fairfield( who was absent from church by the by) can have done any thing to get into disgrace?" |
26196 | You have heard of her, perhaps?" |
26196 | You saw that man,"she continued;"that miserable wretch, Emmanuel? |
26196 | [ 32] But is not this condition of mine, voluntarily and experimentally incurred, a type of my life? |
26196 | _ My Mother._--"_''Says she to her Neighbor, What? |
26196 | _ My Mother_, with more animation than usual.--"Ay, Sisty-- the title?" |
26196 | _ Pisistratus_, eagerly.--"Well, sir?" |
26196 | _ Squills._--"If it be not too great a liberty, pray who or what is Camarina?" |
26196 | have you seen her often?" |
26196 | he says,"shall I marry my child to a new- baked nobleman?" |
26196 | how the devil has all this happened?" |
26196 | is that the man who poaches all my game?" |
26196 | mother, mother, why did you not watch me?" |
26196 | rather bald-- and curt, eh?" |
26196 | said he,"is it you? |
26196 | then you are-- the marquis?" |
26196 | there_ is_ something-- what is this?" |
26196 | what do you mean, sir?" |
26196 | what has us here?" |
26196 | what means of raising a laugh so certain and so cheap as to roll a statue from its pedestal and stick some vulgar utensil in its place? |
26196 | what''s the matter? |
26196 | who does not rejoice that finally Hadley is proved a swindler of the fame of Godfrey, in the matter of the quadrant? |
31162 | Ah, Excellency, can you think so? 31162 And Helen-- Miss Digby-- is she much changed?" |
31162 | And Ilu,[17] what has become of him-- do you know? |
31162 | And did your master teach you,he said, with a bitter smile,"that there is beauty in suffering?" |
31162 | And she answered? |
31162 | And the Padrone? |
31162 | And you have not called to ascertain? |
31162 | And you really believe the young Englishman loves her? |
31162 | And you think not in any way swayed by interest in his affections? |
31162 | Answerest thou not, bewitching Sol? |
31162 | But am I to be exposed to the possibility of such a meeting? 31162 But the heart?" |
31162 | But, I suppose,he continued, smiling,"you were like all women, too much terrified to think of any thing but your own safety?" |
31162 | But, after all, suppose you were to say that the same thing could not be black and white? |
31162 | But, perhaps,suggests some candid and youthful conjecturer--"perhaps Randal Leslie is in love with this fair creature?" |
31162 | Can I set you down any where? |
31162 | Catherine, is it to be an enemy to worship you as I have done? |
31162 | Certainly,interposed Giacomo;"how could he dare to speak, let him love ever so well?" |
31162 | Certainly,said Spendquick, with great spirit--"public property, or why should we pay them? |
31162 | Dear daughter,said they at length to her,"what do you propose to do? |
31162 | Dear me, Leonard, will he want? 31162 Did he tell you that?" |
31162 | Did the girl scorn my precious one? |
31162 | Did you fight?--did you see the enemy? |
31162 | Do you not fear to speak such words to me? |
31162 | Do you not know me, much as I must be altered? |
31162 | Do you see the star at his breast? |
31162 | Egerton is always the same man, I suppose-- too busy for illness, and too firm for sorrow? |
31162 | He makes a sensation? |
31162 | Hearest thou all this, stubborn girl? |
31162 | How are you, Judge? |
31162 | How can I have any idea of it? |
31162 | How can you doubt it? 31162 How do you do, sir?" |
31162 | How is it that you alone can meet this appalling danger in such perfect calm? |
31162 | How is the sweet daughter of the Oneida named? |
31162 | How? 31162 How?" |
31162 | I shall see her again? |
31162 | Impossible; how could he discover you? |
31162 | In your case, what is that motive? 31162 Is it possible?" |
31162 | Is my carriage here? |
31162 | Is the house inhabited? |
31162 | Is your home near this? |
31162 | Juana, if the old Finn were here now, would n''t he be useful? |
31162 | No; the old woman who serves us said that she was asked at a shop''if we were not Italians?'' |
31162 | Oh, my dear lord, what else can it be? 31162 Oh,"said Avenel,"public men, whom we pay, are public property-- aren''t they, my lord?" |
31162 | Plait- il, M''nsieu? |
31162 | Pressed it? 31162 Pressed upon you!--I? |
31162 | She has not yet read them, then?--not the last? 31162 Something that induces you to bestow your daughter on me?" |
31162 | Surely it''s not Faustina''s dream you are thinking of? |
31162 | Then tell me, do you know Randolph Abbey? |
31162 | Then you will love me for his sake, will you not? |
31162 | This is not all,said Sir Michael, who had watched the scene; he turned to Lady Randolph--"Will she come?" |
31162 | Very true; why, indeed? |
31162 | Was ever so original and exquisite a compliment? |
31162 | Well, how was the throne of France to be reached, the very idea of which made her head turn? 31162 What Finn?" |
31162 | What a marvellous doctrine; where can you have learned such untenable philosophy? |
31162 | What are you going to do? |
31162 | What did he say, in that sharp voice? |
31162 | What do you suppose Ashburner wants to see a country belle for? |
31162 | What has gone wrong? |
31162 | What makes you think so? |
31162 | Where could Mendez be? 31162 Who is committing sin?" |
31162 | Why else should he come, Excellency? |
31162 | Why not? |
31162 | Why,said he to the innkeeper,"do n''t you know how to look at men''s faces? |
31162 | Will you excuse me for an instant? 31162 Would you have the kindness to spik Angleesh?" |
31162 | Yes, I am Lilias Randolph; did you know, then, that I was expected? |
31162 | You confess, then, that you wounded him with the intent to kill? |
31162 | You think, then, that the ministry really can not last? |
31162 | You think, then, that this poor kinsman will not need such an alliance in order to regain his estates? |
31162 | Your mother, where is she? 31162 ''Do you like flowers?'' 31162 ''Then she is going to be married?'' 31162 ''Well, Jenny, you are going to- night to the ball?'' 31162 ''Well, father, what do you think of it?'' 31162 ''What do you say, my dear angel?'' 31162 Aletheia,exclaimed Walter,"happy, did you say-- happy to die by that cruel blow?" |
31162 | And now, ere I go, one question more: You indulge conjectures as to Riccabocca, because he has changed his name-- why have you dropped your own?" |
31162 | And the first thing the clever schemer said to himself was this:--"But what can be the man''s motive in what he said to me?" |
31162 | And what is supposed to bring hither the Count di Peschiera?" |
31162 | And why should my poor puppet be the only one to know himself, and perish for it?" |
31162 | Are their husbands also shut up in gardens? |
31162 | Are we justified in rendering ourselves guilty of present and positive injustice, from the imaginary dread of evils to come?" |
31162 | Are you not his murderer?" |
31162 | Are you resolved to embrace the law of Mahomet?" |
31162 | At length, however, Ripa arrived, and the first question that was put to him was:"What had he done with his rival?" |
31162 | Besides, as she said, she ca n''t_ wish_ you to marry a foreigner; though once married, she would----But how do you stand now with the Marchesa? |
31162 | Bless my wits, what is the matter with me?" |
31162 | But from what reason did you assume the strange and fantastic name of Oran?" |
31162 | But if he was innocent, who was the criminal? |
31162 | But if no pretty girl there be The light may soon so out, for me Why should the candle burn and beam Unless bright eyes reflect its gleam? |
31162 | But, by what conveyance, think you, can his lordship have voyaged or travelled hither? |
31162 | But, though you may help me, how can I help you?" |
31162 | By the by, shall we have up the waggon, or walk down?" |
31162 | By the bye,"said the Judge,"I never knew any one yet a judge of the Common Pleas, unless he was either a lawyer or a farmer: did you, Benson?" |
31162 | By the way, I have had an interview with Peschiera--""About his sister''s debts?" |
31162 | By your account, if successful in his suit, he might fail to find an heiress in the bride?" |
31162 | Can it be true? |
31162 | Can the Austrian Count dictate a marriage to the daughter as a condition of grace to the father?" |
31162 | Can we, without reason, deprive them of that liberty and protection which we grant here to all men, and especially to men of prayer? |
31162 | Did not I make thee? |
31162 | Did you say you had never seen any of them?" |
31162 | Dim and faded, did you call him? |
31162 | Do n''t you know that their eyes are always blue, and their hair quite red?" |
31162 | Do you know her too?" |
31162 | Do you not dread my vengeance?" |
31162 | Do you still believe that men are turned into beasts, and beasts into men?" |
31162 | Do you think it an improvable property?" |
31162 | Do you think that sea- monsters could live on land, and ride on horseback, as we do?" |
31162 | Does any one deny it?" |
31162 | Dost thou wish to be freed from her power this very day? |
31162 | Eluding yet love''s sweet control, Yet raining dreams elysian? |
31162 | Fairfield?" |
31162 | Grà © try pressed his daughter to his heart,''Jenny, are you suffering?'' |
31162 | Had his daughter the remotest probability of becoming the greatest heiress in Italy, would he dream of bestowing her on me in this off- hand way? |
31162 | Has he been put to death, or exiled?" |
31162 | Has she consented to accept you?" |
31162 | Have you heard from the Hall lately?" |
31162 | Have you not got rid of your ideas of metempsychosis yet, eh? |
31162 | His motives?" |
31162 | Ho- le!_"said he, slapping his forehead;"what a blockhead I am-- what was I thinking about? |
31162 | How can he help, since Nature points the way, Following, if so he does, their noble school? |
31162 | How can truth be hurtful to mankind? |
31162 | How can you fancy that these men can be Yang- koueï-Dze? |
31162 | How could you shepherds have the courage of soldiers? |
31162 | How has he dared-- how have you dared to molest me thus?" |
31162 | How strange to reflect that all this elaborate and inimitable contrivance has been devised for the well- being of a despised shell- fish? |
31162 | I am without money; be so good as to lend me thy purse?... |
31162 | I ask not if summer will soon by here, And I ask not if long my life shall be; I ask-- if I''m loved by my Rosalie? |
31162 | I want to know where your master is, and why he has not been to my house this evening as he promised?" |
31162 | I was playing with death; why do you not let the children play?'' |
31162 | If he thought it was his master, as he said, why had he not come down at once to admit him? |
31162 | In a few moments, however, a girl made her appearance with the usual inquiry,"Did you call, sir?" |
31162 | In fact, what do they care as long as their salary is regularly paid? |
31162 | Innocent? |
31162 | Is Wauchee content to make the trial?" |
31162 | Is it for man to say,"What is the use of seeing?" |
31162 | Is it not a sin to kill any living thing?" |
31162 | Is it so unusual a misfortune?--so rare a triumph? |
31162 | Is that, too, the custom in France?" |
31162 | Is there one of the Randolphs now located in this house who can complain of me, in any way whatsoever?" |
31162 | Is this all?" |
31162 | It is very cold to- day; wilt thou give me thy coat?" |
31162 | Ki- Chan then inquired after Palmerston, and asked if he was still intrusted with foreign affairs?... |
31162 | L''Estrange started; and as Randal again took his arm, said--"So that Italian lodges here? |
31162 | Let us examine both sincerely and attentively; if yours is the best, we will adopt it; how could we refuse to do so? |
31162 | May I think that we have now an interest in common?" |
31162 | Montaigne''s words are:"When I play with my cat, who knows whether I do not make her more sport than she makes me? |
31162 | My husband? |
31162 | My own dear and noble friend!--is it possible? |
31162 | Not that of pecuniary or ambitious calculations; for how can such calculations enlist you on behalf of a ruined exile? |
31162 | Or you, by birth and habit, knave and fool, How can you help the trash you write-- for pay? |
31162 | Pressed what?" |
31162 | Reader, have you a clear idea of what this"passing out"is? |
31162 | Shall we be friends?" |
31162 | She went on, gazing fixedly at him with the most frigid coldness,"This Lilias is the daughter of your favorite brother, is she not? |
31162 | Sweet Sol, dost thou not understand me?" |
31162 | Tell me, father, do you make as many happy every day as I have just witnessed?'' |
31162 | Tell me, shall we live?" |
31162 | The flowers recall the birth, the natal land, the garden of the family, and what more? |
31162 | The next was:--"Egerton ruined? |
31162 | They say there are other countries in Europe where women govern-- is it true? |
31162 | Was it not a distinct stipulation that he should avoid even the risk of encountering me? |
31162 | Was it with anger or shame? |
31162 | What am I, then?" |
31162 | What can you do, they said, against sea- monsters? |
31162 | What could have detained him? |
31162 | What do you say?" |
31162 | What does he yet desire? |
31162 | What had he to do while painting queens of comedy, or dryads of the opera, with the heart, tears, or divine sentiment? |
31162 | What had we then to fear? |
31162 | What has occurred?" |
31162 | What injury I ever did him was like to this?" |
31162 | What lady is that I see at the far end of the garden?" |
31162 | What other motive can he possibly have? |
31162 | What remains? |
31162 | What the deuce did he do there? |
31162 | What were left to us of the Hookers and Barrows, Taylors and Miltons, if their controversial writings were excepted? |
31162 | Who sends you? |
31162 | Who shall describe these afflicting interviews? |
31162 | Why art thou near my soul Yet flying my fond vision? |
31162 | Why do n''t you keep to the point?" |
31162 | Why is this? |
31162 | Why should Levy have spoken, to me of this?" |
31162 | Why were these works the object of the sage''s study? |
31162 | Why, who have you got with you?" |
31162 | Why? |
31162 | Why?" |
31162 | Will Monega free the bondsman? |
31162 | Will you promise me not to mention to any individual whatever at Randolph Abbey that you have met me? |
31162 | Would any of our readers have fancied, for instance, that a search after_ argols_ could be an exciting employment? |
31162 | Would not that suffice? |
31162 | You agree with me?" |
31162 | You ask me why I think there will be a general election so soon? |
31162 | You thought I should forget him, did you, in the midst of all this luxury? |
31162 | You wanted to speak to me, Frank?" |
31162 | You will wait for him?" |
31162 | _ Micsoda csárdaez? |
31162 | and will she fly with him to be the bride of his heart, and the queen of the Mohawk people? |
31162 | and you know him?" |
31162 | be csinos?_ What inn is this which here I see? |
31162 | be csinos?_ What inn is this which here I see? |
31162 | continued Arbi Esid;"fair as the Houris of the Prophet''s Paradise, canst thou refuse to embrace his faith? |
31162 | demanded the witch;"did yonder sniffling hypocrite thrust my darling from his door? |
31162 | exclaimed the enraged governor;"thus dost thou profane the most sacred names, thus dost thou reject all consideration? |
31162 | exclaims M. de R.,"who are you?" |
31162 | exclaims a low but most expressive voice,"you come to rob me of Theodore''s letters? |
31162 | he said, his face growing white with anger,"and to irritate me thus bitterly, when you know I have no power to control the fierceness of my passions? |
31162 | how can I dream that one so beautiful, so peerless, will confirm the hope you have extended to me?" |
31162 | how could you abhor him-- you who have seen him in his living grace and goodness?" |
31162 | is it not strange, Leslie, that no wealth, no fashion, no fame can wipe out that blot? |
31162 | is this you? |
31162 | lunch-- or what?" |
31162 | returned Malfi;"what in the world can have become of him?" |
31162 | said Harley, with visible emotion,"Is it so?" |
31162 | the light goes out, Have you no pretty girl about? |
31162 | thought the old witch,"what step is that? |
31162 | why will you torture me? |
31162 | £20,000 down-- how to get the sum? |
29246 | ''Felina,''said he,''why do you weep? 29246 ''You-- you here?'' |
29246 | And did the stern Matheus consent to go to your father''s house? |
29246 | And has Jane Fairfield, who married a common carpenter, brought him up to despise small shopkeepers? |
29246 | And how can I save thee? |
29246 | And is that like love? |
29246 | And my horse? |
29246 | And the money? |
29246 | And thou? |
29246 | And what do you conclude from that? |
29246 | And what have you heard? |
29246 | And,said the Duke,"will this be a secret to me?" |
29246 | Are there many patients? |
29246 | Are there no duels ever fought in this part of the country? |
29246 | Are you coming, sir? |
29246 | Are you going to let the man see that you are afraid of him-- that he has got you in his power? 29246 Art thou discontented with my award?" |
29246 | Ashburner, will you stand by me if there''s a row? |
29246 | At what hour? |
29246 | But do you know,said the Englishman,"if after this you should kill your man, we in our country would call it something very like murder?" |
29246 | But suppose a man insulted your wife or sister? |
29246 | But suppose a man was spreading false reports about you; suppose he said you were no gentleman, or that you had cheated somebody? |
29246 | But the aristocracy did not sow this piece with rye, I suppose? |
29246 | But to send a boy like that to the university-- where''s the money to come from? |
29246 | But what is this?--Latin too?--Virgil? |
29246 | But what''s the story to be, master Shanks? |
29246 | But you will bless me again, grandmother? 29246 Can you explain what kind of happiness it is?" |
29246 | Did you ever read White''s_ Natural History of Selborne_? |
29246 | Did your highness remark that the merchant had his clothes and hands covered with oil? |
29246 | Do n''t the song please you? |
29246 | Do you descend, sir, to a subterfuge, when I ask you for an explanation? |
29246 | Does not the search after wisdom induce desires not satisfied in this small circle to which your life is confined? 29246 Frenchmen?" |
29246 | Gone?--Yes.--Do you mean my mother?--Damn it, yes!--She is gone, to be sure.--Didn''t you meet her? |
29246 | Has he any manner? 29246 Have you been to the Exhibition? |
29246 | He does not know all, then? |
29246 | He? 29246 How are you, Cram, how are you?" |
29246 | How fares it with you, my dear friend? |
29246 | How have you settled the object of your journey? |
29246 | How so? |
29246 | How then did you discover that he was not the owner? |
29246 | Hum,said Tom Cutter,"but how will you get that up, Mr. Shanks? |
29246 | Is this where you wish to stop? |
29246 | Just explain, will you? |
29246 | Me? 29246 Of course,"she answered,"can you doubt it?" |
29246 | Oh, yes, I know you, Master Shanks,replied the jailer, winking one of his small black eyes;"who have you come to see? |
29246 | Ought they? |
29246 | Richard, have you been listening? |
29246 | Shall I introduce you? 29246 Sole companions?--your child?" |
29246 | The cripple, I suppose, did not recognize the animal? |
29246 | The room in which Nora slept? 29246 Then what am I to think?" |
29246 | They have a son, I believe; but he''s in America, is not he? |
29246 | To the Duke? |
29246 | Umbrella against the stars? |
29246 | Well, Richard-- you have seen him? |
29246 | Well, mother? |
29246 | What did she say? |
29246 | What do you think yourself? 29246 What dost thou want?" |
29246 | What explanation can I make?--what can I say, or think of this most terrible of fatalities? |
29246 | What for? |
29246 | What for? |
29246 | What is his name, and why should he care for me, grandmother? |
29246 | What is the matter with my new lodger? 29246 What,"said the Prince, when he saw the Count,"are you here, my dear colleague? |
29246 | When will there be a consultation? |
29246 | Where is Frank Sumner? |
29246 | Who are the latter? |
29246 | Who has told you,said the Duchess proudly,"that I suffered as you say?" |
29246 | Who knows,says he,"whether I am not indebted to that blessed nightcap for having turned out one of the most truthful men I ever knew?" |
29246 | Who?--what the devil are you talking about? |
29246 | Why is it, intimate as I have been with your family, that I now know for the first time that Miss Jane Langley has a twin- sister? |
29246 | Why not? |
29246 | Why should he do so, when the animal belongs to me? |
29246 | Why then be so ceremonious? 29246 Why what is the matter, John?" |
29246 | Why, this is a French book-- do you read French, Leonard? |
29246 | Why? 29246 Why?" |
29246 | Will you let Mr. Streatfield remain here, or recall him if he is gone, and give him an opportunity of explaining himself to my sister? 29246 Will you read it, sir? |
29246 | Would''st thou recognize thy horse amongst twenty others? |
29246 | Yes, it is Lansmere; you stop there, I guess? |
29246 | Your wife? |
29246 | ''"[ L]_ Parson_( remorsefully)--"Are those Lord Bacon''s words? |
29246 | ''Fore whom as a suppliant low shall I bow, If Thy bounty to me, Thy poor slave, is denied? |
29246 | ''Is it a dream or vision? |
29246 | ( Aside to Riccabocca)--"Push on, will you?" |
29246 | (_ Exit Rosalinde._) COUNT HENRI.--Where should I be, sweet coz? |
29246 | A gentleman one day said to him,"But do you not find it very dull work poring from morning until night over those dusty sheep- skins?" |
29246 | A noble characteristic of a man perhaps in all respects deserving of admiration: But what of the prejudice you were meditating? |
29246 | Ah low he sings, ah sadly, Fainting with sweetest pain; O lily, snow white lily, Hear''st thou the dying strain? |
29246 | And Thou, a lone white Dove art thou sent forth Upon the winter deluge? |
29246 | And art thou happy in thy loneliness? |
29246 | And cuckoo- flowers for whom the cuckoo''s voice Hails, like an answering sister, to the woods? |
29246 | And may we not draw a moral from the story of his life as faintly and imperfectly shadowed forth in the preceding sketch? |
29246 | And pray, in what age have philosophers governed the world? |
29246 | And since knowledge is compatible with good and with evil, would not it be better to say,''Knowledge is a trust?''" |
29246 | And the Parson, sliding into her chair, said--"But you are dejected, then? |
29246 | And would you not say he who regards religion as a power, intends to abuse it as a priestcraft?" |
29246 | And you?" |
29246 | And, cousin, I do n''t believe she''ll live till doomsday, do you? |
29246 | And, oh, if you thus speak of knowledge, why have you encouraged me to know?" |
29246 | Any thing more, cousin? |
29246 | Apply to your master-- won''t he give you one?" |
29246 | Are there many nice miniatures? |
29246 | Are they not always grumbling that nobody attends to them?" |
29246 | At length the voice of Marlow roused her from her gently- troubled reverie, as he said,"Will you not come out to take a walk?" |
29246 | But for thee-- For such a bevy how art thou arrayed Flower of the Tempests? |
29246 | But is it a crime in them, or their parents, if their talents have lifted them into such rank or renown as the haughtiest duke might envy? |
29246 | But what could I do? |
29246 | But who is DOCTOR VERON, the editor- in- chief, when one finds his excellency_ chezelle_? |
29246 | But who''s this here other chap?" |
29246 | But, we ask, which of those twenty- three has produced a work uniquely and incontestably, or even, save in one or two instances, professedly GREAT? |
29246 | By knowledge, do you mean intellectual cultivation?--by the reign of knowledge, the ascendency of the most cultivated minds?" |
29246 | COUNT.--And how should I make love? |
29246 | Can you hope to bestow upon the vast mass of your order the luminous intelligence of this''Lord Chancellor of nature?'' |
29246 | Canst thou, Elhadra, reach out of the grave, And draw the golden waters of love''s well? |
29246 | Could a mathematician solve a problem? |
29246 | Could a painter paint a good picture if he had a hat on while engaged at the easel? |
29246 | Could his child deceive him? |
29246 | Dale?" |
29246 | Did any man ever make an eloquent speech with a hat on? |
29246 | Did not that show that she was desirous of concealing the acquaintance from her parents? |
29246 | Do n''t you think you and Mrs. Hazleton together can manage to frighten her into silence? |
29246 | Do you think I would keep you-- you, in such a painful state as you have mentioned? |
29246 | Do you think that I can not sometimes read your thoughts?" |
29246 | Do you understand me?" |
29246 | Do you, or do you not, find a difference?" |
29246 | Does her mind develope uniformly with her person? |
29246 | Does it not show us how we may overcome obstacles deemed by us insuperable, and how we may seek to become something better than what we are? |
29246 | Does it prove much in favor of knowledge? |
