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 |
---|---|
21105 | A raft-- what is that? |
21105 | Ai n''t he aggravating? 21105 Am I conjuror or not?" |
21105 | And I s''pose he''s pretty well sp''ilt? |
21105 | And have you come far arter him, miss, if I may make so bold as to ax the question? |
21105 | And he comed all that way from t''other side o''the village by hisself? |
21105 | And how shall we get there? |
21105 | And how would you manage to have no smoke? |
21105 | And what shall we do now? |
21105 | Aye, all happen, Vernon? 21105 But how then,"asked Teddy-- he could speak more plainly now than as a five- year old--"do people get off from ships when they have no boat?" |
21105 | But your sermon, papa? |
21105 | By the three o''clock train, eh? |
21105 | Ca n''t you see? 21105 Ca n''t you send somebody after him?" |
21105 | Did he now? |
21105 | Did n''t I tell''ee as you were n''t to go outdoors in all the slop and slush-- didn''t I tell''ee now? |
21105 | Do n''t you recollect, Con,she observed,"you lent it to Teddy the other day? |
21105 | Do you feel any better now? |
21105 | Do you? |
21105 | Have n''t I? |
21105 | Have you got such a thing as a dry piece of flannel now, miss? |
21105 | Have you really, sir? |
21105 | Have you seen it? |
21105 | I say, old fellow,then began Val again, making a fresh start and blurting out his question,"have you got any money?" |
21105 | Indeed, sir? |
21105 | Is Mary your name? |
21105 | Is that you, Mary? |
21105 | Nothing wrong, I hope? |
21105 | Oh, thank you,said Teddy, rejoiced to hear this, the very hint he wanted;"but what did they do for oars?" |
21105 | Oo wo n''t tate way kitty? |
21105 | P''aps,suggested Cissy,"he''s done upstairs?" |
21105 | Parson Vernon''s, eh? |
21105 | Shall I carry him for you, miss? |
21105 | Shall I go after him, papa? |
21105 | So he is-- sometimes, eh, Master Teddy? |
21105 | Then I may depend on your doing so now, eh? |
21105 | Then why dose him any more with book learning, eh? 21105 There''s nothing wrong with him, I hope?" |
21105 | This your nephew? |
21105 | Wat''s dat? |
21105 | Well, how are you getting on? |
21105 | Well, young shaver,he said,"how are you getting on?" |
21105 | Well? |
21105 | Well? |
21105 | Were''s Puck an''de bunny? |
21105 | What a lot there''ll be for you to see, my hearty, eh? |
21105 | What have you got to say for yourselves, eh, for taking leave in French fashion like that? 21105 What is it, my dear?" |
21105 | What is that you''re jabbering? |
21105 | What say you to Maitland being your name and Vernon that of your companion, eh, my young cocksparrow? |
21105 | What''s the matter? |
21105 | What? 21105 What?" |
21105 | Where is your grandma, sir? |
21105 | Where? |
21105 | Who would have thought the little puss would have been so thoughtful? 21105 Why ca n''t you let him be?" |
21105 | Why, has n''t he been yet? |
21105 | Why, wherever can Miss Conny be all this time? |
21105 | Why? |
21105 | Why? |
21105 | You are very kind,said she;"but, I hardly like to trouble you?" |
21105 | You do n''t mean that, sir-- not in that bundle o''yours surely, sir? |
21105 | Any of you going down to the station to meet them?" |
21105 | Are there any other midshipmen like myself?" |
21105 | Do n''t you remember? |
21105 | Do you know where he is, Liz?" |
21105 | Going to take''em with you to London, sir?" |
21105 | He''s a bright intelligent boy-- you do n''t think him an ignoramus, Jolly, eh?" |
21105 | Hi, boatman, seen any one belonging to the_ Greenock_ ashore?" |
21105 | I hope he will be good-- eh, my boy?" |
21105 | Is n''t that so, Mr Capstan?" |
21105 | Is that you?" |
21105 | Let us bear up for granny''s-- you have n''t been to her place before, have you, eh?" |
21105 | Still, he ca n''t go into the church yet; what are you going to do with him in the meantime, eh?" |
21105 | This could be readily reasoned out at a glance; but, where could Teddy be, the striker of the match, the inceptor of all the mischief? |
21105 | What do you mean by it, eh?" |
21105 | What was to be done? |
21105 | Whatever shall we do?" |
21105 | Where were the canvas tents of the diggers, and the claims, and all? |
21105 | Who could have done it? |
21105 | Why did you not stay in the boat?" |
21105 | Why do n''t you learn to look on the bright side of things, child? |
21105 | Would you like a cup of tea now, sir? |
21105 | ejaculated Molly with open- mouth astonishment, curtseying and smiling:"you doant mean that?" |
21105 | he exclaimed,"can I believe my eyes?--is it really you?" |
21105 | is that your reason, brother- in- law? |
21105 | the man said, his voice being much pleasanter than his looks,"where do you hail from? |
21105 | what are you doing there?" |
34541 | All alo- an? 34541 Alone?" |
34541 | And Belinda, mother dear? |
34541 | And before then? |
34541 | And how about the other luggage, sir,--the portmanteaus and hat- boxes? |
34541 | And where''s-- your patient? |
34541 | And you will forgive Olivia, dear? |
34541 | Are you all alone here? |
34541 | Are you mad, or drunk? 34541 Are you mad?" |
34541 | But afterwards, darling, when you were better, stronger,--did you make no effort then to escape from your persecutors? |
34541 | But is there nothing else I can do, sir? |
34541 | But what will you do, Paul? |
34541 | But when shall we see you again, Paul? 34541 But wo n''t to- morrow mornin''do? |
34541 | But you remember, Edward,--you remember what I said about never seeing the Sycamores? 34541 Can you find no words that are vile enough to express your hatred of me? |
34541 | Did George Weston tell me the truth just now? |
34541 | Did I? |
34541 | Do you imagine that_ I_ will let this marriage take place? |
34541 | Do you know if anybody has lived here lately? |
34541 | Do you remember that poor foolish German woman who believed that the spirit of a dead king came to her in the shape of a blackbird? 34541 Do you think that fellow would go to Australia, Lavinia?" |
34541 | Do you think, Miss Lawford, that it is necessary to sit at a man''s dinner- table before you know what he is? 34541 Edward Arundel!--what about Edward Arundel?" |
34541 | Even yet I am a mystery to you? |
34541 | For only bringing you the news, Paul? |
34541 | Has she said''yes''? |
34541 | Have I any clothes that I can hunt in, Morrison? |
34541 | Have you been here long? |
34541 | Have you nothing more to tell me? |
34541 | How do you mean? |
34541 | How soon will it come? |
34541 | I suppose you are not aware that my future brother- in- law is a major? |
34541 | I suppose you are not aware that you have been talking to Major Arundel, who has done all manner of splendid things in the Punjaub? 34541 I''m to go to Australia, am I? |
34541 | Immediately? |
34541 | Is it true? |
34541 | Is n''t he like you, Edward? |
34541 | Is this true that George Weston tells me? |
34541 | Is this true? |
34541 | Is your clock right? |
34541 | My dear Mrs. John, what is it you want of me? |
34541 | My dressing- case? |
34541 | Need you ask me the question, Paul? 34541 Not yet?" |
34541 | O yes, dear; but had n''t you better take any thing of value yourself? |
34541 | Of course it must n''t,answered Mr. Weston;"did n''t I say so just now? |
34541 | Shall I ever have courage to stop till it comes? |
34541 | Shall you go to London? |
34541 | Since when has my wife been at Kemberling? |
34541 | The door in the lobby? |
34541 | To clean up what? |
34541 | To her-- to Mary-- my wife? |
34541 | To let what be? |
34541 | Well, Lavinia? |
34541 | What can I do to him? |
34541 | What else should we do? 34541 What is it, darling?" |
34541 | What is it? |
34541 | What is the matter, darling? |
34541 | What money have you, Lavinia? |
34541 | What was there for me beyond that place? 34541 What, darling? |
34541 | What, dear? |
34541 | What, mother? |
34541 | Where are all the rest of the servants? |
34541 | Where are my mother and Clarissa? |
34541 | Where is my wife? |
34541 | Where was she before then? |
34541 | Where, in Heaven''s name, have you been hiding yourself, woman? |
34541 | Where? |
34541 | Who are you, girl? |
34541 | Who are you, girl? |
34541 | Who does not know him? |
34541 | Why did n''t you go away with the rest? |
34541 | Why did the other servants leave the place? |
34541 | Why do n''t you speak to me? |
34541 | Why should I try to escape from them? |
34541 | Why should they say my darling committed suicide? |
34541 | Why should you prevent it? |
34541 | Why, my pet? |
34541 | Will God ever forgive my sin? 34541 Will she go there and knock them up, I wonder? |
34541 | You did not see Olivia, then, all this time? |
34541 | You did, did n''t you? 34541 You know my father?" |
34541 | You know what we said to- day, Edward? |
34541 | You mean to let this be, then? |
34541 | You mean to say you found out what had driven your cousin''s widow mad? |
34541 | You think it worth something, then, mother? |
34541 | You think our money is worth something to us? 34541 You wo n''t go to the Towers, papa dear?" |
34541 | You would have stood by Arundel''s poor little wife, my dear? |
34541 | You would stand by her_ now_, if she were alive, and needed your friendship? |
34541 | _ Am_ I happier? |
34541 | _ What_ can I do to him? 34541 ''He has despised your love,''you said:''will you consent to see him happy with another woman?'' 34541 All my plots, my difficulties, my struggles and victories, my long sleepless nights, my bad dreams,--has it all come to this? 34541 Am I to wait for an answer? |
34541 | And now may I ask the reason----?" |
34541 | And, oh sir, bein''a poor lone woman, what was I to do?" |
34541 | Are you turned to stone, Edward Arundel? |
34541 | Are_ you_ going away?" |
34541 | Because I have profited by the death of John Marchmont''s daughter, this impetuous young husband imagines-- what? |
34541 | Besides, what_ should_ come? |
34541 | But Hester was not alone; close behind her came a lady in a rustling silk gown, a tall matronly lady, who cried out,--"Where is she, Edward? |
34541 | But how-- but how? |
34541 | But how? |
34541 | But now ruin had come to him, what was he to do? |
34541 | But still the great question was unanswered-- How was he to kill himself? |
34541 | But tell me what you are going to do yourself, and where you are going?" |
34541 | But was there any chance? |
34541 | But what am I to do? |
34541 | But what are we to do, Paul? |
34541 | But what can a man expect when he''s obliged to put his trust in a fool?" |
34541 | But what of that? |
34541 | But you wo n''t love her quite the same way that you loved me, will you, dear? |
34541 | But you''ll take something-- wine, tea, brandy- and- water-- eh?" |
34541 | But, my darling, why did you make no effort to escape?" |
34541 | Ca n''t you speak, woman? |
34541 | Can God ever forgive these people for their cruelty to you? |
34541 | Can He pity, can He forgive, such guilt as mine? |
34541 | Do you remember how you played upon my misery, and traded on the tortures of my jealous heart? |
34541 | Do you remember that which I must restore to her when I give her back this house and the income that goes along with it? |
34541 | Do you remember what her highest right is? |
34541 | Do you remember what you said to me? |
34541 | Do you remember_ how_ you tempted me? |
34541 | Do you think I can go back to the old life? |
34541 | Does she know that Edward''s there? |
34541 | Edward, is it real? |
34541 | Edward?" |
34541 | From long ago, when you were little more than a boy-- you remember, do n''t you, the long days at the Rectory? |
34541 | Had he not done his duty to the dead; and was he not free now to begin a fresh life? |
34541 | Has the person I left in your care, whom you were paid, and paid well, to take care of,--have you let her go? |
34541 | Have n''t I heard it demonstrated by cleverer men than I am? |
34541 | Have n''t I looked at it in every light, and weighed it in every scale-- always with the same result? |
34541 | He looked forward with a shudder to see-- what? |
34541 | Her thoughts wandered away to that awful question which had been so lately revived in her mind-- Could she be forgiven? |
34541 | How could he tell which of these ways Olivia might have chosen? |
34541 | How should he die? |
34541 | How was he to kill himself? |
34541 | How will you endure Edward Arundel''s contempt for you? |
34541 | How will you tolerate his love for Mary, multiplied twentyfold by all this romantic business of separation and persecution? |
34541 | I wonder whether Marchmont Towers is insured? |
34541 | I''d rather you spoke to him, though,"added the surgeon thoughtfully,"because, you see, it would come better from you, would n''t it now?" |
34541 | If I separated her from her husband-- bah!--was that such a cruelty? |
34541 | If such and such a course of diet is fatal to the body''s health, may not some thoughts be equally fatal to the health of the brain? |
34541 | Is it all real?" |
34541 | Is it for this I have shared your guilty secrets? |
34541 | Is it for this that I have sold my soul to you, Paul Marchmont? |
34541 | Is it true that Edward Arundel is going to be married to- morrow?" |
34541 | Is it-- is it? |
34541 | Is she still with the stepdaughter she loves so dearly?" |
34541 | Is that why you are silent?" |
34541 | Is there anything due to you?" |
34541 | Is your love worth no more than this? |
34541 | It''s all brotherly kindness, of course, and friendly interest in my welfare-- that''s what it''s_ called_, Mrs. J. Shall I tell you what it_ is_? |
34541 | John?" |
34541 | Might not these things even yet come to pass? |
34541 | Mr. Arundel is here, is he not?" |
34541 | Now what, in Heaven''s name, could that miserable little Mary have done with eleven thousand a year, if-- if she had lived to enjoy it?" |
34541 | Or a gentleman who could enter with any warmth of sympathy into his friend''s feelings respecting the auburn tresses or the Grecian nose of"a sister"? |
34541 | Or am I only dreaming? |
34541 | Or, escaping all this, what was there for him? |
34541 | Paul, Paul, what are we to do? |
34541 | Shall I tell you what it is to love? |
34541 | Shall I wake presently and feel the cold air blowing in at the window, and see the moonlight on the wainscot at Stony Stringford? |
34541 | Shall we postpone the wedding?" |
34541 | Should he go upstairs and cut his throat? |
34541 | Something may happen, perhaps, to prevent----""What should happen?" |
34541 | There was no possibility that Olivia should waver in her purpose; for had she not brought with her two witnesses-- Hester Jobson and her husband? |
34541 | There''s a nice opening in the medical line, is there? |
34541 | Was ever bridegroom more indulgent, more devoted, than Edward Arundel? |
34541 | Was it such a great advantage, after all, this annihilation, the sovereign good of the atheist''s barren creed? |
34541 | Was it true that Edward Arundel had never really loved his young bride? |
34541 | Was it within the compass of heavenly mercy to forgive such a sin as hers? |
34541 | Was there any truth in that which Paul Marchmont had said to her? |
34541 | Was there anything in her mind; or was she only a human automaton, slowly decaying into dust? |
34541 | What are you going to do?" |
34541 | What can I do to him? |
34541 | What course would this desperate woman take in her jealous rage? |
34541 | What did it matter to me whether I was there or at Marchmont Towers? |
34541 | What did it matter? |
34541 | What did it matter? |
34541 | What did my mother say?" |
34541 | What do you advise? |
34541 | What else should she say, after refusing all manner of people, and giving herself the airs of an old- maid? |
34541 | What has not been done by unhappy creatures in this woman''s state of mind? |
34541 | What have we to live for? |
34541 | What have you done to show yourself worthy of my faith in you?" |
34541 | What have you done with your savings?" |
34541 | What more likely than that she lost the track, and wandered into the river? |
34541 | What should he do? |
34541 | What vengeance could he wreak upon the head of that wretch who, for nearly two years, had condemned an innocent girl to cruel suffering and shame? |
34541 | What was he to do with that man? |
34541 | What was he to do? |
34541 | What was it worth, this fine house, with the broad flat before it? |
34541 | What was it? |
34541 | What was the dreadful secret which had transformed this woman? |
34541 | What was the nature of his crime, and what penalty had he incurred? |
34541 | What was there for this man even then? |
34541 | What was to be gained by any show of respect to her, whose brain was too weak to hold the memory of their conduct for five minutes together? |
34541 | What would she do? |
34541 | What''s the good of your coming if you bring me no help?" |
34541 | When would art earn him eleven thousand a year? |
34541 | Where are they-- my mother and Letitia?" |
34541 | Where is Olivia, by- the- bye? |
34541 | Where is she? |
34541 | Where''s Peterson?" |
34541 | Where?" |
34541 | Who gave you leave to let that woman go? |
34541 | Who was it who drove Mary Marchmont from this house,--not once only, but twice, by her cruelty? |
34541 | Who was it who first sinned? |
34541 | Who----?" |
34541 | Why do you come here with your idiotic fancies? |
34541 | Why should I be afraid? |
34541 | Why should I prevent it?" |
34541 | Why should he slave at his easel, and toil to become a great painter? |
34541 | Will he ever forgive you, do you think, when he knows that his young wife has been the victim of a senseless, vicious love? |
34541 | Will you come upstairs with me? |
34541 | With George Weston and Olivia, Betsy Murrel the servant- girl, and Hester Jobson to bear witness against him, what could he hope? |
34541 | Would she go straight to Edward Arundel and tell him----? |
34541 | Yes, it is a conspiracy, if you like; if you are not afraid to call it by a hard name, why should I fear to do so? |
34541 | Yes, this was most likely; for how else could she hope to prevent the marriage? |
34541 | You are happier here than you were in Charlotte Street, eh, mother?" |
34541 | You can get your things together; there''s a boy about the place who will carry them for you, I suppose?" |
34541 | You can let me in at the little door in the lobby, ca n''t you, Mrs. John? |
34541 | You do n''t know what that word''love''means, do you? |
34541 | You have heard of my relative, Mrs. John Marchmont,--my cousin''s widow?" |
34541 | You have managed him for fifteen years: surely you can go on managing him now without annoying_ me_ about him? |
34541 | You have no doubt heard that she is-- mad?" |
34541 | You have ruined me; do you hear? |
34541 | You must want money, Paul?" |
34541 | You remember the way he went on that day down in the boat- house when Edward Arundel came in upon us unexpectedly? |
34541 | You want the dressing- case carried to Mrs. Weston''s house, and I''m to wait for you there?" |
34541 | You will let it take place?" |
34541 | You will see them together-- you will hear of their happiness; and do you think that_ he_ will ever forgive you for your part of the conspiracy? |
34541 | You''ll accept the shelter of our spare room until to- morrow morning?" |
34541 | You''ll stop here for the rest of the night? |
34541 | cried Mrs. Arundel;"but surely you----?" |
34541 | exclaimed Mr. Marchmont, decisively;"who is Mr. Gormby, that he should give orders as to who comes in or stops out? |
34541 | he asked;"and what brings you to this place?" |
34541 | may not a monotonous recurrence of the same ideas be above all injurious? |
34541 | or how shall we hear of you?" |
34541 | said Edward Arundel;"Mary, my poor sorrowful darling-- alive?" |
34541 | she cried,"what is it?" |
34541 | she said;"_ is_ it? |
34541 | what are we to do?" |
34541 | what of her? |
34541 | why didst Thou so abandon me, when I turned away from Thee, and made Edward Arundel the idol of my wicked heart?" |
34541 | why do I waste my breath in talking to such a creature as this? |
34541 | will God ever have pity upon me? |
34541 | you know,--you must know, dearest,--that I shall never see that place?" |
34539 | ''Gloomy?'' 34539 Am I so beautiful, or so admired or beloved, that a man who has not seen me half a dozen times should fall in love with me? |
34539 | And can I see him? |
34539 | And he has never been here since? |
34539 | And she went out with Mr. Arundel? 34539 And they have gone there?" |
34539 | And you will do that, mother darling? |
34539 | And you will not reject my appeal? |
34539 | But Mr. Marchmont, my dear,--surely he loves and admires you? |
34539 | But shall you like her when you''ve known her longer? 34539 But what then?" |
34539 | But, good heavens, Olivia, what do you mean? |
34539 | Cookson, from Kemberling, will be there, I suppose,he said, alluding to a brother parson,"and the usual set? |
34539 | Did I suffer so little when I blotted that image out of my heart? 34539 Did he really say what, darling?" |
34539 | Did papa say that, Edward? |
34539 | Do n''t you think you could manage it for me, you know? 34539 Do you mean to tell me it''s_ you_?" |
34539 | Do you think I have toiled for nothing to do the duty which I promised my dead husband to perform for your sake? 34539 Do you understand me, my dear?" |
34539 | Do_ you_ like her, then? |
34539 | Does she wear shabby frocks? |
34539 | Everybody says that Livy''s handsome; but it''s rather a cold style of beauty, is n''t it? 34539 Forgotten what-- forgotten whom? |
34539 | Glad to have any one who''d take papa''s love away from me? |
34539 | He used to like hot rolls when I was at Vernon''s,John thought, rather more hopefully;"I wonder whether he likes hot rolls still?" |
34539 | How dare you come here to insult me, Edward Arundel? |
34539 | How do you know what other people think? 34539 How do you like my cousin, Polly?" |
34539 | How often do you mean to dance with Captain Arundel, Miss Marchmont? |
34539 | How should he love her? |
34539 | I have the honour of speaking to my cousin''s widow? |
34539 | I know she is very good, papa,Mary cried;"but, oh, why, why do you marry her? |
34539 | If it was n''t for whom, old fellow? |
34539 | Insult you? 34539 Is it because he has blue eyes and chestnut hair, with wandering gleams of golden light in it? |
34539 | Is it likely, then, that he cares for anything but her fortune? 34539 Is it necessary that she should be present?" |
34539 | Is it useless to be obedient and submissive, patient and untiring? 34539 Is my life always to be this-- always, always, always?" |
34539 | Is my uncle in the house? |
34539 | Is there neither truth nor justice in the dealings of God? |
34539 | It ai n''t particularly jolly, is it, Martin? |
34539 | It is quite decided, then? |
34539 | It''s not a pretty house, is it, Miss Marchmont? |
34539 | John Marchmont, the poor fellow who used to teach us mathematics at Vernon''s; the fellow the governor sacked because----"Well, what of him? |
34539 | Mary has gone, I hope? |
34539 | Miss Marchmont,--my cousin, Mary Marchmont, I should say,--bears her loss pretty well, I hope? |
34539 | Mr. Arundel has come home? |
34539 | O my God,she cried,"is this madness to undo all that I have done? |
34539 | Oh, Mr. Arundel, how could you think so? |
34539 | Oh, is it you, Mr. Arundel? 34539 P.S.--By- the- bye, do n''t you think a situation in a lawyer''s office would suit you better than the T. R. D. L.? |
34539 | Papa''s cousin-- Mr Marchmont the artist? |
34539 | Shall I invite him to Marchmont Towers? |
34539 | She, who is so good to all her father''s parishioners, could not refuse to be kind to my poor Mary? |
34539 | So you do n''t know my cousin Olivia? |
34539 | Sorry you came back? |
34539 | That he left me to you as a legacy? |
34539 | The gentleman is waiting to see me, I suppose? |
34539 | To you know if he''s on in ze virsd zene? |
34539 | WHEN SHALL I CEASE TO BE ALL ALONE? |
34539 | WHEN SHALL I CEASE TO BE ALL ALONE? |
34539 | We could have haddocks every day at Marchmont Towers, could n''t we, papa? |
34539 | What am I that an empty- headed soldier should despise me, and that I should go mad because of his indifference? 34539 What can I give him to eat?" |
34539 | What could I do with money, if----? |
34539 | What do I love him for? |
34539 | What do you mean by an important mission, Edward? |
34539 | What do you mean, papa? 34539 What do you mean?" |
34539 | What do you mean? |
34539 | What do you think, Livy? |
34539 | What do you think? 34539 What have I done that I should suffer like this?" |
34539 | What have you ever seen that should make you think any one loved me? |
34539 | What is the matter with you, Mary? |
34539 | What is there in her pale unmeaning face that should win the love of a man who despises me? |
34539 | What on earth could have induced this woman to marry my cousin? |
34539 | What then? 34539 What will become of you?" |
34539 | When-- what, Livy? |
34539 | Who can come to see us on such a day? |
34539 | Who cares whether I am well or ill? |
34539 | Who? |
34539 | Why are you wicked? |
34539 | Why do you do this, Marchmont? |
34539 | Why do you marry her then? |
34539 | Why not? |
34539 | Why should this Mr. Marchmont think all this of me? |
34539 | Will you be sorry when I am married, Edward Arundel? |
34539 | You can answer for Captain Arundel''s heart, I suppose, then, as well as for your own? 34539 You got my letter, then?" |
34539 | You persist in declaring, then, that the man with the weak legs is our old mathematical drudge? 34539 You really wish it?" |
34539 | You will take an interest in her, wo n''t you? 34539 You wish me to many Mr. Marchmont, then, papa?" |
34539 | You would wish to hear the reading of the will? |
34539 | You''re not going to engage a governess for me, papa? |
34539 | Your cousin, Miss Arundel? |
34539 | _ What_ have you done? |
34539 | ''draughty?'' |
34539 | ''dreary?'' |
34539 | A little hand knocked lightly at the door of his room while he was thinking this, and a childish voice said,"May I come in, papa?" |
34539 | Am I never to be loved and admired; never to be sought and chosen? |
34539 | And you wish me to be your wife in order that you may have a guardian for your child? |
34539 | Are they honourable and honest towards one another, I wonder, that they can entertain such pitiful doubts of our honour and honesty?" |
34539 | Are you idiotic and besotted enough to believe that it is anything but your fortune this man cares for? |
34539 | Arundel?" |
34539 | Arundel?" |
34539 | Arundel?" |
34539 | But I''ll teach you the game, if you like?" |
34539 | But did the still evening hour bring peace to that restless spirit? |
34539 | But how was he to win this woman''s friendship for his darling? |
34539 | But how was it that, for all her goodness, Olivia Arundel won so small a share of earthly reward? |
34539 | But if he should die, mother, and leave his little girl destitute, you''ll look after her, wo n''t you?" |
34539 | But just at first, and before you know her very well, you will be kind to her, wo n''t you, Olivia? |
34539 | But that''s past now, is n''t it, my dear? |
34539 | But was Marchmont Towers quite as beautiful as that fairy palace of Mary''s day- dream? |
34539 | But was Olivia Arundel the woman to do this? |
34539 | But we can soon set that right, ca n''t we, Polly?" |
34539 | But you are not sorry, are you?" |
34539 | Can it be wondered that he urged his daughter to accept this altered lot? |
34539 | Can it be wondered, then, that the Rector of Swampington thought the prospect offered to his child a very brilliant one? |
34539 | Can you imagine a woman with a wicked heart steadfastly trying to do good, and to be good? |
34539 | Can you play chess?" |
34539 | Could John Marchmont be a Christian, and yet feel this horrible dread of the death which must separate him from his daughter? |
34539 | Could he ever dream for one brief moment of such a horrible cruelty? |
34539 | Could it be possible that Edward Arundel might ever come to love this girl? |
34539 | Could it be that this girl, to whom nature had given strength but denied grace, envied the superficial attractions of the young man at her side? |
34539 | Could she ever find rest in the grave, knowing this? |
34539 | Could there be any possible extinction that would blot out her jealous fury? |
34539 | Could there be anything more piteous than that degrading spectacle? |
34539 | Did Edward Arundel love the pale- faced girl, who revealed her devotion to him with such childlike unconsciousness? |
34539 | Did he love Olivia Arundel? |
34539 | Did n''t I always say so, now? |
34539 | Did n''t I always tell him he''d come into the Lincolnshire property? |
34539 | Did you ever see such an awkward set of fellows in all your life? |
34539 | Do I commit a sin in marrying John Marchmont in this spirit, papa?" |
34539 | Do n''t you smell it?" |
34539 | Do those who know me estimate me so much, or prize me so highly, that a stranger should think of me? |
34539 | Do you know that sometimes I am almost sorry I ever came back to Marchmont Towers?" |
34539 | Do you know which way they went?" |
34539 | Do you love her so very, very much?" |
34539 | Do you think I have n''t consulted your happiness before my own? |
34539 | Do you think I shall love you less because I take this step for your sake? |
34539 | Do you think after hearing this, that I am the woman to be a second mother to your child?" |
34539 | Do you think anybody but Peter Paul could have painted that? |
34539 | Do you think he has not had women fifty times your superior, in every quality of mind and body, at his feet out yonder in India? |
34539 | Do you think that I am blind, or deaf, or besotted; that you defy me and outrage me, day by day, and hour by hour, by your conduct?" |
34539 | Do you think there has been nothing in all this to warp my nature? |
34539 | Do you want him?" |
34539 | Had Olivia ever been in love? |
34539 | Had this Marchmont-- always rather unnaturally reserved and eccentric-- gone suddenly mad? |
34539 | Has all my care of you been so little, that I am to stand by now and be silent, when I see what you are? |
34539 | Has all my life been a great mistake, which is to end in confusion and despair?" |
34539 | He is brave, I dare say, and generous; but what of that? |
34539 | He''s an old friend of mine,--one of the supernu-- what''s- its- names?" |
34539 | His mother ca n''t love him, can she? |
34539 | How can I ever forget that, Edward? |
34539 | How can I ever love you enough to repay you for that?" |
34539 | How can you ask such a question?" |
34539 | How could she grieve him by telling him of her sorrows, when his very presence brought such unutterable joy to her? |
34539 | How have_ you_ learned to school your rebellious heart?" |
34539 | How should he love her? |
34539 | How would you like a stepmamma? |
34539 | How would you like your papa to marry again?" |
34539 | I daresay you remember old Colonel Tollesly, at Halburton Lodge? |
34539 | I must trust this brave- hearted boy, for I have no one else to confide in; and who else is there who would not ridicule my fear of my cousin Paul?" |
34539 | I thought Miss Marchmont was in her room?" |
34539 | I wonder why the people in novels are always dark? |
34539 | If I am to marry at all, who should I choose for a wife? |
34539 | If the day ever comes in which my little girl should have to struggle with this man, will you help her to fight the battle? |
34539 | Is he in the drawing- room?" |
34539 | Is it anywhere near Swampington?" |
34539 | Is it because he has a dashing walk, and the air of a man of fashion? |
34539 | Is it because he has gentlemanly manners, and is easy and pleasant, genial and light- hearted? |
34539 | Is it for this that I have sat night after night in my father''s study, poring over the books that were too difficult for him? |
34539 | Is it really you?" |
34539 | Is it thus with Mary Marchmont? |
34539 | Is my life to be all of one dull, grey, colourless monotony; without one sudden gleam of sunshine, without one burst of rainbow- light?" |
34539 | Is she already marked out for some womanly martyrdom-- already set apart for more than common suffering? |
34539 | Is this folly to be the climax of my dismal life? |
34539 | Is this the recompense for my long years of obedience? |
34539 | Is_ this_ frail life all that stands between me and eleven thousand a year?" |
34539 | Marchmont?" |
34539 | Marchmont?" |
34539 | May I speak to your father? |
34539 | My dear Edward, what_ do_ you mean?" |
34539 | Nothing but despair? |
34539 | Now, will you tell me the chances are not six to six he dies unmarried? |
34539 | O, by- the- bye, you have never heard any thing of that Paul Marchmont, I suppose?" |
34539 | Shall I take my horse round to the stables? |
34539 | Shall we ever go to Dangerfield, I wonder, papa and I? |
34539 | Shall we ever see him again?" |
34539 | She has been used to great indulgence; she has been spoiled, perhaps; but you''ll remember all that, and be very kind to her?" |
34539 | She will be one- and- twenty in three years; and what are three years? |
34539 | The battles in India have been dreadful, have they not?" |
34539 | The question she should have asked was this,"Do I commit a sin in marrying one man, while my heart is racked by a mad passion for another?" |
34539 | Was he thinking,"Is_ this_ fragile creature the mistress of Marchmont Towers? |
34539 | Was it beautiful? |
34539 | Was it likely that she was to find her adversary and her conqueror here, in the meek child who had been committed to her charge? |
34539 | Was it likely, was it possible, that this pale- faced girl would enter into the lists against her in the great battle of her life? |
34539 | Was it some hopeless attachment, some secret tenderness, which had never won the sweet return of love for love? |
34539 | Was she to be for ever insulted by this humiliating indifference? |
34539 | Was this frank expression of regard for Mary Marchmont a token of_ love_? |
34539 | Was_ she_ never to be anything? |
34539 | We have talked of you so often; and I-- we-- have been so unhappy sometimes, thinking that----""That I should be killed, I suppose?" |
34539 | What are you going to do? |
34539 | What could she do to keep this torture away from her? |
34539 | What did it matter? |
34539 | What do I know of Edward Arundel that should lead me to think him better or nobler than other men? |
34539 | What had she done, this girl, who had never known what it was to fight a battle with her own rebellious heart? |
34539 | What had she done? |
34539 | What have I made of myself in my pride of intellect? |
34539 | What if he had needlessly curtailed the short span of his life? |
34539 | What if he were to die soon-- before Olivia had learned to love her stepdaughter; before Mary had grown affectionately familiar with her new guardian? |
34539 | What if he were to die, and leave his only child unmarried? |
34539 | What inducement had she ever had to cast off that sombre attire; what need had she to trick herself out in gay colours? |
34539 | What is Bill Sykes''broken nose or bull- dog visage to Nancy? |
34539 | What is her mystery-- what is her secret, I wonder? |
34539 | What loving eyes would be charmed by her splendour? |
34539 | What need had she to build castles, now that he could no longer inhabit them? |
34539 | What reward have I won for my patience?" |
34539 | What then? |
34539 | What was it in Olivia Arundel''s handsome face from which those who looked at her so often shrank, repelled and disappointed? |
34539 | What was it to her that she was sole heiress of that great mansion, and of eleven thousand a year? |
34539 | What was it? |
34539 | What was it? |
34539 | What was it? |
34539 | What was she that she should be patient? |
34539 | What was the emotion which had now blanched his cheeks? |
34539 | What was the extent of the sin she had committed? |
34539 | What was the good of wealth, if it could not bring this young soldier home to a safe shelter in his native land? |
34539 | What will become of him in that dreadful country? |
34539 | What would become of her, with her dangerous gifts, with her fatal dowry of beauty and intellect and pride? |
34539 | What''s the number, old fellow?" |
34539 | Where are you going, Ned?" |
34539 | Where''s John? |
34539 | Who could be better than Olivia Arundel? |
34539 | Why did she marry John Marchmont? |
34539 | Why does she say,''You wo n''t take another egg, will you, Edward?'' |
34539 | Why have you been so changed to me lately? |
34539 | Why should existence be so bright and careless to him; while to her it was a terrible fever- dream, a long sickness, a never- ceasing battle? |
34539 | Why should she fail in this? |
34539 | Will_ you_ be that protector, Edward Arundel? |
34539 | Would he be sorry that she was not there? |
34539 | Would he be sorry? |
34539 | Would he enjoy himself very, very much? |
34539 | Would he love her any better then than he had loved her two years ago? |
34539 | Would such a thing ever come to pass? |
34539 | Would the new furnace through which she was to pass be more terrible than the old fires? |
34539 | Would the pretty girls in blue be there? |
34539 | Would there be anything more after to- morrow? |
34539 | Yes, she had been his help and comfort since her earliest infancy, and she was not unused to self- sacrifice: why should she fail him now? |
34539 | You have n''t asked them, I suppose?" |
34539 | You know Stanfield, of course?" |
34539 | You mean to undertake it, then? |
34539 | You will let me smoke out of doors, wo n''t you, Polly? |
34539 | You''d like to go, Olivia?" |
34539 | You''ll come, wo n''t you, Livy?" |
34539 | You''re surely not going to renew your acquaintance with him?" |
34539 | _ Could_ such a thing be possible? |
34539 | _ He_ had wished her to obey; what should she do, then, but be obedient? |
34539 | and did you see much of him?" |
34539 | and would he dance with them? |
34539 | are you weak enough to be deluded by a fortune- hunter''s pretty pastoral flatteries? |
34539 | cried the lawyer;"what can you want to go out for at this time in the morning? |
34539 | demanded John Marchmont sadly,"in a darned pinafore and a threadbare frock?" |
34539 | did n''t you recognise him? |
34539 | exclaimed the boy, in a breathless whisper;"do n''t you see, Martin? |
34539 | he cried,"not gone to bed yet?" |
34539 | if she wants me to have one? |
34539 | is the lot of other women never to be mine? |
34539 | may I say that you have given me a hope of your ultimate consent?" |
34539 | may I tell him that I have spoken to you? |
34539 | murmured Mary;"what if I were not rich?" |
34539 | she cried suddenly, with a disdainful gesture of her head;"do you think your pitiful face has won Edward Arundel? |
34539 | she murmured;"will you be sorry?" |
34539 | she said, piteously appealing to the young man,"papa would never, never, never marry again,--would he?" |
34539 | she thought; would the blank days and nights go monotonously on when the story that had given them a meaning and a purpose had come to its dismal end? |
