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 |
---|---|
22844 | Besides, she''s really a niceish sort of a body enough, a tidyish little soul in her way, and you''re a gay widower-- so who knows?" |
22844 | Did not I manage her famously? |
22844 | Nay, what''s the matter with you all?" |
22844 | whistled Dick in an aside whistle;"going to law is she? |
12677 | ''Ever try any Chicago ties?'' 12677 ''Sure you''ve learned that?'' |
12677 | ''That so? 12677 ''That so?'' |
12677 | ''That so?'' 12677 A George Cohan comedy?" |
12677 | All of it? |
12677 | And what,went on he, crossing his feet and leaning negligently against Mrs. McChesney''s desk,"and what can I do for thee, fair lady?" |
12677 | Annie,she teased,"just give us one of your peach cobblers, will you? |
12677 | Appointment? |
12677 | Are you scared,she asked;"just the least bit?" |
12677 | Athena? |
12677 | Baumgartner? |
12677 | Busy? |
12677 | But wo n''t it tire you too much, Mother? |
12677 | Dessert, Mother? |
12677 | Did Baumgartner say he''d--? |
12677 | Do I know her? |
12677 | Do you know when he will be in? |
12677 | Do you know-- Why, I did n''t say there-- What makes you think that--? |
12677 | Do? 12677 Does this fool rule of yours apply to this young fellow, too?" |
12677 | Done what? |
12677 | For me? |
12677 | Good? |
12677 | Got any Robert W. Chambers''s heroines tucked away there? |
12677 | Has Mr. Griebler come in? |
12677 | Hm-- that so? |
12677 | I did n''t say it was bad, did I? 12677 If he says what?" |
12677 | Is n''t that an awfully obvious necktie you''re wearing, Jock? |
12677 | It looks very much as though we were going to be millionaires in our old age, you and I? |
12677 | Jock,repeated Emma McChesney slowly,"where-- shall-- we-- lunch?" |
12677 | Know anything about writing, or advertising? |
12677 | Lamb chops to- night, eh, Annie? 12677 McChesney, do you know why you fell down on that Athena account?" |
12677 | McChesney? |
12677 | Me? 12677 Me? |
12677 | More what? |
12677 | Mother,he said suddenly, standing before her,"there was a time when you were afraid I was n''t going to pan out, was n''t there?" |
12677 | My dear child,with careful politeness,"will you please try to be sane? |
12677 | Not exactly b-- Not ex_act_ly, eh? |
12677 | Not so bad, eh? |
12677 | Point? |
12677 | Say, are you related to Mrs. Emma McChesney, of the Featherloom Skirt Company? |
12677 | Say, where would he stop? |
12677 | Sixty- nine what? |
12677 | So you want money as badly as all that, do you? |
12677 | Spooks? 12677 Think it''s going to take hold?" |
12677 | This? 12677 Well, I guess I can get in a three- hour sleep before-- er--""Before what?" |
12677 | Well, you said you wanted somebody to worry about, did n''t you? |
12677 | Well? |
12677 | Well? |
12677 | What are we going to do about it? |
12677 | What are we going to do? 12677 What can I do for you? |
12677 | What d''you mean-- young? |
12677 | What is it? |
12677 | What is this, anyway? |
12677 | What is this? |
12677 | What were you thinking of? |
12677 | What''ll you have? |
12677 | What''s all this? |
12677 | What''s that for? |
12677 | What''s the hurry? 12677 What? |
12677 | Where did you get him? |
12677 | Where''s this Mr. Griebler, of St. Louis, stopping; do you know? |
12677 | Wo n''t you tell us, Mrs. McChesney? 12677 You back?" |
12677 | You mean at Tonawanda? 12677 Your stenographer can see-- What will the office think? |
12677 | ''Anything else?'' |
12677 | ''That a New York necktie you''re wearing?'' |
12677 | ''What else?'' |
12677 | A George Cohan comedy?''" |
12677 | A George Cohan comedy?''"] |
12677 | A quick step forward--"What''s the matter, Emma?" |
12677 | All of which leads up to this question: How would you like to buy your neckties in Chicago, McChesney?'' |
12677 | And I had to buy, did n''t I? |
12677 | And then you''ll run out there, eh? |
12677 | Are they piling it up on you?" |
12677 | Are you working too hard?" |
12677 | Bring your pastry tray, will you?" |
12677 | Buck?" |
12677 | But do you know what they thought of us in there? |
12677 | Ca n''t you get an ordinary man model and fake the Greek god beauty?" |
12677 | Could your office have an advertising plan roughly sketched by that time?" |
12677 | Do n''t you see that what applies to pastry applies to petticoats? |
12677 | Do you want to leave your name?" |
12677 | Do you?" |
12677 | Get me?" |
12677 | He gave his number, waited a little eager moment, then:"Featherloom Petticoat Company? |
12677 | Home?" |
12677 | How do you think I could have stood those years on the road if I had n''t kept up courage with the thought that it was all for him? |
12677 | How was it in the stories? |
12677 | I did n''t mean-- You see this is business, and I''m crazy to make good, and it''s such a fight--""Do n''t I know it?" |
12677 | I said you looked like a comer, did n''t I?" |
12677 | I''ll go over there this morning and tell''em I''ve changed my mind, see? |
12677 | I''ll talk to you in a minute, young man-- that is--"he turned quickly upon Berg--"if that is n''t against your crazy principles, too?" |
12677 | I''ve talked you to death, have n''t I? |
12677 | If I had n''t had it in me I would n''t be going to Chicago as manager of the Berg, Shriner Western office, would I?" |
12677 | If you''d care to try something? |
12677 | It may be that bore whose telephone conversation begins:"Well, what do you know to- day?" |
12677 | Just favor me with a scenario, will you?" |
12677 | Louis?" |
12677 | McChesney?" |
12677 | Miss Galt?" |
12677 | My what? |
12677 | Now? |
12677 | Of what use his wares on a building whose tower was robed in clouds and which used the chain lightning for a necklace? |
12677 | Or is it my godlike beauty which holds you thus? |
12677 | Or is my face dirty?" |
12677 | Pardon me, wo n''t you, Mrs. McChesney? |
12677 | Poor, eh?" |
12677 | Proofreading Team[ Illustration:"''What is this anyway? |
12677 | Remember that time in Chicago, Mother?" |
12677 | THE MAN WITHIN HIM V. THE SELF- STARTER ILLUSTRATIONS"''What is this anyway? |
12677 | Tell me, why were n''t you sleeping?" |
12677 | That''s worth living for, is n''t it?" |
12677 | The Old Man wants to see me?" |
12677 | The campaign''s theirs, see? |
12677 | Then, as Mrs. McChesney shrugged noncommittal shoulders,"Tell me, how do you feel about it?" |
12677 | Then, boyish curiosity getting the better of him,"Say, tell me, what in the world are you doing to that drawing?" |
12677 | Then, turning about,"Where''s that girl?" |
12677 | Then, turning to her son as the door closed on the drooping figure of the erstwhile buoyant Meyers,"Where''ll we lunch, Jock?" |
12677 | Then-- McChesney, what have you learned about advertising in the last two and a half years?'' |
12677 | Then:"Has n''t my gray suit come back from the tailor''s?" |
12677 | This stuff you mean--?" |
12677 | What do you want to do?" |
12677 | What would you think it was? |
12677 | What''s happened to the boy?" |
12677 | What''s the difference now?" |
12677 | What''s this bad news of Jock?" |
12677 | What? |
12677 | When he talks to you, you play up the keen, alert stuff with a dash of sophistication, see? |
12677 | When we have a job that needs a woman''s eye do we send her? |
12677 | Which to emphasize? |
12677 | Why? |
12677 | Will you let me show you those plans now?" |
12677 | Would he-- does he stop at this desk when he comes in?" |
12677 | Would it bore you too much to touch lightly on the subject of your son''s future?" |
12677 | Would you like your office done in mahogany or oak?''" |
12677 | Yes?" |
12677 | You sometimes see that same little shocked, dazed expression in the eyes of a woman whose husband has just said,"Is n''t that hat too young for you?" |
12677 | You think I know a little something about advertising, do n''t you?" |
12677 | You were happy, were n''t you?" |
12677 | [ Illustration:"''Well, you said you wanted somebody to worry about, did n''t you?''"] |
12677 | [ Illustration:"He made straight for the main desk with its battalion of clerks"]"Mr. Griebler in? |
12677 | evenly,"do you realize that you are virtually hounding me into asking you to marry me?" |
12677 | he demanded wrathfully,"an all- night session?" |
42015 | All ready for the big day? |
42015 | All set? |
42015 | Am I seeing things or is that the old_ Queen_? |
42015 | And when do the supervisors have their annual meeting? |
42015 | Anyone hurt? |
42015 | Anyone hurt? |
42015 | Are n''t you going to stay for the final sophomore debate tryouts? |
42015 | Are n''t you the folks in the speedboat? |
42015 | Are there any charges? |
42015 | Are we what? |
42015 | Are you all right, Helen? |
42015 | Are you all right, dear? |
42015 | Are you going to head all of the front page stories? |
42015 | Are you going to? |
42015 | Are you sure it''s enough? |
42015 | Are you trying to be a county paper? |
42015 | Are you? |
42015 | But I thought you had decided not to go to the play? |
42015 | But is n''t that a little extravagant? |
42015 | But what could I do? |
42015 | But what for, Tom, and can we afford it? |
42015 | But would n''t that cost a lot of money? |
42015 | But you''re not objecting to the paved road, are you? |
42015 | Can I go with you? |
42015 | Can we prove Atwell had a hand in this? |
42015 | Can you run a typewriter? |
42015 | Can you see what boat he has? |
42015 | Did he cancel the passes? |
42015 | Did n''t I ask enough? |
42015 | Did n''t I see you working in the garden this morning when I went down the lake with Jim Preston? |
42015 | Did we get hit? |
42015 | Did you get any today? |
42015 | Did you get that? |
42015 | Did you write a story about the sophomore picnic and what happened to Margaret? |
42015 | Do for what? |
42015 | Do n''t you think you were a little short with him? |
42015 | Do n''t you want someone to go to the farmhouse with you? |
42015 | Do these electric printers run all day? |
42015 | Do you still want me to get a pass? |
42015 | Do you think Rand will give you an interview? |
42015 | Get a story? |
42015 | Get your story in to the A.P.? |
42015 | Getting tired? |
42015 | Going to double the prices of everything? |
42015 | Going up to school for the sophomore- junior debate? |
42015 | Had n''t I better go? |
42015 | Have I been asleep all evening? |
42015 | Have a big celebration? |
42015 | Have lots of business today? |
42015 | Have patience with you, Mother? |
42015 | Have you found Margaret? |
42015 | How about a plane ride if the circus has time to take us? |
42015 | How about cost? |
42015 | How about the farmers back in the hills? |
42015 | How about you, Tom? |
42015 | How about you? |
42015 | How am I going to get out the paper? |
42015 | How are all the storm victims? |
42015 | How deep is the water from here in? |
42015 | How did he look when you talked with him? |
42015 | How did it happen? |
42015 | How did you happen to think of that? |
42015 | How do they decide the official papers? |
42015 | How long will it take us to reach Crescent Beach? |
42015 | How much circulation do you have? |
42015 | How much circulation do you think the_ Advocate_ has now? |
42015 | How much will it be? |
42015 | How will the local merchants feel? |
42015 | How''s Dad? |
42015 | How''s Dad? |
42015 | How? |
42015 | I do n''t suppose you''ll want it broadcast about the accident this morning on the lake and your cracking up in a fence over here? |
42015 | I have? |
42015 | I suppose you know why I''m here? |
42015 | Is Mr. McClintock in the office? |
42015 | Is n''t he handsome? |
42015 | Is n''t there enough steam to make shore? |
42015 | Is the tornado going to hit the town? |
42015 | Is there something I can do? |
42015 | Just what is wrong, Dad? |
42015 | Less than five minutes ago you said''And you want a story about my world flight in return for keeping quiet about the accident?'' 42015 Let''s see, you''re from the_ Rolfe Herald_?" |
42015 | Like it? |
42015 | My gosh,exclaimed Tom,"are n''t you hurt?" |
42015 | New whistle on the old engine? |
42015 | Nice trip? |
42015 | Now what''s up? |
42015 | Papers ready? |
42015 | Rand give you the usual denial? |
42015 | Remember I promised you a story this week? |
42015 | Say, what the dickens are you driving at? |
42015 | Spent that$ 200 yet? |
42015 | Starting in bright and early, are n''t you? |
42015 | Supper about ready? |
42015 | Then what do you want? |
42015 | Then why did n''t Dad try for it? |
42015 | Then you think someone may have been hurt? |
42015 | This is the Rigg Jensen place, is n''t it? |
42015 | Thought you were just going down the street to see how play practice was coming? |
42015 | Want to go to Cranston Friday or Saturday? |
42015 | Want to ride? |
42015 | We''re going back for a while after supper,said Helen,"but I do n''t think it will take us over a couple of hours to finish, do you, Tom?" |
42015 | Well, Mr. Business Manager, what are you going to start on? |
42015 | What about the Flyer? |
42015 | What about your costumes? |
42015 | What are you driving at? 42015 What are you going to do this afternoon?" |
42015 | What did he say? |
42015 | What do you think of it? |
42015 | What do you want first? |
42015 | What happened? |
42015 | What happened? |
42015 | What in heaven''s name happened? |
42015 | What is my first assignment going to be? |
42015 | What kind of a plane do you intend to use? |
42015 | What say? |
42015 | What was the trouble? |
42015 | What will he do if they do n''t license the_ Queen_? |
42015 | What will this do to the_ Herald_? |
42015 | What will we do? |
42015 | What will we need? |
42015 | What will you ask him? 42015 What would you say, Mother, if Tom and I stayed down at the office a while and did some cleaning up?" |
42015 | What''s he saying? |
42015 | What''s that? |
42015 | What''s the idea? |
42015 | What''s the matter Doctor Stevens? |
42015 | What''s the matter, Helen? |
42015 | What''s the matter, young Lady? |
42015 | What''s the matter? 42015 What''s the matter?" |
42015 | What''s the matter? |
42015 | What''s the matter? |
42015 | What''s the matter? |
42015 | When do you think Hugh should start for the southwest? |
42015 | When will he start? |
42015 | When will you take off from New York? |
42015 | Where are you going to sit? |
42015 | Where is it? |
42015 | Where''s Tom? |
42015 | Who could have done such a thing? |
42015 | Who informed you of that? |
42015 | Why Tom,she went on enthusiastically,"think what it would mean to Dad?" |
42015 | Why did n''t we sink out in the lake? |
42015 | Why did n''t you open it and then telephone me? |
42015 | Why so excited about that? 42015 Why, what''s the matter with your father?" |
42015 | Why, what''s the matter, Tom? |
42015 | Will you go back with them now? |
42015 | Will you swing over east, land and pick up the pilot of that plane? |
42015 | Wo n''t she be able to go on Thursday night? |
42015 | Wo n''t that crowd the inside pages? |
42015 | Wo n''t you need a reporter? |
42015 | Wonder how Dad will like our new editorial head and the three column box head I set for your personals? |
42015 | You''re actually planning the world flight? |
42015 | You''re on the class committee, are n''t you? |
42015 | You''re really''Speed''Rand, are n''t you? |
42015 | You''re what? |
42015 | Been over there yet?" |
42015 | Ca n''t we expand the paper some way to get more business? |
42015 | Could she make it appear that the accident was a part of the play, a deliberate bit of comedy? |
42015 | Do you know what''s the matter?" |
42015 | Got some copypaper?" |
42015 | Had the magic of Miss Carver''s story been so strong that she was imagining things? |
42015 | He''s afraid of something and it has worried him until he is positively ill.""And have n''t you any idea what it could be?" |
42015 | How are you Tom?" |
42015 | How does that sound?" |
42015 | How much will they cost?" |
42015 | How will you act?" |
42015 | If I do n''t tell you, will you still spread the story about the accident?" |
42015 | Is it too long?" |
42015 | Is it two or three hours late?" |
42015 | Not bad for a starter, eh?" |
42015 | Think it will keep them from riding with the air circus?" |
42015 | Trying to hi- jack me into paying you to keep quiet?" |
42015 | Want to make time?" |
42015 | Was there anything wrong with her father? |
42015 | What about my family?" |
42015 | What about the_ Herald_? |
42015 | What are you going to do?" |
42015 | What have you been trying to cook, lately?" |
42015 | What secret were they keeping from her? |
42015 | What was the matter with their father? |
42015 | What would be the answer to their months of work? |
42015 | Which story should Helen write first,"Speed"Rand''s world flight, the celebration at Sandy Point or the story of Captain Billy and the_ Queen_? |
42015 | Who could be sending her a telegram? |
42015 | Who did you say the girl was?" |
42015 | Who''s calling?" |
42015 | Would she get the job as Rolfe correspondent? |
42015 | Would they get the county work which meant so much or would Burr Atwell succeed in defeating them? |
42015 | she exclaimed,"''Speed''Rand coming here?" |
453 | Are you a combination porter and prestidigitator? |
453 | Are you sure that you want to buy of me? |
453 | Are you sure? |
453 | Brown? 453 Business? |
453 | But if I win? |
453 | But it was your plan-- you said you wanted me to be here when you came home and when you left, did n''t you? 453 But suppose-- just for the sake of argument-- that it does n''t strike them right this afternoon?" |
453 | But what? |
453 | But why did n''t you let me in on it sooner? |
453 | But why? |
453 | But, you foolish children, ca n''t I peek at her? |
453 | By what power do you think those shears were moved across the cutting- table? 453 Ca n''t you see him, Emma, at the seashore?" |
453 | Can I help? |
453 | Clean up this-- this Bonez Areez, too? |
453 | Coming or going? |
453 | Dad would have enjoyed a morning like this, would n''t he? |
453 | Did, huh? |
453 | Do n''t you think it''s too-- too young? |
453 | Do you do that often? |
453 | Do you mean to say that I''m to be the entire audience at the premiere of this new model? |
453 | Do you mean to tell me that you made this book out for me? 453 Do you really like it? |
453 | Do you suppose I''d allow you to stand up before all those people? |
453 | Do? |
453 | Eh? |
453 | Emma McChesney, you have n''t developed-- er-- claws, have you? |
453 | Emma McChesney,he said steadily,"do you mean that?" |
453 | Get that? |
453 | Girl or boy? |
453 | Good Lord, what is this? 453 Have I? |
453 | How much? |
453 | If I telephone my tailor that I ca n''t make it until four- thirty, will you promise to be back by that time? |
453 | Inspiration working, Emma? |
453 | Is it as bad as that? |
453 | Is that a fair sample? |
453 | Is that-- his office? |
453 | Is-- I-- that is-- Mr. Buck is in, I suppose? |
453 | It glows like a great, deep ruby, does n''t it? |
453 | It is n''t just the money you want, Hortense? 453 Judy O''Who?" |
453 | Just unhook this for me, will you? |
453 | Klein cancel his order again? |
453 | Like it? |
453 | Like''em, Emma? |
453 | Like''em? 453 Make a sketch of it, ca n''t you?" |
453 | Me? 453 Miss it, do n''t you?" |
453 | Mr. Buck? 453 Name? |
453 | No? 453 Not so bad to get back to it, is it?" |
453 | Now, now-- what is it, dear? 453 Now?" |
453 | Pages,she repeated to herself, worriedly,"Pages? |
453 | Send her in to us, will you? 453 She is with you, this business friend who is also so charming?" |
453 | Sophy, who''s the prettiest girl in our shop? 453 Sure,"assented Koritz, head designer;"but when you get it cut you''ll find this piece is wasted, ai n''t it?" |
453 | Sure? 453 T. A., if I had been what they call a homebody, we would n''t be married to- day, would we?" |
453 | Tell a fellow what it''s going to be, ca n''t you? |
453 | Tell me, Hortense,she said now;"what does Henry say to all this? |
453 | Tell me, did you hit it off with the Ella Sweeneys and the Sadie Harrises of the great Middle West? 453 That ca n''t be-- you do n''t mean-- what-- what IS it?" |
453 | That gives you the fulness without bunching, d''you see? |
453 | That''s not one of the new ones, is it? |
453 | Then you refuse to work with us? 453 Then, as a special favor to me, will you begin by trying to stand up straight, please? |
453 | They''re-- they''re all like this? |
453 | This? 453 Up at my apartment, all cozy?" |
453 | Was n''t what? |
453 | We''re not quarreling, are we? |
453 | We- e- ell? |
453 | Well, Emma? |
453 | Well, Emma? |
453 | Well, Mr. Bones, whom did you, and so forth? |
453 | Well, but you told me to entertain them, did n''t you? |
453 | Well, that settles it, does n''t it? |
453 | Well, why do n''t you? |
453 | Well? |
453 | What actual first- hand information can you get about a country from books? |
453 | What has all that to do with it? |
453 | What kind of things? |
453 | What makes you think I''m going back at all? |
453 | What makes you think so? |
453 | What will Jock say? 453 What''s the idea, Emma?" |
453 | What''s the idea? |
453 | What''s the joke? |
453 | What''s the matter with the supply of new dresses? 453 What''s the matter? |
453 | What''s your tailor''s name? |
453 | Where is she? |
453 | Where''s my baby? |
453 | Where? 453 Why do n''t you pack a bag and run over to Chicago for a few days and see this marvel of the age?" |
453 | Why not? 453 Why not?" |
453 | Why, you''ve run up a partition there between Miss Casey''s desk and the workroom door, have n''t you? |
453 | Why-- a-- mmmm-- yes-- oh, yes, we''re making''em up wide, but----"But what? |
453 | Why? |
453 | Will you let me bring her in to meet you, just to prove my point? |
453 | Wo n''t you stay down and have dinner with me to- night, Emma? |
453 | Worked? 453 Working side by side with him, seeing him day after day, how have you been able to resist him?" |
453 | Yes; do n''t you? |
453 | You are pleased with this-- this Indian Rio? |
453 | You do n''t think I''m running down Henry, do you? 453 You knew plenty of home- women that you could have married, did n''t you?" |
453 | You think it''s too wide, maybe, huh? |
453 | You''ll have dinner with me to- night? |
453 | You''re going to tell me now, Emma? 453 Your last diary?" |
453 | ''East is east and West is west and----''""Where''s that child?" |
453 | A joke?" |
453 | A man can have his own opinion, ca n''t he?" |
453 | A new fastener? |
453 | A.--tell me the truth: Do you think I''m old, and faded, and wistful and grandmotherly?" |
453 | A.?" |
453 | A.?" |
453 | Am I an American designer, T. A., Billy?" |
453 | And do you know what they''ve been wearing? |
453 | And if you expect me to say,''Knew what?'' |
453 | And now you come to win the wager, yes?" |
453 | And now-- what shall we do?" |
453 | And the best dressed?" |
453 | And then try me with the real surprise, will you?" |
453 | And why ca n''t you make a fuss over me, I''d like to know?" |
453 | And why come to- day, of all days, when I ca n''t make a fuss over you?" |
453 | And you said they''d be ready when? |
453 | And you will visit my establishment?" |
453 | And-- well, if you''re not busy, you ca n''t be happy very long, can you?" |
453 | And-- why, where are the boys''desks? |
453 | Are n''t we using traveling men any more?" |
453 | Are you sure?" |
453 | As though thinking aloud, she said,"Have you grown thinner, or fatter or-- something?" |
453 | At least, why did n''t you send back for me first?" |
453 | Before we announced it, we had you all guessing, did n''t we? |
453 | Besides, I never have a chance to take one from the office on Sunday, do I? |
453 | Buck?" |
453 | Buck?" |
453 | Buck?" |
453 | But do you really think any woman alive would be caught wearing a garment like this in these days?" |
453 | But it''s sparking away there all the time, and it might as well be put to some use, might n''t it?" |
453 | But we know better, do n''t we? |
453 | But what''s that line about slaves hugging their chains?" |
453 | But what''s the difference, if the chance is there?" |
453 | But what? |
453 | But why? |
453 | Can you see a subway train full of hoop- skirted clerks, stenographers, and models? |
453 | Cave- man stuff?" |
453 | D''you know what I mean?" |
453 | D''you see what I mean? |
453 | Dear me; who could have hung the baby''s little shirt here? |
453 | Did he make you feel-- different?" |
453 | Dinner over,"Well, Emma?" |
453 | Do n''t I know? |
453 | Do n''t it look all right?" |
453 | Do n''t you know that I''ve been longing to do just those things for years and years? |
453 | Do you get me? |
453 | Do you know what I mean?" |
453 | Do you know what I''m going to do? |
453 | Do you know what he''ll wire back? |
453 | Do you mean to say that I have to cram on this like a kid studying for exams? |
453 | Do you still love me? |
453 | Do you suppose it can be that son of hers-- what''s his name? |
453 | Do you think he may have exploded at the equator? |
453 | Does Annie always cook enough for two?" |
453 | Earned a living? |
453 | Ever meet him? |
453 | First- night curtains are always late in rising, are n''t they? |
453 | For ten years I lived with head in a sample- trunk, did n''t I? |
453 | Get that, dear? |
453 | Going to have lunch with me to- day?" |
453 | Guess whom I saw at the tailor''s?" |
453 | Have I been neglecting business?" |
453 | Have I?" |
453 | Have you told him how you feel?" |
453 | How did you hit it off with Ella Sweeney? |
453 | How have the early buyers taken to it?" |
453 | How long shall you want to speak?" |
453 | How much you take for the rights to that skirt?" |
453 | How''s business? |
453 | How''s business? |
453 | I like the green velours in the sitting- room, do n''t you? |
453 | I''ll take it off your hands and push it right, see? |
453 | If Maude Adams was to open on Broadway in''East Lynne,''they''d flock to see her, would n''t they? |
453 | If it had not, where would I be to- day? |
453 | Is T. A. in? |
453 | Is business as bad as the howlers say it is? |
453 | Is n''t there enough to go round?" |
453 | Is n''t there some little cool fool place where I can be comfortable on a hot day like this-- where we can talk comfortably? |
453 | Is that the way you pronounce it? |
453 | Is this Mr. Meyers''tailor? |
453 | It''s finished?" |
453 | Mack?" |
453 | Mc-- Buck?" |
453 | Next week? |
453 | No? |
453 | Now run along into your own office-- won''t you, dear? |
453 | Now, can you explain that?" |
453 | Of course we''ve had a nice little order every few months, but what''s that from the biggest mail- order house in the world? |
453 | Remember what you said about the Fifth Avenue girl?" |
453 | Say, if I thought I was going to be like them in time, I----""Hortense, my dear child, you''re-- you''re happy, are n''t you? |
453 | Say, where''s he been keeping himself all these years? |
453 | She acts worried, does n''t she? |
453 | She''s one of those thin, limp ones, is n''t she? |
453 | Sunday? |
453 | Tell me, you''re surely seeing our man, are n''t you?" |
453 | Tell me: Have I grown old? |
453 | That I''ll have to cater to the personality of the person I''m selling to? |
453 | Then to Annie, who appeared in answer to the buzzer,"Will you tell Sophy Kumpf to come here, please?" |
453 | Then, as the red surged up through the girl''s fair skin,"Well?" |
453 | Then, his shrewd little eyes narrowing,"You want to talk business?" |
453 | They think they''re so big and manly and all, and they''re just like kids; ai n''t it so? |
453 | Used your wits and brains every day against the wits and brains of other folks?" |
453 | Was that the new designer''s idea? |
453 | Well, what happened? |
453 | What are you doing away from your own job? |
453 | What do you think I''m designing-- a doily?" |
453 | What is it, anyway? |
453 | What is this? |
453 | What put that nonsense into your head? |
453 | What would happen if I were to forget myself some day and come down to work in black velvet and pearls?" |
453 | What''s your suit?" |
453 | What? |
453 | What?" |
453 | Where the Argentine inertia? |
453 | Where was the South American languor? |
453 | Where? |
453 | Who will picture Lower Fifth Avenue between five and six, when New York''s unsung beauties pour into the streets from a thousand loft- buildings? |
453 | Why could n''t you make the trade get your viewpoint?" |
453 | Why did n''t you wire me? |
453 | Why had n''t she spent six months neglecting Skirts for Spanish? |
453 | Why not?" |
453 | Why take a cab to go home from the office on a-- a week day?" |
453 | Why? |
453 | Why?" |
453 | Why?" |
453 | Will you wait for us in New York?" |
453 | Will you walk, please?" |
453 | Would you like to have me tell you why?" |
453 | You do n''t object to me on the same grounds that you did to Myrtle, do you?" |
453 | You will not consent to Miss Orton- Wells''speaking to the girls in your shop this noon?" |
453 | You''re on the New York train? |
40179 | A what? 40179 Ah, is that so? |
40179 | Ahem-- are your plans for the winter made yet? |
40179 | Ai n''t it grand we got lost? |
40179 | Ai n''t they the scared cats, though? |
40179 | All of them gone, Oscar? |
40179 | And do you understand it? |
40179 | And how is camp life treating you this morning? |
40179 | And may I ask what is this enchanted land? |
40179 | And money to pay for the chickens? 40179 And that mission is----?" |
40179 | And that way is----? |
40179 | And where would we come in? |
40179 | Any appetite? |
40179 | Any people there? 40179 Apple?" |
40179 | Are n''t the Tuckers splendid? |
40179 | Are we to spend the rest of our lives digging and delving for gold and then not use the money? 40179 Are you cold?" |