29246 | For instance, suppose you were challenged yourself?" |
29246 | For the last time I come to ask of you, madam, Is it your pleasure we fulfil at once your father''s last injunction? |
29246 | From the illustration, almost page by page, of Shakspeare, where is the man but would have shrunk? |
29246 | Grant that you do so-- and what guarantee have you for the virtue and the happiness which you assume as the concomitants of the gift? |
29246 | Had she earned the right, by the magnitude and resolution of her sacrifice, thus to indulge in the sad luxury of fruitless remembrance? |
29246 | Had she known it, what might have happened who can say? |
29246 | Has it ever been so? |
29246 | Have I found it such? |
29246 | Have the wise few been so unerring and so happy? |
29246 | Have you heard my message, father? |
29246 | He added point- blank,"Pray what was it?" |
29246 | He is older than she-- how much? |
29246 | He saw the trouble he gave me, and taking my hand, said, with a voice full of sensibility,''Are you happy?'' |
29246 | He was staggered, and asked,"What do you advise?" |
29246 | How are you, old fellow? |
29246 | How is it down In the dark depths? |
29246 | How is she off?" |
29246 | How so?" |
29246 | I asked him whether it was to be the Church of the sixth century, or the thirteenth, or the seventeenth, or the eighteenth? |
29246 | I asked him which Catholic Church? |
29246 | I said,"Why do you come to me? |
29246 | I think I have heard you say that you once had a narrow escape of a prison?" |
29246 | If''tis shut, to what other my steps can I guide? |
29246 | Is he genteel, or a mere country lout?" |
29246 | Is it an impression of the vileness and worthlessness of our species? |
29246 | Is not the hawthorn for the Queen of May? |
29246 | Is not the maiden blushing in the rose? |
29246 | Is this joy or grief? |
29246 | It seemed monstrous to suppose such a thing; and yet what could he believe? |
29246 | James Montgomery will live by his smaller poems-- his larger are long lyrics-- and when was a long lyric any other than tedious? |
29246 | Know you not that we are now in the town of the just Cadi, and that if we bring the case before him, he will certainly decide in my favor?" |
29246 | Look you, Mr.--what''s your name, sir?" |
29246 | Might not these last words of his be traced to the same motive? |
29246 | Monsieur,"added he, clasping the Doctor''s hand kindly,"how can I discharge my obligations towards you?" |
29246 | Nations, you say, may be beaten by other nations less learned and civilized?" |
29246 | Now know you not the youthful village belle whose face my gallant cousin raves about? |
29246 | Or is public opinion decidedly in favor of the man who does not fight, and against the man who does? |
29246 | Pray, is not ignorance power too?" |
29246 | ROS.--But who''s Carille, my lady? |
29246 | ROS.--Please you, my lady, who is this new victim? |
29246 | Riccabocca._--"What?" |
29246 | Riccabocca_( mildly).--"The shirts, to be sure, my love? |
29246 | Shall I find the Summer there Met manifold, as in an ark of peace? |
29246 | Shall not the babe and buttercup rejoice, Twins in one meadow? |
29246 | Shall we say the truth? |
29246 | She is a great centre of attraction, I observe; is it only for her beauty and dancing?" |
29246 | She resumed her task:--"I am a Duchess but of what value is that vain title which I sought, as an ægis against memory, to me? |
29246 | Should I delve there, O Flower, For beauty? |
29246 | Soon after the officer had departed, he said suddenly,"This is a great honor, but am I expected to bring my instrument?" |
29246 | Tell me then-- tell me at once, am I to hope or to despair?--Will you be mine?" |
29246 | That is Lansmere before me, is it not?" |
29246 | That would answer better for rye than grass; but then what would become of my Lord''s deer? |
29246 | The other history? |
29246 | Then in a low voice he continued,"Why did you present him to the Doctor?" |
29246 | Under the circumstances, could I regard it as any thing but a mere caprice, a lover''s wayward fancy? |
29246 | VIC.--How? |
29246 | VIC.--Whom think you, Rosalinde? |
29246 | VIC.--_Will_ you do so? |
29246 | Was it vision, or monomania, or nervous delusion, all influenced by foregone conclusion? |
29246 | Was it weakness in her to live thus; to abandon the world and the world''s interests, as one who had no hope, or part in either? |
29246 | Was such a son- in- law to be rejected, even after all that had happened, without at least consulting his wife and daughters first? |
29246 | We''ve all the same cut of the jib-- have not we, father?" |
29246 | What did he want?" |
29246 | What do you say?" |
29246 | What had he in common with the rest of the company-- the fops and flirts, the dancing men and dancing women? |
29246 | What had that lady done or said which justified so great a change of feeling towards her? |
29246 | What hast thou with them? |
29246 | What is it you want?" |
29246 | What mean you by that?" |
29246 | What on earth are you talking of, ma''am?" |
29246 | What perceptible sign of mature age or manliness is there about him? |
29246 | What perfidious demon inspired me when I yielded to another than to him the_ right_ to love me? |
29246 | What sense or justice is there in a duel? |
29246 | What was Bacon himself? |
29246 | What words have I uttered?" |
29246 | What would you have more, sir, from folks like us, who have kept shop ourselves? |
29246 | What''s the room you give him?" |
29246 | What''s the use of meddling with him? |
29246 | When I promised a love I knew could be given to no other than to him? |
29246 | When his bottle was filled, he said,''Have you change for a piece of gold?'' |
29246 | Where is my sister''s smile? |
29246 | Who ever wears a hat at the sea- side? |
29246 | Who knows how largely that event may itself have contributed to what it too hastily anticipated and too finally condemned? |
29246 | Why did she love Mrs. Hazleton less? |
29246 | Why had she lost so greatly her esteem for her? |
29246 | Why on the day of that fatal marriage did I see him only when I was about to leave the church? |
29246 | Why should she be ashamed of him? |
29246 | Why will he not let me enter his cabinet? |
29246 | Why, you''re not afraid-- are you?" |
29246 | Will they carry conviction to those strangers to me, or enemies of mine, whose pleasure it may be to disbelieve them? |
29246 | Will they stop the whisperings of calumny? |
29246 | Will you consider all that has happened, as something forgotten? |
29246 | Would not that be a base and sordid view of its advantages? |
29246 | You can get on some learned subject together, and then he will not miss so much his--""His what?" |
29246 | You have an invitation to his funeral? |
29246 | You say the boy''s a cute, clever lad?" |
29246 | You see that great park yonder, on the other side of the road? |
29246 | You take to the boy, then?" |
29246 | You understand me, sir?" |
29246 | You were in the house, do n''t you recollect, getting a jug of beer, while I was sitting at the door when she came down?" |
29246 | Your highness saw that I detained for a night the three things in dispute?" |
29246 | _ Leonard_( recovering his surprise).--"But why so?" |
29246 | _ O tempora, O Moses!_ as Cicero said to Catiline,_ quousque tandem_? |
29246 | _ Parson._--"All evil is power, and does its power make it any thing the better?" |
29246 | _ Parson._--"In the first place, is it true that the class which has the most knowledge gets the most power? |
29246 | and how are the Texas Inconvertibles?" |
29246 | and what can I do for thee?" |
29246 | are the portraits good? |
29246 | between the enlightened scholar and the dunce of to- day, than there was between the monkish alchemist and the blockhead of yesterday? |
29246 | can it be a dream?" |
29246 | could a musician compose a melody or arrange a harmony? |
29246 | could a poet write a song, or a novelist a novel, or a journalist a leading article, with a hat on? |
29246 | did you know you were an infernal scoundrel? |
29246 | exclaimed Mrs. Avenel, fiercely--"why? |
29246 | have you been told?" |
29246 | he cried,"what in the name of fortune has happened here?" |
29246 | he exclaimed,"_ Brutuses_ written by a Voltaire? |
29246 | my brother''s boisterous din? |
29246 | or was it, as the mesmerists seem to hold, an instance of clairvoyance in a high degree? |
29246 | said Monte- Leone,--"introduce Doctor Matheus to the Duke d''Harcourt?" |
29246 | said he, bitterly,''Do you enjoy my misfortune?'' |
29246 | said the Parson,"if I wished to prove the value of Religion, would you think I served it much, if I took as my motto,''Religion is power?'' |
29246 | what have I done? |
29246 | what is the meaning of this?'' |
29246 | who now? |
35345 | ''And you will be_ mine_ for ever?'' 35345 ''But,_ mon pauvre enfant_, what does she at La Morgue?'' |
35345 | ''Do you ask what?'' 35345 ''Do you not see her?'' |
35345 | ''Do you wish for any thing?'' 35345 ''See? |
35345 | ''What do you see?'' 35345 ''What is it, John?'' |
35345 | ''What is it?'' 35345 ''Where does this dreadful smell come from?'' |
35345 | ''Who,_ mon enfant_? 35345 Ah, mother,"said Leonard, sadly,"it is a long tale; you have heard the beginning, who can guess the end?" |
35345 | And do none of you ever go to see him, and try to comfort him,exclaimed Lilias;"do none befriend him in all this house?" |
35345 | And does no one know the secret of her life? |
35345 | And have you determined upon your fate? |
35345 | And how am I to be made useful? |
35345 | And now,said Harley rising, and with his candid winning smile,"do you think we shall ever be friends?" |
35345 | And now,said she,"tell me who and what he is, he seems to occupy so strange a position in this house?" |
35345 | And what avails it? |
35345 | And what things, dear Lilias? 35345 And when shall I see you again?" |
35345 | And who is this visitor? |
35345 | And why have you left your home in----shire? 35345 And you do n''t know the lady''s friends or address?" |
35345 | Are you serious? |
35345 | Are you sure? |
35345 | But what do you mean by an anomalous character? |
35345 | But why lose me my heritage? |
35345 | But why withdrawn? |
35345 | Can not I go with Miss Digby? |
35345 | Did he? 35345 Dinner? |
35345 | Do you remember,said Partridge,"Alfred Dervilly?" |
35345 | Do you think the Austrian government would suffer your estates to pass to this English jackanapes, a clerk in a public office? 35345 Does even Gabriel not know him?" |
35345 | For him;--for whom? 35345 Going to have a son,"repeated Harley, looking very bewildered;"how do you know it is to be a son?" |
35345 | Have you done with that''ere decanter I brought across yesterday? |
35345 | He took my child- angel from me,said Leonard, with visible emotion;"and if she had not returned, where and what should I be now? |
35345 | His mother? |
35345 | How very strange; people seem to hate a good deal at Randolph Abbey; but is it always their nearest relations, as in this case? |
35345 | Hubert, what is it that has excited you in this manner? 35345 I am his niece, but not his heiress surely; there are so many worthier heirs, are you not one of them?" |
35345 | Is it Lilias or you who are waiting? |
35345 | Is it possible you have heard of him already? 35345 Is it, then, the perishable, mortal body that we love and hold communion with, in those who are mercifully given to be our friends?" |
35345 | Is that all? |
35345 | La, my love,said the good Jemima,"that is not like you; you are not envious of her, poor girl?" |
35345 | Like him? |
35345 | Most gladly would I-- most gladly see you again, sweet Lily; since that is your sweet name; but do you know who I am? |
35345 | Nay, that can not be true, or why is it so popular? |
35345 | Nay,she said,"your son and I are such old friends, how could you stand on ceremony with me?" |
35345 | No religion is excluded from the Egyptian society--for is it not certain that religion_ pays_? |
35345 | No, indeed,said Lilias, distressed at the idea,"how could you think me capable of it? |
35345 | Nor who recommended her to your wife? |
35345 | Of whom? |
35345 | Oh, is it possible? |
35345 | Pardon me a rude question; but what do you know of the world? |
35345 | Perhaps you came with him from Italy? |
35345 | Probably Lady Jane Horton? |
35345 | Their papers and recordssays our historian,"were taken from them"by their new masters:--"Was their property demanded for the public service? |
35345 | Then will you promise me,she said,"that I shall hear these glorious sounds once more? |
35345 | Then, what made you look so angry, my dear fellow? 35345 Thou art called Sol,"proceeded the emperor,"is it not so?" |
35345 | What was L''Estrange saying to you? |
35345 | What young man? |
35345 | When the doctor rose and announced his subject, the question was at once whispered in all parts of the hall,"Who are the Mormons? |
35345 | When? 35345 Where, in the loftiest house of Europe, find a husband worthy of such a prize?" |
35345 | Where? |
35345 | Why impossible, fair skeptic? |
35345 | Why should this young man have so sounded me as to Violante''s chance of losing fortune if she married an Englishman? |
35345 | Why? |
35345 | Will you take me there? |
35345 | You are Sir Michael''s niece, are you not, the child of his favorite brother-- his heiress probably? |
35345 | You are his ward-- Lord L''Estrange''s? |
35345 | You are not sorry that Violante is coming to us? 35345 ''From whom did you, Mr. White, obtain these letters?'' 35345 ''Is he better?'' 35345 ''Is it not possible to find Mademoiselle de Coigny?'' 35345 ''Is that your nephew?'' 35345 ''Tell me,''she exclaimed,''will he die? 35345 ''What,''cried the expiring hero,''do they run already? 35345 ''Who run?'' 35345 --Are you as absent as ever?" |
35345 | --"Helen, will you grant me a favor? |
35345 | --"We can guess why-- can we not?" |
35345 | Ah, do you suppose that, all the while I have been conversing with you, I have not noticed the watchful gaze of Mr. Randal Leslie? |
35345 | Already it has been said that"Charity pays,"philanthropy, benevolence, all these-- sometimes? |
35345 | Am I a simpleton now?" |
35345 | Am I so far gone?'' |
35345 | And now what think you of Helen Digby? |
35345 | And now, what have we not arrived at? |
35345 | And talking of that, shall I present you to my Jemima?" |
35345 | And the improved yellow? |
35345 | And this word"brother,"once so precious and so dear, why did he shrink from it now?--why could he not too say the sweet word"sister?" |
35345 | And was it for him? |
35345 | And why not come yourself?" |
35345 | And why this new change of name?" |
35345 | And why, then, was the quiet now gone from his heart, and the repose from his eyes? |
35345 | Are there no ruby drops to ladies''necklaces?--no jewelled toys hanging from gentlemen''s watch- guards? |
35345 | Are you ashamed to retract? |
35345 | Are you better now?" |
35345 | Are you ill?" |
35345 | Are you not answered? |
35345 | Are you then so cruel? |
35345 | As Wolfe disembarked on the Isle of Orleans, what scene could be more imposing? |
35345 | At length I whispered to him,"For Heaven''s sake tell me what does all this mean?" |
35345 | Banished from his beloved Paris and the sunshine of royalty, what should he do but to regain his pedestal? |
35345 | Bertram?" |
35345 | Burley?" |
35345 | But among all these men employed here, are there none accessible to a bribe from a rival in the art? |
35345 | But do n''t you think Leonard and Miss Digby seem born for each other? |
35345 | But do you know any of her relations or friends? |
35345 | But how, in the weft, do the colors duly return, so as to make the stripes, and therefore the checks, recur at equal distances? |
35345 | But what is it for? |
35345 | But what is it that yields gold, and silver, and copper, and brass? |
35345 | But what is it? |
35345 | But what_ is_ this neighboring refinery? |
35345 | But why does it not supersede the old- fashioned turmeric? |
35345 | But why would you be friends with me?" |
35345 | But you would know the author of this book? |
35345 | Cagliostro doctors-- heals-- the poor, for nothing!--even gives them alms-- does a great deal of good-- who but he? |
35345 | Call the class together; propound why of necessity you can do nothing? |
35345 | Can any one on earth oppose the decree written by the right hand of the Most High?" |
35345 | Can it be that prophets and priests really do_ learn_, and that even now, men may grow into the future? |
35345 | Can there be any such?" |
35345 | Can you not understand that I wish for one minute to think you are at home again under this roof?" |
35345 | Can you suggest any mode of tracing this packet if it came to her hands?" |
35345 | Could she not, too,"enlist the sympathies of admiring audiences"--by her sweet smiles and"artless ways,"gain belief, and"a wish to believe?" |
35345 | Dear Lilias, why do you start so, what do you see?" |
35345 | Did they find Loyola''s twenty days sufficient, and was the article then turned out of hand complete for that other state? |
35345 | Do some still doubt? |
35345 | Do we never see gold chains the links whereof are studded with turquoises, or garnets, or little specks of emerald? |
35345 | Do you like him?" |
35345 | Do you think he wears a_ toupet_? |
35345 | Do you? |
35345 | Do_ they_ deceive us; and, if not, who does? |
35345 | Does it exist still? |
35345 | Does it-- or does it not-- pay? |
35345 | Ere long the cry rung on the broad staircase,"Where is Latour? |
35345 | First, we, of course, refused to believe in their existence;--what improvement have we not refused to believe in? |
35345 | For if, as Byron said,"Little Tommy dearly loved a lord,"with how much more affection did he worship a prince of the blood royal? |
35345 | For should not this be the creed of M. Bonaparte, rather than of his illustrious Academicians? |
35345 | For what purpose, think you, gentle reader? |
35345 | From whom did Messrs. Sotheby and Wilkinson receive them for sale? |
35345 | Have we not made a little progress since those good old times, and would it be a pleasant thing to get them back again? |
35345 | He laid his hand kindly on Egerton''s shoulder--"Before I speak of my business, tell me how you are-- better?" |
35345 | He professes to like you, I suppose?" |
35345 | Here are two yellows: how is that? |
35345 | How can I be mistaken?" |
35345 | How can I resist what is inevitable? |
35345 | How is it, then, that we can have no full- grown inspiration; that we know of no perfection-- that we only go on towards it? |
35345 | How is it, then, that you are here?" |
35345 | How is that possible?" |
35345 | How were they to be beaten to death again? |
35345 | How, when?" |
35345 | I believed in her guilt-- and what could now avail her remorse, if remorse she felt? |
35345 | If I have done wrong myself( as who has not?) |
35345 | If I wished to know the retreat of Dr. Riccabocca, in order to render him a great service, would you confide to me that secret?" |
35345 | In order to rest and enjoy, what will content you?" |
35345 | Into whose hands would it have fallen? |
35345 | Is it from the cruelty natural to the female disposition?" |
35345 | Is it not the indestructible soul to which we give our sympathy, and is not that sympathy immortal as itself? |
35345 | Is it possible that such a hue can stand? |
35345 | Is it possible, thought he as he spoke, that a Randal Leslie could have charmed this grand creature? |
35345 | Is it you who ask if I am a coward?" |
35345 | Is the home too mean?" |
35345 | It may be asked how there comes to be any lapidary department here? |
35345 | Know you wherefore I am come?" |
35345 | Lilias turned round hastily to Walter, with such a pair of speaking eyes, that he laughed gayly, and answered them at once----"How can I help you? |
35345 | May I?" |
35345 | Monsieur Partridge, quel est le mal?_''said Louis, with great feeling. |
35345 | More than that, could she not turn the heads of young and old? |
35345 | Mrs.---- why do you ask?" |
35345 | Must this Jewess die?" |
35345 | O, sage in theory, why are you such a simpleton in action?" |
35345 | Or, again, let the beautifying- water succeed or not, have not such dames( if calumny may in aught be believed) another want? |
35345 | Peschiera has the property?" |
35345 | She must have been to a great distance; surely she does not do the same every day?" |
35345 | She took a book from the table as she spoke:"Have you seen this work?" |
35345 | Should I not have to listen to regrets, and hopes, and fears that would prick sharp through my thin cloak of philosophy? |
35345 | Should he ever have any share in it? |
35345 | Should it have so chanced that he had lived now, would he have stopped there does the reader think? |
35345 | Shout it daily to an envious world--"Am I not a charitable man? |
35345 | So says our author, and can we blame him? |
35345 | Sometimes those praises seem to ask ironically,"And what right hast thou to hope because thou lovest? |
35345 | Suddenly he extended his finger, and cried again,''_ La Morgue-- La Morgue._''"''What see you in_ La Morgue_?'' |
35345 | The American commander, who did not know what to make of such conduct, asked him who he was? |
35345 | The end of all, the lofty and the low, must come-- that seems drawing near to Cagliostro too-- but how? |
35345 | The widow saw the smile, and catching Leonard by the arm, whispered,"But, where before have you seen that pretty young lady? |
35345 | The"boy,"as he grew, discovered this world- wide capacity; and who should have this power of setting the"spirits"to work but he? |
35345 | The_ Athenà ¦ um_ inquires:"From whom did Mr. Moxon buy these letters? |
35345 | Then that young man spoke truly?" |
35345 | This is a brilliant blue; indigo, of course? |
35345 | Unconsciously, he let his hands fall softly on her head and said:"Where have you come from? |
35345 | Was Lord L''Estrange really enamored of the Marchesa? |
35345 | Was he more than usually insulting?" |
35345 | Was it your unfortunate meeting with Sir Michael last night? |
35345 | Was its sweetness ever to be for his hungry and thirsty heart? |
35345 | Was not this a frenzy against which he had armed all the powers of his being? |
35345 | Was there no lady well acquainted with Italian, and with whom, perhaps, for that very reason, your wife became familiar?" |
35345 | Was this justice? |
35345 | Was this_ finesse_ compatible with Randal''s notions of Harley''s character? |
35345 | Washington?'' |
35345 | What could be the circumstances so untoward, that even the child could not bind the mother to life? |
35345 | What excuse can you make for your presumption in treating this government with such indignity as to expound to them the nature of fidelity? |
35345 | What has cotton to do here? |
35345 | What is doing with that dirty- white bundle? |
35345 | What is that heap of dirt in the special shed? |
35345 | What think you?'' |
35345 | What was to be done? |
35345 | What will Jemima say?" |
35345 | Whence does it obtain the metals it refines? |
35345 | Where is he?" |
35345 | Who was she? |
35345 | Why ca n''t you speak?" |
35345 | Why did he look up with that earnest gaze to the evening sky, as though some shadow had come over its brightness? |
35345 | Why not? |
35345 | Why, then, will you live, as it were in my shadow-- why will you persecute me?" |
35345 | Will the reader allow the current of this prosperity to be checked for one moment by a certain Count M.? |
35345 | Will we not-- say so?" |
35345 | Will you lay aside, for one minute, your shawl and bonnet? |
35345 | Would my wife''s life be safe? |
35345 | Yet of what avail was the frenzied despair of the unarmed youth? |
35345 | You have none?" |
35345 | You know him?" |
35345 | Your wife knew her?" |
35345 | _ Harley._--"Why, my dear Helen?" |
35345 | _ Harley._--"You puzzle me: what can they be?" |
35345 | _ Of what use to a fool is all the trouble he gives himself?_( Chinese.) |
35345 | and is there not? |
35345 | and what kind of a person am_ I who have had_ part and lot with these? |
35345 | but his mother, how could she marry Sir Michael when she so loved, and still loves, another? |
35345 | can you be surprised that I ask it? |
35345 | did her fears prove groundless? |
35345 | exclaimed a man in the pit,"eh, yon''s Sir Walter, wi''Lockhart and his wife; and wha''s the wee body wi''the pawkie een? |
35345 | has not a great deal of good_ grown out_ of my wickedness? |
35345 | how curb myself when_ all_ hold is lost? |
35345 | my dear fellow, what is the matter? |
35345 | oh, will he,_ must_ he die?'' |
35345 | said a consoling friend;"of what consequence is a splendid dinner? |
35345 | said he;"is there no remedy? |
35345 | said the emperor,"who has urged you to this temerity? |
35345 | she answered;"the frame that shall be a thing of dust and worms so soon? |
35345 | that is the fair creature whom Leonard called his child- angel? |
35345 | the gentle, single- hearted child? |
35345 | thrice in one day-- is this wound never to scar over?" |
35345 | what became of her? |