34539 | she whispered;"did he really say that?" |
34539 | that''s the son of the present possessor?" |
34539 | what do you mean?" |
34539 | what had she done, that all this wealth of love and happiness should drop into her lap unsought,--comparatively unvalued, perhaps? |
34539 | what have I done to offend you?" |
34539 | whispered Martin Mostyn peevishly;"why do n''t you look at the stage? |
34539 | why do I reason with myself?" |
34539 | why do you look at me like that? |
34539 | why should he love her in preference to every other woman in the world? |
34539 | why, why do they let him go? |
34539 | would he be sorry if she married John Marchmont? |
34539 | you mean to consider my offer? |
2084 | And are you still as fond of music as ever, Mr Pontifex? |
2084 | And do n''t you like Beethoven? |
2084 | And how is So- and- so? |
2084 | And now let me ask you what answer you have made to this question hitherto? 2084 And pray, where do you consider modern music to begin?" |
2084 | And what do you want, Alice? |
2084 | And what shall it be to drink? |
2084 | And what you think of it? |
2084 | And what,resumed Pryer,"does all this point to? |
2084 | And wo n''t you come too? |
2084 | And you do not find this letter,said I,"affect the conclusion which you have just told me you have come to concerning your present plans?" |
2084 | And you have told your governess about this? |
2084 | Are you quite sure that you have not made any mistake in all this? |
2084 | But how-- if the testimony of the Bible fails? |
2084 | But surely you believe the Bible when it tells you of such things as that Christ died and rose from the dead? 2084 By faith in what, then,"asked Ernest of himself,"shall a just man endeavour to live at this present time?" |
2084 | CAN''T I? |
2084 | Can anything,''said the publisher,"be conceived more impracticable and imprudent?" |
2084 | Could you like,she wrote to him not long ago,"the thoughts of a little sea change here? |
2084 | Do n''t you love the smell of grease about the engine of a Channel steamer? 2084 Do you, or do you not believe that you will one day stand before the Judgement Seat of Christ? |
2084 | Does he write comedy? |
2084 | Goodness gracious,I exclaimed,"why did n''t we sport the oak? |
2084 | Have you considered your prospects on leaving prison? 2084 Have you never really been near us for all these years? |
2084 | How are my father and mother? |
2084 | How can she know how much we think of our darling? |
2084 | How in the name of reason can I be asked to eat a mutton chop? |
2084 | How,everyone asked,"did they manage to live?" |
2084 | I do n''t like long engagements, Mr Allaby, do you? |
2084 | Is n''t that rather dreadful?--Don''t you think you rather--she was going to have added,"ought to?" |
2084 | It may be said that the truth of these statements has been denied, but what, let me ask you, has become of the questioners? 2084 John,"said my hero, gasping for breath,"are you sure of what you say-- are you quite sure you really married her?" |
2084 | Lor''now,said she,"has he really? |
2084 | Mrs Skinner,he exclaimed jauntily,"what are those mysterious- looking objects surrounded by potatoes?" |
2084 | My dear father,I answered,"what did he do? |
2084 | Of course he would buy Joey a living, and make large presents yearly to his sister-- was there anything else? 2084 Oh, Master Ernest,"said Susan,"why did you not come back when your poor papa and mamma wanted you? |
2084 | Papa,said Ernest, after we had left the house,"Why did n''t Mrs Heaton whip Jack when he trod on the egg?" |
2084 | Perhaps; but is it not Tennyson who has said:''''Tis better to have loved and lost, than never to have lost at all''? |
2084 | Pontifex,said Dr Skinner, who had fallen upon him in hall one day like a moral landslip, before he had time to escape,"do you never laugh? |
2084 | Shall I cut it out? |
2084 | Shall it be brandy and water? 2084 Then do n''t you like them?" |
2084 | There, Ernest, do you hear that? 2084 Tum,"said Ernest, at once;"is that better?" |
2084 | Well now,she exclaimed,"dear, dear me, and is that manuscript? |
2084 | What can it matter to me,he says,"whether people read my books or not? |
2084 | What can there be in common between Theobald and his parishioners? |
2084 | What care I,said he to me one day,"about being what they call a gentleman?" |
2084 | What do you mean? |
2084 | What has being a gentleman ever done for me except make me less able to prey and more easy to be preyed upon? 2084 What is this horrid Government going to do with Ireland? |
2084 | What will you take for supper, Dr Skinner? |
2084 | Why not take a little shop yourself? |
2084 | Why so? |
2084 | Why, Ellen,said he,"what nonsense you talk; you have n''t been in prison, have you?" |
2084 | Why, my dear fellow, can you really be ignorant? 2084 Will being a gentleman,"he said,"bring me money at the last, and will anything bring me as much peace at the last as money will? |
2084 | Writes for the stage, does he? |
2084 | ''When only would he leave his position? |
2084 | A legal right, yes, but had he a moral right? |
2084 | Alethea smiled and said,"I must not say anything to that, must I?" |
2084 | All the boys were fond of her, and was he, Ernest, to tell tales about her? |
2084 | And how should he best persuade his fellow- countrymen to leave off believing in this supernatural element? |
2084 | And mamma held me out at arm''s length and said,''Is he Mr Pontifex''s child, Mrs Burne, or is he mine?'' |
2084 | And what is instinct? |
2084 | Are they in reality anything else than literary Struldbrugs? |
2084 | As for not being able to afford marriage, how did poor people do? |
2084 | Besides why should I? |
2084 | Besides, had she not diverted his attention from herself to his approaching dinner? |
2084 | Besides, where were these poor girls to go? |
2084 | Besides, who but a prig would set himself high aims, or make high resolves at all? |
2084 | But if so, what ground was there on which a man might rest the sole of his foot and tread in reasonable safety? |
2084 | But put this on one side; if the man were to be violent, what should he do? |
2084 | But tell me how is my mother?" |
2084 | But what good could he have done if he had? |
2084 | But what was the meaning of the words''pregnant with serious consequences to yourself''? |
2084 | But what were the feelings of Theobald and Christina when the village was passed and they were rolling quietly by the fir plantation? |
2084 | But who can love any man whose liver is out of order? |
2084 | But why had they not treasured up the water after it was used? |
2084 | But would Christ have fled? |
2084 | Can a man who died thus be said to have died at all? |
2084 | Can anyone do much for anyone else unless by making a will in his favour and dying then and there? |
2084 | Could Giotto or Filippo Lippi, think you, have got a picture into the Exhibition? |
2084 | Could any advantage be meaner than the one which Ernest had taken? |
2084 | Could any amount of immorality have placed him in a much worse one? |
2084 | Could anything be more idolatrous? |
2084 | Could he not turn his having lost all into an opportunity? |
2084 | Could it be for any other reason than that he did not want to see it, and if so was he not a traitor to the cause of truth? |
2084 | Could not God do anything He liked, and had He not in His own inspired Book told us that He had done this? |
2084 | Damn you, Gelstrap, how dare you be so infernally careless as to leave that hamper littering about the cellar?" |
2084 | Day after day went by, and what was he doing? |
2084 | Did he get an answer? |
2084 | Did not a good wife rather help matters than not? |
2084 | Did the other boys do so? |
2084 | Did there lurk a threat under these words-- though it was impossible to lay hold of it or of them? |
2084 | Did you ever meet one of them, or do you find any of their books securing the respectful attention of those competent to judge concerning them? |
2084 | Do we see them or hear of them? |
2084 | Do you always look so preternaturally grave?" |
2084 | Do you approve of these Wesleyans? |
2084 | Do you think so? |
2084 | Do you, or do you not believe that you will have to give an account for every idle word that you have ever spoken? |
2084 | During this same absence what had Mrs Goodhew and old Miss Wright taken to doing but turning towards the east while repeating the Belief? |
2084 | Ernest felt that his visits, so far from comforting Mr Brookes, made him fear death more and more, but how could he help it? |
2084 | Ernest was annoyed and surprised, for had not his father and mother been wanting him to be more religious all his life? |
2084 | Granted, but what is this if it is not Christ? |
2084 | Had he not been afterwards Senior Wrangler, First Chancellor''s Medallist and I do not know how many more things besides? |
2084 | Had he not taken I do n''t know how many University Scholarships in his freshman''s year? |
2084 | Had not Christina less than two hours ago promised solemnly to honour and obey him, and was she turning restive over such a trifle as this? |
2084 | Have they been able to hold what little ground they made during the supineness of the last century? |
2084 | Have you anything more to say?" |
2084 | Have you, gentle reader, ever loved at first sight? |
2084 | Having settled then that he was to tell a lie, what lie should he tell? |
2084 | He asked himself, what were they? |
2084 | He believes her; he has a natural tendency to believe everything that is told him, and who should know the facts of the case better than his wife? |
2084 | He could draw a little, but could he to save his life have got a picture into the Royal Academy exhibition? |
2084 | He had been saved from the Church-- so as by fire, but still saved-- but what could now save him from his marriage? |
2084 | He had got the lad-- a pudding- headed fellow-- by the ear and was saying,"What? |
2084 | He had not gone outside Mrs Jupp''s street door, and yet what had been the result? |
2084 | He has done his best, but what does a fish''s best come to when the fish is out of water? |
2084 | He winced, but said"No, not if it helps you to tell your story: but do n''t you think it is too long?" |
2084 | How can a sheep dog work a flock of sheep unless he can bite occasionally as well as bark? |
2084 | How can any boy fail to feel an ecstasy of pleasure on first finding himself in rooms which he knows for the next few years are to be his castle? |
2084 | How can he find out his strength or weakness otherwise? |
2084 | How can we get this without express training? |
2084 | How could he get the school shop- keepers into trouble by owning that they let some of the boys go on tick with them? |
2084 | How could he hope ever to grow up to be as good and wise as they, or even tolerably good and wise? |
2084 | How did their household differ from that of any other clergyman of the better sort from one end of England to the other? |
2084 | How far, in fact, did admiration for the orthodox tragedians take that place among the Athenians which going to church does among ourselves? |
2084 | How had he come to get into debt? |
2084 | How if, as soon as Ernest came in, the tailor were to become violent and abusive? |
2084 | How is she ever to get safe back to Clapham Junction? |
2084 | How long again is the esteem and sympathy of friends likely to survive ruin? |
2084 | How many times did he call upon his father? |
2084 | How was it possible that these things could be taught too early? |
2084 | How was it that all the clever people of Cambridge had never put him up to this simple rejoinder? |
2084 | How, again, would he take the news of his son''s good fortune? |
2084 | How, indeed, is it likely to come unless to those who either are born with interest, or who marry in order to get it? |
2084 | I expect you have n''t forgotten that day, have you?" |
2084 | I said:"But who will listen? |
2084 | I should have given him more pocket- money if I had not known this-- but what is the good of giving him pocket- money? |
2084 | If the priest is not as much a healer and director of men''s souls as a physician is of their bodies, what is he? |
2084 | If they did happen, is it reasonable to suppose that you will make yourselves and others more happy by one course of conduct or by another? |
2084 | In an evil moment he had mentioned Towneley''s name at Battersby, and now what was the result? |
2084 | In what respect had they differed from their neighbours? |
2084 | Is it about love?" |
2084 | Is it moral for a man to have brought such things upon himself? |
2084 | Is it not generous of him? |
2084 | Is n''t there a lot of hope in it?" |
2084 | Is not this enough? |
2084 | Is there a single teacher or preacher in this great University who has not examined what these men had to say, and found it naught? |
2084 | Is there one of your fathers or mothers or friends who does not see through them? |
2084 | It is high time you learned to say''come,''why, Joey can say''come,''ca n''t you, Joey?" |
2084 | Marry beneath her and be considered a disgrace to her family? |
2084 | Master Ernest, whatever can you be meaning?" |
2084 | Might he not even yet do so to- morrow morning if he were so minded? |
2084 | Might he not have apprenticed both his sons to greengrocers? |
2084 | Might he not, if he too sought the strength of the Lord, find, like St Paul, that it was perfected in weakness? |
2084 | Might not his opportunity be close upon him if he looked carefully enough at his immediate surroundings? |
2084 | Must not people take their chances in this world? |
2084 | Nevertheless, what right had Theobald to complain? |
2084 | No doubt, but how-- considering how stupid, idle, ignorant, self- indulgent, and physically puny he was? |
2084 | Now, Ernest, be pleased to tell me whether this appalling story is true or false?" |
2084 | Of course they must be, for if they had not been, would they not have been bound to warn all who had anything to do with them of their deficiencies? |
2084 | Oh, why, why, why, could not people be born into the world as grown- up persons? |
2084 | Or were not they rather compelling him to keep out-- outside their doors at any rate? |
2084 | Presently Ernest said,"May we give you back this"( showing the halfpenny)"and not give you back this and this?" |
2084 | Reader, did you ever have an income at best none too large, which died with you all except 200 pounds a year? |
2084 | Remain at home and become an old maid and be laughed at? |
2084 | Run away? |
2084 | She smiled and said demurely,"Have they not Moses and the prophets? |
2084 | Should he have had the courage to break away even from his present curacy? |
2084 | Should he say he had been robbed? |
2084 | So that is really manuscript?" |
2084 | Study, to do him justice, he had never really liked, and what inducement was there for him to study at Battersby? |
2084 | Surely you believe this?" |
2084 | Take the cuckoo again-- is there any bird which we like better?" |
2084 | Then came an even worse reflection; how if he had fallen among material thieves as well as spiritual ones? |
2084 | Then came the question-- horrid thought!--as to who was the partner of Ellen''s guilt? |
2084 | Then how could he be himself wrong in trying to act up to the faith that he and Towneley held in common? |
2084 | Then, gathering strength, he said in a low voice:"Mother,"( it was the first time he had called her anything but"mamma"?) |
2084 | Then, when all had sat down, Mr Hawke addressed them, speaking without notes and taking for his text the words,"Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me?" |
2084 | They had heard nothing but what they had been hearing all their lives; how was it, then, that they were so dumbfoundered by it? |
2084 | This was all very fine, but what was Ernest to do? |
2084 | To whom did he call? |
2084 | To whom had he owed money at any time? |
2084 | Was George Pontifex one of Fortune''s favoured nurslings or not? |
2084 | Was he doing this? |
2084 | Was he not a Christian? |
2084 | Was he not fallen himself? |
2084 | Was he not head- master of Roughborough School? |
2084 | Was he really doing everything that could be expected of him? |
2084 | Was he to drive them from house to house till they had no place to lie in? |
2084 | Was it a prudent thing to attempt so much? |
2084 | Was it for this that he had been generous enough to offer to provide Ernest with decent clothes in which to come and visit his mother''s death- bed? |
2084 | Was it for this that when Christina had offered to let him off, he had stuck to his engagement? |
2084 | Was it not then taking rather a mean advantage of the Apostle to stand on his not having actually forbidden it? |
2084 | Was it possible that she might not be going to henpeck him after all? |
2084 | Was it, could it be, her own son, her darling Ernest? |
2084 | Was there any hope of salvation for her either in this world or the next after such unnatural conduct? |
2084 | Was there not an elder brother? |
2084 | Was this the little lad who could get sweeties for two- pence but not for two- pence- halfpenny? |
2084 | Was this, then, the end of his six years of unflagging devotion? |
2084 | We know so well what we are doing ourselves and why we do it, do we not? |
2084 | Were they not intended to produce all the effect of a threat without being actually threatening?" |
2084 | What boy would not take kindly to almost anything with such assistance? |
2084 | What boys, then, owed money to these harpies as well as Ernest? |
2084 | What chance had they against one who, if she had a mind, could put by out of her income twice as much as they, poor women, could spend? |
2084 | What could he do else that would have been of the smallest use to her? |
2084 | What could he do? |
2084 | What culture is comparable to this? |
2084 | What did it all come to, when he did go to see them? |
2084 | What did it all mean? |
2084 | What do one half of our formularies and rubrics mean if not this? |
2084 | What else could he do? |
2084 | What else could she do? |
2084 | What gentleman could stand this air, think you, for a fortnight?" |
2084 | What happened to him? |
2084 | What head of a family ever sends for any of its members into the dining- room if his intentions are honourable? |
2084 | What if circumstances had made his duty more easy for him than it would be to most men? |
2084 | What interest, pray, do you suppose I have that I could get a living for you? |
2084 | What is Christ if He is not this? |
2084 | What is too heavy a price to pay for having duty made at once clear and easy of fulfilment instead of very difficult? |
2084 | What more could parents do than they had done? |
2084 | What opinion can any sane man form about his own work? |
2084 | What other things? |
2084 | What precedents did not Abraham, Jephthah and Jonadab the son of Rechab offer? |
2084 | What should I not have done if I had had one half of your advantages? |
2084 | What should a boy of his age know about the''Messiah''? |
2084 | What should he do? |
2084 | What was his position? |
2084 | What was the noblest life that perished there? |
2084 | What was''business''? |
2084 | What whisper had ever been breathed against his moral character? |
2084 | What wonder, then, that his imagination should fail to realise the changes that eight years must have worked? |
2084 | What, then, it may be asked, is the good of being great? |
2084 | When should he learn to love his Papa and Mamma as they had loved theirs? |
2084 | Where are they now? |
2084 | Where one could live two could do so, and if Ellen was three or four years older than he was-- well, what was that? |
2084 | Where then was the weak place in George Pontifex''s armour? |
2084 | Where was he to draw the line? |
2084 | Where, where, he asked himself, was it all to end? |
2084 | Which did he now think was most likely to have taken the juster view of life and things, and whom would it be best to imitate, Towneley or Pryer? |
2084 | Who can blame her? |
2084 | Who can wonder at him or do anything but pity him? |
2084 | Who could blame them? |
2084 | Who could hurt him more than he had been hurt already? |
2084 | Who knows but he might meet Lord Lonsford himself, or at any rate some of Lord Lonsford''s other descendants?" |
2084 | Who so fit to be consulted if any difficulty about parish management should arise? |
2084 | Who so_ integer vitae scelerisque purus_, it was asked, as Mr Pontifex of Battersby? |
2084 | Who such a happy mixture of the sincere uninquiring Christian and of the man of the world? |
2084 | Who then should he take first? |
2084 | Who was not to be envied, and if envied why then respected, if Theobald was not enviable? |
2084 | Who would be just good enough to live in the same house with him, and who just not good enough? |
2084 | Whom had he to consult but himself now? |
2084 | Whose friendship have you chosen? |
2084 | Whose ox had he taken, whose ass had he taken, or whom had he defrauded? |
2084 | Why did he see in a moment that it was a bad one now, though he had been unable to see it when he had taken it from Pryer? |
2084 | Why do you think so?'' |
2084 | Why had he felt tacitly rebuked as soon as he had met Towneley? |
2084 | Why had he never treated his sisters in this way? |
2084 | Why might he not stand and preach as he saw the Dissenters doing sometimes in Lincoln''s Inn Fields and other thoroughfares? |
2084 | Why should I complain of being among the mediocrities? |
2084 | Why should she? |
2084 | Why should the generations overlap one another at all? |
2084 | Why then should it have been upon them, of all people in the world, that this tower of Siloam had fallen? |
2084 | Why, Lord love the man, whatever is the matter with him?" |
2084 | Why, then, do I insist upon them? |
2084 | Why? |
2084 | With what shops did they get into debt? |
2084 | Would he greet him as though nothing had happened, or would he be cold and distant? |
2084 | Would his father meet him at the station? |
2084 | Yes, but a fallen one? |
2084 | Yet had he not on the whole tried to find out what the ways of God were, and to follow them in singleness of heart? |
2084 | Yet what happened? |
2084 | Yet which of us in his heart likes any of the Elizabethan dramatists except Shakespeare? |
2084 | how can you say so? |
2084 | why, why, why, are there no harbours of refuge for grown men who have not yet lost them?" |
2084 | you too shun me, Ellen?" |
34540 | Am I afraid of him? 34540 Am I afraid of him?" |
34540 | Am I not to be allowed even five minutes''sleep without being broken in upon by some intruder or other? |
34540 | And all this was without result? |
34540 | And he could do nothing? |
34540 | And in the meantime you take possession of this estate? |
34540 | And it has been said that she-- that she was drowned? |
34540 | And nothing can part us now? |
34540 | And now my darling, my foolish run- away Polly, what is to be done with you? |
34540 | And she has never been seen since? |
34540 | And she was never seen again? |
34540 | And they found nothing? |
34540 | And what did this man, this Mr. Weston, say? |
34540 | And you''ll put it in the western drawing- room at the Towers, wo n''t you, Polly? |
34540 | And you, Hester,--you knew my wife better than any of these people,--where do you think she went? |
34540 | And-- you-- you think she went out of this house with the intention of-- of-- destroying herself? |
34540 | Any letters for me, Dick? |
34540 | Because I am so-- childish? |
34540 | Because of what, my treasure? |
34540 | But what if people did say this? |
34540 | But you wo n''t leave me alone with my stepmother, will you, Edward? |
34540 | By whom? |
34540 | Can anything be more miserable to me than the prevarication which I meet with on every side? |
34540 | Captain Arundel, I believe? |
34540 | Did papa dislike Mr. Paul Marchmont? |
34540 | Did you ever notice a peculiar property in stationery, Polly? |
34540 | Do people say that? |
34540 | Do they say that of me? |
34540 | Do you consider that it is my duty to do this? |
34540 | Do you know if Mr. Paul Marchmont has gone down to the boat- house? |
34540 | Do you really think, Letitia, that your brother''s wife committed suicide? |
34540 | Go,she said;"why should we keep up a mockery of friendliness and cousinship? |
34540 | Had she any money? |
34540 | Has Paul Marchmont been in this house? |
34540 | Has she ill- treated the girl, or is she plotting in some way or other to get hold of the Marchmont fortune? 34540 Hates you, darling?" |
34540 | Have you any-- particular reason for thinking so? |
34540 | Have you anything more to say to me? |
34540 | He has taken possession, then? |
34540 | He is very desperate about his wife, then, this dashing young captain? |
34540 | How did she disappear? |
34540 | How long? |
34540 | How should I benefit by her death? |
34540 | How should you, you fortunate Polly? 34540 How was it?" |
34540 | I am your wife now, Edward, am I not? |
34540 | I had some difficulty in inducing her to return here; but after hearing of your accident--"How was the news of that broken to her? |
34540 | I shall come and see you again, Ned,Miss Arundel cried, as she shook the reins upon her horse''s neck;"and so will Belinda-- won''t you, Belinda?" |
34540 | I want you to get me some vehicle, and a lad who will drive me a few miles, Morrison,the young soldier said;"or you can drive me yourself, perhaps?" |
34540 | Is there no cure for this disease? |
34540 | Is there no making this man answer for his infamy? |
34540 | Is there no relief except madness or death? |
34540 | Is there no way of making him suffer? |
34540 | Is this what you have to say to me? |
34540 | Is what true? |
34540 | Look at the rain,she said;"hark at it; do n''t you hear it, drip, drip, drip upon the stone? |
34540 | Mary is not up yet, I suppose? |
34540 | May I come into your house? 34540 Mentally deficient? |
34540 | My own one, my pretty one, my wife, when shall I get to you? |
34540 | My wife was ill, then? |
34540 | No; I came here, as your kinsman, to ask you what you mean to do now that Paul Marchmont has taken possession of the Towers? |
34540 | Not to- night, sir, surely? |
34540 | O sir, is that true? |
34540 | O sir, what can I think, what can I think except that? 34540 Olivia,"cried the young man,"are you mad?" |
34540 | Olivia,said Edward Arundel very earnestly,"what is it that makes you unhappy? |
34540 | Polly,cried the young man,"do you think Jupiter liked Hebe any the less because she was as fresh and innocent as the nectar she served out to him? |
34540 | Richard Paulette has been here? |
34540 | Shall I go and see Lucas? |
34540 | She assigned no reason to_ you_, my dear Mrs. Marchmont; but she assigned a reason to somebody, I infer, from what you say? |
34540 | She has not been found, then? |
34540 | Should I have received that confirmation? |
34540 | Telling him the reason of her departure? |
34540 | That poor Miss Mary was your lawful wedded wife? |
34540 | That? |
34540 | The letter to Mr. Paulette and to your father? |
34540 | The mystery of her death? |
34540 | Then it was not a fable? |
34540 | To which of these people am I to look for an account of my poor lost girl? 34540 Was she seen by no one else?" |
34540 | Was that the tenderest face that looked down upon my darling as she lay on her sick- bed? |
34540 | Was there any other reason for supposing that-- that my wife fell into the river? |
34540 | Was this found by the river- side? |
34540 | Well; and when you went----? |
34540 | What am I to do? |
34540 | What change? |
34540 | What compensation can they give me for an accident that shut me in a living grave for three months, that separated me from----? 34540 What compensation?" |
34540 | What did they dare to say against her or against me? |
34540 | What did they say? |
34540 | What do you mean, Edward? |
34540 | What do you mean? |
34540 | What do you mean? |
34540 | What does it matter to you whether it is true or not? 34540 What does it matter to you?" |
34540 | What does_ he_ want at Marchmont Towers, I wonder? |
34540 | What for? |
34540 | What is it to you, or to any one, how I look? 34540 What is it, Barbara?" |
34540 | What is the question you came here to ask me? |
34540 | What is the secret of that woman''s life? |
34540 | What opinion? |
34540 | What question? |
34540 | What right have I to be happy amongst these people? |
34540 | What shall I do with you, Miss Marchmont? |
34540 | What was not a fable? |
34540 | What was that? |
34540 | What''s that? |
34540 | When was he here? |
34540 | Where is my wife? |
34540 | Where was this? |
34540 | Where? |
34540 | Who has despised you, Olivia? |
34540 | Who is it? |
34540 | Who is your wife? |
34540 | Who should dare to say that she spoke other than the truth? 34540 Who will help me to look for my missing love?" |
34540 | Who will tell me the truth about my lost darling? |
34540 | Who would n''t let you? |
34540 | Whose child? |
34540 | Whose child? |
34540 | Why did she stop here? |
34540 | Why do n''t you have a gardener, Ned? |
34540 | Why do people worry me so? |
34540 | Why do you not answer my question? |
34540 | Why is it that you shut yourself from the sympathy of those who have a right to care for you? 34540 Why is that woman so venomous a creature in her hatred of my innocent wife? |
34540 | Why not? |
34540 | Why should I take any care of the place? |
34540 | Why was my wife doubted when she told the story of her marriage? |
34540 | Why, do n''t you know who he is, mate? |
34540 | Why? |
34540 | Will it never come? |
34540 | Will it never come? |
34540 | Will you come there presently? 34540 Will you go back to the Towers to- morrow morning?" |
34540 | Will you go with me to India, then, Mary? |
34540 | Woman, do you think duty is a thing to be measured by line and rule? 34540 Would you like to know, Edward Arundel?" |
34540 | Yes; where else should you stay? |
34540 | You believe that, I suppose? |
34540 | You deny, then, that you were guilty of causing this poor deluded child''s flight from this house? |
34540 | You did n''t know I was in Lincolnshire, did you? |
34540 | You disbelieved in that marriage? |
34540 | You do n''t love me any the less because of that, do you, Edward? |
34540 | You do not think, then, that she is dead? |
34540 | You say that your stepdaughter is neither weak- minded nor strong- minded? |
34540 | You sometimes fear----? |
34540 | You think Miss Marchmont strong- minded, then, perhaps? |
34540 | You think her perfectly able to take care of herself? |
34540 | You think like these other people,--you think that she went away to destroy herself? |
34540 | You think,he gasped hoarsely, after a long pause,--"you think-- that-- she is-- dead?" |
34540 | You will sleep here to- night, of course? |
34540 | You would hardly wish to benefit by Mary''s death, would you, Olivia? |
34540 | _ Must_ you tell my stepmother of our marriage? |
34540 | _ When_ shall I get there? |
34540 | _ Why_ did she leave this place? 34540 Ai n''t you, Linda? 34540 Am I a fool, that people can prevaricate and lie to me like this? 34540 And I think I have surprised you, have n''t I? 34540 And Paul Marchmont, again,--what have I learned from him? 34540 And did any revulsion of feeling arise in her breast? 34540 And now--? 34540 And yet what was it that he had lost, after all? 34540 And you and he are stanch allies, I suppose? |
34540 | Another voice in her breast seemed to whisper,"Why do you reproach me for not having loved this girl? |
34540 | Are you going to open the gate and let us in, or do you mean to keep your citadel closed upon us altogether, Mr. Edward Arundel?" |
34540 | At what time does he come to his painting- room?"'' |
34540 | But I think----""You think what?" |
34540 | But what reason could the woman have for her hatred of this innocent girl? |
34540 | But who could have calculated upon the railway accident; and who could have foreseen a separation in the first blush of the honeymoon? |
34540 | By what means did he drive my darling to her despairing flight?" |
34540 | Can you wonder, then, if I feel confirmed in an opinion that I formed upon the day on which I heard the reading of my cousin''s will?" |
34540 | Could he disbelieve his cousin? |
34540 | Did I do wrong when I offered to be your wife?" |
34540 | Did any corresponding transformation in her own heart bear witness to the baseness of her love? |
34540 | Did she tell you that I looked to you to account to me for the disappearance of my wife?" |
34540 | Do you hear, woman? |
34540 | Does any one think that, by any unhappy accident, by any terrible fatality, she lost her way after dark, and fell into the water? |
34540 | Does my meerschaum annoy you? |
34540 | Edward Arundel, do you hate me so much that you refuse to share the same shelter with me, even for a night?" |
34540 | Edward, if I ask you a favour, will you grant it?" |
34540 | Edward?" |
34540 | Had he been to the Grange? |
34540 | Had not_ she_ perilled her soul upon the casting of this die? |
34540 | Had she not endured the worst long ago, in Edward Arundel''s contempt? |
34540 | Had she sought me out?--had she followed me to Dangerfield? |
34540 | Had_ she_ not flung down her eternal happiness in that fatal game of hazard? |
34540 | Has my brain no sense, and my arm no strength, that I can not wring the truth from the false throats of these wretches?" |
34540 | Have you yet to learn that Christianity is cosmopolitan, illimitable, inexhaustible, subject to no laws of time or space? |
34540 | He sprang up from the table directly he had finished his meal, and cried out impatiently,"What can make Mary so lazy this morning? |
34540 | How am I to be avenged upon the wretch who caused my darling''s death?" |
34540 | How could the young man answer this question except by clasping his betrothed to his heart? |
34540 | How did you find my wife? |
34540 | How did you induce her to come back to this place? |
34540 | How should I know the effect that report would have upon my unhappy cousin?" |
34540 | How should_ she_ protect herself against her enemies? |
34540 | How was it, then? |
34540 | I may come again, may I not, now that the ice is broken, and we are so well acquainted with each other? |
34540 | If it should be thus: if, on going down to Marlingford, he obtained no tidings of his friend''s daughter, what was he to do? |
34540 | If there is one spark of womanhood in your nature, I appeal to that; I ask you what has happened to my wife?" |
34540 | Is Marchmont Towers a prison, that you shut your gates as if they were never to be opened until the Day of Judgment?" |
34540 | Is it madness, or the infernal cruelty of a fiend incarnate?" |
34540 | Is it not so?" |
34540 | Is it that, in some hour of passion, you consented to league yourself with Paul Marchmont against my poor innocent girl? |
34540 | Is it true, Olivia?" |
34540 | Is the black shadow upon your life a guilty secret? |
34540 | Is the burden that you carry a burden on your conscience? |
34540 | Is the cause of your unhappiness that which I suspect it to be? |
34540 | Is there no one sentiment of womanly compassion left in your breast? |
34540 | It seems so long ago; but it was only last night, was it? |
34540 | It was as if she said,--"Are you the devil, that you hold out this temptation to me, and twist my own passions to serve your purpose?" |
34540 | It_ is_ a relationship, is it not, although such a very slight one?" |
34540 | Jobson?" |
34540 | Leaving nothing else-- positively nothing? |
34540 | M.''s?" |
34540 | May I venture to urge your proceeding there in search of her without delay? |
34540 | No; what injury can he inflict upon me worse than that which he has done me from the very first? |
34540 | No? |
34540 | Now, I ask you what motive Mary Marchmont can have had for running away from this house?" |
34540 | Of course I am not fond of Scotch shepherdesses now, you know, dear; but how should Mrs. Pimpernel know that? |
34540 | Oh, the relentless devil, the pitiless devil!--what can be the motive of her conduct? |
34540 | Or do you mean to keep me out here for ever?" |
34540 | Shall I never be put out of this horrible suspense?" |
34540 | Shall I repent, and try to undo what I have done? |
34540 | Shall I thrust myself between others and Mr. Edward Arundel? |
34540 | Shall_ I_ make myself the ally and champion of this gallant soldier, who seldom speaks to me except to insult and upbraid me? |
34540 | Shall_ I_ take justice into my hands, and interfere for my kinsman''s benefit? |
34540 | She has been very unkind to you?" |
34540 | She has used you very badly, then, this woman? |
34540 | That''s the sort of thing, is n''t it, Polly?" |
34540 | The hand of death was upon her; what could it matter how she died? |
34540 | The sceptical artist may have thought,"What if there should be some reality in the creed so many weak fools confide in? |
34540 | Then Paul Marchmont went with you to Hampshire?" |
34540 | Was it reasonable to imagine that you would have married, and yet have left your mother in total ignorance of the fact?" |
34540 | Was not this even more likely than that she should seek refuge with her kinsfolk in Berkshire? |
34540 | Was she to sit quietly by and hear a stranger lie away her kinsman''s honour, truth, and manhood? |
34540 | Was there anything upon earth that she feared now? |
34540 | Was there to be no end to this unendurable delay? |
34540 | Was this the boyish red- coated dandy she had despised? |
34540 | Was this the man she had called frivolous? |
34540 | Weston?" |
34540 | Weston?" |
34540 | What am I to do with myself all this night, racked with uncertainty about Mary?" |
34540 | What can I do? |
34540 | What could have happened to throw him into that state? |
34540 | What did it all mean? |
34540 | What did it all mean? |
34540 | What did it matter that Edward Arundel repudiated and hated her? |
34540 | What do I care for any one''s opinion-- now?" |
34540 | What do you care whom I marry, or what becomes of me?" |
34540 | What do you think has become of her?" |
34540 | What do you think has become of my lost girl?" |
34540 | What does it matter what people say of me? |
34540 | What good have my looks done me, that I should worry myself about them?" |
34540 | What had he to do with any catastrophe except that which had fallen upon his innocent young wife? |
34540 | What has been the matter with you?" |
34540 | What have I done, Edward, that she should hate me?" |
34540 | What if Mary had gone to Oakley Street? |
34540 | What if there_ is_ a God who can not abide iniquity?" |
34540 | What if this helpless girl had been detained by force at Marchmont Towers? |
34540 | What is it that''s drove her away from her''ome, sir, and such a good''ome too? |
34540 | What is the favour I am to grant?" |
34540 | What is the mystery of your life?" |
34540 | What is the use of my fortune if you wo n''t share it with me, if you wo n''t take it all; for it is yours, my dearest-- it is all yours? |
34540 | What more likely than that she should turn instinctively, in the hour of her desolation, to the humble friends whom she had known in her childhood? |