40179 | Are you scared? |
40179 | Are you well, honey? 40179 Bobby? |
40179 | But I mean be engaged to me? |
40179 | But suppose someone else does n''t wait and she gets snapped up before your eyes-- what then? |
40179 | But what are we to do? 40179 But where will you and Bill sleep?" |
40179 | But why spend it on me when I do n''t want to go into society? |
40179 | But you write to her every time you write to me, do n''t you, Tom Tit? |
40179 | But, mother----"Simply have to-- how can a girl come out suitably unless she is in her own home? |
40179 | Ca n''t Dr. Wright have a plain talk with your mother and explain matters to her? |
40179 | Ca n''t Susan attend to the things? |
40179 | Ca n''t we take our guns, Miss Helen? |
40179 | Ca n''t your last winter''s suit be done over? 40179 Can I tell her you say yes if she does?" |
40179 | Can you do that, too? |
40179 | Certainly, why not? |
40179 | Cold? 40179 Did you ever see one of these teakettles, Skeeter?" |
40179 | Did you ever see such a morning? 40179 Did you like it then? |
40179 | Do n''t you want to know my name, too, Miss Nan Carter? 40179 Do they make you blue, these bills?" |
40179 | Do you boys know exactly where we are going? |
40179 | Do you come across any of this stuff, whatever it is that these crazy folks call teakettles? |
40179 | Do you get lonesome all by yourself? |
40179 | Do you know it''s''most night? 40179 Do you know, Mr. Tinsley, that I have danced out five dresses this summer? |
40179 | Do you live here all the time? |
40179 | Do you mind really, Douglas? |
40179 | Do you think we are lost? |
40179 | Do you think we had better cross this stream? |
40179 | Does she really cook, herself? |
40179 | Does the spring- keeper live far from here? |
40179 | Douglas, can the boys take their guns? 40179 Douglas, do n''t you think you could love me a little?" |
40179 | Fish with what? 40179 Fly? |
40179 | Gone where? |
40179 | Have you a telephone at camp? |
40179 | Have you ever flown before? |
40179 | Have you seen the week- enders swarming up the mountain? |
40179 | Helen, what do you enjoy most in camp life? |
40179 | Honest? 40179 How about fried turnovers like Mammy Susan makes?" |
40179 | How can I? 40179 How can we fry anything without lard and a pan?" |
40179 | How do you make eggshell cake? |
40179 | How on earth did you happen to land here? |
40179 | How''s that, like triplets? |
40179 | I am sorry you are ill. What is troubling you? |
40179 | I do n''t want you to ask her to dance a german with you----Oh, what was the fellow driving at, anyhow? |
40179 | I''ll do what I can, but if you take the matter so much to heart why do n''t you do it yourself, Tucker? 40179 I''m not worrying about what they will say, but what will they think? |
40179 | In heaven''s name, what is all this food for? |
40179 | Is he a great friend of your father? |
40179 | Is it a mother? 40179 Is it pies? |
40179 | Is n''t this great? |
40179 | Is n''t this just too lovely? |
40179 | Is she ill? |
40179 | Is she so superior? |
40179 | Is that so, grandmother? |
40179 | Is that you, Tom Tit? |
40179 | Is you uns ever flew? |
40179 | Mind? 40179 Miss Dum Tucker, are you going to remain long in camp?" |
40179 | Miss Nan, did I ever see a teakettle that you know of? |
40179 | Mother, are you comfortable up there? |
40179 | Mr. Smith, tell me, while flying through the air would you like to have one of these teakettles with you? 40179 Mr. Tucker, tell me: did you really get mother to give up White Sulphur just to chaperone the twins and Page?" |
40179 | Nothing, I reckon, with Skeeter and me here to protect you-- eh, Skeeter? |
40179 | Now that you have found us, what are you going to do with us? |
40179 | Now, Douglas, what''s the use in going around looking like a frump? 40179 Of course it is hard, but then are n''t all of you giving up things, too?" |
40179 | Oh, do you get a letter every day? 40179 Oh, how did you do it?" |
40179 | Oh, mountain nymph, may a traveler land in your domain? |
40179 | Out where? |
40179 | Political or climatic? |
40179 | Say, Skeeter, what are we going to do? |
40179 | Skeeter, did you and Frank get any squirrels yesterday? |
40179 | Talking about spooks-- what do you know about that? |
40179 | Then we are n''t so very much trouble? |
40179 | This is Helicon-- and you-- who are you? |
40179 | Tom Tit, would you like to fly with that great bird? |
40179 | Turrible ai n''t no word for it; an''now you say the white folks wants to eat agin? 40179 Two lumps, or one?" |
40179 | Walk after supper? |
40179 | Was the man sick? |
40179 | We can do them in no time, ca n''t we, Nan? |
40179 | We uns? 40179 Well, Dr. Wright,"trilled Mrs. Carter,"is n''t this a delightful adventure for my girls to have amused themselves with? |
40179 | Well, ai n''t this the limit? 40179 Well, what did I tell you? |
40179 | Well, what will we do? 40179 Well, who would not be meek with all those parcels?" |
40179 | What I done now? |
40179 | What about them? 40179 What are we going to do, Nan? |
40179 | What are we to do? 40179 What are you girls scrapping about?" |
40179 | What is an artist but a person who finds things, just like my poor Tom Tit, and then is able to tell to the world what he has found? |
40179 | What is his business? |
40179 | What is it, Douglas? |
40179 | What kind of pies shall it be? |
40179 | What on earth have you done to make Nan so eternally grateful? |
40179 | What others? 40179 What would you have done last night if Tom Tit had not found you and brought you home?" |
40179 | What''s a bes''frien''? 40179 What''s a problem?" |
40179 | What''s all that? |
40179 | What, that little ole Hi Parker? 40179 When he writes to you, does he tell you things in poetical language?" |
40179 | Where are Susan and Oscar? |
40179 | Where are all the children, Robert? |
40179 | Where are the other girls? |
40179 | Where did I ever get them, Doctor, these girls? 40179 Where do you live?" |
40179 | Where is Bobby? 40179 Where is Helen?" |
40179 | Wherefo''you done lef''yo''wuck to Miss Helen? |
40179 | Which way is home? |
40179 | Who is blaming it on you? |
40179 | Who is the gentleman? |
40179 | Who taught you to play the jew''s- harp? |
40179 | Who''s going to worry him? 40179 Why do n''t you let her have them?" |
40179 | Why do n''t you say you do n''t give a hang for me and let me go? |
40179 | Why kick you? 40179 Why not? |
40179 | Why on earth do they want to carry garden tools on a ten mile tramp? |
40179 | Why should n''t she? |
40179 | Why, does mother know he is coming up? |
40179 | Why, how did you know? |
40179 | Why, what''s the matter? 40179 Will all of you please step out of the way?" |
40179 | Wo n''t it be terrible if the train is late and all the week- enders get here before mother and father? |
40179 | Wo n''t you tell us some more about yourself? |
40179 | Yes, apple,laughed Helen, amused at Dum''s enthusiasm,"also some lemon pies, do n''t you think? |
40179 | Yes, it must go somewhere just as all the trails we have followed today must-- but where? 40179 Yes; what on earth could happen to us?" |
40179 | You ca n''t get home somehow tonight? |
40179 | You do n''t mean I have actually landed at Week- End Camp? 40179 You dream then a great deal?" |
40179 | You mean outdoors? |
40179 | You, Bobby, what are you doing up there? |
40179 | Ai n''t that grand? |
40179 | Am I right?" |
40179 | And Bobby-- where does Bobby sleep?" |
40179 | And how about the axe, since it is not meant to signify coon hunting?" |
40179 | And if we go into our house and turn out the desirable tenants, where are we to get an income to exist on?" |
40179 | And now what are we to do with them?" |
40179 | And now what do you think?" |
40179 | And now when he said:"What makes you think he is still so badly off?" |
40179 | And what do you think Skeeter and I''ll be doing while they are carrying you off?" |
40179 | And you girls in the tents beyond? |
40179 | Another aeroplane or a rainbow?" |
40179 | Are there any people there? |
40179 | Are you sick?" |
40179 | Be you uns daffy, too?" |
40179 | But what am I thinking of? |
40179 | CHAPTER XVII THE SPRING- KEEPER"Is n''t this grand?" |
40179 | Ca n''t you see that he is still in a very nervous state and the least little worry might upset his reason? |
40179 | Ca n''t your mother see this?" |
40179 | Can I really fly?" |
40179 | Can you give me a few minutes?" |
40179 | Can you think of anything?" |
40179 | Can you turn your crank and listen?" |
40179 | Can you uns play that again?" |
40179 | Could it be that even now she did not understand? |
40179 | Could she ever forget it? |
40179 | Could she have charged the purchases in New York? |
40179 | Could this be his Helen, the queen of the kitchen, attending to the preparation of this great quantity of food? |
40179 | Depressed over what?" |
40179 | Did n''t I say you could n''t keep anything from Zebedee?" |
40179 | Did n''t he, Frank?" |
40179 | Did you ever see such a cute little room? |
40179 | Did you hear me tell Douglas what my plan is for her and me? |
40179 | Do n''t you hear a strange sound, kind of like music without a tune?" |
40179 | Do n''t you like it? |
40179 | Do n''t you reckon he''ll go to the camp with us? |
40179 | Do they want to stay?" |
40179 | Do you ever see Mr. Spring- keeper and Tom Tit? |
40179 | Do you know I adore the old- fashioned waltz?" |
40179 | Do you reckon he will tell us all about himself and poor Tom Tit without our pumping him? |
40179 | Do you reckon we will sleep in here?" |
40179 | Do you think that if he were almost well he would sit passively down and let his daughters decide for him as he is doing now? |
40179 | Do you want to take a trip with me some day?" |
40179 | Eh, Tom Tit?" |
40179 | Everyone was kind and thoughtful of her, but then was she not kind and thoughtful of everyone? |
40179 | Guns?" |
40179 | Had he been too severe in his harangue? |
40179 | Had her mother been buying things in New York? |
40179 | Had she not been punished and now were not all the grownups sorry for her and petting her? |
40179 | Had she not brought a present to every one of her girls and a great box of expensive toys for Bobby? |
40179 | Had she not even remembered every one of the servants, not only Susan and Oscar but the ones who had been in her service when she had left Richmond? |
40179 | Has he not always been a man of action, one to take the initiative? |
40179 | Have n''t I always written to you?" |
40179 | Have you a telephone here?" |
40179 | Have you got your bags?" |
40179 | He had heard music in the wind and music in the water; the birds had sung to him and the beasts had talked to him; but what was this? |
40179 | How about High Olympus? |
40179 | How about that?" |
40179 | How can we?" |
40179 | How could her mother be so easily influenced? |
40179 | How could they get lost? |
40179 | How did you do it?" |
40179 | How did you learn?" |
40179 | How does our bank account stand now?" |
40179 | How else am I to get them paid?" |
40179 | How else could a wood nymph drink? |
40179 | How many times had he been approached in just this way? |
40179 | How on earth do you make such cute edges to your tarts? |
40179 | How would Helen take his interference? |
40179 | I do n''t want to butt in-- you understand that, do n''t you? |
40179 | I may be a private for the rest of my life and what could I offer a girl like you? |
40179 | I mean would it be the kind of thing you could carry with you? |
40179 | I saw it, did n''t you, Lucy?" |
40179 | If I did engage myself to you, you would n''t have the least bit of respect for me and you know you would n''t; would you?" |
40179 | If a complexion could show up as well as hers did in the sunlight what would it not do in artificial light? |
40179 | Is father worse?" |
40179 | Is it you?" |
40179 | Is n''t he romantic?" |
40179 | Is n''t he sweet?" |
40179 | Is n''t it strange how these places are overrated? |
40179 | Is n''t that a lovely dress she has on this evening? |
40179 | Is n''t that enough for her to be grateful over?" |
40179 | Is n''t that wonderful?" |
40179 | Is she a good looker?" |
40179 | Is that Camp Carter? |
40179 | Is there some way out of it without letting father know that mother wants something and can not have it for lack of money?" |
40179 | Is this where I am to be? |
40179 | Kin you play on the Victrola?" |
40179 | Maid, will you fly with me?" |
40179 | Miss Dee, what are these teakettles like?" |
40179 | Miss Douglas, are you expecting to miss the boys who have gone to the border with the Blues?" |
40179 | Mrs. Carter, have you any of these teakettles about you?" |
40179 | Must I tell Dr. Wright? |
40179 | Nan was disgusted with herself that again the thought came to her:"What are all of these people going to have for breakfast?" |
40179 | Nan, did you know he was coming?" |
40179 | Now shall we fly to''Frisco? |
40179 | Oh, Lucy, are you crazy? |
40179 | Other girls pretended, why not she? |
40179 | Parker?" |
40179 | Parker?" |
40179 | Spring- keeper?" |
40179 | Tell me that, who was they? |
40179 | Thank you, Miss Dum, for the compliment you just paid me, or did you mean your father? |
40179 | Then she drew Mr. Tucker aside and whispered to him:"See here, Zebedee, do n''t you think it is up to us somehow to relieve this situation? |
40179 | Tucker, what is your opinion of the war? |
40179 | We know it is hard on her-- all of this----""All of what?" |
40179 | What are we to do?" |
40179 | What business has a girl of your age to know about who does thorough cleaning and when it is done?" |
40179 | What do you make of it?" |
40179 | What do you mean, Bobby?" |
40179 | What do you think about it?" |
40179 | What do you think he intended to convey by this?" |
40179 | What does your father say?" |
40179 | What for?" |
40179 | What is it this time? |
40179 | What is it?" |
40179 | What is your plan?" |
40179 | What made her give it up? |
40179 | What made you bawl?" |
40179 | What makes you think he is still so badly off?" |
40179 | What on earth do you do with all the scraps?" |
40179 | What on earth?" |
40179 | What should she do? |
40179 | What time had she to think about getting engaged? |
40179 | What was Dr. Wright thinking of her? |
40179 | What was she to do about her mother and Helen? |
40179 | What will Miss Douglas and Miss Helen say to us?" |
40179 | What would her mother say to such an escapade? |
40179 | What you say to that, Skeeter?" |
40179 | What''s worrying you?" |
40179 | When are you going to leave those diggings and come back to the good old burg? |
40179 | Where are your teeth? |
40179 | Where did mother get it? |
40179 | Where do you reckon they''ll sleep?" |
40179 | Where has it gone?" |
40179 | Where is my precious Bobby?" |
40179 | Where is your mother?" |
40179 | Who are all those people I saw coming up the road?" |
40179 | Who is going?" |
40179 | Who is he?" |
40179 | Who knows? |
40179 | Who was his folks? |
40179 | Why ca n''t she see, Nan?" |
40179 | Why did you have your hair cut so short? |
40179 | Why, Lewis, I-- I-- how can I be when it is so sudden? |
40179 | Will it last much longer?" |
40179 | Will that do?" |
40179 | Wo n''t you be engaged to me so I''ll have something to work for until I can see you again?" |
40179 | Wo n''t you, Tillie?" |
40179 | Would Helen ever forgive him? |
40179 | Would her mother want to buy more things to replace these that were ruined? |
40179 | Would it be of any value on the journey?" |
40179 | Would n''t it be grand to be like Aeneas and put your food on a little cake and then eat the cake?" |
40179 | Would n''t the old- fashioned waltz go well with that record Helen has just put on? |
40179 | Would you mind asking for them?" |
40179 | You have a home somewhere near here, have n''t you?" |
40179 | You knew all the time that it was no cousin business, did n''t you, Douglas?" |
40179 | You know we are right, do n''t you?" |
40179 | You remember you told me once that you and Miss Jinny Cox saved the day for a picnic at Monticello when a deluge hit you there?" |
40179 | You remember,"and he turned to Helen,"his troubled talk about lamb chops and silk stockings, do you not?" |
40179 | You think this is going to harm your camp and keep people from coming, do n''t you?" |
40179 | You will write to me, wo n''t you?" |
3016 | $ 19,000 “ How do you make the gasolene and repairs as much as that? ” asked Mrs. Bell. |
3016 | ''Will you be my Chamber maid?'' |
3016 | ''Will you give up a good clean well- paid business that you love-- that has big hope and power and beauty in it-- and come and keep house for me? |
3016 | ''” “ Love him? |
3016 | And Obstinacy! ” “ Is that all? ” asked Diantha. |
3016 | And besides, do n''t you think anybody else can see your dream? |
3016 | And gentlemen, I suppose? |
3016 | And how about coffee? ” She brought the coffee, such as it was, and a can of condensed milk. |
3016 | And more coming. ” “ What, more yet? |
3016 | And only five dollars a week, you say? ” “ For each person, yes. ” “ I do n''t see how she does it. |
3016 | And the two maids have only table service and bedrooms. ” “ Thirty- five bedrooms? ” “ Yes. |
3016 | And while you''re talking of rights-- how about a parent''s rights? |
3016 | And why ca n''t he think at all about the others? |
3016 | Anyhow I''ve got used to Miss Bell now. ” “ She gets letters often? ” “ Yes-- very often-- from Topolaya where she came from. |
3016 | Are n''t they beauties? |
3016 | Are you doing this with any quixotic notion of helping me-- in_ my_ business? |
3016 | Are you going to break down? ” “ No, ” said Diantha, “ I am not going to break down. |
3016 | Are you_ sure_ about Mrs. Jessup, dear? ” “ As sure as I can be of any one till I''ve tried a long time. |
3016 | But how about you? |
3016 | But then she does have her disadvantages-- as you said. ” “ Does she? |
3016 | But what''s the use? |
3016 | But who was this approaching? |
3016 | But you do love me a little, do n''t you? ” “ O_ yes_! ” she answered. |
3016 | Ca n''t a woman enjoy her home, just as a man does, without running the shop? |
3016 | Ca n''t you get_ anybody_ that will stay? ” “ I ca n''t seem to get anybody on any terms, so far. |
3016 | Ca n''t you see? |
3016 | Ca n''t you, Hector? ” Hector rolled large adoring eyes at her, but said nothing. |
3016 | Can you not see it is wrong, utterly wrong, all this mad escapade of yours? |
3016 | Diantha? ” “ No indeed! ” Mrs. |
3016 | Do n''t you see? |
3016 | Do you know who buys''em? ” Ross did not. |
3016 | Do you know? ” asked Dora. |
3016 | Do you like her as much as you thought? |
3016 | Does it take that much time every day? ” “ Yes, indeed! |
3016 | Free of_ you_? ” He caught her and held her and kissed her over and over. |
3016 | Had n''t you better go and lie down now? |
3016 | Helping me to take care of my family? |
3016 | How about a little music, Matthew? |
3016 | How can I get along without you? ” He tried to put his arm around her again, but she drew back. |
3016 | How can you say you love me-- and ruin both our lives like this? |
3016 | How did you ever dare? ” “ Why I got my courage from the girl herself. |
3016 | How do they all stand it? ” “ Most of them stand it much better than I do, Ned. |
3016 | How does that strike you, Mrs. Ree? ” “ Admirable! ” said Mrs. Ree. |
3016 | How does that suit you? ” Mrs. Bell looked at her unbelievingly. |
3016 | How long will it take you to get out of this? ” “ Get out of-- what? ” she faltered. |
3016 | How long will it take you to get out of this? ” “ Get out of-- what? ” she faltered. |
3016 | I ca n''t give it up! ” “ Not for me? |
3016 | I can not live any longer without you? ” “ Of course I will, ” said Diantha. |
3016 | I do not approve of your work-- I can not approve of it-- but will you forgive me for that and marry me? |
3016 | I had the other thing all planned-- the girls practically engaged. ” “ Where were you thinking of going? ” asked Mrs. Weatherstone. |
3016 | I have plans-- which will speak for themselves later. ” “ So, ” said Mr. Bell, “ Plans all made, eh? |
3016 | I need you. ” “ Wo n''t you sit down? ” said Diantha. |
3016 | I suppose you''ve considered your Mother in these plans? ” “ I have, ” said his daughter. |
3016 | I wonder you have n''t charged your mother for nursing her? ” “ You notice I have n''t, ” said Diantha coldly. |
3016 | I would wager now--_may_ I try an experiment Mrs. Porne? ” and she stood up, taking out her handkerchief. |
3016 | Is it hot and tempting? ” Mrs. Ree was fascinated by the new heresy. |
3016 | Is it not so? ” “ Your ladies of America have all things in your hands, ” said the Prince to Miss Cora. |
3016 | Is it true? |
3016 | Is it your things, ma''am? ” “ No, ” said Mrs. Weatherstone. |
3016 | Is it-- expensive? ” Mrs. Porne smiled. |
3016 | Is there anything so ignominious about a woman that it is disgraceful to let one help you? |
3016 | Is there not some mistake? ” “ It''s a damn shame, ” said Matthew. |
3016 | Is your wonderful salary worth more to you than being here with your mother-- with me? |
3016 | My name is Ilda. ” “ Who engaged you? ” “ Mrs. |
3016 | Neither did your Aunt Esther, but she''s still teaching. ” “ Did n''t you like any of it? ” pursued Diantha. |
3016 | No, no-- let her run the house-- she thinks she owns it. ” “ She''s fond of you, is n''t she? ” asked Mrs. Porne. |
3016 | Not a married woman in the house but that washerwoman,--and her husband''s a fool! ” “ And again; You do n''t see how she does it? |
3016 | Not when I can offer you a home at last? |
3016 | Not when I show you that there is no longer any need of your earning money? ” he said hotly. |
3016 | Nothin you''re ashamed to mention, I hope? ” asked Mrs. Delafield. |
3016 | O-- come from? |
3016 | Of course one has to know how. ” “ Whenever did you find-- or did you create?--those heavenly sandwiches? ” he asked. |
3016 | Only-- ” “ Only what, Dinah? ” “ Only he''s so tied up! ” said the girl, brushing every chip from the hearth. |
3016 | Or a gasoline? |
3016 | Please, sir? ” “ You must give me a kiss first! ” said he-- and since there seemed no escape and she was in haste, she submitted. |
3016 | Ross is n''t ready to marry yet, is he? ” “ No-- nor likely to be for years. |
3016 | Sugar or lemon? |
3016 | Take what you''ve got ahead now? ” “ Yes; there''s plenty, ” said Diantha. |
3016 | The house seems as big again! ” “ But the food? ” eagerly inquired Mrs. Ree. |
3016 | Their houses on their backs-- like snails! ” “ Do n''t see why, with ten( or is it fifteen?) |
3016 | Then Baby came and I loved him-- best? |
3016 | Warden-- wouldn''t you like some cool drink? |
3016 | We like our own napkins, and we did n''t use a cloth, anyway. ” “ And how about silver? ” “ We put ours away. |
3016 | What are they? ” “ Why she''s so-- rigid. |
3016 | What are you going to tell me, dear? |
3016 | What did any honest person want of a wall? |
3016 | What does matter, anyway? |
3016 | What have you done with all that? ” “ Given it to you, Father, ” said she quietly, and handed him the third sheet of figures. |
3016 | What you say of children no longer applies to me. ” “ And what is this mysterious business you''re goin''into-- if one may inquire? |
3016 | What''s happened Viva? ” “ Nothing that anybody can help, ” said her friend. |
3016 | What''s more you do n''t seem to get the woman''s. ” “ Can you see no other point of view than those? ” she asked. |
3016 | What''s the matter? |
3016 | What''s the other? ” “ Why that''s best of all! ” she cried triumphantly. |
3016 | When did you come? |
3016 | When on earth was safety for young maidens Far from mother''s love and father''s care? |
3016 | When? ” The old lady was shaken by this inconceivable promptness. |
3016 | Why a wall? |
3016 | Why are men so proud? |
3016 | Why did the bottom drop out of her courage at sight of them? |
3016 | Why do n''t I--? ” she rose and walked slowly up and down, her hands behind her. |
3016 | Why do n''t you? ” Diantha''s scanty baggage was all in sight. |
3016 | Why not take a little more time? ” “ I want to do it as quickly as I can, for reasons, ” answered Diantha. |
3016 | Why not? |
3016 | Why should I have to give up anything? ” “ You do not have to, ” he said patiently. |
3016 | Why should I? |
3016 | Will it be twenty years, do you think? ” He looked relieved. |
3016 | Wo n''t you start the victrolla? ” Matthew would n''t. |
3016 | You can get at it now, ca n''t you-- with this other Belle to the fore? ” “ She''s not Belle, bless you-- she''s''Miss Bell.'' |
3016 | You could stand unhappiness; ca n''t you stand happiness? ” And she strove with herself; and kept on with her work. |
3016 | You remember that guinea- pig experiment I want so to try? ” Diantha remembered and smiled sadly. |
3016 | You will marry me? ” “ I will marry you, Ross! ” “ And when? |
3016 | You will marry me? ” “ I will marry you, Ross! ” “ And when? |
3016 | You would n''t grudge us that, would you? ” As a result of all this the cooked food delivery service was opened at once. |
3016 | You''re crying! ” “ Am I? ” asked Mrs. Bell weakly; wiping her eyes in a dazed way. |
3016 | Your mother says I may know. ” “ Why not? ” she said. |
3016 | have you got any farther? ” Mrs. Porne flushed. |
3016 | they say; and you get married-- and after that it''s Housework! ” “ They do n''t say,''Will you be my Cook?'' |
3016 | under my roof? ” hotly demanded Madam Weatherstone. |
3016 | “ All these are facts, dearest. ” “ Now, Ross, will you be perfectly frank with me? |
3016 | “ And besides, ” the girl went on “ If I waited-- and saved-- and married Ross-- what becomes of_ you,_ I''d like to know? |
3016 | “ And nothing to show for all that splendid effort! ” “ They do n''t do a thing? |
3016 | “ And the summer''s not a good time to start a thing like that, is it? ” Diantha meditated. |
3016 | “ And turn out the old lady? |
3016 | “ And when is she coming, if I may ask? ” “ She has come. |
3016 | “ And yet--? ” said her friend. |
3016 | “ And you wo n''t give it up to marry him? ” “ No, ” said Diantha. |
3016 | “ And you''re meaning to leave home just to make money, are you? ” “ Why not? ” said Diantha firmly. |
3016 | “ And you''re meaning to leave home just to make money, are you? ” “ Why not? ” said Diantha firmly. |
3016 | “ Are n''t you a little-- spectacular? ” she suggested. |
3016 | “ Are n''t you going to feed him? ” asked Mr. Porne, with forced patience. |
3016 | “ Are n''t you home early, dear? ” asked Mrs. |
3016 | “ Are there any crackers for instance? |
3016 | “ Are you Mrs. Edgar Porne? ” she asked. |
3016 | “ Are you coming back to me? ” he wrote. |
3016 | “ But how about science? ” she asked him. |
3016 | “ Dear, ” said Mr. Porne, “ might I petition to have the steak less cooked? |
3016 | “ Did they all die? ” she asked with polite sympathy. |
3016 | “ Did you love him so much? ” she asked softly. |
3016 | “ Did you-- was it profitable? ” she asked. |
3016 | “ Do n''t they usually make you teach them their trade and charge for the privilege? ” “ Yes, of course they do. |
3016 | “ Do n''t you miss the carving, Mr. Porne? ” asked the visitor. |
3016 | “ Do n''t you propose to tell me what this''work''is? ” “ Yes-- I will-- certainly. |
3016 | “ Do n''t you see, child, that it ca n''t do you anything but harm? |
3016 | “ Do n''t you see, child, that you ca n''t afford to wait? |
3016 | “ Do n''t you understand? |
3016 | “ Do you know what is in it? ” asked the guest. |
3016 | “ Do you love your work better than you love me? |
3016 | “ Do you mean that you love-- your work-- better than you love me? ” “ No! |
3016 | “ Do you realize that you are saying no to me, Diantha? ” “ You are mistaken, dear. |
3016 | “ Do you really imagine, Diantha, that Mrs. O''Shaughnessy or Mrs. Yon Yonson can manage a house like this as you can? ” Diantha flushed a little. |
3016 | “ Does n''t your pet club house go well,''Miss Bell?'' |
3016 | “ Does she keep on just the same? ” asked little Mrs. Ree of Mrs. Porne in an awed whisper. |
3016 | “ Fine, is n''t it? ” said Mr. Porne. |
3016 | “ Free of you? |
3016 | “ Have n''t you seen the little circular? |
3016 | “ Have you been here long? ” she asked. |
3016 | “ Headache? ” she asked. |
3016 | “ Here''s Astor with three big hotels on his hands-- why should n''t I have one to play with? |
3016 | “ How about all this new furnishing? ” Mrs. Bell said suddenly. |
3016 | “ How about our bungalow? |
3016 | “ How con you bear to give so much pain to everyone who loves you? |
3016 | “ How do you cover that? |
3016 | “ How do you like the architecture? ” asked Mrs. Porne. |
3016 | “ How does it work? |
3016 | “ How does the ranch go? ” he asked. |
3016 | “ I have wanted to get rid of Mrs. Halsey for some time, but the new one I found yesterday. ” “ What''s her name? ” inquired Mathew. |
3016 | “ I know it would be very useful. ” “ Is there any date set? ” asked Miss Bell. |
3016 | “ I might borrow some o''Mis''Bell? ” suggested Sukey; “ dat''s nearer''n''de sto''. ” “ Yes, do, Sukey, ” her mistress agreed. |
3016 | “ I wish you''d made a pitcherful. ” “ Why did n''t you, Do? ” her sisters demanded. |
3016 | “ I wonder if he''ll care for it? ” she said, laying down her brush and holding the book at arm''s length to get the effect. |
3016 | “ I''ll speak to his grandmother too! ” “ O-- would you? ” urged Diantha. |
3016 | “ I''m not complaining, am I? |
3016 | “ I''m very glad for you, Belle, dear-- but-- what an endless nuisance it all is-- don''t you think so? ” “ Nuisance! |
3016 | “ If I could do it! ” “ You''ll have to do just that sort of thing when you are running your business, wo n''t you? ” her visitor went on. |