35345 | what tyrant, what enemy could be more fearful to him than an earthly love? |
35345 | who are you?" |
35345 | who can have been bold enough to mention him?" |
35345 | why is it that the"spirits"so often fail us at our sorest need? |
37872 | A message, Gabriel? |
37872 | And I suppose you were frightened? |
37872 | And are you happy? |
37872 | And did he take the parcel with him? 37872 And have you no coals?" |
37872 | And how can you? |
37872 | And how would you spend your days, Julie, had you the choice of your own way of life? |
37872 | And pray, who constrains my will? |
37872 | And she''s gone, is she, Susan? |
37872 | And so your aunt loves a white rose better than a slice of bread? |
37872 | And the pictures in the hall? |
37872 | And trying to be happy, Westbourne? 37872 And what am I to do with this little bauble?" |
37872 | And what does he mean to do now? |
37872 | And what''s the matter? 37872 And where is he now?" |
37872 | And will you,said he, in a voice stifled with emotion,"tell me which of the four you love?" |
37872 | Ay, my dear, why not? 37872 Ay, why not?" |
37872 | Be you going there? |
37872 | But I am too poor to part with it on such terms, and you too proud to take it-- is that your meaning? 37872 But are you sure he''s dead?" |
37872 | But at any rate, would it not be better to write first, and apprise him of the additional visitor? |
37872 | But did she say why she desired it, and what she wished to speak to me about? |
37872 | But did you hear anything of the parcel? |
37872 | But still, though L''Estrange is doubtless all you say, do n''t you think he rather wastes his life-- living abroad? |
37872 | But the farmers want work here as well as elsewhere, I suppose? |
37872 | But what are you? |
37872 | But you do not love him? |
37872 | But you? 37872 By my word of honor, no,"retorted the old woman, in her turn surprised--"no, my dear; but what is the matter-- why do you blush so?" |
37872 | Can I offer you a glass of wine-- it is pure, of our own making? |
37872 | Could n''t I carry the message for you? |
37872 | Dear me,cried Mrs. Leslie,"who can that possibly be? |
37872 | Did anything disturb you in the night, father? |
37872 | Did he? |
37872 | Did you never, when you were on the lakes, see them eat ham and molasses? 37872 Do you know who built this bridge?" |
37872 | Do you not see,replied Scorpione,"that I am opening the door for the escape of the poison?" |
37872 | Do you remember,said Lucille, after a long pause,"the story of the fair demoiselle of Alsace you used to tell me long ago? |
37872 | Eh? |
37872 | Feed_ who_? 37872 Had my uncle nothing with him but what I have found in his pockets?" |
37872 | Her name? |
37872 | How dare you speak in that tone to me? |
37872 | How did he die? 37872 How know you that I would not have done as much for each of your friends?" |
37872 | I forget whether he has any family? |
37872 | I hope my roughness has not hurt you? |
37872 | I hope so, my little pet-- why not? |
37872 | I suppose she_ is_ a fortune- teller; and how did she come to ask for me? |
37872 | Is he as amusing as ever? |
37872 | Is that queer fellow ever coming back to England? |
37872 | Is this a time to talk of such things? 37872 Is this the village of Rood?" |
37872 | It is: what do you want? |
37872 | It seems, sir, that you have made the acquaintance of Mademoiselle de Charrebourg? |
37872 | May I ask your permission? |
37872 | May I consult the family? |
37872 | Me? 37872 Monsieur!--for the love of God do you mean-- do you mean----?" |
37872 | Mr. Hazeldean has company staying with him? |
37872 | No papers? |
37872 | Not Ephraim Aldridge? |
37872 | Oh yes, I likes them well eno''; mayhap you are at school with the young gentleman? |
37872 | Oh, Tracy, Tracy,cried Mary, addressing her little boy,"what_ are_ you doing with that book? |
37872 | Oh-- I-- no; but they are well done, are n''t they, sir? |
37872 | On Saturday, then? |
37872 | Really? |
37872 | Say you so? |
37872 | She inquired if the Visconte de Charrebourg still lived on the estate, and then she said,''Has he not a beautiful daughter called Lucille?'' 37872 Signor,"continued Maulear,"what principle, what opinions can combat your desire to see your mother, and to rescue her from despair? |
37872 | So you are Lucille de Charrebourg? |
37872 | So,said he, after they had run through the most important items--"so you have found a tenant for the house in Thomas Street? |
37872 | Taken from nature-- eh? |
37872 | Tell me, Lucille, are you angry with me? |
37872 | Then am I condemned to be henceforward a stranger to_ dear_ Mademoiselle de Charrebourg? |
37872 | Then nobody was present but your father? |
37872 | Then you had a doctor? |
37872 | Then you saw it? |
37872 | Then you were not in the room when the accident happened? |
37872 | There again I give you a_ carte blanche_; say I am a benevolent fairy; you do n''t seem to like that? 37872 This_ is_ sixty, sir,"said Miss Cecilia; adding to herself,"I wonder if it was sixteen he was sent to?" |
37872 | Those are very funny,said he:"they seem capitally done-- who did''em?" |
37872 | To me? |
37872 | Was there any message, Sue? |
37872 | Well, Gabriel, and what is it? |
37872 | Well, Madame? |
37872 | Well, Miss Gibbs, I hope you have something that will suit me? |
37872 | Well, Mr. Mayor,said Audley, pointing to a seat,"what else would you suggest?" |
37872 | Well, shall I tell you? 37872 What accident, sir?" |
37872 | What are you about, Randal? |
37872 | What are you about? |
37872 | What did it contain? 37872 What do you know about pointed- heads? |
37872 | What do you pay for peeping? |
37872 | What do you think of his condition? |
37872 | What does this mean, Monsignore? |
37872 | What does_ Niagara_ mean? |
37872 | What hopes have you, doctor, of the poor lad? |
37872 | What is he? |
37872 | What is life to a duty? |
37872 | What is the matter? 37872 What made you go out so late for that purpose?" |
37872 | What now shall we believe? |
37872 | What object did you propose to yourself in committing these acts? |
37872 | What rule does a gentleman adopt in naming his country- seat when he acquires a new one, or is there any rule? |
37872 | What shall we give you, Gabriel, now that you have won the game? 37872 What should he take?" |
37872 | What sized book? |
37872 | What strange chance has conducted you to this spot? |
37872 | What surprises you? |
37872 | What was it? 37872 What''s the matter?" |
37872 | What, Randal? |
37872 | What, monsieur, has happened? |
37872 | What,said he,"only twenty pounds?" |
37872 | When did my uncle come here? 37872 Where am I?" |
37872 | Where is he? |
37872 | Where is it? 37872 Where? |
37872 | Who are you? 37872 Who can that be?" |
37872 | Who is it? 37872 Who says so?" |
37872 | Why ask that question? |
37872 | Why do you say that, Marguerite? |
37872 | Why does he not go to them? |
37872 | Why fear my love? |
37872 | Why how came he to know the Lanes? 37872 Why should I only be absent from my brother''s funeral?" |
37872 | Will you give me a receipt for the note, sir? |
37872 | Will you please to walk in? 37872 Will you pull me down that bough, Oliver?" |
37872 | Without compliment? |
37872 | Yes; an odd name enough for a private soldier, is n''t it? |
37872 | You are an officer''s servant, I see? |
37872 | You have no food either, I suppose? |
37872 | You have perhaps heard, sir, that Mr. Lane is dead? |
37872 | Your father seems in bad health? |
37872 | ''Shall I dare to ask, Monsignore, is the visit I receive an act of benevolence, or of official duty?'' |
37872 | --"What exile from his country can fly himself as well?" |
37872 | A true lover of his country should be exempted from the pain of blushes, when a foreigner inquires of him,"_ Whom does this statue represent? |
37872 | After a few observations on the last debate, this gentleman said--"By the way, can you dine with me next Saturday, to meet Lansmere? |
37872 | After twenty, does the heart ever rise up from her green sod and sing at Heaven''s gate as in childhood? |
37872 | And count me your loves, fair lady-- How many may they be?" |
37872 | And to return to matters of more consequence, I want to know what you''ve done with the tenements in Water Lane?" |
37872 | And where was the pocket- book and the notes? |
37872 | Are you sure it is not we who waste our lives? |
37872 | Besides, who was to take care of her father, and the lodger, and the shop? |
37872 | But could she forbear? |
37872 | But how did you happen to meet her?" |
37872 | But how is he to pay the rent?" |
37872 | But then, what could he do? |
37872 | But what do you say to a youngster''s seating himself upon a piano in the public parlor, while a lady is playing on it?" |
37872 | But where was the evidence of the constraint? |
37872 | But why do they withhold it now? |
37872 | But"who shall control his fate?" |
37872 | But, after all, what''s in a name? |
37872 | Call we for harp or song? |
37872 | Can that boy in years be already aged in heart? |
37872 | Can you be Mr. Ephraim Aldridge''s nephew?" |
37872 | Could anything be prettier? |
37872 | Could the surgeons be the guilty parties? |
37872 | Did it ever strike you, by the way, how behindhand your countrymen are in the matter of hotels? |
37872 | Did you mean to follow him and rob him-- perhaps murder him? |
37872 | Do you hear, Mary?" |
37872 | Do you suppose I can listen to you now?" |
37872 | Ewart?" |
37872 | Fair Evelyn pouted proudly; She sighed"Will he never have done?" |
37872 | Had the princess Leonora''s ghost visited the scenes Tasso loved so well? |
37872 | Had you much trouble in getting rid of the Lanes?" |
37872 | Have they stung her? |
37872 | He who gives the sunshine, shall he not bring the clouds? |
37872 | How could he arouse her without awaking the reptiles also? |
37872 | How could she have got it?" |
37872 | How d''ye think the Premier would take it?" |
37872 | I hope Mr. Jonas is well?" |
37872 | I hope it is nothing serious?" |
37872 | I wonder if gentlemen are as true of heart now?" |
37872 | In all these chances and changes, what fixed and rigid mind could escape the fangs of persecution and wrong? |
37872 | Is he very ill? |
37872 | Is it any thing serious?" |
37872 | Is this meant to guard against too sanguine notions of inheritance, which his generosity may have excited? |
37872 | It may be asked, why then did not the Colonel go the same length as his Majesty? |
37872 | It was a dreadful shock for him, being so ill.""How did it happen?" |
37872 | It was easy to read that, for he always called her_ his darling Mary_--but what came next? |
37872 | Leslie''s?" |
37872 | Mayor._--"And if I go to the last chap, what do you think he''ll say?" |
37872 | Now, where were his hopes? |
37872 | Or that of another, addressed to her: Thou wouldst be loved? |
37872 | Or_ who''d_ listen to music by day, That had listened to music by night? |
37872 | Paulding?" |
37872 | President.--"And what did you do after one of these visits to a cemetery?" |
37872 | Rickeybockey?" |
37872 | Root them up, will you? |
37872 | She inwardly felt that there was danger in it, but what could it be? |
37872 | That''s speaking fair and manful, is n''t it?" |
37872 | Then turning to the young man, he said,"Philip, I think you loved your brother Arthur?" |
37872 | They must have been placed out of sight; and the question occurred to him, was_ she_ a party to the concealment? |
37872 | Tracy, what can it mean? |
37872 | True, he is very little in town; but why do n''t you go and see him in the country? |
37872 | Two votes for a free and independent town like ours-- that''s something, is n''t it?" |
37872 | Was Taddeo a relation or connection of Aminta? |
37872 | Was it a dream?" |
37872 | Was there ever such a triumph? |
37872 | Was there no address on it?" |
37872 | We translate the conclusion of the article:--"We shall be asked if Heine really continues to write? |
37872 | Well, then, about this Monsieur Le Prun?" |
37872 | Were contrasts ever seen more striking, and more likely to excite a powerful interest?" |
37872 | What am I saying?" |
37872 | What assistance could he render her? |
37872 | What business can he possibly have with me? |
37872 | What business have you here scandalizing the congregation, and brawling at the church door? |
37872 | What could he come for? |
37872 | What could he do but wait till the blow came? |
37872 | What could he do in his extremity? |
37872 | What did he come about?" |
37872 | What did he do or say-- how did he demean himself so as to produce in her bosom a feeling of horror and disgust toward him that nothing could remove? |
37872 | What did the parcel contain?" |
37872 | What does he want?" |
37872 | What had been thine effect upon Philip Hastings? |
37872 | What harm_ can_ be in it?" |
37872 | What has happened? |
37872 | What is the use of thought and example, if the mind remains thus feeble? |
37872 | What of that?" |
37872 | What say you, child?" |
37872 | What singer can sustain a high or a low tone, or execute a prolonged and varied shake, with more power and accuracy than Parodi? |
37872 | What was the secret of all this? |
37872 | What was to be done? |
37872 | What would a million men, taken at random from the multitude, have done, had they been so situated, so tempted? |
37872 | What''s the matter with him? |
37872 | When did_ he_ ever withhold his hand when I offered him money?" |
37872 | Where does he come from?" |
37872 | Where is he?" |
37872 | Where is it?" |
37872 | Where too, could be the danger? |
37872 | Where, then, could be the harm of helping himself to that which had been partly intended for him? |
37872 | Who can execute a musical tour de force with more effect than she has so recently done in Norma and Lucrezia? |
37872 | Who says he''s dead?" |
37872 | Who was this stranger, and how came he there lying dead on the floor of that poor house? |
37872 | Why did you not send for me sooner?" |
37872 | Why do n''t you tell me what it is that grieves you? |
37872 | Why should it trouble me? |
37872 | Why so?" |
37872 | Will you give me back the land, I say? |
37872 | Will you please to walk up stairs, and see him yourself?" |
37872 | Wilt thou come back? |
37872 | Yet, did he love or cherish her the less? |
37872 | You observe?" |
37872 | You remember that parcel we saved from the fire?" |
37872 | You see you were member for Lansmere once, and I think you came in but by two majority, eh?" |
37872 | You will be sure to deliver it into his own hands?" |
37872 | _ Blanche._--"But pray whom do you mean for a hero?--and is Miss Jemima your heroine?" |
37872 | _ Eh, bien!_ after all what more have I asked for? |
37872 | _ Pisistratus._--"Agreed; have you anything to say against the infant hitherto?" |
37872 | _ Pisistratus._--"Do you remember any of his reasons, sir?" |
37872 | and to whom?" |
37872 | and what do you want?" |
37872 | and when I got it, what did it bring me? |
37872 | are you deaf?" |
37872 | come where no troublesome eye Can look on the vigil love keeps; When there is not a cloud in the sky, What maid,_ but an old maiden_, sleeps? |
37872 | didst thou teach_ them_, or they teach_ thee_? |
37872 | do you call yourself a man? |
37872 | feed who?" |
37872 | for that and the song,_ Wo n''t_ you give me the locket of hair? |
37872 | he continued in a very different tone:"I''m afraid I gripped your arm too hard?" |
37872 | how should that be? |
37872 | is n''t it? |
37872 | or your guardian- angel? |
37872 | quoth Benson, in much dudgeon, turning to their chamberlain,"suppose we should want to wash in the morning, what are we to do?" |
37872 | said Lane;"where is it?" |
37872 | said Mr. Jonas, taking the note that Tracy brought him;"and she has found no papers?" |
37872 | said Rovero;"think you I sell my devotion? |
37872 | thought he;"how can man, who sees only the surface of things, ever hope to be just?" |
37872 | what its purpose, significance, or power? |
37872 | you painted them?" |
37872 | you?" |
36124 | A little girl whom I saw in the churchyard yonder, weeping very bitterly-- is she a relation of yours? 36124 All they say, then, is true?" |
36124 | And how about the champagne? |
36124 | And how did the ball go off? |
36124 | And it is not a very handsome city either, you say? |
36124 | And may I venture to ask your majesty how the works of Etienne, Jay, Jony and company, came hither? |
36124 | And since then? |
36124 | And so this London is very vast?--VERY? |
36124 | And when they race, do the horses run on ground like_ this_? |
36124 | And when? |
36124 | And why? |
36124 | And you have not secured a partner? 36124 And you will not tell me where that exile is, or if his daughter still lives?" |
36124 | Any bad news? |
36124 | Ay, and what? |
36124 | But his little girl surely remembers the name that he did not finish? |
36124 | But there must be parts that are prettier than others? 36124 But what can you do in London-- such a big place, Lenny?" |
36124 | But what is your life, Harley?--the saucer without the storm? |
36124 | But where''s Pelham? 36124 But you have not taken your degree, I think? |
36124 | Can I have accommodation for the night? |
36124 | Curse fatal results,cried John Ayliffe, giving way to a burst of fury;"why the devil do you come back to tell me such things and make me wretched? |
36124 | Curse the brute,he said, in a wandering sort of way,"I wonder, Shanks, you don''t-- damn it, where am I?--what''s the matter? |
36124 | Did you swear she was dead? |
36124 | Do n''t you want some champagne-- veritable Cordon Bleu-- only fourteen dollars a dozen, and a discount if you take six cases? |
36124 | Do they ever have races here? |
36124 | Do you know, that''s very well said, Audley? 36124 Do you mean to say that I am dying?" |
36124 | Do you think she has really told all? |
36124 | Do you wish to know by your own observation who are the conspirators? |
36124 | Does he mean to marry again? |
36124 | Father-- father-- do you hear me_ now_? |
36124 | For good? |
36124 | Go away-- why do you disturb me? 36124 Has his horse come back?" |
36124 | Has the experiment been often tried? |
36124 | Have I given you their secret notes and books? |
36124 | Have I named you the chief Carbonari in Paris? |
36124 | Have you not yet a daughter? |
36124 | How can I see and hear them? |
36124 | How long did he know he was dying? |
36124 | How? 36124 How?" |
36124 | I do,said H...."Do you wish to see-- to hear them?" |
36124 | In the next room? 36124 Indeed,"said the Prince, with delight;"and will your Majesty deign to tell me what this information is?" |
36124 | Is it you? |
36124 | Is that other rich? |
36124 | Is that you, Best? |
36124 | Is this the reason why Mr. Egerton so insultingly warns me against counting on his fortune? |
36124 | It is shameful,cried the Italian with warmth;"what has my brother ever done to him, that he should intrigue against the Count in his own court?" |
36124 | Madame di Negra? 36124 Monsieur,"said the stranger to M. H....,"have I kept my promise?" |
36124 | No relatives? |
36124 | No, no, not exactly dying,said the surgeon, putting his hand upon his pulse,"not dying I trust just yet, but--""But I shall die, you mean?" |
36124 | On whom? |
36124 | Pecuniarily, no doubt; but is it as good for the whole development of the man? 36124 Shall we be as happy when we are_ great_?" |
36124 | Shall you? |
36124 | Tell him, tell him by all means,said Mr. Dixwell,"why should you not tell him?" |
36124 | Tell us,he said,"who were the culprits?" |
36124 | The King,said M. de Maulear,"at least deigns to reckon me among the faithful subjects of whom he spoke just now?" |
36124 | The question in regard to mesmerism is two- fold:_ first_, how is the mesmeric prostration to be accounted for? 36124 Then do you think I am going to die so soon?" |
36124 | Then will you go on time? 36124 Then you would not have me call on him, sir? |
36124 | Think you that a great misfortune? |
36124 | This is terrible,said the Duchess,"are you sure this is so?" |
36124 | Was it? |
36124 | Well but, sir, what is to be done? |
36124 | Well,said the young man,"I''m not sure that would not be best for me-- come,"he continued sharply,"tell me how long I am to lie here on my back?" |
36124 | Well-- but you will write to Mr. Dale, or to me? 36124 What do you say?" |
36124 | What do you want now? |
36124 | What fault? |
36124 | What have you here that''s first rate? 36124 What is the matter my child?" |
36124 | What is the matter? 36124 What other Doctor?" |
36124 | What reason can your_ patron_ have to serve us, if he asks for neither gold, place, nor favor? |
36124 | What say you? |
36124 | What the devil does that signify? |
36124 | What then will you do? |
36124 | What''s that, sir? |
36124 | What''s the matter? 36124 What''s the news this morning?" |
36124 | When did this letter arrive here? |
36124 | Who is that very handsome woman? |
36124 | Who will dare to use such language? |
36124 | Who''s that? 36124 Who''s that?" |
36124 | Why are you so sad? |
36124 | Why not name that man? 36124 Why?" |
36124 | Why? |
36124 | Why? |
36124 | Will Mr. Egerton pay the young gentleman''s debts? 36124 Will his Majesty,"said the usher, who had just arrived,"receive the prime minister?" |
36124 | Will you bet three to five in hundreds on the Lady? |
36124 | Will you bet two to three on her against the field? |
36124 | With me? |
36124 | Yes,said H...."Have I unfolded the plot of Carbonarism?" |
36124 | Yes,said I to myself,"quite true-- why should I be angry?" |
36124 | You are then very fond of Count Monte- Leone? |
36124 | You ca n''t mean Mrs. Warner''s letter? |
36124 | You have not told her? |
36124 | You were a little taken aback, were n''t you? |
36124 | _ Five_ four- mile heats on ground like this? |
36124 | ''Are you Bishop Hughes?'' |
36124 | ''Is there no way at all, Mr. Curtis,''says he,''by which these articles may be passed, free of duty?'' |
36124 | ''Who is that dead man?'' |
36124 | --"Do you believe in Mesmerism?" |
36124 | --"Is it true kindness to bid him exchange manly independence for the protection of an official patron?" |
36124 | A lean man forfeits something in their estimation; for they say,"He must have foolishness; why has he wanted wisdom to eat more?" |
36124 | Am I to cut them out of the tiger''s ribs to- morrow?--or are they idly to be fired away into the trunk of a tree, or drawn again? |
36124 | And I said,''Your little girl, sir?'' |
36124 | And Leonard''s heart rushed to his lips, and he answered to the action as he bent down and kissed her cheek,"Orphan, will you go with me? |
36124 | And had her father no money with him?" |
36124 | And if he had_ not_ discovered it, how could he, Jennings, get at the drawers to examine them? |
36124 | And the poor little girl seems to have no relations-- and where is she to go? |
36124 | And what does the reader suppose is the theme-- the fresh, before unheard- of theme-- of another paper? |
36124 | And what was the host to do with her? |
36124 | And what would he say of her, if he could see her in heaven? |
36124 | And why should splendor prepare for perpetuity when that which supports it is to be shared among half a dozen or a dozen descendants? |
36124 | And without this engine of coercion what prince can be the master of his people? |
36124 | Are they gone?" |
36124 | Are you hurt, sir? |
36124 | At last he said:"I shall take a longer journey to- morrow, Caleb-- much longer: let me see-- where did I say? |
36124 | But he left some of the tiniest little balls you ever see, sir, to give the child; but, bless you, they did her no good-- how should they?" |
36124 | But if I was not your mother, after all, Lenny, and cost you all this-- oh, what would you say of me then?" |
36124 | But was it love that you felt for her? |
36124 | But what is going on at Hartwell?" |
36124 | But what is that? |
36124 | But when did you return?" |
36124 | But while we are talking of him, allow me to ask if Lord L''Estrange is indeed still so bitter against that poor brother of mine?" |
36124 | By Jove, Randall, how pleasant a thing is life in London? |
36124 | Come, big"Sam Nock,"king of two- ouncers, what is to be the fate of these two great plumbs that you are now to swallow? |
36124 | Did I not tell you the story of Fortunio? |
36124 | Did her father leave no directions, or was he in possession of his faculties?" |
36124 | Did she comprehend_ them_? |
36124 | Did you not say yourself laughter is as necessary for digestion as it is to the heart?" |
36124 | Dixwell?" |
36124 | Do n''t you find it rather expensive in the Guards? |
36124 | Do n''t you remember?" |
36124 | Do you go to Almack''s to- night?" |
36124 | Do you hear the monotonous rumble? |
36124 | Do you mean to make this young man your heir?" |
36124 | Do you remember, Alred dear, The peach- tree''s cool and ample shade, Where first our hearts learned love and fear, And vows of constancy were made? |
36124 | Does our friend the Prince de Maulear, contrary to every expectation, become a flatterer in his old age? |
36124 | Dost thou see the procession? |