34540 | What more natural than that she should go back to the familiar habitation, dear to her by reason of a thousand associations with her dead father? |
34540 | What mystery are these people hiding amongst themselves; and what should_ he_ have to do with it?" |
34540 | What other motive could you have had for doing this deadly wrong? |
34540 | What other person?" |
34540 | What reason have you to fear my cousin Olivia?" |
34540 | What shall I say to Paulette? |
34540 | What was he to do? |
34540 | What was it to him if famine- stricken Ireland were perishing, and the far- away Indian possessions menaced by contumacious and treacherous Sikhs? |
34540 | What was it to him if the glory of England were in danger, the freedom of a mighty people wavering in the balance? |
34540 | What was it to him if the heavens were shrivelled like a blazing scroll, and the earth reeling on its shaken foundations? |
34540 | What was the clue to the mystery of this letter, which had stunned and bewildered him, until the very power of reflection seemed lost? |
34540 | What was the clue to the mystery? |
34540 | What would the world say of me, Mary? |
34540 | What, in Heaven''s name, can it mean?" |
34540 | Whatever villany this man might be capable of committing, Olivia must at least be guiltless of any deliberate treachery? |
34540 | Where had she gone? |
34540 | Where was he to look for her next? |
34540 | Where was she likely to go in her inexperience of the outer world? |
34540 | Who could there be in Lincolnshire with the right to call to him thus by his Christian name? |
34540 | Who could think that sorrow would come between us so soon?" |
34540 | Who else would dare accuse a Dangerfield Arundel of baseness? |
34540 | Who saw her there?" |
34540 | Who should dare to disbelieve her?" |
34540 | Why did he for ever goad her to blacker wickedness by this parade of his love for Mary? |
34540 | Why did he force her to remember every moment how much cause she had to hate this pale- faced girl? |
34540 | Why did n''t he take to her, I wonder? |
34540 | Why did she leave this house?" |
34540 | Why did you not write to tell her of Mary''s flight?" |
34540 | Why does not God have pity upon me, and take the bitter burden away? |
34540 | Why had she ever consented to go there, when she had again and again expressed such terror of her stepmother? |
34540 | Why had she not rather followed her husband down to Devonshire, and thrown herself upon his relatives for protection? |
34540 | Why had she remained at Marchmont Towers? |
34540 | Why is it that, whether I threaten, or whether I appeal, I can gain nothing from her-- nothing? |
34540 | Why should we keep her in ignorance of it? |
34540 | Why, then, should I make myself a slave for the sake of winning people''s esteem? |
34540 | Why?" |
34540 | Will you accept my help?" |
34540 | Will you come and open the gate for me, please? |
34540 | Will you come into the wood with me?" |
34540 | Will you go?" |
34540 | Wo n''t you, Hoskins?" |
34540 | Wo n''t you, Polly?" |
34540 | You can perhaps give me the address of some place in London where your cousin is in the habit of staying?" |
34540 | You do n''t suppose I''m going to lay down my sword at seven- and- twenty years of age, and retire upon my pension? |
34540 | You must live a fortnight somewhere, Polly: where shall it be?" |
34540 | You remember me, perhaps? |
34540 | You wo n''t leave me-- you wo n''t leave me, will you?" |
34540 | You would not surely have me be less than true to myself, Mary darling? |
34540 | You''ve heard me talk of Belinda Lawford, my dearest, dearest friend? |
34540 | Your taste, I suppose, Olivia? |
34540 | cried Edward Arundel;"he makes himself at home at Marchmont Towers, then?" |
34540 | cried the young man,"what, in mercy''s name, has brought you here?" |
34540 | do you think I came down here to stand all night staring through these iron bars? |
34540 | has my love so little the aspect of truth that she_ can_ doubt me?" |
34540 | he cried, in a fierce agony of mental or bodily uneasiness;--"how long? |
34540 | he cried,"are you possessed by a thousand fiends? |
34540 | he muttered;"how was it? |
34540 | he thought;"why did n''t she come to me? |
34540 | how had he looked? |
34540 | is he now? |
34540 | or that-- O God, that would be too horrible!--does any one suspect that she drowned herself?" |
34540 | said Edward Arundel;"you believe, then, that she is dead?" |
34540 | said the soldier;"you call those things frocks, do n''t you? |
34540 | she asked; and then, as her eyes rested on the cards, she added, angrily,"Have n''t I told you that I would not see any callers to- day? |
34540 | she said;"O Captain Arundel, is it really you?" |
34540 | the girl cried suddenly, clasping her hands and looking imploringly at Captain Arundel,"were the cruel things she said true? |
34540 | what had he talked about? |
34540 | who else would be vile enough to call my father''s son a liar and a traitor? |
34540 | will this journey never come to an end? |
40735 | A long journey,I repeated;"and why not?" |
40735 | A million of them? |
40735 | And further_more_,said Mr. Shears, insinuatingly,"what I want to know is: why has she got them pitchers a- hanging around the school- room walls? |
40735 | And if they do-- what then? |
40735 | And the great stone of Iris- Iris? |
40735 | And the subscription price? |
40735 | And what did you prophesy, Uncle Weatherby? |
40735 | And what was that? |
40735 | And what was that? |
40735 | And where,I ask,"was that?" |
40735 | And who is Maggie? |
40735 | And who_ was_ Michael the Angelo? |
40735 | And why? |
40735 | And yet,said the scientist,"you-- you are quite unattached, are you not?" |
40735 | And you have already--? |
40735 | Are they not? |
40735 | Are you quite sure about it, Bertram? |
40735 | At Rug--"What will visitors say? 40735 B- what?" |
40735 | Been up the Statue of Liberty, I suppose? |
40735 | Bertram,said my wife one evening as we sat together by the lamp,"what do you think Letitia says?" |
40735 | But I mean-- don''t you think she may have loved him? |
40735 | But are you sure they are primroses? |
40735 | But do n''t you remember Robin Hood and his merry men? |
40735 | But how did you do it? |
40735 | But how? |
40735 | But the cost? |
40735 | But what are they for? |
40735 | But when did you think of it? |
40735 | But who will buy it? |
40735 | But why do n''t you ask God to send you a little boy all your own, just four years old like me, so we could play together? 40735 But why, Bertram?" |
40735 | But why? |
40735 | But you''ll come, father? |
40735 | But you? |
40735 | But,I said,"do you trust--""Trust her? |
40735 | Child,he said, looking her keenly in the eyes,"do you find it so hard to brave that lion?" |
40735 | Come,I said,"have you no faith, Letitia?" |
40735 | Daughter,she would say,"where is your hat?" |
40735 | Dictionary''s handy, is n''t it? |
40735 | Did Mr. Bob send them? |
40735 | Did Mr. Bob send these Bombay papers? |
40735 | Did anything famous happen there? |
40735 | Did n''t you guess? |
40735 | Did n''t you know? |
40735 | Did she always tell you that? |
40735 | Did she really remember you? |
40735 | Did she tell you that? |
40735 | Did what? |
40735 | Did you guess where you were going? |
40735 | Did you look in the P''s? |
40735 | Did you notice any bobolinks? |
40735 | Did you say Miss Peggy Neal, suh? |
40735 | Did, hey? 40735 Do I look forlorn? |
40735 | Do I look like an ogress? |
40735 | Do they fill the box? |
40735 | Do they smoke at your parties? |
40735 | Do you know what I asked him? |
40735 | Do you know what I asked that man? |
40735 | Do you like''Sordello''? |
40735 | Do you object,I asked,"to your aunt''s best Sunday hat?" |
40735 | Do you remember how I called to you, and came running back? |
40735 | Do you remember me? |
40735 | Do you remember this ancient dame? |
40735 | Do you remember when I went to school to you? 40735 Do you remember, Letitia, how you and Robin rested here?" |
40735 | Do you suppose Tom put in his name like that? |
40735 | Do you? |
40735 | Doctor,he said,"how does a man perform some marvellous surgical feat, which no one had ever done, or dreamed of doing, before? |
40735 | Doctor,said Peggy Neal, rising again,"you wo n''t mind waiting outside a moment? |
40735 | Does he ever grumble at you? |
40735 | Father,he said, doggedly,"it''s about-- it''s about--""Yes?" |
40735 | Had you thought of that? |
40735 | Have we not Sun Dial? |
40735 | Have you cloth,she asked,"of the shade called Lincoln green?" |
40735 | Hiram must be getting on then? |
40735 | Hm-- what, father? |
40735 | How cool_ are_ the moors? |
40735 | How do you get on with your Latin? |
40735 | How is it you''re here? 40735 How many did you swallow?" |
40735 | How old are you? |
40735 | How shall I know? |
40735 | How shall we fill it? |
40735 | How then shall you escape sadness and regret? 40735 I be the horsey?" |
40735 | I beg pardon? |
40735 | I dread the winter-- don''t you? |
40735 | I thought my legs were so short? |
40735 | I? 40735 I?" |
40735 | If I may be permitted,he said,"to repeat my humble question-- may I ask, was it your money-- that bought-- the pictures?" |
40735 | Indeed? |
40735 | Is Miss Neal at home? |
40735 | Is Mr. Hiram Ptolemy in? |
40735 | Is it a battle- field? |
40735 | Is it a castle? |
40735 | Is it customary here, Peggy? |
40735 | Is it just a town, then? |
40735 | Is it thinking, then? |
40735 | Is my father dead? |
40735 | Is n''t it? |
40735 | Is she--? |
40735 | Is there another Mills Hotel? |
40735 | It''s hard always trying to be-- dominant,she remarked,"is n''t it?" |
40735 | Latin and Greek, of course? |
40735 | Let''s see, that''s Poe, is n''t it? |
40735 | Letitia was fond of Robin, was she not? |
40735 | Letitia,I said, sharply,"what nonsense is this?" |
40735 | Light green or dark green? |
40735 | Loving no one in particular, I have had the time to love every one, do n''t you see? 40735 Might it not incite them to sling- shots?" |
40735 | Miss Neal? |
40735 | Miss who? |
40735 | Mother,I said, coolly,"will you put up some sandwiches? |
40735 | Mr. Butters, what kind of type is this? |
40735 | Mr. Percival,I said, cordially, looking at my watch,"wo n''t you come to dinner?" |
40735 | Must I give up all my fun because a mere girl''s coming? |
40735 | Neal? |
40735 | Never been up the--"What did he say? |
40735 | New York is a great place, is n''t it? |
40735 | No patients, doctor? |
40735 | No? |
40735 | Not much of a talker, though? |
40735 | Now, if the idle young gentleman drawing_ pictures_--"_ Tertia vigilia eruptionem fecerunt_--oh, they did, did they? |
40735 | Of course, of course,he interposed,"but did you ever take up ancient matters to any extent?" |
40735 | Oh, Mr. St. John,she said, while we all sat listening,"I''ve wanted to ask you: how did you come to write_ Sleepington Fair_?" |
40735 | Oh, what is the matter? |
40735 | Oh, would it? |
40735 | Oh,I said,"and did he go to Rugby, sir?" |
40735 | Oh,said he,"is that you, father?" |
40735 | Oh,she answered,"those?" |
40735 | Old friends? |
40735 | Only an hour? 40735 Only six slices, Bertram? |
40735 | Peter, who''s that? |
40735 | Print it, child? 40735 Regular jungles-- eh, father?" |
40735 | Robin Saxeholm? |
40735 | Robin told you? |
40735 | Robin,I said one day, and as casually as I could make my tone,"did you want to tell me anything? |
40735 | Rough? |
40735 | Said? 40735 Say, what do you think I am? |
40735 | Shall I nail the cover on? |
40735 | Shall I write to Peggy? |
40735 | So he lives at a Mills Hotel? |
40735 | So long, father? 40735 So?" |
40735 | Still hatching poems, I suppose? |
40735 | Still,I insist,"you do not prefer it to your own?" |
40735 | Suppose,said Dove,"it should be a girl who bears away sacred fire from your shelf, Letitia?" |
40735 | Surprising? |
40735 | Tavistock? 40735 Tavistock?" |
40735 | Tell me,she urged,"did I presume too much? |
40735 | Tell whom? 40735 The Doone Valley,"I remarked,"would be Devon, would n''t it?" |
40735 | The figure? 40735 The grapes?" |
40735 | Then shall you alter it? |
40735 | Then why not stay? |
40735 | This trip? |
40735 | Those? 40735 To what, then,"piped Jimmy Gallows,"do you attribute your success?" |
40735 | Unattached,he repeated,"by ties of-- the affections?" |
40735 | Was it a conundrum? |
40735 | Well, I rather hoped--"Yes? |
40735 | Well, now, how did you guess it? 40735 Well,"he would say, stopping them as they walked together arm in arm,"if you seek Peter, look for Bertram-- eh?" |
40735 | Well? 40735 Well?" |
40735 | Well? |
40735 | What about water? |
40735 | What are the red lines, father? |
40735 | What can I get for you, dear? |
40735 | What can we do for you this morning? |
40735 | What could he say, my love? |
40735 | What did he say? |
40735 | What did you ask, Bertram? |
40735 | What do I want with a husband then? |
40735 | What do you mean by the next name to Robin? |
40735 | What do you think that little-- that man wants? |
40735 | What do you want? |
40735 | What does he want to choose_ our_ year for? 40735 What does my son care about Michael the Angelo?" |
40735 | What for? |
40735 | What good''11 it do to tell you? 40735 What have I done?" |
40735 | What have_ I_ done? |
40735 | What is wanted? |
40735 | What luck, Bertram? |
40735 | What made you do it? |
40735 | What type? |
40735 | What was the matter with him? |
40735 | What was the promise she made you? |
40735 | What would you like? |
40735 | What''s the difference? |
40735 | What,I asked,"is the figure meant for?" |
40735 | What,he asked,"are drawin''-books_ for_?" |
40735 | What,_ never_? |
40735 | What? |
40735 | When do we start? |
40735 | When were you rough, Bertie? |
40735 | When,I asked,"will it be out?" |
40735 | Where Robin is? |
40735 | Where have you been so long, Letitia? |
40735 | Where is it, Bertram? |
40735 | Where''s Tavistock? |
40735 | Whiskers? |
40735 | Who buys them? |
40735 | Who is this woman? |
40735 | Who knows, my boy? 40735 Who said I did n''t know how to spell it?" |
40735 | Who told you that? |
40735 | Who was Robin? |
40735 | Who wrote them? |
40735 | Who''s that, Peter? |
40735 | Who''s there? |
40735 | Who-- if I may be so bold--and here he raised his voice to the insinuating higher register--"who, may I inquire, paid for them?" |
40735 | Who? 40735 Who_ is_ Miss Primrose?" |
40735 | Who_ was_ this here Michael the Angelo? |
40735 | Whom do we know in New York, Letitia? |
40735 | Why I am going to New York? |
40735 | Why not? |
40735 | Why should you know one? |
40735 | Why tell an idyl, when you can live one, little Chloe, little wild olive? 40735 Why, at Rugby, sir--""And what, pray, has Rugby, or a thousand Rugbys, to do with your wilful disobedience?" |
40735 | Why, confound you, what do you mean by telling me I do n''t know my own business? |
40735 | Why, darn your skin,said Colonel Shears,"why not? |
40735 | Why, do n''t you remember Hiram Ptolemy and Peggy Neal? |
40735 | Why, gentlemen? 40735 Why,"said his mother,"do n''t you know? |
40735 | Will I die? |
40735 | Will I? 40735 Will you come in, suh?" |
40735 | Wouldst thou love God? |
40735 | Yes,said Letitia,"did you know him, too?" |
40735 | Yes? |
40735 | Yes? |
40735 | Yet in lieu of these,Dove once replied,"she has her day''s work and her church and books--""But are they enough for a woman, do you think?" |
40735 | You are? |
40735 | You did? |
40735 | You have heard from him then? |
40735 | You hear from her often, I suppose? |
40735 | You here again? |
40735 | You here, Bertram? |
40735 | You will go, Letitia? |
40735 | You will go? |
40735 | You, Letitia? |
40735 | Your own? |
40735 | _ Did_ I? |
40735 | _ I?_"You,I repeated. |
40735 | _ I_ made you swallow them? |
40735 | _ Rugby!_ And what of Rugby? |
40735 | _ This_ June? |
40735 | _ Us_, Letitia? |
40735 | ''You hear often, I suppose?'' |
40735 | ''_ Are n''t_ you playing, Brown?'' |
40735 | Ablative of what? |
40735 | And Mr. Ptolemy-- why can I never remember the name of his hotel?" |
40735 | And if I refuse''em, why, then, they just naturally up and say,''Well, you printed Primrose''s; why not mine?'' |
40735 | And what d''I do it for? |
40735 | And what did he say to that?" |
40735 | And why not kiss me? |
40735 | And, in conclusion, I want to ask right here: who''s a- payin''for them there decorations?" |
40735 | Are you hurt? |
40735 | Are you-- are you interested-- in science?" |
40735 | Bob?" |
40735 | Bob?" |
40735 | Bob?" |
40735 | Bob?" |
40735 | But can you tell me, please, if Mr. Hiram De Lancey Percival lives here?" |
40735 | But the addresses?" |
40735 | Butters?" |
40735 | Butters?" |
40735 | Butters?" |
40735 | Butters?" |
40735 | Butters?" |
40735 | Ca n''t you guess, my dear? |
40735 | Ca n''t you speak?" |
40735 | Can you remember that?" |
40735 | D''you think I''ve got time to be talking to every young sprig like you?" |
40735 | Did I not, my son?" |
40735 | Did n''t you know?" |
40735 | Did she never yearn for little old Grassy Ford again? |
40735 | Did you never hear of the_ Vicar of Wakefield_?" |
40735 | Did you see her dress? |
40735 | Did you see the rings on her fingers? |
40735 | Do I look so helpless?" |
40735 | Do all Devonshire roads lead up to Tavistock?" |
40735 | Do n''t you remember those books you left for us?--in our old school- room?--on the shelf?" |
40735 | Do n''t you remember? |
40735 | Do you remember where I sat-- there by the window? |
40735 | Do you want to be speckled like your ugly old mother- hen?" |
40735 | Do you wonder, Bertram?" |
40735 | Does Aunt Letty know?" |
40735 | Eh? |
40735 | Eh?" |
40735 | Good Lord, what hat?" |
40735 | Had ever man so exasperating an antagonist? |
40735 | Had she not spread that slice on Sun Dial, never to forget? |
40735 | Had the modern schools produced an Abraham Lincoln, he wished to know? |
40735 | Have you your grip with you?" |
40735 | He said it was a pity you would never be knighted, and once he drew for you your escutcheon-- you do n''t remember? |
40735 | How did she like New York? |
40735 | How did you guess it?" |
40735 | How had her health been? |
40735 | How is my mother?" |
40735 | How then should any one so coolly virtuous know trial or passion? |
40735 | How''s that?" |
40735 | How''s the old gentleman?" |
40735 | If not quite dead, why were they kept so long a- dying there? |
40735 | Is father home?" |
40735 | Is the first number ready yet?" |
40735 | It was a wonderful journey, I then admit, and I do not blame them for their pridefulness, but what, I ask, would they have done without my map? |
40735 | It would teach them the beauty of manly-- Why do you laugh?" |
40735 | It''s about-- father,_ you''ll_ tell her--""Tell her?" |
40735 | It''s my old sermon of environment, I know; but why are you here?--and why am I? |
40735 | Lord?" |
40735 | Me she ignored at pleasure; could it be possible, I wondered, that she was determined to renounce the whole round world as well? |
40735 | Meanwhile, wo n''t you be seated?" |
40735 | Might not summer- boarders, Letitia asked, bear a surer, more golden harvest than those worn- out fields? |
40735 | Mr. Bob in India?" |
40735 | No school, Letitia?" |
40735 | No? |
40735 | Now what could be troubling the lad, I wondered? |
40735 | Now, that''s nice, is n''t it? |
40735 | Now, who in thunder cares a tinker''s damn for Theocritus, in Grassy Ford? |
40735 | Percival?" |
40735 | Percival?" |
40735 | Percival?" |
40735 | Question: how do authors get their books accepted?_""Yes-- how do they?" |
40735 | Question: how do authors get their books accepted?_""Yes-- how do they?" |
40735 | Remember how Velveteens caught Tom up a tree?" |
40735 | Shall we go into the other room?" |
40735 | She might, perhaps, make a tale or two of the Archer in Lincoln Green, but what is the romance of an archer without the lady in it? |
40735 | Surely so young a saint could have no warm impetuous hours to remember, no sweet abandonment, no pretty idyls-- had she even a spring- time to recall? |
40735 | Tell Aunt Letty what?" |
40735 | Tell what?" |
40735 | That night, when the last guest had departed, I asked Letitia,"Well, what do you think of the author?" |
40735 | The brooks run on so gayly as before, and why not they as well? |
40735 | Then may I ask when you_ made_ them a part of it, Miss Primrose?" |
40735 | To leave at four o''clock, to return at nine and find one open which had been shut before!--is it not the gardener''s morning joy? |
40735 | VI AN OLD FRIEND OF OURS"Oh, I know the town,"I had told them confidently-- had I not been there in 18--? |
40735 | Was I wrong to ask her without consulting you?" |
40735 | Was she quite happy? |
40735 | What could this discord be? |
40735 | What did I say? |
40735 | What do girls talk so long about? |
40735 | What do you say to a summer in England, boy?" |
40735 | What had I to do with tombs? |
40735 | What had they expected, he asked at home? |
40735 | What have I done? |
40735 | What is it? |
40735 | What is it?" |
40735 | What of that?... |
40735 | What right had any one to assume that I had not long planned to go a- fishing that very morning? |
40735 | What right have you to avoid the burdens your fellows bear?--to be in bliss, while they are suffering? |
40735 | What was the lion roaring of so gently there? |
40735 | What were the formulæ? |
40735 | What were the rules and their exceptions? |
40735 | What will your parents say if they come, as parents should, to see the property for which they pay a tribute to the state?" |
40735 | Where are you?" |
40735 | Where have I heard that name? |
40735 | Where?" |
40735 | Which one to- night, Suzanne?" |
40735 | Who knows what befell the edition of that memorable_ Gazette_ which contained"Jerusalem,"set solid, a mighty column of Alexandrine lines? |
40735 | Why ablative of time? |
40735 | Why ca n''t he wait till next?" |
40735 | Why do n''t you?" |
40735 | Why does a fellow learn such stuff? |
40735 | Why not hunt old friends? |
40735 | Why, I asked, and as reproachfully as I could make the question-- why had she never told me? |
40735 | Why, I wondered, had she been so curious about long journeys? |
40735 | Why, always, did the whole school turn so knowingly to you? |
40735 | Will you never grow up?" |
40735 | With what balm of sympathy and cheer would the new Letitia heal those wounds? |
40735 | Would Letitia be as mild, I wondered? |
40735 | Would no kind, sunny soul in mercy free them from their pallid misery? |
40735 | Would she not publish it, she was asked, pleadingly? |
40735 | You admit it, then? |
40735 | You''re so pale, Peggy-- and your eyes-- and your hair-- Peggy, what_ have_ you done to your hair?" |
40735 | _ How_ does a fellow know_ eruptionem_? |
40735 | _ You_ paid for them?" |
40735 | we asked ourselves-- this strange impassiveness, this disapproval, as it seemed to us-- negative, but no less obvious for that? |
40735 | whose little boy is this?" |
9471 | A Hercules? |
9471 | An Adonis? |
9471 | And God do n''t mind much, does he? |
9471 | And I thought with myself,--Would God set his children down in the dark, and leave them to cry aloud in anguish at the terrors of the night? 9471 And do you think_ he_ has no feelings, Mr. Evans? |
9471 | And how to get at them? 9471 And somebody to wait, I suppose?" |
9471 | And such a huge big foot,--just like a bear''s? |
9471 | And then? |
9471 | And were you able to think all that when you were so ill, my love? |
9471 | And what Thackeray calls cold balls handed about? |
9471 | And what do you do then? |
9471 | And who are you going to ask? |
9471 | And who told you that? |
9471 | And why, pray? 9471 And why? |
9471 | And will you come and see me? 9471 And you complain of that-- don''t you?" |
9471 | And you count Roger the thin edge? |
9471 | And you did n''t grumble? |
9471 | And you lay the disappointment of missing a glimpse into the sweet privacy of such a home to my charge? |
9471 | And you think Marion likes him? |
9471 | And you will answer him that you have eaten and drunk in his presence, and cast out devils, and--? |
9471 | Are you not, then, to pull the mote out of your brother''s eye? |
9471 | Are you out of your five wits, husband? |
9471 | Are you sure you have oil enough in your vessel as well as in your lamp? |
9471 | Are you sure,said my husband, as we were starting,"that they will take an advertisement at the printing- office?" |
9471 | Are you sure? |
9471 | Are your husband''s pictures well hung? |
9471 | Black lamb? |
9471 | Brown jug and all? |
9471 | But are there not diseases which are only so much the worse diseases that they are not intermittent? |
9471 | But do n''t you know you must n''t go to the door when any one is talking to Jemima? |
9471 | But have you made no further inquiry? |
9471 | But how are we to live in the mean time? |
9471 | But how would that apply to Charlie? |
9471 | But how? 9471 But if I ask you to repeat it in his hearing, you will not refuse?" |
9471 | But if it''s all one has got? |
9471 | But if she_ should_ be the mother? |
9471 | But if they say what is wrong? |
9471 | But might not a thief say he was influenced merely by the desire to add another sovereign to his hoard? |
9471 | But sometimes you forget, do n''t you? |
9471 | But suppose you were to recover your health: would it not be delightful to_ do_ something for his sake? 9471 But what can come of it?" |
9471 | But what could Mr. Blackstone do? |
9471 | But what does she do? |
9471 | But what will the landlord himself think? |
9471 | But what''s to become of Blackstone? |
9471 | But where can you change it? 9471 But where, then, does Miss Clare live? |
9471 | But why have they not yet vindicated for themselves a social position,I asked,"and that a high one?" |
9471 | But would n''t that make them stop believing in him altogether? |
9471 | But would that be fair to Roger? 9471 But would you not tell them how wicked it is?" |
9471 | But you do n''t think she refused him? |
9471 | But you do n''t think that is what the world was made for? |
9471 | But you think the fresh air may have done them good? |
9471 | But your friends? |
9471 | But--"You do n''t want to leave me?" |
9471 | But, answer me,--do you believe Lady Bernard would invite her to meet her friends if she knew all? |
9471 | But, my dear fellow, do n''t you see it is a fact? 9471 But,"he returned,"why should n''t you go to the Hall for a week or two without me? |
9471 | Ca n''t you see what she is? |
9471 | Can I do any thing for you, then? |
9471 | Can you paint just as well when I am here as when you are alone? |
9471 | Can you tell me, my good woman, whether she''s at home? |
9471 | Could it be her mother? |
9471 | Could it have been she? |
9471 | Could n''t you go and see your cousin some morning instead? |
9471 | Could she not eat something? |
9471 | Could you take me to Cambridge Square to my next engagement? |
9471 | Could you take me with you some time? |
9471 | Dear Wynnie,she said,"you would n''t have me back with my old foolishness, would you? |
9471 | Did anybody, then, ever believe the likes of that, grannie? |
9471 | Did my sister-- in-- law ever tell you what an idle fellow I used to be? |
9471 | Did they give any reason for thinking her unfit? |
9471 | Did you ask her address? |
9471 | Did you ask her if it was she you saw carrying the jug of beer in Tottenham Court Road? |
9471 | Did you ever hear of the martyrs, Sim? |
9471 | Did you ever know a lady that was n''t? |
9471 | Did you ever see God, Marion? |
9471 | Did you not both believe in one Lord? |
9471 | Did you see how her face lighted up always before she said any thing? 9471 Did you think of the black lamb in it, then, when you laid that black pussy on the hearth?" |
9471 | Do I disturb you? |
9471 | Do n''t you find St. Paul saying something very like it again and again? |
9471 | Do n''t you know that sweet hymn about feeding our lamps from the olive- trees of Gethsemane? 9471 Do n''t you know that the man is no conciliatory, or even mild dissenter, but a decided enemy to Church and State and all that?" |
9471 | Do n''t you mean to come in? |
9471 | Do n''t you think it a little hard? |
9471 | Do n''t you think you had better not? 9471 Do you consider yourself under no obligation to people who ask you to dinner?" |
9471 | Do you know that sweet hymn, Mrs. Percivale? 9471 Do you know, my dear,"said my father to her,"whether Miss Clare is at home?" |
9471 | Do you like being read to when you are at work? |
9471 | Do you like it? |
9471 | Do you mean to say you have never thought of the shape of the book your monthly papers would make? |
9471 | Do you think God loves the child less than you do? 9471 Do you think it well in your position to be obliged to a man in his?" |
9471 | Do you think my character wo n''t stand that much? 9471 Do you think,"I said,"that any one, before he came, could have imagined such a visitor to the world as Jesus Christ?" |
9471 | Do you want to die too? |
9471 | Do you wish, then, to be in friendly relations with him? |
9471 | Does Lady Bernard know as much about her as she seems? |
9471 | Does Miss Clare live in this house? |
9471 | Does she go to church, do you suppose? |
9471 | Does she sing? |
9471 | Every man who says, Am I my brother''s keeper? 9471 First floor?" |
9471 | Found whom? |
9471 | Have I offended you, Ethel? |
9471 | Have n''t you got her address yet? 9471 Have there been any tramps about the house since we left?" |
9471 | Have you been to the Academy yet? |
9471 | Have you ever been to the National Gallery, Richard? |
9471 | Have you ever heard her? |
9471 | Have you forgiven me? |
9471 | Have you got a place, then, Jemima? |
9471 | Have you sold another picture? |
9471 | Her dowager aunt? |
9471 | Her sad looks? |
9471 | How am I to find out where they are? |
9471 | How am I to help you, Judy dear? |
9471 | How are you to get him into your heart? 9471 How can I say I have, when I never had any thing to forgive?" |
9471 | How can you do that? |
9471 | How comes it to be interesting, then? |
9471 | How could they tell she was your child, when you stole her away like a thief? 9471 How could you help being shy of me?" |
9471 | How did she take it? |
9471 | How did you find that out, Sim? |
9471 | How do you do, Miss Clare? |
9471 | How do you grow good, Marion? |
9471 | How do you know that? 9471 How do you know that?" |
9471 | How do you know we were quarrelling? |
9471 | How do you make that out? |
9471 | How does that make up for any thing? |
9471 | How long have you missed her? |
9471 | How many grandchildren have you then, pray, Miss Clare? |
9471 | How much do you want for this sketch? |
9471 | How''s that? |
9471 | How, then, are you to teach them? |
9471 | How, then, can you say you had too little in common to be able to commune? |
9471 | How_ is_ this, Miss Clare? 9471 I beg your pardon,"said Mr. Morley,"but is he not on the very supposition inferior to them?" |
9471 | I beg your pardon; but what designs can you have upon my memory? |
9471 | I do n''t know,said his brother thoughtfully;"who can tell? |
9471 | I fancy I hear a rushing As of waters down a slope: Is it wrong, I wonder, to fancy It may be the river of hope? 9471 I have no doubt of it; but why do you ask?" |
9471 | I presume you would have gone if I had n''t been with you? |
9471 | I pull the right line, do n''t I? |
9471 | I should be very glad to do as you desire, husband,I said,"but how can I? |
9471 | If I were to go with you, now, and explain some of them to you? 9471 If he be so generous, how does it come that he is so rich?" |
9471 | If you can make any one believe that there is something somewhere to be trusted, is not that the best lesson you can give him? 9471 If you saw a scaffold,"said Marion, turning again to Jarvis,"would you be in danger of mistaking it for a permanent erection?" |
9471 | Is Mrs. Percivale a lady of fortune? |
9471 | Is he stout? |
9471 | Is he tall? |
9471 | Is he your husband? |
9471 | Is it at all likely they do, Roger? 9471 Is it likely your children will be ladies and gentlemen,"he said,"if you prevail on their father to play the part of a sneaking parasite?" |
9471 | Is it not a fault, Mr. Percivale, to prevent one from obeying the divine law of bearing another''s burden? |
9471 | Is it not hard that the privileges of kleptomania should be confined to the rich? 9471 Is it to be my room? |
9471 | Is n''t it all the same, though, darling? |
9471 | Is n''t it possible some one who knows Miss Clare may have seen this girl, and been misled by the likeness? |
9471 | Is n''t it possible, Percivale,I said,"that God may not care so much for beginning at that end?" |
9471 | Is n''t it sirloin? |
9471 | Is that all you got for that picture? |
9471 | Is that near enough? 9471 Is there any thing to be done?" |
9471 | Is this to be a wife? |
9471 | It seems final, Roger? |
9471 | Lady Bernard? |
9471 | Like it? |
9471 | May I ask what you are laughing at? |
9471 | May it not be because they are so often, like the gypsies, lawless in their behavior, as well as peculiar in their habits? |
9471 | Mr. Evans,Marion went on, turning again to the blind man,"do you think the design of this world was to make men comfortable?" |
9471 | Never been to the opera? 9471 No doubt,"I returned;"but who knows what that way may be?" |
9471 | Now, what do you think of it? |
9471 | Now, what is there,I asked,"in all my life that is worth setting down,--I mean, as I should be able to set it down?" |
9471 | Only when I can be of service to you, you_ will_ let me, wo n''t you? |
9471 | Percivale, why will you pretend to be so stupid? |
9471 | Please, ma''am, is Master Fido to carry Master Zohrab about by the back o''the neck? |
9471 | Please,''m, could you eat your dinner now? 9471 Pray, what do you mean by it?" |
9471 | Rather-- ponderous, do n''t you think, for weaving into a narrative? |
9471 | Run out to look for her? |
9471 | Shall I like Paradise when I get there? 9471 Shall I write for you, and ask him to come and see you?" |
9471 | She calls that knocking about, do she? |
9471 | She has been with you some time-- has she not? |
9471 | She has told you, then? |
9471 | She_ has_ told you, then? |
9471 | So long as what? |
9471 | Suppose you was to get a black eye, sir? |
9471 | Sure, grannie, that ai n''t out o''the Bible? |
9471 | Take care of what? |
9471 | The bathroom? |
9471 | The nurse from the nursery, sir; or the young person as teaches the young ladies the piano? |
9471 | The price of this, then, joking aside, is--? |
9471 | The way is wide,I said:"what if you should miss him?" |
9471 | The whole affair has an unfinished look, you think? |
9471 | The whole? |
9471 | Then I may come and see you again? |
9471 | Then I suppose you would rather be of some good and uncomfortable, than of no good and comfortable? |
9471 | Then he meant to do something else? |
9471 | Then how can you say they stole her? 9471 Then what more is there we can do?" |
9471 | Then why not to- night? |
9471 | Then why should I? |
9471 | Then why should n''t you do so now? 9471 Then you did n''t miss me?" |
9471 | Then you do believe,my husband was saying,"in the importance of what some of the Devonshire people call_ havage_?" |
9471 | Then you do count yourself a Bohemian: pray, what significance do you attach to the epithet? |
9471 | Then you do think the girl with the beer- jug was Miss Clare, after all? |
9471 | Then you mean to go with us? |
9471 | Then your husband? |
9471 | Then, as he has n''t done it, the probability is he did n''t mean to do it? |
9471 | Then, so long as the house was going up all right, the probability is there would n''t be much amiss with the scaffold? |
9471 | Then, what was their faith worth,said the blind man,"if they believed false and true all the same?" |
9471 | Then,cried Roger, starting to his feet with clasped hands,"--perhaps-- is it possible?--you will-- you will let me love you? |
9471 | Then,said Lady Bernard archly,"am I to understand, Mr. Blackstone, that you do n''t believe it of the least importance to come of decent people?" |
9471 | To be kissed? |
9471 | To whom, Lord, should I sing but thee, The Maker of my tongue? 9471 True, true,"I said;"but ought we not to examine our own selves whether we are in the faith?" |
9471 | Was it dying for a kiss then? |
9471 | Was it the storm that troubled them then? 9471 We were reading about Herod, were n''t we? |
9471 | Well, do n''t you think that enough for a while? |
9471 | Well, if I were to get a black eye for the sake of the child, would that be any disgrace to me, Sim? |
9471 | Well, my dear, but how can you see Amy if you ca n''t even see God? 9471 Well, they did n''t get black eyes only,--they got black all over, you know,--burnt black; and what for, do you think, now?" |
9471 | Well, what''s the matter? 9471 Well, will not all kindness shown to the poor by persons in a superior station tend in that direction?" |
9471 | Well? |
9471 | Were you as much pleased with her conversation as at our house? |
9471 | Were you thinking of that Titian in the Louvre, with the white rabbit in it? |
9471 | What are they? |
9471 | What can we do to find her? |
9471 | What could any clergyman do in such a case? |
9471 | What did she go for to throw her cotton gownd in my teeth for, as if it was my blame she warn''t in silks and satins? |
9471 | What did she say? |
9471 | What did you love him for? |
9471 | What did you marry him for then? |
9471 | What did you think of that, Roger? |
9471 | What do you expect the man to say about it? |
9471 | What do you ladies talk about now in your morning calls? |
9471 | What do you make of her playfulness? |
9471 | What do you mean by being''helped up''? |
9471 | What do you mean by that? |
9471 | What do you mean, Wynnie? 9471 What do you mean? |
9471 | What do you mean? |
9471 | What do you mean? |
9471 | What do you want me to tell you? |
9471 | What do_ you_ think is the matter with him? |
9471 | What does it mean, Percivale? |
9471 | What does what mean? |
9471 | What good, then, can you expect to do him? |
9471 | What grounds? 9471 What has that to do with taking care?" |
9471 | What have you got there, Percivale? |
9471 | What if it were not meant to stand, then? 9471 What is he like?" |
9471 | What is her notion, then? 9471 What is it, then?" |
9471 | What is n''t likely? |
9471 | What is she? |
9471 | What is the matter? |
9471 | What is the will of God? 9471 What must we do next?" |
9471 | What reason does she give? |
9471 | What then? |
9471 | What were you and my wife quarrelling about, Rodge? |
9471 | What will people say to your borrowing five pounds at a public- house? |
9471 | What''s so very odd, Roger? |
9471 | What''s the matter with Blackstone? |
9471 | What, then, do you mean to tell him? |
9471 | What, then, do you suppose the proper relation between a London clergyman and his parishioners? |
9471 | What-- what-- what''s the matter? |
9471 | What_ does_ this mean? |
9471 | What_ is_ the matter, my darling? |
9471 | What_ is_ the matter? |
9471 | When did you arrive, cozzie? |