3016 | “ If I deliberately do what I think is right-- against your wishes-- what will you do? ” “ Do? ” The laughed bitterly. |
3016 | “ If I deliberately do what I think is right-- against your wishes-- what will you do? ” “ Do? ” The laughed bitterly. |
3016 | “ If a woman refuses to mention her age is it because she''s ashamed of it? ” the girl retorted, and Mrs. Delafield flushed darkly. |
3016 | “ In how short a time could you pack, Mrs. Halsey? ” she inquired. |
3016 | “ Is it as good as your own? |
3016 | “ Is it that he wo n''t let you keep on with the business? ” Diantha nodded. |
3016 | “ Is she a-- a friend? ” she ventured, not sure of her ground. |
3016 | “ It is simply that I have made up my mind I can do better elsewhere. ” “ Do what better? ” asked Mrs. |
3016 | “ It''s more because it means_ both!_ ” She leaned to him, glowing, “ Do n''t you see? |
3016 | “ It''s not at all bad looking, is it? ” she ventured. |
3016 | “ It''s too late to go anywhere, I suppose? ” he ventured. |
3016 | “ Madam Weatherstone? ” said the President, placatingly. |
3016 | “ O-- allow it? |
3016 | “ Of course not; and why should she? |
3016 | “ Or perhaps you have been planning this for some time? ” “ No, ” said Viva. |
3016 | “ Pack, ma''am? |
3016 | “ Porne, ” he said, “ where''d that girl come from anyway? |
3016 | “ Shall I attend to the orders this morning? ” asked Madam Weatherstone with an air of noble patience. |
3016 | “ Shall I come home to lunch? ” he asked. |
3016 | “ Shall we go in and read a bit? ” he offered; but she thought not. |
3016 | “ She does n''t furnish table linen? ” “ No, there are Japanese napkins at the top here. |
3016 | “ She does not give a fish course, does she? ” Mrs. Ree observed. |
3016 | “ Six years? |
3016 | “ Supper ready? ” asked Mr. Bell, with grim humor. |
3016 | “ There''s no keeping anything from you, is there? |
3016 | “ To leave home!--And Mother! ” “ Well? ” said Diantha, while the tears rose and ran over from her mother''s eyes. |
3016 | “ To what does all this lead? ” asked Diantha pleasantly. |
3016 | “ Too tired to sleep, you poor darling? |
3016 | “ Very well, thank you, Mr. Thaddler. ” “ Them Chinks pay up promptly? ” “ As prompt as the month comes round. |
3016 | “ We are all so truly convinced of the sacredness of the home duties! ” “ Well, what do you want me to do? ” asked their hostess. |
3016 | “ We never pretended to have a fish course ourselves-- do you? ” Mrs. Ree did not, and eagerly disclaimed any desire for fish. |
3016 | “ Well, why not? |
3016 | “ Well-- why not? |
3016 | “ What are you doing to Mother, Diantha? ” demanded young Mrs. Peters. |
3016 | “ What are you getting at your present place-- if I may ask? ” loftily inquired the great Mrs. Thaddler, ponderous and beaded. |
3016 | “ What are you going to give him, mother? ” “ Another bath- robe; his old one is so worn. |
3016 | “ What are you talking about anyway? ” Diantha met his eyes unflinchingly. |
3016 | “ What can I do? |
3016 | “ What could she say? |
3016 | “ What do you think of my investment? ” said Mrs. Weatherstone. |
3016 | “ What do you_ expect_ to get? |
3016 | “ What do you_ think_ I did it for? |
3016 | “ What is it, Dear? ” he asked. |
3016 | “ What is your name? ” “ No, ma''am, ” said the child-- she was scarce more. |
3016 | “ What kind of work do you like best-- really? ” her daughter inquired suddenly, after a silent moment or two. |
3016 | “ What''d I do it for? ” continued the unasked benefactor. |
3016 | “ What''s all this I hear about you, young lady? ” he demanded, holding her hand and looking her straight in the eye. |
3016 | “ What''s this about the new house, Miss Bell? |
3016 | “ What_ beautiful_ manners she had! ” “ How rich is she, mother? |
3016 | “ When can you come? ” she asked. |
3016 | “ Where is it, dear? ” she whispered. |
3016 | “ Whither away so fast, my dear? ” he amiably inquired. |
3016 | “ Who? ” was the surprising answer. |
3016 | “ Why ca n''t he see, ” she would say to herself, “ that if this succeeds, he can do his work; that I can make it possible for him? |
3016 | “ Why do n''t you ask her? ” “ We will. |
3016 | “ Why do n''t you go into it at once? ” urged Mrs. Weatherstone. |
3016 | “ Why do n''t you stop it Mother dear? |
3016 | “ Why should we, Ma? ” inquired Cora. |
3016 | “ Why_ do n''t_ you get an oil stove? |
3016 | “ Will you come to the platform, Dr. Eltwood? ” Dr. Eltwood came to the platform with the easy air of one to whom platforms belonged by right. |
3016 | “ Will you come? ” he said. |
3016 | “ Yes-- ” “ Do you sleep well? ” “ No-- not very. ” “ And I can see that you do n''t eat as you ought to. |
3016 | “ Yes; it''s nothing; it''s gone already. ” “ Worry? ” she asked. |
3016 | “ You are close by in case of any trouble. ” “ What on earth are you going for? |
3016 | “ You say she was really a school- teacher? |
3016 | “ You tried it some time, I understand? ” “ Indeed we did-- and would still if we had the chance, ” she replied. |
3016 | “ You wo n''t come in and see mother and the girls? ” “ No, thank you; not this time. |
3016 | “ Yours, Ross. ” “ Any time she felt like coming back? |
3016 | “''Do you love me?'' |
11660 | ''Burbanked''? |
11660 | ''Egg- shaped''? |
11660 | ''Grass pink,''repeated Ethel, Brown,"is n''t that the same as''spice pink''?" |
11660 | A flower counter? 11660 A hairy what?" |
11660 | A locust? |
11660 | A rose? |
11660 | And you notice how conveniently the coal beds lie to the iron mines? 11660 Are n''t they wonderful? |
11660 | Are n''t we going to have that sort of thing inside? |
11660 | Are n''t you afraid you''ll get that pretty silk all cindery? |
11660 | Are there pink poppies? |
11660 | Are they growing in water? |
11660 | Are you sure they''re all pink? |
11660 | Are your father and mother alive? |
11660 | Assisted by yellow jessamine? |
11660 | At the back? |
11660 | Born after she ceased writing home? |
11660 | But is n''t it true that we get as much pleasure out of a single superb chrysanthemum or rose as we do out of a great mass of them? |
11660 | But what would be his object? 11660 But, Grandfather, if the beauty is there right now why ca n''t we see it?" |
11660 | Can I help? |
11660 | Can we do it? |
11660 | Can we get blossoms on chrysanthemums the first, year? |
11660 | Can we make candy marshmallows out of it? |
11660 | Can you ask? 11660 Can you be ready for an early morning train from New York?" |
11660 | Can you guess why? |
11660 | Can you remember cineraria? 11660 Can you tell me just what the trouble is? |
11660 | Coal? 11660 Could I have a corner for them? |
11660 | Could n''t we--? |
11660 | Could you help it? |
11660 | Could you see what it was like? |
11660 | Did any of you notice the bean I''ve been sprouting in my room? |
11660 | Did he? 11660 Did his interest seem to fail?" |
11660 | Did it have''root, stem and leaves''? |
11660 | Did the opposite happen at night? |
11660 | Did they have a great old fight to take the fort? |
11660 | Did they know her name? |
11660 | Did you kill the buds? |
11660 | Did you know that this is one of the largest herds of buffalo in the United States? |
11660 | Did you notice a minute ago that I spoke of the''leaflet''of a horse- chestnut leaf? 11660 Dig up what?" |
11660 | Do I seem to remember a rule about using one teaspoonful of tea for each person and one for the pot? |
11660 | Do I understand, madam, that you''re going to have a pink border here? |
11660 | Do n''t I remember some in your yard? |
11660 | Do n''t all the pines have three needles in the bunch? |
11660 | Do n''t know what? |
11660 | Do n''t they call them''pansy bowls''? |
11660 | Do n''t they grow any flowers at all? |
11660 | Do n''t you remember how those snowflakes we looked at under the magnifying glass on Ethel Blue''s birthday burst into magnificent crystals? 11660 Do n''t you remember the Bulgarian? |
11660 | Do n''t you remember when Fitz- James first sees Ellen in the''Lady of the Lake''? |
11660 | Do the tips of the leaves have names? |
11660 | Do they enjoy working the gardens? |
11660 | Do you blame her? |
11660 | Do you know what they''re for? |
11660 | Do you mean that I wo n''t be able to buy it? 11660 Do you remember that girl who was with him at the Flower Festival?" |
11660 | Do you remember the talk you and I had about Rose House just before the Fresh Air women and children came out? |
11660 | Do you remember what Bryant says about''The Yellow Violet''? |
11660 | Do you remember your mother? |
11660 | Do you see it has a big midrib and the other veins run out from it''every which way''as Ethel Blue said, making a net? 11660 Do you see on shore some low- lying houses and sheds? |
11660 | Do you see that flat oblong space there at the back? 11660 Do you see those long rows of bee- hives? |
11660 | Do you suppose Roger would be willing to dig it up for us? |
11660 | Do you think he honestly believes that she''s the missing heir? |
11660 | Do you want to change any of the beds that were here last summer? |
11660 | Do you want to know what I found out? |
11660 | Does n''t the plant breathe and eat through them? |
11660 | Does that mean they blossom every two years? |
11660 | Does this have to stand over night? |
11660 | Dorothy--"Smith? |
11660 | Find out what? |
11660 | Fire damp? |
11660 | Grapefruit? 11660 Has Aunt Louise bought them?" |
11660 | Has anybody a knife? |
11660 | Has it a thick, leathery leaf that lies down almost flat? |
11660 | Have the orphans any gardens to work in? |
11660 | Have we decided on the background flowers for the wild bed? |
11660 | Have you caught Emily? |
11660 | Have you got anything to cover it with when the spring sunshine grows too hot? |
11660 | Have you started any peony seeds? |
11660 | He does look like a horrid sort of man, does n''t he? |
11660 | Here''s another competition between Helen''s wild garden and the color bed; which shall take the buttercups and cowslips? |
11660 | How about sweet williams? |
11660 | How about the watering systems of all these gardens, anyway? 11660 How are we going to know just when to plant all these things so they''ll come out when we want them to?" |
11660 | How are you going to tell? |
11660 | How can you do it without talking? |
11660 | How could it have? |
11660 | How did you know I''d suggest a walk there for the Saturday Club meeting? |
11660 | How did you know about it, anyway? 11660 How did you learn all that?" |
11660 | How do you happen to know so much? |
11660 | How do you know it is? 11660 How is it different from the oak veining?" |
11660 | How large a house is she going to build? |
11660 | How long is he? |
11660 | How many members of this handsome and intelligent Club know what leaves are for? |
11660 | How often do you change the water? |
11660 | How often do you water it? |
11660 | How on earth,called Ethel Blue,"are we going to get over it?" |
11660 | I do n''t know whether we can do it with this tiny fire, but let''s try-- what do you say? |
11660 | I do seem to be asking about a million questions, do n''t I? |
11660 | I should think the biggest difference would be that animals eat plants and plants eat-- what do plants eat? |
11660 | I suppose we may all have a chance at all of these institutions? |
11660 | I suppose you do n''t care what else goes into the garden? |
11660 | I wonder why they''re called''wind- flowers''? |
11660 | I''d like to know why you never told me about that before? |
11660 | If we sod down these beds here what will Roger do for his sweetpeas? 11660 If you''re interested right off why wo n''t other people be?" |
11660 | Is it a story? |
11660 | Is it much work? |
11660 | Is n''t boiling water boiling water? |
11660 | Is n''t it lucky he is? 11660 Is n''t the easiest way to call their attention to it to have a piece in the paper?" |
11660 | Is n''t there any poetry about it? |
11660 | Is that all he says? |
11660 | Is that what I did to Miss Maria? |
11660 | Is that what the negroes call''light wood''? |
11660 | Is the little girl his daughter? |
11660 | Is there any brown paper around these precincts, Dorothy? |
11660 | Is there any early history about here? |
11660 | Is there any gas here? |
11660 | Is there anything you can do about it? |
11660 | It does n''t seem as though it were strong enough to do either good or harm, does it? 11660 It''s just the opposite of a rolling stone, is n''t it?" |
11660 | Jabez Smith? 11660 Julian Smith? |
11660 | Let''s ask her if we may? |
11660 | Look hard at this white pine needle; do you see, it has three sides, two of them white and one green? 11660 Me?" |
11660 | Must it be brown? |
11660 | Now, then, Roger, the first thing for us to do is to see--"With our mind''s eye, Horatio? |
11660 | Of course we do-- if Della does n''t have to take the train back yet? |
11660 | Oh, will you? 11660 One of the sweetpea packages is marked''blue,''"said Roger,"I wonder if it will be a real blue?" |
11660 | Or silver or copper? |
11660 | Pink flowers, a pink room-- is there anything else pink? |
11660 | Pink? |
11660 | Shall we take up this wake- robin? |
11660 | Something like mine? |
11660 | Tell me, dear, are n''t there some thoughts in your mind that you do n''t like to tell to any one? 11660 Tell me,"she said,"exactly what is coal and how did it get here?" |
11660 | That is really natural gas, is n''t it? |
11660 | That nice, acid- tasting leaf? |
11660 | That''s a lesson in success, is n''t it? 11660 That''s pretty; what''s the rest of it?" |
11660 | The horse chestnut is a hungry one, is n''t it? |
11660 | The name was n''t Morton, was it? |
11660 | Then you wo n''t plant the garden this year? |
11660 | There is an old hemp rug and some straw matting in the attic-- won''t they do? |
11660 | They do look fools, do n''t they? |
11660 | They have to; how are they to do anything else? |
11660 | They''re pretty, are n''t they? 11660 This minute?" |
11660 | Those pinks are perennials, are n''t they? 11660 Up here on the hill?" |
11660 | Useless? 11660 Walked right in? |
11660 | Was it good? |
11660 | Was it pretty? |
11660 | Was n''t the attack on Deerfield during the French and Indian War? |
11660 | We want it to be a regular business, so will you please tell us how much rent we ought to pay? |
11660 | Well, then, why not have the tables where you sell things-- if you are going to have any? |
11660 | What about the animals? |
11660 | What are the blossoms? |
11660 | What are the characteristics of the framework? |
11660 | What are the trees that still have a few leaves left clinging to them? |
11660 | What are we going to put in here first? |
11660 | What are you doing this planting for? |
11660 | What are you girls talking about? |
11660 | What are you girls talking about? |
11660 | What are you people talking about? |
11660 | What can we do? |
11660 | What did he do with the other half of his batter? |
11660 | What did she do with it? |
11660 | What did they call it? |
11660 | What do we need? |
11660 | What do you hear from Stanley? |
11660 | What do you know about hating? |
11660 | What do you mean? 11660 What do you say if we divide the border along the fence into four parts and have a wild garden and pink and yellow and blue beds? |
11660 | What do you say to poppies? |
11660 | What do you suppose Mother and Aunt Louise will say? |
11660 | What do you think it is? |
11660 | What does he say, Brother? |
11660 | What flower is it you''re so crazy over? |
11660 | What happens when this bean plant uses up all its food? |
11660 | What in the world is it? 11660 What is a stable doing down here?" |
11660 | What is a trillium? |
11660 | What is it? 11660 What is it? |
11660 | What is it? 11660 What is it?" |
11660 | What is it? |
11660 | What is it? |
11660 | What is shale? |
11660 | What is that high wharf with a building on it overhanging the river? |
11660 | What is the answer as far as anybody knows it? |
11660 | What is the blade of your leaf made of? |
11660 | What is there flowery about a Punch and Judy show? |
11660 | What is your idea about having the children taught? 11660 What on earth do you mean?" |
11660 | What plants did she have? |
11660 | What scheming is Hapgood up to now? |
11660 | What was the date of the marriage? |
11660 | What were you doing? |
11660 | What would happen if the fan stopped running? |
11660 | What would happen if you let it boil a while? |
11660 | What would you think of a series of editorials, each striking a different note? |
11660 | What''s its name? |
11660 | What''s that? |
11660 | What''s that? |
11660 | What''s the idea of two boilings? |
11660 | What''s the next move? |
11660 | What''s the object of cutting off the end? |
11660 | What''s the rush? |
11660 | What''s the use of remembering all that? |
11660 | What''s this delicate white stuff? 11660 What''s yours, Ethel Blue?" |
11660 | What''th in that little houthe over there? |
11660 | What? |
11660 | What? |
11660 | What? |
11660 | What_ I_ want to know,retorted Mr. Emerson,"is what brand of curiosity you have in your cranium, and how did it get there? |
11660 | When do you want us to start? |
11660 | Where are we going to get a tent? |
11660 | Where are we now? |
11660 | Where are you going to get your land? |
11660 | Where are you? |
11660 | Where besides the railroad station? |
11660 | Where do you get the water? |
11660 | Where do you suppose she went to? |
11660 | Where was it, son? 11660 Where was the coal?" |
11660 | Where''s my hat? |
11660 | Where''s the other? |
11660 | Who is he? 11660 Why ca n''t we start some of the flower seeds here and have early blossoms?" |
11660 | Why could n''t we have it in the corner where there is a fence on two sides? 11660 Why do n''t we have a fine one this summer, Helen?" |
11660 | Why do n''t we make a roar about it? |
11660 | Why do n''t we make plans of the gardens now? |
11660 | Why do n''t you give a talk on arranging flowers as part of the program this evening? |
11660 | Why do n''t you give her this space behind the green and limit your flower beds to the fence line? |
11660 | Why do n''t you try hedges of gooseberries and currants and raspberries and blackberries around your garden? |
11660 | Why eagle? 11660 Why is it funny?" |
11660 | Why not forget Punch and Judy and have the same performance exactly in both places? |
11660 | Why not on the veranda at the side? |
11660 | Why not use the hall and the grounds, too? |
11660 | Why should she be mad, when I went up there to be nice to her? 11660 Why were you in her room?" |
11660 | Why, should n''t I go into her room? 11660 Why?" |
11660 | Will it be made of concrete? |
11660 | With cotton wool for fuel? |
11660 | Wo n''t it hurt those plants to pull them up this way? |
11660 | Wo n''t transplanting them twice set them back? |
11660 | Would n''t it be easier to buy the insect powder? |
11660 | Would there be any objection to my offering a small prize? |
11660 | Would you be mad if she went into your room without knocking? |
11660 | Would you like to have me tell her? 11660 Would you mind if we had a flower counter here in your hall?" |
11660 | You ca n''t stick them in a week apart and have them blossom a week apart? |
11660 | You call this clear? |
11660 | You copied them yourself? |
11660 | You do n''t mean the field with the brook where Roger got the pussy willows? |
11660 | You do n''t object to a silver centrepiece on the dining table, do you? |
11660 | You knew she had been adopted by a Wentworth? |
11660 | You mean that the dump might be made into the garden? |
11660 | You want more flowers in this yard, then? |
11660 | You wo n''t be able to live in the house this summer, will you? |
11660 | You''d know that one was an oak, and the one next to it a beech, would n''t you? |
11660 | You''re sure of that? |
11660 | --and pink candy- tuft for the border and foxgloves for the back; are those old plants or seedlings?" |
11660 | And do n''t you hope he''ll find some clue before his holidays end? |
11660 | And see what a lovely, lovely color the blossom is? |
11660 | And these tiny bluey eyes?" |
11660 | And where is he staying?" |
11660 | Are n''t you going to have trouble with these wild plants that like different kinds of ground?" |
11660 | Can each one of you decide what your own leaf is?" |
11660 | Can the old gentleman cultivate them or is his rheumatism too bad?" |
11660 | Can you guess what''_ ovate_''is?" |
11660 | Did you tell me you had a peony?" |
11660 | Do n''t they ever stop?" |
11660 | Do n''t want to take some switches back to town with you?" |
11660 | Do n''t you know how Irish potatoes send out those white shoots when they''re in the cellar?" |
11660 | Do n''t you know this must be a great gathering place for birds? |
11660 | Do n''t you remember my raditheth were ripe before yourth were? |
11660 | Do n''t you remember there are potteries that make beautiful things at Trenton? |
11660 | Do n''t you remember, I made some baskets out of them?" |
11660 | Do n''t you see all these dead trees standing with bare trunks?" |
11660 | Do n''t you think it looks like a bird''s claw?" |
11660 | Do n''t you think it''s pretty?" |
11660 | Do you get many of them?" |
11660 | Do you know why the leaves stay on?" |
11660 | Do you remember, I asked you, Dorothy, if you minded my taking up that aster that showed a white bud? |
11660 | Do you suppose there are any violets up in the woods?" |
11660 | Do you suppose, Mrs. Smith, that he''s going to sign any deed that gives you that land? |
11660 | Do you want to hear it?" |
11660 | Does it have to be a Norway spruce cone?" |
11660 | Does n''t it remind you of a feather?" |
11660 | Emerson''s?" |
11660 | Father of Mary Smith? |
11660 | Had n''t I told him the date of our Emily''s birth? |
11660 | Has Aunt Louise--?" |
11660 | Has n''t it any other name?" |
11660 | He raised his eyebrows doubtfully, then turning to Stanley he inquired:"You did n''t find out what became of this Leonard Smith, did you?" |
11660 | How about snapdragons?" |
11660 | How about the father, Stanley?" |
11660 | How do you think the botanists have named the shape that is like an egg upside down?" |
11660 | How in the world did you get all these shrubs to blossom now? |
11660 | How is that?" |
11660 | If you''ve made up your minds had n''t I better tell my lawyer to make out the papers at once?" |
11660 | Is Aunt Louise going to set up a car?" |
11660 | Is all that stuff in a horse chestnut leaf- food?" |
11660 | Is it going to last?" |
11660 | It grows like this?" |
11660 | Lost? |
11660 | Nature followed an efficiency program, did n''t she?" |
11660 | Our coal?" |
11660 | Pretty tough just to have an old bachelor uncle to look after yer, ai n''t it?" |
11660 | See the point of a fern leaf on this bit?" |
11660 | See the''hairy scape''Helen talked about? |
11660 | Shall you have another nearer the road?" |
11660 | Surely you did n''t just keep them in water in this room?" |
11660 | That''s more suitable, is n''t it?" |
11660 | The Hapgood woman''s husband? |
11660 | Violet with a hint of pink?" |
11660 | Were n''t you taking flowers there yourself?" |
11660 | What do you suppose this yellow bell- shaped flower is?" |
11660 | What does the nasturtium leaf remind you of?" |
11660 | What is it now?" |
11660 | What is it?" |
11660 | What is the difference in the veining between Ethel Brown''s oak leaf and Ethel Blue''s lily of the valley leaf?" |
11660 | What makes it?" |
11660 | What we have for breakfast? |
11660 | What''s the difference between a''leaflet''and a''leaf''?" |
11660 | Why should he try to thrust the child into a perfectly strange family?" |
11660 | Will the regular teachers do it?" |
11660 | Without knocking?" |
11660 | Would Helen call a cell that you could n''t see a plant?" |
11660 | Would n''t it be too strange if he should be the son of the lost Emily?" |
11660 | You have town water here and at Dorothy''s, but how about the new place?" |
11660 | You know how the soil of the West Woods at home is deep with decayed leaves? |
11660 | You would n''t think a handful of earth-- just plain dirt-- was pretty, would you? |
11660 | You''ll see more fossil ferns there, and the skeleton of a diplodocus--""A dip- what?" |
11660 | [ Illustration: Multiple Cells]"What do you mean by a single cell?" |
11660 | [ Illustration: Obtuse Truncated Notched]"Can you think of any other leaves that have leaflets?" |
11660 | [ Illustration: Pinnate Pinnate, tendrils Locust Leaf Sweet Pea Leaf]"A sweetpea?" |
11660 | and Ethel Brown said,"The Indians used to go from the upper end of Lake Chautauqua to the Gulf in their canoes? |
11660 | exclaimed the Ethels, and Mary asked,"What happened to it?" |
11660 | thoughts that seem to belong just to you yourself? |
13034 | ''And maybe we can bungle through with a few bearings for a while, can we?'' 13034 ''So it stands to reason, does it?'' |
13034 | ... Do you love him, Helen? |
13034 | A shortage as big as that last year? 13034 All for me? |
13034 | All right, boys? |
13034 | And did n''t he ever come back? |
13034 | And last night he was in that car on the bridge.... Where do these Bols hang out? |
13034 | And suppose the red lamp had been disregarded? |
13034 | And then what did she ask you? |
13034 | And then what did she say? |
13034 | And then? |
13034 | And when Uncle Stanley dies-- what then? |
13034 | And you wo n''t let anybody run away with you until I''ve had another chance? |
13034 | And, indeed, why should n''t they be? 13034 Any of them married?" |
13034 | Anything I can do for you, Miss Mary? |
13034 | Anything wrong? |
13034 | Are n''t you going to kiss me, too? |
13034 | Are they going to boycott us? |
13034 | Are you forgetting a little detail like that? |
13034 | Are you ready? |
13034 | Are you sure your figures are right? |
13034 | Are you sure your women workers are turning out bearings so much cheaper than the men did? |
13034 | Besides,thought Mary,"she''d only say,''Oh, all right,''and yawn and change the subject-- and what could I do then?" |
13034 | But do n''t you think it''s altogether wrong,said Professor Marsh,"to deprive a child of the advantages of home life?" |
13034 | But how can they? |
13034 | But tell me: Is that why you are making so many additions to the factory-- because we are changing to a corporation? |
13034 | But what are you doing here? |
13034 | But who''ll run the factory? |
13034 | But would they be for ever blue? |
13034 | But, Helen-- don''t you think it''s just possible-- that you''ve been worrying him? |
13034 | Ca n''t you begin to see that the average woman has always worked harder than the average man? 13034 Can I come in?" |
13034 | Can a woman do a man''s work? 13034 Can you come down to the office early this morning?" |
13034 | Can you read it? |
13034 | Can you speak French? |
13034 | Could n''t you play the drum? |
13034 | Did Helen cry, when she saw how late it was getting? |
13034 | Did n''t you hear anything of this-- in Charleston? |
13034 | Did n''t you say you expected trouble? |
13034 | Did you get your copy of the annual report? |
13034 | Did you have a quarrel? |
13034 | Do n''t I think what, dear? |
13034 | Do n''t you feel well? |
13034 | Do n''t you know by now that it''s the one great thing in life? |
13034 | Do n''t you see? 13034 Do n''t you think that love is the greatest thing in life?" |
13034 | Do n''t you think we''ve waited long enough? |
13034 | Do you know if the piano''s here yet? |
13034 | Do you know what I would do if I were you? |
13034 | Do you love me a little bit now? |
13034 | Do you mind then if I start a subscription for the instruments? |
13034 | Do you think it''s fair? |
13034 | Do you think she''s as pretty as Mary? |
13034 | Do you think they are overworked? |
13034 | Do you think we had better try it a little longer and see how it works out? |
13034 | Do you, know you''re getting to be fashionable? |
13034 | Does it remind you of old times, the same as it does me? |
13034 | First you catch it in their eye and in their voice:''Are you sure you''re comfortable?'' 13034 Going to have an artists''colony up here?" |
13034 | Good news? |
13034 | Got all we can handle now, have n''t we? |
13034 | Got who? |
13034 | Has he asked you yet? |
13034 | Have you ever been the least bit sorry,he asked,"that you turned me down-- for a business career?" |
13034 | Helen,she said, when their visitor had gone,"do you really love Wally-- or are you just amusing yourself?" |
13034 | How are you getting on? |
13034 | How are you going to pass a law like that when women can vote? |
13034 | How did you do it? |
13034 | How long are you going to try it, do you think? |
13034 | How long does it take to break in an ordinary man? |
13034 | How many have been rejected today? |
13034 | How many men are out now? |
13034 | How''s Aunt Patty and Aunt Cordelia? |
13034 | How''s Wally? |
13034 | How? |
13034 | Hutch,he said in a quieter voice,"do n''t you remember me?" |
13034 | I can almost imagine that we''re an old married couple, sitting in here like this-- can''t you? |
13034 | I did n''t make much of a hit with the governor, but then you know I seldom do--"Where did you get the pictures? |
13034 | I guess it''s a question of pride on the man''s part-- as much as anything else--"Oh, Archey-- don''t you think a woman has pride, too? |
13034 | I understand,said Mary; and turning to the four she asked,"How do you feel about it?" |
13034 | I wonder what they would think of this? |
13034 | I wonder what they would think of women working here? |
13034 | I wonder who he is? |
13034 | I''ve just been in Helen''s room,she said,"and what do you think she has on her dresser?" |