36124 | Enviable man, have you ever loved?" |
36124 | Every year does not some lad leave our village, and go and seek his fortune, taking with him but health and strong hands? |
36124 | For where is it that we can say London_ bursts_ on the sight? |
36124 | For, after all, what good are academical honors but as the entrance to life? |
36124 | Germain?" |
36124 | God? |
36124 | Going to the trot to- day?" |
36124 | Has any thing gone wrong?" |
36124 | Has not a mother a right to her child?" |
36124 | Has not the King just given you the_ tabouret_ as a fresh proof of his love?" |
36124 | Have you told this youth plainly that he may look to you for influence, but not for wealth?" |
36124 | Have you written to him?" |
36124 | He escaped; and how did he escape? |
36124 | He had satisfied himself by saying, as so many men do,"Every man must die some time or another,"and had never asked his own heart,"What is it to die?" |
36124 | He paused silently for an instant, and then asked almost fiercely,"what brought you back?" |
36124 | He says:"Why should I not express to you, my lord, a desire which I have long had in my heart? |
36124 | How can one speculate on a social state formed under such circumstances? |
36124 | How did all this happen?" |
36124 | How go things in your part of the world? |
36124 | How the devil shall I get out of this scrape? |
36124 | How, then, is the miserable nonsense to be disposed of? |
36124 | Hush what''s that? |
36124 | I am, however, glad he has acted thus, for his conduct will diminish my sorrow at his departure--""His departure?" |
36124 | I think, however, the time is approaching to gather it, and in a month I will--""But,"said H....,"does not this delay endanger all? |
36124 | I wonder if that makes me an Honorable too? |
36124 | If I am to die, why ca n''t you let me die quietly and know nothing about it?" |
36124 | If there were another life, a judgment, an eternity of weal or woe, what was to be his fate? |
36124 | If they were so, how could he have hoped to sway them? |
36124 | If you are a- going back, sir, would you kindly mention it?" |
36124 | In what part of the Tuileries did he contract that disease? |
36124 | Is any one there?" |
36124 | Is he lost? |
36124 | Is her cup of sorrow full? |
36124 | Is that like a man of sense? |
36124 | It was now midday;--how to spend the long hours till sunset? |
36124 | It''s better than being nominal lawyers?" |
36124 | Keep still, ca n''t you?" |
36124 | Laryer Jones says we must pass her to Marybone parish, where her father lived last; and what''s to become of her then? |
36124 | Leslie?" |
36124 | May they not act, while we pause?" |
36124 | Mr. Dixwell laughed--"What, under the seal of confession?" |
36124 | Nevertheless, we can not quite agree with Professor Wilson in all his propositions: WHAT IS MESMERISM? |
36124 | Of what does the Southern summer dream here in the North, amongst pines and fragrant birches? |
36124 | See Savage and Johnson at night in Fleet- street, and who shall doubt the truth of St. Patrick''s Purgatory?" |
36124 | Shall I find you one? |
36124 | Shall she complain now that he is happy, and is master of Dunleath? |
36124 | Shanks,"he said,"what''s the use of three hundred pounds? |
36124 | She is a widow?" |
36124 | She paused in silence, indeed, for a moment or two, and then said in her sweet musical voice,"Well, Sir John, is that all?" |
36124 | Stay, did you see this about Bishop Hughes and Sam Thunderbolt, the Native American member of Congress from Pennsylvania?" |
36124 | Staying in town, Randal?" |
36124 | Tell me wherefore down the valley, ye have traced the turnpike''s way, Far beyond the cattle pasture, and the brick- yard with its clay? |
36124 | The Man in the Grey Coat_--MINERVA,"said the doctor, looking at them;"who dared to bring these books hither?" |
36124 | The howling of the wolf and the bear, dost thou know it? |
36124 | The next moment, however, the young man said,"Then you do promise, do you?" |
36124 | The old Shikaree makes his appearance in the nullah, and wishing me success through the window, asks if"all is right?" |
36124 | The other things I have got: and you, I presume, will let me have the drawers for-- say a pound profit on your bargain?" |
36124 | The poet is young,--he feels, dreams, and sings-- what needs poet more? |
36124 | Tiger gone!--cow dead!--was it a dream? |
36124 | Time enough for that-- eh? |
36124 | Was it you, or your friend Harrison, who instanced Richard Bleecker as a man who had made no progress in any thing manly for fifteen years?" |
36124 | Well, and what said Frank?" |
36124 | Well, why not?" |
36124 | Well-- what then? |
36124 | What blessing can attend the union? |
36124 | What could I do to stop them? |
36124 | What could public life give to one who needs nothing? |
36124 | What could you say worse to an author? |
36124 | What day will you fix?" |
36124 | What did I say, I wonder? |
36124 | What did he think on plucking it?--on preserving it? |
36124 | What did she there? |
36124 | What do you think of that pretty girl in pink?" |
36124 | What does youth care for any thing beyond a year? |
36124 | What girl of eighteen ever deemed herself too young to be wooed and won by a man of twenty- eight? |
36124 | What had he to offer now to Aminta? |
36124 | What has happened?" |
36124 | What has your mother done which seems to have affected you so much? |
36124 | What is the new one?" |
36124 | What is this black thing? |
36124 | What like? |
36124 | What man of twenty- eight ever thought himself old in the presence of a maiden of eighteen? |
36124 | What nation on the continent, mine excepted, can maintain for two years longer its present war establishment? |
36124 | What need to refer to it? |
36124 | What place have we here steaming like a boiler? |
36124 | What withholds them? |
36124 | What wonder that as the flower expands in beauty it gradually unfolds to blissful consciousness? |
36124 | What young man could come into life with brighter auspices? |
36124 | What, though, is come over you? |
36124 | When all passes under the hammer, what becomes of heir- looms, and whatever else in which family life and interest are bound up? |
36124 | When does he come?" |
36124 | Where does he now live? |
36124 | Where should I go now for advice? |
36124 | Where''s Brydges?" |
36124 | Where, then, shall we land? |
36124 | Who are you? |
36124 | Who is the puffer here? |
36124 | Why have you been so long in Italy?" |
36124 | Why should an audience, which has the patience to put up with such spectacles, not be fooled to the top of its bent? |
36124 | Why should they be excluded from a land of wonders which others are permitted to enter? |
36124 | Will you be shaved like a Chinese? |
36124 | You did not know him?" |
36124 | You know him?" |
36124 | You remember drinking that wine at Wilson''s last summer?" |
36124 | You say there are parks; why should not we lodge near them, and look upon the green trees?" |
36124 | You would not let the poor woman die when you can save her?" |
36124 | [ 9] Every man''s brain must be a world in itself, eh? |
36124 | _ Blanche._--"What is that legend? |
36124 | _ Leonard._--"To the perch, sir?" |
36124 | _ Nicholas._--Framed? |
36124 | _ Nicholas._--How did he ever get to Rome at all? |
36124 | _ Nicholas._--How? |
36124 | a spotted deer-- why does she call? |
36124 | and how to turn them from the strait road into his? |
36124 | and what are those people doing? |
36124 | and who is now come to interrupt me?" |
36124 | and_ secondly_, how is it to be disposed of? |
36124 | are you intimately acquainted with this stream, sir?" |
36124 | do you not really hear me? |
36124 | exclaimed John Ayliffe, now nearly driven to frenzy,"what if they convict me of perjury for swearing she was dead?" |
36124 | has she seen any thing? |
36124 | he cried,"what has she done?" |
36124 | how? |
36124 | is it not so? |
36124 | on canvas? |
36124 | on panel? |
36124 | out of humor?" |
36124 | replied John Ayliffe, replenishing his glass,"but the question now is, Shanks, what are we to do? |
36124 | said Aminta, passing her arm around the Prince''s neck;"have you not a daughter who loves you?" |
36124 | said a feeble voice, as he approached; and he ran up, exclaiming,"Gracious me, what is the matter? |
36124 | said he;"surely the child must have some kinsfolk in London? |
36124 | said the Duchess, making Taddeo sit by her;"the Marquise de Maulear has lost her husband? |
36124 | said the King,"speak out my old friend, if the matter depends on me--""Can not the King do any thing?" |
36124 | say,_ I will!_""Think you he will say so?" |
36124 | tell me wherefore do ye gaze On the ground that''s being furrowed for the planting of the maize? |
36124 | these are our men; what should we do without them? |
36124 | under glass? |
36124 | varnisht? |
36124 | what is that down the nullah to the left? |
36124 | what new star, in the heaven of mind, demanded most the exploration and illustration of the_ North American Review_, for this July quarter, in 1851? |
36124 | why does he not name himself?" |
45771 | ''And why? 45771 ''Are you the father?'' |
45771 | ''But must I-- must I die? 45771 ''But you did find help, somewhere?'' |
45771 | ''But, tell me,''I continued,''how it fared with you? 45771 ''I am going to put him down for the three hundredth,''said Peleg;''do ye hear that, Bildad? |
45771 | ''My strength is made perfect in weakness''--''Is not that said?'' 45771 ''Shall I go?'' |
45771 | ''Then will you try to make a friend of me? 45771 ''Then, you have heard his most unhappy history?'' |
45771 | ''Who shall assure us of that? 45771 A house of charity, then?" |
45771 | Ah Randal, Randal, is this the frankness of friendship? 45771 Am I among traitors or loyal soldiers?" |
45771 | And do you know that, Miss Ella? |
45771 | And how am I to got to America? 45771 And my own portion? |
45771 | And she accepted the charity; she received the alms? |
45771 | And that one-- that one-- that young creature, whose funeral-- Do you know her? 45771 And the Emperor consented?" |
45771 | And what made me lose so important though so ineffectual an ally? |
45771 | And you would marry Frank if the dower was secured? |
45771 | Any one you would wish to be sent for? |
45771 | Any thing more you would wish to have done? |
45771 | Are you going to turn me out into the street? |
45771 | Attempt my life? 45771 But do you not overrate the value of my aid?" |
45771 | But grant that my heart shrunk from the task you imposed on me, would it not have been natural? 45771 But how can I aid this marriage?" |
45771 | But how win that in despite of the father? |
45771 | But is what you say quite true? |
45771 | But still,she said coldly,"you enjoy one- half of those ample revenues-- why talk, then, of suicide and ruin?" |
45771 | But who can stand against such wealth as Egerton''s-- no doubt backed, too, by the Treasury purse? |
45771 | Can you doubt it? |
45771 | Cards-- was it? 45771 Did I blush?" |
45771 | Did she never mention me? |
45771 | Did you observe,asked the police officer,"if one of the men was tall and strongly made and had red hair, and the other short and high- shouldered?" |
45771 | Do I tire you with relating these things? |
45771 | Do you hear the impudence of the black rascal? 45771 Do you remember, marquis, the day-- or rather the night-- on which we met for the first time? |
45771 | For,as the apostle queries very wisely,"if he love not man, whom he hath seen, how can he love God, whom he hath not seen?" |
45771 | Give you what? 45771 Go on,"cried Ella, impatiently;"what became of you?" |
45771 | Good God, whom? |
45771 | Here is help, madame,said I;"what is the matter-- tell me?" |
45771 | How long did you stay there? |
45771 | How? |
45771 | How? |
45771 | I enjoy them at the pleasure of the crown; and what if it be the pleasure of the crown to recall our cousin, and reinstate him in his possessions? |
45771 | I feel that I shall die, my dear friend,said she to me one day,"and I have some few requests to make of you; you will not marry again-- will you?" |
45771 | Is he poor, or is he extravagant? |
45771 | Is he? 45771 Is it you, Eugenie?" |
45771 | Is there any one you would wish to have sent for? |
45771 | Julian Winstanley----"He who won the steeple- chase yesterday? 45771 Mademoiselle?" |
45771 | Message!--what message? |
45771 | Mine? 45771 My sister,"replied the Count,"do I look like a man who saved? |
45771 | Now you upbraid me,said the Count, unruffled by her sudden passion,"because I gave you in marriage to a man young and noble?" |
45771 | Of whom am I speaking? 45771 Of whom are you talking, man?" |
45771 | Papa,she said,"promise me that you will never-- never-- never again----""Do what?" |
45771 | Repent while my whole soul is writhing with agony? 45771 Shall I pass on to others? |
45771 | She became your wife? |
45771 | The father had, then, taken part in some political disaffections, and was proscribed? |
45771 | Then I am alone in the world? |
45771 | Then who is to maintain me? 45771 Then you prefer the other scheme? |
45771 | Then your hip_ does_ hurt you? |
45771 | Then, madame,said I,"your friend is, in fact, penniless?" |
45771 | There is a_ probability_, then, of that pardon? 45771 There was at that time a young_ danseuse_ on those boards who attracted my attention: she was called, I believe, Zephirine; do you remember her?" |
45771 | Was Jem drunk when he upset his coach the other night? |
45771 | Well? |
45771 | Were you not speaking of her? |
45771 | What are you about? 45771 What matters? |
45771 | What means this inaction at a moment of danger? |
45771 | What on earth makes you think so? |
45771 | What''s that you say, you Nigger? |
45771 | What, then, is the meaning of this? |
45771 | What_ are_ you talking about, Matty? |
45771 | Where am I, and what is it? |
45771 | Where is the lover,added M. de Marigny,"who, under like circumstances, does not redouble all the oaths his mistress seems to doubt? |
45771 | Where now,it was asked,"are his magniloquent professions of philanthropy, his self- devotedness, and his zeal in the cause of India?" |
45771 | Which is Emily''s room? |
45771 | Which is her room? |
45771 | Who cares how such as_ you_ serve their sisters? |
45771 | Who is there? |
45771 | Who is there? |
45771 | Who was she? 45771 Who you call Nigger, eh? |
45771 | Who-- who-- who? |
45771 | Whom do you mean, sir? |
45771 | Why should I have told you? 45771 Why,"said I to myself,"should I not be able to love this pretty girl whom they propose I should marry? |
45771 | Why-- why did she come here? |
45771 | Why? 45771 Yes, mademoiselle; where is she?" |
45771 | You are her father? |
45771 | You did? |
45771 | You do-- you are sure you do? |
45771 | You don''t?--you are sure you do n''t? 45771 You have?" |
45771 | You saw the Emperor? |
45771 | You then, of course,said I, interrupting his narrative for a moment,"demanded an explanation of her terrible confession?" |
45771 | You will not have me die, then? |
45771 | You will restore my fortune? |
45771 | You will? |
45771 | You wish, Ella, to preserve this worthless life? 45771 Your mistress?" |
45771 | ''Do you think the living God is a buzzard idol,''sternly asks Milton,''that you dare address Him in this manner?'' |
45771 | ''Where is the mother?'' |
45771 | --she had lost all other terror before that of horrible suspicion which had seized her--"what are you about? |
45771 | A charity girl? |
45771 | A few days after our marriage she said to me,"My dear marquis, I used formerly to go sometimes to the theatre of Audinet-- did you?" |
45771 | An idea struck me:"Do you know anything of the language of flowers?" |
45771 | And again--"Would it be dangerous to recognize the soul of a chambermaid? |
45771 | And have you not found the great, the only true reality, at the bottom?'' |
45771 | And how were these little children educated? |
45771 | And that was--?" |
45771 | And then turn your eyes in an opposite direction; look at the wealthy and the noble of mature age, enter their houses, and what will you see and hear? |
45771 | And who, amongst all your adorers, can offer you a lot so really enviable as the one whom, I see by your blush, you already guess that I refer to?" |
45771 | And why need such works irritate our entire public_ now_? |
45771 | And why, pray-- and what, pray, am I saying so mighty bad, Mrs. Matty? |
45771 | Are their hearts oppressed by misfortune? |
45771 | Are you sure it was Stringer?" |
45771 | At last he said,"Tell me where I am?" |
45771 | Brother, brother-- what, indeed, do I owe to you? |
45771 | But afterwards, how am I to live? |
45771 | But can there be the remotest semblance of truth in them? |
45771 | But what Cimon would not be refined by so fair an Iphigenia? |
45771 | But what house is this?" |
45771 | But where was that to be? |
45771 | But whither would he have us fly? |
45771 | But, in spite of the old adage,"What''s in a name?" |
45771 | But, you foolish girl, what do you gain by closing one exit, when there are open ten thousand as good?" |
45771 | Can any thing be done?" |
45771 | Did I say I hated him?" |
45771 | Did she never speak of either of us?" |
45771 | Did you never hear that I had a father living?'' |
45771 | Did you not say so?" |
45771 | Do not you know me? |
45771 | Do you imagine it to be possible that there can be in the world two men so heartless-- so utterly devoid of honor?" |
45771 | Do you know how this was done?" |
45771 | Does an iceberg write in that strain, we should like to know? |
45771 | Does the apparition of these outrages glare upon this grave-- outrages too ignoble to notice, too painful to recognize? |
45771 | Ella turned away contemptuously, with a gesture that expressed"was that all?" |
45771 | Every soul in the house is now buried in sleep; why should I not steal down to the library and gratify my indomitable curiosity? |
45771 | Fatherless and motherless, whom had my childhood to love and obey but you?" |
45771 | Had he never seen a funeral with white plumes before in his life? |
45771 | Had not M. de Fosseux deserved his fate? |
45771 | Had she meant to give me an awful warning of the fate which awaited me if I proved as faithless as M. de Fosseux? |
45771 | Have you considered at what expense?" |
45771 | Have you not sadly failed me in the task I imposed on your regard for my interests? |
45771 | Her lips moved as she said,''Do I understand your silence rightly?'' |
45771 | How can I know it now? |
45771 | How had my heart and mind been able to engender such frightful calumnies against the best of women? |
45771 | How was it?'' |
45771 | How will it become him to live now? |
45771 | How?" |
45771 | I ask you, for you know well, be it pride or be it self- devotion, what have I ever required in return for my love? |
45771 | I can not say to the man who woos me,''Will you pay the debts of the daughter of Franzini, and the widow of di Negra?''" |
45771 | I hope it is n''t true that you feign sickness not to play with your sister?" |
45771 | I will never abandon you--_never_----""And who is talking of_ you_, marquis?" |
45771 | If it be a breach of hospitality, it is surely a venial one? |
45771 | If not-- ah, he is of a character that perplexes me in all but his worldly ambition; and how can we foreigners influence him through_ that_?" |
45771 | If so, from what source had my imagination drawn these bloody horrors? |
45771 | In a word have you been in earnest-- or have you not had some womanly pleasure in amusing yourself and abusing my trust?" |
45771 | Is he looking there? |
45771 | Is it not some years since you first came to England on the mission of discovering these worthy relatives of ours? |
45771 | Is that true? |
45771 | Is there firm land, be it ever so distant? |
45771 | Is there no hope?--no doubt?--no opening for pause or hesitation?" |
45771 | Is there not some ancient poet who says that"Jove laughs at lovers''perjuries?" |
45771 | Lionel!--is it possible?" |
45771 | Matty, where''s Nurse?" |
45771 | Meanwhile if it be not impertinent, pray, where is enlightenment marching to?" |
45771 | Now, marquis, what did such perfidy deserve? |
45771 | Of these he inquired which was the true religion? |
45771 | Policeman, had n''t you best get a stretcher, and carry him to the workhouse or to the hospital?" |
45771 | Shall I write?" |
45771 | She put down her work and went up to Clementina, saying,"What ails you, Miss? |
45771 | Short?" |
45771 | Surely you know too well the nature of your kinsman?" |
45771 | Surely, then, this is the auspicious moment to obtain the sanction of the Church to our union?" |
45771 | That is to say, my note of hand; and how much do you think that is worth, my girl? |
45771 | The little_ Bouquetière_ was becoming proud-- becoming a lady;--but how? |
45771 | The next consideration was-- what was to be done? |
45771 | Then how does he promise to welcome Macænas when he came to sup with him? |
45771 | Then she died at last in the hospital?" |
45771 | Thus Horace asks Bacchus whither he is about to transport him? |
45771 | Too bad, eh? |
45771 | Was it, then, a dream-- a frightful illusion, and the mere forerunner of my illness? |
45771 | Wat you sink of dat, hey?" |
45771 | Well?" |
45771 | What can grow out of such a life, that is really wholesome and good? |
45771 | What can the old gentleman expect, if he will thus tantalize his guests?" |
45771 | What could be more base and dishonorable than to abandon so fond and devoted a woman? |
45771 | What do you mean?" |
45771 | What does the Roman teach? |
45771 | What else could his majesty do? |
45771 | What has been my advice to you for these several days past? |
45771 | What hell dis?" |
45771 | What is a bill of sale?" |
45771 | What is five thousand a year, when a man spends six? |
45771 | What is she to do? |
45771 | What other man could be capable of a similar crime-- of such base perfidy? |
45771 | What say you to him, Blake, with your considering face? |
45771 | What should I attempt my life for?" |
45771 | What was a woman to do who had asked nothing, exacted nothing, and to whom so much had been promised? |
45771 | What was her state of mind as regarded her mother-- her father-- and her lover?" |
45771 | What was to become of her? |
45771 | What would become of Hamlet? |
45771 | What would you?" |
45771 | What you trike poor debil for? |
45771 | What? |
45771 | When I come to myself, where was I?" |
45771 | Where is he who would hesitate to swear that he is the most truthful and constant of men? |
45771 | Which is her room?" |
45771 | Who could think of that?" |
45771 | Who shall say? |
45771 | Who would not vow_ eternal_ love to_ such_ a woman?" |
45771 | Who''ll come and hear Harry Blake? |
45771 | Who, in the name of goodness, is Julian Winstanley? |
45771 | Why did he make a sudden pause? |
45771 | Why did his heart quiver? |
45771 | Why did you come in to interrupt me, girl?" |
45771 | Why make it a point of duty to mix my ashes with theirs? |
45771 | Why regard yourself as the cause of an unhappy event to which you yourself had so nearly fallen a victim? |
45771 | Why should I go and die amidst ancestral tombs? |
45771 | Why then should I suffer them to affect me in the least? |
45771 | Why was virtue made so hard, and self- indulgence so enticing? |
45771 | Why, who does not know it? |
45771 | Why_ ca n''t_ you brighten up a little, and come and play? |
45771 | Will you aid me then-- yes or no? |
45771 | Will you believe that I said nothing of all this to Mademoiselle d''Ermay? |
45771 | Will you have done? |
45771 | You used to love us, papa----""Do you know what has happened?" |
45771 | You? |
45771 | and above all-- where? |
45771 | and how am I to live there when I am there? |
45771 | and what was to become of you?" |
45771 | and when are their issues known?'' |
45771 | any thing about_ her_--?" |
45771 | but who can command this faith?'' |
45771 | did they keep a shop?" |
45771 | he called out, in such a passion,''would you beg money from the lady to spend in more gin? |
45771 | he cried,--"Which is Emily''s room?" |
45771 | he cried-- one short touch of nature had reached him at last--"what are you talking of?" |
45771 | he must have more than that?'' |
45771 | he_ is_ charming, is not he?" |
45771 | my dear young lady, have you drank so deep of the cup of sorrow? |
45771 | of whom are you speaking? |
45771 | or is the wild waste of waters, seething, warring round as far as eye can reach, our only hope? |
45771 | said the Count with a visible impatience,"is there anything in the attainment of your object that should render you indifferent to mine? |
45771 | the pilot- stars, shining fitfully through the parting of the storm- clouds, our only guidance? |
45771 | till you give me--""What?" |
45771 | was the remark she made;"but was she only an apothecary''s wife,"she went on;"and was her name Stringer? |
45771 | what are you about? |
45771 | what are you thinking about?" |
45771 | what do you mean? |
45771 | what do you mean?" |
45771 | what is that?" |
45771 | what is to be done? |
45771 | what is to become of us all?" |
45771 | what ladies?" |