9471 | Where am I to get it? |
9471 | Where are you going now? |
9471 | Where are you going? 9471 Where did you get that stuff you was a readin''of to us, grannie?" |
9471 | Where did you tell me you had met her? |
9471 | Where do you live? |
9471 | Where is he? |
9471 | Where is she? |
9471 | Where''s Jemima? |
9471 | Which station had we better go to next? |
9471 | Who can tell? |
9471 | Who is it from? |
9471 | Who is your medical man? |
9471 | Who knows? 9471 Who told you that, Sim?" |
9471 | Whom do you think I took down to dinner? |
9471 | Why did n''t ye stop at home then? 9471 Why did n''t you ask her to play?" |
9471 | Why did n''t you go with her? |
9471 | Why did n''t you let us know, papa? |
9471 | Why did you marry him then? |
9471 | Why do you pity me, Connie? |
9471 | Why do you take so little notice of the child? |
9471 | Why not, if you wish it? |
9471 | Why not? 9471 Why only sometimes?" |
9471 | Why should I spend my money to perpetuate such a condition of things? |
9471 | Why should it be appreciated? |
9471 | Why should n''t a sirloin be boiled as well as roasted? 9471 Why should n''t we dine here? |
9471 | Why should you hope not? |
9471 | Why should you think she does any thing? |
9471 | Why? |
9471 | Will they from any lips? 9471 Will you come and be with me when-- when--?" |
9471 | Will you come in? |
9471 | Will you let me come and see which you have chosen? |
9471 | Will you let me come and see you, then? |
9471 | Will you say a man may have the faith God cares for without the faith you say he does not care for? |
9471 | Will you shut your eyes for one minute,he went on,"and, whatever I do, not open them till I tell you?" |
9471 | Will you tell me, then, what the object of this world is? |
9471 | Would it content you,I asked,"to be able to dream of it again?" |
9471 | Would n''t he have set about making him comfortable then, in spite of his blunders? |
9471 | Would n''t he help his father as soon as his disciples? |
9471 | Would n''t it be better to leave Mrs. Percivale with me? |
9471 | Would n''t you like to steer? |
9471 | Would n''t you rather not believe in a God than believe in an unjust one? |
9471 | Would you give her up? |
9471 | Would you have everybody take me for the latest incarnation of the oldest insanity in the world,--that of maternity? 9471 Would you mind telling me about it? |
9471 | Would you mind telling me,I said,"what made you take to reading it?" |
9471 | Would you never, then, give money, or any of the necessaries of life, except in extreme, and, on the part of the receiver, unavoidable necessity? |
9471 | Would you not give alms at all, then? |
9471 | Yes, grannie"Then were n''t you too hard upon him? 9471 Yes,--isn''t that enough?" |
9471 | Yet what great difficulty would there be in combining the two sets of duties, especially with such a man as Blackstone? 9471 You ai n''t going to take him from me, grannie, after he''s been and struck me?" |
9471 | You did think I was neglecting you, then, Percivale? |
9471 | You do n''t expect to persuade him to shut up shop? |
9471 | You do n''t think I am going to sacrifice all my privileges to this little tyrant, do you? |
9471 | You had some music? |
9471 | You know her, then, I suppose? |
9471 | You mean you do n''t think God would have let him? |
9471 | You open a very difficult question,said Mr. Morley:"What are we to do with them? |
9471 | You would n''t complain, then, if it should be a little out of the square, and if there should be no windows in it? |
9471 | You_ do n''t_ mean I may come as often as I like? |
9471 | _ Do_ you think so? |
9471 | --or,"better than"such a one? |
9471 | After all, was I not judging her? |
9471 | Ai n''t it a love, now?" |
9471 | Ai n''t you fond of music?" |
9471 | And again, was it likely that such as she, her mind occupied with so many other absorbing interests, would fall in love unprovoked, unsolicited? |
9471 | And how could I blame you, that, loving her, you wanted her to know it? |
9471 | And how should they be able to love one another, if they are not fit to be married to each other? |
9471 | And if they do n''t think about cats and guns, why should they? |
9471 | And if this were all, why should she have said she hoped it would soon pass? |
9471 | And what do you say to Lady Bernard?" |
9471 | And who but he that has had the worst hurt man can receive, and the best comfort God can give, can tell what either is? |
9471 | And why did he make the Captain of our salvation perfect through suffering? |
9471 | And why should n''t I? |
9471 | And why should you wish it for me? |
9471 | And you like to hear me sing, do n''t you?" |
9471 | Are they not already too far sunk towards the brutes to be capable of receiving any such rousing influence?" |
9471 | Are you sure you have got at the real one?" |
9471 | As for the publican, who knows what chance of doing him a good turn it may put in my way?" |
9471 | As soon as it was over, I said,--"And what will the Lord say to you, do you think, when you have said so to him?" |
9471 | As we returned home, Roger said, after some remark of mine of a cognate sort,--"Does she never try to teach them any thing, Ethel?" |
9471 | At length, one morning, I said to him,--"Are you ashamed of the New Testament, Percivale? |
9471 | At this moment Eliza appeared in the door- way, saying,--"Will ye come to yer supper, Dick? |
9471 | Besides, Mrs. Percivale, my clients want to know more about your sisters, and little Theodora, or Dorothea, or-- what was her name in the book?" |
9471 | But I check myself: who shall say what love is sufficing for this or for that? |
9471 | But I''m not so miserable as you may think me, Wynnie,"he went on;"for do n''t you see? |
9471 | But had she indeed ever looked death in the face? |
9471 | But how could he show himself to you otherwise than by helping you to understand the revelation of himself which it cost him such labor to afford? |
9471 | But is that all that''s troubling you?" |
9471 | But perhaps you think you do know him?" |
9471 | But what man that knew any thing of her could help looking at her with such an admiration? |
9471 | But what will all the labor of a workman who does not fall in with the design of the builder come to? |
9471 | But where is the heavenly paradise I used to dream of then?" |
9471 | But where was the need of any such mental parley? |
9471 | But who was there to dare offer love to my saint? |
9471 | But why should n''t I be done good to as well as he?" |
9471 | But will you say the converse of that is true?" |
9471 | But"--"Why do you say_ perhaps_, grannie?" |
9471 | By this time Roger confesses to have been rather in a rage; but what could he do? |
9471 | Could I believe my eyes? |
9471 | Cromwell?" |
9471 | Did n''t you feel something the same that terrible day?" |
9471 | Did she sing?" |
9471 | Did you borrow one, then?" |
9471 | Did you ever know a man with such a plentiful lack of condescension? |
9471 | Do n''t you see children born with the sins of their parents nestling in their very bodies? |
9471 | Do n''t_ you_ wish to fly away and be at rest?" |
9471 | Do ye''appen to know now, grannie, how much is a span?" |
9471 | Do you agree to that?" |
9471 | Do you mind?" |
9471 | Do you think God would, or would not, count that to the man for faith?" |
9471 | Do you think he would enjoy it?" |
9471 | Do you think it is? |
9471 | Do you think you could persuade your husband to bring you to dine with me?" |
9471 | Does not a nation exist for the protection of its parts? |
9471 | Evans?" |
9471 | Even when she turns away her face and wo n''t look at you?" |
9471 | For what is the test of discipleship the Lord lays down? |
9471 | Four times that? |
9471 | Had she given you ground for imagining higher aims in her?" |
9471 | Had they anybody to love them? |
9471 | Has he not chosen me, and called me for his own? |
9471 | Has she taken to dark sayings of late, Percivale?" |
9471 | Have these no claims on the nation? |
9471 | Have we not to awake them to the very sense that life is worth caring for? |
9471 | Have you any ground for suspicion? |
9471 | Have you considered that he had been working hard all day long, and was, in fact, worn out? |
9471 | Have you ever discharged a servant? |
9471 | Have you had any supper?" |
9471 | He objected: on what ground do you think? |
9471 | He would n''t want to be showing of it off-- would he? |
9471 | Here I checked myself, for what could she_ do_ in such a state of health? |
9471 | How can any mother sit with her child on her lap and not know that there is a God over all,--know it by the rising of her own heart in prayer to him? |
9471 | How can it be I never saw it before? |
9471 | How could she marry a man she could n''t look up to? |
9471 | How could such a conjunction have taken place without the intervention of Charles Dickens? |
9471 | How could they send that away?" |
9471 | How could you have him there, except by knowing him? |
9471 | How did the old fellow get on after he had buried his termagant wife?'' |
9471 | How is any one to be_ sure_ of the things recorded? |
9471 | How on earth could I write a book without making a fool of myself? |
9471 | How should I have dared to say such things if I had? |
9471 | How would her new position affect her ministrations?" |
9471 | How would that do?" |
9471 | How, then, can there be a God? |
9471 | I cried,"what_ is_ the matter? |
9471 | I do n''t remember-- Do you think you could have played a false note?" |
9471 | I do violence to my own feelings in going: is not that enough? |
9471 | I drink the clothes off your back, do I? |
9471 | I felt it a serious matter to have to answer such words, for how could I have any better assurance of that external kind than Percivale himself? |
9471 | I was at first a little ashamed of the feeling; for why should I be anywhere more at home than in the house of such parents as mine? |
9471 | I will put the question again: Do you suppose you would have been able to distinguish his work from that of any other man?" |
9471 | I''ve said hardly any thing about the birds, have I? |
9471 | If I had had my piano, I should have cared little; but I had not a single book, except one-- and what do you think that was? |
9471 | If he had been one of my poor friends, guilty of some plain fault, I should have told him so without compunction; and why not, being what he was? |
9471 | If my father heard any one utter such a phrase as"Do n''t you love me best?" |
9471 | If so, should we not say that she spoke by the Spirit? |
9471 | If there is no hope, why, upon any theory, take the trouble to say so? |
9471 | If you could let her have a little beef- tea? |
9471 | In what other relations do you suppose a clergyman ought to be with one of his parishioners?" |
9471 | Is Amy worse?" |
9471 | Is Mrs. Cromwell an old friend?" |
9471 | Is he not waiting for me? |
9471 | Is it kind? |
9471 | Is it not better to depart and be with him? |
9471 | Is it not obedience? |
9471 | Is it not worth forsaking this world to inherit a kingdom like that? |
9471 | Is it not your sanctification? |
9471 | Is it well?" |
9471 | Is not my Jesus mine? |
9471 | Is that it?" |
9471 | Is there any reason in the nature of things why he should sink? |
9471 | Is there any thing I can do for you?" |
9471 | Is there no connection between the head and the feet?" |
9471 | Is there not such a mighty fact as the body of Christ? |
9471 | It may be a wonderful saw, but how fares your watch? |
9471 | It might, for any thing they knew, be some other woman stealing her, as you stole theirs the other day? |
9471 | It was necessary that my father should_ lay him on_( is that the phrase? |
9471 | Jarvis?" |
9471 | Lest I should again forget, as soon as she had kissed and admired the baby, I said,--"Have you found out yet where Miss Clare lives, Judy?" |
9471 | Let me see: what have you in the slave- market, as your wife calls it?" |
9471 | May I, Percivale?" |
9471 | May there not one day be such a repose for all,--only the heavenly counterpart, coming of perfect activity instead of weary success? |
9471 | Might I not, then, do something such, in my small way, and lose no jot of my labor? |
9471 | Morley?" |
9471 | Mr. Blackstone,"--he was n''t married then,--"Miss Clare, I think,--and"--"What do you ask her for?" |
9471 | Mr. Blackstone? |
9471 | Must he not sink?" |
9471 | My Lord, whom should I fear but thee, Who am thy creatures''fear? |
9471 | My husband turned to me and said,--"Mrs. Percivale, do you accept this as a correct representation of your difference?" |
9471 | Myself I have been able to see good very clearly where some could see none; and shall I doubt that God can see good where my mole- eyes can see none? |
9471 | Need I say there was one more whose voice or presence never startled her? |
9471 | Now,_ you_ would n''t like_ not_ to_ grow_, would you? |
9471 | Of all failures, why should this be known to the world? |
9471 | Of course the first thing that suggested itself was, Could my angel be in love? |
9471 | On one of these occasions I said to him,--"Would n''t you like to come and hear Marion play to her friends this evening, Roger?" |
9471 | On the other hand, ought I not to care for her state? |
9471 | Once I said to her,--"Are you afraid of death still, Eleanor?" |
9471 | Only it would n''t be respectable; would it, sir?" |
9471 | Only, what would become of her friends? |
9471 | Or do you think he is less able to take care of her than you are? |
9471 | Or why should n''t they be made like Eve out of their father''s ribs? |
9471 | Or, if they must pass through such tortures, would he not at least let them know that he was with them? |
9471 | Percivale?" |
9471 | Percivale?" |
9471 | Percivale?" |
9471 | Percivale?" |
9471 | Percivale?" |
9471 | Percivale?" |
9471 | Please, ma''am, may n''t I stop?" |
9471 | Roger? |
9471 | Sha''n''t I, Mawion?" |
9471 | Shall I get out, and take another cab?" |
9471 | Shall I tell you what first began to open my eyes to the evils of a large establishment? |
9471 | She could not be wrong in trusting him; but could she be right in her notion of the measure to which her union with him had been perfected? |
9471 | She would say, Why should her children be better off than the children about them? |
9471 | Should I not be inhuman, that is, unchristian, if I did not? |
9471 | Should not I here thy servant be, Whose creatures serve me here? |
9471 | Suppose our Lord had had such a father: what do you think he would have done?" |
9471 | Surely I may wish that?" |
9471 | Tell me honestly, do n''t you think it natural, if a friend asks you to dinner, that you should ask him again?" |
9471 | The drawing might be correct,--but the color? |
9471 | The fact that I could cry consoled me, for how could I be heartless so long as I could cry? |
9471 | The fault in them was that they would n''t take petting; and what''s the good of a child that wo n''t be petted? |
9471 | The river of crystal waters That flows from the very throne, And runs through the street of the city With a softly jubilant tone? |
9471 | Then if, solicited, she but returned love for love, why was she sad? |
9471 | Then turning to me, she asked,"May I do as I think best?" |
9471 | Then why should I not endure it calmly and without complaint? |
9471 | Then, turning to Sarah,"Have you searched the house and garden?" |
9471 | To blame for the storm? |
9471 | To take personal and private duties upon me, would be to abandon them; and how dare I? |
9471 | Under what pretence could a cat be used for a Christian symbol?" |
9471 | Was it any disgrace to them?" |
9471 | Was it not that he might in like manner bring many sons into glory? |
9471 | Was it only that the child''s restlessness and roughness tired her? |
9471 | Was she not given to me that she might learn what I had begun to learn, namely, that a willing childhood was the flower of life? |
9471 | Waxwork, ai n''t it?" |
9471 | We could dine early, could n''t we?" |
9471 | Well, one thing was-- shall I tell you what it was? |
9471 | Were any tramps seen about the place?" |
9471 | Were my poor friends likely to return to their dingy homes with any great feeling of regard for the givers of such cold welcome?" |
9471 | Were their hearts quiet under their dingy cloaks and shabby coats? |
9471 | Were you coming to find me?" |
9471 | What added to the misery was, that I had always thought of myself as a lady; for was not papa a gentleman, let him be ever so poor? |
9471 | What can_ I_ do now? |
9471 | What do you really mean to say and stick to? |
9471 | What have you been doing with yourself all the time?" |
9471 | What hurt would not such comforting outweigh to the child? |
9471 | What if I should never see her again? |
9471 | What if it were meant only for a temporary assistance in carrying out something finished and lasting, and of unspeakably more importance? |
9471 | What is to be_ done_? |
9471 | What matter if any two are unequal at a given moment, seeing their relative positions may be reversed twenty times in a thousand years? |
9471 | What pleasure could it be to a weak, worn creature like me to go on living in this isle of banishment?" |
9471 | What right had she to call any thing my husband did a bad habit? |
9471 | What shall you do next?" |
9471 | What was that in the bed? |
9471 | What will be the final result, who dares prophesy? |
9471 | What would have become of you if it had been so?" |
9471 | What would he say when he found that his pet was gone, and we had never told him? |
9471 | What_ shall_ I do?" |
9471 | What_ shall_ I do?" |
9471 | When are you most inclined to pray to God? |
9471 | When are you most ready to hear about good things? |
9471 | When the ladies rose, Judy took me aside, and said,--"What does it all mean, Wynnie?" |
9471 | When you have plenty of money in your pockets, or when you are in want? |
9471 | When you''re naughty, Willie, you ca n''t get near your mamma, can you?" |
9471 | When, for instance, are you most willing to do right? |
9471 | Where could they live? |
9471 | Where is the child?" |
9471 | Who could preach to them their duty to the nation, except on grounds which such a nation acknowledges only with the lips?" |
9471 | Who could say what tender influences might not be stealing over him, borne on the fair sounds? |
9471 | Who knows but that may be the path I must travel to meet the Bridegroom?" |
9471 | Who more?" |
9471 | Who will say that he could have done without the love of the dog whose bones have lain mouldering in his garden for twenty years? |
9471 | Who would have thought three weeks ago to see you so well to- day?" |
9471 | Who''s cow''s dead?" |
9471 | Who, with the most enduring and most passionate love his heart can hold, will venture to say that he could have done without the love of a brother? |
9471 | Why did not God remember me, if it was only for my father''s sake? |
9471 | Why did you not let me know?" |
9471 | Why do n''t we send missionaries to Belgravia? |
9471 | Why do you ask?" |
9471 | Why has n''t the little angel got her feathers on yet?" |
9471 | Why should I?" |
9471 | Why should his children not be his friends? |
9471 | Will my reader laugh at me for mentioning such a trifle? |
9471 | Will that do?" |
9471 | Will you walk in?" |
9471 | Wo n''t you put her out?" |
9471 | Wo n''t_ you_ come and have a slice o''the''am, an''a tater, grannie? |
9471 | Would he lay his hand on his forehead, On his hair as white as wool, And shine one hour through his fingers, Till the shadow had made me cool? |
9471 | Would he not make the very darkness light about them? |
9471 | Would his religion then prove of a quality and power sufficient to keep him from drifting away with the receding tide of his hopes and imaginations? |
9471 | Would it be wrong to press you to take a little of this wine, just to counteract a chill?" |
9471 | Would n''t you like to go and see them some day?" |
9471 | Would n''t_ you_ like to go? |
9471 | Would that have been like him?" |
9471 | Would you be quite content with that? |
9471 | Would you call it just in a family to abandon its less gifted to any moral or physical spoiler who might be bred within it? |
9471 | Would you like something, my dear?" |
9471 | Would you like to see your child?" |
9471 | Would you make him twofold more the child of hell than yourself?" |
9471 | You and Sarah will make the carpets; wo n''t you? |
9471 | You and she could carry your mistress in, could you not? |
9471 | You believe him an honorable man,--do you not?" |
9471 | You bette''now, Amy?'' |
9471 | You do n''t think I would leave you to go alone? |
9471 | You do not know her, I think? |
9471 | You do think, Miss Clare, do you not, that we shall know our friends in another world?" |
9471 | You here?" |
9471 | You will not call that honesty?" |
9471 | You wo n''t be seen going into a public- house?" |
9471 | _ Father._--And why? |
9471 | _ Freddy._--Wouldn''t you do it for Harry? |
9471 | _ Mother._--Then if you will have them married, husband, will you say how on earth you expect them to live? |
9471 | _ Mother._--What period was that? |
9471 | _ Mother._--You do n''t mean to say you would have ceased to believe in God, if he had n''t given you your own way? |
9471 | _ Must_ they take care of themselves? |
9471 | _ You_''re sorry for striking her-- ain''t you, now?" |
9471 | an''it''s called''_ The Birds and the Babies!_''They had lots of little pretty robins and canaries hanging round the ceiling, and--_shall_ I say?" |
9471 | and with some mortal mere? |
9471 | as to that, how should I know, grannie? |
9471 | cried a voice of wrath from the corridor,"do you know what you are doing? |
9471 | exclaimed my father:"what_ do_ you mean, Ethel?" |
9471 | have you? |
9471 | he said eagerly:"did you think I had forsaken you to the cruel elements?" |
9471 | he said merrily,"the daughter of a clergyman be seen going to a conventicle?" |
9471 | or,"Ai n''t I your favorite?" |
9471 | she rejoined, turning her big eyes full upon me;"congratulate me that I am doomed to be still a captive in the prison of this vile body? |
9471 | she wants_ to better herself_, of course,"I replied,--in such a tone, that Lady Bernard rejoined,--"And why should she not better herself?" |
9471 | that all-- is it?" |
9471 | what do you think of that?_");"an''nobody but the aged man knew he was going to die. |
9471 | when you are in jolly health, or when the life seems ebbing out of you in misery and pain? |
9471 | when you have had a good dinner, or when you have not enough to get one? |
9471 | you came into an empty house?" |
9471 | you congratulate me, do you?" |
9471 | you wanted to be kissed, did you?" |
11876 | ''Ave yo''coom t''tall mae thot? 11876 ''Aven''t yo''eerd, Miss Gwanda?" |
11876 | ''E wanted yo? 11876 ''E? |
11876 | ''Oo says she''s freetened? |
11876 | ''Oo''s goan t''kape yo? 11876 ''Woman, where are those thine accusers? |
11876 | A clane breast, yo''call it? 11876 A hole? |
11876 | A ma- an? 11876 About what she''s done, you mean? |
11876 | Afraid o''pore Maaggie? |
11876 | Alice? 11876 Ally, what is it? |
11876 | Ally,he said,"what am I to think of you? |
11876 | Ally-- d''yo knaw we''re aloan here? |
11876 | Ally-- what made you do it? |
11876 | Ally? |
11876 | Am I to go on giving the whole blessed time? 11876 Am I to stand over you till you drink it?" |
11876 | Am I too clever for myself? |
11876 | Am I too roough? 11876 An''''ow''bout t''women, Jimmy? |
11876 | An''what''s this thing you''ve coom to aassk me, Miss Cartaret? |
11876 | An''why sudn''I call''i m? 11876 And Mary knew that?" |
11876 | And Mrs.--er-- Cartaret lives in London, does n''t she? |
11876 | And Papa? |
11876 | And does your sister like living in London? |
11876 | And how are you going to get your luggage to the station? |
11876 | And how,said Alice,"could she expect to have them?" |
11876 | And if I did, did n''t that show that I did n''t want you to tell me? 11876 And if he does n''t?" |
11876 | And if-- you care for him? |
11876 | And is n''t there? |
11876 | And is there? |
11876 | And she would n''t have him? |
11876 | And what if I do? 11876 And what is it you want me to do?" |
11876 | And what-- do you-- mean by doing such a thing without consulting me? |
11876 | And which of''em will it bae, Mrs. Gaale, think you? |
11876 | And who,said Rowcliffe,"is Lady Frances Gilbey?" |
11876 | And why is this the first time I''ve heard of it? |
11876 | And why on earth did n''t you? |
11876 | And yo''dawn''t keer what they saay, do yo''? |
11876 | And you made him see her? |
11876 | And you might have got it? |
11876 | And you''re sure now? |
11876 | And you_ did_ sit up for three nights with Ned Alderson''s baby? |
11876 | And your friend must have been proud of your voice, was n''t he? |
11876 | And-- if I may ask-- what will you do, and where do you propose to stay, while you''re looking for him? |
11876 | And-- why not? |
11876 | And-- you saved the baby? |
11876 | Another? 11876 Any better for whom?" |
11876 | Any news of Greatorex today? |
11876 | Anyhow, you''re not tired of London? |
11876 | Are yo''there? 11876 Are yo''woondering why I''ve coom, Essy?" |
11876 | Are you offended because Steven has n''t been to see you? |
11876 | Are you quite sure? |
11876 | Are you? 11876 As I ca n''t knit, do you mind my smoking?" |
11876 | Assy Gaale? 11876 Assy Gaale? |
11876 | At last? 11876 At teatime?" |
11876 | Away? 11876 Because I wo n''t waste my pity? |
11876 | Been drinking again, or what? |
11876 | But do n''t you think he''d sing for_ me_, if I were to ask him? |
11876 | But if it makes you seedy? |
11876 | But the other things,he insisted--"the things I want to do----Do you think I''ll do them?" |
11876 | But those you do know you get on with? 11876 But why are n''t you having anything yourself?" |
11876 | But why? 11876 But yo''re happy enoof, are n''t yo''--all the same?" |
11876 | But--Ally''s voice sounded nearer--"he''s gone, has n''t he?" |
11876 | But-- I thought-- I thought----"What did you think? |
11876 | But_ is_ she? |
11876 | By whom? |
11876 | Ca n''t I? 11876 Ca n''t you he sorry for her?" |
11876 | Ca n''t you see, Molly, that I hate the infernal humbug and the cruelty of it all? 11876 Ca n''t you tell me,"she persisted,"if he''s worse?" |
11876 | Ca n''t you? |
11876 | Can I see Steven before I go? |
11876 | Can I see you for two minutes? |
11876 | Can I tell when I am? 11876 Can he?" |
11876 | Can yo tell at all what''s amiss, doctor? |
11876 | Can you date it-- this recovery? |
11876 | Can you forbid Jim Greatorex? 11876 Can you stand my talking about it?" |
11876 | Cold? |
11876 | D''yo''ear mae speaakin''to yo? 11876 D''yo''mind them, Essy? |
11876 | D''you mean, is she worse? |
11876 | Dawn''t I? 11876 Did Gwenda send for you?" |
11876 | Did I ever show it? |
11876 | Did I ever_ say_ I cared? |
11876 | Did I hear young Greatorex round at the back door this evening? |
11876 | Did Mary tell you? |
11876 | Did Papa tell you that? |
11876 | Did he tell you he''d marry you, Essy? |
11876 | Did n''t I succeed? |
11876 | Did n''t you know there''s been another? |
11876 | Did she come on a bicycle? |
11876 | Did the grace of God go away from you when you married, Jim? |
11876 | Did yo expact''i m t''kape yo, yo gawpie? 11876 Did you not hear me ring?" |
11876 | Did you really love me then? |
11876 | Did you tell my father that? |
11876 | Did_ you_ send for him? |
11876 | Do I like it? 11876 Do I?" |
11876 | Do n''t you know? |
11876 | Do yo? 11876 Do you call this living?" |
11876 | Do you dislike my mentioning it? 11876 Do you know many women?" |
11876 | Do you know what this means? |
11876 | Do you know, Steven, you''re getting quite stout? |
11876 | Do you like it? |
11876 | Do you mean Jim Greatorex? |
11876 | Do you mean for always? 11876 Do you mean,"said Rowcliffe, surprised out of his reticence,"before this happened?" |
11876 | Do you mean-- Steven Rowcliffe? |
11876 | Do you mind telling me where you''re going to? |
11876 | Do you never want to get away? |
11876 | Do you remember? 11876 Do you suppose I do n''t know what''s the matter with her as well as he does?" |
11876 | Do you suppose they did? |
11876 | Do you think Essy Gale could get him to come? |
11876 | Do you think I_ could_? |
11876 | Do you think he''d do it if I were to go up and ask him? |
11876 | Do you think he''ll ever remember? |
11876 | Do you want to get rid of him? |
11876 | Do you want to see me about Ally? |
11876 | Do you_ really_ mean it, or are you frightening us? 11876 Does Mummy want you?" |
11876 | Does Papa know-- that she''ll die-- or go mad? |
11876 | Does anybody_ ever_ come? |
11876 | Does she know it? |
11876 | Does that make it more dangerous? |
11876 | Dr. Rawcliffe, will yo joost coom an''taak a look at lil maare? |
11876 | Ef he doos, caann''t I walk in my awn fealds wi''my awn sweetheart? |
11876 | Eh-- oo''s there now? |
11876 | Essy, are you in bed? |
11876 | Even when you''ve got the chance? |
11876 | For how long? |
11876 | For two, sir? |
11876 | Get''i m? 11876 Going--_away_?" |
11876 | Good God, how do_ I_ know what you showed? 11876 Gwenda-- do you think anybody_ knows?_ They did, you know-- before, and it was awful." |
11876 | Had n''t you better ask him yourself? |
11876 | Happier? |
11876 | Hard? |
11876 | Harker? 11876 Has Gwenda gone?" |
11876 | Has Mary gone? |
11876 | Has anybody been bullying you, Ally? |
11876 | Has anything gone wrong? |
11876 | Has anything happened? |
11876 | Has n''t he said anything? |
11876 | Has she said anything? |
11876 | Has that fellow Rowcliffe been here again? |
11876 | Has the doctor seen him to- day? |
11876 | Has young Rowcliffe been here to- day? |
11876 | Has-- she-- confessed? |
11876 | Have n''t you? |
11876 | Have you any idea,he said,"when your sister''s coming back?" |
11876 | Have you brought him? |
11876 | Have you had any tea? |
11876 | He did n''t? 11876 He''s away, is n''t he?" |
11876 | Honestly now, do you think I shall? |
11876 | How about Sunday? 11876 How am I to behave?" |
11876 | How are you going to stop me? |
11876 | How can I end it? |
11876 | How can it? |
11876 | How can you possibly tell? 11876 How did you know it was?" |
11876 | How do you know Ally would n''t have rather died if she could have chosen? 11876 How do you know he is n''t coming?" |
11876 | How do you know what Essy thinks? 11876 How do you know what you would n''t have done? |
11876 | How do you know? |
11876 | How do you propose to stop it, Papa? |
11876 | How is it different for Gwenda? |
11876 | How is your other sister getting on? |
11876 | How long? |
11876 | How much do you suppose Mary cares about his soul? 11876 How old is she?" |
11876 | I mean-- anything horrid? |
11876 | I say, Greatorex, why do n''t you marry? 11876 I say, are you ill?" |
11876 | I say, is it very beastly? |
11876 | I say, shall you ever get away from this place? |
11876 | I say, what_ are_ you doing? |
11876 | I say,he said,"what must you think of me? |
11876 | I say-- is anything wrong? |
11876 | I suppose you know he has refused to marry her? |
11876 | I wo n''t have him sent for-- do you hear? |
11876 | I''d better see him here, had n''t I? |
11876 | I''ll fetch yo anoother glass? |
11876 | I''m afraid poor Alice is--"Is what? |
11876 | I? 11876 If I asked you to go, would you go, Steven? |
11876 | If I were offended,said Gwenda,"should I be here?" |
11876 | If it was only the anà ¦ mia--"Is n''t it? |
11876 | If it''s like that now what is it going to be? 11876 Influence? |
11876 | Is he ever ill? |
11876 | Is he worse? |
11876 | Is it Essy? |
11876 | Is it ten yet? |
11876 | Is it true that Steven''s going to give up his practice? |
11876 | Is it,she brought out,"because of Steven Rowcliffe?" |
11876 | Is it? 11876 Is n''t he gorgeous? |
11876 | Is n''t that just the reason why I ought to know? |
11876 | Is she going to die? |
11876 | Is that another new dress you''ve got on? |
11876 | Is that fellow coming, or is he not? |
11876 | Is that so? |
11876 | Is that what you told father? |
11876 | Is that what''s bothering you? |
11876 | Is that you, Miss Cartaret? 11876 Is there anything else, after all, you_ can_ trust?" |
11876 | Is there anything the matter with her? |
11876 | Is there anything wrong? |
11876 | Is thot truth, Essy? |
11876 | Is your father in? |
11876 | Is your sister always so silent? |
11876 | It looks like it, does n''t it? |
11876 | It was n''t you I heard playing the other night? |
11876 | It''s settled? |
11876 | Jim,she said,"shall I always see it?" |
11876 | Jim-- what would you have done if I had n''t loved you? |
11876 | Leave it? |
11876 | Like what? |
11876 | Like what? |
11876 | Look here, Papa, while you''re trying how you can make this awful thing more awful for her, what do you think poor Essy''s bothering about? 11876 Look here, shall I drive you back or do you feel like another four- mile walk?" |
11876 | Looking as young as ever, I suppose? |
11876 | Mary,he said,"I suppose you knew about Gwenda?" |
11876 | May I come too? |
11876 | May I see her? 11876 Moments? |
11876 | My dear Gwenda, did I ever say you ought to leave? |
11876 | My dear child, do you suppose it matters to me what you''re not, as long as I love you as you are? |
11876 | My dear child, what good would that do you? |
11876 | My not knowing it? |
11876 | My sister? |
11876 | Nat Assy Gaale? |
11876 | No,he said,"why should it?" |
11876 | No? 11876 Not always?" |
11876 | Not the one I saw? |
11876 | Not-- her heart? |
11876 | Oh Jim-- darling-- haven''t I told you? |
11876 | Oh Jim-- would other people know? |
11876 | Oh Steven-- what do you wear that for? |
11876 | Oh, come,said Ally,"how''s Papa?" |
11876 | Oh, have n''t I? |
11876 | Oh, where''s my hanky? |
11876 | Oh, wo n''t it? |
11876 | Oh,said little Ally,"is_ that_ all?" |
11876 | Oh-- aren''t you coming in for tea? |
11876 | Oh-- but are n''t you glad you''ve got such a lovely fireplace? |
11876 | Oh-- consideration for me, I suppose? |
11876 | Oh-- would it come to that? |
11876 | Papa,she said,"is it true that you''ve sacked Essy at three days''notice?" |
11876 | Perhaps you know what was said about your sister Alice? 11876 Really?" |
11876 | Rowcliffe-- I beg you-- will you use your influence? |
11876 | Sence doctor is n''t coomin''? |
11876 | Shall I ask her to call again, sir? |
11876 | Shall I save her, doctor? |
11876 | Shall it be the moor or the fields? |
11876 | Shall we go back? 11876 Shall you be seeing Jim Greatorex soon?" |
11876 | Shall you stop long here? |
11876 | She denies it? |
11876 | She does n''t wash them? |
11876 | She''s toald yo''? |
11876 | She''s toald yo''she''s afraid o''mae? |
11876 | So that,she pursued,"_ I''m_ the horrid thing that''s happened to you? |
11876 | Soon? |
11876 | Sorry, are you? |
11876 | Steven, is there really any danger? |
11876 | Steven-- help me-- can''t you see how terrible it is if she''s afraid of him? |
11876 | Steven-- will you speak to her? 11876 T''mare, Daasy?" |
11876 | T''moonth''s nawtice? |
11876 | T''women? 11876 Taller?" |
11876 | Tha silly laass!----"What about the thorn- trees, Gwenda? |
11876 | Than-- for Gawd''s saake, loove, what is it? |
11876 | That yo, Dr. Rawcliffe? 11876 That''s what you think of me?" |
11876 | That''s why you took her away? |
11876 | The thorn- trees? 11876 Then you know? |
11876 | They''ve gien yo t''saack? |
11876 | They? 11876 Think what?" |
11876 | This? 11876 This? |
11876 | Three months--? |
11876 | Till when? |
11876 | Till who comes? |
11876 | Tired? |
11876 | To- morrow? 11876 To_ do?_"( Mary said to herself, then certainly it was not amusing. |
11876 | Too lonely for her, I suppose? |
11876 | Too many of you-- in the state your sister''s in? |
11876 | Unless what? |
11876 | Utterly unconscious? |
11876 | Wall, Mrs. Blenkiron,she said,"yo''''aven''t got to mak''tae for yore doctor now?" |
11876 | Wall, it''s nowt t''yo, is it? |
11876 | Wall--? |
11876 | Was it Alice we were talking about? |
11876 | Was it because of Steven? |
11876 | Was it because you knew I would n''t let you? 11876 Was it?" |
11876 | Well yo''coom? |
11876 | Well, Dr. Rowcliffe, if those are your ideas of morality----? |
11876 | Well, but what day? 11876 Well, is it Steven, then? |
11876 | Well, then, ca n''t you take him? 11876 Well, then-- let me see-- can you come to tea on Friday? |
11876 | Well, what is it? 11876 Well,"he said gently,"what is it?" |
11876 | Well,he said,"and what did n''t I tell you?" |
11876 | Well-- so you''ve come back at last? |
11876 | Well-- till your father comes back? |
11876 | Well--_won''t_ you? 11876 Well?" |
11876 | Well? |
11876 | Were n''t they in? |
11876 | Were you ever,she said,"at such an awful wedding?" |
11876 | What are those hooks for in the chimney? |
11876 | What are you afraid of? |
11876 | What are you doing? |
11876 | What are you keeping away for? 11876 What day of the month is it?" |
11876 | What did Mummy do to him? |
11876 | What did he say? |
11876 | What do yo mane? 11876 What do you mean, Ally?" |
11876 | What do you mean, Gwenda? |
11876 | What do you mean,''he ca n''t''? 11876 What do you mean?" |
11876 | What has become of the other one, I wonder? |
11876 | What have you been doing to her-- all of you? |
11876 | What have you sent for_ him_ for? 11876 What have you_ got?_"he persisted. |
11876 | What if I did? 11876 What if she did? |
11876 | What is it that he wo n''t funk? |
11876 | What is it, Ally? 11876 What is it, Ally?" |
11876 | What is it, Daasy----what is it? 11876 What is it, then? |
11876 | What is it? 11876 What is it?" |
11876 | What is it? |
11876 | What is n''t? |
11876 | What is, then? |
11876 | What is? |
11876 | What maakes it coom? 11876 What makes it come?" |
11876 | What on earth are you going for? |
11876 | What on earth for? |
11876 | What on earth makes you want to go and leave this place when you''ve spent hundreds on it? |
11876 | What put that idea into your head? |
11876 | What sud I have doon? 11876 What to_ do_ about her?" |
11876 | What way? |
11876 | What were you doing at the farm? |
11876 | What were you doing wi''thot stoof? |
11876 | What''s the matter with Essy? |
11876 | What''s the matter with you? |
11876 | What''s this I hear,he said,"of you and young Rowcliffe scampering about all over the country?" |
11876 | What_ I_ was doing? |
11876 | What_ did_ I say? |
11876 | What_''ave_ yo''doon, Jimmy? 11876 Whatever have you done your hair like that for?" |
11876 | Whatever put that idea into your head? |
11876 | Whatever_ can_ Papa have said to him? |
11876 | When did I ever sin against you? |
11876 | When did I have it? 11876 When did he tell you that?" |
11876 | When did she tell you? |
11876 | When shall we come? |
11876 | When? |
11876 | When? |
11876 | Where are you going? |
11876 | Where did you get it? |
11876 | Where is he? |
11876 | Where were you before you came here? |
11876 | Where''s Jim? |
11876 | Where? |
11876 | Which sister? |
11876 | Who did then? |
11876 | Who do you suppose would lie about it? |
11876 | Who is it then? |
11876 | Who is that young lady? |
11876 | Who is the man, Essy? |