13034 | If anything happens to young Josiah,I can imagine him thinking to himself with a grin,"I may own this place myself some day.... Who knows?" |
13034 | If that dam breaks, it will sweep away the factory and part of the town.... What are you going to do? |
13034 | If they can do it, we can do it, too-- don''t you think so? |
13034 | In what way? |
13034 | Is Miss Spencer in? |
13034 | Is Mr. Strauss here? 13034 Is Woman Really Man''s Equal?" |
13034 | Is it because the heirs expect too much? |
13034 | Is it you, Master Paul? |
13034 | Is n''t it true,she began,"that most of the machinery we use does n''t require a great deal of skill to run it?" |
13034 | Is that the bell now? |
13034 | Is their work fairly accurate? |
13034 | It is Archey; is n''t it? |
13034 | It sounds possible-- the way Miss Spencer puts it-- but will it work? |
13034 | It was Uncle Stanley''s idea, then? |
13034 | It would only bother them,she told herself,"and what good could it do?" |
13034 | Joe, will you please tell Mr. Woodward, Sr., that I would like to see him? |
13034 | Let''s take a stroll down there, shall we? |
13034 | Like them? 13034 Looking for somebody?" |
13034 | May I look at that? |
13034 | May we confer with you Monday at your office regarding situation at New Bethel? |
13034 | Might I ask, Miss Mary, of what nature is the subject? |
13034 | Mr. Edsol, is n''t it? |
13034 | Not mad at your uncle, are you, little girl? |
13034 | Not tired? 13034 Now first of all,"she said,"just how badly do you four women need your pay envelopes every week?" |
13034 | Now why did he save this clipping? |
13034 | Now,smiled Mary to the spokesman of the committee,"wo n''t you tell me, please, what fault you find with these four women?" |
13034 | Oh, dad,Mary had said, looking up and speaking on impulse,"did I hear you say last night that Burdon Woodward was in New York?" |
13034 | Oh, who do you think was there tonight? |
13034 | On what, for instance? |
13034 | Or is it because I have other things to think about? 13034 Patty,"said Miss Cordelia one day,"do you know that child of ours is seventeen?" |
13034 | Poor Brad-- didn''t I tell you? |
13034 | Quarrel with Burdon Woodward? |
13034 | Shall I tell the rest of the men? |
13034 | So have I,said Miss Patty in a low voice,"but where''s the letter?" |
13034 | Stopped him? 13034 Take Mr. MacPherson,"she thought;"how is he my natural enemy? |
13034 | Tell them what, Uncle Stanley? |
13034 | That we''re going to shut down till further notice? |
13034 | That''s all? |
13034 | The next thing we know,he said to Mary one day,"every man on the place will walk out, and what are we going to do then?" |
13034 | The only reason you wish these women discharged is because they are women, is that it? |
13034 | The present question is: How can we settle this matter to suit both sides? |
13034 | Then did you ever hear of any one in our family named Paul? |
13034 | Then why is it? |
13034 | There is n''t? 13034 Tired, dear?" |
13034 | Tired, dear? |
13034 | To college? |
13034 | Was n''t there a girl''s name which means bitterness? |
13034 | Wash the dishes? 13034 Well, do n''t you see? |
13034 | Well, have n''t you? |
13034 | Well, what can I do? |
13034 | Well? |
13034 | What are the men saying now? |
13034 | What are the men saying now? |
13034 | What are they striking for? |
13034 | What are us men going to do after a while? |
13034 | What are you going to do about Walter Cabot? |
13034 | What are you going to do when you have used up all your local women? |
13034 | What are you going to do with them? |
13034 | What are you laughing at? |
13034 | What can I do? |
13034 | What did he discharge you for? |
13034 | What did the garage man find was the trouble with your car? |
13034 | What do they see? |
13034 | What do you say if we have it printed in big type, and pasted on the bill- boards? |
13034 | What do you think, Helen? |
13034 | What do you think, Mary? |
13034 | What for? |
13034 | What is it, ma cherie, which you can not believe? |
13034 | What is it? |
13034 | What makes you think it''s going to spread? |
13034 | What more can I say? |
13034 | What on earth are you listening for? |
13034 | What time do we get there? |
13034 | What was it dad used to call me sometimes-- his''Little Hustler''? |
13034 | What would have happened if the oven had n''t been opened when the white light appeared? |
13034 | What would you do? |
13034 | What''s all this excitement about Martha? 13034 What''s the matter with Burdon down at the office lately? |
13034 | What''s the matter with them? |
13034 | What''s the matter with those men who are going out? |
13034 | What''s the matter, Archey? |
13034 | What''s the matter, Mary? |
13034 | What''s the matter, Wally? |
13034 | What''s the matter? 13034 What''s the matter?" |
13034 | What''s the use of having so many bath- bowls in this table,asked Professor Marsh,"when you only have two nurses to do the bathing?" |
13034 | What''s the use? |
13034 | What''s this? |
13034 | What? |
13034 | What? |
13034 | When is Mr. Woodward expected back? |
13034 | Where do they get their flowers? |
13034 | Where''s Burdon? |
13034 | Where''s the phone, Mary? 13034 Who discharged you?" |
13034 | Who says factory work is easier than housework? |
13034 | Who sent it? 13034 Who was that?" |
13034 | Who-- who did this? |
13034 | Who? 13034 Who?" |
13034 | Why are parents so careful? 13034 Why did our earnings fall down so low last year?" |
13034 | Why do n''t you audit his books and see who paid for that car? |
13034 | Why do n''t you take him? |
13034 | Why do you feel like ignoring it, if it''s such a natural question? |
13034 | Why does n''t it go over? |
13034 | Why not? |
13034 | Why not? |
13034 | Why not? |
13034 | Why not? |
13034 | Why not? |
13034 | Why should n''t they get as much as the men if they are going to do men''s work? |
13034 | Why, Ma''m Maynard,said Mary,"you do n''t think that all men are fools, too, do you?" |
13034 | Why, you want to be good; do n''t you? |
13034 | Why? |
13034 | Why? |
13034 | Why? |
13034 | Will you mark them with a tick, please-- those you ca n''t dance? |
13034 | Wo n''t you be seated for a few minutes? |
13034 | Would they want to go back to candles? |
13034 | Y- yes--"Who was he? |
13034 | Yes, and who knows? 13034 Yes, dear?" |
13034 | Yes? |
13034 | You know the old saying, do n''t you? |
13034 | You mean for the women to be making bearings? |
13034 | You mean to say they all kissed you? |
13034 | You mean to say they will go on strike before they will work with their own wives and sisters? |
13034 | You mean working for wages? |
13034 | You mean your friends? |
13034 | You think so, ma cherie? 13034 You think so?" |
13034 | You think so? |
13034 | You''ll do that, Miss Spencer? |
13034 | You''re sure it has nothing to do with this? |
13034 | You''re sure there''s nothing more I can do? |
13034 | You''re to go right back to your work,she said, and in a gentler voice,"Wally, can I speak to you, please?" |
13034 | You''ve never seen my daughter, have you? |
13034 | Your friends are n''t with you tonight? |
13034 | ''Are you sure you do n''t feel a draft?'' |
13034 | ''Are you sure you''re warm enough?'' |
13034 | ''What do you mean, rough stuff?'' |
13034 | ''What do you mean: good scares?'' |
13034 | ... Are you going to boycott us now?" |
13034 | ... You do n''t mean to say that they have made you an aunt already?" |
13034 | All those who would like to try it-- will they please stand up?" |
13034 | Aloud he said, pretending to yawn,"Great events, batuchka? |
13034 | Aloud she said,"What do you think of it?" |
13034 | And again"Is it you, Master Paul?" |
13034 | And aloud in quite a humouring tone he said,"We do n''t need men? |
13034 | And seeing that she hesitated he added, first looking cautiously over his shoulder,"Is it anything, for instance, to do wi''Mr. Woodward? |
13034 | And the babies? |
13034 | And the home? |
13034 | And then he said,''What time did you leave Mary''s?'' |
13034 | And why was he singing so sadly, so plaintively just underneath Mary''s window? |
13034 | Any better?" |
13034 | Archey?" |
13034 | At any other time she would have asked herself,"Why is he inquiring for Burdon?" |
13034 | Because who would hire a man at$ 21 a week after the war if they could get a woman to do the same work for$ 15?" |
13034 | But how are you getting on, Helen?.... |
13034 | But how did he know Helen was there? |
13034 | But what''s the woman going to do?" |
13034 | But you do n''t condemn the eight hour day-- do you?--just because it does n''t fit everybody?" |
13034 | But you would n''t call children natural enemies, would you-- or try to get along without them?" |
13034 | But you would n''t call food a natural enemy; would you? |
13034 | But-- if it was any other man than Stanley Woodward, I would say today that he was doing his best to-- to--""To''do''me?" |
13034 | CHAPTER I"Patty,"said Miss Cordelia one morning,"have you noticed Josiah lately?" |
13034 | Can we tell the men that they are going to get women''s wages?" |
13034 | Did he kiss you?" |
13034 | Did young Josiah want to leave the office early? |
13034 | Did young Josiah yearn for life and adventure? |
13034 | Do n''t you think that''s a good thing? |
13034 | Do you care to see them, or shall I tell them you are out?" |
13034 | Do you expect him tomorrow?" |
13034 | Does he understand it?" |
13034 | Does n''t that mean a lot to you, Aunt Patty? |
13034 | Edsol?" |
13034 | For great men would not spend their days in catching little fishes-- am I not right, batuchka?" |
13034 | For why? |
13034 | Have you a car here?" |
13034 | Helen appeared at the office soon after nine and the moment she saw Mary she said,"Has Wally''phoned you this morning?" |
13034 | Helen nodded and glanced at Mary with a look that said,"Did you hear him call me''Dear''?" |
13034 | How are you? |
13034 | How could you, if he were driving very fast?" |
13034 | How did they find time to do their washing and ironing? |
13034 | How did they train the women? |
13034 | How long is it since your bookkeeping system was overhauled here?" |
13034 | How?" |
13034 | I do n''t want to go to Miss Parsons''school--""Where do you want to go then?" |
13034 | I hope he brings his handsome son again-- don''t you?" |
13034 | I said to him,''that a woman ca n''t do a man''s work and get away with it? |
13034 | I think I ought to ask you something first, though.... Did any one ever tell you that you had a brother Paul? |
13034 | I thought he was leaving earlier than usual tonight; did n''t you? |
13034 | If I take you this morning, will you promise to be a good girl, and sit in the office, and not go wandering off by yourself? |
13034 | If women can do such wonderful things for the Red Cross, why ca n''t they do wonderful things in other ways?" |
13034 | If women enter the trades, what are the men going to do? |
13034 | Is it not because all the world knows well that a man can not be left to his own promise, but has to be bound by the law as a lion is held in a cage?" |
13034 | Is that your idea of woman''s work?'' |
13034 | It was the sight of him down there that reminded me: that''s all.... How has everything been running here? |
13034 | Life-- thankfulness for life-- a joy so deep that it was n''t far from pain-- hoping-- longing- yearning... for what? |
13034 | Mary; tell me you love me just a little bit; wo n''t you?" |
13034 | Me?" |
13034 | Now that she had the ballot and could no longer be legislated against, could she hold her own industrially on equal terms with man? |
13034 | One day Mary suddenly said to her father,"Who was Paul?" |
13034 | Or Archey Forbes? |
13034 | Or Judge Cutler? |
13034 | Or Wally Cabot?" |
13034 | Or sweep the streets? |
13034 | Or what?" |
13034 | Or, putting it as briefly as possible,"Could she make good?" |
13034 | Or, say, the conduct of the business?" |
13034 | Queer, is n''t it?" |
13034 | See?" |
13034 | See?" |
13034 | She kissed her cousin twice, quotation marks of affection which enclosed the whisper,"Do you mind if I stay all night?" |
13034 | She waited until her cousin paused for breath and then,"Did Burdon Woodward ride home with you tonight?" |
13034 | Smoothly, I hope?" |
13034 | So it''s silly to say''What''s the use?'' |
13034 | So, do n''t you see? |
13034 | Strauss?" |
13034 | Suppose last night, instead of coming home, he had turned the car toward Boston or New York, what would you have done then?" |
13034 | Suppose the idea spreads and after a while there are millions of women doing work that used to be done by men-- what are the men going to do?" |
13034 | That''s why I''m here.... Can I have my old room?" |
13034 | The accountant looked at her with the same quizzical air as an astronomer might assume in looking at a child who had just said,"What? |
13034 | The millionaire and the mill- hand-- somehow they always manage to leave less than every one expected--""Why is that?" |
13034 | The old familiar office seemed to be waiting for her, the pictures regarding her as though they were saying"Where have you been, young lady? |
13034 | The sun ninety million miles away from the earth? |
13034 | Then how about Worth, and those other big men dressmakers? |
13034 | Then how about that butler up at Miss Spencer''s?'' |
13034 | Then how about the chefs at the big hotels?'' |
13034 | Then how about the steam laundries where nearly all the shirt ironers are men?'' |
13034 | Then who''s to do the work?" |
13034 | There is so much work that has to be done in the world every day; is n''t there?" |
13034 | They returned to the office and when they were seated again, Mary said,"What is it you wanted to say?" |
13034 | This merry letter, for instance, which Mary read and smiled over-- who was the"Jack"who had written it? |
13034 | To show you how her mind worked, one night she asked her father,"What makes a machine squeak?" |
13034 | To stop improvements now would be inviting ruin-- They had their hands on the top rung of the ladder now; why let go and fall to the bottom--? |
13034 | Unless for demonstrated incapacity, upon what grounds shall we now deny them equal opportunities? |
13034 | Wally Cabot?" |
13034 | Wally out of town?" |
13034 | Was her equality theoretical-- or real? |
13034 | Was young Josiah late the next morning? |
13034 | Were n''t you surprised yourself when your idea worked out so well?" |
13034 | What about the children? |
13034 | What are the men going to do if the women take their jobs?" |
13034 | What are you doing there in Mary''s bed? |
13034 | What do you suppose reminded me of it?" |
13034 | What do you understand by a man''s work?'' |
13034 | What have you been doing to him?" |
13034 | What would a girl know about mergers, combinations, fundamental patents, the differences between common and preferred stock, and all that? |
13034 | What would everybody think if those new buildings stayed empty--? |
13034 | What''s the use of having things if you ca n''t enjoy them?" |
13034 | Who is she, anyway?" |
13034 | Why are chaperons require''--even in the highest, most culture''society? |
13034 | Why is marriage require''? |
13034 | Will there be work enough for everybody?" |
13034 | Will you please follow me?" |
13034 | Will you promise me that?" |
13034 | Woodward?" |
13034 | Woodward?" |
13034 | Would n''t it be awful if-- if we were to be married-- and then got like that, too?" |
13034 | Would n''t you like to see it go on?" |
13034 | You do n''t think he''d do anything to hurt Spencer& Son; do you?" |
13034 | You''ll promise to be here when I come back?" |
13034 | you and Wally?" |
38029 | ''Spose dey ai n''t got de money fer ter pay right plank down, but kin pay de week atter? 38029 Ain''dat de very las''bit an''grain o''nonsense?" |
38029 | Ain''yo''de fust and fo''most up dere whar de school''s at? 38029 Am I not working in the interests of the owner of this building? |
38029 | An''what yo''_ ma_ gotter say''bout it if_ I_ sets out ter tak''care of an''old horse? 38029 An''you haint got dat''surance money and cyant git hit, Baby?" |
38029 | And is he coming right down? |
38029 | And what shall_ I_ be about while you are doing the pulling? 38029 And where are you minded to stroll on this charming afternoon when everybody else is glad to sit in a snug room and take a Saturday rest?" |
38029 | And who is Mammy, may I inquire? |
38029 | Are n''t we here to be done with after that showing? |
38029 | Are n''t you Mrs. Carruth''s little girl? |
38029 | Are they for sale? |
38029 | Are they yours? 38029 Are you Mrs. Bernard Carruth''s little daughter? |
38029 | Bress Gawd what yo''got dere, chile? 38029 Bress de Lawd, Honey, ain''I allers tol''ye''chickens got secon''sight? |
38029 | But I could n''t use a desk for a counter, could I? |
38029 | But Mammy, Mammy, she ca n''t; she must n''t; what will mother say? |
38029 | But how''bout dis hyer pol''cy? 38029 But suppose we are able to sell the old place?" |
38029 | But what did you wish to ask me, Mammy? |
38029 | But where was Mike, and what was he doing all that time to_ let_ you do such a thing? |
38029 | But who will_ pay_ for him? 38029 But you surely do n''t want_ all_ that?" |
38029 | But you''ll tell me before_ next_ Saturday, wo n''t you? 38029 But, mother, suppose no one will take old Baltie and give him a home?" |
38029 | But_ how_ did you get Baltie and, greater marvel,_ how_ did you bring him all this way home? |
38029 | Can we buy some? |
38029 | Carruth? 38029 Could n''t you have yo''name whar de Merry Christmas stan''at an''''candies''whar de bong bongs is?" |
38029 | Could you put them somewhere else and rent the stable to me, ma''am? 38029 Den yo''wo n''t trus''de Ca-- de fambly?" |
38029 | Did you? 38029 Do you happen to know which part of the South you come from?" |
38029 | Do you know what I believe I''ll do? |
38029 | Do you object to telling me just what you wish to do and why you need an office? |
38029 | Do you think it would hurt her to go, Eleanor? |
38029 | Do you want to quite spoil me? |
38029 | Do? 38029 Does Mammy think for the family?" |
38029 | Done wid_ what_? |
38029 | Fo''de Lawd sake wha''yo''chillen at_ now_? |
38029 | Got a blanket? 38029 Great, ai nt they, Professor?" |
38029 | Had_ you_ struck her? 38029 Has it got_ lots_ of money to do such things with?" |
38029 | Have you brought the necessary papers with you? 38029 Honey, what I tol''yo''? |
38029 | How about little white moire paper boxes with some pretty flower on the cover? |
38029 | How about those pretty Japanese boxes they have at Bailey''s? |
38029 | How are you this morning? 38029 How could it be an intrusion under the circumstances? |
38029 | How long may he stay there without being killed? 38029 How much am I bid for this garden set? |
38029 | How much are they? |
38029 | How much? |
38029 | How old a man is he, mother? 38029 How old should you think?" |
38029 | How_ could_ you? 38029 Huccum I cyan''t understand''em? |
38029 | Hum; Um: What''s I t''inkin''of? 38029 I do n''t believe you understood what I said, did you?" |
38029 | I guess after all it_ is n''t_ a good afternoon, is it? 38029 I say, what did this fellow do to you, little girl?" |
38029 | Is Miss Jinny the older sister who manufactures that delicious candy? |
38029 | Is mother willing? 38029 Is n''t he a_ dear_, mother, to take so much trouble for me? |
38029 | Is n''t he splendid, mother? |
38029 | Is that the place where they_ kill_ them? 38029 Is yo''here, Miss Jinny? |
38029 | Is yo''writ yo''letter ter him? 38029 It seems to have been interrupted already, does it not? |
38029 | Jean, what do you mean? |
38029 | Lend me some cash, Bob? |
38029 | Little girl, are you from the South? |
38029 | Mammy Blairsdale? |
38029 | Mammy, dear, Listen here, Is n''t this a lark? 38029 Mammy_ what_?" |
38029 | Merciful powers, what_ has_ the child done now? |
38029 | Miss Jinny, is dat de solemn prar- book truf? |
38029 | Must you tell her? |
38029 | Must you? 38029 Ned can, ca n''t he, Professor?" |
38029 | Night errand? 38029 No so''les? |
38029 | Not really? |
38029 | Not two yards of any one pattern? 38029 Now, Constance, what are you planning? |
38029 | Now, young lady, by- the- way, do you mind letting me know your name? 38029 O, but what_ will_ mother say? |
38029 | Oh, Baltie, dear, dear Baltie, how did you get out of your stable and come way off here? |
38029 | Oh, Mammy, did you_ sell_ some? |
38029 | Oh, am I? 38029 Oh, are you playing foot- ball? |
38029 | Oh, did you buy those pieces of matting? |
38029 | Oh, may I give him just_ one_ pat before we go? |
38029 | Oh,_ where_ are you going to take him, please? |
38029 | Oh,_ why did_ you get up to meet me? 38029 Perhaps we would,"agreed Eleanor,"but where will we go if we give up the home? |
38029 | Seriously, Constance, what have you thought of doing, dear? |
38029 | Shall I have the men lead him up to your barn? |
38029 | Somebody gwine tek away dat old horse dat yo''love, an''breck yo''heart? 38029 Strike her? |
38029 | Then why do n''t you add my part? |
38029 | Then you_ will_ let me go to East Riveredge with the candy? |
38029 | Wal, what_ would_ ye do to''em, heh? |
38029 | Wal,''spose he does; what then? 38029 Was there ever such a philosopher as Mammy?" |
38029 | Well, since it is a space we never thought to rent anyway, and could n''t use for anything else if we wished to, suppose we say five dollars a month? 38029 Well, you let me answer that question day after to- morrow, Mumsey? |
38029 | Well_ two_ of us have settled upon our plan of action, now what are_ you_ going to do, Connie? 38029 Wha'', wha'', wha'', yo say, suh?" |
38029 | Wha'', wha'', wha'', yo''say, Baby? |
38029 | Wha''de matter, honey? 38029 Wha''yo''call him? |
38029 | Wha''yo''doin''down hyer? 38029 Wha''yo''mean by a locum agen'', honey?" |
38029 | What are you hiding under your cape? |
38029 | What are you thinking of Mammy? |
38029 | What can I do for you, young lady? |
38029 | What can I do? 38029 What did she do with her apples? |
38029 | What do_ you_ suggest for my boxes, mother? |
38029 | What do_ you_ think of it, Mammy? |
38029 | What er? 38029 What is burning, I wonder?" |
38029 | What is it, Mammy? 38029 What is it, Mammy?" |
38029 | What is it? 38029 What is the use of asking that? |
38029 | What''ll I do to him? 38029 What''s de matter, honey? |
38029 | What_ is_ the use of being so ridiculously high and mighty? 38029 When are you going to begin this enterprise?" |
38029 | Where has he been all these years, mother, that we have never met him in Riveredge? |
38029 | Where in this world have_ you_ sprung from? 38029 Where is Mammy? |
38029 | Where_ do_ you get hold of those awful expressions, Jean? 38029 Who said I had any notion of leaving school? |
38029 | Who sesso? |
38029 | Who''n thunder air you? |
38029 | Whom? 38029 Why not have an auction then? |
38029 | Why not, I''d like to know? |
38029 | Why nothing to_ you_? 38029 Why what in this world would you do with it if you_ did_? |
38029 | Will you? 38029 Would it not be kinder to end such a hapless existence than to leave it to an uncertain fate, dear?" |
38029 | Wul, why do n''t ye go home then? |
38029 | Yas, Baltie hawse, what dat chile been doin''wid yo''? |
38029 | Yes? 38029 Yo''s a Blairsdale?" |
38029 | You got out of the field through that broken place in the fence up there did n''t you dear? 38029 _ Can_ you or may you? |
38029 | _ One dollar!_ Did I hear right? 38029 _ What_, Mammy consent to a Blairsdale going into trade?" |
38029 | _ You_ do n''t know what all the fuss is about, and why Mammy is waiting to give me Hail Columbia? |
38029 | ''Taint so very much worn, is it? |
38029 | ''Tis elergant, ai nt it? |
38029 | Ai n''t I free? |
38029 | Ai nt he mine? |
38029 | Ain''I perdic''dat yo''boun''ter hit de tack spang on de right en''? |
38029 | Ain''I seen him dese many years? |
38029 | Ain''I tole yo''I''se_ rich_? |
38029 | An''now yo''gwine open a boof an''''splay''em fer sale? |
38029 | An''sell hit, too? |
38029 | An''yo''ai nt got it?" |
38029 | An''yo''gwine pertec''him an''keer fer him in his discrepancy? |
38029 | And I really_ have_ got''most five dollars, and would_ that_ be enough for another week?" |
38029 | And now_ you_ want to quit school and go to work? |
38029 | And oh,_ how_ did the auction turn out, mother? |
38029 | And what is the matter? |
38029 | And you think of opening a_ stand_?" |
38029 | Are n''t we_ just right_, Mammy? |
38029 | Are you going to sell this set of furniture? |
38029 | Are you planning to sell candy? |
38029 | Are you the superintendent of the building?" |
38029 | Are you thinkin''of taking out a policy?" |
38029 | Are you_ all_ safe? |
38029 | Are your Pegasus Ponies as profitable?" |
38029 | Are your photos ready to paste on''em?" |
38029 | As he turned to go back a man who occupied a cigar stand near the door nodded and said with a laugh:"Got a new tenant, Mr. Porter? |
38029 | As they drew near the stairway, Miss Willing glanced up, gave an indifferent nod in answer to Constance''s"How do you do, Miss Willing?" |
38029 | Baltie?" |
38029 | Baltie?'' |
38029 | Bernard Carruth''s daughter? |
38029 | But I fear I shall intrude upon you?" |
38029 | But I wonder what it''ll bring? |
38029 | But I''se gotter settle up dis policy fer de fambly so what is it? |
38029 | But how? |
38029 | But is supper almost ready? |
38029 | But since you love horses so dearly, wo n''t you run and give Comet a lump of sugar? |
38029 | But this house must be an awful expense, ai n''t it? |
38029 | But what do you want?" |
38029 | But where are you going?" |
38029 | But yo''ai nt gwine stan''behin''de counter is yo''? |
38029 | But you have n''t asked me what I''m going to charge you for your booth?" |
38029 | By- the- way, apropos of horses, what_ has_ Mammy done to poor old Baltie? |
38029 | By- the- way, how did you get on at the school to- day? |
38029 | CHAPTER II"Baltie""When he''s forsaken Withered and shaken What can an old_ horse_ Do but die?" |
38029 | CHAPTER IV Baltie is Rescued"How old are you, little lassie?" |
38029 | CHAPTER V A New Member of the Family"Has you- all done''cided to do wid out yo''suppers dis yer night? |
38029 | CHAPTER XI First Ventures"Did you get all the things, Mammy?" |
38029 | Can I trust you?" |
38029 | Can you tear yourself away from your messes long enough to come up to the attic with me? |
38029 | Carruth?" |
38029 | Come now, out with it--_didn''t_ he?" |
38029 | Connie?" |
38029 | Could''n''de collapse be hild up twell den?" |
38029 | Crowding about the phaeton they asked:"Who makes the candy? |
38029 | De house gwine burn down on top our haids?" |
38029 | Dear, dear, how times have changed, have n''t they? |
38029 | Did n''t Jabe Raulsbury say dat anybody what would tek keer of him could_ have_ him? |
38029 | Did she strike in self- defense?" |
38029 | Did you find him?" |
38029 | Did you get out that mirror that belonged to your great- grandmother?" |
38029 | Did you have time to go and see the prospective ones this afternoon? |
38029 | Did you make''em? |
38029 | Did_ you_ make them? |
38029 | Did_ you_ make''em?" |
38029 | Do n''t I b''long ter de fambly? |
38029 | Do n''t you have to pay board for horses just like people pay their board?" |
38029 | Do n''t you think I ought really to pay more? |
38029 | Do n''t you think that would be a good plan?" |
38029 | Do you always sell it? |
38029 | Do you know him?" |
38029 | Do you mean to tell me''taint all alike?" |
38029 | Do you think I''ll_ ever_ sell it?" |
38029 | Do you think I''m going to miss any of the treat? |
38029 | Do you understand?" |
38029 | Do? |
38029 | Does she make it herself? |
38029 | Does yer want ter kitch yo''deaf cold?" |
38029 | Don''seem right fer a comp''ny ter put sich a boy as yo''is in sich a''sponsible''sition, do it now?" |
38029 | Excitement sharpens one''s appetite does n''t it? |
38029 | Fine day, is n''t it?" |
38029 | Flingin''my earnin''s''way? |
38029 | For a few moments no one had a suggestion to offer, then Constance cried:"Mother could n''t we_ sell_ a good many of the things? |
38029 | For de Lawd''s sake wha''dat chile been at now, an''we all cl''ar''stracted''bout her? |
38029 | Forty hours fer de mile?" |
38029 | Gawd bress my soul what we- all comin''to when a Blairsdale teken ter drive a nomnibus fer a livin''? |
38029 | Get out''en de fambly? |
38029 | Go wo''k fer some o''dese hyer strange folks what ai nt keer a cent fo''me, an''ai nt know who I_ is_? |
38029 | Goin''to let us have another pretty girl to talk to?" |
38029 | Guess one of us better go along with her had n''t we, Ned?" |
38029 | Has she to you? |
38029 | Have we a record in this office?" |
38029 | Have you saved your ma''s clothes? |
38029 | Have you taken leave of your senses, child?" |
38029 | Have you thought about that?" |
38029 | He was at the gate when I drove up, and what do you think he did? |
38029 | He_ would''nt_ have had to say''Whom? |
38029 | How about_ you_?" |
38029 | How am I ever going to pay for it though? |
38029 | How are you flourishing, Nornie? |
38029 | How came she to do such a thing?" |
38029 | How came you there?" |
38029 | How could Jabe Raulsbury have been so utterly heartless?" |
38029 | How did you happen to hear us?" |
38029 | How far have you come? |
38029 | How is_ that_ for a frolic? |
38029 | How much did I sell last Saturday and how much to- day?" |
38029 | How much does Hadyn Stuyvesant ask you for it anyway? |
38029 | How much is I gotter pay yo''?" |
38029 | How much were the packages of candy? |
38029 | How old are you now?" |