45771 | what must I do?" |
45771 | what-- what shall we do? |
45771 | who could she be?" |
45771 | why should I have disturbed your dream of happiness, my dear Ella? |
45771 | why? |
45771 | will you let me alone?" |
45771 | would''st thou know All the raptures that do flow From those sweet compulsive rules Of our ancient drinking schools? |
45771 | you want to hear all about it, do you? |
36405 | ''And is the skull pierced by three bullets?'' 36405 ''What could it have been?'' |
36405 | ''What do I want it for?'' 36405 ''You, sir?'' |
36405 | A knavish trade unknown at Paris? |
36405 | Ah, Signor, should the loss of a fortune cause such regret? |
36405 | Ah,cried Leonard, sorrowfully,"how could I forget?" |
36405 | Am not I devoted to the devil, and will not that be sufficient to make my way? |
36405 | And has not the Duchess discovered why the Duke has done so? |
36405 | And how, sir, have there ever been poets? 36405 And how,"cried Leonard, fiercely,--"how have they dared to slander this dead mother? |
36405 | And no inquiries were ever made? |
36405 | And what is Mr. Burley, and what has he written? |
36405 | Are you not her lawful guardian? 36405 Are you sure?" |
36405 | But how can I prevent it? |
36405 | But what became of Sabina, and what interest has your son in this picture? |
36405 | But who are you? |
36405 | But who is this Monseigneur? |
36405 | But why, my dearest child, did you not tell us all this before? |
36405 | But you would not, Mrs. Hazleton, surely you would not have me use such power ungenerously? |
36405 | But,resumed the Doctor seriously,"you really feel a strong predisposition to make verses?" |
36405 | Can this be true? |
36405 | Certainly; have not all your old hopes returned? 36405 Did he pray to God?" |
36405 | Do I? |
36405 | Do you know such a one? |
36405 | Do you know the fact? |
36405 | Do you know where he is gone, and how long he will be absent? |
36405 | Do you not remember a visit I made to her some time ago,replied Emily,"when I remained with her for several days? |
36405 | Do you think so really? |
36405 | Do you think so? 36405 Does she not let me see you? |
36405 | Eh? 36405 Emily,"he said in a loud voice, which startled her suddenly from her reverie,"Emily, your mother is very ill.""Worse? |
36405 | Felina,said the Count,"should I talk to you of such matters?" |
36405 | From a ball? |
36405 | Have you not seen the Minister and asked an explanation? |
36405 | His what? |
36405 | How soon will this be over? |
36405 | How, my young friend? 36405 How, sir?" |
36405 | How? 36405 Is my mother worse?" |
36405 | Is your lady up? |
36405 | Lord, my lady,said the maid,"had I not better send for the doctor too? |
36405 | Master Poulailler,said Roussart,"you are going to be married, then?" |
36405 | May I go with him to the gate? |
36405 | Not stay here? 36405 Now, my dear,"he said,"what is it you wish to tell me? |
36405 | Oh, Philip, how can you say so? |
36405 | Sir,said Monte- Leone, with the same calmness,"will you tell me first to whom I speak?" |
36405 | This young woman, so beautiful, so brilliant, so much admired-- Do you know her? |
36405 | Well, Monsieur le Comte, what is your business with me? |
36405 | Well, and what is the report of your calling? 36405 Well,"he said, seeing that she remained silent,"how can_ I_ hope, when this mighty genius labored and despaired? |
36405 | What can I do for you? |
36405 | What can you mean? 36405 What devotion, Signora, do you speak of?" |
36405 | What do I care what men without are to say and think of the words that gush forth on my page? |
36405 | What do yon mean, Emily? |
36405 | What do you wish to do with me? |
36405 | What has she done? 36405 What have you to say to Marlow?" |
36405 | What is the good of it? |
36405 | What proof do you mean? |
36405 | What say you? |
36405 | What say you? |
36405 | What,he exclaims,"has become of the glorious Apollo of the Greek? |
36405 | What,said Marie,"is the Count about to be married?" |
36405 | Where have you been? |
36405 | Which is strongest? |
36405 | Whither? |
36405 | Who is he, fairest? |
36405 | Why do you ask that, Helen? |
36405 | Why not? 36405 Why was the General arrested?" |
36405 | Why, are you not her father? |
36405 | Will you work at something practical and prosy, and let the poetry rest awhile? |
36405 | Yes, sir; can not you hear the whip of the postillions? |
36405 | You are before the carriage, then, mademoiselle? |
36405 | You are perhaps somewhat annoyed by my proceedings in your hotel? |
36405 | You never served, Monsieur Morisseau? |
36405 | You say you walked up to London-- was that from choice or economy? |
36405 | You were then discharged? |
36405 | _ Per Bacco!_said M. Morisseau, at once speaking the purest Italian,"what did that devil give me to drink?" |
36405 | --"But how could you defend your country from invasion without fleets and armies?" |
36405 | --She said,"Why, why did I leave you?" |
36405 | A well- known Frenchman lately put me the question, Why I took no active part in the revolution of 1848? |
36405 | After throwing so many millions of dollars into the river, why should not a few millions more be thrown? |
36405 | Am I to be upbraided for these poor humanities?" |
36405 | Am not I dying?" |
36405 | And did Shakspeare himself, in his life, ever hearken to the applause that thundered round the Personators of his airy images? |
36405 | And did he not call on them to unite, and arise in their strength, and destroy it? |
36405 | And did he not know that the southern heart could not remain insensible to reproach and aggression? |
36405 | And have not we had enuff of bringing up children to be above their birth? |
36405 | And if a favor, should I take it? |
36405 | And now, I ask-- how many old and young teachers are there in Germany thus qualified? |
36405 | And the company? |
36405 | And what systems of psychology or à ¦ sthetics had Shakspeare studied? |
36405 | And while he called on the south for union, did he not warn the conservative party at the north that this monster was not to be tampered with? |
36405 | And why are the lights turned out when the audience have half- way reached the front doors? |
36405 | And why are theatrical forests always green in the middle of winter? |
36405 | And why do they stand like mutes at a funeral, whilst two people in their midst are plotting some horrible murder? |
36405 | And why does n''t the aforesaid mistress box his ears for his impoliteness? |
36405 | And why does the kettle drummer always glance around the house upon entering with such an air of satisfaction? |
36405 | And with what principles of poetic art were the bards of Israel conversant? |
36405 | And you, sir?'' |
36405 | Anderson_, in the play of"Gisippus,"visit the Roman centurion in a brick house, entered through a mahogany door, with a brass plate upon it? |
36405 | Are stage- fairies all over the world such unequal highflyers? |
36405 | Are there never any snakes about? |
36405 | Because HE has been able to reach no consistent and influential faith, ought all men to abandon the task? |
36405 | Because he foresaw and frankly said that certain effects must result from certain causes, does this prove that he desired these effects? |
36405 | Because we can not at present form an infallible creed, should we beware of seeking to form a creed at all? |
36405 | Because we can not see all the stars, must we never raise our eyes, or our telescopes, to the midnight heavens? |
36405 | Burley_( continuing).--"But''The Art of Thinking,''--you charge eight shillings for''The Art of Thinking?''" |
36405 | But he has deserted me-- he must have betrayed her? |
36405 | But it looks out of place by the roadside: what say you?" |
36405 | But then came the question, how was the payment made? |
36405 | But what is the story and the attraction of such works? |
36405 | But who could advise another man to set his whole hope of fortune on the chance of a prize in a lottery? |
36405 | But you have friends of your own in town?" |
36405 | By what right does the head man in the chorus do all the gesticulating, while his fellows stand like militia- men? |
36405 | Can I be satisfied that she will be well and properly cared for? |
36405 | Can she have done it to show her spleen at this foolish opposition to her marriage?" |
36405 | Count Monte- Leone?--a man of his rank?" |
36405 | Did he unwisely fear that the ancient fable of Cadmus would be realized-- that dragon- teeth, recklessly scattered, would spring up armed? |
36405 | Did you know my aunt?" |
36405 | Do the rag- pickers ever break in? |
36405 | Do you suppose Burns drinking at the ale- house, with his boors around him, was drinking, like them, only beer and whisky? |
36405 | Does he disdain to have recourse, hap- hazard, to the little artifices of eloquence? |
36405 | Every little flower below me Seems to see me, seems to know me; Every bird and cloud above me Seems( or do I dream?) |
36405 | For what parts in the skies have your studies on the earth fitted you? |
36405 | France-- can he have discovered all this and quitted her, seeking, in charity, to make the breach as little painful as possible? |
36405 | Had the Count been denounced? |
36405 | Had the author of Hyperion nothing but maudlin sensibility? |
36405 | Had_ they_ other callings?" |
36405 | Hair chestnut; eyes-- what color? |
36405 | Has Marlow had any share in this discovery?" |
36405 | Has he not at command those vivid flashings of the imagination which, by an electric sympathy, might bring down about him thunders of applause? |
36405 | Has not the death of the Marquis revived your old passion?" |
36405 | Have you not the disposal of her hand?" |
36405 | Have you put the canker worm in your own bosom? |
36405 | He paused a moment, and added,"It is that Nature is very patient?" |
36405 | He threw himself into the Doctor''s own well- worn chair, and muttered to himself,"Why did he tell me to come? |
36405 | Helen sobbed aloud; then, writhing from the Doctor, she exclaimed,"But he may know where I am? |
36405 | How is it, indeed, that the intellectual humorist succeeds better as an author than as a teacher? |
36405 | How knew they that I-- was-- was-- was not the child of wedlock?" |
36405 | How? |
36405 | I am sorry enough for it now-- I repent from my whole heart; and now tell me-- tell me, can you forgive me?" |
36405 | I leave you, when you are lost and ruined, Count?" |
36405 | In considering the rights of man the great question is not, Has a master a right to hold a slave? |
36405 | In the first place, I want to know why theatres and opera houses have such curious odors when empty? |
36405 | Is John Burley now of man''s common standard? |
36405 | Is he fearful that his gesture and his voice would not become his thought? |
36405 | Is it passion or pain? |
36405 | Is there as much cruelty in holding slaves, even under the most unfavorable circumstances, as in selling into bondage a whole nation? |
36405 | Is this true?" |
36405 | It was in vain that he asked himself, What could be her motives? |
36405 | Jews in China, what will they be like? |
36405 | Lady St. Elan looked cunningly up, muttering--"''So you thought I was so silly, did you? |
36405 | Mr. Burley, is that you? |
36405 | Now, why did he permit_ that_? |
36405 | Put no trust in Mrs. Hazleton, my oldest and dearest friend?" |
36405 | Should I be more false, more faithless, more ungenerous than he thought me? |
36405 | The Countess said--"You know the news, brother?" |
36405 | The Doctor did not expect that thanksgiving, and he was so startled that he exclaimed,"For what?" |
36405 | The question naturally arises, to what are we to ascribe the formation of such a character? |
36405 | The real ones were contained in an answer to the very appropriate question--_Cui bono?_ However, the railway was shelved for a time. |
36405 | There was a long and somewhat sad pause, and then the dying man once more turned his look upon the surgeon, asking,"How long do you think it will be?" |
36405 | They do not urge their world- machine To sounder progress, nor explain The difficulties that were seen And felt before-- pray what_ is_ brain? |
36405 | This lady is kind to you, then?" |
36405 | Was he suspicious that his days had been shortened by poison? |
36405 | We may see each other sometimes? |
36405 | We were to share together-- you paid all; and how can I want it here, too?" |
36405 | Were you not there, Count?" |
36405 | What are the symptoms?" |
36405 | What are these proofs you talk of? |
36405 | What becomes of the bills which are left behind? |
36405 | What brings all these_ savans_ hither? |
36405 | What can Marlow be doing during this long unexplained absence? |
36405 | What can be done, my good friend to protract the time?" |
36405 | What connection is there between villany and a bass voice? |
36405 | What could he do without me? |
36405 | What could he say new respecting these two great ornaments of American science and literature? |
36405 | What did he mean by these words? |
36405 | What did she do?" |
36405 | What did she say? |
36405 | What do I say? |
36405 | What does he need to insure, if he wishes it, the enthusiastic admiration of the young public whom he instructs? |
36405 | What have you been dreaming?'' |
36405 | What is it you desire?" |
36405 | What is the difference between being good and bad? |
36405 | What kind of book? |
36405 | What kind of thermometers do managers have? |
36405 | What new can he think of for me? |
36405 | What right has he to do so? |
36405 | What the deuce did he do there amongst prize- fighters, and actors, and poets? |
36405 | What was Love''s lily pressure, what the light Of its pleased smile, that a chance breath may chill? |
36405 | What was his name? |
36405 | What wonderful hair- invigorator do some actors use in order to grow themselves a fine pair of bushy whiskers in fifteen minutes? |
36405 | What''s the necessity of a_ prima donna_ singing towards the ceiling when she addresses a chorus behind her? |
36405 | When did these suspicions of her first begin, and how?" |
36405 | Whence did he come, and what had he done? |
36405 | Where are gone The anthem, and the sea- bird''s moan? |
36405 | Where are the roses of the years, Ere Mother Eve knew mother''s cares? |
36405 | Where do the musicians go to through that little door in the stage? |
36405 | Where is the clang of Tubal- Cain''s First brass, and where are Jubal''s strains? |
36405 | Where is the rainbow Noah saw And heard a law, or thought a law? |
36405 | Where is the splendor of the morn That rose on seas, ere man was born? |
36405 | Where is the sunny ideal of the hellenistic heavens? |
36405 | Where the sacred sorrows of Christian perfection? |
36405 | Which course avails the more for our glory? |
36405 | Which for our repose? |
36405 | Who could tell the result in words so touching as Lucy''s own? |
36405 | Who ever saw an excited basso bid a"minion away,"without trying to throw his fist behind him? |
36405 | Who is he, I pray you, that artizan who uses the pen? |
36405 | Who is there that man can trust?" |
36405 | Who made gaiter- boots for Juno and her attendant goddesses, in the many classical plays I have witnessed? |
36405 | Who that knew him believes it? |
36405 | Who wishes her acquaintance? |
36405 | Why did Delta only open, and never dig out, this new and rich vein? |
36405 | Why do people always cough in the theatre after a severe storm of thunder and lightning, and hold their handkerchiefs to their noses at such times? |
36405 | Why do stage heroines venture out into the woods in November in white silk dresses? |
36405 | Why do the fairies shake so convulsively when they soar through the air over the stage? |
36405 | Why does Ernani''s mistress wear such splendid diamonds, and not sell them to give him release from persecution? |
36405 | Why does the fat man with the violoncello always saw upon two strings, and leave the two in the middle to such a contemptuous silence and exile? |
36405 | Why does the lover always sing tenor in an opera? |
36405 | Why does the lover, rushing upon the stage to the embrace of his mistress, stop half way to bow to the ladies in the boxes? |
36405 | Why does the moon, in every opera wherein she condescends to show herself, stand still for half an hour immediately over a chimney? |
36405 | Why is it that three or four stout men, with loaded pistols, allow themselves to be beaten off the stage by a slim man with a small stick? |
36405 | Why should she be thus moved, when she knows she is doing that which is just, and honest, and faithful?" |
36405 | Why should she grieve? |
36405 | Will a daughter who has betrayed her father show more piety towards a mother? |
36405 | Will this suit you?" |
36405 | Wilt thou sink? |
36405 | Would Mr. Hunt destroy that link, which in every age has bound us to the infinite and eternal? |
36405 | Would he bring us back to mere brute worship, and brute belief? |
36405 | You tell me you are ordered to leave France?" |
36405 | You will come to me,''And my poem, how does it sell?'' |
36405 | _ Doctor._--"Bless me, you do? |
36405 | am I not the first to mention them? |
36405 | and always stay to hear the speech( if there is any), although they have not paid as much by half as they who ran away? |
36405 | but, Has one human being a right to hold another subordinate? |
36405 | cried Leonard, raising his brows from which the cloud had passed,--"Why, indeed, did you leave me?" |
36405 | cried the husband and wife;--"who are you, and by what right is it that you thus dispose of the goods of another?" |
36405 | he continued, looking at the packet carried by his fellow- traveller,''pray what luck have you had?'' |
36405 | how?" |
36405 | it is she who is ill. Shall I go to her? |
36405 | m''aurais- tu fait aussi avaler le boucon?" |
36405 | mimicked the mad woman;''why what should I want it for, Sabina, but to cut your throat with?'' |
36405 | or did he allude, with the last accents he uttered, to the barbarous assassination of the Emperor Paul? |
36405 | said Leonard mournfully, and after long silence--"no inquiries to learn who was the father of the motherless child?" |
36405 | said the Count,"are you the son of General A----?" |
36405 | said the Count,"would you do so?" |
36405 | was the plan for the completion of which he and his friends toiled known? |
36405 | what can I do for the orphan?" |
36405 | whence did he come? |
36405 | who is that?" |
36405 | who will prevent me?" |
36405 | will not my own child listen to the voice of a dying mother?" |
36405 | worse?" |
36564 | ''_ If it be he?_''what doubt can there be? |
36564 | ''_ If it be he?_''what doubt can there be? |
36564 | Ah, Dorset,she said, speaking to the animal in a kindly tone,"you are better now, are you?" |
36564 | Ah, Master John,said she, clasping his nerveless hand--"well, the fields be pleasant now-- I hope you are come to stay a bit? |
36564 | Am I a fool,she asked herself,"to be thus moved by an empty gossip like that? |
36564 | And I want to shoot chamois? |
36564 | And did he owe it you? |
36564 | And if he kill you? |
36564 | And never buys? |
36564 | And why? |
36564 | Are these their signatures? |
36564 | Are you a native of----? |
36564 | Are you done? |
36564 | Arrested? |
36564 | At whose suit? |
36564 | But if he resist? |
36564 | But what are you going to do? 36564 But what is it that Joseph has picked up from the snow, and is examining so carefully?" |
36564 | But what will you do? |
36564 | But would not death itself express as much-- a peace to the same passions, a peace more lasting? |
36564 | But, are not the driver and carriage his? |
36564 | But,said d''Harcourt,"what if it be an officer?" |
36564 | But_ apropos_ of what do you puzzle us with these queries on courage? |
36564 | By what process can such conception be achieved? |
36564 | Can you doubt the author? |
36564 | Can you manage with the loaf of bread then, and three- halfpence for to- day? |
36564 | Can you not guess? |
36564 | Can you tell me where he is? |
36564 | Deign, though, to tell me, I beg you, when did the Count go? |
36564 | Did not stern old Sam Johnson say he could never write but from want? |
36564 | Did you ever hear of a ghost playing the flute? |
36564 | Did you not hear the name? |
36564 | Did you not say you made, at least, a guinea a- week? |
36564 | Did you read? |
36564 | Did you see his face? |
36564 | Do you mean Monte- Leone? |
36564 | Do you think I do n''t know that sound? |
36564 | Do you think the other lists also forgeries? |
36564 | Do you want me? |
36564 | Do you yet doubt? |
36564 | Ein Englander? |
36564 | Gentlemen,said the Count with dignity,"am I called on to rehearse again the offensive scene which took place at the abbey de San Paolo? |
36564 | Good day, Jenny,said the farmer;"is Mr. Dixwell here?" |
36564 | Had I not better kill him? |
36564 | Has he been here? |
36564 | Have not our eyes seen? 36564 He seems ill; what has been the matter with him?" |
36564 | His name? 36564 How are you, Randal Leslie? |
36564 | How at sea,they asked,"can the Sabbath be respected?" |
36564 | How can you be dull enough to ask? 36564 How had originals been replaced by copies?--how had the police obtained the originals?" |
36564 | How is that idea acquired? |
36564 | How know you what I feel? |
36564 | How long have you been in this state? |
36564 | How much? |
36564 | How so? |
36564 | How so? |
36564 | How? |
36564 | 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?" |
36564 | I will stay with you, my kind friend,said Burley, with unusual meekness--"I can have the old room, then?" |
36564 | I wish to know, did you drive him from his hotel, or some other place? |
36564 | Is it insensibility to fear? 36564 Is it the Count you mean?" |
36564 | Is it true? |
36564 | Is that at the cottage? |
36564 | It is a letter from my own Richard,cries the delighted girl;"will you give it me?" |
36564 | Joseph, what''s i''the fardel? 36564 La, Austin, how can you say so?" |
36564 | Let us suppose one to be thus endowed; what then? |
36564 | May he not have used the name surreptitiously? |
36564 | May we yet doubt? |
36564 | Minion,says the mother,"know you this superscription?" |
36564 | My dear Herwitz,said the Minister, a little, bowing, smirking man,"what can I do for you? |
36564 | My mother, what mean you? |
36564 | Oh yes; some that the dear lady left behind her; and perhaps you would like to look at some papers in her own writing? |
36564 | Oh, my mother, why am I thus persecuted? |
36564 | Pray be seated, Mr. Atkinson,he said,"what is it you want? |
36564 | Revolt? |
36564 | Shall I keep the purse again, Leonard? |
36564 | Shall I see you again? |
36564 | Speak to me, and tell me to what I am indebted for your presence here? |
36564 | The carriage and name mine? |
36564 | Unworthy? |
36564 | Violence? |
36564 | Was it not his form, dress, and air? |
36564 | Well, Joseph, where did we come down-- eh? |
36564 | Well, the eggs are fresh laid, and you would like a rasher of bacon, Master John? 36564 Well,"said the Doctor to Taddeo,"was he at the Duchess''s?--did he go out as his driver said?" |
36564 | What are those conjectures? |
36564 | What can they be about? |
36564 | What did they say? 36564 What do I hear?" |
36564 | What do they want? |
36564 | What does this mean?--why this change?--whence did he obtain a right thus to ruin and crush me? |
36564 | What have you done? |
36564 | What is courage? |
36564 | What is courage? |
36564 | What is it? |
36564 | What is that? |
36564 | What is the book, my Lord? |
36564 | What is the highest degree of expression that art can delineate? |
36564 | What is the matter now? |
36564 | What is the matter with him? |
36564 | What is the matter? |
36564 | What is the matter? |
36564 | What mean you? |
36564 | What means this? |
36564 | What means this? |
36564 | What more would you have? |
36564 | What note? |
36564 | What now shall we do? |
36564 | What say you? |
36564 | What then is the matter? |
36564 | What trouble now menaces you? 36564 What will you do with that paper?" |
36564 | What? |
36564 | What_ is_ the matter, my dear D''Arbel? |
36564 | Whence did your master come hither? |
36564 | Where could you two ever have met? |
36564 | Where is he now-- has he left the hotel? |
36564 | Where-- here? 36564 Whither? |
36564 | Who can it be at this hour? |
36564 | Who can it be? |
36564 | Who is he? |
36564 | Who is it? |
36564 | Who is she? |
36564 | Who is that man? |
36564 | Who is the person? |
36564 | Who then will dare to say that I married a disgraced man? |
36564 | Who will execute it? 36564 Who will tell me what it is?" |
36564 | Who, Signora, is that friend? |
36564 | Whom should we call Pylades''friend but Orestes? |
36564 | Why how is that? |
36564 | Why is my house thus invaded? |
36564 | Why,added he, with great vehemence,"why do you not ask for another version than that which condemns him? |
36564 | Will you sell this? 36564 You are sure you would remember him, if we met him by chance?" |
36564 | You have not breakfasted? |
36564 | Your husband is Karl Herwitz, the mechanist? |