11876 | Who is the strange girl who walks on the moor by herself at night and is n''t afraid? |
11876 | Who sent for her? |
11876 | Who to? |
11876 | Who toald yo she would n''t''ave mae? |
11876 | Who told you I was going? |
11876 | Who told you that story? |
11876 | Who told you that? |
11876 | Who would have believed,said Mary,"that Ally could have looked so pretty?" |
11876 | Who''s tallin''yo''? |
11876 | Who? 11876 Whose?" |
11876 | Why are you afraid? |
11876 | Why are you smiling? |
11876 | Why c- can''t you leave me alone? 11876 Why ca n''t you leave me alone? |
11876 | Why did n''t you tell me yourself, Gwenda? |
11876 | Why did you leave it? |
11876 | Why did you tell me that? 11876 Why do n''t you lie the other way then?" |
11876 | Why do you say that, Gwenda? |
11876 | Why does anybody? 11876 Why does she attempt-- the big things?" |
11876 | Why ever did he leave it? |
11876 | Why mine more than hers? |
11876 | Why not leave it at that? |
11876 | Why not? |
11876 | Why not? |
11876 | Why not? |
11876 | Why not? |
11876 | Why on earth did n''t Steven_ try_ to marry Gwenda? |
11876 | Why should I be sorry for her? 11876 Why should n''t we?" |
11876 | Why should n''t you say it? |
11876 | Why would n''t you? |
11876 | Why-- I-- don''t come? |
11876 | Why-- is anybody coming? |
11876 | Why? 11876 Why? |
11876 | Why? |
11876 | Why? |
11876 | Why? |
11876 | Will Maggie be there? |
11876 | Will yo kape mae, Moother? |
11876 | Will yo''staay with''i m? 11876 Will yo''taake me back, sir, when it''s all over?" |
11876 | Will you coom in, Miss Cartaret? |
11876 | Wo n''t you come into the drawing- room, then? |
11876 | Woan''t yo''kape me till th''and o''t''moonth, sir? |
11876 | Would I go if I did n''t? |
11876 | Would he do it for me? |
11876 | Would it be too awful for you if you stayed? |
11876 | Would you like me to get him back in the choir? |
11876 | Would you like to see him, miss? |
11876 | Would you think me an awful brute if I said I wanted you to go? |
11876 | Wull yo look at''I m, doctor? |
11876 | Wull yo''waait on''er? |
11876 | Wull yo''wark for''er, Maaggie? |
11876 | Yo mane,said Greatorex,"I ought to marry her?" |
11876 | Yo''d bae freetened o''mae, Maaggie? |
11876 | Yo''re nat goain''t''saay as yo''ve got yoresel into trooble? |
11876 | Yo''re_ nat_ afraaid of mae? |
11876 | Yo''ve called''i m thot, Essy? |
11876 | Yo''wouldn''''ave a good- fer- noothin''falla like mae, would yo, laass? 11876 You believe that silly story? |
11876 | You do n''t know why I sent for you? 11876 You do n''t really think Garth was the place for her?" |
11876 | You do n''t really think you can fool God that way, Papa? 11876 You do n''t say so?" |
11876 | You do n''t suppose I really could have left you? |
11876 | You do n''t suppose I''m going to give you any money to go with? |
11876 | You do n''t want to marry him? |
11876 | You expected him? |
11876 | You like my north- country orchard? |
11876 | You may know what''s the matter with her,she said,"but can you cure it?" |
11876 | You mean Mummy running away from him? |
11876 | You mean that if he met me he''d dislike me? |
11876 | You own to''once''? 11876 You said you wanted to go, and you do, do n''t you?" |
11876 | You should n''t say things like that; they sound----"How do they sound? |
11876 | You think I''m an egoist? 11876 You think it ca n''t tell me anything about your soul?" |
11876 | You think it''s a sin? 11876 You think, perhaps, it does n''t matter?" |
11876 | You thought so then? |
11876 | You want me to go? |
11876 | You want to see me? |
11876 | You wanted him to marry Ally, did you? 11876 You will perhaps admit that whatever danger there may have been then is over?" |
11876 | You wo n''t come for anything but a wedding? |
11876 | You wo n''t go back on it? 11876 You would n''t go away and leave me?" |
11876 | You''d think it a bit loansoom, wouldn''yo'', ef yo''staayed in it yeear in and yeear out? |
11876 | You''d_ like_ me to do it? |
11876 | You''re afraid? |
11876 | You''re coming in to tea, are n''t you? |
11876 | You''re not going to worry about what I told you? |
11876 | You''re sure there has n''t been--he paused discreetly for his word--"some misunderstanding?" |
11876 | You''re_ not_ going out? |
11876 | You''ve been thinking of leaving Rathdale, have n''t you? |
11876 | You''ve found something to do in London? |
11876 | You_ had_ a throat then? |
11876 | You_ have_ thought of it? |
11876 | You_ will_ see him, wo n''t you, Ally? |
11876 | _ Do_ to you? |
11876 | _ Is_ it? 11876 _ Is_ it?" |
11876 | _ Is_ it? |
11876 | _ Was_ I horrid? |
11876 | _ What_ are the sins that do most easily beset us? 11876 _ You?_"He drew a long breath and sent it out again. |
11876 | ''Ave I avver aassked yo''t''marry mae?" |
11876 | ''E''s too ill.""Ill?" |
11876 | ''Oo''s she to mook_''er_ naame with''er dirty toongue?" |
11876 | ''Ooo''s''e married? |
11876 | ''Twasn''Moother?" |
11876 | ( Are n''t you a nice baby? |
11876 | ( What on earth had put Steven Rowcliffe into Mary''s head?) |
11876 | ***** Only-- in that case-- why had n''t they drawn the blinds down? |
11876 | *****"Do you mind my sitting beside you if I keep quiet?" |
11876 | *****"How''s Alice?" |
11876 | *****"Is anything worrying you, Steven?" |
11876 | *****"Is your head very bad, Steven?" |
11876 | *****"May I come in?" |
11876 | *****"Which of you two is going to hook me up?" |
11876 | After all, Molly, what did she do?" |
11876 | All he said to that was"You''re very fond of her?" |
11876 | Ally-- did you know that Essy''s had a baby?" |
11876 | Ally? |
11876 | Am I never to have anything for myself?" |
11876 | Am I to have her at the house or not?" |
11876 | And in nine days she had only asked him once if he knew how poor Papa was? |
11876 | And incurable?" |
11876 | And it was as if he had said,"Why am I always meeting you? |
11876 | And it was then that the Vicar would make himself wonderful and piteous by asking, a dozen times a day,"Where''s Ally?" |
11876 | And she''s been worse than this last month?" |
11876 | And the lady I am to see is--? |
11876 | And then--"Do you_ always_ walk after dark and before sunrise?" |
11876 | And when he said,"Where''s Gwenda?" |
11876 | And would Mummy mind wiring Yes or No on Saturday morning? |
11876 | And you_ will_ marry me?" |
11876 | And''oo alse talled yo''? |
11876 | Anyhow, that''s your hill, is n''t it?" |
11876 | Are n''t you?" |
11876 | Are we to suppose that you''re defending her?" |
11876 | Are you a fool-- or what?" |
11876 | Are you certain?" |
11876 | Are you ill?" |
11876 | At the stroke of ten she murmured,"Steven, are you ready for bed?" |
11876 | Because, you see, if you thought so then that shows--""What does it show?" |
11876 | Blenkiron?" |
11876 | Blenkiron?" |
11876 | But I do n''t want to frighten my people-- so perhaps, if you just looked in about teatime, as if you''d called? |
11876 | But I think they''re the prettiest, do n''t you?" |
11876 | But do yo''suppawss I''d''a''doon it fer yore meddlin''? |
11876 | But if Mr. Greatorex was n''t dead? |
11876 | But what''s all very well?" |
11876 | But whatever should we have in Leeds?" |
11876 | But who asked him to?" |
11876 | But-- couldn''t she? |
11876 | Ca n''t you say a judicious word?" |
11876 | Ca n''t you think?" |
11876 | Caann''t yo aanswer? |
11876 | Can I do anything for you?" |
11876 | Can I do anything for you?" |
11876 | Can you hold her?" |
11876 | Could n''t they see that she was tired? |
11876 | D''ye''ear, Mr. Cartaret? |
11876 | D''yo mind thot Soonda yo caame laasst year? |
11876 | D''yo think yo''re the only woon thot''s tampted? |
11876 | D''you know what Rowcliffe thinks of her?" |
11876 | Did he tell you?" |
11876 | Did n''t Papa tell you about her?" |
11876 | Did yo aver''ear saw mooch aa a bad woord?" |
11876 | Did yo think you''d nowt to do but t''laay oop at t''Vicarage an''''ave th yoong laadies t''do yore wark for yo, an''t''waait on yo''and an''foot? |
11876 | Did you expect him or did you not?" |
11876 | Did you or did you not go into the barn?" |
11876 | Did you see her face?" |
11876 | Did you want to go as much as all that?" |
11876 | Did''e saay as''e''d maarry yo? |
11876 | Do I look worried?" |
11876 | Do n''t you know why? |
11876 | Do n''t you see how unhappy you''d be with me, how impossible it all is?" |
11876 | Do n''t you see that I should go on driving you mad? |
11876 | Do yo''aassk mae t''marry Assy now? |
11876 | Do you happen to know_ why_ she does n''t like the place?" |
11876 | Do you hear, Molly? |
11876 | Do you know it''s two months since you''ve been here?" |
11876 | Do you know why I tried? |
11876 | Do you mind my smoking a cigarette?" |
11876 | Do you mind sending him a wire? |
11876 | Do you realise that I''ve never met him yet?" |
11876 | Do you remember?" |
11876 | Do you suppose I do n''t know you?" |
11876 | Do you suppose I''m going to leave him with you? |
11876 | Do you suppose she''d think of Ally or of you, either?" |
11876 | Do you suppose we are n''t glad to see you?" |
11876 | Do you suppose_ he''d_ give me away?" |
11876 | Do you think Steven Rowcliffe would have told_ me----_""How could he? |
11876 | Do you think he saw us?" |
11876 | Do you think he''d like you to go and hang it up in a willow tree?" |
11876 | Do you want the same thing to be said about you?" |
11876 | Do you want to see him?" |
11876 | Do you?" |
11876 | Doan''t yo''knaw t''coffin''s coom? |
11876 | Does that make you happy?" |
11876 | Gale?" |
11876 | Greatorex?" |
11876 | Had n''t they settled it that Gwenda was to come and live with her if things became impossible at home? |
11876 | Has Essy brought her milk?" |
11876 | Has anybody set fire to them?" |
11876 | Has he done anything?" |
11876 | Has the vet seen her?" |
11876 | He could hear the question,"Why were you afraid?" |
11876 | He sent oop soomthing--""Well, have you given it her?" |
11876 | He was saying to himself,"Oh, has n''t she? |
11876 | He wondered how long it would have lasted? |
11876 | How can we?" |
11876 | How can you bring yourself to speak of it, if you''re a modest girl? |
11876 | How could she, when she_ knew_, when she was on her honor not to think of him?" |
11876 | How did you know I cared for him?" |
11876 | How do I know what you''re going to do to him? |
11876 | How do I know? |
11876 | How do I know? |
11876 | How does he know what''s her own and what''s his?" |
11876 | How is it going to end? |
11876 | How long has it been going on?" |
11876 | How was he to know that she had n''t done it on purpose? |
11876 | How''s Essy going to do without those two months''wages she might have had? |
11876 | How_ can_ I let her die, poor darling, or go mad? |
11876 | I care awfully----""Well----""Oh, Gwenda, can they_ make_ me marry him?" |
11876 | I do n''t imagine Steven Rowcliffe did it""Really Ally-- what do you suppose I did?" |
11876 | I know that----""But-- you do n''t care for him?" |
11876 | I say, how much time have I?" |
11876 | I suppose you think you had your chance, then?" |
11876 | I thought-- perhaps-- if I was n''t there----""That I''d marry her? |
11876 | I''d better send the vet up tomorrow had n''t I?" |
11876 | I''m going to look--""And what,"inquired the Vicar with an even suaver irony,"_ can_ you do?" |
11876 | I''ve always wanted to have you here----""And why should n''t you?" |
11876 | If Mr. Greatorex were a long time over his dying? |
11876 | If my father wo n''t let my sister marry Dr. Rowcliffe, you do n''t suppose he''ll let me marry you? |
11876 | If she did n''t know how to nurse pneumonia, who did? |
11876 | Ill? |
11876 | Is he going to marry you?" |
11876 | Is it serious?" |
11876 | Is it thot, Assy? |
11876 | Is it thot?" |
11876 | Is n''t she?" |
11876 | Is n''t that enough?" |
11876 | Is n''t that so?" |
11876 | Is n''t there any sister or anybody who could come to him?" |
11876 | Is there anybody you could send her to?" |
11876 | It is n''t that----""What is it?" |
11876 | It said,"Do n''t you see that it would kill me if you went?" |
11876 | It''s all right, is n''t it? |
11876 | It''s queer, is n''t it?" |
11876 | It_ is n''t_ true?" |
11876 | Just after dinner? |
11876 | Last night I got it into my head--""What did you get into your head? |
11876 | Let me see-- was it Ally? |
11876 | Mae? |
11876 | Miss Gwanda t''mak''yore bafe- tae an''chicken jally and t''Vicar t''daandle t''baaby? |
11876 | Miss Gwanda? |
11876 | Ooo alse could it bae? |
11876 | Or Monday? |
11876 | Or when I''m going to be?" |
11876 | Or will yo''coom with mae?" |
11876 | Perhaps you''re tired of having it talked about?" |
11876 | Rawcliffe?" |
11876 | Rawcliffe?" |
11876 | Rawcliffe?" |
11876 | Robina supposed they_ were_ impossible? |
11876 | Rowcliffe?" |
11876 | Rowcliffe?" |
11876 | Rowcliffe?" |
11876 | Sall we goa oop t''fealds?" |
11876 | Shall I ask Essy?" |
11876 | Shall I catch him?" |
11876 | She frowned as if she were annoyed with him for not being ill."Then what was that other man here for?" |
11876 | She had rather a bad time, had n''t she?" |
11876 | She is n''t happy in it?" |
11876 | She only said,"Have you seen the thorn- trees on Greffington Edge?" |
11876 | She put it down quietly and slipped out of the room without her customary"Anything more, Miss?" |
11876 | She ran after young Rickards, did n''t she? |
11876 | She said to herself,"Is it going to be taken from me like everything else?" |
11876 | She said to herself,"Why does he go on at us like this?" |
11876 | She thought,"I wonder what he''d have said if I''d told him the truth? |
11876 | She told you?" |
11876 | She wondered: Did he know, then, or did he not know? |
11876 | So she asked him point- blank if he had heard from Gwenda? |
11876 | Supposing he does want to get back on me, why should he go and punish you two?" |
11876 | Surely I may love him for his goodness?" |
11876 | T''women? |
11876 | That reminds me, how''s the baby?" |
11876 | That we''re never to see each other again?" |
11876 | That_ they_ tired her? |
11876 | The note ran:"DEAR DR. ROWCLIFFE: Can you come and see me this afternoon? |
11876 | Then, just as they parted, she said,"When are you coming to see us again?" |
11876 | Then, perhaps, if I regularly laid myself out for it, by years of tender and untiring devotion I might win him over?" |
11876 | There are three of them, are n''t there?" |
11876 | There, did they, then, did they? |
11876 | They dawn''t maake yo''feel baad about it, do they?" |
11876 | This is the first time, is n''t it?" |
11876 | To- morra''s yore weddin''day, I''ear?" |
11876 | Was it because she had not written that he was looking bad, or was it because she had written and he knew? |
11876 | Was n''t it Gwenda?" |
11876 | Was_ that_ what she had required of him? |
11876 | Were you anywhere with Jim Greatorex before Dr. Harker saw you in December? |
11876 | Whan did''e gie it yo?" |
11876 | What are we going to do?" |
11876 | What d''yo mane----Yo knaw?" |
11876 | What do you addle your brains with that stuff for?" |
11876 | What do you do it for? |
11876 | What do you think of her?" |
11876 | What else? |
11876 | What for did I tak''yo from t''Farm an''put yo into t''Vicarage ef''t was n''t t''get yo out o''Jimmy''s road? |
11876 | What is it, loove?" |
11876 | What is the earthly use of going back on things? |
11876 | What is there-- what can there have been to cure her?" |
11876 | What is this great thing you''ve come to tell me?" |
11876 | What on earth made you think I''d do that? |
11876 | What should I want your milk for? |
11876 | What was it?" |
11876 | What were we talking about?" |
11876 | What''ll it be gettin''un down again wit''''E layin''in un? |
11876 | What''s making you so sensitive?" |
11876 | What''s the good? |
11876 | What_ could_ he do?" |
11876 | What_ do_ you want, then?" |
11876 | What_ was_ the dreadful thing that Ally did? |
11876 | Whatten arth possessed yo t''goa an''tak oop wi''Jim Greatorex? |
11876 | When he looked round in his strange and awful gentleness and said,"Where''s Ally?" |
11876 | When you''re doing the same thing?" |
11876 | When?" |
11876 | Where are you off to?" |
11876 | Where is she?" |
11876 | Where is she?" |
11876 | Where?" |
11876 | Who was it?" |
11876 | Why ca n''t you leave the poor child alone?" |
11876 | Why ca n''t you look me straight in the face and say plump out what I''ve done?" |
11876 | Why ca n''t you see things as they are?" |
11876 | Why did n''t you send for me?" |
11876 | Why did you sacrifice him?" |
11876 | Why do n''t you?" |
11876 | Why not? |
11876 | Why should n''t I be glad? |
11876 | Why should n''t I be?" |
11876 | Why should n''t we be happy? |
11876 | Why should she? |
11876 | Why waste all this glorious air?" |
11876 | Why?" |
11876 | Why?" |
11876 | Why_ did_ you go, Gwenda? |
11876 | Why_ should_ he marry her if he does n''t want to, and if she does n''t want it? |
11876 | Will Ally really die-- or go mad-- if she isn''t-- happy?" |
11876 | Will yo halp me give it''er, doctor?" |
11876 | Will you marry me or will you not? |
11876 | Would Essy be coming soon? |
11876 | Would Essy have the sense? |
11876 | Would Gwenda have written to him? |
11876 | Would he? |
11876 | Would n''t you?" |
11876 | Would yo like thot, Ally?" |
11876 | Would you rather we did n''t talk about it? |
11876 | Would you understand that too?" |
11876 | Would_ you_ stay in it a day longer than you could help if you were me?" |
11876 | Yo''dawn''want to spite mae, do yo''?" |
11876 | You get on all right with Mary?" |
11876 | You were not with him in-- when was it, Mary?" |
11876 | You''re so glad to get back then?" |
11876 | You''ve heard about it?" |
11876 | You_ do_ care for me? |
11876 | _ Are_ you? |
11876 | _ Is_ anything wrong?" |
11876 | _ Is_ it?" |
11876 | _ Was_ I afraid of you?" |
11876 | _ What_ are the temptations to which we are especially prone?" |
11876 | hath no man condemned thee?'' |
34542 | ''Gloomy?'' 34542 All alo- an? |
34542 | Alone? |
34542 | Am I afraid of him? 34542 Am I afraid of him?" |
34542 | Am I not to be allowed even five minutes''sleep without being broken in upon by some intruder or other? |
34542 | Am I so beautiful, or so admired or beloved, that a man who has not seen me half a dozen times should fall in love with me? 34542 And Belinda, mother dear?" |
34542 | And all this was without result? |
34542 | And before then? |
34542 | And can I see him? |
34542 | And he could do nothing? |
34542 | And he has never been here since? |
34542 | And how about the other luggage, sir,--the portmanteaus and hat- boxes? |
34542 | And in the meantime you take possession of this estate? |
34542 | And it has been said that she-- that she was drowned? |
34542 | And nothing can part us now? |
34542 | And now my darling, my foolish run- away Polly, what is to be done with you? |
34542 | And she has never been seen since? |
34542 | And she was never seen again? |
34542 | And she went out with Mr. Arundel? 34542 And they found nothing?" |
34542 | And they have gone there? |
34542 | And what did this man, this Mr. Weston, say? |
34542 | And where''s-- your patient? |
34542 | And you will do that, mother darling? |
34542 | And you will forgive Olivia, dear? |
34542 | And you will not reject my appeal? |
34542 | And you''ll put it in the western drawing- room at the Towers, wo n''t you, Polly? |
34542 | And you, Hester,--you knew my wife better than any of these people,--where do you think she went? |
34542 | And-- you-- you think she went out of this house with the intention of-- of-- destroying herself? |
34542 | Any letters for me, Dick? |
34542 | Are you all alone here? |
34542 | Are you mad, or drunk? 34542 Are you mad?" |
34542 | Because I am so-- childish? |
34542 | Because of what, my treasure? |
34542 | But Mr. Marchmont, my dear,--surely he loves and admires you? |
34542 | But afterwards, darling, when you were better, stronger,--did you make no effort then to escape from your persecutors? |
34542 | But is there nothing else I can do, sir? |
34542 | But shall you like her when you''ve known her longer? 34542 But what if people did say this?" |
34542 | But what then? |
34542 | But what will you do, Paul? |
34542 | But when shall we see you again, Paul? 34542 But wo n''t to- morrow mornin''do? |
34542 | But you remember, Edward,--you remember what I said about never seeing the Sycamores? 34542 But you wo n''t leave me alone with my stepmother, will you, Edward?" |
34542 | But, good heavens, Olivia, what do you mean? |
34542 | By whom? |
34542 | Can anything be more miserable to me than the prevarication which I meet with on every side? |
34542 | Can you find no words that are vile enough to express your hatred of me? 34542 Captain Arundel, I believe?" |
34542 | Cookson, from Kemberling, will be there, I suppose,he said, alluding to a brother parson,"and the usual set? |
34542 | Did George Weston tell me the truth just now? |
34542 | Did I suffer so little when I blotted that image out of my heart? 34542 Did I?" |
34542 | Did he really say what, darling? |
34542 | Did papa dislike Mr. Paul Marchmont? |
34542 | Did papa say that, Edward? |
34542 | Did you ever notice a peculiar property in stationery, Polly? |
34542 | Do n''t you think you could manage it for me, you know? 34542 Do people say that?" |
34542 | Do they say that of me? |
34542 | Do you consider that it is my duty to do this? |
34542 | Do you imagine that_ I_ will let this marriage take place? |
34542 | Do you know if Mr. Paul Marchmont has gone down to the boat- house? |
34542 | Do you know if anybody has lived here lately? |
34542 | Do you mean to tell me it''s_ you_? |
34542 | Do you really think, Letitia, that your brother''s wife committed suicide? |
34542 | Do you remember that poor foolish German woman who believed that the spirit of a dead king came to her in the shape of a blackbird? 34542 Do you think I have toiled for nothing to do the duty which I promised my dead husband to perform for your sake? |
34542 | Do you think that fellow would go to Australia, Lavinia? |
34542 | Do you think, Miss Lawford, that it is necessary to sit at a man''s dinner- table before you know what he is? 34542 Do you understand me, my dear?" |
34542 | Do_ you_ like her, then? |
34542 | Does she wear shabby frocks? |
34542 | Edward Arundel!--what about Edward Arundel? |
34542 | Even yet I am a mystery to you? |
34542 | Everybody says that Livy''s handsome; but it''s rather a cold style of beauty, is n''t it? 34542 For only bringing you the news, Paul?" |
34542 | Forgotten what-- forgotten whom? 34542 Glad to have any one who''d take papa''s love away from me?" |
34542 | Go,she said;"why should we keep up a mockery of friendliness and cousinship? |
34542 | Had she any money? |
34542 | Has Paul Marchmont been in this house? |
34542 | Has she ill- treated the girl, or is she plotting in some way or other to get hold of the Marchmont fortune? 34542 Has she said''yes''?" |
34542 | Hates you, darling? |
34542 | Have I any clothes that I can hunt in, Morrison? |
34542 | Have you any-- particular reason for thinking so? |
34542 | Have you anything more to say to me? |
34542 | Have you been here long? |
34542 | Have you nothing more to tell me? |
34542 | He has taken possession, then? |
34542 | He is very desperate about his wife, then, this dashing young captain? |
34542 | He used to like hot rolls when I was at Vernon''s,John thought, rather more hopefully;"I wonder whether he likes hot rolls still?" |
34542 | How dare you come here to insult me, Edward Arundel? |
34542 | How did she disappear? |
34542 | How do you know what other people think? 34542 How do you like my cousin, Polly?" |
34542 | How do you mean? |
34542 | How long? |
34542 | How often do you mean to dance with Captain Arundel, Miss Marchmont? |
34542 | How should I benefit by her death? |
34542 | How should he love her? |
34542 | How should you, you fortunate Polly? 34542 How soon will it come?" |
34542 | How was it? |
34542 | I am your wife now, Edward, am I not? |
34542 | I had some difficulty in inducing her to return here; but after hearing of your accident--"How was the news of that broken to her? |
34542 | I have the honour of speaking to my cousin''s widow? |
34542 | I know she is very good, papa,Mary cried;"but, oh, why, why do you marry her? |
34542 | I shall come and see you again, Ned,Miss Arundel cried, as she shook the reins upon her horse''s neck;"and so will Belinda-- won''t you, Belinda?" |
34542 | I suppose you are not aware that my future brother- in- law is a major? |
34542 | I suppose you are not aware that you have been talking to Major Arundel, who has done all manner of splendid things in the Punjaub? 34542 I want you to get me some vehicle, and a lad who will drive me a few miles, Morrison,"the young soldier said;"or you can drive me yourself, perhaps?" |
34542 | I''m to go to Australia, am I? 34542 If it was n''t for whom, old fellow?" |
34542 | Immediately? |
34542 | Insult you? 34542 Is it because he has blue eyes and chestnut hair, with wandering gleams of golden light in it? |
34542 | Is it likely, then, that he cares for anything but her fortune? 34542 Is it necessary that she should be present?" |
34542 | Is it true? |
34542 | Is it useless to be obedient and submissive, patient and untiring? 34542 Is my life always to be this-- always, always, always?" |
34542 | Is my uncle in the house? |
34542 | Is n''t he like you, Edward? |
34542 | Is there neither truth nor justice in the dealings of God? |
34542 | Is there no cure for this disease? |
34542 | Is there no making this man answer for his infamy? |
34542 | Is there no relief except madness or death? |
34542 | Is there no way of making him suffer? |
34542 | Is this true that George Weston tells me? |
34542 | Is this true? |
34542 | Is this what you have to say to me? |
34542 | Is what true? |
34542 | Is your clock right? |
34542 | It ai n''t particularly jolly, is it, Martin? |
34542 | It is quite decided, then? |
34542 | It''s not a pretty house, is it, Miss Marchmont? |
34542 | John Marchmont, the poor fellow who used to teach us mathematics at Vernon''s; the fellow the governor sacked because----"Well, what of him? |
34542 | Look at the rain,she said;"hark at it; do n''t you hear it, drip, drip, drip upon the stone? |
34542 | Mary has gone, I hope? |
34542 | Mary is not up yet, I suppose? |
34542 | May I come into your house? 34542 Mentally deficient? |
34542 | Miss Marchmont,--my cousin, Mary Marchmont, I should say,--bears her loss pretty well, I hope? |
34542 | Mr. Arundel has come home? |
34542 | My dear Mrs. John, what is it you want of me? |
34542 | My dressing- case? |
34542 | My own one, my pretty one, my wife, when shall I get to you? |
34542 | My wife was ill, then? |
34542 | Need you ask me the question, Paul? 34542 No; I came here, as your kinsman, to ask you what you mean to do now that Paul Marchmont has taken possession of the Towers?" |
34542 | Not to- night, sir, surely? |
34542 | Not yet? |
34542 | O my God,she cried,"is this madness to undo all that I have done? |
34542 | O sir, is that true? |
34542 | O sir, what can I think, what can I think except that? 34542 O yes, dear; but had n''t you better take any thing of value yourself?" |
34542 | Of course it must n''t,answered Mr. Weston;"did n''t I say so just now? |
34542 | Oh, Mr. Arundel, how could you think so? |
34542 | Oh, is it you, Mr. Arundel? 34542 Olivia,"cried the young man,"are you mad?" |
34542 | Olivia,said Edward Arundel very earnestly,"what is it that makes you unhappy? |
34542 | P.S.--By- the- bye, do n''t you think a situation in a lawyer''s office would suit you better than the T. R. D. L.? 34542 Papa''s cousin-- Mr Marchmont the artist?" |
34542 | Polly,cried the young man,"do you think Jupiter liked Hebe any the less because she was as fresh and innocent as the nectar she served out to him? |
34542 | Richard Paulette has been here? |
34542 | Shall I ever have courage to stop till it comes? |
34542 | Shall I go and see Lucas? |
34542 | Shall I invite him to Marchmont Towers? |
34542 | Shall you go to London? |
34542 | She assigned no reason to_ you_, my dear Mrs. Marchmont; but she assigned a reason to somebody, I infer, from what you say? |
34542 | She has not been found, then? |
34542 | She, who is so good to all her father''s parishioners, could not refuse to be kind to my poor Mary? |
34542 | Should I have received that confirmation? |
34542 | Since when has my wife been at Kemberling? |
34542 | So you do n''t know my cousin Olivia? |
34542 | Sorry you came back? |
34542 | Telling him the reason of her departure? |
34542 | That he left me to you as a legacy? |
34542 | That poor Miss Mary was your lawful wedded wife? |
34542 | That? |
34542 | The door in the lobby? |
34542 | The gentleman is waiting to see me, I suppose? |
34542 | The letter to Mr. Paulette and to your father? |
34542 | The mystery of her death? |
34542 | Then it was not a fable? |
34542 | To clean up what? |
34542 | To her-- to Mary-- my wife? |
34542 | To let what be? |
34542 | To which of these people am I to look for an account of my poor lost girl? 34542 To you know if he''s on in ze virsd zene?" |
34542 | WHEN SHALL I CEASE TO BE ALL ALONE? |
34542 | WHEN SHALL I CEASE TO BE ALL ALONE? |
34542 | Was she seen by no one else? |
34542 | Was that the tenderest face that looked down upon my darling as she lay on her sick- bed? |
34542 | Was there any other reason for supposing that-- that my wife fell into the river? |
34542 | Was this found by the river- side? |
34542 | We could have haddocks every day at Marchmont Towers, could n''t we, papa? |
34542 | Well, Lavinia? |
34542 | Well; and when you went----? |
34542 | What am I that an empty- headed soldier should despise me, and that I should go mad because of his indifference? 34542 What am I to do?" |
34542 | What can I do to him? |
34542 | What can I give him to eat? |
34542 | What change? |
34542 | What compensation can they give me for an accident that shut me in a living grave for three months, that separated me from----? 34542 What compensation?" |
34542 | What could I do with money, if----? |
34542 | What did they dare to say against her or against me? |
34542 | What did they say? |
34542 | What do I love him for? |
34542 | What do you mean by an important mission, Edward? |
34542 | What do you mean, Edward? |
34542 | What do you mean, papa? 34542 What do you mean?" |
34542 | What do you mean? |
34542 | What do you mean? |
34542 | What do you mean? |
34542 | What do you think, Livy? |
34542 | What do you think? 34542 What does it matter to you whether it is true or not? |
34542 | What does it matter to you? |
34542 | What does_ he_ want at Marchmont Towers, I wonder? |
34542 | What else should we do? 34542 What for?" |
34542 | What have I done that I should suffer like this? |
34542 | What have you ever seen that should make you think any one loved me? |
34542 | What is it to you, or to any one, how I look? 34542 What is it, Barbara?" |
34542 | What is it, darling? |
34542 | What is it? |
34542 | What is the matter with you, Mary? |
34542 | What is the matter, darling? |
34542 | What is the question you came here to ask me? |
34542 | What is the secret of that woman''s life? |
34542 | What is there in her pale unmeaning face that should win the love of a man who despises me? |
34542 | What money have you, Lavinia? |
34542 | What on earth could have induced this woman to marry my cousin? |
34542 | What opinion? |
34542 | What question? |
34542 | What right have I to be happy amongst these people? |
34542 | What shall I do with you, Miss Marchmont? |
34542 | What then? 34542 What was not a fable?" |
34542 | What was that? |
34542 | What was there for me beyond that place? 34542 What will become of you?" |
34542 | What''s that? |
34542 | What, darling? 34542 What, dear?" |
34542 | What, mother? |
34542 | When was he here? |
34542 | When-- what, Livy? |
34542 | Where are all the rest of the servants? |
34542 | Where are my mother and Clarissa? |
34542 | Where is my wife? |
34542 | Where is my wife? |
34542 | Where was she before then? |
34542 | Where was this? |
34542 | Where, in Heaven''s name, have you been hiding yourself, woman? |
34542 | Where? |
34542 | Where? |
34542 | Who are you, girl? |
34542 | Who are you, girl? |
34542 | Who can come to see us on such a day? |
34542 | Who cares whether I am well or ill? |
34542 | Who does not know him? |
34542 | Who has despised you, Olivia? |
34542 | Who is it? |
34542 | Who is your wife? |
34542 | Who should dare to say that she spoke other than the truth? 34542 Who will help me to look for my missing love?" |
34542 | Who will tell me the truth about my lost darling? |
34542 | Who would n''t let you? |
34542 | Who? |
34542 | Whose child? |
34542 | Whose child? |
34542 | Why are you wicked? |
34542 | Why did n''t you go away with the rest? |
34542 | Why did she stop here? |
34542 | Why did the other servants leave the place? |
34542 | Why do n''t you have a gardener, Ned? |
34542 | Why do n''t you speak to me? |
34542 | Why do people worry me so? |
34542 | Why do you do this, Marchmont? |
34542 | Why do you marry her then? |
34542 | Why do you not answer my question? |
34542 | Why is it that you shut yourself from the sympathy of those who have a right to care for you? 34542 Why is that woman so venomous a creature in her hatred of my innocent wife? |
34542 | Why not? |
34542 | Why not? |
34542 | Why should I take any care of the place? |
34542 | Why should I try to escape from them? |
34542 | Why should they say my darling committed suicide? |
34542 | Why should this Mr. Marchmont think all this of me? |
34542 | Why should you prevent it? |
34542 | Why was my wife doubted when she told the story of her marriage? |
34542 | Why, do n''t you know who he is, mate? |
34542 | Why, my pet? |
34542 | Why? |
34542 | Will God ever forgive my sin? 34542 Will it never come?" |
34542 | Will it never come? |
34542 | Will she go there and knock them up, I wonder? 34542 Will you be sorry when I am married, Edward Arundel?" |
34542 | Will you come there presently? 34542 Will you go back to the Towers to- morrow morning?" |
34542 | Will you go with me to India, then, Mary? |
34542 | Woman, do you think duty is a thing to be measured by line and rule? 34542 Would you like to know, Edward Arundel?" |
34542 | Yes; where else should you stay? |
34542 | You believe that, I suppose? |
34542 | You can answer for Captain Arundel''s heart, I suppose, then, as well as for your own? 34542 You deny, then, that you were guilty of causing this poor deluded child''s flight from this house?" |
34542 | You did n''t know I was in Lincolnshire, did you? |
34542 | You did not see Olivia, then, all this time? |
34542 | You did, did n''t you? 34542 You disbelieved in that marriage?" |
34542 | You do n''t love me any the less because of that, do you, Edward? |
34542 | You do not think, then, that she is dead? |
34542 | You got my letter, then? |
34542 | You know my father? |
34542 | You know what we said to- day, Edward? |
34542 | You mean to let this be, then? |
34542 | You mean to say you found out what had driven your cousin''s widow mad? |
34542 | You persist in declaring, then, that the man with the weak legs is our old mathematical drudge? 34542 You really wish it?" |
34542 | You say that your stepdaughter is neither weak- minded nor strong- minded? |
34542 | You sometimes fear----? |
34542 | You think Miss Marchmont strong- minded, then, perhaps? |
34542 | You think her perfectly able to take care of herself? |
34542 | You think it worth something, then, mother? |
34542 | You think like these other people,--you think that she went away to destroy herself? |
34542 | You think our money is worth something to us? 34542 You think,"he gasped hoarsely, after a long pause,--"you think-- that-- she is-- dead?" |
34542 | You will sleep here to- night, of course? |
34542 | You will take an interest in her, wo n''t you? 34542 You wish me to many Mr. Marchmont, then, papa?" |
34542 | You wo n''t go to the Towers, papa dear? |
34542 | You would hardly wish to benefit by Mary''s death, would you, Olivia? |
34542 | You would have stood by Arundel''s poor little wife, my dear? |
34542 | You would stand by her_ now_, if she were alive, and needed your friendship? |
34542 | You would wish to hear the reading of the will? |
34542 | You''re not going to engage a governess for me, papa? |
34542 | Your cousin, Miss Arundel? |
34542 | _ Am_ I happier? |
34542 | _ Must_ you tell my stepmother of our marriage? |
34542 | _ What_ can I do to him? 34542 _ What_ have you done?" |
34542 | _ When_ shall I get there? |
34542 | _ Why_ did she leave this place? 34542 ''He has despised your love,''you said:''will you consent to see him happy with another woman?'' 34542 ''draughty?'' 34542 ''dreary?'' 34542 A little hand knocked lightly at the door of his room while he was thinking this, and a childish voice said,May I come in, papa?" |
34542 | Ai n''t you, Linda? |
34542 | All my plots, my difficulties, my struggles and victories, my long sleepless nights, my bad dreams,--has it all come to this? |
34542 | Am I a fool, that people can prevaricate and lie to me like this? |
34542 | Am I never to be loved and admired; never to be sought and chosen? |
34542 | Am I to wait for an answer?" |
34542 | And I think I have surprised you, have n''t I? |
34542 | And Paul Marchmont, again,--what have I learned from him? |
34542 | And did any revulsion of feeling arise in her breast? |
34542 | And now may I ask the reason----?" |
34542 | And now--? |
34542 | And yet what was it that he had lost, after all? |
34542 | And you and he are stanch allies, I suppose?" |
34542 | And you wish me to be your wife in order that you may have a guardian for your child? |
34542 | And, oh sir, bein''a poor lone woman, what was I to do?" |
34542 | Another voice in her breast seemed to whisper,"Why do you reproach me for not having loved this girl? |
34542 | Are they honourable and honest towards one another, I wonder, that they can entertain such pitiful doubts of our honour and honesty?" |
34542 | Are you going to open the gate and let us in, or do you mean to keep your citadel closed upon us altogether, Mr. Edward Arundel?" |
34542 | Are you idiotic and besotted enough to believe that it is anything but your fortune this man cares for? |
34542 | Are you turned to stone, Edward Arundel? |
34542 | Are_ you_ going away?" |
34542 | Arundel?" |
34542 | Arundel?" |
34542 | Arundel?" |
34542 | At what time does he come to his painting- room?"'' |
34542 | Because I have profited by the death of John Marchmont''s daughter, this impetuous young husband imagines-- what? |
34542 | Besides, what_ should_ come? |
34542 | But Hester was not alone; close behind her came a lady in a rustling silk gown, a tall matronly lady, who cried out,--"Where is she, Edward? |
34542 | But I think----""You think what?" |
34542 | But I''ll teach you the game, if you like?" |
34542 | But did the still evening hour bring peace to that restless spirit? |
34542 | But how was he to win this woman''s friendship for his darling? |