38029 | How would you like to share your quarters with this enterprising young lady? |
38029 | How''s_ that_ for a little thoroughbred?" |
38029 | How- de- do, Auntie? |
38029 | How_ could_ I?" |
38029 | Huccum dat old horse here?" |
38029 | I call that pretty good for a ten- year- old business woman, do n''t you, Mumsey, dear?" |
38029 | I know my candy is good,''cause if it was n''t Mammy could not sell it so easily, and--""Candy? |
38029 | I''m half- starved? |
38029 | I''ve been to East Riveredge with the candy--""_ What_ candy, Jean? |
38029 | I_ know_ she will,"wailed Constance, as a man ran across the hall calling:"Miss Carruth, Miss Constance, where are you? |
38029 | If any one had been found to take him he_ would n''t_ have been there yet, would he? |
38029 | If you''re to be a coach- woman you''ve got to have some sort of an equine creature to hustle along, have n''t you? |
38029 | Is dat so? |
38029 | Is dat so?" |
38029 | Is he coming to get him? |
38029 | Is n''t she a marvel? |
38029 | Is n''t that right and fair, Mammy?" |
38029 | Is n''t that right, Mammy? |
38029 | Is she know yo'', suh?" |
38029 | Is this his horse? |
38029 | Is this your horse?" |
38029 | Is yo''busy? |
38029 | Is yo''see her?" |
38029 | Is your mother here?" |
38029 | Is_ he_ de agen''?" |
38029 | Is_ that_ why she struck you?" |
38029 | It is a pretty wet, horrid one, and not a very nice one to be out in, is it?" |
38029 | It is always easier to talk business when seated, do n''t you think so?" |
38029 | It will make you happier to know he will be comfortable for a little while any way, wo n''t it?" |
38029 | It''s old Baltie; do n''t you know him? |
38029 | It_ does_ seem a shame to sell''em, do n''t it now? |
38029 | Jean told it from beginning to end, and ended by demanding:"Do n''t you really, truly, know anything about the candy Constance is making to sell?" |
38029 | Jis''tell me dat?" |
38029 | Just going? |
38029 | Madam Carruth, as she was often called, shook her niece''s hand, looked at her keenly for a moment and then said:"My stars, Jenny, what ails you? |
38029 | Mek a Blairsdale''ceited?" |
38029 | Miss Nornie would n''t never in de roun''worl''do_ dat_, would she, honey? |
38029 | Mr. Porter laughed in spite of himself, then sobering down again asked:"Have you time to come back to my office? |
38029 | Mrs. Carruth rested her cheek upon it as she replied:"What should I do without my girls? |
38029 | Mrs. Carruth turned toward her and asked with a quizzical smile;"What is spoiling, Mammy?" |
38029 | My goodness, is n''t that a lot? |
38029 | My niece has always been considered a most amiable woman, has n''t she? |
38029 | My, does n''t that sound business- like? |
38029 | Nornie, do n''t you wish_ you''d_ taken to a commercial rather than a professional life? |
38029 | Not Bernard Carruth''s daughter?" |
38029 | Now can I go out?" |
38029 | Now comes the fire insurance settlement and the interest on that wo n''t be over seven hundred at the outside, will it?" |
38029 | Now do you? |
38029 | Now whar in de name o''man_ is_ yo''been ter?" |
38029 | Now what am I offered for this roll of fine Japanese matting? |
38029 | Now what is the first step?" |
38029 | Now, she ca n''t possibly_ feed_, let alone clothe, us for less than twenty dollars a week, can she? |
38029 | Now, suh, who is_ yo''_?" |
38029 | Now_ what_ did you say Haydn Stuyvesant charged you for this house?" |
38029 | O_ where_ is Mammy?" |
38029 | Of this he speedily became aware, and looking at her keenly he asked:"Have you ever eaten any of the old Auntie''s candy? |
38029 | Oh, how long have you been here? |
38029 | Oh, what shall I do for you? |
38029 | One dollar for at least fifteen yards of perfectly new Japanese matting? |
38029 | Placing her arms upon her hips, and raising her head like a war- horse scenting battle, Mammy stamped her foot and cried:"Step down an''out? |
38029 | Porter?" |
38029 | Punch his head?" |
38029 | Say, Professor, do you really know her folks? |
38029 | Say, do n''t you think them Carruths were just a little mite extravagant? |
38029 | Say, where did yer git him?" |
38029 | See her?" |
38029 | She jist a projectin'', ai n''t she?" |
38029 | She was about to turn away when Jean made her way through the crowd to her side crying:"Did you really get them, Miss Pike? |
38029 | She was very white and asked almost breathlessly,"Girls, girls, is anyone hurt? |
38029 | Should it be rebuilt with the money to be paid by the insurance company, or should it be sold? |
38029 | Smack her kase she done plague yo'', or praise her kase she doin''her bes''fer ter mek t''ings go a little mite easier fer her ma?" |
38029 | So dey ai n''t gwine_ trus''_ you, Baby? |
38029 | So yo''want me fer ter state mine an''cl''ar long out, does yo''Mr.''Lijah? |
38029 | Sometimes we would rather sacrifice our time than our temper, do n''t you think so?" |
38029 | Sort o''fits yo''pine blank, don''it now? |
38029 | Stuyvesant?" |
38029 | Stuyvesant?" |
38029 | Successful business women and a firm of which you are proud to be a member? |
38029 | Surely you wo n''t leave Riveredge? |
38029 | That is the set mother felt so bad about selling, is n''t it, Connie?" |
38029 | That leaves fourteen hundred wherewith to feed and clothe five people, does n''t it? |
38029 | That one with the bronze bird on it, see?" |
38029 | The former slight might have been disregarded; the latter? |
38029 | The lad laughed and raising his hand stroked the warm neck as he said:"Found a friend at last, old boy? |
38029 | The superintendent noticing her hesitancy said kindly:"Wo n''t you be seated? |
38029 | Then she asked:"Am I to refrain from making inquiries?" |
38029 | Two? |
38029 | Want to see them? |
38029 | Was yo''ma a studyin''''bout yo''doin''s when she done giv''yo''dat name? |
38029 | We only want to make you realize how precious you are, do n''t you understand?" |
38029 | We''re here to be done_ with_, are n''t_ we_, Nornie?" |
38029 | Well it''s this: Your stable, ma''am, up at the old place, are you usin''it at all?" |
38029 | Well? |
38029 | Well_ Miss_ Jean, are you from the South?" |
38029 | Were the tables about to turn upon her? |
38029 | Wha''s plaguin''you dis mawnin''?" |
38029 | Wha''sort o''compiny is it dat would n''t trus''a_ Blairsdale_, I like ter know?" |
38029 | Wha- fo you gotter do wid such folks, Baby?" |
38029 | Whar dat chile been? |
38029 | Whar yo''bin at? |
38029 | What I done druv dar fer? |
38029 | What I gotter do fer ter keep it f''om collapsin''ef it ai nt paid by day atter to- morrer?" |
38029 | What I gwine do widout yo''all? |
38029 | What I gwine_ do_ wid yo''? |
38029 | What I kerrin''fer dem? |
38029 | What Massa Bernard done tackle in his business dat I cyan''t ef_ yo''_ kin? |
38029 | What all have you got here anyhow?" |
38029 | What am I bid, ladies and gentlemen?" |
38029 | What are you going to do with them?" |
38029 | What brought you out this way if you were going to South Riveredge?" |
38029 | What can I do for you? |
38029 | What could ye expect when he was more''n seventeen years old?" |
38029 | What did I tell you? |
38029 | What do you think of it?" |
38029 | What do you think of_ that_ for my initial venture?" |
38029 | What do you want? |
38029 | What done happen ter yo''?" |
38029 | What er you telling me?" |
38029 | What er? |
38029 | What fur ole Miss sendin''yo''dar fer den? |
38029 | What good is he to anybody? |
38029 | What is it?" |
38029 | What is it?" |
38029 | What is your plan?" |
38029 | What is_ that_ horrid looking thing over there?" |
38029 | What more could I do?" |
38029 | What news of the ponies? |
38029 | What shall I? |
38029 | What sort o''fool talk is_ dat_, Baby? |
38029 | What under the sun are you doing? |
38029 | What will you wear?" |
38029 | What would a come of we- all if I had n''t paid dat bill den an''dar? |
38029 | What yo''t''ink I''se been doin''all dese years o''freedom? |
38029 | What_ am_ I to do with you? |
38029 | What_ are_ you talking about? |
38029 | What_ should_ she do? |
38029 | What_ would_ we do without you?" |
38029 | What_ would_ your father say?" |
38029 | What_ yo''_ know''bout it, sar? |
38029 | When can we get some more? |
38029 | When did unconscious flattery prove sweeter? |
38029 | When he had finished she looked at him sharply and said:"You know what dat chile''oughter be named? |
38029 | When we were talking about selling these things she almost cried when she spoke about the garden tools and the lamp----""_ What_ lamp, child? |
38029 | When will you stock up?" |
38029 | When yo''gwine begin makin''all dat mess o''candy?" |
38029 | Where dey live at who has de sesso''bout it all?" |
38029 | Where is your sister Constance? |
38029 | Where''s Mammy?" |
38029 | Wherein lies the difference, may I inquire?" |
38029 | Which kettles and pans can you spare for my very own? |
38029 | Who did? |
38029 | Who gwine do dat when Mammy stan''by? |
38029 | Who gwine ter say I cyant wo''k? |
38029 | Who has paid this sum and where was it paid?" |
38029 | Who is the juvenile vender?" |
38029 | Who will do better''n that? |
38029 | Who would have believed it?" |
38029 | Who_ is_ he?" |
38029 | Who_ is_ she any how?" |
38029 | Whoever heard of''cats and dogs''pouring down? |
38029 | Will your horse stand?" |
38029 | Would ye now, really? |
38029 | Would you mind if I told you about it?" |
38029 | Yo''heah_ me_? |
38029 | Yo''heah_ me_?" |
38029 | Yo''look lak yo''could he''p, do n''t yo''? |
38029 | Yo''s gwine enter a pa''tner- ship, yo''know_ dat_, Baltie- hawse? |
38029 | You could n''t see where you were going, could you? |
38029 | You do n''t mean to tell me you are going to sell_ out_? |
38029 | You have n''t, have you? |
38029 | You heah_ me_?" |
38029 | You hear dat? |
38029 | You hear me? |
38029 | You wo n''t feel anxious if I am not back before dark will you?" |
38029 | You''ve been working, little girl, have n''t you?" |
38029 | _ Dat_ don''need no argufyin''do it? |
38029 | _ Den_ what yo''gwine''do wid her? |
38029 | _ Do_ you pay as much as fifty a month for it? |
38029 | _ Me?_ a Blairsdale! |
38029 | _ Must_ Baltie be killed?" |
38029 | _ Where_ is that dear, dear woman?" |
38029 | _ Where_, where are those dear girls that I may deliver this priceless treasure into their hands?" |
38029 | ai n''t he stanin''dere a livin''tes''imony of what a bran- smash an''elbow- grease kin do? |
38029 | persisted Jean,"will he_ have_ to be shot then?" |
38029 | where are you?" |
39515 | About Household Crockery-- is it to be a promotion, or do you still think of getting someone in? 39515 Abuse you? |
39515 | Acting? 39515 Am I late?" |
39515 | Am I? |
39515 | And do you, madam, endorse the verdict? |
39515 | And have n''t I taken trouble in teaching you your duties? 39515 And have n''t I the right to state my opinion-- and to act on it, too? |
39515 | And sharp''s the word.... What are you waiting for? |
39515 | And should I never see you again? |
39515 | And the dressing- room? |
39515 | And this?... 39515 And why not?" |
39515 | And why not? |
39515 | And you wish us to be decently buried? |
39515 | And your partner, sir? 39515 Another woman, Yates? |
39515 | Any dinner for a hungry wayfarer? |
39515 | Any dinner to- day for a poor relation?... 39515 Anything out of the way?" |
39515 | Are the ladies in? |
39515 | Are there? |
39515 | Are they really so ill- favoured? |
39515 | Are you going to drive me mad among you-- make me commit suicide? 39515 Are you going to strike me?" |
39515 | Are you quite sure that he is our Fentiman? |
39515 | Are you sure? |
39515 | Are you trying to pull my leg? 39515 As a question to begin with-- what about your prospects, in whatever career you have planned?" |
39515 | Beastly unlucky, is n''t it? |
39515 | Besides, where did Enid come in? 39515 But I am truly forgiven?" |
39515 | But I suppose you did it all under her direction? |
39515 | But how? |
39515 | But is it kind to me? 39515 But is_ he_ all right with the girls? |
39515 | But may I make one request-- that when I am unfortunate enough to deserve reproof, it may be administered privately and not in public? |
39515 | But what do they call it when the weather plays tricks at this time of year? 39515 But what has happened? |
39515 | But what makes you believe all this? |
39515 | But where the dickens did you slip away to? 39515 But whichever it is-- boy or girl-- you''ll love it just the same, wo n''t you, Yates?" |
39515 | But would I ask you if I was n''t certain-- as certain as I can be of anything in the world-- that you could never be happy with him? 39515 But you are assured that he can supply you with ample means during his lifetime?" |
39515 | But you are expecting property at your father''s death? 39515 But you_ will_ go, Jane? |
39515 | But, Mr. Marsden, how can I for one moment of time credit you with-- with the love you will go on talking about? |
39515 | But, Mr. Prentice,and Mrs. Marsden smiled;"if a small camp does a little good, why should n''t a large camp do a lot of good?" |
39515 | But, Richard, supposing that we were to sell the business, what would happen to you? |
39515 | But, my darling, why do you cry? 39515 But,"said Marsden,"does n''t Mr. Bence sign it?" |
39515 | But_ how_? |
39515 | By the way,he said, looking round;"shall we let them escort Mrs. Marsden home?" |
39515 | Ca n''t I? 39515 Ca n''t you guess?" |
39515 | Ca n''t you play anything gayer? 39515 Ca n''t you see now the force of what I have told you so often? |
39515 | Cousin Jenny, how goes it? |
39515 | Dick, have you spent it-- have you spent what belonged to me? |
39515 | Did n''t we, mother? 39515 Did this come out of the shop?" |
39515 | Did you ever see such wretched little starveling girls as he puts into the bazaar at Christmas? |
39515 | Did you happen,she asked him,"to read the report of the general meeting of the railway company?" |
39515 | Did you indeed, ma''am? |
39515 | Did you mean what you told me by the river? |
39515 | Did you see him? |
39515 | Did you? |
39515 | Do I?... 39515 Do n''t you admit as much as that, Mr. Kenion? |
39515 | Do n''t you think it''s rather impertinent? |
39515 | Do you mean it still? |
39515 | Do you mean that you want to desert me altogether? |
39515 | Do you mean they are_ silly_ about him? |
39515 | Do you mean, worth money? 39515 Do you remember what I told you eighteen months ago?" |
39515 | Do you say_ done_ to that? |
39515 | Do you think Mr. Charles-- or his family-- would be kind enough to use influence? |
39515 | Do you want me to send the things back into the department? |
39515 | Do you want me to tell them now-- at once? |
39515 | Do you wish me to be present at the interview? |
39515 | Do you? |
39515 | Do you? |
39515 | Does not Mr. Bulford go out hunting? |
39515 | Does that mean that you are thinking of leaving us? |
39515 | Eh-- what? |
39515 | Eh-- what? |
39515 | Emily-- Susan,said Mrs. Marsden quietly,"what_ is_ all this noise and fuss about?" |
39515 | Enid, are you purposely, wilfully unkind to me?... 39515 Enid, have I made a horrible fright of myself?" |
39515 | Enid, may I come in? |
39515 | Enid, my darling, are you there?... 39515 Has n''t he told you about it?" |
39515 | Have I put myself forward? 39515 Have n''t I_ shown_ it to you?" |
39515 | Have you given your heart to some married woman? 39515 Have you heard?" |
39515 | Have you missed me? 39515 Have you thought what_ I_ am to do? |
39515 | How can I have it all-- when you know what I gave to Enid? |
39515 | How can I judge of a horse without trying him? |
39515 | How can he?... 39515 How can you ask? |
39515 | How can you say that, mother? |
39515 | How could I-- even if I were willing? |
39515 | How dare you call me a cheat? |
39515 | How did that apply? |
39515 | How much was it? |
39515 | How was that? |
39515 | Hullo, Jane, what do you think you are doing? |
39515 | I am very sorry-- but I share the unhappiness, do n''t I? 39515 I call him Pontius because he is my_ pilot_.... Do n''t you see? |
39515 | I do n''t think that, under the peculiar conditions of the case, anything could have been more satisfactory-- do you? |
39515 | I fear that you would have preferred the car, Enid? |
39515 | I may trust you not to have dabbed in something artful that I''d never heard of? |
39515 | I say, suppose I had believed you-- and yielded one day, do n''t you know very well that all the world would laugh at me? |
39515 | I suppose he_ is_ a crock-- or he would n''t be here? |
39515 | I told you so all along.... What did I say from the beginning?... 39515 If I convinced you that it was literally true, would it make any difference to you?" |
39515 | If I sit down and talk to you quietly, will you promise that you wo n''t begin again? |
39515 | If I were to tell you that I had n''t another penny in the world? |
39515 | If it is n''t convenient to me to square up at the moment, why ca n''t you wait? 39515 If so,"said the cook, with concentrated sourness,"why not let her go to the police, as she wishes?" |
39515 | If that were to happen, the question would arise, Will it prove an injury or a benefit to the town? |
39515 | Indeed? |
39515 | Is Miss Jane with her? |
39515 | Is Mr. Mears in his room? |
39515 | Is he a hunting man? 39515 Is he? |
39515 | Is he? |
39515 | Is it the news that we had reason to expect? |
39515 | Is it twelve.... Can you hear Holy Trinity clock from here, Prentice? 39515 Is it? |
39515 | Is it?... 39515 Is n''t that just a little cruel?" |
39515 | Is n''t this my right place, Dick-- kneeling on the ground at your feet? |
39515 | Is that a fact? |
39515 | Is that ledge hard, Miss Vincent? 39515 Is that right?" |
39515 | Is that so? |
39515 | Is that true-- bar larks? |
39515 | Is that you, mummy? |
39515 | Is that your answer? |
39515 | It is your wish? |
39515 | It''s exactly the same as the draft that I passed? |
39515 | Jane, what''s the use of asking me that? 39515 Janey? |
39515 | Joke? |
39515 | May I advert to a practice that has fallen into disuse, and drink a glass of wine with you?... 39515 May I ask if you think I am not earning my salary, sir?" |
39515 | May I be of assistance, sir? 39515 May I go with you?" |
39515 | May n''t I go up?... 39515 Meaning your various extensions?" |
39515 | Miss Thompson? |
39515 | Miss Woolfrey, do you feel yourself competent to fill it? 39515 Mother dear, ca n''t you help me?" |
39515 | Mother dear, how can I thank you enough? |
39515 | Mother dear, is anything wrong? 39515 Mother dear, is n''t it wonderful? |
39515 | Mother dear, is n''t this dreadful? |
39515 | Mother dear, is that you? |
39515 | Mother dear, may I come in? 39515 Mother, what''s the matter?" |
39515 | Mother? 39515 Moving now, are n''t we? |
39515 | Mr. Marsden, have you gone out of your senses? |
39515 | Mr. Marsden, where are you? 39515 Mr. Marsden-- have you any suggestions to make?" |
39515 | Mr. Mears, what are we to do about Mr. Greig? 39515 My darling, how can I? |
39515 | My own boy,she murmured,"why should n''t I kneel? |
39515 | No hurry, is there? |
39515 | No, sir, not ordinary visitors-- but Mrs. Thompson never counted you as an ordinary visitor-- did she, sir? 39515 No,"said Marsden shortly,"I do n''t want anything more-- What''s your name?" |
39515 | Nor in your private life? |
39515 | Not real ladies? |
39515 | Not the smallest soreness left? 39515 Nothing wrong, I hope?" |
39515 | Now is not this much nicer-- the air, the quiet enjoyment, the gentle motion-- than if we were being whirled past everything in a motor- car? |
39515 | Now that they''ve given you a dear little granddaughter, you_ will_ do something for them, wo n''t you? |
39515 | Now then-- where do you want my autograph? |
39515 | Now, about this money? |
39515 | Now, sir, will you behave yourself, and let us finish our conversation quietly and decently? |
39515 | Of course, old girl, if you can see your way to making the amount for a little_ more_? |
39515 | Oh, Harriet, here you are.... Where the dickens have you hidden the wine? 39515 Oh, Janey-- how can you?" |
39515 | Oh, but is n''t it too early for tea? |
39515 | Oh, how can he? 39515 Oh, how can you pretend that?" |
39515 | Oh, is it? |
39515 | Oh, that''s easy to say, is n''t it? |
39515 | Oh, that''s the conveyance for the sale, eh? 39515 Oh, why is he away? |
39515 | Oh, yes, you''re glib enough-- but if you''ve got it, why do n''t you bring it out? |
39515 | Oh, you mean that you are giving him a present of fifteen hundred pounds? |
39515 | On your honour as a man, is that true? |
39515 | One of the good old school, is n''t he? 39515 Or beneath yours, Dick?" |
39515 | Or do you think, sir, if you hunted the country, you''d find a man who''d give the same service for the same money? |
39515 | Or have you come back to ask for the money again? |
39515 | Out with it-- d''you hear? |
39515 | Over my head, ma''am? |
39515 | Really and truly, you wo n''t mind? |
39515 | Really? 39515 Resign? |
39515 | Shall I drive on, ma''am? |
39515 | Shall I make you a glass of hot grog to drink in bed? |
39515 | So that''s what you did, Jane, eh? 39515 Suppose you always have to go on paying him half of all you can make by your industry? |
39515 | Surely,said Mrs. Thompson,"you could see that a girl of your age can not do such things without malicious people saying unkind things?" |
39515 | Thank you for nothing.... Where''s the cook? 39515 That will be very convenient-- for both of us, wo n''t it? |
39515 | That you, Rooney? 39515 That''s more than enough business for Thursday afternoon, is n''t it, Enid?" |
39515 | Then ca n''t you make this one sacrifice for me? |
39515 | Then do you think there would be any objection-- would you consider it might seem bad taste if henceforth I were to resume my old name? 39515 Then how do you get along? |
39515 | Then how_ can_ respectable people like the Salters entertain him? |
39515 | Then what''s it worth? 39515 Then when may I have my share?" |
39515 | Then why are you discontented in this one? |
39515 | Then you, Mr. Collins-- understand it''s all mighty fine, but it wo n''t wash."Wo n''t it? |
39515 | Then, will you let me have it? |
39515 | Those things are not at all bad-- but they are n''t genuine, I suppose? |
39515 | To better yourself? |
39515 | Twenty thousand? 39515 Was n''t that enough for you?" |
39515 | We hope to make rather a big thing of our clearance sale.... How long shall we keep it going? 39515 We''ve got on well together, have n''t we, Yates?" |
39515 | We''ve heard such yarns for ten years, have n''t we? |
39515 | Well, Janey, what do you think of my new coat? 39515 Well, Mears, what''s the best news with you?... |
39515 | Well, Mr. Mears, what do you think about it? |
39515 | Well, old girl, I''m leaving you to your own resources again-- but, you understand, do n''t you? 39515 Well, what about it?" |
39515 | Well,asked Marsden,"why do n''t we begin?" |
39515 | Well,said Collins mockingly,"what are you going to do-- keep your bargain, or go to law with us?" |
39515 | Well? |
39515 | Well? |
39515 | What are we waiting for? |
39515 | What are you doing with your private income? |
39515 | What are you doing? 39515 What are you up to now?" |
39515 | What can I have the pleasure of showing you, sir? |
39515 | What can we show madam? |
39515 | What department, sir? |
39515 | What did he say about it? |
39515 | What did she say? |
39515 | What did they bring? |
39515 | What did you expect-- that I should welcome your proposal and thank you for it? |
39515 | What did you tell me, Dick? |
39515 | What did you think of wearing this afternoon? |
39515 | What do you mean by that, Jane? 39515 What do you mean by that? |
39515 | What do you mean? |
39515 | What do you mean? |
39515 | What do you propose for Christmas? |
39515 | What do you say? |
39515 | What do you think of our young lady? |
39515 | What do you want here-- you prying old hag? 39515 What do you want here? |
39515 | What drove you to that, ma''am? |
39515 | What have you ever given me in exchange for all I gave you-- except shame and sorrow? |
39515 | What is it you are playing? |
39515 | What is it you hoped for? |
39515 | What is it you wish to know? |
39515 | What is it, Richard? |
39515 | What is it, Yates? |
39515 | What is it? 39515 What is it?" |
39515 | What is it? |
39515 | What is it? |
39515 | What is it? |
39515 | What is the dispute? |
39515 | What is the time? |
39515 | What must be stopped? |
39515 | What next? 39515 What nonsense have you been stuffing her up with? |
39515 | What on earth is this? |
39515 | What the dickens has it got to do with you? |
39515 | What the dickens is the matter with you, Jane? |
39515 | What was I talking about? |
39515 | What was it? |
39515 | What''s all this gas about? |
39515 | What''s that? |
39515 | What''s the good of talking about it? |
39515 | What''s the good of waiting, when you have made up your mind? |
39515 | What''s your condition? |
39515 | What, are n''t we done? |
39515 | What? 39515 What? |
39515 | What? |
39515 | What? |
39515 | When did you think of going to her? |
39515 | Where did you get it? |
39515 | Where did you pick_ her_ up? |
39515 | Where is Enid? |
39515 | Where is her home? |
39515 | Where''s father and mother? |
39515 | Where''s the trick? |
39515 | Where_ is_ her father? |
39515 | Which department, madam? 39515 Which do you hope for, yourself, ma''am?" |
39515 | Who are these gentlemen? 39515 Who cares what a woman says?" |
39515 | Who did you say it was? |
39515 | Who is it? |
39515 | Who is that lady, Enid? |
39515 | Who says I have spent it? |
39515 | Who the devil are you talking about? |
39515 | Who the devil''s that? |
39515 | Who went? 39515 Who,"asked Marsden,"was that spindle- shanked ass?" |
39515 | Who? |
39515 | Why are you laughing like that? |
39515 | Why do n''t you do it? 39515 Why do you call my son Pontius?" |
39515 | Why do you look so glum? |
39515 | Why have n''t I seen him? 39515 Why indeed? |
39515 | Why is n''t it your duty now? |
39515 | Why not let me hear them now? 39515 Why not? |
39515 | Why not? 39515 Why should I tell you? |
39515 | Why should he do that? 39515 Why should they do that?" |
39515 | Why,inquired Mrs. Thompson,"did n''t you ask someone to help you?" |
39515 | Why? 39515 Why?" |
39515 | Why? |
39515 | Will you be quiet, Pontius? |
39515 | Will you go through them, sir? |
39515 | Will you kindly check them with me, Prentice? |
39515 | Will you moderate your language? |
39515 | Will you see him? |
39515 | Will you shut up, and stop nagging? |
39515 | Would you mind-- would he mind if I went in and looked round? |
39515 | Would you still take half my share from me? |
39515 | Yes, but you''ll do a little_ more_ now, wo n''t you? |
39515 | Yes, but, Dick, you wo n''t begin launching out without consulting me-- allowing some weight to my opinion? |
39515 | Yes, has n''t it? |
39515 | Yes, in a minute.... You''ll dismiss me to- morrow, wo n''t you? 39515 Yes, yes-- and tell me, my dear fellow, what were her terms?" |
39515 | Yes,said Mr. Prentice contemptuously,"but who''s Bence, when all''s said and done?" |
39515 | You do n''t often come this way? |
39515 | You do n''t say so? |
39515 | You do? 39515 You give me your word of honour that you won''t-- won''t touch me?" |
39515 | You say he has made all arrangements for his voyage? |
39515 | You silly girl,he said cringingly,"what rubbish have you got into your head? |
39515 | You think he will wish to cast her off? |
39515 | You were angry with me? |
39515 | You wo n''t consent to it? |
39515 | You''ll tell him now, wo n''t you, ma''am? |
39515 | You''ve discontinued them altogether-- haven''t you? |
39515 | Young Marsden? 39515 Your heart? |
39515 | ''And how am I to get the money?'' |
39515 | ''See? |
39515 | Ai n''t I smart enough? |
39515 | Am I not to call on my cousin?" |
39515 | Am I not your mother? |
39515 | And as it is to be just a friendly unceremonious gathering, do you mind wearing morning dress?" |
39515 | And how damn slow they are, are n''t they?" |
39515 | And how''s Mallingbridge? |
39515 | And the sofa?" |
39515 | And the windows when done-- who could resist them? |
39515 | And then? |
39515 | And those chairs?... |
39515 | And what about_ my_ life?" |
39515 | And what the devil did I know of the business before I came into it? |
39515 | And who''s to blame? |
39515 | And why not? |
39515 | And why should he go on working? |
39515 | Another time he said,"Jane, do you twig why I am wearing my topper? |
39515 | Are you a man of property-- landed estates, and so on?" |
39515 | Are you asking me to pay you?" |
39515 | Are you giving it to Enid?... |
39515 | Are you ill?" |
39515 | Attend to me.... Ah- ha,--you''re beginning to look rather foolish.... Now, how much law do you want?" |
39515 | B?... |
39515 | Bence?" |
39515 | But I shall always go on loving you.... Oh, my goodness, what is my life to be without you?" |
39515 | But as the pen is close to your hand, Mr. Marsden-- will you, sir, open the ball?" |
39515 | But come in again when I ring-- and stay with me for a few minutes, will you, Yates?" |
39515 | But did it? |
39515 | But do you honestly feel you could stand alone?" |
39515 | But if you feel up to it?" |
39515 | But lor'', how can_ I_ hurt you? |
39515 | But now I wonder-- would you mind telling me when it was that you first thought of the Bence coup?" |
39515 | But on whom would he drop? |
39515 | But tell me, candidly, supposing you met me now as a stranger-- how old would you guess I was?" |
39515 | But the gas- works spoil the picture, do n''t they?" |
39515 | But was that all you had to say to me?" |