36564 | [ 14]And now, pretty Mistress Margery,"says Sir James,"will you affirm that this man sayeth untruly, when he sayeth that you are ensured together? |
36564 | ''Tis the river that founded and gave pomp to the city; and without the discontent, where were progress-- what were Man? |
36564 | --"Is it because he thinks I am not fit company for you?" |
36564 | --"You go, my little lady?--and why? |
36564 | Am I, as one in the supreme_ vente_ of Naples, the chief of which I was, an object of distrust to my brethren? |
36564 | And how could the boy turn out of his room the man to whom he was under obligations? |
36564 | And now, most patient reader,--are you there still? |
36564 | Are pickled herrings plenteous? |
36564 | Are these the papers given you by the imprisoned chiefs A----, Ch----, B----, C----, F----, and Ober? |
36564 | Are these the papers you gave me?" |
36564 | Are they to be more ignobly treated now that the people have become patrons? |
36564 | Are we alone?" |
36564 | Are we not satisfied?" |
36564 | As you are going into the House, will you remind him?" |
36564 | Burley?" |
36564 | But after what you have told me, will you share my purse with me for your wife and children''s sake?" |
36564 | But if ye will not, what rebuke, and loss, and shame will be yours? |
36564 | But pray, Austin, what is courage?" |
36564 | But, had Burley written the pamphlet, would the same repute have attended_ him_? |
36564 | But,"she added,"what do you want to talk of the dead and gone for, when there are living folks enough to talk about?" |
36564 | Can friendship do nothing to soothe you?" |
36564 | Can we not all live together?" |
36564 | Caxton._--"You would not have minded if it had been a Frenchman with a sword in his hand?" |
36564 | Coming to hear the debate?" |
36564 | Could he, however, reveal to a young and tender woman the fate which menaced him-- the duel which as was said was to be merciless? |
36564 | Did I not save thee? |
36564 | Did she sleep well or ill that night? |
36564 | Did they consent?" |
36564 | Did you come hither to speak of him alone?" |
36564 | Do n''t we meet you everywhere in the four quarters of the globe? |
36564 | Does the human face alone give utterance through its lineaments to thought and feeling? |
36564 | Even from the first, when Leonard had exclaimed,"Ah, Helen, why did you ever leave me?" |
36564 | First, she asserted that she was not deceived, and to this her companion replied, with a slight incredulous smile,"Are you quite sure, my friend? |
36564 | For what does our government care if our native authors, even of the highest ability, earn less than common stevedores? |
36564 | Four times in the year are they accursed that let matrimony----''""Accursed are they?" |
36564 | From whom can she have learned it?" |
36564 | Gone? |
36564 | Goodyer?" |
36564 | Hall, who wrote"Joanna of Naples?" |
36564 | Has the man got a horse? |
36564 | Hastings?" |
36564 | Have I again lost the confidence of my dearest associates? |
36564 | Have I not suffered all the tortures of hell since the day I renounced you? |
36564 | Have not our ears heard? |
36564 | Heavens, sir, do I understand aright-- can Mr. Prickett be dead since I left London?" |
36564 | His companion smiled, and replied by another question,"What is the man who reads the book?" |
36564 | His dreamy impressions of London? |
36564 | How can I repeat the words? |
36564 | How say you, Mistress Dry- goods; will you deal, will you chaffer?" |
36564 | How? |
36564 | I speak seriously-- do you hear, sir? |
36564 | I? |
36564 | If you remember me, I hope all boyish quarrels are forgotten?" |
36564 | Is he cockney enough to be going to flash off his rifle, and afraid of some one hearing him? |
36564 | Let me understand if it makes matrimony?" |
36564 | Manfred? |
36564 | Mistress, know you the price of salted hams at this present? |
36564 | Monte- Leone said with vehemence,"Is it not enough to separate us?--would he add insult to cruelty? |
36564 | Now, as it fell out,_ I_ also got excited;_ I_ too thirsted after chamois''blood; but how to get it? |
36564 | Of what am I accused? |
36564 | Oh, then the matter is easily understood-- but pray what did Emily say? |
36564 | Or do they think, as Sir E. Bulwer Lytton seems to imply, that, except Cooper and Irving, we have no authors whose works are readable in Britain? |
36564 | Or is it supposed that we shall cease producing if the possibility of English copyright is taken away? |
36564 | Poor thing, what could have become of her?" |
36564 | She said,"What say you?--do you oppose the union?" |
36564 | Should she burden him? |
36564 | Sir Philip started, and murmured between his teeth"Justice-- ay, justice!--who did you say?" |
36564 | Sir Philip?" |
36564 | Suddenly I sat up in my bed and addressed my wife:"How much money have you got left, Catherine?" |
36564 | The worst that could come would be Emily''s marriage with Marlow, and if you do not care about it, who should? |
36564 | The yearly amount, the lineal extent, of thread now made-- who can measure it? |
36564 | Then speaking to the man who, while surrounded by the three men, began to tremble,"Who is the person who came in the carriage?" |
36564 | They will arrest you as the murderer of this man and what then will become of the association?" |
36564 | Thou dost but try my love? |
36564 | Time converts even what is unjustly acquired into a legitimate possession-- how much more that which the owner has actually created? |
36564 | To whom else but me would you confide it? |
36564 | Two days before, Leonard had pawned Riccabocca''s watch; and when the last shilling thus raised was gone, how should he support Helen? |
36564 | Use it as a pocket- handkerchief? |
36564 | Von Apsberg suffered his grief to pass away, and asked,"Is this note yours, General?" |
36564 | We may speak of the wonders effected by steam and other motive agents, but of what value would they have been without this means of their employment? |
36564 | Well, what are you fumbling at? |
36564 | What but his faculty to brave, to suffer, to endure-- the patience that resists firmly, and innovates slowly? |
36564 | What could I say? |
36564 | What have I done to this man? |
36564 | What is my crime? |
36564 | What is this? |
36564 | What was it that he wrote? |
36564 | What were her thoughts, then, now? |
36564 | What, then, shall I do? |
36564 | When did a Paston ask Richard Calle for aid that his hand was not open? |
36564 | Where art thou? |
36564 | Who can deny the genius and artistic power of Hawthorne, or the clear English simplicity of his style? |
36564 | Who can feel out of spirits in that brisk mountain atmosphere? |
36564 | Who could wait three or four days when the object is security, tranquility, or revenge? |
36564 | Who should suffer with you? |
36564 | Who the devil is this pamphleteer?" |
36564 | Who would you permit to share my torments? |
36564 | Who, and what is this clever man whom you call Burley?" |
36564 | Whom do you injure by this species of retaliation? |
36564 | Why could he not escape? |
36564 | Why didst thou lure me, craftiest, from my home? |
36564 | Why is not the study of the Saxon Testament generally introduced? |
36564 | Why must you leave him because I come?" |
36564 | Why should we not print cheap editions for exportation? |
36564 | Why should we refuse protection to the writings of a foreign author, and concede it to his scientific discoveries? |
36564 | Why should you so eagerly clutch at a foreign sale for your works, as to sacrifice what you can secure-- freedom from injurious competition at home? |
36564 | Why was I worthy of you yesterday, and am so base to- day?" |
36564 | Will they be less, in their own estimation, the greatest, the freest, the wisest, and the most enlightened nation upon earth? |
36564 | Will you deny it? |
36564 | Will you not promise me then?" |
36564 | Wonder again; what in the name of goodness is he going to do with that? |
36564 | Would you believe it? |
36564 | Would you leave Paris and myself? |
36564 | Would your honor like a jarvey?" |
36564 | You do not think me such a being?" |
36564 | an anathema on the streets, and its hearts of stone? |
36564 | and when the betrothed answers,''I will be true,''does not the lover trust to her courage as well as her love?" |
36564 | and wilt thou-- wilt thou not return? |
36564 | apart from thee; The galley? |
36564 | are not those of the landscape also pregnant with meaning?" |
36564 | at this door?" |
36564 | 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?" |
36564 | dark elegies on fate? |
36564 | did you hear that?" |
36564 | gone? |
36564 | gone? |
36564 | his name?" |
36564 | how?" |
36564 | is it not gone? |
36564 | is it you who speak thus?" |
36564 | murmurs against poverty? |
36564 | or, will our becoming robbers ourselves diminish the wholesale piracy of our neighbors? |
36564 | said La Felina--"your heroic friend unworthy of her?" |
36564 | said Marie, trembling,"what do these people want?" |
36564 | said she;"why have you come so early to see me? |
36564 | said the Count;"who will exhibit it to my eyes? |
36564 | said the young man, forgetting all in his joy at this confession--"of my sister?" |
36564 | where are they? |
36564 | where? |
36564 | whether they left no marks in earth- works-- those most lasting of records-- in quarries and entrenchments, in mines, tumuli, and mounds? |
36564 | who is he?" |
36564 | who will show me the phantom which robs me of name and fame, and secretly immolates my honor?" |
36564 | who? |
36564 | why against mine?" |
36564 | why is he so enraged against me? |
36564 | why may not these lists have been taken and copied while in his possession? |
36564 | why may they not have been thus treated, so that he gave you but counterfeits when he fancied he gave you originals? |
37904 | All is discovered, is it? 37904 And I have the honor of addressing Father Hieronimo?" |
37904 | And lodge her in your own house? |
37904 | And that? |
37904 | And unsettle a right ambition for a wrong one? 37904 And what,"thought I,"will Grace say to_ that_?" |
37904 | And you are a member of the Holy Inquisition? |
37904 | And you called him Nero? |
37904 | Are we not happy? |
37904 | Are you discovered and forced to leave us? |
37904 | Are you going home so early? 37904 But before we say more, monsieur, are you engaged to Mademoiselle Esther?" |
37904 | But can you seriously mean to take this child with you abroad? |
37904 | But did it not strike you that they might possibly die of hunger here? 37904 But how shall I pay the other half?" |
37904 | But if I tell all,said La Felina,"do you fear nothing for yourself?" |
37904 | But if it was me, only, she hated,added Emily,"why should she so persecute my father and yourself?" |
37904 | But oh, monsieur, can you not suggest something to help me-- to help us? |
37904 | But what is this? 37904 But who could have done it, sir?" |
37904 | But, zounds, sir, you say you are not surprised he has not come to welcome his own father? |
37904 | Can any body tell me,he said,"when Lady Hastings took a dose of this stuff?" |
37904 | Can you live-- excuse the question-- with her without dowry? |
37904 | Condemned, did you say? |
37904 | Could I exist without you? |
37904 | Dear me, my kind friend, is that you? |
37904 | Did I not say this man was a demon? |
37904 | Did it not come from Lamberti? |
37904 | Did you? 37904 Do n''t you?" |
37904 | Do you know him? |
37904 | Do you know, my child,said Lady Hastings, with a meaning smile,"I have been sometimes inclined to think that she wished to marry Marlow herself?" |
37904 | Do you recollect me, Captain Perez? |
37904 | Do you sleep well? |
37904 | Do you think so, holy father? |
37904 | Does he really go abroad next week? |
37904 | Good gracious me, my dear, what is the matter? |
37904 | Gray is pledged to spend to- night in the haunted house, is he not? |
37904 | Has he got any arms there? |
37904 | Have not you seen him yet, sir? |
37904 | Have you been here long? 37904 He? |
37904 | His acceptance-- where is it? 37904 How is Miss Emily?" |
37904 | How? |
37904 | I beg a thousand pardons, holy father,the captain said, with much humility,"but I hope you will not take offence at these necessary precautions?" |
37904 | I injure you,said Giacomo,"when you know I would die for you?" |
37904 | I suppose then you can not tell how long Mrs. Hazleton remained alone with your lady before she woke? |
37904 | Is Mr. Norreys at home? |
37904 | Is he really happy? |
37904 | Is it not the time? |
37904 | Is it only in danger that a country is served-- only in war that duty is fulfilled? 37904 Is this child an Avenel too?" |
37904 | Islam? |
37904 | Let me considersaid he,"I want some bones, and where the devil shall I find them?" |
37904 | My God, my God, can I hear aright? |
37904 | My dear, will you lend me that ring? |
37904 | No one saw,said the Duke,"_ how_ you came hither?" |
37904 | Not if I acknowledge to have seen him myself? |
37904 | Of what do you complain? |
37904 | Oh, Oliver,said aunt Carra,"you do n''t mean to go away?" |
37904 | Precepts? |
37904 | Prophet? |
37904 | Richard-- Richard-- who is he? 37904 Right-- what is he worth? |
37904 | She was not weeping when you left her? |
37904 | So,said Lord L''Estrange,"you would return to London!--What to do?" |
37904 | The country is terribly dull, is it? 37904 There is no suspicion?" |
37904 | True,said Giacomo,"but she is not alone--""Who accompanies her? |
37904 | Truly,said Chamfort, with a scornful smile,"you will not be one of the priests in these temples?" |
37904 | We have bothered Mr. Hillhouse long enough,said aunt Carry, taking my hand,"and will go to the house, shall we not?" |
37904 | Well, I know that,replied Crebillon;"but see how piteously these poor dogs look at us; could I leave them to die of hunger in the street?" |
37904 | Well, did those hurt her? |
37904 | Well, that is odd,thought Perez,"and what can there be in it? |
37904 | Well, then, what was the drawback to your walk? |
37904 | Were you with her when she was seized so suddenly? |
37904 | What Duchess, my dear father? |
37904 | What brings him here? |
37904 | What danger now menaces you? |
37904 | What do you do there when it is not paid? |
37904 | What do you wish, sir? |
37904 | What is it, my dear friend? |
37904 | What is it? |
37904 | What is the matter, sir? |
37904 | What is the matter? |
37904 | What is the matter? |
37904 | What is the meaning of this mysterious language? |
37904 | What mean you, sir? |
37904 | What more do we require? 37904 What say you, sir?" |
37904 | What should be done? 37904 What was it? |
37904 | What will Grace say? |
37904 | What wine is this? |
37904 | What''s that? |
37904 | What''s that? |
37904 | What''s the matter? 37904 Where is he?" |
37904 | Who gave it to her? |
37904 | Who is there? |
37904 | Who knows? |
37904 | Who''s this, who''s this, i''th''merry greenwood? 37904 Whom do you refer to?" |
37904 | Why despair? |
37904 | Why did he leave England, then? |
37904 | Why do n''t the flour come through? |
37904 | Why do you presume to stop my carriage on the King''s highway? |
37904 | Why so? |
37904 | Why was all this? 37904 Why, Charlotte, what is the matter?" |
37904 | Why, Master Atkinson, what is all this about? |
37904 | Why, what is the matter? |
37904 | Why? |
37904 | Why? |
37904 | Will you accompany me to this house, monsieur? 37904 Will you join us?" |
37904 | Will you try another? |
37904 | You are no doubt the bearer of a letter for me, from Father Antonio? |
37904 | You are right, father; but what would become of these poor animals were I not to take compassion upon them? 37904 You are so harsh to me; how can you expect kindness from her?" |
37904 | You did not by chance look through the key- hole? |
37904 | You did not think I should sell my daughter for a debt of the table? 37904 You heard no other sounds previously?" |
37904 | You here, Doctor? |
37904 | You learnt that from her? |
37904 | You, Marlow, you? |
37904 | Your own? |
37904 | Your particular friend, Master Frank? 37904 _ He?_"said the Duke and Count together. |
37904 | _ She?_said the Count. |
37904 | --"How can this be?" |
37904 | Again, it is said--"Why are we so anxious to make the church wear the garb of the world? |
37904 | Aha, sir-- very well, very well-- the country is horribly dull, is it? |
37904 | And I can never envy nor comprehend either-- yet my own-- what is it?" |
37904 | And if he wanted a third person, was not there his own mother? |
37904 | And is it not better for both of you, that youth should open upon the world with youth''s natural affections free and unforestalled?" |
37904 | And pray why, sir?" |
37904 | And there, and there again? |
37904 | And what does youth want that it should be extravagant? |
37904 | And when shall all this occur?" |
37904 | And yet if I was to shoot Gray----""Shoot?" |
37904 | And you have done it? |
37904 | Are ye where great Orion towers and holds Eternity on his stupendous front? |
37904 | As I do not like to put my hand rudely upon a lady, may I ask you, Madam, to let me see what that pocket contains?" |
37904 | Atkinson?" |
37904 | Brothers, we must have no wailing: do we agonize alone? |
37904 | But I am sure my dear Lord must think that the Duchess should not have made the first overture-- even to a friend and a kinsman?" |
37904 | But later, if encouraged, would the love be the same? |
37904 | But now--? |
37904 | But we, too, named a condition-- Did we not, Lansmere?" |
37904 | But what am I talking of?" |
37904 | But what does the coffin contain if it does not contain the saint''s bones? |
37904 | But where is it?--the parasol, I mean?" |
37904 | But, if discovered, what harm can ensue? |
37904 | But, never mind-- and yet how could you forget it?" |
37904 | Call ye this man an imposter? |
37904 | Can such a memory influence you even to this day? |
37904 | Commenced? |
37904 | Could such a reverie better end? |
37904 | Did WE this evil bring? |
37904 | Did the rose- bushes and lilacs and flags that are in the garden, ever grow here? |
37904 | Do I love? |
37904 | Do n''t you know the carriage?" |
37904 | Do you know me?" |
37904 | Do you know what will arise from this revolution( where, namely, reason will triumph in opposition to religion)? |
37904 | Do you understand?" |
37904 | Does it not flash upon us when we least expect it? |
37904 | Either attempt would make a noise, which the passengers or sailors might hear, but what is to be done? |
37904 | For what vantage- ground is so high as youth? |
37904 | Frederic?" |
37904 | Gad, I''ll give it him?" |
37904 | Get me a sheet of paper,"replied the surgeon,"and a pen and ink-- oh, they are here are they?" |
37904 | Gray has to spend the night there-- we''ll go again to- night, that is, if my wife will let me, and perhaps get my brother to help us-- eh? |
37904 | Gray?" |
37904 | Gray?" |
37904 | Has it not every thing in itself merely because it_ is_? |
37904 | Hath_ he_ reveries half so sweet for morsels under the tongues of memory and fancy as those which come nigh to the brain of the married man? |
37904 | Have you enjoyed it?" |
37904 | Have you no engagements?" |
37904 | He shook his head and replied--"Oh, my lord, how have I deserved such kindness? |
37904 | He was silent and cast down his eyes; then he said:"Have you, madame, read, in Josephus, the history of the siege of Jerusalem?" |
37904 | Her mien was dejected; a cloud overcast her face, whose expression seemed to say,"Who takes my faithful friend from me?" |
37904 | How about this challenge? |
37904 | How could you send my lady such stuff?" |
37904 | How did this happen? |
37904 | How far distant are the confines of dreamland: that magical kingdom where the tired soul satiates itself in the intoxications of fancy? |
37904 | How long to last? |
37904 | How? |
37904 | I am alone, and often sad, Helen; will you not comfort me? |
37904 | I feel I ask much-- but will you?" |
37904 | I have it at last"Perez cried,"_ the key, the key_,"and quickly putting it into the key- hole, he opened the Box-- and he saw-- what? |
37904 | I hope he is looking well?" |
37904 | I hope you have made your own private cabin, as you promised, worthy of their reception?" |
37904 | I must open the box, but how? |
37904 | I muttered in his ear,"you would swindle my descendant out of all he has?" |
37904 | I suppose my half- brother will let you come?" |
37904 | I tell you I have met a relation of theirs-- a nephew of-- of--"Of Richard Avenel''s?" |
37904 | I will see no one--""You will see me, Monsieur?" |
37904 | If, though, he has lost his liberty; if all his plans are destroyed, why should I any longer contend against misfortune? |
37904 | Is it clear that she will love you?--not mistake gratitude for love? |
37904 | Is it in riotous feasting and drunkenness you spend the holy season of Lent?" |
37904 | Is it not like the inspiration to the muse? |
37904 | Is there always poetry in motion? |
37904 | It took a good half dozen strong healthy negroes, and then as many sailors, to carry it: what can there be in the coffin? |
37904 | Knowledge for itself I desire-- what care I, if it be not power?" |
37904 | Love? |
37904 | Monsieur,"said he, with great animation,"have you not heard all? |
37904 | Mrs. Hazleton beckoned her up, saying in a quiet, easy, every- day tone,"I suppose your lady is awake by this time?" |
37904 | Now, Count Monte- Leone,"said La Felina, rising up,"is it necessary for me to name that woman? |
37904 | O, whither sail you, Sir John Franklin? |
37904 | O, whither sail you, brave Englishman? |
37904 | Oh, could your mother''s name have been Avenel?" |
37904 | Oh, know ye not''tis victory but to live? |
37904 | Or from our fellows did the torture spring? |
37904 | Or where pale Neptune in the distant space Shows us how far, in his creative mood, With pomp of silence and concentred brows, The Almighty walked? |
37904 | Raymond replied:"And suppose I had not played with you and lost? |
37904 | Raymond?--But his family?" |
37904 | Recall all the unhappy marriages that have come to your knowledge-- pray have not eighteen out of twenty been marriages for love? |
37904 | Shall I challenge my"Lady Gay Spanker"of last night''s acquaintance to a game of bowling? |
37904 | Shall I force the lock, or break the cover of the box? |
37904 | Shall I hold out hopes to him that I will not meddle with his creed if he will not meddle with mine? |
37904 | Shall I introduce you?" |
37904 | Shall I join forces with the laughing beauties who are handling maces in the billiard room of the inn hard by? |
37904 | Shall I play geographer to those who are learned in the nomenclature of snobbism? |
37904 | Shall I tempt the unsophisticated pickerel of the lake under the shadow of yonder frowning precipice, with glittering bait? |
37904 | Shall you sleep in the haunted house? |
37904 | She asked herself--"Would the difference be discovered when the time came for giving her the medicine?" |
37904 | She paused for a moment or two, and then added,"Now, shall I go for my father?" |
37904 | She said,"Is he much changed? |
37904 | Sir John, where are the English fields, And where are the English trees, And where are the little English flowers That open in the breeze? |
37904 | Sir Philip, what is this I hear?" |
37904 | Still what else to love is there left to me?" |
37904 | Still, what was to be done? |
37904 | Talk-- and what about? |
37904 | Tell me then, has Emily brought forward any proofs, or alluded to these accusations since I saw you? |
37904 | The commanders and pilots so celebrated by the novelist, have they not successors indomitable as they? |
37904 | The first of our race is ever the one we are most proud of; and pray, what ancestors had he? |
37904 | The summer''s gone, the winter''s come, We sail not on yonder sea: Why sail we not, Sir John Franklin? |
37904 | Then is it not far better thus to be, thoughtful, and brave, and melancholy, Than given up to idle revelry, amid the unreligious brood of folly? |
37904 | Then where are ye, lost sunbeams of the mind? |
37904 | This is one offer, what say you to it?" |
37904 | This time it was I( namely Laharpe) who took the word,"and of me you say nothing?" |
37904 | To whom, then, could Egerton mean to devise his fortune? |
37904 | Waywayanda lake? |
37904 | Well-- in this country-- who should plume himself on birth?" |
37904 | What are prophets but the trumpets blown by God to stir the heart? |
37904 | What care we for your English gray clouds without? |
37904 | What do I know of you, monsieur? |
37904 | What do you say, Catherine?" |
37904 | What epic poem of our times begins to compare in influence over the common mind with the stories of Scott and Cooper? |
37904 | What has befallen to draw your eyes from that?" |
37904 | What hope can scale this icy wall, High over the main flag- staff? |
37904 | What if he should go on walking all night? |
37904 | What is all this about, John?" |
37904 | What is it all about? |
37904 | What is she charged with?" |
37904 | What is that yonder? |
37904 | What is that"something?" |
37904 | What is that?" |