34542 | But how was it that, for all her goodness, Olivia Arundel won so small a share of earthly reward? |
34542 | But how-- but how? |
34542 | But how? |
34542 | But if he should die, mother, and leave his little girl destitute, you''ll look after her, wo n''t you?" |
34542 | But just at first, and before you know her very well, you will be kind to her, wo n''t you, Olivia? |
34542 | But now ruin had come to him, what was he to do? |
34542 | But still the great question was unanswered-- How was he to kill himself? |
34542 | But tell me what you are going to do yourself, and where you are going?" |
34542 | But that''s past now, is n''t it, my dear? |
34542 | But was Marchmont Towers quite as beautiful as that fairy palace of Mary''s day- dream? |
34542 | But was Olivia Arundel the woman to do this? |
34542 | But was there any chance? |
34542 | But we can soon set that right, ca n''t we, Polly?" |
34542 | But what am I to do? |
34542 | But what are we to do, Paul? |
34542 | But what can a man expect when he''s obliged to put his trust in a fool?" |
34542 | But what of that? |
34542 | But what reason could the woman have for her hatred of this innocent girl? |
34542 | But who could have calculated upon the railway accident; and who could have foreseen a separation in the first blush of the honeymoon? |
34542 | But you are not sorry, are you?" |
34542 | But you wo n''t love her quite the same way that you loved me, will you, dear? |
34542 | But you''ll take something-- wine, tea, brandy- and- water-- eh?" |
34542 | But, my darling, why did you make no effort to escape?" |
34542 | By what means did he drive my darling to her despairing flight?" |
34542 | Ca n''t you speak, woman? |
34542 | Can God ever forgive these people for their cruelty to you? |
34542 | Can He pity, can He forgive, such guilt as mine? |
34542 | Can it be wondered that he urged his daughter to accept this altered lot? |
34542 | Can it be wondered, then, that the Rector of Swampington thought the prospect offered to his child a very brilliant one? |
34542 | Can you imagine a woman with a wicked heart steadfastly trying to do good, and to be good? |
34542 | Can you play chess?" |
34542 | Can you wonder, then, if I feel confirmed in an opinion that I formed upon the day on which I heard the reading of my cousin''s will?" |
34542 | Could John Marchmont be a Christian, and yet feel this horrible dread of the death which must separate him from his daughter? |
34542 | Could he disbelieve his cousin? |
34542 | Could he ever dream for one brief moment of such a horrible cruelty? |
34542 | Could it be possible that Edward Arundel might ever come to love this girl? |
34542 | Could it be that this girl, to whom nature had given strength but denied grace, envied the superficial attractions of the young man at her side? |
34542 | Could she ever find rest in the grave, knowing this? |
34542 | Could there be any possible extinction that would blot out her jealous fury? |
34542 | Could there be anything more piteous than that degrading spectacle? |
34542 | Did Edward Arundel love the pale- faced girl, who revealed her devotion to him with such childlike unconsciousness? |
34542 | Did I do wrong when I offered to be your wife?" |
34542 | Did any corresponding transformation in her own heart bear witness to the baseness of her love? |
34542 | Did he love Olivia Arundel? |
34542 | Did n''t I always say so, now? |
34542 | Did n''t I always tell him he''d come into the Lincolnshire property? |
34542 | Did she tell you that I looked to you to account to me for the disappearance of my wife?" |
34542 | Did you ever see such an awkward set of fellows in all your life? |
34542 | Do I commit a sin in marrying John Marchmont in this spirit, papa?" |
34542 | Do n''t you smell it?" |
34542 | Do those who know me estimate me so much, or prize me so highly, that a stranger should think of me? |
34542 | Do you hear, woman? |
34542 | Do you know that sometimes I am almost sorry I ever came back to Marchmont Towers?" |
34542 | Do you know which way they went?" |
34542 | Do you love her so very, very much?" |
34542 | Do you remember how you played upon my misery, and traded on the tortures of my jealous heart? |
34542 | Do you remember that which I must restore to her when I give her back this house and the income that goes along with it? |
34542 | Do you remember what her highest right is? |
34542 | Do you remember what you said to me? |
34542 | Do you remember_ how_ you tempted me? |
34542 | Do you think I can go back to the old life? |
34542 | Do you think I have n''t consulted your happiness before my own? |
34542 | Do you think I shall love you less because I take this step for your sake? |
34542 | Do you think after hearing this, that I am the woman to be a second mother to your child?" |
34542 | Do you think anybody but Peter Paul could have painted that? |
34542 | Do you think he has not had women fifty times your superior, in every quality of mind and body, at his feet out yonder in India? |
34542 | Do you think that I am blind, or deaf, or besotted; that you defy me and outrage me, day by day, and hour by hour, by your conduct?" |
34542 | Do you think there has been nothing in all this to warp my nature? |
34542 | Do you want him?" |
34542 | Does any one think that, by any unhappy accident, by any terrible fatality, she lost her way after dark, and fell into the water? |
34542 | Does my meerschaum annoy you? |
34542 | Does she know that Edward''s there? |
34542 | Edward Arundel, do you hate me so much that you refuse to share the same shelter with me, even for a night?" |
34542 | Edward, if I ask you a favour, will you grant it?" |
34542 | Edward, is it real? |
34542 | Edward?" |
34542 | Edward?" |
34542 | From long ago, when you were little more than a boy-- you remember, do n''t you, the long days at the Rectory? |
34542 | Had Olivia ever been in love? |
34542 | Had he been to the Grange? |
34542 | Had he not done his duty to the dead; and was he not free now to begin a fresh life? |
34542 | Had not_ she_ perilled her soul upon the casting of this die? |
34542 | Had she not endured the worst long ago, in Edward Arundel''s contempt? |
34542 | Had she sought me out?--had she followed me to Dangerfield? |
34542 | Had this Marchmont-- always rather unnaturally reserved and eccentric-- gone suddenly mad? |
34542 | Had_ she_ not flung down her eternal happiness in that fatal game of hazard? |
34542 | Has all my care of you been so little, that I am to stand by now and be silent, when I see what you are? |
34542 | Has all my life been a great mistake, which is to end in confusion and despair?" |
34542 | Has my brain no sense, and my arm no strength, that I can not wring the truth from the false throats of these wretches?" |
34542 | Has the person I left in your care, whom you were paid, and paid well, to take care of,--have you let her go? |
34542 | Have n''t I heard it demonstrated by cleverer men than I am? |
34542 | Have n''t I looked at it in every light, and weighed it in every scale-- always with the same result? |
34542 | Have you yet to learn that Christianity is cosmopolitan, illimitable, inexhaustible, subject to no laws of time or space? |
34542 | He is brave, I dare say, and generous; but what of that? |
34542 | He looked forward with a shudder to see-- what? |
34542 | He sprang up from the table directly he had finished his meal, and cried out impatiently,"What can make Mary so lazy this morning? |
34542 | He''s an old friend of mine,--one of the supernu-- what''s- its- names?" |
34542 | Her thoughts wandered away to that awful question which had been so lately revived in her mind-- Could she be forgiven? |
34542 | His mother ca n''t love him, can she? |
34542 | How am I to be avenged upon the wretch who caused my darling''s death?" |
34542 | How can I ever forget that, Edward? |
34542 | How can I ever love you enough to repay you for that?" |
34542 | How can you ask such a question?" |
34542 | How could he tell which of these ways Olivia might have chosen? |
34542 | How could she grieve him by telling him of her sorrows, when his very presence brought such unutterable joy to her? |
34542 | How could the young man answer this question except by clasping his betrothed to his heart? |
34542 | How did you find my wife? |
34542 | How did you induce her to come back to this place? |
34542 | How have_ you_ learned to school your rebellious heart?" |
34542 | How should I know the effect that report would have upon my unhappy cousin?" |
34542 | How should he die? |
34542 | How should he love her? |
34542 | How should_ she_ protect herself against her enemies? |
34542 | How was he to kill himself? |
34542 | How was it, then? |
34542 | How will you endure Edward Arundel''s contempt for you? |
34542 | How will you tolerate his love for Mary, multiplied twentyfold by all this romantic business of separation and persecution? |
34542 | How would you like a stepmamma? |
34542 | How would you like your papa to marry again?" |
34542 | I daresay you remember old Colonel Tollesly, at Halburton Lodge? |
34542 | I may come again, may I not, now that the ice is broken, and we are so well acquainted with each other? |
34542 | I must trust this brave- hearted boy, for I have no one else to confide in; and who else is there who would not ridicule my fear of my cousin Paul?" |
34542 | I thought Miss Marchmont was in her room?" |
34542 | I wonder whether Marchmont Towers is insured? |
34542 | I wonder why the people in novels are always dark? |
34542 | I''d rather you spoke to him, though,"added the surgeon thoughtfully,"because, you see, it would come better from you, would n''t it now?" |
34542 | If I am to marry at all, who should I choose for a wife? |
34542 | If I separated her from her husband-- bah!--was that such a cruelty? |
34542 | If it should be thus: if, on going down to Marlingford, he obtained no tidings of his friend''s daughter, what was he to do? |
34542 | If such and such a course of diet is fatal to the body''s health, may not some thoughts be equally fatal to the health of the brain? |
34542 | If the day ever comes in which my little girl should have to struggle with this man, will you help her to fight the battle? |
34542 | If there is one spark of womanhood in your nature, I appeal to that; I ask you what has happened to my wife?" |
34542 | Is Marchmont Towers a prison, that you shut your gates as if they were never to be opened until the Day of Judgment?" |
34542 | Is he in the drawing- room?" |
34542 | Is it all real?" |
34542 | Is it anywhere near Swampington?" |
34542 | Is it because he has a dashing walk, and the air of a man of fashion? |
34542 | Is it because he has gentlemanly manners, and is easy and pleasant, genial and light- hearted? |
34542 | Is it for this I have shared your guilty secrets? |
34542 | Is it for this that I have sat night after night in my father''s study, poring over the books that were too difficult for him? |
34542 | Is it for this that I have sold my soul to you, Paul Marchmont? |
34542 | Is it madness, or the infernal cruelty of a fiend incarnate?" |
34542 | Is it not so?" |
34542 | Is it really you?" |
34542 | Is it that, in some hour of passion, you consented to league yourself with Paul Marchmont against my poor innocent girl? |
34542 | Is it thus with Mary Marchmont? |
34542 | Is it true that Edward Arundel is going to be married to- morrow?" |
34542 | Is it true, Olivia?" |
34542 | Is it-- is it? |
34542 | Is my life to be all of one dull, grey, colourless monotony; without one sudden gleam of sunshine, without one burst of rainbow- light?" |
34542 | Is she already marked out for some womanly martyrdom-- already set apart for more than common suffering? |
34542 | Is she still with the stepdaughter she loves so dearly?" |
34542 | Is that why you are silent?" |
34542 | Is the black shadow upon your life a guilty secret? |
34542 | Is the burden that you carry a burden on your conscience? |
34542 | Is the cause of your unhappiness that which I suspect it to be? |
34542 | Is there anything due to you?" |
34542 | Is there no one sentiment of womanly compassion left in your breast? |
34542 | Is this folly to be the climax of my dismal life? |
34542 | Is this the recompense for my long years of obedience? |
34542 | Is your love worth no more than this? |
34542 | Is_ this_ frail life all that stands between me and eleven thousand a year?" |
34542 | It seems so long ago; but it was only last night, was it? |
34542 | It was as if she said,--"Are you the devil, that you hold out this temptation to me, and twist my own passions to serve your purpose?" |
34542 | It''s all brotherly kindness, of course, and friendly interest in my welfare-- that''s what it''s_ called_, Mrs. J. Shall I tell you what it_ is_? |
34542 | It_ is_ a relationship, is it not, although such a very slight one?" |
34542 | Jobson?" |
34542 | John?" |
34542 | Leaving nothing else-- positively nothing? |
34542 | M.''s?" |
34542 | Marchmont?" |
34542 | Marchmont?" |
34542 | May I speak to your father? |
34542 | May I venture to urge your proceeding there in search of her without delay? |
34542 | Might not these things even yet come to pass? |
34542 | Mr. Arundel is here, is he not?" |
34542 | My dear Edward, what_ do_ you mean?" |
34542 | No; what injury can he inflict upon me worse than that which he has done me from the very first? |
34542 | No? |
34542 | Nothing but despair? |
34542 | Now what, in Heaven''s name, could that miserable little Mary have done with eleven thousand a year, if-- if she had lived to enjoy it?" |
34542 | Now, I ask you what motive Mary Marchmont can have had for running away from this house?" |
34542 | Now, will you tell me the chances are not six to six he dies unmarried? |
34542 | O, by- the- bye, you have never heard any thing of that Paul Marchmont, I suppose?" |
34542 | Of course I am not fond of Scotch shepherdesses now, you know, dear; but how should Mrs. Pimpernel know that? |
34542 | Oh, the relentless devil, the pitiless devil!--what can be the motive of her conduct? |
34542 | Or a gentleman who could enter with any warmth of sympathy into his friend''s feelings respecting the auburn tresses or the Grecian nose of"a sister"? |
34542 | Or am I only dreaming? |
34542 | Or do you mean to keep me out here for ever?" |
34542 | Or, escaping all this, what was there for him? |
34542 | Paul, Paul, what are we to do? |
34542 | Shall I never be put out of this horrible suspense?" |
34542 | Shall I repent, and try to undo what I have done? |
34542 | Shall I take my horse round to the stables? |
34542 | Shall I tell you what it is to love? |
34542 | Shall I thrust myself between others and Mr. Edward Arundel? |
34542 | Shall I wake presently and feel the cold air blowing in at the window, and see the moonlight on the wainscot at Stony Stringford? |
34542 | Shall we ever go to Dangerfield, I wonder, papa and I? |
34542 | Shall we ever see him again?" |
34542 | Shall we postpone the wedding?" |
34542 | Shall_ I_ make myself the ally and champion of this gallant soldier, who seldom speaks to me except to insult and upbraid me? |
34542 | Shall_ I_ take justice into my hands, and interfere for my kinsman''s benefit? |
34542 | She has been used to great indulgence; she has been spoiled, perhaps; but you''ll remember all that, and be very kind to her?" |
34542 | She has been very unkind to you?" |
34542 | She has used you very badly, then, this woman? |
34542 | She will be one- and- twenty in three years; and what are three years? |
34542 | Should he go upstairs and cut his throat? |
34542 | Something may happen, perhaps, to prevent----""What should happen?" |
34542 | That''s the sort of thing, is n''t it, Polly?" |
34542 | The battles in India have been dreadful, have they not?" |
34542 | The hand of death was upon her; what could it matter how she died? |
34542 | The question she should have asked was this,"Do I commit a sin in marrying one man, while my heart is racked by a mad passion for another?" |
34542 | The sceptical artist may have thought,"What if there should be some reality in the creed so many weak fools confide in? |
34542 | Then Paul Marchmont went with you to Hampshire?" |
34542 | There was no possibility that Olivia should waver in her purpose; for had she not brought with her two witnesses-- Hester Jobson and her husband? |
34542 | There''s a nice opening in the medical line, is there? |
34542 | Was ever bridegroom more indulgent, more devoted, than Edward Arundel? |
34542 | Was he thinking,"Is_ this_ fragile creature the mistress of Marchmont Towers? |
34542 | Was it beautiful? |
34542 | Was it likely that she was to find her adversary and her conqueror here, in the meek child who had been committed to her charge? |
34542 | Was it likely, was it possible, that this pale- faced girl would enter into the lists against her in the great battle of her life? |
34542 | Was it reasonable to imagine that you would have married, and yet have left your mother in total ignorance of the fact?" |
34542 | Was it some hopeless attachment, some secret tenderness, which had never won the sweet return of love for love? |
34542 | Was it such a great advantage, after all, this annihilation, the sovereign good of the atheist''s barren creed? |
34542 | Was it true that Edward Arundel had never really loved his young bride? |
34542 | Was it within the compass of heavenly mercy to forgive such a sin as hers? |
34542 | Was not this even more likely than that she should seek refuge with her kinsfolk in Berkshire? |
34542 | Was she to be for ever insulted by this humiliating indifference? |
34542 | Was she to sit quietly by and hear a stranger lie away her kinsman''s honour, truth, and manhood? |
34542 | Was there any truth in that which Paul Marchmont had said to her? |
34542 | Was there anything in her mind; or was she only a human automaton, slowly decaying into dust? |
34542 | Was there anything upon earth that she feared now? |
34542 | Was there to be no end to this unendurable delay? |
34542 | Was this frank expression of regard for Mary Marchmont a token of_ love_? |
34542 | Was this the boyish red- coated dandy she had despised? |
34542 | Was this the man she had called frivolous? |
34542 | Was_ she_ never to be anything? |
34542 | We have talked of you so often; and I-- we-- have been so unhappy sometimes, thinking that----""That I should be killed, I suppose?" |
34542 | Weston?" |
34542 | Weston?" |
34542 | What am I to do with myself all this night, racked with uncertainty about Mary?" |
34542 | What are you going to do? |
34542 | What are you going to do?" |
34542 | What can I do to him? |
34542 | What can I do? |
34542 | What could have happened to throw him into that state? |
34542 | What could she do to keep this torture away from her? |
34542 | What course would this desperate woman take in her jealous rage? |
34542 | What did it all mean? |
34542 | What did it all mean? |
34542 | What did it matter that Edward Arundel repudiated and hated her? |
34542 | What did it matter to me whether I was there or at Marchmont Towers? |
34542 | What did it matter? |
34542 | What did it matter? |
34542 | What did it matter? |
34542 | What did my mother say?" |
34542 | What do I care for any one''s opinion-- now?" |
34542 | What do I know of Edward Arundel that should lead me to think him better or nobler than other men? |
34542 | What do you advise? |
34542 | What do you care whom I marry, or what becomes of me?" |
34542 | What do you think has become of her?" |
34542 | What do you think has become of my lost girl?" |
34542 | What does it matter what people say of me? |
34542 | What else should she say, after refusing all manner of people, and giving herself the airs of an old- maid? |
34542 | What good have my looks done me, that I should worry myself about them?" |
34542 | What had he to do with any catastrophe except that which had fallen upon his innocent young wife? |
34542 | What had she done, this girl, who had never known what it was to fight a battle with her own rebellious heart? |
34542 | What had she done? |
34542 | What has been the matter with you?" |
34542 | What has not been done by unhappy creatures in this woman''s state of mind? |
34542 | What have I done, Edward, that she should hate me?" |
34542 | What have I made of myself in my pride of intellect? |
34542 | What have we to live for? |
34542 | What have you done to show yourself worthy of my faith in you?" |
34542 | What have you done with your savings?" |
34542 | What if Mary had gone to Oakley Street? |
34542 | What if he had needlessly curtailed the short span of his life? |
34542 | What if he were to die soon-- before Olivia had learned to love her stepdaughter; before Mary had grown affectionately familiar with her new guardian? |
34542 | What if he were to die, and leave his only child unmarried? |
34542 | What if there_ is_ a God who can not abide iniquity?" |
34542 | What if this helpless girl had been detained by force at Marchmont Towers? |
34542 | What inducement had she ever had to cast off that sombre attire; what need had she to trick herself out in gay colours? |
34542 | What is Bill Sykes''broken nose or bull- dog visage to Nancy? |
34542 | What is her mystery-- what is her secret, I wonder? |
34542 | What is it that''s drove her away from her''ome, sir, and such a good''ome too? |
34542 | What is the favour I am to grant?" |
34542 | What is the mystery of your life?" |
34542 | What is the use of my fortune if you wo n''t share it with me, if you wo n''t take it all; for it is yours, my dearest-- it is all yours? |
34542 | What loving eyes would be charmed by her splendour? |
34542 | What more likely than that she lost the track, and wandered into the river? |
34542 | What more likely than that she should turn instinctively, in the hour of her desolation, to the humble friends whom she had known in her childhood? |
34542 | What more natural than that she should go back to the familiar habitation, dear to her by reason of a thousand associations with her dead father? |
34542 | What mystery are these people hiding amongst themselves; and what should_ he_ have to do with it?" |
34542 | What need had she to build castles, now that he could no longer inhabit them? |
34542 | What other motive could you have had for doing this deadly wrong? |
34542 | What other person?" |
34542 | What reason have you to fear my cousin Olivia?" |
34542 | What reward have I won for my patience?" |
34542 | What shall I say to Paulette? |
34542 | What should he do? |
34542 | What then? |
34542 | What vengeance could he wreak upon the head of that wretch who, for nearly two years, had condemned an innocent girl to cruel suffering and shame? |
34542 | What was he to do with that man? |
34542 | What was he to do? |
34542 | What was he to do? |
34542 | What was it in Olivia Arundel''s handsome face from which those who looked at her so often shrank, repelled and disappointed? |
34542 | What was it to her that she was sole heiress of that great mansion, and of eleven thousand a year? |
34542 | What was it to him if famine- stricken Ireland were perishing, and the far- away Indian possessions menaced by contumacious and treacherous Sikhs? |
34542 | What was it to him if the glory of England were in danger, the freedom of a mighty people wavering in the balance? |
34542 | What was it to him if the heavens were shrivelled like a blazing scroll, and the earth reeling on its shaken foundations? |
34542 | What was it worth, this fine house, with the broad flat before it? |
34542 | What was it? |
34542 | What was it? |
34542 | What was it? |
34542 | What was it? |
34542 | What was she that she should be patient? |
34542 | What was the clue to the mystery of this letter, which had stunned and bewildered him, until the very power of reflection seemed lost? |
34542 | What was the clue to the mystery? |
34542 | What was the dreadful secret which had transformed this woman? |
34542 | What was the emotion which had now blanched his cheeks? |
34542 | What was the extent of the sin she had committed? |
34542 | What was the good of wealth, if it could not bring this young soldier home to a safe shelter in his native land? |
34542 | What was the nature of his crime, and what penalty had he incurred? |
34542 | What was there for this man even then? |
34542 | What was to be gained by any show of respect to her, whose brain was too weak to hold the memory of their conduct for five minutes together? |
34542 | What will become of him in that dreadful country? |
34542 | What would become of her, with her dangerous gifts, with her fatal dowry of beauty and intellect and pride? |
34542 | What would she do? |
34542 | What would the world say of me, Mary? |
34542 | What''s the good of your coming if you bring me no help?" |
34542 | What''s the number, old fellow?" |
34542 | What, in Heaven''s name, can it mean?" |
34542 | Whatever villany this man might be capable of committing, Olivia must at least be guiltless of any deliberate treachery? |
34542 | When would art earn him eleven thousand a year? |
34542 | Where are they-- my mother and Letitia?" |
34542 | Where are you going, Ned?" |
34542 | Where had she gone? |
34542 | Where is Olivia, by- the- bye? |
34542 | Where is she? |
34542 | Where was he to look for her next? |
34542 | Where was she likely to go in her inexperience of the outer world? |
34542 | Where''s John? |
34542 | Where''s Peterson?" |
34542 | Where?" |
34542 | Who could be better than Olivia Arundel? |
34542 | Who could there be in Lincolnshire with the right to call to him thus by his Christian name? |
34542 | Who could think that sorrow would come between us so soon?" |
34542 | Who else would dare accuse a Dangerfield Arundel of baseness? |
34542 | Who gave you leave to let that woman go? |
34542 | Who saw her there?" |
34542 | Who should dare to disbelieve her?" |
34542 | Who was it who drove Mary Marchmont from this house,--not once only, but twice, by her cruelty? |
34542 | Who was it who first sinned? |
34542 | Who----?" |
34542 | Why did he for ever goad her to blacker wickedness by this parade of his love for Mary? |
34542 | Why did he force her to remember every moment how much cause she had to hate this pale- faced girl? |
34542 | Why did n''t he take to her, I wonder? |
34542 | Why did she leave this house?" |
34542 | Why did she marry John Marchmont? |
34542 | Why did you not write to tell her of Mary''s flight?" |
34542 | Why do you come here with your idiotic fancies? |
34542 | Why does not God have pity upon me, and take the bitter burden away? |
34542 | Why does she say,''You wo n''t take another egg, will you, Edward?'' |
34542 | Why had she ever consented to go there, when she had again and again expressed such terror of her stepmother? |
34542 | Why had she not rather followed her husband down to Devonshire, and thrown herself upon his relatives for protection? |
34542 | Why had she remained at Marchmont Towers? |
34542 | Why have you been so changed to me lately? |
34542 | Why is it that, whether I threaten, or whether I appeal, I can gain nothing from her-- nothing? |
34542 | Why should I be afraid? |
34542 | Why should I prevent it?" |
34542 | Why should existence be so bright and careless to him; while to her it was a terrible fever- dream, a long sickness, a never- ceasing battle? |
34542 | Why should he slave at his easel, and toil to become a great painter? |
34542 | Why should she fail in this? |
34542 | Why should we keep her in ignorance of it? |
34542 | Why, then, should I make myself a slave for the sake of winning people''s esteem? |
34542 | Why?" |
34542 | Will he ever forgive you, do you think, when he knows that his young wife has been the victim of a senseless, vicious love? |
34542 | Will you accept my help?" |
34542 | Will you come and open the gate for me, please? |
34542 | Will you come into the wood with me?" |
34542 | Will you come upstairs with me? |
34542 | Will you go?" |
34542 | Will_ you_ be that protector, Edward Arundel? |
34542 | With George Weston and Olivia, Betsy Murrel the servant- girl, and Hester Jobson to bear witness against him, what could he hope? |
34542 | Wo n''t you, Hoskins?" |
34542 | Wo n''t you, Polly?" |
34542 | Would he be sorry that she was not there? |
34542 | Would he be sorry? |
34542 | Would he enjoy himself very, very much? |
34542 | Would he love her any better then than he had loved her two years ago? |
34542 | Would she go straight to Edward Arundel and tell him----? |
34542 | Would such a thing ever come to pass? |
34542 | Would the new furnace through which she was to pass be more terrible than the old fires? |
34542 | Would the pretty girls in blue be there? |
34542 | Would there be anything more after to- morrow? |
34542 | Yes, it is a conspiracy, if you like; if you are not afraid to call it by a hard name, why should I fear to do so? |
34542 | Yes, she had been his help and comfort since her earliest infancy, and she was not unused to self- sacrifice: why should she fail him now? |
34542 | Yes, this was most likely; for how else could she hope to prevent the marriage? |
34542 | You are happier here than you were in Charlotte Street, eh, mother?" |
34542 | You can get your things together; there''s a boy about the place who will carry them for you, I suppose?" |
34542 | You can let me in at the little door in the lobby, ca n''t you, Mrs. John? |
34542 | You can perhaps give me the address of some place in London where your cousin is in the habit of staying?" |
34542 | You do n''t know what that word''love''means, do you? |
34542 | You do n''t suppose I''m going to lay down my sword at seven- and- twenty years of age, and retire upon my pension? |
34542 | You have heard of my relative, Mrs. John Marchmont,--my cousin''s widow?" |
34542 | You have managed him for fifteen years: surely you can go on managing him now without annoying_ me_ about him? |
34542 | You have n''t asked them, I suppose?" |
34542 | You have no doubt heard that she is-- mad?" |
34542 | You have ruined me; do you hear? |
34542 | You know Stanfield, of course?" |
34542 | You mean to undertake it, then? |
34542 | You must live a fortnight somewhere, Polly: where shall it be?" |
34542 | You must want money, Paul?" |
34542 | You remember me, perhaps? |
34542 | You remember the way he went on that day down in the boat- house when Edward Arundel came in upon us unexpectedly? |
34542 | You want the dressing- case carried to Mrs. Weston''s house, and I''m to wait for you there?" |
34542 | You will let it take place?" |
34542 | You will let me smoke out of doors, wo n''t you, Polly? |
34542 | You will see them together-- you will hear of their happiness; and do you think that_ he_ will ever forgive you for your part of the conspiracy? |
34542 | You wo n''t leave me-- you wo n''t leave me, will you?" |
34542 | You would not surely have me be less than true to myself, Mary darling? |
34542 | You''d like to go, Olivia?" |
34542 | You''ll accept the shelter of our spare room until to- morrow morning?" |
34542 | You''ll come, wo n''t you, Livy?" |
34542 | You''ll stop here for the rest of the night? |
34542 | You''re surely not going to renew your acquaintance with him?" |
34542 | You''ve heard me talk of Belinda Lawford, my dearest, dearest friend? |
34542 | Your taste, I suppose, Olivia? |
34542 | _ Could_ such a thing be possible? |
34542 | _ He_ had wished her to obey; what should she do, then, but be obedient? |
34542 | and did you see much of him?" |
34542 | and would he dance with them? |
34542 | are you weak enough to be deluded by a fortune- hunter''s pretty pastoral flatteries? |
34542 | cried Edward Arundel;"he makes himself at home at Marchmont Towers, then?" |
34542 | cried Mrs. Arundel;"but surely you----?" |
34542 | cried the lawyer;"what can you want to go out for at this time in the morning? |
34542 | cried the young man,"what, in mercy''s name, has brought you here?" |
34542 | demanded John Marchmont sadly,"in a darned pinafore and a threadbare frock?" |
34542 | did n''t you recognise him? |
34542 | do you think I came down here to stand all night staring through these iron bars? |
34542 | exclaimed Mr. Marchmont, decisively;"who is Mr. Gormby, that he should give orders as to who comes in or stops out? |
34542 | exclaimed the boy, in a breathless whisper;"do n''t you see, Martin? |
34542 | has my love so little the aspect of truth that she_ can_ doubt me?" |
34542 | he asked;"and what brings you to this place?" |
34542 | he cried, in a fierce agony of mental or bodily uneasiness;--"how long? |
34542 | he cried,"are you possessed by a thousand fiends? |
34542 | he cried,"not gone to bed yet?" |
34542 | he muttered;"how was it? |
34542 | he thought;"why did n''t she come to me? |
34542 | how had he looked? |
34542 | if she wants me to have one? |
34542 | is he now? |
34542 | is the lot of other women never to be mine? |
34542 | may I say that you have given me a hope of your ultimate consent?" |
34542 | may I tell him that I have spoken to you? |
34542 | may not a monotonous recurrence of the same ideas be above all injurious? |
34542 | murmured Mary;"what if I were not rich?" |
34542 | or how shall we hear of you?" |
34542 | or that-- O God, that would be too horrible!--does any one suspect that she drowned herself?" |
34542 | said Edward Arundel;"Mary, my poor sorrowful darling-- alive?" |
34542 | said Edward Arundel;"you believe, then, that she is dead?" |
34542 | said the soldier;"you call those things frocks, do n''t you? |
34542 | she asked; and then, as her eyes rested on the cards, she added, angrily,"Have n''t I told you that I would not see any callers to- day? |
34542 | she cried suddenly, with a disdainful gesture of her head;"do you think your pitiful face has won Edward Arundel? |
34542 | she cried,"what is it?" |
34542 | she murmured;"will you be sorry?" |
34542 | she said, piteously appealing to the young man,"papa would never, never, never marry again,--would he?" |
34542 | she said;"O Captain Arundel, is it really you?" |
34542 | she said;"_ is_ it? |
34542 | she thought; would the blank days and nights go monotonously on when the story that had given them a meaning and a purpose had come to its dismal end? |
34542 | she whispered;"did he really say that?" |
34542 | that''s the son of the present possessor?" |
34542 | the girl cried suddenly, clasping her hands and looking imploringly at Captain Arundel,"were the cruel things she said true? |
34542 | what are we to do?" |
34542 | what do you mean?" |
34542 | what had he talked about? |
34542 | what had she done, that all this wealth of love and happiness should drop into her lap unsought,--comparatively unvalued, perhaps? |
34542 | what have I done to offend you?" |
34542 | what of her? |
34542 | whispered Martin Mostyn peevishly;"why do n''t you look at the stage? |
34542 | who else would be vile enough to call my father''s son a liar and a traitor? |
34542 | why didst Thou so abandon me, when I turned away from Thee, and made Edward Arundel the idol of my wicked heart?" |
34542 | why do I reason with myself?" |
34542 | why do I waste my breath in talking to such a creature as this? |
34542 | why do you look at me like that? |
34542 | why should he love her in preference to every other woman in the world? |
34542 | why, why do they let him go? |
34542 | will God ever have pity upon me? |
34542 | will this journey never come to an end? |
34542 | would he be sorry if she married John Marchmont? |
34542 | you know,--you must know, dearest,--that I shall never see that place?" |
34542 | you mean to consider my offer? |
40631 | A chance? 40631 A little chit like that to speak to me thus"--then, turning sharply on her,"Are you not afraid?" |
40631 | A little what? |
40631 | About what? |
40631 | All what is? |
40631 | All your pistols charged? |
40631 | And agree? |
40631 | And did Scantlebray look on passively while you released him? |
40631 | And for furnishing you with the code of signals? |
40631 | And for the other thing----? |
40631 | And from Porth- leze there are to be signals to the Black Prince to come on here-- but so that they may be read the other way-- you understand? |
40631 | And how was she? |
40631 | And how''s your missus? |
40631 | And is it because of him that you go? |
40631 | And it was never recovered? |
40631 | And left you without any satisfaction? |
40631 | And me-- would you do aught for me? |
40631 | And my rabbits, are they to go too? |
40631 | And now that I have your promise-- I have that, have I not? |
40631 | And pray, how in the name of wonder did you do that? 40631 And pray,"said Mr. Desiderius Mules,"have the owners of the vessels, the passengers, the captains, no objections to make?" |
40631 | And still you will have me? |
40631 | And that of whom? |
40631 | And the basket of shells? |
40631 | And the little''uns? 40631 And then I may go home?" |
40631 | And then-- we shall see; sha n''t we, Obadiah, old man? |
40631 | And then? |
40631 | And to- morrow morning, will you have the same? |
40631 | And what are the bitter-- briny thoughts? |
40631 | And what are you going to do to- day? |
40631 | And what do they give you every time you carry them a bit of information? |
40631 | And what do you think of that? |
40631 | And what do you want me to do? |
40631 | And what have you come about, sir? |
40631 | And what if I say that, if you go, I will turn old Dunes-- I mean your aunt-- out of the house? |
40631 | And what of all that? |
40631 | And when and where may that be? |
40631 | And when shall we meet? |
40631 | And where did you throw it? 40631 And where is Jamie? |
40631 | And why not? 40631 And will you not eat?" |
40631 | And you come to me of your own will? |
40631 | And you found the jessamine very sweet? |
40631 | And you got ashore? |
40631 | And you have come to warn me? |
40631 | And you will obey? |
40631 | And you wish it? |
40631 | And you''ll give me the best bedroom, and will have choice dinners, and the best old tawny port, eh? |
40631 | And you? 40631 And you?" |
40631 | And you? |
40631 | And you?--are you afraid of the wreck that you have made? |
40631 | And,said Judith, drawing a long breath,"what about Jamie?" |
40631 | And,said Scantlebray,"what if certain persons give occasion to a ship being wrecked, and then plundering the wreck?" |
40631 | And-- did any others-- I mean did any wreckers come to your ship? |
40631 | Are cook and Jane coming with us? |
40631 | Are we going to Mr. Menaida''s, aunt? |
40631 | Are you better? |
40631 | Are you coming? |
40631 | Are you going to bring him up as a milk- sop? 40631 Are you measuring the window for blinds for him?" |
40631 | Are you out of your senses, like Jamie, to ask such a question? 40631 Are you ready to take up his cause? |
40631 | Are you satisfied? |
40631 | Are you sure? 40631 Are you unwell?" |
40631 | Are you very tired, darling papa? |
40631 | At Wadebridge; and why not? 40631 Ball, Oliver, what ball?" |
40631 | Because I have missed-- but, Jamie, I hope you have not been at my workbox? |
40631 | But do you really think-- that Aunt Dionysia is going to have Jamie sent back to that man at Wadebridge? |