39515 | But was the thing true? |
39515 | But what about bad times? |
39515 | But what promises would he not make? |
39515 | But what was I saying? |
39515 | But what was I saying? |
39515 | But what''s the use of going on? |
39515 | But where''s Harriet disappeared to?" |
39515 | But who''s the other gentleman?" |
39515 | But why am I lighting out so determined and sudden, instead of vegetating here half me life? |
39515 | But wo n''t you lie down again? |
39515 | But you have n''t made up your mind yet, have you?" |
39515 | But you must know what I feel about it.... Is it any good going over the ground again?" |
39515 | But you never got it really?" |
39515 | But you referred them to me?" |
39515 | Ca n''t you and the missus do an advance-- something on account-- however small-- to keep me going?" |
39515 | Can I forget that-- even if you forget it?" |
39515 | Charles? |
39515 | Charles?" |
39515 | Collins tapped his nose jocosely, and smiled at Mr. Prentice-- seeming to say without words,"What do you think of that, old boy? |
39515 | Concentrate your mind-- all your mind on it.... Do n''t you understand, do n''t you see that this is everything and the sale is nothing?" |
39515 | Could it be possible? |
39515 | Could n''t someone get her a cushion? |
39515 | Could one get a decent perambulator in Mallingbridge, or would one have to go fagging up to London? |
39515 | Cut down the staff? |
39515 | D''you hear? |
39515 | D''you want that mare over- reaching herself?" |
39515 | Did he think Mallingbridge would consent to pay for such high- class education? |
39515 | Did n''t I tell you? |
39515 | Did people hire perambulators, or buy them right out? |
39515 | Did she know how they spoke of her-- these few who remembered? |
39515 | Did they mind? |
39515 | Did you see a pretty girl on all your travels, Mrs. Thompson-- except the one you took with you?" |
39515 | Did you, madam, observe signs of economic prosperity among the people?" |
39515 | Do I ever deny your rights?" |
39515 | Do n''t any of you know that Madam is the proper form of address when you''re speaking to your employer''s wife?" |
39515 | Do n''t you see? |
39515 | Do n''t you want some supper?" |
39515 | Do you dare to say that word again? |
39515 | Do you mean Charles?" |
39515 | Do you really mean it?" |
39515 | Do you ride to the meets with him?" |
39515 | Do you see much of them out there?" |
39515 | Do you think that, as your entire capital, it would be enough for you?" |
39515 | Do you want to ruin me?''" |
39515 | Do you wish a blouse of the prevailing tint? |
39515 | Do you wish one of the new fashionable Leghorns?... |
39515 | Does n''t she run smooth?" |
39515 | Dressed up to the nines-- wasn''t she?" |
39515 | Eh? |
39515 | Enid, is n''t there any fish? |
39515 | Extravagance-- what is it? |
39515 | Greig?" |
39515 | Had Gordon dined, or had anger and resentment deprived him of appetite and spared his ill- filled purse? |
39515 | Had it been an accident, or a monstrous impertinence? |
39515 | Had she acted wisely when pushing an untried man so promptly to the front? |
39515 | Has he obliged you to do this?" |
39515 | Have n''t I treated you kindly?" |
39515 | Have n''t you got it with you?" |
39515 | Have you had your grub? |
39515 | Have you missed your Dickybird?" |
39515 | He dared to think it.--But was he wrong? |
39515 | Hide and Seek-- Catch who, Catch can? |
39515 | How could she save herself-- or him? |
39515 | How dare you?... |
39515 | How do I know how many keys there are n''t knocking about the house? |
39515 | How have you dribbled it away-- and let yourself get so low that you have to come howling for a beggarly fifty pounds?" |
39515 | How much value had he knocked off the good will already? |
39515 | How much? |
39515 | How was he to live without_ some_ ready cash? |
39515 | How would they manage now? |
39515 | How''s business?" |
39515 | I ask you, is it kind to me?" |
39515 | I leave you alone, do n''t I?" |
39515 | I look all right, do n''t I? |
39515 | I mean, are you sure of the succession?" |
39515 | I ought to have kicked him down the shop.... Can you guess what he came about?" |
39515 | I say, how am I supposed to carve this? |
39515 | I would like a house just like that-- for you and me to live in when I am able to give up my work....""What were you saying, mother?" |
39515 | I''d like to stay with you-- but may I sleep in Em''ly''s room?" |
39515 | I''ll get out here, and stroll in the garden with you.... My sweet Enid, did the message frighten you?" |
39515 | I''m absolutely dependent on the business-- if the profits go down to nothing, am I to starve?" |
39515 | If I could for a moment believe--""Why ca n''t you believe?" |
39515 | If I renounce all claims on you forever-- if I agree to make a formal renunciation,--well, surely that''s worth_ something_ to you?" |
39515 | If they tried to turn themselves into a company to- morrow, what price could they put down for it? |
39515 | If you will be good enough to tell me your cousin''s name?" |
39515 | Is it all serene between you and Mears? |
39515 | Is it entailed upon you? |
39515 | Is it not so, Emily?... |
39515 | Is it straw hats for ladies? |
39515 | Is it to be cuts? |
39515 | Is it true?" |
39515 | Is it you or I who is to be cock of the walk? |
39515 | Is she not free to respond to your affections?" |
39515 | Is this another joke?" |
39515 | Janey, be nice-- be good.... Dear old Janey-- don''t you know what this means?" |
39515 | Kenion?" |
39515 | Let bygones be bygones-- won''t you?" |
39515 | Marsden?" |
39515 | Marsden?... |
39515 | May she come in? |
39515 | Mears?" |
39515 | Mears?" |
39515 | Men all seem alike, do n''t they?" |
39515 | Might not her darling be now a prey to similar yearnings and longings for a swift reunion? |
39515 | Mr. Marsden, come now, after all, what is this fuss about?" |
39515 | Mrs. Thompson, I should say Mrs. Marsden-- are we to disregard her?" |
39515 | My old room-- is it empty, or are you using it for anything?" |
39515 | No?" |
39515 | No?... |
39515 | No?... |
39515 | Not a professional man? |
39515 | Now then, ladies and gentlemen, hock, claret, whisky and soda? |
39515 | Oh, Enid,"said Mrs. Thompson indignantly, yet very sadly,"did n''t you ever think how deeply this would wound me?" |
39515 | Old Girl?" |
39515 | Or shall she call again? |
39515 | Parisian Jewellery?... |
39515 | Perhaps downstairs this, the greatest of the changes, would not be observable? |
39515 | Prentice, do you understand? |
39515 | Prentice?" |
39515 | Prentice?" |
39515 | Prentice?" |
39515 | Prices on change are down, are they?--and you do n''t care to realise just now?" |
39515 | Put my bag on the table.... Where are you sitting, Prentice.... Over there? |
39515 | See?" |
39515 | See?... |
39515 | Shall I go round and kick the brute?" |
39515 | Shall I order a fresh pot?" |
39515 | Shall we sit down here? |
39515 | She ca n''t do this, can she?" |
39515 | She''s_ Bence''s_; she is... Mrs. Thompson, do n''t I tell you? |
39515 | Starting thus, to what heights might he not attain in Thompson''s? |
39515 | Surely the law would n''t allow her to spoof me like that?" |
39515 | Take this up too-- same room.... Who''s that out there? |
39515 | That is usual on these occasions, is it not?" |
39515 | The college authorities heard of it-- from whom do you suppose? |
39515 | The customers?" |
39515 | The word is, As you were-- eh?... |
39515 | There, this is my hour--""Will you let me go?" |
39515 | They paint them so natural, do n''t they?" |
39515 | Thirty thousand? |
39515 | This is as between Masons, is n''t it?... |
39515 | Thompson?... |
39515 | Was it not cruel to send the brave little thing away from her? |
39515 | Was it the fire- engine?" |
39515 | Was she to accompany him, or to stay moping at home by herself?... |
39515 | Was there any idea of making a permanent provision for him? |
39515 | We must get you on horseback again.... You do like your riding, do n''t you?" |
39515 | We must n''t allow communications.... Where is Mr. Marsden? |
39515 | We would come to the rescue so gladly, if we could-- but, alas, how can we? |
39515 | We''re partners, are n''t we? |
39515 | Were these little puffs of smoke, appearing and disappearing so frequently, indicative of latent fire? |
39515 | What are guesses?" |
39515 | What are we to do?" |
39515 | What are you getting at?" |
39515 | What are you insinuating?... |
39515 | What are you playing at? |
39515 | What are you worth now-- of your very own-- apart from the firm?" |
39515 | What do they say of me down there?... |
39515 | What do you mean?" |
39515 | What does it matter to you when you get it? |
39515 | What does it matter? |
39515 | What does it matter? |
39515 | What does madam think of_ this_?... |
39515 | What good can I do sticking here any longer? |
39515 | What has happened? |
39515 | What have you done with all your own? |
39515 | What is it that you want done?" |
39515 | What is it? |
39515 | What is my private life to you-- or anybody else? |
39515 | What is the grievance? |
39515 | What is_ his_ attitude?... |
39515 | What next?... |
39515 | What promise had he ever failed to break? |
39515 | What sort of woman do I look like now?" |
39515 | What then?" |
39515 | What to do? |
39515 | What''s his name?" |
39515 | What''s that proverb? |
39515 | What''s the good of dabbing a lot of sweets in front of people, before they''ve had any meat? |
39515 | What''s the matter with you? |
39515 | What''s up? |
39515 | What? |
39515 | What? |
39515 | What_ can_ we do? |
39515 | Whatever are we to do?" |
39515 | Where did you get them?" |
39515 | Where do I sign?" |
39515 | Where does the rest go-- if you are n''t saving it? |
39515 | Where has everything gone?" |
39515 | Where has my child gone?... |
39515 | Where is she?" |
39515 | Where''s your quarrel with that?" |
39515 | Which of them has the money-- the husband or the wife?" |
39515 | Who could of believed such a thing''appening?" |
39515 | Who could say what was true or false in this connection? |
39515 | Who makes the members of parliament, the bishops, the prime ministers? |
39515 | Who would n''t be? |
39515 | Who''s driven me out of them?" |
39515 | Why are n''t you rejoicing-- singing your song of joy?" |
39515 | Why are you hesitating? |
39515 | Why ca n''t_ you_ forget it?... |
39515 | Why do n''t you come round the counter and sit on the customers''laps?... |
39515 | Why else should she have felt such a wrathful discontent at the idea of his courting all the silly girls? |
39515 | Why have you left me to learn his name from the lips of servants and busybodies? |
39515 | Why not? |
39515 | Why pay high wages for subordinate chieftains when the over- lords can supervise for nothing? |
39515 | Why should you pretend to be in such a deuce of a hurry?" |
39515 | Why should you throw up a comfortable situation?" |
39515 | Why the devil does n''t she come in and ask if anything''s wanted?" |
39515 | Why?" |
39515 | Why?" |
39515 | Will you think it out-- draw up a list of guests-- and arrange everything?" |
39515 | Wo n''t that be nice?" |
39515 | Wo n''t you take off your coat?" |
39515 | Would he mind? |
39515 | Would you believe it?" |
39515 | Yates, is Miss Enid in?" |
39515 | You and I have got to the end of our tether, have n''t we? |
39515 | You are n''t thinking of putting him up again?" |
39515 | You are not ashamed to be seen with me-- eh, little woman?... |
39515 | You do intend to go-- and no rot?" |
39515 | You do n''t get enough of the holiday feeling.... Oh, where''s my Kodak? |
39515 | You do understand that, do n''t you?" |
39515 | You got the news, I suppose?" |
39515 | You have n''t forgotten my whistle?" |
39515 | You know that, do n''t you, sir?" |
39515 | You mean it, too, do n''t you? |
39515 | You naughty girl-- I''ve apologised, have n''t I? |
39515 | You never came to one of my dinner- parties?... |
39515 | You shoved it away in that safe, did n''t you? |
39515 | You up there?" |
39515 | You will still be what you have always been-- my best and kindest friend?" |
39515 | You would n''t think it, would you? |
39515 | You''d do that, would n''t you?" |
39515 | You''ll consent?" |
39515 | You''re twenty- two, are n''t you? |
43703 | A better one? |
43703 | A_ lady_? |
43703 | About-- what''s his name? 43703 Above everything?" |
43703 | Above the vegetating line? |
43703 | Air you sure you feel well, Miss Nevers? |
43703 | All her affairs of state accomplished? |
43703 | All up to that time you wish might be again as it was? 43703 All winter, perhaps?" |
43703 | All? |
43703 | Alone? |
43703 | Am I not included? |
43703 | And are they quite as gay and crazy as ever? |
43703 | And do you approve of what I wrote? |
43703 | And how long is that going to take? |
43703 | And if you sell the collection? |
43703 | And likes them, notwithstanding? |
43703 | And never again distrust yourself or me? |
43703 | And now that you have looked into it and know what is there, do you care to remain in the heart of-- of such a man as I am? |
43703 | And the collection is valuable? |
43703 | And the next day, and the next, and next, and-- always, Jacqueline? |
43703 | And to determine its value I ought to have an expert go there and catalogue it and appraise it? |
43703 | And to drink this H. P. W. to your health and happiness? |
43703 | And unless I do you are intending to publish that-- story? |
43703 | And what are those? |
43703 | And what do you think of that, Jacqueline? |
43703 | And what may be the name and quality of this personal reason? 43703 And when they do n''t,"asked Elena, smiling,"what do you do then, Miss Nevers?" |
43703 | And with him, too? 43703 And yet you married me?" |
43703 | And you know that I love you above everything in the world? |
43703 | And you know that you are there alone? |
43703 | And you me? |
43703 | And you think you_ can_ sell it for me? |
43703 | And-- and now-- such a man has taken my little friend-- my little girl-- Jacqueline----"Do you think he''s as rotten as what you say? |
43703 | And-- may I wish you happiness, Mrs. Desboro? 43703 And-- there is no flaw?" |
43703 | And-- what is that, Jacqueline? |
43703 | And-- will you do it-- for my sake? |
43703 | And-- you? |
43703 | Angry? |
43703 | Annoy you? 43703 Any good ones?" |
43703 | Anything doing at the office? |
43703 | Are business and friendship incompatible? |
43703 | Are n''t these gentlemen correctly ticketed? |
43703 | Are n''t you coming? |
43703 | Are there not a number of such gentlemen still existing on earth? |
43703 | Are they? 43703 Are we going to let anything frighten us?" |
43703 | Are you angry, Jim? |
43703 | Are you cold? |
43703 | Are you coming back, Miss Nevers? |
43703 | Are you crying? |
43703 | Are you enjoying it? |
43703 | Are you enjoying the party, Jacqueline? |
43703 | Are you ever known as''Stray Lock''among your intimates? |
43703 | Are you going to dine all alone up there? |
43703 | Are you going to renig just because Aunt Hannah is a possible prize? 43703 Are you going to send me away?" |
43703 | Are you going to speak to Miss Nevers? |
43703 | Are you going to tell her I''m mercenary? |
43703 | Are you going to tell me that you love me? |
43703 | Are you in love with that girl-- after what you have promised me? |
43703 | Are you quite ready to go? |
43703 | Are you quite sure you ca n''t dine with me? |
43703 | Are you ready for luncheon? |
43703 | Are you really hard hit? |
43703 | Are you really surprised to hear me admit it? |
43703 | Are you sane or crazy? |
43703 | Are you serious? |
43703 | Are you so sure of me, Jim? |
43703 | Are you well? |
43703 | Are you, after all, about to send me forth''between tall avenues of spears, to die?'' |
43703 | Are you--_afraid_ of this man? |
43703 | As funny as the poet? |
43703 | As hard as yesterday? |
43703 | At the club-- the Olympian Club----"Is he there? |
43703 | Bad? 43703 Been stock- gambling again?" |
43703 | Besides, you were such a wild little thing-- don''t you remember what crazy things we used to do, you and I----"Did I? 43703 But sometimes you dine out and go to the theatre and to dances and things?" |
43703 | But what do you care, dear? |
43703 | But what''s the use? |
43703 | But when a girl does n''t care for a man----"Do you mean to marry for_ love_? |
43703 | But who''s to hold up the mirror to a man? |
43703 | But you know there is no meeting ground there for us, do n''t you? |
43703 | But,she asked candidly,"could you call this a business situation?" |
43703 | But-- suppose he wo n''t ask me to go back? |
43703 | But_ can_ you? |
43703 | Ca n''t I take you to your office? |
43703 | Ca n''t Mr. Desboro come here pretty soon? |
43703 | Ca n''t you do anything with it? |
43703 | Ca n''t you let me make you a business loan at exorbitant interest without expiring of mortification? |
43703 | Can she slide down the banisters instead? |
43703 | Can we escape them? |
43703 | Can we? |
43703 | Can you explain these forgeries? |
43703 | Can you not forget, too? |
43703 | Can you not imagine a more desirable marriage for a girl? |
43703 | Can you not tell your husband? |
43703 | Can you not, Jacqueline? |
43703 | Can you prove there was n''t? |
43703 | Can you stop her, Adalbert-- and retain the money? |
43703 | Can you, dear? |
43703 | Care killed it, did n''t it? |
43703 | Cary? |
43703 | Come, James,she said in a low voice,"what do you mean to do? |
43703 | Come,he said,"what are you going to do about it? |
43703 | Could n''t I be of use to you, Jacqueline? 43703 Could n''t what?" |
43703 | Could n''t you ask me to something? |
43703 | Could n''t your business wait? |
43703 | Could you be_ mine_, after what I have written? |
43703 | Could you tell me the reasons, Jim? |
43703 | Could you tell me, Jacqueline? |
43703 | Could you wait a moment? 43703 Dearest?" |
43703 | Did I actually dare question your ability? |
43703 | Did I? |
43703 | Did Mr. Cairns speak to you of Cynthia? |
43703 | Did anybody telephone this morning? |
43703 | Did he perhaps tell you that he had an appointment at the Kiln Club with a man who was interested in porcelains and jades? |
43703 | Did he telephone? |
43703 | Did he tell you that? |
43703 | Did he? |
43703 | Did n''t I tell you? |
43703 | Did n''t it occur to you that you were ending a friendship rather abruptly? |
43703 | Did n''t she say anything? |
43703 | Did n''t you ever expect to come up here again? |
43703 | Did n''t you know that Miss Nevers keeps an antique shop? |
43703 | Did n''t you like her? |
43703 | Did n''t you read it? |
43703 | Did n''t you understand what I wrote? 43703 Did n''t you want speed?" |
43703 | Did n''t your wife ever meet her at your house? |
43703 | Did you ask her to marry you? |
43703 | Did you ever before see her? |
43703 | Did you ever hear of the Reverend Bertie Dawley? |
43703 | Did you ever meet any others? |
43703 | Did you ever see anything as beautiful as that girl? |
43703 | Did you expect me to give you a chance to destroy me and poison Jacqueline''s mind? 43703 Did you go to business?" |
43703 | Did you imagine I''d ever let Miss Nevers escape from Silverwood? |
43703 | Did you not receive my message? |
43703 | Did you think I would have taken it if you had refused it? |
43703 | Did you think you were obliged to support me? 43703 Did you write that?" |
43703 | Did you? |
43703 | Did you? |
43703 | Did_ he_ care to come? |
43703 | Did_ you_ discover her? |
43703 | Do I count for absolutely nothing? |
43703 | Do I mind anything that it pleases you to do? 43703 Do I? |
43703 | Do anything with what? |
43703 | Do n''t trust me, will you? |
43703 | Do n''t you approve of me as much as you thought you did? 43703 Do n''t you believe me?" |
43703 | Do n''t you care for it? |
43703 | Do n''t you ever read it? |
43703 | Do n''t you know how to tell the time? |
43703 | Do n''t you know how-- how deeply I-- care for you? |
43703 | Do n''t you know that I have other things----"What have I done, Miss Nevers? |
43703 | Do n''t you know that I love you_ now_--that I am absolutely mad about you? |
43703 | Do n''t you think I know what is the code among your sort-- among the species of men you find sympathetic? 43703 Do n''t you think it was a trifle brusque, Miss Nevers?" |
43703 | Do n''t you think so? |
43703 | Do n''t you want to come? |
43703 | Do n''t you wish me to be happy? |
43703 | Do n''t you_ know_ it, Jacqueline? |
43703 | Do n''t you_ know_ it? |
43703 | Do n''t you_ like_ Desboro? |
43703 | Do they ever speak of me? 43703 Do you believe in prayer, dear?" |
43703 | Do you believe that story? |
43703 | Do you call that a banquet, darling? |
43703 | Do you doubt it? |
43703 | Do you expect an answer? |
43703 | Do you expect to_ remain_ in business? |
43703 | Do you flatter yourself that I returned to see_ you_? |
43703 | Do you know it, Jacqueline? |
43703 | Do you know that you and I have not yet discussed terms? |
43703 | Do you know what I thought of you, Jim, when you first came in? |
43703 | Do you know you are talking very horridly to me? |
43703 | Do you know,he said,"what a rotten thing you have done?" |
43703 | Do you like her, Jim? |
43703 | Do you like it? 43703 Do you like it?" |
43703 | Do you like-- the show? |
43703 | Do you love me? |
43703 | Do you mean Aunt Hannah? |
43703 | Do you mean for always? |
43703 | Do you mean that I am never to see you at all? |
43703 | Do you mean that mine is to be the final decision always? |
43703 | Do you mean that such a militant motto suits me? |
43703 | Do you mean that you intend to come into this office every day? |
43703 | Do you not expect to be there? |
43703 | Do you notice the difference? |
43703 | Do you promise? |
43703 | Do you promise? |
43703 | Do you realise-- what it means for us? |
43703 | Do you really care for me that way, Jacqueline? |
43703 | Do you really care very much? |
43703 | Do you remember what he said about her? |
43703 | Do you remember, once, long ago, I prophesied this for you? 43703 Do you send me?" |
43703 | Do you speak Wenli? |
43703 | Do you still think you care for such a man as I am? |
43703 | Do you suppose I could live life through without you_ now_? |
43703 | Do you suppose anybody in my business would willingly miss the chance of personally handling such a transaction? 43703 Do you suppose,"he said laughingly,"that you could ever bring yourself to kiss me, Jacqueline?" |
43703 | Do you think I did? |
43703 | Do you think I have? |
43703 | Do you think a woman arrives at any conclusion through the kind of reasoning that satisfies men? 43703 Do you think it admirable?" |
43703 | Do you think it likely? |
43703 | Do you think of that every minute? |
43703 | Do you think so? |
43703 | Do you think so? |
43703 | Do you think that is best? |
43703 | Do you think that way about me? |
43703 | Do you think you are old enough and experienced enough to catalogue and appraise such an important collection as this one? 43703 Do you think your daily record fit for public scrutiny, Jim?" |
43703 | Do you think your pretense of guileless candour is disarming me, young man? |
43703 | Do you think,he said gravely,"that you are spoiling me for business purposes?" |
43703 | Do you trust me? |
43703 | Do you understand about the-- jewels? |
43703 | Do you understand me now? |
43703 | Do you understand that I wish to marry her? |
43703 | Do you want her to? |
43703 | Do you want me to go with you? |
43703 | Do you want me to stay with you? 43703 Do you wish me to go home, Cary?" |
43703 | Do you wish me to go home? |
43703 | Do you wish me to? 43703 Do you?" |
43703 | Do you? |
43703 | Do you? |
43703 | Do-- do you care for any other woman? |
43703 | Do? 43703 Do_ you_?" |
43703 | Does n''t it count at all with you? |
43703 | Does n''t it make you happy, Stuyve? |
43703 | Does that concern you? |
43703 | Does your caring for me amount to-- love? |
43703 | Eh? |
43703 | Elena, have you ever heard of a honeymoon that lasts? 43703 Elena,"he said,"will you kindly come to your senses? |
43703 | For how long can you go, Jacqueline? |
43703 | For how long? |
43703 | Forgive me-- won''t you? |
43703 | God knows I''m not proud,he said,"but can you beat it, Desboro?" |
43703 | Had I better? |
43703 | Happy? 43703 Has anybody said anything about me to you?" |
43703 | Has she gone to her room? |
43703 | Has-- has Mrs. Hammerton been to see you? |
43703 | Have I any other choice? |
43703 | Have I done that? |
43703 | Have I ever acted that part? |
43703 | Have I lied to you? |
43703 | Have I offended you? |
43703 | Have n''t I invited you to take me? |
43703 | Have n''t you any common sense? |
43703 | Have some coffee, James? |
43703 | Have they arrived? 43703 Have we time to motor to Silverwood?" |
43703 | Have you any remote and asinine notions of educating her and marrying her, and foisting her on your friends? 43703 Have you anything to beat it?" |
43703 | Have you been abroad, Miss Nevers? |
43703 | Have you done so? |
43703 | Have you finished? |
43703 | Have you forgiven me? |
43703 | Have you quite recovered all the scattered fragments of your heart? 43703 Have you really decided to sell that superb collection?" |
43703 | Have you really, Jacqueline? |
43703 | Have you seen the papers? |
43703 | Have you spoiled me very much, Jacqueline? |
43703 | Have-- have you already forgotten what I said? |
43703 | He is not very young, is he? |
43703 | He''ll divorce me now, wo n''t he? |
43703 | Herrendene? 43703 Hey?" |
43703 | How are yours marked? |
43703 | How can I have any when the world is so rotten after nineteen hundred years of Christianity? |
43703 | How can I help you? 43703 How can I take you this way-- and keep you-- after what I have done?" |
43703 | How can a girl show it more honestly? 43703 How can anybody slide_ up_ the banisters?" |
43703 | How can we be friends, from a social standpoint? 43703 How can you be my wife, Jacqueline, and still remain a business woman?" |
43703 | How can you care for me? |
43703 | How deeply do you suppose I feel about it? |
43703 | How did you know? 43703 How do I know, you little villain? |
43703 | How do you know I do n''t lunch with some of them? 43703 How do you know? |
43703 | How do you know? |
43703 | How do you mean, Cynthia? |
43703 | How do you mean, dear? |
43703 | How do you mean? |
43703 | How do_ you_ know? 43703 How high does she plan to climb?" |
43703 | How is the play going? |
43703 | How long? |
43703 | How long? |
43703 | How many men do you wish to control? |
43703 | How much are you in this, anyway? |
43703 | How much is it worth, Miss Nevers? |
43703 | How''s that, old top? |
43703 | How? |
43703 | How? |
43703 | How? |
43703 | How_ can_ you? 43703 How_ could_ you care for a bad man?" |
43703 | I ca n''t turn Michael out to starve, can I? |
43703 | I do n''t know, Mr. James-- what with her veil and furs----"How did she come? |
43703 | I have n''t thought about him----"Honestly, Jacqueline? |
43703 | I have so many matters here----"Do n''t you_ want_ to? |
43703 | I mean the wonder with the gold hair, that Mrs. Hammerton has in tow? |
43703 | I mean-- are you going to-- change-- toward me? |
43703 | I suppose I''m included among the sort of men you have been so graphically describing? |
43703 | I wonder if he has Grenville''s monograph on Spanish and Milanese mail? |
43703 | I wonder,she said,"if this_ is_ all right?" |
43703 | I''ll have to-- won''t I? |
43703 | I''ll promise to take you everywhere with me----"In your pocket? 43703 I''ve done it so far, have n''t I? |
43703 | I''ve heard Cary Clydesdale speak of you, have n''t I? |
43703 | I''ve told you a thousand times it ca n''t be done----"Do you mean that no woman has ever been in your apartments? |
43703 | I-- I thought-- if I burned my bridges and came to you----"What_ did_ you think? |
43703 | I-- did not mean it that way----"But it does fit, Cynthia; does n''t it? |
43703 | I-- how do I know? 43703 I-- it''s a question-- of business-- matters which demand----""Will you come once more?" |
43703 | I? 43703 I? |
43703 | If I dared----"Is that sort of courage lacking in you, Mr. Desboro? 43703 If nobody finds you,"cried Cairns, as she crossed the threshold,"we each forfeit whatever you ask of us?" |
43703 | If there''s really anything the matter with you, why do n''t you go into business and forget it? 43703 In his house-- a big, old house about five miles from the station----""How do you get there?" |
43703 | In your office? 43703 In_ bed_?" |
43703 | Is Her Royal Shyness ready? |
43703 | Is Mr. Clydesdale with her? |
43703 | Is all well with you, Jacqueline? |
43703 | Is he intoxicated? |
43703 | Is he_ too_ nice? |
43703 | Is it a little social visit, Mr. Clydesdale, or have you discovered some miracle of ancient Cathay which you covet? |
43703 | Is it all right to wish you happiness, Cynthia? |
43703 | Is it to you that I must whisper''je m''accuse''? |
43703 | Is it you, dear? |
43703 | Is love_ enough_ for you, Jacqueline? |
43703 | Is n''t it a safe one? |
43703 | Is n''t it anything at all to you when I kiss you? |
43703 | Is n''t it disgraceful and absurd? |
43703 | Is n''t it odd to be born at my age? 43703 Is n''t it true?" |
43703 | Is n''t it, Jacqueline? |
43703 | Is n''t that the moon- youth who writes over the heads of the public and far ahead of''em into the next century? |
43703 | Is n''t this all of the papers that you cared to see, Jacqueline? |
43703 | Is she going to accept him? |
43703 | Is she your aunt? |
43703 | Is she_ very_ pretty? |
43703 | Is that all that five hundred years has taught men-- concealment? |
43703 | Is that anything new? |
43703 | Is that quite true, dear? |