37904 | What kind of a devil has given you the dungeon, the poison, and the hangman?--what has this in common with philosophy, and with the reign of Reason?" |
37904 | What matters it to me, then, whose heart is wrung-- or what becomes of you, or me, or any one? |
37904 | What next to come? |
37904 | What o''clock is it?" |
37904 | What of the Esquimaux? |
37904 | What poet sits down and says,''I will write a poem?'' |
37904 | What say you to this course?" |
37904 | What says my bill of lading? |
37904 | What the devil!--(firing up)--am I a tyrant-- a bashaw-- that my own son is afraid to speak to me? |
37904 | What think you of the whaler now? |
37904 | What were they to me? |
37904 | What would they say to see how gently your arms receive the sleeping burthen and transfer it softly to its snowy couch? |
37904 | What would you have done?" |
37904 | When I want to see how little those last influence the happiness of wise men, have I not Machiavel and Thucydides? |
37904 | White marble is the most beautiful, but how would it stand our climate in the open air? |
37904 | Who allow innkeepers and railroad guides to assassinate Aboriginal terms in order that petty pride may exult in petty fame? |
37904 | Who dares to brave the leprosy?" |
37904 | Who does not welcome the promise of the new age of powerful commerce and mental blessing? |
37904 | Who ever learned"Thanatopsis"on the summit of the Catskills, and afterwards forgot a line of it? |
37904 | Who has come to see the informer? |
37904 | Who is this before whose presence idols tumble to the sod? |
37904 | Who is this that comes from Hara? |
37904 | Who is this that comes from Hara? |
37904 | Who lives aright? |
37904 | Who''s this with horn and hound? |
37904 | Whom-- Richard Avenel?" |
37904 | Why do they fail to do in space, what they do in time, in geography what they do in history? |
37904 | Why do they not deny the existence of negroes and of the Chinese because none of them come to France? |
37904 | Why do we stoop, and bow, and cringe before that enemy whom we are sent to conquer and_ annihilate_? |
37904 | Why have a confidant in our affairs? |
37904 | Why should I fly from this charge to meet another? |
37904 | Why should I hide any thing? |
37904 | Why should I meddle in these foreigners''affairs? |
37904 | Why should I struggle longer? |
37904 | Why, Frank is not expensive, and he will be very rich-- eh?" |
37904 | Will you not call on him while you are in town? |
37904 | Yet, how can she like me as she ought, if her heart is to be full of you?" |
37904 | You ask, if he were lord in the land, and you were in a minority, if not in numbers yet in power, what would he do to you? |
37904 | You know, I hope, that you have good Hazeldean blood in your veins?" |
37904 | You promised my father never to open the door without a signal--""Why then, Mademoiselle, did you not give the signal?" |
37904 | You see I can not marry a dream; and where out of dreams, shall I find this''whom?''" |
37904 | Your name is Leonard Fairfield?" |
37904 | Youth is youth-- what needs it more?" |
37904 | _ Duchess._--"But what do you tell us here, M. Cazotte? |
37904 | _ Duchess._--"In this case, I hope I shall have a black trimmed coach?" |
37904 | _ Duchess._--"Nobler ladies? |
37904 | _ Egerton._--"Whom?" |
37904 | _ Harley._--"And that gave you pleasure?" |
37904 | _ Harley._--"Do we ever search for love? |
37904 | _ Harley._--"What was it?" |
37904 | _ Is he not a spy?_"The first words of the Italian,"_ That man is but a shadow_,"had arrested La Felina''s attention. |
37904 | _ Lord Lansmere._--"How?" |
37904 | _ Squire._--"Eh?" |
37904 | a letter? |
37904 | and adds, patting Harry on the head,"Where is my little boy? |
37904 | but madame is no longer with monsieur?" |
37904 | certainly not, and the coffin might contain-- any thing else--_the said coffin containing_--what you please-- how should I know? |
37904 | cried the surgeon;"was she with her for any time alone?" |
37904 | exclaimed Mr. Atkinson,"you do not mean to say that she has certainly poisoned Lady Hastings?" |
37904 | he cried, in a voice of appalling harshness,"is it thus you do penance for your sins? |
37904 | he exclaimed,"where is he? |
37904 | he is not thinking of that, I trust? |
37904 | heard you not the noise of guns? |
37904 | is he very sick?" |
37904 | said Sir Philip Hastings,"what new whim is this?" |
37904 | said Von Apsberg, with deep distress;"Renà ©, dear Renà ©, arrested?" |
37904 | said she,"am I not dying?" |
37904 | said the Count,"are you not afraid that I will kill you?" |
37904 | said the Duke,"why do you leave us?" |
37904 | see ye not, my merry men, The broad and open sea? |
37904 | the princesses by birth?" |
37904 | there is no key, what is to be done? |
37904 | think you, good Sir John Franklin, We''ll ever see the land? |
37904 | what her immediate consequence, her undeniable and acknowledged effects will be?" |
37904 | what was the motive?" |
37904 | what''s the matter?" |
37904 | when shall I see my old mother And pray at her trembling knee? |
37904 | when shall I see my orphan child? |
37904 | who has not read it? |
37904 | who hung you there on high? |
37904 | who made thy brightness? |
37904 | would he think it so great a punishment to come home and live with his parents?" |
37904 | you have told us all our fortunes, but you say nothing of your own fate?" |
20955 | ''How did she get here?'' 20955 Ah, dear father,_ that_, then, was your thought? |
20955 | Ah, why not also confide in her? 20955 All what things?" |
20955 | Amen, say I: and what callest thou English gold? |
20955 | And Mr. Levy was there, eh? |
20955 | And for what end? |
20955 | And hast thou no visitors with thee now, friend host? |
20955 | And how long has that bill to run now? |
20955 | And if the Padrone were to meet him, do you think the Padrone would say''Come stà sa Signora?'' 20955 And in whose household have you resided?" |
20955 | And perhaps,resumed Mrs. Hazeldean, with a very sunny expression of countenance,"you have noticed this in Frank since he was here?" |
20955 | And what means have you for meeting them? |
20955 | And what though I have sometimes seen the Lady Adelaide? |
20955 | And what work interests you so much? |
20955 | And who should this be in a holy habit, following the bridal equipage on his mule? 20955 Are you a fool, child? |
20955 | Are you out of your senses? |
20955 | As how? |
20955 | At my poor father''s death? 20955 Because she is a foreigner?" |
20955 | But have I not atoned it? 20955 But if she had rank and title?" |
20955 | But if the Count is in town? |
20955 | But the child? |
20955 | But where''s the Deer? |
20955 | But why? 20955 Can there be a doubt of that?" |
20955 | Can this be my Jenny? |
20955 | Can you say that in this case my suspicions are unfounded? |
20955 | Character-- ah, that is indispensable? |
20955 | De demoiselles; de-- de-- what_ you_ call''em, Monsieur Job? |
20955 | Did you endorse it? |
20955 | Discern you yon trees-- groups of them scattered about, and through which an occasional glimpse of the highway may be distinguished? 20955 Do I ask you to show it? |
20955 | Do you know what they say? |
20955 | Do you mean me and Henry? |
20955 | Do you mean to tell me, Miss Snape, that you will write down the names of three parties who will accept a bill for one hundred pounds for you? |
20955 | Gina,murmured one of the girls, still pursuing her work,"what has made you turn so pale? |
20955 | Ha, Randal, boy,said Mr. Leslie, looking up lazily,"how d''ye do? |
20955 | Have you circulated any other bills made by the same drawer? |
20955 | He? |
20955 | How can I know it is false? |
20955 | How can a man know general principles unless he has first studied the details? 20955 How did you happen to find them, Mayfield?" |
20955 | How do you get on with the work, Lucrezia? |
20955 | How? |
20955 | I am of a different opinion; but tell me, what sort of a person is this former master of hers? |
20955 | Is Sarah Purday,I asked the turnkey,"more reconciled to her position than she was?" |
20955 | Is he not an attractive man? |
20955 | Is it not a handsome pattern? |
20955 | Is it so uncommon to take interest even in a stranger who is menaced by some peril? |
20955 | Is it so? 20955 Is not the brave here?" |
20955 | Is that all? |
20955 | Is the Signora Montani ill? |
20955 | Kaw-- what? |
20955 | Know you how long it is since we met? |
20955 | Mark you her rich white dress, mother, with its corsage of diamonds, and the sleeves looped up to the elbow with lace and jewels? 20955 Marry her!--are you serious?" |
20955 | Me-- and why? 20955 Meet it?" |
20955 | Might ye no be the Pretender? |
20955 | Money? |
20955 | My love, my love, what mean you? |
20955 | My mother--(so Violante always called Jemima)--my mother, you have spoken to her? |
20955 | Nay, signor, not retired, but--"But what? 20955 No!--have you?" |
20955 | Nor heard of him? |
20955 | O father, can you resist this? 20955 Oh, Giovanni, you are ill!--my husband, what is it? |
20955 | Oh, that was all; some affair when I was member from Lansmere? |
20955 | Oui, oui, oui-- de ladees--_pas la- bas, pas la- bas!_ They must be-- a-- a--_noyées_--what you call when you fall_ dans l''eau_ and_ mourez_--eh? |
20955 | Out with what, my dear madam? 20955 Pray, sir,"I said,"could you meet that one hundred pounds bill, supposing it could not be paid by the acceptor?" |
20955 | Pray,said I, interrupting his excuses,"does your young lady''s name begin with S.? |
20955 | Rely on me, sir,said Randal;"but I should think this poor Doctor can scarcely be the person she seeks to discover?" |
20955 | Rogers and his wife were not, I hope, cognizant of this? |
20955 | Shall the tall tree of my tribe turn to a willow? |
20955 | She is very beautiful, Bianca; but--"Ay, what, you are a reader of countenances,_ madra mia_; what see you there? |
20955 | Sir Count, the Lady Adelaide--"Has retired? |
20955 | Sir William has accepted my challenge? |
20955 | Sir, I thank you sincerely,said Riccabocca with emotion;"but am I not safe here?" |
20955 | So you have returned, signor? |
20955 | Speak- a you Italian? |
20955 | Suppose he was to marry? |
20955 | Supposing I could assist you,she at last said,"how would that help me?" |
20955 | The Riccaboccas? 20955 The old Signora Montani is bedridden; how could she get to mass?" |
20955 | The what? |
20955 | This second bill, you say, is urgently required to enable Miss Snape to leave town? |
20955 | Was it not enough to make me ill? |
20955 | Was there ever any lace made there? |
20955 | Well, but Leonard Fairfield?--you have seen him since? |
20955 | Well, what_ shall_ we call them? |
20955 | Well,she impatiently snarled,"suppose so; what then?" |
20955 | Were you? 20955 What did you do with that? |
20955 | What do they say? |
20955 | What do you guess? 20955 What is it?" |
20955 | What is the name of the falls, Mayfield? |
20955 | What is this, signora? |
20955 | What is your name? |
20955 | What is_ she_ like? |
20955 | What mean you? |
20955 | What name did you say, sir? |
20955 | What now? |
20955 | What shall I be now if I live? 20955 What then? |
20955 | What was their appearance? |
20955 | What, is your master ill? |
20955 | When does young Thornhill come of age? |
20955 | Where did you hide the soap on the day when you confess you tried to poison Henry Rogers? |
20955 | Who are you-- and what do you do here? |
20955 | Who is always quarrelling? |
20955 | Who is she?--what is her name? |
20955 | Who is that going away? 20955 Who might, perhaps,"observed Randal-- not truly if he referred to Madame di Negra--"who might, perhaps, speak very little English?" |
20955 | Who the devil would? |
20955 | Whose else can he be? 20955 Why did you visit her?" |
20955 | Why naturally? |
20955 | Why not allude to them? |
20955 | Why not the name of the Falls of the Silver Lace? |
20955 | Why not? |
20955 | Why, you do n''t mean--? |
20955 | Will you never come to see us? 20955 You do n''t like a foreigner and a Catholic?" |
20955 | You have read that letter? |
20955 | You must have an Englishwoman? |
20955 | You surely did not wrong her? |
20955 | _ Honorable_, did you say? |
20955 | ''Tis the third autumn, ay, so long, Since memory''neath this very bough, Thrilled my sad lyre strings into song-- What shall unlock their music now? |
20955 | --"Do you mean the Devil?" |
20955 | --"Power!--the vulgarest application of it, or the loftiest? |
20955 | --"What do you call the loftiest, and what the vulgarest?" |
20955 | A paroquet of painted shallowness? |
20955 | A silly thing to whistle to and fro, And peck at plums, and then be whistled off? |
20955 | Am I not your daughter-- the descendant of men who never feared?" |
20955 | And I-- what was it thou didst take me for? |
20955 | And a world all dying because I am, and show myself to be, and to have long been, even that? |
20955 | And look at his attractions: see this goodly lot of cavaliers speeding on to join his banquet; can any there compare with him?" |
20955 | And now, Frank, what say you-- would it not be well if I run down to Hazeldean to sound your parents? |
20955 | And who prizes the wise man if he fails?" |
20955 | And whom did you meet at Hazeldean?" |
20955 | And your father thinks that the Squire may leave you a legacy?" |
20955 | Another year shall I return, And cross this solemn chapel floor, While round me memory''s shrine- lamps burn-- Or shall this pilgrimage be o''er? |
20955 | Any quarrel about tithes?" |
20955 | Are persons who profess to take the likeness of human nature to make an accurate portrait? |
20955 | Athalie, to what have you so unthinkingly urged me?" |
20955 | Besides, do I not know your nature? |
20955 | But as to a profession-- what is he fit for? |
20955 | But as to the Marchesa''s affections,"continued Frank, with a faltering voice,"do you really and honestly believe that they are to be won by me?" |
20955 | But for that I-- I-- What do you stare at me so for, you infernal blue- bottle? |
20955 | But how is it instructive?" |
20955 | But how was it with him? |
20955 | But what becomes of them? |
20955 | But what can be your reason? |
20955 | But who else has done so?" |
20955 | But why not study the original? |
20955 | But yet, would it not be better,"added Levy, with emphasis,"to borrow it, without interest, of your friend L''Estrange?" |
20955 | But you can see her now, mother; remember you one half so lovely?" |
20955 | But you mean the loftiest?" |
20955 | But you will let us know when he comes?" |
20955 | But, did you ever know any thing like the prejudices that must prevail against you? |
20955 | But, where are the girls? |
20955 | But, with such self- conquest, how is it that you can not contrive to live within the bounds of a very liberal allowance?" |
20955 | By the by, what do you suppose the Hazeldean rental is worth-- net?" |
20955 | By the way, you have never, by chance, spoken of the Riccaboccas to Madame di Negra?" |
20955 | Can I forget that night on the plains of Arras? |
20955 | Can comedy be finer than this? |
20955 | Can there he a finer compliment? |
20955 | Certainly she is two or three years older than you; but if you can get over that misfortune, why not marry her?" |
20955 | Come, but for me what would you have been-- perhaps a beggar?" |
20955 | Could Theseus so make mirth of Ariadne? |
20955 | Could it be possible, if he obtained any interview with the Signora, that he could win her affections?" |
20955 | Could it be the man before me? |
20955 | Could you lend me half a sovereign till Saturday?" |
20955 | Dale._--"Is the author known yet?" |
20955 | Did you correct it?" |
20955 | Do books help?" |
20955 | Do n''t you see that it was for your sake only I feared-- and would be cautious?" |
20955 | Do you begin to perceive my drift?" |
20955 | Do you correct them? |
20955 | Do you know the Count of Peschiera?" |
20955 | Do you not trust your secret to me?" |
20955 | Drift the last wild- flowers from my path-- What care I for the summer now? |
20955 | Friends, revelry, a wife of rare beauty, the chase, the bustle of an immense household-- in short, what had you not to aid your mental struggles? |
20955 | Giovanni, can you picture what I endured? |
20955 | Good heavens, can you think so poorly of me? |
20955 | Good heavens, sir, does he mean to marry a Hindoo?" |
20955 | Has he seen the girl yet? |
20955 | Has not every person some Matthews and James in their acquaintance-- one all passion, and the other all indifference and vapid self- complacency? |
20955 | Has she not a very pale face, and cold gray eye?" |
20955 | Hast thou, in pleasant sport, deserted me? |
20955 | Have you any other commands?" |
20955 | He confided that which I told him this day?" |
20955 | He felt convinced that she had no act or part in so dishonorable a trick-- yet what may not be expected from a jealous woman? |
20955 | He was silent for a few moments, and then he bawled out:"She''ll swing for it, they say-- swing for it, d''ye hear, dame? |
20955 | Here at Crail, too, in the East Neuk o''Fife--''tis a strange chance; and what in heaven''s name seek ye here? |
20955 | How are we to- day for the musquitoes?" |
20955 | How can I praise or blame, and not offend, Or how divide the frailty from the friend? |
20955 | How can I thank you? |
20955 | How can I think of farm- yards when you talk of Frank''s marriage? |
20955 | How can you talk such nonsense? |
20955 | How could he do otherwise? |
20955 | How do you know that?" |
20955 | How does one learn it? |
20955 | How?" |
20955 | Hum-- were you in your own room or the ante- room?" |
20955 | I grant, sir, that I know the Count di Peschiera; but what has Dr. Riccabocca to do with the kinsmen of so grand a personage?" |
20955 | I instantly detected a forgery; by whom? |
20955 | I love Mademoiselle Athalie, the niece of Madame de Livry--""How, the old flame of the great Louis?" |
20955 | I may not speak to you of marriage; and it is necessary to my position that I we d.""_ She_ is of your own rank, therefore you have wooed her?" |
20955 | I replied,"Pray, sir, from whom did you get this bill?" |
20955 | I say to every man,''Do n''t come to me-- I can get you money on much easier terms than any one else;''and what''s the result? |
20955 | I was passing through the street now,--merely to look up at her windows--""You speak of Madame di Negra? |
20955 | I was silent; and presently he gasped:"Wha-- at, what have I said?" |
20955 | In what have I distrusted you? |
20955 | Is it a whim, a jest, a trick of task, To mesh me in another labyrinth? |
20955 | Is she as handsome as the young Lady Beatrice, the count''s sister, who married away a year agone?" |
20955 | Is the Squire not on good terms with his parson? |
20955 | It was rude, I own; but who could have helped it? |
20955 | Italian!--that''s all, is it?" |
20955 | Know you what the chain is, Gina?" |
20955 | Leslie?" |
20955 | Leslie?" |
20955 | Let that content him; what more does he desire? |
20955 | Mr. Leslie, what does intellectual power refined to the utmost, but entirely stripped of beneficence, most resemble?" |
20955 | Now, tell me, Giacomo, is this Count really unprincipled and dangerous? |
20955 | O sorrowful and faded years, Gathered away a time ago, How could your deaths the fount of tears Have troubled to an overflow? |
20955 | One older than this? |
20955 | Perhaps there was something in the expression of my countenance which Mr. Axminster did not like, for he said,"It is good for the amount, I presume?" |
20955 | Poor Booth''s habits and customs are bad indeed, but who can deny the benevolence, and charity, and pity, of this simple and kindly being? |
20955 | Pray, sir, what knowledge is in power?" |
20955 | See you aught?" |
20955 | Shall we never be together again-- like brother and sister, as you have just said?" |
20955 | So Randal looked at him in surprise, and said,"Do you, sir?--why?" |
20955 | Tell me, how many of these things have you put afloat?" |
20955 | The Hopetoun family are there, I believe?" |
20955 | The Signora Montani? |
20955 | The goddess, too, looked down piteously, as if to say,''Seest thou not that I have no arms, and can not help thee?''" |
20955 | Then retreating a step, but laying his hand on the exile''s shoulder, he added--"Need I say that your secret is safe with me?" |
20955 | Then you would not listen to the Count if he proposed some amicable compromise; if, for instance, he was a candidate for the hand of your daughter?" |
20955 | Then, violently pulling the check- string,"Stop"she gasped;"and_ will you_ have the goodness to get out?" |
20955 | There''s no such painted good- for- nothing creature in Frank''s eye, eh?" |
20955 | Was it suffering that drove me back? |
20955 | Was there an_ old_ church of Kighotan? |
20955 | Waters,"she exclaimed, in a changed, palpitating voice, as I was passing forth;"when all is done, you will not forget me?" |
20955 | We are then led to inquire,_ where_ was the old parish church of Kigquotan, and_ when_ was it probably built? |
20955 | What can any instruction do more? |
20955 | What care I that I sing to- day Where sound not the old plaintive hymns, And where the mountains hide away The sunset maple''s yellow limbs? |
20955 | What converse had he with felonious Night, That underneath her dark consenting cloak, He stole unchallenged from his Ariadne? |
20955 | What danger? |
20955 | What did he say of me?" |
20955 | What dost thou think-- that I shall perish here, Gnawed by the tooth of hungry savageness? |
20955 | What else but sweetness tempered all one way, And looks of sociable benignity? |
20955 | What is it which in this building inspires the veneration and affection it commands? |
20955 | What must be done? |
20955 | What quality of air? |
20955 | What regiment, sir?" |
20955 | What say you to the Falls of the Bounding Deer?" |
20955 | What shall I do? |
20955 | What signifies, so you''re happy?" |
20955 | What solace have the gods for such as thou, That is not stabbed by this one thrust through me? |
20955 | What then?" |
20955 | What were you saying about prejudices?" |
20955 | What words are these thus furrowed on the shore? |
20955 | What, then, was that quality, and what its influence upon them? |
20955 | When do you want the £ 5000?" |
20955 | When shall we go?" |
20955 | Whence then arises this? |
20955 | Where can they be?" |
20955 | Where were the gallant Present and all the natives, that not a man of them moved to assist the unfortunate Orpen? |
20955 | Where''s Jenny? |
20955 | Who could have expected you? |
20955 | Who could have thought it? |
20955 | Who could have written it? |
20955 | Who ever thinks of Petrarch as the old time- worn man? |
20955 | Who is here In disarray of princely gear? |
20955 | Who left that crock of water at my side? |
20955 | Who so true? |
20955 | Who stole my dog that loved no one but me? |
20955 | Who_ could_ have sent it? |
20955 | Why do you take this interest in him?" |
20955 | Why should I have done this had my affections been another''s? |
20955 | Why was the tent unstruck, I unawaked, I left, most loved, and last to be forgotten By much obtaining, much indebted Theseus? |
20955 | Why?" |
20955 | Will you that I read it?" |
20955 | Winter, wilt keep the love I offer thee? |
20955 | Yet shrink I, trembling and afraid, From searching glances inward thrown; What deep foundation have I laid, For any joyance, not my own? |
20955 | Yet, Gina, what would you have me do? |
20955 | You do not mean to imply that this man, infamous though he be, can contemplate the crime of an assassin?" |
20955 | You have heard of M. Henri Lemercier?" |
20955 | You have no designs upon_ that_, too?" |
20955 | You spoke of forestalling danger? |
20955 | You trust to me now?" |
20955 | You understand?" |
20955 | Your master confides in you? |
20955 | _ 2d Dryad:_ How knew you that, my lady dear? |
20955 | _ 2d Dryad:_ Now honey- lips, the lie is where? |
20955 | _ 3d Dryad_: But, cedar- cinctured sister, say, What news has winged our Queen away? |
20955 | _ Ceres_ A lie? |
20955 | _ First Lawyer._ But you do not write your sermons? |
20955 | _ First lawyer._ You preach very often, I suppose? |
20955 | _ Frank._--"What? |
20955 | _ Parson._--"How should they be read in order to help?" |
20955 | _ Parson._--"So is the_ Vicar of Wakefield_; yet what book more instructive?" |
20955 | _ Parson._--"What of?" |
20955 | _ Randal._--"Allow me to inquire if, had the kinsman no child, the Count di Peschiera would be legitimate and natural heir to the estates he holds?" |
20955 | _ Randal._--"Does that thought suggest no danger to the child of the kinsman?" |
20955 | _ Randal._--"Is it possible? |
20955 | _ Randal._--"Miss Sticktorights?" |
20955 | _ Randal._--"Must an author be handsome?" |
20955 | _ Randal._--"Would you be as averse to such a notion as Mr. Hazeldean is?" |
20955 | _ Riccabocca._--"You come from London? |
20955 | _ Riccabocca_,( startled.)--"How?" |
20955 | _ Second Lawyer._ Do you not often make mistakes in preaching extemporaneously? |
20955 | _ Second Lawyer._ How do you do then? |
20955 | _ Second Lawyer._ How do you find time to study, when you preach so often? |