40631 | But how about the false lights? |
40631 | But how came it about? |
40631 | But how did you get him his freedom? |
40631 | But not of her heart? |
40631 | But papa!--what would he say? |
40631 | But she has been out to- night? |
40631 | But suppose he do n''t, and cuts down some on the glebe? |
40631 | But surely you have no wreckers here? |
40631 | But what am I to call you? |
40631 | But when do you come here, Aunt Dunes? |
40631 | But when? 40631 But who pulled the earrings off her?" |
40631 | But who will take care of you? |
40631 | But why do you suppose there will be wrecks? |
40631 | But why not? |
40631 | But why? |
40631 | But, auntie, are there many down- stairs? |
40631 | But, auntie, are you leaving the Glaze? |
40631 | But, surely, you are no longer bound to him? |
40631 | But, why to Scantlebray? 40631 But,"said Mr. Mules,"do you mean to tell me that you people in this benighted corner of the world live like sharks, upon whatever is cast overboard?" |
40631 | But-- Captain Coppinger--"Captain Coppinger? |
40631 | But-- the donkey? |
40631 | But-- where am I? |
40631 | But-- who did it, auntie? |
40631 | But-- who lives here? |
40631 | But-- will they let me have him back? |
40631 | Buttons, dear? |
40631 | By whom? |
40631 | Can I not prevent it? |
40631 | Can you ascend as you came down? |
40631 | Captain Coppinger found you somewhere, and forbade your ever going to that place again? |
40631 | Captain Coppinger has, surely, never asked you to put this alternative to me? |
40631 | Come and pick a bone with us? |
40631 | Come in? |
40631 | Did I not come down the cliffs for you? |
40631 | Did she say all that? |
40631 | Did you not send out Jamie with a light to mislead the sailors, and draw them on to Doom Bar? |
40631 | Did you take anything from under the tray? |
40631 | Dissimulation, aunt? |
40631 | Do you mean my dear papa? |
40631 | Do you play on the piano? |
40631 | Do you really believe that Coppinger killed him? |
40631 | Do you see this? |
40631 | Do you suppose if I were to entreat him that he would abandon smuggling? 40631 Do you think me capable of lashing at you with my crop?" |
40631 | Fond of hunting, eh? |
40631 | For heaven''s sake, you have told no one of our plans? |
40631 | From whom? |
40631 | Has this cottage been vacant for long, auntie? |
40631 | Have I brought it? |
40631 | Have I? |
40631 | Have you been at your usual task? |
40631 | Have you heard any reason assigned? |
40631 | Have you not? 40631 He is in pain, do you not see this as you stand here? |
40631 | He''s too hard on my little chap, ai n''t he? |
40631 | Hot or cold? |
40631 | How are you, old man? |
40631 | How are you? 40631 How came that?" |
40631 | How came you here? |
40631 | How can it be dangerous? |
40631 | How can you expect a bulb to flower if you take it out of the earth and stick it on a bedroom chair stirring broth? 40631 How d''y''do, Spargo? |
40631 | How do you know? |
40631 | How do you make that out? |
40631 | How do, Mr. Joshua? 40631 How have you been hurt?" |
40631 | How long have you been working at the first declension in the Latin grammar, Jamie? |
40631 | How long is she to be here with you? |
40631 | How many do you want, sir? |
40631 | How so? |
40631 | How so? |
40631 | How? |
40631 | I can not stay for more than a moment in which to ask how you do, and whether you are somewhat better? 40631 I could have told you as much-- and this has cost you money?" |
40631 | I demand, whence comes that brooch? 40631 I hope they''ve not give us the slip, Captain?" |
40631 | I may take Tib with me? |
40631 | I need not finish the bowl? |
40631 | I never asked to have these children thrust down my throat, like the fish- bone that strangled Lady Godiva-- no, who was it? 40631 I s''pose I ca n''t on the spur of the moment go in and ask over St. Minver parson?" |
40631 | I should like to get up; may I? |
40631 | I suppose you know who I am? |
40631 | I was escorting her home, to her husband''s----"Is she married? |
40631 | I will not-- that wretch-- beat me? 40631 I will tell you, but-- who is that just entered the room?" |
40631 | I''ll tell you what,said the old man,"if you will not let me in I suppose you will not object to my writing a line to Judith?" |
40631 | I-- insult you? 40631 I-- oh-- I!--after my father''s death?" |
40631 | I-- why so? |
40631 | I? 40631 Indeed?" |
40631 | Is any one coming to live here? |
40631 | Is he so hateful to you? |
40631 | Is it a very serious matter, Judith, and engrossing? |
40631 | Is it because of last night''s foolery you say that? |
40631 | Is it due to the ideas in which you have been brought up that you are not afraid-- when you have reduced me to a wreck? |
40631 | Is that all? |
40631 | Is that you? |
40631 | Is the sale over, aunt? |
40631 | Is there peace between us? |
40631 | Jamie, did you lift the tray? |
40631 | Jamie, who sent you out to do this? 40631 Jamie,"said Judith, looking him straight in the face,"have you been to my box?" |
40631 | Ju, may I have these buttons? |
40631 | Judith, can you ride? |
40631 | Judith,said Coppinger,"will you stand surety that he does not tell tales?" |
40631 | Judith-- is that her name? |
40631 | Kicking along, Mr. Menaida, old man? |
40631 | Look here,said he,"what is that?" |
40631 | May I help you, aunt? |
40631 | May I see her if I come at any other hour? |
40631 | Me? 40631 Middlin'', thanky''; and how be you, gov''nor?" |
40631 | Middlin''--and yours? |
40631 | Middlin''also; and your missus? |
40631 | Miss Trevisa''s letter, authorizing you to act for her? |
40631 | Must not say what, Jamie? |
40631 | My dear, we know all about that; very nice and sweet for you to say so-- isn''t it duckie? |
40631 | My room, auntie? |
40631 | No board at all? |
40631 | No one to see you? |
40631 | No place in your establishment for that party, eh? |
40631 | No, I am not afraid; why should I be? |
40631 | No; a Dane would never have thought of asking why not?--why not lash a poor little silly boy? |
40631 | Not a Dane? |
40631 | Not that; but, if she were here, what would become of me? 40631 Not_ rosa_,_ rosà ¦_?" |
40631 | Nothing? 40631 Now Jukes,"said Vokins,"will you take a turn, or shall I?" |
40631 | Now may I get out? |
40631 | Now papa''s dead I''ll do no more lessons, shall I? |
40631 | Now then,said the agent,"what do you think of me-- that I am a real friend?" |
40631 | Now, how many do you remember to have heard named? 40631 Now, young hopeful, what say you? |
40631 | Of me? 40631 Of what sort? |
40631 | Of what? |
40631 | Oh, Jamie, not till we get back to Polzeath? |
40631 | Oh, do see, Ju, how patched the glass is with foam!--and is it not dirty? |
40631 | Oh, sir, I am so very, very grateful to you for having received us into your snug little house----"You like it? 40631 Oh, sir, is he here?--have you got Jamie here?" |
40631 | Oh, uncle? 40631 Oh, where is Jamie? |
40631 | Or bars of silver? |
40631 | Papa, you are listening to the roar of the sea? |
40631 | Papa, you are listening to the roar? |
40631 | Papa,said Judith hastily, seeing his discouragement and knowing his tendency to depression,"papa, do you hear the sea how it roars? |
40631 | Perfectly,answered Sir William Molesworth;"were you in that?" |
40631 | Please, Mr. Scantlebray, may I get out? 40631 Please,"said Jamie, timidly,"may I get out now and go home?" |
40631 | Salvors? 40631 Shall I begin, Jukes? |
40631 | Shall I come to you, or will you to me!--through the tamarisks? |
40631 | Shall I light you a pair of candles, Judith? |
40631 | Shall we take a light? |
40631 | So-- in the night you went to him? |
40631 | Thanky'', sir; but, how about the boarding of the floor? 40631 That, then, is the common explanation?" |
40631 | The Black Prince? |
40631 | The rabbits? 40631 The white gate!--what about that?" |
40631 | Then what do you want? |
40631 | Then why do you not, father? 40631 Then why do you take snail- shells?" |
40631 | Then why have you given yourself to me? |
40631 | Then why not peace? |
40631 | Then will naught that I have said make you desist? |
40631 | Then, shall you go to her and reside with her? |
40631 | Then-- Jamie, will you come back with me to the house? |
40631 | They say!--who say? 40631 Through the lanes and along the lonely roads?" |
40631 | To the master-- to whom else? 40631 Torn off?" |
40631 | Unreservedly? |
40631 | Was the porridge as you liked it this morning? 40631 Well, what of that? |
40631 | Well,said Coppinger,"what answer do you make?" |
40631 | Well-- and what did they say? |
40631 | Were any lives lost? |
40631 | What I mean is, can you forgive me? |
40631 | What I might do? 40631 What about your workbox, Ju?" |
40631 | What ails her? 40631 What answer do you make to this?" |
40631 | What are the crooks for, dear? |
40631 | What are you fidgeting at, my dear? |
40631 | What are you looking at? |
40631 | What brings this man here? |
40631 | What brings you here? |
40631 | What buttons? |
40631 | What chain, my pretty? |
40631 | What chapter is that? |
40631 | What do you ask? |
40631 | What do you know? 40631 What do you know?" |
40631 | What do you mean? |
40631 | What do you mean? |
40631 | What do you mean? |
40631 | What do you mean? |
40631 | What do you mean? |
40631 | What does he mean by this-- this conduct? |
40631 | What has he done? |
40631 | What has sprung out of it? |
40631 | What have you done? |
40631 | What have you taken? |
40631 | What is fox- hunting when you come to consider-- or going after a snipe or a partridge? 40631 What is he here for?" |
40631 | What is it you want? |
40631 | What is it, Davy? |
40631 | What is it, Jamie? |
40631 | What is it, Judith? 40631 What is it, dear?" |
40631 | What is it, dear? |
40631 | What is that noise at the door? |
40631 | What is that? |
40631 | What is that? |
40631 | What is that? |
40631 | What is the law about wreckage, Menaida, old man? |
40631 | What is the matter with you? |
40631 | What is the matter? 40631 What is the meaning of these two five pounds?" |
40631 | What is the meaning of this? 40631 What is the meaning of this?" |
40631 | What is the meaning of this? |
40631 | What is this-- at the bottom?--a ring? |
40631 | What is this? 40631 What is your meaning?" |
40631 | What led you astray? |
40631 | What makes you say that? |
40631 | What of that? 40631 What say you to the gay things there? |
40631 | What say you, corporal, shall we drink his blood? 40631 What shall I play? |
40631 | What signals? |
40631 | What was his name? |
40631 | What was that he said about Oliver Menaida? |
40631 | What will be said,growled Coppinger,"when it is seen that you wear no ring?" |
40631 | What''s a hat wi''out a head in it, or boots wi''out feet in''em, or a man wi''out spirits in his in''ard parts? |
40631 | What, Jamie, strike me, your only friend? |
40631 | What, married in the morning and roving the downs at night? |
40631 | What, no one-- not--he hesitated, and said,"not a woman?" |
40631 | What, sir? |
40631 | What, ten thousand? |
40631 | What, then, are your alternatives? |
40631 | What-- all I have done? |
40631 | What-- go? |
40631 | What-- this, Menaida, old man? |
40631 | What-- to Aunt Dunes? 40631 What-- you were wrecked?--in that ship last night?" |
40631 | When did it come on? |
40631 | When? |
40631 | When? |
40631 | Where did you lose the chain, Jamie? |
40631 | Where is Jamie? |
40631 | Where is Judith? |
40631 | Where is she going to take us to? |
40631 | Where was it? 40631 Where will you go?" |
40631 | Where will you take him? |
40631 | Where''s a candle, Corporal? |
40631 | Where''s the goose? |
40631 | Where? 40631 Where?" |
40631 | Which is it to be? 40631 Which is it, Mr. Obadiah, rum or brandy?" |
40631 | Who are you? |
40631 | Who did it? 40631 Who did?" |
40631 | Who ever would have thought of seeing you here? |
40631 | Who goes there? |
40631 | Who have taken whom? |
40631 | Who is below? |
40631 | Who is that man with you? |
40631 | Who is that? |
40631 | Who is that? |
40631 | Who is there? 40631 Who is this?" |
40631 | Who''s been the idiot to forget the spirits? |
40631 | Whose clothes? |
40631 | Whose house can it be? |
40631 | Why did he not let you come to my house to salute your aunt? |
40631 | Why did n''t papa get a nicer sister-- like you? |
40631 | Why did you do that? |
40631 | Why do you look at me so? 40631 Why do you not come and see me? |
40631 | Why do you threaten? |
40631 | Why have you tied that bandage about your head? |
40631 | Why is it here? |
40631 | Why is it there? 40631 Why may I not see her?" |
40631 | Why not? 40631 Why not? |
40631 | Why not? 40631 Why not?" |
40631 | Why not? |
40631 | Why not? |
40631 | Why not? |
40631 | Why not? |
40631 | Why not? |
40631 | Why not? |
40631 | Why not? |
40631 | Why not? |
40631 | Why should I? 40631 Why should they not see it?" |
40631 | Why should they not; have you aught against it? 40631 Why that sigh, Judith?" |
40631 | Why to me, sir? |
40631 | Why!--what has made you bring a load of sand up here? 40631 Why, then, have you promised to come to me?" |
40631 | Why, what is there to harm us? |
40631 | Why, you do n''t suppose fire- arms will go off wi''out a charge? 40631 Why? |
40631 | Why? |
40631 | Will they be good and honorable and contented thoughts? 40631 Will you forgive me?" |
40631 | Will you give me your hand? |
40631 | Will you go at once and see if Judith Trevisa is home? |
40631 | Will you honor me by taking a seat near me-- under the trellis? |
40631 | Will you let me out if I do? |
40631 | Will you not have a doctor to see you? |
40631 | Will you refuse me even the pleasure of letting you see what is there? |
40631 | Will you swear to it? |
40631 | With what? |
40631 | Wo n''t it take paint? |
40631 | Would you like more now? |
40631 | Yes, I do,retorted the boy, resentfully,"I know the wild goose and the tame one-- which do you call that?" |
40631 | Yes, you have taken me up, now must I throw----She did not finish the sentence; she meant, must she voluntarily throw herself into his arms? |
40631 | Yes; and that door leads to your sister''s? |
40631 | You are no Dane, or you would not have asked''Why not?'' 40631 You are sure they''re down, Wyvill?" |
40631 | You are sure you do n''t mind one rum? |
40631 | You can not what? |
40631 | You did not throw it over the cliff? |
40631 | You do n''t suppose I carry these sort of things about with me? |
40631 | You have a close conveyance ready for your patient? |
40631 | You have come to me, Judith? |
40631 | You have furnished him with the key to the signals? |
40631 | You have received orders-- from Coppinger? |
40631 | You hear her? |
40631 | You know best what opportunities have offered----"Aunt, what do you mean? |
40631 | You think he''ll throw it up? |
40631 | You think not? |
40631 | You think so? |
40631 | You torment me, you-- when I am ill? 40631 You were not led astray by false lights?" |
40631 | You will accept nothing? |
40631 | You will come down- stairs? |
40631 | You will follow, will you not? |
40631 | You will not mention what I have told you to anyone? |
40631 | You wo n''t come? 40631 You wo n''t mind my spending an hour or two with you, will you?" |
40631 | You-- Judith-- why? |
40631 | You-- you? |
40631 | Your aunt? 40631 ***** Are our readers acquainted with that local delicacy entitled, in Cornwall and Devon, Squab Pie? 40631 --in a tone of concentrated rage--Oliver?" |
40631 | A drop of real first- rate cognac?" |
40631 | A moment after an idea struck him, and he turned his head sharply, fixed his eyes on young Menaida, and said,"Where did we meet?" |
40631 | A window overhead was thrown open, and a voice that Judith recognized as that of Mrs. Obadiah Scantlebray, called:"Who is there?--what is wanted?" |
40631 | Alone, eh? |
40631 | Am I to be made a beast of burden of? |
40631 | Am I to rack my brains to find a home for my nephew and niece, only that I may be thrust out myself? |
40631 | Am I to speak in chains, or will you release me?" |
40631 | Am I to tear over the country on post- horses to seek a nephew here and a niece there? |
40631 | And Captain Cruel lets you have this dear little cottage?" |
40631 | And Doom Bar, what is that but a counter on which the good things are spread, and those first there get the first share?" |
40631 | And I had been building for you a castle-- not in Spain, but in a contiguous country-- who''d have thought it? |
40631 | And Judith-- what were her thoughts? |
40631 | And because he had not obtained them from a jeweller, did it follow that he had taken them unlawfully? |
40631 | And how often, just as he seemed about to drop asleep, had he become again suddenly awake, through some terror, or some imagined discomfort? |
40631 | And if it did, whither would it go? |
40631 | And now, what will you do?" |
40631 | And pray how did you do this? |
40631 | And so there has been a rumpus, eh? |
40631 | And the chain? |
40631 | And the repairs of the vestry-- are they to be reckoned at four and ninepence farthing? |
40631 | And was she doing the girl an injury in helping her to a marriage that would assure her a home and a comfortable income? |
40631 | And what brings you here?" |
40631 | And what can I do with a set of babies? |
40631 | And who is the happy man to be? |
40631 | And why so long untenanted? |
40631 | And you really will humor my childish whim?" |
40631 | And you will give me a little bit, and Scanty a bit, and take a little bit home to Ju, eh?" |
40631 | And you, too, Menaida, old man?" |
40631 | And, supposing that the shelf she felt with her hand were not the track, could she descend again to the place where she had been? |
40631 | And-- how much luggage have you? |
40631 | And-- who was Coppinger? |
40631 | Answer me, did you go on board the wrecked vessel to save those who were cast away?" |
40631 | Answer me-- who gave you those jewels?" |
40631 | Any fool can ram tow into a skin and thrust wires into the neck, but what is the result? |
40631 | Are there not other asylums?" |
40631 | Are they family jewels? |
40631 | Are you afraid?" |
40631 | Are you anything of a sportsman, sir?" |
40631 | Are you comfortable there?" |
40631 | Are you expecting some one? |
40631 | Are you fond of music?" |
40631 | Are you partial to almond rock, orphin?" |
40631 | Are you ready, Scanty?" |
40631 | Are you satisfied?" |
40631 | Are you sure they are loaded?" |
40631 | At what time am I likely to catch you both in? |
40631 | Be us a going round Pentyre?" |
40631 | Between me and you there is a great gulf fixed-- see you? |
40631 | Between sickle and scythe, eh?" |
40631 | Both, moreover, did justice to Mr. Menaida''s wine, they did not spare it; why should they? |
40631 | But how about myself? |
40631 | But suppose you do not have the chance?" |
40631 | But then-- what a price must be paid to save him? |
40631 | But there-- where is Jamie? |
40631 | But was smuggling a sin? |
40631 | But what heading shall I give my discourse? |
40631 | But where was the samphire? |
40631 | But who can say whether they be true or false?" |
40631 | But who could have supposed that anyone would have gone to the box, raised the tray and searched the contents of the compartment beneath? |
40631 | But, my dear child, why are you in such a hurry to get rid of me? |
40631 | Call Jump, set''Shakespeare''before her, and she will hammer out a scene-- correctly as to words; but where is the sense? |
40631 | Can I endure that you should call him by his Christian name, while I am but Captain Coppinger? |
40631 | Can nothing be done for this poor little craft, drifting in fog-- aimless!--and going on to the rocks?" |
40631 | Can you not help me a little, and reduce the amount one has to think of and do? |
40631 | Can you remember? |
40631 | Cargreen?" |
40631 | Cargreen?" |
40631 | Cheap, is it not? |
40631 | Come, not the day of the month-- but the month, eh?" |
40631 | Come, shall we play at army and navy, and the forfeit be a drink of Reynard''s blood?" |
40631 | Coppinger looked at her with his boring, dark eyes intently, and said:"What is the meaning of this?" |
40631 | Coppinger looked steadily at her for a while, then he said,"Are you ill? |
40631 | Coppinger?" |
40631 | Could Judith go to bed and let Coppinger run into the net prepared for his feet-- go to his death? |
40631 | Could he afford to buy her a set at the price of some hundreds of pounds? |
40631 | Could he leave her? |
40631 | Could nothing be done for the little creature? |
40631 | Could she carry the odor in her clothes? |
40631 | Could she climb to this point-- climb up the bare rock, with sheer precipice below her? |
40631 | Could the moon fly away into space were the terrestrial orb to bid it cease to be a satellite? |
40631 | Cramp and pains-- but what is that to you?" |
40631 | Cruel Coppinger?" |
40631 | Dare she seize it? |
40631 | Did he kill him?" |
40631 | Did he mean it? |
40631 | Did she mean it? |
40631 | Did she think of Oliver as Mr. Menaida, junior? |
40631 | Did they not want you to go, also?" |
40631 | Did you ever read''Hamlet,''Captain Coppinger?" |
40631 | Did you ever see a kittiwake turn his neck in that fashion? |
40631 | Do n''t burs stick? |
40631 | Do n''t you say so, poppet?" |
40631 | Do they think I''m a tradesman to be ordered about? |
40631 | Do you hear me?" |
40631 | Do you hear the roar of the sea, papa?" |
40631 | Do you hear? |
40631 | Do you hear?" |
40631 | Do you intend to remain in that den of wreckers and cut- throats? |
40631 | Do you know Mistress Polgrean''s sweetie shop?" |
40631 | Do you know he might have killed me?" |
40631 | Do you know the handwriting?" |
40631 | Do you know what is in the loft of the cottage we were in? |
40631 | Do you know why the bells of St. Enodoc are so sweet? |
40631 | Do you not know that man seeks in marriage not his counterpart but his contrast? |
40631 | Do you not know where your clothes were put?" |
40631 | Do you see a small door by the clock- case? |
40631 | Do you see the winder, Orphing? |
40631 | Do you think I could bear that? |
40631 | Do you think that I have gained naught from you? |
40631 | Do you understand what that means?" |
40631 | Do you understand? |
40631 | Does he remain long in England?" |
40631 | Does that not please your humor?" |
40631 | Does us desarve a drop of refreshment or does us not? |
40631 | Dull, eh? |
40631 | Eating their own weight of victuals at twopence- ha''penny a head, eh? |
40631 | Five pounds in pencil added to each, and then summed up in the total? |
40631 | From no other direction?" |
40631 | Gingerbreads or tartlets, almond rock or barley- sugar?" |
40631 | Go to Pentyre, you want to find gold- dust on the shore, do n''t you?" |
40631 | Going to sleep? |
40631 | Had he been anxious and unhappy about her? |
40631 | Had he been struck by the falling mast and stunned or beaten overboard? |
40631 | Had he known that the estate was obtainable when he had come suddenly out of the clouds into the place to secure it? |
40631 | Had he obeyed her and gone back to Uncle Zachie? |
40631 | Had she been intercepted by the Preventive men? |
40631 | Had she got there in the fog, not knowing her course; or had she come there knowingly, and was making for the mouth of the Camel? |
40631 | Had she, bewildered by that gull, diverged from the track? |
40631 | Had-- had she reached the top of the cliff? |
40631 | Has any one seen Jenkyns?" |
40631 | Has he not come home?" |
40631 | Has she been looking at it? |
40631 | Have they been bought? |
40631 | Have you a light?" |
40631 | Have you any business in the place?" |
40631 | Have you any objection to that?" |
40631 | Have you donkeys?" |
40631 | Have you ever met him?" |
40631 | Have you heard?" |
40631 | Have you sent for the undertaker? |
40631 | He asked:"But how comes the boy to be without clothes?" |
40631 | He was not the man to concern himself in other people''s affairs; why should he take trouble on behalf of Judith and her brother? |
40631 | How are you all? |
40631 | How are you? |
40631 | How came you here? |
40631 | How can I see you there, in the doorway?" |
40631 | How can you be other? |
40631 | How can you say that he is not the man who has done it? |
40631 | How could he? |
40631 | How could he?" |
40631 | How do you get on? |
40631 | How do you like them?" |
40631 | How has he wronged you?" |
40631 | How have you managed to get all my things together?" |
40631 | How many have you brought with you?" |
40631 | How many rooms have you in this house? |
40631 | How much? |
40631 | How would the world regard her? |
40631 | How would you like it, Aunt, if you were snatched away to Barthelmy fair, and suddenly found yourself among tight- rope dancers, and Jack Puddings?" |
40631 | How''s the orphings? |
40631 | I hate him, and so do you, do n''t you, Ju? |
40631 | I have no doubt it will be very comfortable and acceptable to Judith to hear this, but-- what is to become of me? |
40631 | I mean, strum?" |
40631 | I say, old man, are you ill? |
40631 | I shall give that to your sister and she will keep the supply, eh, will you not, Judith?" |
40631 | I should hardly advocate that for the restoration of a church; besides, where is the savage to be got? |
40631 | I suppose you know that you must have mourning? |
40631 | I wonder what she will say, eh?" |
40631 | I wonder where Jamie is?" |
40631 | I''ve entered into agreements----""With whom?" |
40631 | If I said Zachie Menaida I suppose I meant what I said, or are you hard of hearing? |
40631 | If found and recognized, what excuse could she give? |
40631 | If he established before the world that the marriage was invalid, what would she do? |
40631 | If the watch were to find her there, what explanation of her presence could she give? |
40631 | In which quarter of the year? |
40631 | Is every one to lie in clover and I in stubble? |
40631 | Is he a very wicked man?" |
40631 | Is he hurt seriously?" |
40631 | Is he hurt? |
40631 | Is it an assault? |
40631 | Is it not an insult that you refuse to come in? |
40631 | Is it possible that instead of your visiting Mr. Oliver, Mr. Oliver is now visiting you-- here, in this cottage?" |
40631 | Is it worth your while having this?" |
40631 | Is not that insulting, galling, stinging, maddening?" |
40631 | Is not this a collection of scraps cut very small? |
40631 | Is that why you are out at night?" |
40631 | Is your aid worth it? |
40631 | It is so, is it not, Jukes?" |
40631 | It was n''t built for the lovely Dionysia, was it? |
40631 | It''s holiday time, ai n''t it, Orphing? |
40631 | Jamie had gone out with his ass and the lantern, that was true, but was Jamie''s account of the affair to be relied on? |
40631 | Jamie''s cost in that establishment will be £70 in the year, and how much do you suppose that you possess?" |
40631 | Jamie? |
40631 | Ju, the door is open; shall we go in?" |
40631 | Judith said to him:"My dear, you have not been skinning and stuffing any birds lately, have you?" |
40631 | Jukes, this is serious, Jukes; eh, Jukes?" |
40631 | Jump, have you seen where I put the key? |
40631 | Late in life to become nurse and keep the bottle and pap- bowl going, eh, old man? |
40631 | May I have the basket of buttons?" |
40631 | May it be so?" |
40631 | Menaida?" |
40631 | Menaida?" |
40631 | Miss Trevisa slightly courtesied, then said,"I am sure you are over- indulgent, but what is to become of me? |
40631 | Must she resign herself to that man of whom she knew so little, whom she feared so greatly? |
40631 | No answer was given to this; but he who had been addressed as Captain asked--"Are the asses out?" |
40631 | No orders against the pistol going off of itself, Captain, if I have a chance presently?" |
40631 | No strength, no resolution from seeing you toil on in your thankless work, without apparent results? |
40631 | Not very logical reasoning, but what woman, where her feelings are engaged, does reason logically? |
40631 | Not? |
40631 | Now tell me, what did you get?" |
40631 | Now to work, shall we? |
40631 | Now what he has commissioned me to say is-- will you go with him? |
40631 | Now you are going away, is there anything connected with the house you wish me to attend to? |
40631 | Now, did you take that?" |
40631 | Now, then, what about mourning? |
40631 | Now, you wo n''t mind my throwing an eye round this house, will you-- a scientific eye? |
40631 | Oh, not come yet? |
40631 | Old mother Dunes? |
40631 | Or had he neglected her injunction, and was he in the house, was he below along with the revellers? |
40631 | Other people had to put up with rejection, why not Coppinger? |
40631 | Presently she asked--"Are you sure, aunt, that Jamie is gone back to Polzeath?" |
40631 | Presently she withdrew her hand, and said,"Is not that enough? |
40631 | Pull with me, old man?" |
40631 | Sarve out the grog?" |
40631 | Shall I find those in your house?" |
40631 | Shall I light the candles? |
40631 | Shall I say grace? |
40631 | Shall we make an end of him? |
40631 | Shall we run him to earth? |
40631 | She had been saddled with these children, much against her wishes, and if she shifted the saddle to the shoulders of one willing to bear it, why not? |
40631 | She had gone out at night in storm to save Cruel Coppinger-- should she not go out in still starlight to aid her own twin- brother, if he needed her? |
40631 | She read--"Why do you not come and see me? |
40631 | She said, quietly, in altered tone,"Can I get you anything to comfort you?" |
40631 | She went on in her busy mind to ask why he had come to see her? |
40631 | She would like to be at the ball-- and dance three dances with Oliver-- but would Captain Coppinger suffer her? |
40631 | Should I be turned out into the cold at my age by this red- headed hussy, to find a home for myself with strangers? |
40631 | Should she make the confession which would incriminate her husband? |
40631 | Should she show them into the study? |
40631 | Should she take that? |
40631 | So will you, sir-- eh? |
40631 | Surely not on an ordinary evening?" |
40631 | Tell me-- uncle-- tell me truly, what do you think about Captain Coppinger? |
40631 | That I''ve not an income of my own, and that I am dependent on my customers? |
40631 | That door did you say?" |
40631 | That he liked her-- after all she had done? |
40631 | That is what I heard named-- eh, Captain?" |
40631 | That shilling, if you please?" |
40631 | That star on the black sea-- what did it mean? |
40631 | The nights close in very fast and very dark now, eh, Commander?" |
40631 | The shelf at first was tolerably broad, and could be followed without risk by one whose head was steady; but for how long would it so continue? |
40631 | Then Mr. Menaida started up:"And-- you sell yourself to this man for Jamie?" |
40631 | Then for what object was it built? |
40631 | Then he chuckled and said:"Sent Miss Judith on a wild goose chase, have I? |
40631 | Then, after a short pause, he asked further,"And your unshod feet?" |
40631 | Then, after chuckling- to himself, Scantlebray, senior, said:"Obadiah, old man, I wonder what Missie Ju is thinking? |
40631 | Then, suddenly, he stood still opposite her and asked, in a threatening tone:"Do you not like your room? |
40631 | Then, suddenly--"I do not know that they have been bought? |
40631 | There is money in the house, I suppose?" |
40631 | There is no command issued that you are not to take a message from me to your master?" |
40631 | There would be nothing wrong in that, Ju?" |
40631 | There-- what more can you desire? |
40631 | They are not paste, I suppose?" |
40631 | They were not new from a jeweller, but what of that? |
40631 | To find for them places at your table, that I may be deprived of a crust and a bone under it? |
40631 | To what would it lead? |
40631 | To whom does this house belong?" |
40631 | Trevisa?" |
40631 | Was Judith stirring on his arm? |
40631 | Was he at Uncle Zachie''s? |
40631 | Was he dead, broken to pieces, pounded by those strong hoofs? |
40631 | Was he jealous? |
40631 | Was it conceivable that she had passed there?--there in the dark? |
40631 | Was it five thousand? |
40631 | Was it possible for him to bring Coppinger to justice? |
40631 | Was it possible that Judith had shrunk from coming to his house to bear the message? |
40631 | Was it possible that there was a lane on the further side of the house which would give her the desired opportunity? |
40631 | Was it possible that this could go on without driving her mad? |
40631 | Was she bound to fulfil her engagement to Mr. Obadiah? |
40631 | Was she cruel? |
40631 | Was she his wife? |
40631 | Was she ill? |
40631 | Was she restrained there against her will from visiting her old friends? |
40631 | Was that the interpretation of those words of excuse in which he had declared her his queen? |
40631 | Was that the meaning of the offer of the choice of all his treasures?--of the vehemence with which he had seized her hand and had kissed it? |
40631 | Was that what had prompted the strange note sent to her along with the keg of spirits to Uncle Zachie? |
40631 | Was that why he had come to the cottage the day after his accident? |
40631 | Was this the hand of Judith who had taught Jamie caligraphy, had written out his copies as neatly and beautifully as copper- plate? |
40631 | We encountered a terrible gale as we approached this coast; do you recollect the loss of the Andromeda?" |
40631 | We have just heard----""What?" |
40631 | We owe our wreck to you?" |
40631 | We will put it another way, eh, Jukes?" |
40631 | Well, sir,"to Mr. Mules,"what was the figure of the valuation? |
40631 | Were they beating him, because he cried out in the night and disturbed the house? |
40631 | Were they ever married? |
40631 | Were they married? |
40631 | Were they not brought to justice?" |
40631 | Were they putting him into a dark room by himself, and was he nearly mad with terror? |
40631 | Were they tormenting the poor little frightened creature? |
40631 | What a fragile fine quill that was on which hung so much beauty? |
40631 | What about clothing again? |
40631 | What about?" |
40631 | What age did you say you were?" |
40631 | What are Porth- quin and Hayle Bay but our laps, in which lie the wrecks heaven sends us? |
40631 | What are we to do about Jamie?" |
40631 | What became of the jewelry? |
40631 | What can I do for you now, eh?" |
40631 | What can he tell about building- stone here? |
40631 | What chance?" |
40631 | What coat did I have on when I read it? |
40631 | What could she do to save Jamie? |
40631 | What could she do? |
40631 | What course would he pursue? |
40631 | What danger would ensue to her if she went out and ran back to Wadebridge? |
40631 | What did Aunt Dunes mean when she pointed to a door and spoke of her room? |
40631 | What did I say? |
40631 | What did he say?" |
40631 | What did this fierce, strange man, mean? |
40631 | What did you say you wanted-- advice?" |
40631 | What do y''say, Gearge? |
40631 | What do you figure up?" |
40631 | What do you know about him? |
40631 | What do you know?" |
40631 | What do you most admire, most covet? |
40631 | What do you say to that, Jukes? |
40631 | What do you suppose I have in my pocket? |
40631 | What do you think I would do?" |
40631 | What do you want it for?" |
40631 | What do you want?" |
40631 | What does that door lead to?" |
40631 | What explanation could satisfy the inquisitive? |
40631 | What for?" |
40631 | What for?" |
40631 | What has caused this squabble? |
40631 | What has happened? |
40631 | What have you been taking? |
40631 | What if he has been bought?" |
40631 | What is all that dark stuff there?" |
40631 | What is it all about? |
40631 | What is it?" |
40631 | What is that light?" |
40631 | What is the accommodation here? |
40631 | What is the figure, eh?" |
40631 | What is the matter with you? |
40631 | What is the meaning of that, pray?" |
40631 | What letter is that?" |
40631 | What money is there in the house for present necessities? |
40631 | What say you, mates? |
40631 | What say you? |
40631 | What was he doing? |
40631 | What was she to do with them? |
40631 | What was the meaning of it? |
40631 | What was the particular reason why Captain Coppinger objected to the visits of his wife to Polzeath at that time? |
40631 | What was to be done? |
40631 | What was to be done? |
40631 | What was to be done? |
40631 | What were the exact words Captain Cruel had employed? |
40631 | What were those people doing to him? |
40631 | What will the world call you, eh?" |
40631 | What will the world say, eh? |
40631 | What will you have?--some cold beef-- and cider? |
40631 | What would become of the boy at the asylum? |
40631 | What would he do? |
40631 | What would they have to live upon? |
40631 | What would you be then, eh? |
40631 | What''s the news?" |
40631 | What, eating and drinking? |
40631 | When all were made fast, old Mr. Menaida said:"Now, Noll, my boy, are you armed?" |
40631 | When did she come in?" |
40631 | When is your birthday? |
40631 | When you have your cake-- raisin- cake, eh?" |
40631 | Where are you, Ju?" |
40631 | Where are you? |
40631 | Where are your manners? |
40631 | Where did you get them? |
40631 | Where do you come from?" |
40631 | Where is Jamie? |
40631 | Where is Jamie?" |
40631 | Where is Jenkyns? |
40631 | Where is it?" |
40631 | Where is the evidence? |
40631 | Where is your husband? |
40631 | Where the life? |
40631 | Where was Jamie? |
40631 | Where was she to put them? |
40631 | Where-- from whom did you get those earrings? |
40631 | Which is it? |
40631 | Who can say? |
40631 | Who else would be that, were not I?" |
40631 | Who ever set you to this wicked task?" |
40631 | Who gave it you?" |
40631 | Who is it?" |
40631 | Who is that?" |
40631 | Who sent the sand upon it? |
40631 | Who wanted the church? |
40631 | Who was this that dared to bellow in the house of death, when her dear, dear father lay up- stairs with the blinds down, asleep? |
40631 | Who was this who had dared to oppose her will to his? |
40631 | Who would be abroad at that time? |
40631 | Who would lull his fears, who sing to him old familiar strains? |
40631 | Who''s there?" |
40631 | Who, without the miraculous powers of a prophet, could tell that B should be natural?" |
40631 | Whoever it is, he is pretending to be as dead drunk and stupefied as the others, and which is the man, Noll?" |
40631 | Whom could she trust? |
40631 | Why are you here? |
40631 | Why did Captain Coppinger buy all my dear crinkum- crankums?" |
40631 | Why did Coppinger call her cruel? |
40631 | Why did He not send lightning and strike him dead?" |
40631 | Why did he ask questions about this little picture? |
40631 | Why did he not see her anymore? |
40631 | Why did you not come to the Glaze?" |
40631 | Why do you walk backward?" |
40631 | Why had Judith failed to accomplish the piece? |
40631 | Why had he run there? |
40631 | Why have they been here?" |
40631 | Why look suspiciously at Judith as he did so-- suspiciously and threateningly? |
40631 | Why not? |
40631 | Why not?" |
40631 | Why that chancel, show me the builder who will contract to do that alone at a hundred and twenty- seven pounds? |