43703 | Is that so? |
43703 | Is that still part of your business? |
43703 | Is that true? |
43703 | Is that true? |
43703 | Is that what you think, Jim? |
43703 | Is that why you came in to- night? |
43703 | Is that you, Desboro? |
43703 | Is that your mature belief? |
43703 | Is that_ all_? |
43703 | Is the hack out there yet? |
43703 | Is there a man on earth ass enough not to fall in love with you if you ever condescended to smile at him twice? |
43703 | Is there any chance for you to get a better part? |
43703 | Is there any girl you want to marry? |
43703 | Is there anybody else in this room? |
43703 | Is there anything in all the world I can do for you, Jacqueline? |
43703 | Is there anything to think? |
43703 | Is this a plant? |
43703 | Is this a zoo den in the Bronx, or a breakfast room, Desboro? 43703 Is-- have I-- has what you know of me killed all feeling, all tenderness in you?" |
43703 | Is-- is the child sick? |
43703 | Is_ he_ always there, darling? |
43703 | Is_ she_ included? |
43703 | Is_ that_ how you speak of what we have been to each other? |
43703 | Is_ that_ the right time? |
43703 | It is n''t some girl, is it? 43703 It is n''t true yet, is it?" |
43703 | It is n''t true-- it must n''t be----He interrupted deliberately:"What are you trying to do to me? |
43703 | It is no longer necessary? |
43703 | It takes some time to catalogue and appraise such a collection, does n''t it? |
43703 | It''s a nice, cosy, comfortable place, is n''t it? 43703 It''s perfectly simple,"said Cynthia coolly,"he went there from his office, feeling a bit under the weather----""Is he_ ill_?" |
43703 | Jacqueline, dear, has anything unpleasant happened to disturb you since I last saw you? |
43703 | Jacqueline,she said bluntly,"what was Reggie Ledyard saying to you this evening? |
43703 | Jacqueline? |
43703 | Jacqueline? |
43703 | Jade? |
43703 | Jim, dear,she said timidly,"wo n''t you give me ten minutes alone with you?" |
43703 | Jim, do you want to buy any primitives, guaranteed genuine? |
43703 | Jim,repeated the voice,"what are you doing this evening?" |
43703 | Jim,_ must_ we do it this way? 43703 Jim?" |
43703 | Jim? |
43703 | Kindness to people is also a Clydesdale tradition-- isn''t it, James? |
43703 | Knew what? |
43703 | Lose much? |
43703 | Love? |
43703 | Madame? |
43703 | Mademoiselle? |
43703 | Mademoiselle? |
43703 | Make things as they were-- before----"Before I wrote? |
43703 | Marie, will you draw lots to see who hides? |
43703 | Marry? 43703 May I say something that I have in mind and not offend you?" |
43703 | Miss Nevers,he said menacingly,"do you mean to insinuate that I am a swindler?" |
43703 | Mrs. Hammerton? 43703 Much?" |
43703 | Must I go, Jacqueline? |
43703 | Must I ring for a clerk to put you out? |
43703 | Must you? |
43703 | No; but do n''t you ever take anything seriously? |
43703 | Now for the club and a cold plunge-- eh, Desboro? 43703 Now, what do you want to do? |
43703 | Now,he said,"how about it? |
43703 | Now,she said, leaning forward in her chair as soon as he was seated,"what is the meaning of this?" |
43703 | Of offering too much? |
43703 | Of what use am I to you? |
43703 | Of what? |
43703 | Oh, come, Jim, are you going to spoil our card quartette on the train? 43703 Oh, is it? |
43703 | Oh,she said, with sudden impatience,"do you suppose I have any illusions concerning the sort of man you are? |
43703 | Oh-- when I sat under the dragon, with my lute, and said for your guests some legends of old Cathay? |
43703 | Ought I to be? |
43703 | Our acquaintanceship of a single week? 43703 Please-- and what exactly then may be your status? |
43703 | Reading? 43703 Ready?" |
43703 | Realise what? |
43703 | Really? 43703 Really?" |
43703 | Remain? 43703 Risk it?" |
43703 | Send me? |
43703 | Shall I climb up beside you and unlace your helmet? |
43703 | Shall I remain here with you? |
43703 | Shall I see you again? |
43703 | Shall I tell you about Silverwood? |
43703 | Shall I tell you his name at once? |
43703 | Shall I whisper it? |
43703 | Shall we drive or walk, Cynthia? |
43703 | Shall we go to town in the car? |
43703 | Shall we have tea? |
43703 | Shall we start? |
43703 | She is an actress, is n''t she? |
43703 | She''s a bad old thing,said Desboro affectionately, and, in his natural voice:"Are n''t you, Aunt Hannah? |
43703 | She''s very charming, is n''t she? |
43703 | Silverwood? |
43703 | So you are coming? |
43703 | So you are really going to sell? |
43703 | So you wo n''t see her again? |
43703 | Spiritual responsibility? |
43703 | Suppose,she said, steadily,"that I tell my husband what you are doing? |
43703 | Tea? 43703 Tell me honestly,"he added,"do n''t you want us to be friends?" |
43703 | Tell me,he said,"what is it that can make amends?" |
43703 | Thank you; it''s only to the theatre-- if you care to walk with me----"Are you rehearsing? |
43703 | That is for cataloguing and appraising only? |
43703 | That lock of hair? 43703 That you are entertaining a very pretty girl at Silverwood House-- unchaperoned?" |
43703 | That you love me? |
43703 | That''s quite a sermon, is n''t it, Miss Nevers? 43703 That''s what you believe, is it?" |
43703 | That''s why you asked me here, is n''t it? |
43703 | That_ is_ civilisation, is n''t it? |
43703 | The main thing,said Jacqueline slowly,"is that he should know you_ do_ love him; is n''t it?" |
43703 | The question is,said Reggie Ledyard excitedly,"are you a sport, Miss Nevers, or are you not? |
43703 | The remedy? |
43703 | Then I''ll have to crawl in, too, wo n''t I? 43703 Then is n''t a friendship between us possible without anything threatening to spoil it? |
43703 | Then what do you see unusual about her? |
43703 | Then why do you go to the station with me? |
43703 | Then why the devil didn''t----"Why did n''t I accept food and warmth and raiment and lodging from a generous and harebrained young man? 43703 Then wo n''t you have tea?" |
43703 | Then you do n''t have to marry him, do you, Miss Nevers? |
43703 | Then, friendship_ is_ possible between a man and a woman, is n''t it? |
43703 | Then-- could you come over here? |
43703 | Then-- what are your wishes? |
43703 | Then-- what is there for me to do? |
43703 | Then-- why are you going to let him in? |
43703 | Then-- you leave me-- to him? 43703 There are no highwaymen, are there?" |
43703 | There_ is_ no other woman; is there? |
43703 | They all came to say good- morning,she explained,"and how could I think of my clothing? |
43703 | They send a car for me----"Who? |
43703 | They? 43703 This is very jolly, is n''t it?" |
43703 | Thought what? |
43703 | Time? |
43703 | To whom if not to me, Jacqueline? |
43703 | To- morrow, then? |
43703 | To- morrow? |
43703 | To- morrow? |
43703 | To- night, Jim? |
43703 | Typhoid? |
43703 | Unwell? |
43703 | Very fine,sneered Waudle,"but why do n''t you make her keep you in pin money?" |
43703 | Very precious, is n''t it? |
43703 | W-- what? |
43703 | Was I severe with you and your friends? |
43703 | Was it a business matter with that Dawley man? 43703 Was it a hard day for you, sweetheart?" |
43703 | Was it a lie, Jim? |
43703 | Was it satisfying? |
43703 | Was it_ that_ very second? |
43703 | Was what a lie? |
43703 | We were awakened by a hammering at the door and a horn blowing-- and guess who it was? |
43703 | We''re friends already; what are you going to do about it? |
43703 | We_ are_ going, are n''t we? |
43703 | Well, who is she, Farris? |
43703 | Well, you know I could n''t very well kneel down and make you a declaration before I knew your name, could I, dear? |
43703 | Well? |
43703 | Were_ you_ ever actually in China? |
43703 | Were_ you_ in China, Mr. Waudle, or only in Japan? |
43703 | Wh- what do they say? |
43703 | Wh-- who is it? |
43703 | What about that Van Alstyne supper at the Santa Regina? |
43703 | What are you doing here? |
43703 | What are you doing, Jim? |
43703 | What are you going to do with me? |
43703 | What are you going to do, Jim? 43703 What are you going to do?" |
43703 | What are you murmuring there all by yourself, Jacqueline? |
43703 | What are you muttering all to yourself, Jim? |
43703 | What are you sorry about? 43703 What business shall I go into?" |
43703 | What did he say? |
43703 | What did he want of you? |
43703 | What did you say? |
43703 | What did you think of him? |
43703 | What do I want with all these clubs and things? |
43703 | What do you do in the evenings? |
43703 | What do you mean, Jack? |
43703 | What do you mean, darling? |
43703 | What do you mean? |
43703 | What do you mean? |
43703 | What do you mean? |
43703 | What do you mean? |
43703 | What do you suppose Mrs. Hammerton''s game is? |
43703 | What do you want with her, then? |
43703 | What do you wish to study, Cynthia? |
43703 | What do_ you_ call a man who has done what he''s done? |
43703 | What do_ you_ care what they do to Jim''s live stock, Miss Nevers? |
43703 | What does it matter? |
43703 | What does she resemble-- Venus, or Rosa Bonheur? |
43703 | What else can I do? |
43703 | What else is there to do? |
43703 | What expert will you send to catalogue and appraise it? |
43703 | What has been the matter, Jim? |
43703 | What has he done? |
43703 | What have I done to drive you away? |
43703 | What have you-- done-- to me? |
43703 | What is his name? |
43703 | What is it you mean to do, Jacqueline? |
43703 | What is it you wish? |
43703 | What is it, Jim? |
43703 | What is it, dearest? |
43703 | What is it? 43703 What is it?" |
43703 | What is that? |
43703 | What is the object,she said,"of trying to make me forget that I would n''t be here at all except on business?" |
43703 | What is the situation, Jim? |
43703 | What is the truth? |
43703 | What is troubling you, Jacqueline? |
43703 | What kind of lady is she? |
43703 | What kind? |
43703 | What miserable lesson have you learned to teach you such a creed? |
43703 | What more do you know about me than you did this morning, Jacqueline? |
43703 | What of it? |
43703 | What on earth do you mean? |
43703 | What pleases you so thoroughly, James-- yourself? |
43703 | What reason? |
43703 | What reason? |
43703 | What skating? |
43703 | What the dickens do you suppose prompted Mrs. Hammerton to arrive at such an hour? |
43703 | What troubles you? |
43703 | What was it-- death, destruction, and general woe, as usual? |
43703 | What were you doing in the country, sweetness? |
43703 | What woke you up? |
43703 | What would they think? |
43703 | What would you do about it? |
43703 | What you are doing is blackmail, is n''t it? |
43703 | What''s the matter with you? |
43703 | What''s the matter with_ you_? |
43703 | What''s the trouble? |
43703 | What? 43703 What?" |
43703 | What? |
43703 | What? |
43703 | What? |
43703 | What? |
43703 | What? |
43703 | What? |
43703 | What? |
43703 | What? |
43703 | What? |
43703 | What? |
43703 | What? |
43703 | What? |
43703 | Whatever_ I_ might be? |
43703 | Whazzer mazzer? 43703 When do you finish?" |
43703 | When is that gay company of yours going to return, Jim? |
43703 | When she was there appraising my jim- cracks? 43703 When?" |
43703 | Where are the Clydesdales? |
43703 | Where are you bound? |
43703 | Where are you going to send me? |
43703 | Where are you going, James-- home, or nowhere? |
43703 | Where are you living, Cynthia? |
43703 | Where did you go? |
43703 | Where did you know her, Jim? |
43703 | Where is it? |
43703 | Where is she? |
43703 | Where is''nowhere home''? 43703 Where on earth did you go?" |
43703 | Where on earth did you learn Chinese? |
43703 | Where will you wait? |
43703 | Where''s your library? 43703 Where?" |
43703 | Which is why you gave it to me, is n''t it? |
43703 | Which one? |
43703 | Which show? |
43703 | Who do you think it is? |
43703 | Who has been educating you to talk this way? |
43703 | Who is it? |
43703 | Who is she? |
43703 | Who is the dream, Jim? |
43703 | Who is_ Miss_ Nevers? |
43703 | Who provoked me? 43703 Who scours all this mail?" |
43703 | Who was he, dear? |
43703 | Who? 43703 Who?" |
43703 | Who? |
43703 | Whose collection are you cataloguing? |
43703 | Why are n''t you busy with it, then? |
43703 | Why are n''t you coming with us? |
43703 | Why are you so brusque with me, Jim? |
43703 | Why be curious about what is bad? 43703 Why ca n''t I take a flyer? |
43703 | Why ca n''t you remain here as my employer? 43703 Why did you let me keep you up?" |
43703 | Why do n''t you play hide and seek? |
43703 | Why do n''t you, too? 43703 Why do you ask me? |
43703 | Why do you call his house''home''? 43703 Why do you come here-- after reading that?" |
43703 | Why do you exclude me, Cynthia? |
43703 | Why do you say that? 43703 Why do you sneer at it?" |
43703 | Why do you suppose that I am likely to be lacking in sympathy, Cynthia? |
43703 | Why does n''t a man hide? |
43703 | Why entertain preference for anything or anybody? |
43703 | Why is it funny? 43703 Why not assume it for your own? |
43703 | Why not, darling? |
43703 | Why not? 43703 Why not? |
43703 | Why not? 43703 Why not?" |
43703 | Why not? |
43703 | Why not? |
43703 | Why say it? 43703 Why should I pursue things? |
43703 | Why, Jacqueline? |
43703 | Why, if you please? |
43703 | Why,repeated Jacqueline,"did n''t my husband telephone to me? |
43703 | Why? 43703 Why?" |
43703 | Why? |
43703 | Why? |
43703 | Why? |
43703 | Why? |
43703 | Why? |
43703 | Why? |
43703 | Why? |
43703 | Why? |
43703 | Will it spoil you if I tell you? |
43703 | Will you be ready at five? |
43703 | Will you be ready? |
43703 | Will you come? 43703 Will you go fishing with me, Miss Nevers? |
43703 | Will you go straight to bed? |
43703 | Will you have a cigar, Clydesdale? |
43703 | Will you kindly announce me to Miss Nevers? |
43703 | Will you let me go with you, Miss Nevers? |
43703 | Will you listen to me----"About Elena Clydesdale? |
43703 | Will you lunch with me, Jim? |
43703 | Will you lunch with me, Jim? |
43703 | Will you marry me, then, as soon as I can arrange for it? |
43703 | Will you persuade Cary to keep the collection, Miss Nevers? |
43703 | Will you really be at home to me, Cynthia? |
43703 | Will you remember that you have an engagement to- night? |
43703 | Will you respond-- when we are alone? |
43703 | Will you see that Mr. Desboro comes here as soon as he is-- fit? |
43703 | Will you take me for a walk on Sunday? |
43703 | Will you trust me with your friendship? |
43703 | Will you, dear? 43703 Will you?" |
43703 | Will you? |
43703 | Will you? |
43703 | With any people I know? |
43703 | With_ me_, Jacqueline? |
43703 | With_ you_? |
43703 | Wo n''t you let me make you a cocktail? |
43703 | Wo n''t you stay? |
43703 | Wo n''t you tell me, too, Jacqueline? |
43703 | Wo n''t you? |
43703 | Wo n''t you? |
43703 | Would it seriously annoy you if I did make love to you some day? |
43703 | Would you care to? |
43703 | Would you marry me now,he managed to say,"_ now_, after you know what a contemptible cad I am?" |
43703 | Would you tell me what to do? 43703 Would_ you_?" |
43703 | Yes, but on what am I to decide? |
43703 | Yes; do n''t you? |
43703 | Yes? |
43703 | Yes? |
43703 | You actually left such a note for him? |
43703 | You are going to remain here all alone? |
43703 | You are only a boy, are n''t you? |
43703 | You are the Mr. Desboro who owns the collection of armour? |
43703 | You are very tired, are n''t you? |
43703 | You believe in me still? |
43703 | You can go away with me for_ one_ week, ca n''t you? |
43703 | You did n''t know that, did you, dear? |
43703 | You did n''t really mean to abide by the decision, did you? |
43703 | You did n''t take him? |
43703 | You do n''t love me any more, do you, Jim? |
43703 | You do n''t mind, do you? |
43703 | You do n''t really mean it, do you, Miss Nevers? |
43703 | You do n''t really mind, do you? |
43703 | You found it necessary to be at Silverwood when she was there? |
43703 | You have n''t changed toward me in these few weeks, have you, Jacqueline? |
43703 | You have n''t taken cold, have you? |
43703 | You have no fear of me now? |
43703 | You have no further interest in me, have you? |
43703 | You like my friends? |
43703 | You mean to say that nothing except sheer, dry business keeps you here? |
43703 | You mean-- to-- to marry? |
43703 | You promised not to marry----"What is it to you what I do-- if you treat your husband decently? |
43703 | You say you''ve been in China? |
43703 | You thought of me, Jacqueline? |
43703 | You want_ me_--to come-- where your friends----"Do n''t you care to? |
43703 | You will be at leisure before I am, wo n''t you? |
43703 | You will come to Silverwood again, wo n''t you? |
43703 | You wo n''t go with us? |
43703 | You wo n''t sit up and work, will you? |
43703 | You''ll make up your mind in two hours? |
43703 | You''re a clever girl; ask yourself what you''d think if the facts about you and young Desboro-- you and me-- were skillfully brought out? |
43703 | You''re a very rotten scoundrel, are n''t you? |
43703 | You''re not in any financial trouble, are you? |
43703 | You''re not really going to do it, are you? |
43703 | You''ve a lot of''em, have n''t you, Miss Nevers? |
43703 | You-- counted them, too? |
43703 | You? |
43703 | You_ like_ her? |
43703 | Your life? |
43703 | Yours? |
43703 | _ Am_ I? 43703 _ Are_ you?" |
43703 | _ Do_ you? |
43703 | _ I_ do n''t; do I? |
43703 | _ I_ gave it to you, Jacqueline? |
43703 | _ Is_ that all? |
43703 | _ May_ I speak to you in fullest candour and-- and implicit confidence, Miss Nevers? |
43703 | _ Not_ at Silverwood? |
43703 | _ That_ kind? |
43703 | _ This_ way? |
43703 | _ Want_ to? 43703 _ What_ has happened?" |
43703 | _ You!_ What do I care what your patronising intentions may be? 43703 ''What the devil is it?'' 43703 395''Why do n''t you ask your-- wife?''" |
43703 | 411"''I do not believe you,''she said between her teeth"419"What was she to do? |
43703 | 455"''You have no further interest in me, have you?''" |
43703 | A passing fancy might be enough to arouse his curiosity; but why did not the fancy pass? |
43703 | About your devotion?" |
43703 | After a few moments he said, under his breath:"Do you realise that we are married, Jacqueline?" |
43703 | After a few moments he said:"Did you know that Jack Cairns had met her?" |
43703 | After a moment he said:"Ca n''t you care for me at all-- in this way? |
43703 | After a moment he said:"So the spouse of the moon wanted you to go to Italy with him?" |
43703 | After a moment, he said:"Does it make a difference to you, Jacqueline, what I was before I knew you?" |
43703 | After a silence he said humbly:"Would it be unpardonable if I--_would_ you tell me whether you are engaged?" |
43703 | After all, you and Desboro had had your fling; why should n''t hubby have an inning?" |
43703 | All Spanish and Milanese mail, is n''t it? |
43703 | All the same,_ is_ it?" |
43703 | Am I different?" |
43703 | Am I disappointing you already?" |
43703 | Am I horridly pale, Jim?" |
43703 | And I''ll have you to myself in the car----""Suppose we are ditched?" |
43703 | And are they nice to us?" |
43703 | And did you and Mr. Munger regard your statement concerning the Chinese prince as poetic license? |
43703 | And do you think I will lie to spare_ you_?" |
43703 | And do you think that men of your sort are fitted to talk about marrying such a girl as Miss Nevers? |
43703 | And his eyes said very plainly:"Shall we go for a walk?" |
43703 | And how about you?" |
43703 | And how in the world did she acquire it? |
43703 | And how long are we going to remain here on this foggy platform?" |
43703 | And how unpleasant would it be to break when, in the natural course of events, circumstances made the habit inconvenient? |
43703 | And if you feel that way, what am I good for? |
43703 | And is she a blonde?" |
43703 | And it''s almost time to put on more conventional apparel, is n''t it? |
43703 | And not say something that I''ll be surely sorry for some day-- or something she''ll be sorry for? |
43703 | And now you''ve got to raise the wind, somehow?" |
43703 | And please say to Mr. Cairns that it is perfectly dear of him to let you off----""But_ he_ is coming, too, is n''t he?" |
43703 | And shall I go and leave you to abstruse and intellectual meditation, or do I disturb you by tagging about at your heels?" |
43703 | And shall I make my adieux now? |
43703 | And still, if she actually were here, why was he not searching for her under every suit of sunlit mail? |
43703 | And suppose she should stir in her place, setting her harness clashing? |
43703 | And then the weather----""Do you suppose mere_ weather_ could keep me from the Desboro collection? |
43703 | And to Desboro:"Can you imagine anything in the world more fascinating than to use such knowledge? |
43703 | And what about the shooting trip?" |
43703 | And what are you going to do while I''m busy?" |
43703 | And what did he offer her to respond to? |
43703 | And what do you suppose would happen if a man of my sort attempts to vouch for any woman?" |
43703 | And what is the use of truth, anyway, unless it leaves us ennobling illusions?" |
43703 | And what more could a young girl want? |
43703 | And where in the world would men find a living soul to excuse them if it were not for us? |
43703 | And where is a girl to acquire that kind of wisdom? |
43703 | And where was the other woman? |
43703 | And who the devil was this fellow Sissly? |
43703 | And why was she going back to Silverwood? |
43703 | And will you all remain in this room with the door closed?" |
43703 | And will you time me, Mr. Ledyard? |
43703 | And with you?" |
43703 | And you have an unterrified tabby- cat at home, have n''t you?" |
43703 | And you know it wo n''t, do n''t you? |
43703 | And you will come over with Daisy, wo n''t you? |
43703 | And, Jack-- did you_ ever_ see two more engaging young girls than the two who have just deserted us? |
43703 | And, after a moment:"Shall we walk?" |
43703 | And, as Desboro remained silent and thoughtful:"Perhaps you might wish to see Miss Nevers? |
43703 | And-- where was he going? |
43703 | And:"Where did she learn such things?" |
43703 | And_ is n''t_ it humiliating?" |
43703 | And_ what_ do you suppose my innocent eyes encountered-- just like that?" |
43703 | Another pause, then:"Yes, I''ll come-- if there''s a reason----""When?" |
43703 | Are n''t you ill?" |
43703 | Are there any in the armoury that will fit me, Jim?" |
43703 | Are they brief or redundant, laconic or diffuse? |
43703 | Are they? |
43703 | Are you coming to the dance to- morrow night?" |
43703 | Are you concealing it? |
43703 | Are you contented? |
43703 | Are you going to leave me to face things alone? |
43703 | Are you going to lie to me, Jim?" |
43703 | Are you going to marry somebody?" |
43703 | Are you going to send me away now?" |
43703 | Are you really a tin sport?" |
43703 | Are you really as much in love with me as that? |
43703 | Are you really going to defy me?" |
43703 | Are you there?" |
43703 | Are you to be at Silverwood by any happy chance?" |
43703 | Are you very much surprised to see me here?" |
43703 | Are you well, sir?" |
43703 | Are you? |
43703 | Are you? |
43703 | As they started to descend the steep stairs, Jacqueline said casually:"Do you continue to find Mr. Cairns as agreeable and interesting as ever?" |
43703 | Ask her if----""What_ is_ a guarantee?" |
43703 | Ask yourself if you''ve ever, inadvertently, done as decent a thing?" |
43703 | At present I am perfectly cognisant of contemporary events now passing in my immediate vicinity----""Where were you to meet your wife?" |
43703 | Aunt Hannah retained his hand:"Where are you going now, James?" |
43703 | Because I have been talking flippantly? |
43703 | Because some happen to be fashionable and wealthy and idle? |
43703 | Besides, if he were, what would it mean? |
43703 | Blackmail?" |
43703 | Business women are understood, are n''t they? |
43703 | But I may ask your opinion, may I not?" |
43703 | But I was n''t certain you had quite accepted me----""Are you laughing at me?" |
43703 | But because I_ must_ decide about things that concern myself alone, you do n''t think I adore you any the less, do you, Jim?" |
43703 | But have you spoken to them about it? |
43703 | But he said passionately:"How can I be arbiter of my own fate unless I have all you can give me of love and faith and unswerving loyalty?" |
43703 | But it''s over now, is n''t it?" |
43703 | But she answered lightly:"Can I ask for more than a dance or two with you? |
43703 | But there is n''t a smarter foot, or a prettier hand, or a trimmer waist in all Gotham, is there?" |
43703 | But this is-- is-- unspeakable----""What on earth is the matter? |
43703 | But we_ can_ be friends?" |
43703 | But what can you expect? |
43703 | But what do I care, as long as you are nice to me?" |
43703 | But what''s the use? |
43703 | But whether I am or not makes absolutely no difference to me-- or to Jacqueline Nevers----""What do you mean by that?" |
43703 | But why so suddenly the solitary recluse?" |
43703 | But you know how grateful I am, do n''t you?" |
43703 | But you know why he did n''t meet Jacqueline at five, do n''t you?" |
43703 | But you must n''t cry, do you hear? |
43703 | But-- do you notice that it has made any difference in my friendship? |
43703 | But-- may I say something-- for your sake more than for my own?" |
43703 | By leaving Desboro? |
43703 | Ca n''t I kiss a girl now and then and keep my senses?" |
43703 | Ca n''t a fellow regenerate himself and remain cheerful?" |
43703 | Ca n''t you invent something new for us to do?" |
43703 | Ca n''t you understand that that includes your husband? |
43703 | Cairns discovered him coming out of the billiard room:"Have a snifter?" |
43703 | Cairns gripped his arm:"You go to the baths; do you hear? |
43703 | Can I be of service?" |
43703 | Can you afford one?" |
43703 | Can you beat it?" |
43703 | Can you beat professional experience as an educator?" |
43703 | Can you?" |
43703 | Chain me up while you pass your life deciding at leisure whether to live with your husband or involve yourself and me in scandal?" |
43703 | Clydesdale?" |
43703 | Clydesdale?" |
43703 | Clydesdale?" |
43703 | Clydesdale?" |
43703 | Come, now; why play the honest yokel? |
43703 | Could he not give her time to recover? |
43703 | Could it be possible that she was seated up there, hidden inside some suit of blazing mail, astride a battle- horse? |
43703 | Could she ask him-- venture, perhaps, to invite him to dinner with some of her friends? |
43703 | Could you consider it?" |
43703 | Could you help me out?" |
43703 | Could you tell me?" |
43703 | Could you?" |
43703 | Cynthia and-- who else? |
43703 | Desboro smiled:"Do you think it''s likely, dear friend?" |
43703 | Desboro?" |
43703 | Desboro?" |
43703 | Desboro?" |
43703 | Desboro?" |
43703 | Desboro?" |
43703 | Desboro?" |
43703 | Desboro?" |
43703 | Desboro?" |
43703 | Desboro?" |
43703 | Desboro?" |
43703 | Desboro?''" |
43703 | Desboro?''"] |
43703 | Did I say he was? |
43703 | Did any girl who ever lived find pleasure in perfection? |
43703 | Did any other fool hint anything more of that sort?" |
43703 | Did he go there?" |
43703 | Did he mean to make love to her sometime? |
43703 | Did he want her friendship? |
43703 | Did he wish to disturb her tranquility? |
43703 | Did he?" |
43703 | Did n''t you?" |
43703 | Did she?" |
43703 | Did you know it?" |
43703 | Did you know it?" |
43703 | Did you know that? |
43703 | Did you mind?" |
43703 | Did you propose to go to the station and sit there?" |
43703 | Did you really begin to-- to care for me that actual afternoon?" |
43703 | Did you wish to include it in the sale as it is, or have it repaired? |
43703 | Do I look sallow and horrid? |
43703 | Do n''t they want us to draw the line between them and the sort we''re to meet at supper?" |
43703 | Do n''t we?" |
43703 | Do n''t you believe any marriage can be happy?" |
43703 | Do n''t you believe me? |
43703 | Do n''t you know, dear, that it always costs heavily to do anything in a hurry? |
43703 | Do n''t you see? |
43703 | Do n''t you think I know what a girl ought to have? |
43703 | Do n''t you think her expression is very sweet?" |
43703 | Do n''t you think so, Jim?" |
43703 | Do n''t you think so?" |
43703 | Do n''t you understand, Jacqueline? |
43703 | Do n''t you want to come over and eat chocolates and gossip?" |
43703 | Do n''t you wish to come?" |
43703 | Do n''t you?" |
43703 | Do women encourage you in such modest faith in yourself? |
43703 | Do you approve my writing to you?" |
43703 | Do you ever see them any more?" |
43703 | Do you expect me to hang around somewhere while you work? |
43703 | Do you expect to keep me tied to the table- leg in case of eventualities?" |
43703 | Do you get me, Desboro? |
43703 | Do you get on with Aunt Hannah?" |
43703 | Do you hear me, you yellow- haired, blue- eyed little beast?" |
43703 | Do you know how long any two people can endure each other without merciful assistance from a third? |
43703 | Do you know it?" |
43703 | Do you know she is perfectly sweet? |
43703 | Do you know, child, that there is a sort of simpering smugness about a house like this that makes me inclined to kick dents in the furniture?" |
43703 | Do you mean make love to you?" |
43703 | Do you mind my interrupting you?" |
43703 | Do you mind?" |
43703 | Do you mind?" |
43703 | Do you realise that I''m nearly dead sitting for an hour here? |
43703 | Do you realise what you are saying?" |
43703 | Do you really like it, Jim?" |
43703 | Do you really think we had better go up to Silverwood in the car? |