20955 | and did she_ trouver_ him?" |
20955 | and so on? |
20955 | and what are you driving at?" |
20955 | and what manner of man is he?" |
20955 | dare-- do you say dare? |
20955 | despair? |
20955 | did she se blesser?" |
20955 | do n''t you think it would be the best way? |
20955 | do_ you_ wish it?" |
20955 | echoed Bianca;"has she not married him? |
20955 | he burst out,"how are you off for soap? |
20955 | if that were what, here and every where in God''s Creation, I_ am_? |
20955 | in French Flanders? |
20955 | is it that I then read but books, and now my knowledge has passed onward, and men contaminate more than books? |
20955 | lie down and die? |
20955 | or think you I would permit it?" |
20955 | repeated Riccabocca, startled and conscience- stricken;"why do you say''trust?'' |
20955 | said Randal, inquisitively,"you told me you had come in contact with him once, respecting, I think, some of your old parishioners at Lansmere?" |
20955 | she contemptuously exclaimed;"you, who voluntarily sever yourself from me?" |
20955 | she lamented--"how can you prove it to me?" |
20955 | so good?" |
20955 | that snuffy, tiresome, prosy professor? |
20955 | the great swordsman and fencer-- that noble master of the science of self- defence, with the fame of whose skill and valor all Europe is ringing?" |
20955 | vill you?'' |
20955 | what to?" |
20955 | where?" |
20955 | you are a handsome fellow, and your expectations are great-- why do n''t you marry some woman with money?" |
22694 | ''Well, Agathe, what''s to be done now?" |
22694 | ''Then why play the lover?'' 22694 A desert? |
22694 | About that-- that d---- woman; there, is_ that_ intelligible? 22694 About what?" |
22694 | Ah, sir, what indeed? |
22694 | Ah-- what have you to fear of Crespo? |
22694 | And Crespo eats them? |
22694 | And does that happen often? |
22694 | And she will treat you, perhaps, like----"Like what? |
22694 | And so, I suppose, the devil came in the midst of the tempest, and took him away bodily in a flash of lightning? |
22694 | And what happened to old Le Prun? |
22694 | And what has become of the wonderful coach? |
22694 | And what said Aminta? |
22694 | And whom do you suspect? 22694 And will you never again indulge her fancy for society?" |
22694 | Are not you? |
22694 | Are you ill? |
22694 | Are you well to- day? |
22694 | As poor as my father? |
22694 | Ay!--what the devil did you mean by that? |
22694 | Ay? |
22694 | Better, perhaps,replied her mistress, with a quiet smile;"but was he so very wicked? |
22694 | But are you enough, you rascals? |
22694 | But do you not still enjoy the prospect? 22694 But how came that passion to endanger Crespo''s life?" |
22694 | But if your sister does not love Count Monte- Leone? |
22694 | But is it not a madness of poor Le Prun to present that terrible man to his handsome young wife? |
22694 | But what is the cause of your wretchedness, my dear Lucille? |
22694 | But which way be you going, sir? 22694 But why are you here, dear Lucille? |
22694 | By my faith, I forget all about it; but what the devil connection have these demons, blue, black, or red, with your fête? |
22694 | By your play? |
22694 | Did Raikes say it was Lord Cripplegate? 22694 Did not you hear?" |
22694 | Did you ever notice the whiffletrees of my team- trotting wagon, how they extend on each side beyond the hubs of the wheels? 22694 Did you not tell me, madam, that nothing could be too magnificent? |
22694 | Do n''t take the trouble-- a little more, or a little less like, what does it matter? |
22694 | Do say, plainly, what it_ is_ all about? |
22694 | Do you dance? |
22694 | Do you know that lady? |
22694 | Do you remember how delighted you were with him the evening of the_ tableaux_ at Lady Westrophe''s? 22694 Do you think so?" |
22694 | Enjoy it? 22694 For heaven''s sake, what do you mean?" |
22694 | For what does your excellency take me? 22694 For,"argues this stern, broad- shouldered Athenian,"how can people be virtuous who are always thinking of their own infirmities?" |
22694 | Had not I and Emily better go with you? |
22694 | Happiness? |
22694 | Has the medical officer attended to her? |
22694 | Have you a pain there, dear Lucille? |
22694 | Have you come far? |
22694 | Have you gained him over? |
22694 | Have you killed him? |
22694 | Heard it? 22694 Hem!--what is he driving in this shadow for? |
22694 | Her refusal would make two persons unhappy; first the Count of Monte- Leone, and in the second place----"And in the second place? |
22694 | Hey dear, bless the pretty child!--did I though? |
22694 | Hey, what''s that? 22694 Hey? |
22694 | Hey? |
22694 | How came you to use a cudgel to a man who had none? 22694 How can I saddle my horse now?" |
22694 | How could I not keep my promise? |
22694 | How do you know? |
22694 | How soon is it to take place? |
22694 | I came to ask how you are, Lucille-- I feared you were ill."I-- I ill? 22694 I know her?" |
22694 | I say, Benson,quoth he,"is this one of the hotels that are so much better than ours, and that our people ought to take a lesson from?" |
22694 | If I love Aminta? |
22694 | If you absolutely must--"It is in the drawing- room, yonder, is it not? 22694 In what respect?" |
22694 | Into my bedroom? 22694 Is Mrs. Hazleton''s messenger waiting?" |
22694 | Is not that true? |
22694 | Is this all? |
22694 | Julie, will you hate me if I tell you all? |
22694 | Louis, did you come by the Hotel de Ville? |
22694 | Monsieur le Marquis is a handsome man,said Blassemare, who at that moment joined them; and, addressing Lucille,"You have seen him before?" |
22694 | My_ heart_ is indifferent-- but-- but he is very handsome-- don''t you think so? |
22694 | No, but----"Ah, she''s in league with the thieves, may be? |
22694 | No, no-- nothing but----"How do you feel now?--are you better? |
22694 | Not a soul-- why, you are jesting; pray, is the Marquise de Pompignaud nobody? 22694 Of course,"said Blassemare,"you have the fullest reliance upon the honor of your wife?" |
22694 | Of whom do you speak? |
22694 | Of whom? |
22694 | Perhaps we are going the same way, and I can give you a lift? |
22694 | Pray,said I,"what_ can_ one do to relieve the monotony of this intolerable place? |
22694 | Really? 22694 Say you so? |
22694 | Semminating--"Dissemminating, you blockhead-- disseminating what?" |
22694 | Seriously,he repeated,"did you not call me by that name?" |
22694 | She is not injured? |
22694 | She was young and pretty, and he old and ugly, but rich; well, what followed? |
22694 | That?--eh? 22694 The black one with the red blinds was it? |
22694 | The house must be very full,Ashburner remarked;"and were there not a great many arrivals this morning? |
22694 | The portrait that you sent up to the garret last week, madam? |
22694 | Then you_ were_ at Avignon? |
22694 | Was he in love? |
22694 | Well, madame? |
22694 | Well, sir, try it: and in the mean time, I expect----"What do you expect? |
22694 | Well, sir? |
22694 | Well, then, suppose we were to leave out the temple, and the columns, and all the architectural part, and content ourselves with the statue? 22694 Well, what did you hear?" |
22694 | Well, what do you expect? 22694 Well, what say you?" |
22694 | Well, what_ old_ calamity? |
22694 | What advantage in carriages, and horses, and open gates, when we are surrounded by a desert? |
22694 | What affair? |
22694 | What are you thinking of, brother? 22694 What calumny?" |
22694 | What do you see there, my dear sister? |
22694 | What do you think of him? |
22694 | What do you think of the likeness? |
22694 | What have you done with the Comte and Comtesse de Choissy? |
22694 | What is all that? |
22694 | What is that you are singing? 22694 What is the matter, Marguerite?" |
22694 | What is the matter? |
22694 | What is the meaning of all this? |
22694 | What makes you fear this? |
22694 | What of her? |
22694 | What on earth does it signify after all? 22694 What ought he to know?" |
22694 | What was going on? |
22694 | What,said one,"_ le Citoyen Herbois_?" |
22694 | What? |
22694 | What?--whom? |
22694 | Where would be the merit of the service, unless its performance cost some sacrifice? |
22694 | Which is best? |
22694 | Who in the world is this good man in plaster? |
22694 | Who is he? |
22694 | Who is that woman with a book in her hand? |
22694 | Who is that young person whom Le Prun is leading towards them? 22694 Who''s Mrs. Somerset Montmorency?" |
22694 | Who''s that? |
22694 | Who? |
22694 | Why did he say it was Lord Cripplegate? |
22694 | Why did you come, then-- what do you want of me? |
22694 | Why do you say_ that_? |
22694 | Why does he love me? |
22694 | Why so? |
22694 | Why the devil should you murder me? |
22694 | Why, Signor, can not he be informed of his grave duty? |
22694 | Why, how long have you been awake-- did you-- did you hear music-- singing? |
22694 | Why, what the devil is urging you? |
22694 | Why-- why? 22694 Why?" |
22694 | Will you deign, Signorina,said the Marquis to Aminta,"to accept me as a guest for a few days?" |
22694 | Would you like, madam, to look at the design for the monument? |
22694 | Yes, dear Lucille; can I do any thing for you? |
22694 | Yes, my poor woman,said the baronet;"is there any thing I can do for you?" |
22694 | Yes; what are you at, Zuleika? 22694 Yet after all, do you know that I would rather sleep in the southern corner of a country church- yard than in the tomb of the Capulets? |
22694 | You are aware,said she, with a painful effort, and a voice half choked by sobs,"you are aware of the blow which I have received?" |
22694 | You are having a statue of him made? 22694 You are mistaken; besides, how can you see under a veil which way she looks?" |
22694 | You do n''t mean to say that you or any one likes being here? |
22694 | You have been in the south lately? |
22694 | You think so? |
22694 | You think so? |
22694 | You will go then to Naples? |
22694 | You wrong me, Lucille; I told you the simple truth-- why should I deceive you? |
22694 | Your first question,writes Southey,"is, whether Letters would gain by the more avowed and active encouragement of the Government? |
22694 | _ Her!_--whom? |
22694 | _ Mais qu''est ce qu''ils sont donc, ces vaut- riens?_asked Le Roi. |
22694 | _ One glass!_said she,"_ only one glass?_ His sleep can not be long. |
22694 | _ Sacre!_ what does the child want? |
22694 | ''And we have never ceased being happy: we are always happy, are we not Agathe?'' |
22694 | ''Let me see,''said Louis,''Agathe, how long have we been married?'' |
22694 | ''Make my way in life,''sayest thou, Audley Egerton? |
22694 | ''Shall we open the casement and ask him what they want?'' |
22694 | ''Some dear friend, I suppose?'' |
22694 | And ca n''t I wait? |
22694 | And for that necklace, do you know how it was that you did n''t have it, and that you were very nearly having it, you ungwateful little devil you? |
22694 | And she asks in kindest accents,"Was she happy when she died?" |
22694 | And then the old fellow ca n''t live_ very_ long-- a few years-- and so who knows yet what may befall?" |
22694 | And what are temptations but trials?--what are trials but perils and sorrows? |
22694 | And what innocence or good will can disarm jealousy? |
22694 | And what is to become of the poor Signorina? |
22694 | And where now is Pius IX.? |
22694 | And who shall mourn, while, in the mystic race, from hand to hand still moves the unquenched torch, that none have reached the goal? |
22694 | And whose farm did he take?" |
22694 | And yet, with all my struggles, will knowledge ever place me on the same level as that on which this dunce is born? |
22694 | Are there a dozen well known artists who will openly testify to a conviction of their usefulness? |
22694 | Are they as they have been? |
22694 | Are they paintings, or sculptures, or engravings, purchased from the artists who made them, and who have received an adequate price for them? |
22694 | As soon as he had closed the door, he said to her--"I hope they make you comfortable here, Marguerite?" |
22694 | Besides, does gratitude lead to love?" |
22694 | Bruce?" |
22694 | But how are you, Goody? |
22694 | But now, after all, what was to be done? |
22694 | But of all the poor, who should hate the rich like the pauper gentleman? |
22694 | But what can it mean? |
22694 | But what could be done? |
22694 | But what is that she says, which makes the old woman start with a look of triumph? |
22694 | But when do our parents and friends, when do we ourselves, dream of what our lot is really to turn out? |
22694 | But where did all these"thousand works"come from? |
22694 | But who has n''t had his best actions misinterpreted by calumny? |
22694 | But why do you look at me with those strange glances? |
22694 | But you heard nothing else?" |
22694 | But, you see, he had an unexpected legacy----"_ Randal._--"And retired from business?" |
22694 | By my word, this place deserves its name-- is it not truly the Chateau des Anges?" |
22694 | Can he be jealous?" |
22694 | Can she love him? |
22694 | Could it be that, so recently liberated, he was about to begin again that life of plot and sedition which already had cost him his liberty? |
22694 | Could this charming flower be already scorched by the hot breath of passion? |
22694 | Dale._--"She is very amiable, Jemima, is she not?" |
22694 | Did I not watch her closely? |
22694 | Did you ever examine an ant- hill, dear reader? |
22694 | Did you ever see such eyes? |
22694 | Do Art- Unions promote the interests and reward the labors of those who are most eminently deserving? |
22694 | Do you know a more beautiful girl in Naples? |
22694 | Do you know any one more cultivated and refined than she?" |
22694 | Do you remember her, reader? |
22694 | Do you think he would turn you off in this way, had you sought his assistance to save_ her_?" |
22694 | Fled like the cloudy rack With morning''s early breath, What night shall bring them back? |
22694 | For a moment or two she lay muttering sounds which seemed to have no meaning; but at length she said, distinctly enough,"Is that Philip Hastings?" |
22694 | For what?" |
22694 | Had n''t he fitted your dwawing- woom with yellow satin at the beginning of the season? |
22694 | Had this young girl, apparently so pure and modest, had the White Rose of Sorrento, any secret amour or intrigue? |
22694 | Has any thing--_frightened_ you?" |
22694 | Has n''t he brought you a pincushion or a jack- in- the- box, Lady Raikes? |
22694 | Has not the Northern hunter seen the flag of England, o''er her floating palaces, unfurled in his dominions crystalline? |
22694 | Have I not heard my mother say that I am as near in blood to this Squire as any one, if he had no children? |
22694 | Have I not my savings, too? |
22694 | Have not our latter days beheld, with awe, the ice- borne Muscovite[22] ride the fierce billows of the Polar Sea? |
22694 | Have they all been executed by living American artists? |
22694 | Hazeldean''s?" |
22694 | He calls her Lord Crick-- crick-- ipplegate,"sobbed her ladyship,"Why did I marry him?" |
22694 | He is a relation of yours?" |
22694 | He is going down the Rhine;--for its scenery? |
22694 | He is going into Egypt;--to see the Pyramids? |
22694 | He said it was a shame that any body should die in a workhouse; he appealed to his neighbor Smith, who was warming his broth, whether it was not so? |
22694 | He who feels only for himself, abjures his very nature as man; for do we not say of one who has no tenderness for mankind that he is_ inhuman_? |
22694 | Her emotion was perceived at once by Maulear, who said to himself:"What mystery is this? |
22694 | His father''s halls? |
22694 | How can I, a stranger to this young girl, hope to please her? |
22694 | How can one speak of a balance of powers, where there are but two forces-- foreign absolutism, and the people? |
22694 | How can you propose such an exile to the Marquis? |
22694 | How could I hate my dear friend and companion?" |
22694 | How could death and he meet together? |
22694 | How could one organize a constitutional monarchy where the aristocracy is without a past, and where royalty inspires neither affection nor respect? |
22694 | How dare you sing that?" |
22694 | How she came by the money to buy such a trinket? |
22694 | How she got it? |
22694 | I came up--"Albert-- where is Albert? |
22694 | I_ wo n''t_ go tick, that''s flat; and she ought to be contented with what she has had; ought n''t she, Prince?" |
22694 | If not, who else but Aminta could wear it, unless indeed her mother did? |
22694 | If there had been no poverty, and no sense of poverty, where would have been that which we call the wealth of a country? |
22694 | If there were no penury and no pain, what would become of fortitude?--what of patience?--what of resignation? |
22694 | In the first place, have they any suspicions?" |
22694 | Indeed, what sentiment can be more natural? |
22694 | Is his brother, the Conte de Cresseron, still living?" |
22694 | Is it possible that its leaders should be the object of so much calumny? |
22694 | Is that all her history? |
22694 | Is this the way you are to marry her in the foreign land?" |
22694 | It contains three stories:"Nice People,""What is Happiness?" |
22694 | Look at my husband-- did he ask aid for himself? |
22694 | Lucille, on a sudden, said--"So, at the end of a year you will be married?" |
22694 | Mr. Bradshaw did not heed the interruption, but continued:"''And who,''I inquired,''was the Lady of the Lake? |
22694 | Nevertheless, I reasoned, these things can never have been brought here by the worthy people I have seen; and then-- the little grave in the garden? |
22694 | Now, one word more, or if you please to consider it so, one favor more-- when will I be tried?" |
22694 | O my brethren, do you not perceive? |
22694 | One morning we went out to prune our vines, the door of the house was open, just as you found it yesterday; why should we ever shut the door? |
22694 | Our life in the country is so sad and melancholy; what can we offer him as a compensation for the amusements he would sacrifice?" |
22694 | Oust him from what? |
22694 | Oust him-- what from? |
22694 | Pray, when did I refuse you carriages, or horses, or free egress from this place? |
22694 | Reader, can you go back for twenty years? |
22694 | Saw ye not white fog- wreaths floating through the cold gray dawn over ice- laden billows, as they roll through yon rock- cinctured chasm? |
22694 | See, here lies a muscle of keen sensibility; and there-- what is that? |
22694 | Shook her bosom then with passion, Hot her forehead burned with pain, But her lips said only,"Allan, Will you ever come again?" |
22694 | Surely you ca n''t find it an impediment?" |
22694 | The lawyer asks our Lord,''who is my neighbor?'' |
22694 | The lov''d ones of our youth Hasten''d to life''s last bourne; Dear to the heart''s deep truth, Will they return? |
22694 | Thwart a woman, and she will strive to vex you-- there''s nothing new in that; why should not Madame Le Prun share the pretty weaknesses of her sex? |
22694 | To whom can I apply so well as to you, when I need the counsel and assistance of a friend, equally kind, disinterested, and clear- headed? |
22694 | Treated as you are, how_ can_ you call yourself a prisoner?" |
22694 | Was she satisfied-- had she sated herself? |
22694 | Was this the headdress of a chambermaid? |
22694 | We rose with the birds, and went to rest with the sun, and no two could have been happier: am I not right, Agathe?'' |
22694 | We were told he had lived there( what neighborhood has not its"Cromwell House?") |
22694 | Well, but if he were dead, who would be the heir of Hazeldean? |
22694 | Well, then, shall I have no power to oust this blockhead? |
22694 | Were it not better gently to withdraw the dead child and leave the mother to her_ repose_? |
22694 | What a busy, anxious, fidgety creature Ned Worrell was? |
22694 | What a walk that was for me? |
22694 | What are we? |
22694 | What boy do you mean?" |
22694 | What can it mean but guilt, danger, and despair?" |
22694 | What could induce Taddeo thus to leave his mother''s house, alone, at midnight, and in a storm? |
22694 | What is the history of the monarchy and of the aristocracy of Italy? |
22694 | What is there in twenty years that should keep us from going back over them? |
22694 | What madness and crime can have conjured up these sounds? |
22694 | What might come of it, if he were to have a long canting talk with the old wretch upon her death- bed?" |
22694 | What prominent part have they played in the national development? |
22694 | What state more pitiable to the eye of a man of robust health than that of the Confirmed Valetudinarian? |
22694 | What the devil do I know of the Comte and Comtesse de Choissy, as you call them?" |
22694 | What the devil is come to the parish?" |
22694 | What then would the man say? |
22694 | What vital element have they supplied to Italian strength, or to the unification of the future existence of Italy? |
22694 | What would my aristocratic mother say to that? |
22694 | What would you give, you dog, to have such a sweet smile from Lady Raikes? |
22694 | What?" |
22694 | When do you mean to take orders? |
22694 | Where died Charles Albert? |
22694 | Which of us should arouse the unhappy comtesse? |
22694 | Whither do we go? |
22694 | Who gave it her? |
22694 | Who shall pierce the ancient prison- house where Nature''s might, in mightier chains of adamantine frost, lies fettered, since Creation? |
22694 | Why are they unequal? |
22694 | Why did he not think of that before?" |
22694 | Why do we fail so often in the practice? |
22694 | Why pause ye in mid ocean? |
22694 | Why should I throw upon your mind the gloom and shadows of my own?" |
22694 | Why should I thrust my own neck into the trap? |
22694 | Why will not some American publisher give us a translation, with the original illustrations? |
22694 | Why? |
22694 | Will he awaken?" |
22694 | Will this suffice?" |
22694 | Will you permit me to go into your bedroom?" |
22694 | With a fierce start, Monsieur Le Prun cried, suddenly--"What do you mean?" |
22694 | With such elements how would it be possible to found a monarchy surrounded with an aristocracy? |
22694 | Without doubt, you have his portrait?" |
22694 | Would she change her quarters? |
22694 | Would she prefer the children''s department of the House? |
22694 | Yes; we''ll forget all: wo n''t we?" |
22694 | Yet now, what to us the priest and the Levite, of God''s chosen race though they were? |
22694 | You forget; why should n''t Raikes forget? |
22694 | You go on so fast, so smoothly, so easily on the forward course-- why not in retrogression? |
22694 | You have never merited aught from me but gratitude; will you forgive me?" |
22694 | You heard it, did you not?" |
22694 | You know Rood, then?" |
22694 | You may have heard of Farmer Bruce?" |
22694 | You told me, then, that you knew some stories of him-- come, what are they?" |
22694 | _ Randal._--"Would the money have paid as well, sunk on my father''s land?" |
22694 | and do we not call him who sorrows with the sorrowful,_ humane_? |
22694 | and has he begun to neglect you so soon? |
22694 | and what are they? |
22694 | but as it is, I repeat, what is to be done?" |
22694 | cried the Squire, reddening,"did you say''Damn the stocks?'' |
22694 | did you ever see such a complexion? |
22694 | did you ever see such a killing pink dress, and such a dear little delightfully carved ivory parasol?" |
22694 | do not you know?" |
22694 | do you suppose Dr. Rickeybockey got out of his warm bed to bung up the holes in my new stocks?" |
22694 | do you think the Governor would let one of his officers die without assistance? |
22694 | had''nt he paid three hundwed and eighty for a new cawwiage for you the week before? |
22694 | how can you?" |
22694 | is the Conte de la Perriere nobody?" |
22694 | is the effect of the narcotic over? |
22694 | or lock the gates, madame? |
22694 | or should we disturb her? |
22694 | said Maulear, with surprise;"Are you intent on their marriage?" |
22694 | said she;"what have I done? |
22694 | said the heavy dragoon;"against Joe, Zuly? |
22694 | said the old woman, gazing at her,"then you are the pretty lady Sir Philip was to have married, but would not have her?" |
22694 | she answered;"being here, or on a common, or the sea- sands? |
22694 | surely it has not lost all its charms?" |
22694 | that''s a pity; what ails you, my charming little wife?" |
22694 | the horrid man who enslaves us all? |
22694 | then you heard it, did you?" |
22694 | this is the most insolent, unprovoked, diabolical-- but whom do you suspect, I say?" |
22694 | what could we do? |
22694 | what do you mean?" |
22694 | what new calamity is this?" |
22694 | what proofs are wanting?" |
22694 | what''s this?" |
22694 | where is my husband?" |
22694 | who can describe it accurately? |
22694 | why conceal it from me?" |
22694 | why should this poor lad love one who scarcely knew him?" |
22694 | you have made a mistake, I see you repent, be quick; what will you do with us?" |