43703 | Do you remember how I used to come here and cry?" |
43703 | Do you remember one evening, just before Christmas, when you and your husband had been on the outs?" |
43703 | Do you remember_ Ariane_?" |
43703 | Do you see all these piles of manuscript? |
43703 | Do you see the collar of the Golden Fleece on the gorget? |
43703 | Do you suppose I''ll know anybody aboard?" |
43703 | Do you suppose he interests me? |
43703 | Do you suppose we''d be that way, too, if we were men?" |
43703 | Do you suppose your reasoning makes it more endurable? |
43703 | Do you think I can be trusted to mind my business when_ she_ comes to- morrow? |
43703 | Do you think I can ever forget that?" |
43703 | Do you think I want_ every_ living creature to detest me?" |
43703 | Do you think I''d have been such a fool if I''d known it, Jacqueline?" |
43703 | Do you think I''d let you stand for anything less after that? |
43703 | Do you think I''ll have sense enough to remember this to- morrow, and not be ass enough to acquire more-- a responsibility, for example? |
43703 | Do you think I''ll succeed?" |
43703 | Do you think I''m going to blacken my own face? |
43703 | Do you think a woman wants that?" |
43703 | Do you think that you would care to see me again?" |
43703 | Do you understand? |
43703 | Do you understand?" |
43703 | Do you want people to overhear us?" |
43703 | Do you wish me to give them up?" |
43703 | Do you wonder that I know a little about it?" |
43703 | Do you?" |
43703 | Do you?" |
43703 | Do_ you_ tempt me?" |
43703 | Does n''t one''s host have to be impartially attentive? |
43703 | Does that concern_ you_?" |
43703 | Does that entail hard labour for life?" |
43703 | Eh? |
43703 | Elena coloured furiously:"Is it necessary for me to incriminate myself before you help me? |
43703 | Else why was he lingering? |
43703 | For her?" |
43703 | For instance, when rumour couples Elena Clydesdale''s name with James Desboro''s, does it occur to you to question the scandal? |
43703 | For the love of Mike, Cynthia, borrow the needful and----""From_ you_?" |
43703 | Gentlemen,_ are_ we done for without even suspecting it? |
43703 | Get me?" |
43703 | Go forward into the box; those people will be arriving----""Do you promise?" |
43703 | Go to your room and I''ll come----""Are you mad?" |
43703 | Good- bye-- and if I come again-- may I remain?" |
43703 | Had he been remiss, or had he ventured too many attentions? |
43703 | Had he cultivated and added to either? |
43703 | Had he done anything? |
43703 | Had he made of it anything except an instrument for idle caprice and indolent passions to play upon? |
43703 | Had n''t he understood it? |
43703 | Had she anything to do with his strange conduct? |
43703 | Had the ghosts of their owners risen to confront him on his own hearthstone, standing already between him and this young girl he had married? |
43703 | Had the thought of marrying him ever entered her head? |
43703 | Had you considered_ that_ possibility?" |
43703 | Has it ever occurred to you how doubly disgraceful it is for people, with every chance in the world, not to make good?" |
43703 | Has it?" |
43703 | Has she accepted you?" |
43703 | Have n''t I?" |
43703 | Have n''t you any control over your countenance?" |
43703 | Have n''t you seen her since?" |
43703 | Have you a note from me?" |
43703 | Have you any idea how I look forward to your coming?" |
43703 | Have you never heard me recite the three- word- classic of San Tzu Ching? |
43703 | Having located a clock with a certain amount of accuracy, what is the next step to take in finding out the exact time?" |
43703 | He asks for one minute only, saying that it is a matter of most desperate importance to you----""To_ me_?" |
43703 | He ca n''t, can he?" |
43703 | He continued silent beside her so long that she said timidly:"Do you mind, Jim?" |
43703 | He flushed hotly:"Do you-- do I inspire you with-- do I repel you-- physically?" |
43703 | He had an appointment and----""Where?" |
43703 | He is not in town to- night----""Confound it, do you think I''m that sort?" |
43703 | He lifted her hand to his lips:"Do you love me, Jacqueline?" |
43703 | He reddened:"Toward whom?" |
43703 | He said in a low voice:"Jacqueline, would you marry me as soon as I can get a license-- if I asked you to do it?" |
43703 | He said, astonished:"Well, why on earth do you suppose I''m taking the trouble to ask the others?" |
43703 | He said, incredulously:"Did you write to him what you have just said to me?" |
43703 | He said, looking at her smilingly but curiously:"Have you any idea, Cynthia, how entirely you have changed in two years?" |
43703 | He said, quietly:"Does n''t our friendship count for anything?" |
43703 | He said:"How is your skating jacket coming along?" |
43703 | He said:"Shall we say good- night?" |
43703 | He said:"Yours is a French name?" |
43703 | He seated himself on the other arm of the sofa:"Did you adore him?" |
43703 | He skates very well; we are learning to waltz on skates----""Who does the teaching?" |
43703 | He smiled uneasily:"For how long must we twain, who are now one, maintain solitary sovereignty over our separate domains?" |
43703 | He strove to speak coolly:"Then you_ can_ see into it?" |
43703 | He turned to Mrs. Quant with an effort:"Is everything all right?" |
43703 | He was saying:"But is n''t friendship an obligation, Cynthia?" |
43703 | He would n''t come, would he?" |
43703 | Her shrill voice was a little modified when she said:"Where did you learn to do such things? |
43703 | Hey?" |
43703 | How are you, sweetness, anyway?" |
43703 | How can real innocence be so unworthily wise?" |
43703 | How could he have carried on this terrible affair after he had met her, after he had known her, loved her, won her? |
43703 | How could he have done it? |
43703 | How could he have made a secret rendezvous with the woman scarcely an hour after he had asked her to marry him? |
43703 | How could he have received that woman as a guest under the same roof that sheltered her? |
43703 | How could she go to her husband again? |
43703 | How could they, once the business between them was transacted? |
43703 | How do I know what might be hidden behind that fixed grin of his?" |
43703 | How do you get on with the gorgon?" |
43703 | How do_ you_ feel about it, old top?" |
43703 | How does she know?" |
43703 | How else could I understand_ you_?" |
43703 | How in the world could that poor countess have stood it?" |
43703 | How long am I to continue paying? |
43703 | How long did you suppose I could stand it to see you at that desk and then go and sit in a silly club?" |
43703 | How much did this man really mean of what he said to her? |
43703 | How much of an expert are you? |
43703 | How seriously had she taken the rôle she was playing somewhere at that moment? |
43703 | How soon can you get here?" |
43703 | How was it with his mind? |
43703 | How was it with his spiritual beliefs? |
43703 | How''s that for a reckless suggestion?" |
43703 | I ask you to convince my husband----""How?" |
43703 | I ask you, now, honestly; are you?" |
43703 | I believe I''ll run up to my room and do a little friction on my cheeks----""With nail polish?" |
43703 | I know how to_ tell_ it, provided I once know what it is----""Are you drunk?" |
43703 | I know people will find Mr. Sissly''s lecture interesting, but do you think they''ll like mine?" |
43703 | I remember it with pleasure-- your kindness, and Mrs. Quant''s----""How on earth can you talk to me that way?" |
43703 | I suppose the usual people will be there?" |
43703 | I tell you it puts life into a man, does n''t it? |
43703 | I tell you you''d better find some way----""What has happened?" |
43703 | I warned you that our wedding trip would have to be postponed if you married me this way-- didn''t I, dear?" |
43703 | I warned you''"385"''It was rather odd, was n''t it, Jim?''" |
43703 | I wo n''t keep you long----""What do you mean? |
43703 | I''m good, am I not, Jacqueline?" |
43703 | I-- I know in my heart that I''ve got to defend it----""What do you mean, my darling?" |
43703 | I-- had no idea you''d offer to do such a thing----""Why should n''t I? |
43703 | If I did not, could I endure-- what you do?" |
43703 | If it did, do you suppose I''d hesitate to choose?" |
43703 | If that girl is in there crying all alone,_ what_ are you doing out here?" |
43703 | If you would not think me selfish, self- seeking-- believe unworthy motives of me----""What do you mean?" |
43703 | In cold blood?" |
43703 | In other words, you forestalled me, did n''t you?" |
43703 | Into what would it grow? |
43703 | Is Manila worth seeing, Captain Herrendene?" |
43703 | Is he plural?" |
43703 | Is he too ill? |
43703 | Is it because of what you know about marriages-- like mine?" |
43703 | Is it right for me to tell you that I understood you? |
43703 | Is it you, Jacqueline, dear?" |
43703 | Is it yours?" |
43703 | Is my name more difficult for you?" |
43703 | Is n''t his name Munger?" |
43703 | Is n''t it horribly messy?" |
43703 | Is n''t it natural for a girl to wish for her oldest friend at such a time? |
43703 | Is n''t it odd? |
43703 | Is n''t it plain enough?" |
43703 | Is n''t it to be just a matter of enjoying together what interests each? |
43703 | Is n''t it your house----""Silverwood?" |
43703 | Is n''t it? |
43703 | Is n''t it?" |
43703 | Is n''t that a wonderful way to begin life?" |
43703 | Is n''t that so, Miss Nevers?" |
43703 | Is n''t that the limit? |
43703 | Is n''t there anything in you to respond?" |
43703 | Is not that honour enough?" |
43703 | Is that it?" |
43703 | Is that the hymn- tune, James?" |
43703 | Is that what you mean to do? |
43703 | Is that what you mean?" |
43703 | Is that your idea of divine responsibility?" |
43703 | Is there any punishment to compare with it, Clydesdale?" |
43703 | Is there any reason? |
43703 | Is there anything I have said that you disapprove?" |
43703 | Is_ that_ all the credit you give me for my worship and adoration?" |
43703 | Is_ that_ it? |
43703 | Is_ that_ the excuse?" |
43703 | It was rather odd, was n''t it, Jim? |
43703 | It''s a fine text, is n''t it, though?" |
43703 | It''s a horrid mess, is n''t it-- what he did to my husband? |
43703 | It''s been a long time, has n''t it?" |
43703 | It''s funny about Miss Nevers, is n''t it?" |
43703 | It''s funny, is n''t it?" |
43703 | It''s merely a matter of mutual interest and respect, is n''t it?" |
43703 | It''s rather rotten, is n''t it, pussy? |
43703 | It''s you, Elena, is n''t it?" |
43703 | James?" |
43703 | James?" |
43703 | James?" |
43703 | Jim, have I bored you with a sermon? |
43703 | Jim, what_ did_ you think of me?" |
43703 | Jolly, is n''t it?" |
43703 | Make a servant out of me? |
43703 | Make him believe that the remainder of the jades and rose- quartz carvings are genuine?" |
43703 | May I ask if it is you?" |
43703 | May I bring them to dinner this evening?" |
43703 | May I have twenty minutes? |
43703 | Might it not be accomplished through Daisy Hammerton? |
43703 | Mirk?" |
43703 | Miss Nevers is here?" |
43703 | Mrs. Barkley leaned across the table toward him:"What''s the matter, James? |
43703 | Mrs. Clydesdale, too, had risen"151"''Which is the real pleasure?'' |
43703 | Murder?" |
43703 | Must I close the story book and lay it away until another day?" |
43703 | Must this always be so? |
43703 | No? |
43703 | Now I want to ask you whether a lot of those things have not increased in value since my grandfather''s day?" |
43703 | Now do you feel the steel?" |
43703 | Now do you understand?" |
43703 | Now, Miss Nevers, what do you require? |
43703 | Now, do you understand?" |
43703 | Now, does your vanity believe that my return to Silverwood was influenced by your piteous appeal over the wire-- and your bad temper, too?" |
43703 | Now, was n''t that a peculiar thing for an enterprising young man to discover, I ask you?" |
43703 | Of course you_ could_ go South, but, judging from your devotion to the study of ancient armour----""You do n''t mean it, do you?" |
43703 | Of what are you thinking-- with that slight and rather fascinating smile crinkling your eyes?" |
43703 | Of what use was it other than to believe in him? |
43703 | Oh, what is it-- what could it be, Jack? |
43703 | Only I had better tell you about Cynthia Lessler----""Who?" |
43703 | Only-- would_ you_ marry her?" |
43703 | Opportunity for what? |
43703 | Or are you merely created that way?" |
43703 | Or as diverting fiction? |
43703 | Or what? |
43703 | Or-- shall I tell you again that I love you?" |
43703 | Ought I not to say it?" |
43703 | Pencil and pad?" |
43703 | Perhaps a course of banquets-- perhaps a régime under a diet list warranted to improve----"Did you ever see the Desboro collection, Miss Nevers?" |
43703 | Really, I must hurry and dress----""Dress?" |
43703 | Reggie Ledyard, much flattered, admitted the wholesale indictment against his sex:"How can we help it? |
43703 | Reggie, dear?" |
43703 | Rotten of her, was n''t it?" |
43703 | See? |
43703 | Shall I leave you in peace? |
43703 | Shall I see you at the dance?" |
43703 | Shall I trundle it in?" |
43703 | Shall I? |
43703 | Shall I?" |
43703 | Shall I?" |
43703 | Shall I?" |
43703 | She considered him:"Have n''t you any profession?" |
43703 | She had aided him before in emergencies-- unwillingly, it is true-- but what of that? |
43703 | She had gone half mad with fear"] What was she to do? |
43703 | She laid aside the paper and took off her glasses:"Very well; failing to obtain the desired information from me, why do n''t you ask your-- wife?" |
43703 | She laughed:"Is n''t it odd? |
43703 | She laughed:"_ You_ have n''t changed, at all events, have you? |
43703 | She looked at him; shrugged her shoulders:"Oh, Mr. Desboro,"she said pleasantly,"does it,_ really_?" |
43703 | She looked up at him at last, frank- eyed but flushed:[ Illustration:"''Which is the real pleasure?'' |
43703 | She managed to sustain his gaze:"Could you find a lady gorgon?" |
43703 | She paused at the door, looking back:"Is that understood?" |
43703 | She said presently, without turning:"Some day, may I ask Cynthia to visit me?" |
43703 | She said, very pale:"Will you not tell me-- give me some hint about what you have written?" |
43703 | She told him, adding:"Do you really mean to come?" |
43703 | She was occupied with her fruit cup; presently she glanced up at him:"Is that your policy?" |
43703 | She, too, noticed the difference in his voice as he said:"Then may I have the car there as usual to- morrow morning?" |
43703 | Should they switch him on to her private apartments above? |
43703 | Sissly? |
43703 | So I must ask you again who is this prince?" |
43703 | So that''s the game, is it? |
43703 | So you''ll accept the-- er-- job?" |
43703 | So you''re at the bottom of it all, are you?" |
43703 | So-- I will say good- bye----""May I not walk home with you? |
43703 | So-- may I go now?" |
43703 | So-- we will be friendly to her, wo n''t we?" |
43703 | Somewhere out? |
43703 | Still looking at him, the faint smile fading into seriousness, she repeated:"Why should n''t I say so? |
43703 | Stuyvesant, too? |
43703 | Tell me, James, do you think this little Nevers girl dislikes me?" |
43703 | Tell me, is there anything I can do for your comfort before I go? |
43703 | Tell me, what are you doing over Sunday?" |
43703 | That blond and hulking ass Ledyard, was n''t it? |
43703 | That is specific, is n''t it?" |
43703 | That is very simple, is n''t it?" |
43703 | That sounds horribly priggish-- but is n''t it so, Cynthia?" |
43703 | That you would one day take your proper place in the world?" |
43703 | That''s rather neat, is n''t it?" |
43703 | The burden of decision lies with you this time, does n''t it?" |
43703 | The cat woke up and regarded him gravely; he said to her:"You do n''t even need a pocket- book, do you? |
43703 | The distant voice spoke again, and:"Silverwood?" |
43703 | The old lady looked at her grimly:"What does''thank you''mean? |
43703 | The rejoinder came faintly:"How do you know?" |
43703 | Then she raised her head and looked at him:"Do you think it best?" |
43703 | Then what did all this perplexity mean that was keeping her awake? |
43703 | Then why are you here at this hour of the morning, after your wedding night?" |
43703 | Then you_ have_ seen''The Better Way''?" |
43703 | Then, turning to Jacqueline:"Are you going to give this young man some tea, my child? |
43703 | Then, with a little gesture:"Wo n''t you please be seated?" |
43703 | Then:"Did you suppose it is always easy for a girl in love-- whose instinct is to love-- and to give? |
43703 | There is nothing I wo n''t forgive-- except-- one thing----""What?" |
43703 | There was a pause, a moment''s whispering, then light footsteps flying through the corridor, and:"Where on earth have you been for a week?" |
43703 | They gossiped for a while, then Cynthia ended:"I''ll see you to- morrow night, wo n''t I? |
43703 | To Desboro? |
43703 | To a maid passing he said:"Is Mrs. Clydesdale lunching at home?" |
43703 | To her husband? |
43703 | To spurn her? |
43703 | To the man on duty there he said:"Did Mrs. Clydesdale come in?" |
43703 | To threaten her? |
43703 | To warn her? |
43703 | To what end? |
43703 | To whom are you in the habit of talking every evening at seven by special request?" |
43703 | To whom could she turn now? |
43703 | Understand?" |
43703 | Understand?" |
43703 | Understand?" |
43703 | Wait until these people leave----""To- night?" |
43703 | Want a try at this moon- pup, Desboro? |
43703 | Want me to read it to you?" |
43703 | Was faith in this man really dead? |
43703 | Was he doing it now? |
43703 | Was he trying to awaken her to some response? |
43703 | Was it all right?" |
43703 | Was it disloyal to you to forgive her?" |
43703 | Was it in such a girl to challenge the possibility, make it as near a serious question as it ever could be? |
43703 | Was it only the image of faith which her loyalty and courage had set up once more for an altar amid the ruins of her young heart? |
43703 | Was it that girl at Silverwood?" |
43703 | Was it the vulgar vice of jealousy that was beginning to fasten itself upon her? |
43703 | Was it to see with her own eyes the admiration for herself in his? |
43703 | Was it your lack of enterprise that saved me-- or your prudence?" |
43703 | Was n''t it horrible, Desboro?" |
43703 | Was she the kind of girl who would nail the worldly opportunity? |
43703 | Was that what she wished to know when she and this man separated for the day--_where the woman was_? |
43703 | Was the clock still going? |
43703 | Was_ she_? |
43703 | Was_ that_ what tortured her? |
43703 | Was_ that_ what you heard? |
43703 | Waudle?" |
43703 | Waudle?" |
43703 | We talk foolishness-- don''t you know it? |
43703 | Well, what did you say to_ him_?" |
43703 | Were you going anywhere? |
43703 | What are you going to do about it? |
43703 | What are you going to do for nearly two hours if you do n''t take tea? |
43703 | What are you going to do with her anyway?" |
43703 | What are you going to do-- sell a few superannuated Westchester hens at auction? |
43703 | What are you going to do?" |
43703 | What are you going to do?" |
43703 | What are you sorry for? |
43703 | What can heal it, dear?" |
43703 | What could be more suitable, more perfect? |
43703 | What did faith matter to her in the world if she could not trust this man? |
43703 | What did he mean to do with this woman who had hated him and who now was about to disgrace him? |
43703 | What did he mean to do? |
43703 | What did he want of her? |
43703 | What did he want to say to her? |
43703 | What did he want with her or her friendship-- or her blue eyes and bright hair-- or the slim, girlish grace of her? |
43703 | What did he want? |
43703 | What did his liking for her signify other than the natural instinct of an idle young man for any pretty girl? |
43703 | What did it mean? |
43703 | What did you find in the jade room?" |
43703 | What difference does it make where you get it as long as it''s a decent deal? |
43703 | What difference does what you say make to me, when I hate_ him_ and I love_ you_? |
43703 | What do I care what Miss Nevers does?" |
43703 | What do I know about him-- except that he''s big and red? |
43703 | What do they care? |
43703 | What do you mean by talking this way?" |
43703 | What do you say to that, young man?" |
43703 | What do you suppose I came here for?" |
43703 | What do you suppose I have been doing these last three years? |
43703 | What do you suppose my father was doing all his life? |
43703 | What do you think of her?" |
43703 | What does she know? |
43703 | What does she mean by coming here at such an unearthly hour? |
43703 | What earthly use am I to you? |
43703 | What else was he-- except a trained animal, sufficiently educated to keep out of jail? |
43703 | What experience has she? |
43703 | What followed stiffened her still more-- and there were only a few words, too-- only:"For God''s sake, what are you thinking of?" |
43703 | What had happened to her husband? |
43703 | What had happened? |
43703 | What had he done to her? |
43703 | What had he done with his inheritance? |
43703 | What had she done? |
43703 | What have they said?" |
43703 | What is it you have to say to me?" |
43703 | What is it you wish me to do-- deceive Mr. Clydesdale? |
43703 | What is it?" |
43703 | What is she, James; a pretty blue- stocking whom nobody''understands''except you?" |
43703 | What of it? |
43703 | What on earth do you mean? |
43703 | What rumour, what breath of innuendo? |
43703 | What the devil''s the matter with me? |
43703 | What time is it?" |
43703 | What was he doing now-- with his lips quivering against her other hand, all wet with his tears? |
43703 | What was he going to do about it? |
43703 | What was the use? |
43703 | What was there to do? |
43703 | What was there to do? |
43703 | What whisper had reached her guiltless ears? |
43703 | What will you do until five, Jim?" |
43703 | What would come of it? |
43703 | What''s the real motive? |
43703 | What_ do_ they say about us? |
43703 | When a mere Johnnie is also a Jack, it makes a difference-- doesn''t it? |
43703 | When are you going up to Silverwood?" |
43703 | When he had the opportunity, he said:"What may I send you that you would care for?" |
43703 | When his self- control seemed assured once more, he said:"Do you mean that the damage I have done is irreparable?" |
43703 | When may I kiss you?" |
43703 | Where are you going?" |
43703 | Where did he come from-- Luzon?" |
43703 | Where is the Lord of the West, The Golden Emperor''s son? |
43703 | Where was she to go? |
43703 | Where?" |
43703 | Where?" |
43703 | Which friends? |
43703 | Which is it to be?" |
43703 | Which is it?" |
43703 | Who has been talking to you? |
43703 | Who was that girl at Silverwood?" |
43703 | Why are you no longer?" |
43703 | Why bother with priest or clergyman? |
43703 | Why ca n''t I have the pleasure of speculating on a perfectly sure thing? |
43703 | Why ca n''t we enjoy matter- of- fact business relations? |
43703 | Why ca n''t you come up for this week- end, and postpone the Museum meanderings? |
43703 | Why cut off your nose to spite your face? |
43703 | Why did Mr. Cairns telephone? |
43703 | Why did n''t my husband telephone? |
43703 | Why did n''t she finish the cataloguing herself? |
43703 | Why did you think I had? |
43703 | Why do n''t you ask him up for the skating, Jim?" |
43703 | Why do n''t you go back to Westchester and hoe potatoes?" |
43703 | Why do n''t you know? |
43703 | Why do they say such foolish and untrue things about_ me_?" |
43703 | Why do you ask me? |
43703 | Why do you ask?" |
43703 | Why do you not decide for yourself?" |
43703 | Why do you think my friends are so different from you? |
43703 | Why had he come to see her then? |
43703 | Why had he come? |
43703 | Why had he not gone South with the others? |
43703 | Why had she suddenly changed her mind and suggested a creature named Sissly? |
43703 | Why must the burden of decision always rest with me?" |
43703 | Why not adopt it?" |
43703 | Why not merely look it? |
43703 | Why not? |
43703 | Why not? |
43703 | Why should I go to see her?" |
43703 | Why should I not have learned something?" |
43703 | Why should I?" |
43703 | Why should Love sigh?" |
43703 | Why should n''t I say so?" |
43703 | Why should n''t you help me? |
43703 | Why should she have responded to an appeal from such a man as Desboro? |
43703 | Why should you ever have felt that you owed any duty to me?" |
43703 | Why was he here at all? |
43703 | Why was he hurting her so? |
43703 | Why was he not hunting her with the pack? |
43703 | Why was he spending time thinking about her-- disarranging his routine and habits to be here when she came? |
43703 | Why was he waiting here until noon to talk to this girl? |
43703 | Why? |
43703 | Why?" |
43703 | Why?" |
43703 | Why?" |
43703 | Why?" |
43703 | Why_ did n''t_ you have brains enough to discover her, Jim, and make her marry you?" |
43703 | Will she be there-- the one who does the lute solo in''The Maid of Shiraz''?" |
43703 | Will that satisfy you?" |
43703 | Will you be kind to me, Jim, and not flirt with my maid?" |
43703 | Will you bring the car around at five?" |
43703 | Will you come for me to- morrow at five?" |
43703 | Will you come to me at eight?" |
43703 | Will you come?" |
43703 | Will you kindly inform me?" |
43703 | Will you trust me when I say it is better for us to marry quietly and at once?" |
43703 | Will you wait here for me?" |
43703 | With no beliefs?" |
43703 | Wo n''t this snow make the roads bad? |
43703 | Wo n''t you be patient with me, Jim?" |
43703 | Wo n''t you come up to the house, Desboro?" |
43703 | Wo n''t you even look at me?" |
43703 | Wo n''t you let me arrange with some old gorgon to chaperon you? |
43703 | Wo n''t you stand by me, Jim?" |
43703 | Would n''t she have looked the part? |
43703 | Would she really have abided by the terms if discovered by Herrendene, for example, or Dicky Hammerton-- if they were mad enough to take it seriously? |
43703 | Would this proud and chaste young girl, accepting the acted lie as truth, resent it? |
43703 | Would you answer me one question?" |
43703 | Would you ask Farris to fetch a whisk- broom?" |
43703 | Would you mind going back and speaking to her when I drive away?" |
43703 | Would you mind if I label you''Stray Lock,''and put you on the shelf among the other immortals?" |
43703 | Would you-- would you try a few m- m- magic drops, Mr. James, sir? |
43703 | Would you?" |
43703 | Yes or no? |
43703 | Yes-- I''ll be ready----""Does it make you happy?" |
43703 | Yes? |
43703 | Yes?" |
43703 | Yet, may I say that this-- this heart- breaking crisis in her life, and-- in mine-- has-- brought us together? |
43703 | You ai n''t never had typod, now, hev you?" |
43703 | You and Jack Cairns and James Desboro-- and Cary Clydesdale, too? |
43703 | You can live where you please, ca n''t you?" |
43703 | You could do that, could n''t you? |
43703 | You did n''t think so once, did you?" |
43703 | You do n''t mind, do you?" |
43703 | You do n''t wish to make me afraid of you, do you? |
43703 | You have made my life a living lie again-- so that you could evade responsibility----""Was I ever responsible for you?" |
43703 | You have only to put on your business coat, have n''t you?" |
43703 | You have plenty to do to amuse you-- haven''t you, dear?" |
43703 | You know that, do n''t you?" |
43703 | You refuse to stand between me and my-- my degradation? |
43703 | You see that for yourself, do n''t you?" |
43703 | You think I''m fond of you, do n''t you? |
43703 | You think your Mr. Desboro is one, do n''t you?" |
43703 | You understand, do n''t you?" |
43703 | You wo n''t misunderstand, will you? |
43703 | You would n''t take that away from me, would you?" |
43703 | You''d never marry_ him_, would you?" |
43703 | You''ll always tell me when you do n''t, wo n''t you?" |
43703 | You''ll go to call on her, wo n''t you?" |
43703 | You''re a very clever young one, are n''t you? |
43703 | You''ve all the irresponsibility and moral rottenness of your Cavalier ancestors in you; do you know it, James? |
43703 | You''ve heard about the proverbial cat?" |
43703 | You_ did_ forestall me, did n''t you, Jim?" |
43703 | You_ were_ thinking of me when you thought of this, were n''t you?" |
43703 | Your grandfather specialised?" |
43703 | [ Illustration:"''Are business and friendship incompatible?''"] |
43703 | [ Illustration:"''It was rather odd, was n''t it, Jim?''"] |
43703 | [ Illustration:"''Now,''she said, leaning forward...''what is the meaning of this?''"] |
43703 | [ Illustration:"''Why do n''t you ask your-- wife?''"] |
43703 | [ Illustration:"''You have no further interest in me, have you?''"] |
43703 | [ Illustration:"What was she to do? |
43703 | _ All?_"No answer. |
43703 | _ Am_ I such a prig as I sound?" |
43703 | _ Are_ you, Cynthia?" |
43703 | _ Are_ you, dear?" |
43703 | _ Is_ she so unusually wonderful, Jim?" |
43703 | _ Was_ there?" |
43703 | _ What_ did he want of her? |
43703 | _ What_ did he want of her? |
43703 | _ Why?_ Yet, never once was her anger aroused against this man. |
43703 | _ Yes!_""Then-- what must you think of me?" |
43703 | from Desboro; and from Elena Clydesdale:"This has got to end-- I ca n''t stand it, Jim----""Stand what?" |
43703 | he asked;"a perfect one, or the real thing?" |
43703 | she asked"]"Which is the real pleasure,"she asked,"seeing each other, or anticipating the-- the resumption of the entente cordial?" |
43703 | what?" |