40631 | Why was Judith not submissive? |
40631 | Why will you take nothing? |
40631 | Why, there''s a letter come to me now from Plymouth-- a naturalist there, asking for more birds; and what can I do? |
40631 | Why?" |
40631 | Will it not be fun? |
40631 | Will nothing move you?" |
40631 | Will she listen to you?" |
40631 | Will you be satisfied to have the idolized brother with the deep seas rolling between you?" |
40631 | Will you come as well?" |
40631 | Will you come?" |
40631 | Will you continue to regard him as Uncle Zachie, and be to him as his dear little niece, and keep house for him in the sunny southern land?" |
40631 | Will you do something for Ju? |
40631 | Will you give me my absolution?" |
40631 | Will you make a rabbit, also? |
40631 | Will you see to that?" |
40631 | Will you sit down and have a drop? |
40631 | Will you take your turn?" |
40631 | With the flour- roller?" |
40631 | Wo n''t he be pleased?" |
40631 | Would any other hand rest on the hot brow and hold it down on the pillow? |
40631 | Would he expect to dance with her all the evening? |
40631 | Would he have done that had he thought it involved danger, or, rather, serious danger? |
40631 | Would he proceed against her for attempted murder? |
40631 | Would her brother have approved of her forwarding this union? |
40631 | Would she make no concession to him? |
40631 | Would the moon shine out again and show him what he dreaded seeing? |
40631 | Would they call on her to part- maintain them? |
40631 | Would they suffice to sustain her? |
40631 | Would they take her away and lock her up for the rest of the night? |
40631 | Would you mind lending me a hand? |
40631 | Would you mind-- just another drop?" |
40631 | Would you oblige me with lighting one? |
40631 | Would you turn your back and leave me?" |
40631 | You are naught to me but a robber, a wrecker, a drunkard, a murderer-- go down into Hell?''" |
40631 | You ask me why you should be afraid of me?" |
40631 | You can not wish me to marry Cruel Coppinger?" |
40631 | You dare to do it?" |
40631 | You do n''t suppose Coppinger and his men will allow themselves to be taken easily? |
40631 | You have n''t been out on the cliffs to- day, have you?" |
40631 | You know that?" |
40631 | You know whom they got in place of me? |
40631 | You refuse this alternative?" |
40631 | You see them pokey things my brother has drawn? |
40631 | You see?" |
40631 | You see?" |
40631 | You understand clearly? |
40631 | You understand me?" |
40631 | You understand what I mean, father? |
40631 | You were about to say something?" |
40631 | You will always be to Jamie what you are now, Ju-- his protector or champion? |
40631 | You will eat and drink, I suppose? |
40631 | You will make an effort, will you not, Jamie? |
40631 | You will promise to come and see me again? |
40631 | You will remember the signals? |
40631 | You will strike me?" |
40631 | You wo n''t object to my pulling out my tape and taking the plan of the edifice, will you?" |
40631 | You wo n''t take three brandies and one rum?" |
40631 | You''ll ask me down for the shooting, wo n''t you, Commander- in- Chief?" |
40631 | _ Could_ he fight Captain Coppinger? |
40631 | _ Is_ anyone there?" |
40631 | and I suppose you''ll keep a hunter?" |
40631 | and are we to come here with you?" |
40631 | and what did they give you for the false code of signals?" |
40631 | are you going to the ball at Wadebridge after Christmas?" |
40631 | asked Scantlebray;"or do you need a more ceremonious introduction to Mr. Obadiah, eh?" |
40631 | bless my heart, when?" |
40631 | could she not draw a few steps nearer? |
40631 | do you grudge her to me?" |
40631 | do you not know? |
40631 | do you recall this?" |
40631 | exclaimed Mr. Menaida,"and what do you want? |
40631 | exclaimed the Captain,"you here?" |
40631 | exclaimed the Rector,"and pray who pays the fees for drowned men I may be expected to bury?" |
40631 | had n''t us better run over to the Rock and get a little anker there?" |
40631 | have I offended you again? |
40631 | how about your lunch?" |
40631 | is everything to be thrown on my shoulders? |
40631 | middlin''?" |
40631 | not if papa wished it?" |
40631 | or did he lie on deck enveloped and smothered in wet sail, or had he been caught and strangled by the cordage? |
40631 | or do you desire that your friends should bestir themselves to obtain your release? |
40631 | or take the other alternative? |
40631 | ordered Captain Coppinger, standing up,"you woman, are you a fool? |
40631 | said he,"whatever am I about? |
40631 | said she,"my dear, are you the young lady whose brother is here? |
40631 | she asked;"you really look ill.""I am ill.""Ill-- what is the matter?" |
40631 | she said,"what does this mean? |
40631 | surely, Lady Knighton, it was not of you that the story was told?" |
40631 | the lobe of her ear?" |
40631 | the work of her mother, broken off by death-- that also? |
40631 | what are you doing there?" |
40631 | what can I do for you?" |
40631 | what do you mean? |
40631 | what is the meaning of this?" |
40631 | what is this dreadful racket about?" |
40631 | what now is your answer?" |
40631 | what shall I do if you take my money?" |
40631 | what will you say to me? |
40631 | what-- his bride?" |
40631 | where are your clothes?" |
40631 | where be the spirits to? |
40631 | where did I have it last? |
40631 | where have I put the key of the caddy? |
40631 | where is it? |
40631 | where to?" |
40631 | why not?" |
40631 | will you give me some advice and assistance?" |
40631 | will you remain at the door? |
40631 | you allow there is some good in me?" |
40631 | you did not tell Mr. Scantlebray to take Jamie away from me?" |
40631 | you never sent Jamie to an asylum?" |
43168 | A little; it is nice when it is fine, is n''t it? 43168 A nice piece of work this, is n''t it? |
43168 | A plan to show me, did you say? 43168 A_ plan_, I say, Arthur, do n''t you hear?" |
43168 | About Captain Beverley-- did you hear anything about him? |
43168 | About what? |
43168 | Ah, then you have come upon the subject? |
43168 | All the way? 43168 Alys, what do you mean?" |
43168 | Alys,he said, sternly, but any one that knew him could have seen that it was a sternness born of anxiety,"what is all this? |
43168 | Alys,he was saying,"are you not going to play a little? |
43168 | Alys? |
43168 | Am I? |
43168 | Am_ I_ to ask her to stay? |
43168 | And I do n''t quite understand, but Romary is not your home, is it? |
43168 | And I never could have got to know you so well in any other circumstances-- could I? 43168 And I? |
43168 | And failing Mary, Alys, you wo n''t be sorry to have Lilias for-- for a_ sister_--will you, Alys? |
43168 | And has it been all owing to that? |
43168 | And has your mother no idea of all this? |
43168 | And her people know, of course-- her sister does, any way, I suppose? |
43168 | And how are you all at home, my dear? |
43168 | And how did you find me out here? |
43168 | And how do you know that I have not put it all before her? |
43168 | And how do you manage to steer clear of so fatal an error? |
43168 | And how is your nephew-- young Mr Brooke? |
43168 | And if-- just_ supposing_ the sound of your voice sent me sleep, you would not be very much offended, would you? |
43168 | And that young lady-- we thought her_ so_ pretty,said Lilias--"she is Miss Cheviott, then, I suppose?" |
43168 | And the eldest one-- Miss Western-- the one here is the second, is she not?--the eldest is going away, you say? |
43168 | And then he found out what a mistake he had made? |
43168 | And then? |
43168 | And then? |
43168 | And what about Lilias, Mary dear? |
43168 | And what about telling Alys? |
43168 | And what does she now think? |
43168 | And what has he done to deserve it, and why should he submit to it? 43168 And what if it be?" |
43168 | And what if you found that you had done such to me? |
43168 | And what is it? 43168 And what is that?" |
43168 | And what is to be done then? |
43168 | And what is to be done? |
43168 | And what made you do this? 43168 And what more?" |
43168 | And what was the opinion-- favourable or the reverse? 43168 And what were you laughing at when I came in?" |
43168 | And what will you tell them? |
43168 | And what? |
43168 | And when can I see you? |
43168 | And where do_ you_ intend to be then? |
43168 | And which is Basil? |
43168 | And why not in mine? |
43168 | And why not? |
43168 | And why not` so I_ am_''? |
43168 | And why should n''t he be? |
43168 | And why should n''t he marry and settle down? |
43168 | And why should you have refused? 43168 And you spoke up for them?" |
43168 | And you? 43168 And you?" |
43168 | And, I suppose, you have not much misgiving as to what the answer will be to your letter? |
43168 | Andrew,called out Mr Cheviott,"where is my flask?" |
43168 | Are not the Cheviotts the principal people here, now? |
43168 | Are not you_ sure_ of going? 43168 Are the Cheviotts at Romary now?" |
43168 | Are there no dishes of any kind to be had, I wonder? |
43168 | Are you awfully annoyed with me, Laurence? |
43168 | Are you beginning to regret it? |
43168 | Are you bidding the sun good- night? |
43168 | Are you going to take me all the way to Withenden? |
43168 | Are you going to the ball from Romary? |
43168 | Are you homesick already? |
43168 | Are you in earnest, Laurence? |
43168 | Are you not glad to have me back again? 43168 Are you not going to the farm?" |
43168 | Are you offended by my inferring a possibility of your_ not_ speaking French? |
43168 | Are you tired of your honours already, Mary? |
43168 | As to what she has been thinking about me, do you mean? |
43168 | Ashamed of it,he repeated,"ashamed of loving you? |
43168 | At the doctor''s, was n''t it? 43168 Awfully pretty what?" |
43168 | Basil you know? |
43168 | Beverley,repeated Mr Western,"how do you know that is his name?" |
43168 | But I can go in? |
43168 | But are n''t you coming in to mamma, Mary? |
43168 | But did_ you_ see Mr Cheviott? |
43168 | But do n''t you see that just because we have lived so quietly as you say, we have had the more time for` lessons''? 43168 But do you think her_ badly_ hurt-- crippled, perhaps, for life?" |
43168 | But is them never the same primroses? |
43168 | But is there not some condition attached to Arthur''s fortune? |
43168 | But must it not be harder on papa and mamma than on us? |
43168 | But not without explaining the reason to-- to the Westerns? |
43168 | But on the whole, perhaps, what wonder? |
43168 | But suppose you have no choice between that and letting your enemy hunger? |
43168 | But tell me what day will you spend with us? 43168 But the best rooms are not dismantled, I suppose?" |
43168 | But what are the rumours, and what have they to do with Lilias? |
43168 | But what do you mean by a wish to repay to his sister what she had done for him? |
43168 | But what has put marrying so much into your head to- day? 43168 But what sort of people are they?" |
43168 | But what were you intending?--what were you going to do? |
43168 | But what will there be for tea? |
43168 | But who are they?--I mean, how many are there of them? |
43168 | But who knows, my dear, how long the present state of things may last? 43168 But why suppose none of us will marry?" |
43168 | But why? |
43168 | But you are not intending to make any plan with Mrs Greville for my leaving home, I hope, Mary? |
43168 | But you will let me ask you something, will you not? 43168 But yours, Mary? |
43168 | But? |
43168 | But_ failing_ an eldest son, mother, failing any direct male heir at all, do you--? |
43168 | By what you said just now about Arthur''s uncertain circumstances, did you mean the peculiar terms of his father''s will? |
43168 | By- the- bye, Arthur,she said, suddenly,"have you heard anything about the Brocklehurst ball? |
43168 | By- the- bye, Miss Western,he went on, with some constraint but, nevertheless, resolution in his voice,"I hope you have good news of your sister?" |
43168 | By- the- bye, aunt, what did you mean about there being some sort of condition attached to Arthur''s getting his property? 43168 Ca n''t you believe it?" |
43168 | Ca n''t you leave all that? |
43168 | Can I be dreaming? |
43168 | Can he have been playing with her only? 43168 Can it be possible that he has fallen in love with this very magnificent Miss Western, whom his sister admires so much, and that she has snubbed him? |
43168 | Can that be doing me wrong? |
43168 | Can you not tell me where you are going, or what you are doing? |
43168 | Can your horse take you all the way home again to- night? |
43168 | Consumption, I suppose? |
43168 | Could I ever leave off trusting you, Laurence? |
43168 | Could I insult Alys by asking her to accept me_ without_ my caring for her as she should be cared for? 43168 Could n''t he have left her half his money unconditionally?" |
43168 | Dear father? |
43168 | Did Captain Beverley not say anything about her going? |
43168 | Did no one know of what my father was doing when he made that insane codicil? 43168 Did she_ say_ that she would never come to see you at Romary?" |
43168 | Did you not find the housekeeper after all? |
43168 | Did you not know? 43168 Did_ Alys_ speak of it?" |
43168 | Do n''t you think you might leave the children to manage for themselves one other day? 43168 Do n''t you want some new dresses, Alys? |
43168 | Do the doctors think as you do? |
43168 | Do you call that a civil answer? |
43168 | Do you care about this sort of thing? |
43168 | Do you know what came into my head when I first saw you driving so fast up that lane? |
43168 | Do you like balls? |
43168 | Do you mean the` Mawde''about whom there is a tablet in the church here? |
43168 | Do you mean to say--_Mary_--do you mean that you_ love_ me? 43168 Do you speak French?" |
43168 | Do you speak Italian? |
43168 | Do you think he had any intention of the kind? |
43168 | Do you think it''s good taste, or good feeling either, to sneer in that way when you must-- when you can not but see what all this is to me? |
43168 | Do you think me very harsh, Alys? |
43168 | Do you think she would mind if I went to speak to her? 43168 Does Alys know why you came?" |
43168 | Does Alys know_ anything_ of all this? |
43168 | Does he think I am going out of my mind? |
43168 | Does she count as one of the three beauties we heard about, do you think? |
43168 | Does she know that I, at one time, objected to your knowing her? |
43168 | Does she want me? |
43168 | Does that mean that you think this one pretty? |
43168 | For a cup of tea? |
43168 | Freedom from anxiety, from daily worry-- he has had too much of that-- would be greatly in his favour, would it not? |
43168 | George, where is George? |
43168 | HAVE I MADE IT WORSE? |
43168 | Had he asked you to do so? |
43168 | Had you not better ask Laurence? |
43168 | Has he displeased you since you have been here? |
43168 | Has she no maid with her? |
43168 | Has she-- do you think, Mrs Greville-- said anything of this to Mr Cheviott? |
43168 | Have I been rude to him again? |
43168 | Have I not got a quantity? 43168 Have n''t they been resting in church all this time? |
43168 | Have you a headache, father dear? |
43168 | Have you ever heard of a place called Hathercourt near there? |
43168 | Have you ever heard your mother speak of this Mrs Brabazon? 43168 Have you forgotten all that Mary Western did for me? |
43168 | Have you known him long? 43168 Have you never seen it? |
43168 | Have you not slept well, my dear Mary? |
43168 | Have you seen Alys, Laurence? |
43168 | Have you seen Lilias? |
43168 | He is small- minded enough to be stung into doing what he has by even my contempt, yet how could I have spoken otherwise? 43168 Her sister-- Mary, do you mean? |
43168 | How I explain it? |
43168 | How I wish he would go back to Romary? |
43168 | How can I when the door is locked? |
43168 | How can Lilias''s` feeling sure''affect the question one way or the other? |
43168 | How can he help being so? 43168 How can you possibly judge, Alys?" |
43168 | How can you say such a thing? 43168 How can you tell till you have tried?" |
43168 | How could they be, if they are so very poor? |
43168 | How did you hear it, Laurence? |
43168 | How do you do, Miss Western? |
43168 | How do you know it_ was_ my laugh? |
43168 | How do you make that out? 43168 How do you mean, Polly? |
43168 | How do you mean, father dear? |
43168 | How do you mean? 43168 How do you mean?" |
43168 | How do you mean? |
43168 | How do you mean? |
43168 | How do you mean` in his circumstances,''aunt? 43168 How do you-- have you ever seen her?" |
43168 | How do_ you_ know it? |
43168 | How is Alys? |
43168 | How is he, poor fellow? 43168 How on earth did` the gentleman that was with her''get out?" |
43168 | How would you define` awfully pretty,''Mary? |
43168 | How, indeed, could they be otherwise? |
43168 | How? 43168 How?" |
43168 | How? |
43168 | How? |
43168 | How_ can_ she ever see that she did me injustice? |
43168 | I can easily get out,he said, turning back to Mary,"but once I am out what do you want me to do? |
43168 | I can not now imagine what came over me to make me say what I did-- but you will forgive and forget, will you not, Miss Western? 43168 I did not mean to be changeable or to vex you, dear Mrs Greville,"she began,"only--""Only what?" |
43168 | I do n''t want to be uncourteous or exaggerated-- besides, what is there in shaking hands? 43168 I suppose,"he went on,"it is here Miss Cheviott is?" |
43168 | I thought you told me that it was not the_ pretty_ Miss Western that you expected? |
43168 | I wish she were not so confident, and yet how can she be less so if she trusts him? 43168 I?" |
43168 | If the girl be what you think her, would she accept you if she knew it would be to ruin you? |
43168 | If you had had any idea I was anywhere near here you would have flown to the Land''s End or John o''Groat''s House to avoid me-- is that it? |
43168 | If_ I_ do n''t want to marry_ him_, he will be none the worse,she repeated, slowly,"but if he does n''t want to marry me-- what then? |
43168 | Is Alys ill? |
43168 | Is it Miss Cheviott you wish to see? |
43168 | Is it all your dislike to her brother? |
43168 | Is it always to be war between us, Miss Western? |
43168 | Is it so unusual nowadays to find people who have learned French? |
43168 | Is it-- no, it can not be-- that there is any truth in that absurd nonsense that Miss Winstanley was telling us? |
43168 | Is mamma better? 43168 Is mother not coming in here again?" |
43168 | Is my aunt up yet? |
43168 | Is n''t mother funny-- odd I mean, in some ways-- difficult to understand? |
43168 | Is old Mr Brooke going to adopt you and make you his heiress? 43168 Is that all?" |
43168 | Is that one of Mrs Brabazon''s nephews? |
43168 | Is that your sister? |
43168 | Is the poor lady killed, Mary, does you think? |
43168 | Is them new every year-- never the same? |
43168 | Is there nothing I can do to help you? |
43168 | Is your head so bad, dear father? |
43168 | It can not be that Lilias has refused him? |
43168 | It did not do you any harm, did it? 43168 It is quite romantic is n''t it? |
43168 | It is very good of you, but I do n''t think I care about going-- you wo n''t mind if I stay at home? |
43168 | It surely is n''t that she has met Captain Beverley again,said Mrs Western, anxiously,"or_ surely_ not that any one else has taken a fancy to her? |
43168 | It''s a nice old place, after all, child, is it not? |
43168 | Josey, what do you want? 43168 Laurence, I say, what_ will_ they think of me?" |
43168 | Laurence, you will thank her, wo n''t you? |
43168 | Laurence,exclaimed Alys,"what in the world is the matter?" |
43168 | Laurence,said Arthur, at last, when for the time letters were put down, and breakfast began to receive some attention,"is that yesterday''s_ Times_? |
43168 | Laurence,she said, hesitatingly,"I suppose you have_ quite_ made up your mind to leave on Friday?" |
43168 | Let''s see,he said, consideringly,"whereabouts was it we first came into the room?" |
43168 | Lilias, would you like to go away from home for a while? |
43168 | Lilias-- did you say there was a letter from her? 43168 Lovely, are they not?" |
43168 | Mamma,interrupted George, the second Western boy, hurrying up--"mamma, who can those people be? |
43168 | Mary, do you dislike Laurence? |
43168 | Mary, then? |
43168 | Mary, what does this mean? 43168 Mary, you are concealing something from me-- he is going to be married?" |
43168 | Mary,said Lilias,"what are you thinking about?" |
43168 | Mary,she repeated again,"how are we to tell Lilias?" |
43168 | Mary,she said, mischievously,"shall I tell?" |
43168 | Mary,she said, nervously,"you do n''t mean that-- that there is anything indelicate in my coming here, to this house? |
43168 | Mary,she said,"I hear such a funny noise, do n''t you? |
43168 | May n''t I come with you to meet her? 43168 Miss Cheviott must be better, or her faithful nurse would not be chattering so merrily-- eh, Miss Western?" |
43168 | Miss Cheviott, is it not? 43168 Miss Western''s room is not haunted, surely?" |
43168 | Miss Western, you would n''t be afraid to spend the night here, would you? |
43168 | Miss Western,he said, quietly,"wo n''t you say good- night? |
43168 | Miss Western,it said,"if you are not engaged for this dance, may I have the honour of it?" |
43168 | Miss Western,said Mr Cheviott, abruptly,"is your decision quite unshaken?" |
43168 | Mr Morpeth,she exclaimed,"is it you? |
43168 | Mr Morpeth,she said at last,"what are you thinking?" |
43168 | My dear Alys,she said,"will you forgive me? |
43168 | My sister is still here, is she not? 43168 No note has come for me, I suppose?" |
43168 | No,said Mary, half laughing,"I do n''t know that I do, but--""But what?" |
43168 | Nor splendid people? |
43168 | Nothing has happened that I have not been told of? |
43168 | Now listen-- first of all, do you remember Lilias writing-- of course you do-- about having met a cousin of yours, a Mrs Brabazon, in town? |
43168 | Now wo n''t you be warned,she added, speaking more lightly,"wo n''t you be warned, and let our pleasant truce last to the end?" |
43168 | Of course,exclaimed Mrs Greville, in a tone of relief,"the Morpeths-- you remember, Charles? |
43168 | Oh, Mary, could n''t I run home and fetch somebody? 43168 Oh, papa, can not you trust me? |
43168 | Over where? |
43168 | Perhaps I should have worded it differently, and said,` do you like dancing?'' |
43168 | Pleasant- looking, mother? |
43168 | Poetry, science, fiction? 43168 Pretty girls, do you call them, Alys? |
43168 | Rather,said Laurence,"What is_ yours_? |
43168 | Return? |
43168 | Romary is just two miles from here, is it not? |
43168 | Shall I not be in the way if I come with you? 43168 Shall I tell mamma tea is ready, Lilias?" |
43168 | Shall I try to lift the young lady, do you think, miss? |
43168 | Shall we not see her at church on Sunday? |
43168 | Shall we try again? |
43168 | Shall you be sorry when it is over, Laurence,said Alys,"and we are back again at Romary, without our guardian angel?" |
43168 | Shall you have your talk with Alys to- night? |
43168 | She told the tale with bated breath--` A sad old story; is it true?'' |
43168 | Should I go over this afternoon, do you think? |
43168 | Should n''t Basil or George run back and ask them if they would like to wait at the Rectory till their carriage comes? 43168 Since when?" |
43168 | So soon? |
43168 | So you know them, then, Miss Cheviott? |
43168 | So-- so what? 43168 Something like, is n''t it?" |
43168 | Supposing now, Mary-- just_ supposing_ any one were to come to call, what would they think of this room? |
43168 | Tell me, Mary, dear Mary-- forgive me for stopping you,she said, breathlessly,"but do tell me, do you_ think_ he is going to die?" |
43168 | Tell you what, dear Mrs Greville? |
43168 | The Brookes,she exclaimed,"are you talking of the Brookes of Marshover?" |
43168 | The birds are talking about their new houses, are n''t they, Mary? |
43168 | The great round drawing- room and the picture- gallery with the arched roof? 43168 The likeness-- don''t you remember we were talking about it, last night, in our own room? |
43168 | The_ evenings_? |
43168 | Their beauty must be of the dairy- maid order, I suppose? |
43168 | Then I am to wait here till further orders,said Mary,"and those orders, in the first place, I suppose, will be yours, Mr Brandreth?" |
43168 | Then has Lilias come back? |
43168 | Then the estates are entailed? |
43168 | Then there has been no party at Romary? |
43168 | Then there is no chance of moving her at present? |
43168 | Then we shall see you again in the afternoon, and till then I am to do nothing about these arrangements? |
43168 | Then what do you want to know? |
43168 | Then what on earth did you run your head into the net for? |
43168 | Then when shall I see you again? |
43168 | Then you_ will_ come to Romary? |
43168 | Then,began Mrs Western, with some little hesitation,"are you, may I ask, Captain Beverley, going to live altogether at Hathercourt Edge? |
43168 | There are no people of the name hereabouts now? |
43168 | There are some_ very_ old rooms, are there not? |
43168 | There wo n''t be none dogs, will there, Mary? |
43168 | There, now, will that do? |
43168 | These are your younger sisters, I suppose? |
43168 | Two years!--what can it all mean? 43168 WHAT MADE THE BALL SO FINE?" |
43168 | Was Arthur''s mother not a lady? |
43168 | Was I wrong to leave her? |
43168 | Was he not? 43168 Was it very long ago?" |
43168 | Was it your own idea? |
43168 | Was there ever such a girl before? |
43168 | Well girls? |
43168 | Well, Alys, are you very tired? 43168 Well, Mary?" |
43168 | Well, dear, I am sorry for making you cry, but you will forgive me, wo n''t you? |
43168 | Well, girls? |
43168 | Well, then,he said,"will you do exactly as I tell you?" |
43168 | Well, what then? |
43168 | What am I to say Lily? 43168 What are you all laughing at me for?" |
43168 | What are you saying about me, eh, Alys? |
43168 | What are you thinking about, Mary? 43168 What are you thinking of, Laurence?" |
43168 | What can have become of Thwaites? 43168 What can he know about it?" |
43168 | What can it be, then? 43168 What can it be?" |
43168 | What can it mean? 43168 What can she mean?" |
43168 | What can that be? |
43168 | What can you possibly know about anything of the kind? |
43168 | What could have put such an idea into your head? |
43168 | What decision? |
43168 | What did he come for?--why did he stay such a time? |
43168 | What did you speak to her for? |
43168 | What do you think, Laurence? 43168 What does it matter? |
43168 | What does it mean? 43168 What else, what less could I possibly do?" |
43168 | What for? |
43168 | What has happened? 43168 What has made you so dull this evening, Lilias?" |
43168 | What has my being or not being twenty- one to do with Arthur''s marrying? |
43168 | What have I done to offend you, Alys? |
43168 | What is it that amuses you so, Miss Western? |
43168 | What is it, then? 43168 What is it?" |
43168 | What is the matter, Laurence? |
43168 | What is the story of the haunted room? |
43168 | What is your news? 43168 What makes you speak that way to- day?" |
43168 | What makes you think so all of a sudden, Laurence? |
43168 | What nice good eyes that second Miss Western has? |
43168 | What or whom is it haunted by, pray? |
43168 | What possible reason can Mrs Brabazon have for wanting to know anything about those Westerns? 43168 What shall I do if that horrible footman opens the door?" |
43168 | What shall I do with you at Romary? 43168 What shall I do? |
43168 | What shall we do? |
43168 | What sort of dress, do you mean? |
43168 | What was it? |
43168 | What were you going to say, Mary? |
43168 | What will Alys, even, think of me? |
43168 | What will be done? 43168 What will be too late? |
43168 | What will you have? |
43168 | What would have been the good of that? 43168 What''s the matter, dear?" |
43168 | What, dear? |
43168 | What? |
43168 | What? |
43168 | What? |
43168 | What? |
43168 | What? |
43168 | What? |
43168 | What_ do_ you mean, aunt? |
43168 | What_ is_ the matter? 43168 What_ shall_ I do?" |
43168 | What_ would_ Lilias say if she knew? |
43168 | What_ would_ you do with five old maids, papa? |
43168 | When you saw him two years ago? |
43168 | Where am I? |
43168 | Where are you going, Miss Western? |
43168 | Where have those girls got their looks from? |
43168 | Which is the way to the haunted room? |
43168 | Which way do you wish to go out? |
43168 | Who can have said any harm of him? |
43168 | Who can it be, Mary? 43168 Who did draw it up?" |
43168 | Who is it? 43168 Who is there? |
43168 | Who is` it''? |
43168 | Who said I disliked him? |
43168 | Who, with eyes in their heads, would think of her dress when they see her face? |
43168 | Who? 43168 Whose trap can that be?" |
43168 | Why am I not glad, delighted, to see that Lilias is happy again? 43168 Why are you so indignant?" |
43168 | Why did I dance with him? |
43168 | Why did n''t you tell me, Mary? |
43168 | Why did you stop? |
43168 | Why do n''t you answer? |
43168 | Why do you ask? |
43168 | Why do you call it` that ill- starred day''? |
43168 | Why do you hate it? |
43168 | Why do you look so strange, Mary? |
43168 | Why do you say` Lily,''and look at me like that? |
43168 | Why do you so much wish Arthur to marry? |
43168 | Why in the world did you not see all this two years ago, when you persuaded me into agreeing to your selling out and setting you straight again? 43168 Why is Mrs Brabazon always with them?" |
43168 | Why not all? |
43168 | Why not? |
43168 | Why should I be ashamed? 43168 Why should I not ask you how Alys is?" |
43168 | Why should he? |
43168 | Why should n''t I talk of Arthur''s being married? 43168 Why should she?" |
43168 | Why should you ask? 43168 Why should you be so ungracious about it, Lilias?" |
43168 | Why should you? |
43168 | Why so? |
43168 | Why will you always begin about this subject, Alys? |
43168 | Why, I wonder, is it the fate of some people to be constantly doing other people''s dirty work? 43168 Why, then? |
43168 | Why, what''s the matter? 43168 Why? |
43168 | Why? 43168 Why?" |
43168 | Why? |
43168 | Why? |
43168 | Why? |
43168 | Will not your mother have been very uneasy about you? |
43168 | Will not your sister be dreadfully uneasy at your being so late? |
43168 | Will she not regret this fearfully afterwards? |
43168 | Will the truce last,he was saying to himself,"even through another day? |
43168 | Will they leave Hathercourt? |
43168 | Will you let me get down here, please? |
43168 | Will you not allow me to say one word of regret for the pain I have caused you? |
43168 | Will you step into the library while I ask? |
43168 | With a view to settling down at the Edge? |
43168 | Wo n''t mamma be pleased, Lilias, when she comes down? |
43168 | Wo n''t you answer me? 43168 Wo n''t you come in? |
43168 | Wo n''t you go on with what you were saying? |
43168 | Would it be any good trying to find the spring of the other door? |
43168 | Would papa not mind? |
43168 | Would you care to live, Alys, do you think, if you had a red nose? |
43168 | Would you mind putting that in writing? |
43168 | Would you mind_ my_ waiting here an instant? |
43168 | Would you really like to know? |
43168 | Would you, papa? |
43168 | Would_ you_ like some? |
43168 | Yes, I remember your speaking of India,said Lilias,"but I think you said you were going back there again, did you not?" |
43168 | Yes, dear; but can I do nothing? 43168 Yes, you remember him? |
43168 | Yes,said Mary;"but,"she added, shyly,"what made you change?" |
43168 | You agree with me? |
43168 | You are perfectly certain that her eccentric behaviour to- day was not caused by her believing she in any way stood between you and Miss Western? 43168 You are sure that is all, Mary?" |
43168 | You are sure, then,she went on,"that-- that it will be all right with Lilias? |
43168 | You ask me that? 43168 You did n''t send over to- day to inquire, did you?" |
43168 | You did not hear anything of those people-- the Romary people, I mean? |
43168 | You do n''t happen to know anything of the clergyman of Hathercourt, or rather of his family? 43168 You do n''t really think that I would be influenced by that kind of consideration?-- you do n''t think so poorly of me?" |
43168 | You do n''t seem any better pleased with your letter than I am with mine? |
43168 | You do n''t suppose he has been living on nothing but eggs all this time, do you? |
43168 | You have my promise; what more would you have? |
43168 | You have n''t written to tell him when we are going home, have you, Alys? |
43168 | You have quite finished at Hathercourt, you are sure? |
43168 | You have yourself to blame for it,said Mary, with some asperity;"why did you speak so indifferently of Mrs Greville''s invitation? |
43168 | You have_ wished_ to find it possible? |
43168 | You know surely that my mother made over nearly all she had to him? 43168 You meant to tell me all when you first got the letter?" |
43168 | You remember Romary, Margaret? |
43168 | You saw mamma? |
43168 | You should by rights be dancing over there, should you not? |
43168 | You wo n''t prevent my seeing the haunted room, though you wo n''t tell me its story? |
43168 | Your cloak is waterproof, I see,he continued,"is your dress dry underneath it?" |
43168 | Your letter to Alys partly; by- the- bye, you have to tell me how_ you_ came to change so as to write it? 43168 Your name, if you please, ma''am?" |
43168 | Your poor dear mother and all? |
43168 | Your sister likes dancing too, I suppose? |
43168 | _ Alys_ knows nothing of this? |
43168 | _ Can_ they be already really engaged? |
43168 | _ Did_ you? |
43168 | _ Do_ you think her the most beautiful girl in the room? |
43168 | _ Hate_ you? |
43168 | _ Have_ you been ill, Arthur? |
43168 | _ Like_ to go? 43168 _ Was_ there_ ever_ anything so awkward?" |
43168 | _ What_? |
43168 | _ Where_, do you say-- in the library? 43168 _ Whose_ doing?" |
43168 | might I read aloud to you? 43168 A flush rose to Mary''s cheek at the thought-- what would the Cheviotts think of this marvellous news? 43168 A little laugh went round, and under cover of it Mary managed to say gently to Mr Greville:Then Mr Cheviott is at Romary now?" |
43168 | A man in disguise-- what might she not be? |
43168 | A"happy thought"occurred to him-- why not go round by the Balner woods? |
43168 | After all, why not? |
43168 | Alexa, how can I tell?" |
43168 | Alonzo.--What is this maid with whom thou wast at play? |
43168 | Alys was alone in her room that afternoon, when a tap and the request,"May I come in?" |
43168 | And I have no power to clear you from these debts out of what should be, what surely will be, your own before very long?" |
43168 | And acknowledging even thus much, where was the gratitude he had so often expressed? |
43168 | And any way I meant well-- my darling!--I would do it all over again for you, would I not? |
43168 | And do you know what I think, Laurence? |
43168 | And if I did, how could that possibly have anything to do with my wishing him to marry? |
43168 | And if it''s a pretty house, it makes one envious, and if it''s ugly, what''s the good of seeing it?" |
43168 | And now that he had discovered her, what could he do or say that would not add to her distress? |
43168 | And what Lilias''s dreams were, who can say? |
43168 | And what_ do_ you think? |
43168 | And where, too, have they learned such perfect self- possession and power of expressing themselves, brought up in the wilds of Hathercourt?" |
43168 | And why should I feel it so? |
43168 | And you will leave Lilias to me?" |
43168 | And, do you know,"he added, with a sort of boyish_ naivete_,"I do n''t think I ever realised how wonderfully pretty you are? |
43168 | And, in the mean time, ca n''t you try to guess what Lilias''s letter is about?" |
43168 | And_ have_ I made it worse? |
43168 | Are n''t you going to give me any breakfast this morning?" |
43168 | Are there any for me, Laurence?" |
43168 | Are you going out of your senses, Mr Cheviott? |
43168 | Are you not going to dance any more?" |
43168 | Are you quite sure she is what she represents herself to be?" |
43168 | Arthur, what would-- what_ could_ I do?" |
43168 | Aunt, is it,_ can_ it be that Arthur''s inheriting his father''s property-- his_ own_ property-- depends on his marrying_ me_?" |
43168 | Bacon?" |
43168 | Better, I hope?" |
43168 | But I see no help for it; when nurse takes to her` feelings,''what can we do? |
43168 | But even if it were all explained, what then? |
43168 | But for that I could have made you care for me-- I know I could-- could I not? |
43168 | But he surely can not be anything but courteous to you, Mary? |
43168 | But how do you mean about Lilias?" |
43168 | But how to do it? |
43168 | But it is sad, is it not? |
43168 | But she has never been there?" |
43168 | But she is a sweet girl, you say?" |
43168 | But talking of Meadshire reminds me-- is it anywhere near Withenden that you live?" |
43168 | But was Mary enjoying herself too? |
43168 | But what am I to think now? |
43168 | But what avails it now To speak more words? |
43168 | But what can I do for Lily?" |
43168 | But what could be done? |
43168 | But what has first to be considered is this-- the statement on that paper is Alys''s own voluntary declaration--""Did she write it of her own accord?" |
43168 | But what has put all this of Arthur''s marrying into your head just now, Alys? |
43168 | But where_ is_ George? |
43168 | But why need I care if he does? |
43168 | But why should n''t he? |
43168 | But why should you care about her sister''s knowing it?" |
43168 | But why should you object to it? |
43168 | But you do n''t think there will be any question of stopping my allowance, in the mean time, if I marry before the stated period is out?" |
43168 | But, Aunt Fanny,"she continued, in a softer tone,"was there not something unhappy about Arthur''s parents? |
43168 | But, Lilias, what am I to do? |
43168 | But, Lilias,"she added, wistfully,"I wish you would tell me-- you do n''t mind my asking, do you?--is-- is anything_ settled_--explained, I mean?" |
43168 | But, Mr Cheviott, you are not meaning to take me home all the way?" |
43168 | By- the- bye, I shall be driving that way this afternoon if any of you young ladies care to come with me in the dog- cart? |
43168 | By- the- bye, that may be the young man you are telling me about, Mary, which was he-- the fair or the dark one?" |
43168 | Ca n''t you leave me to tell you about Mrs Brabazon''s letter after you have been at Hathercourt?" |
43168 | Ca n''t_ you_ trust_ me_, Alys?" |
43168 | Call ye that a saying of your prayers? |
43168 | Can Arthur have to do with it? |
43168 | Can he possibly have written anything to Alys besides what I saw?" |
43168 | Can none of you tell me?" |
43168 | Can you come to- morrow? |
43168 | Can you tell me if I am anywhere near Farmer Bartlemoor''s? |
43168 | Can you-- are you really going to stay with Alys all night?" |
43168 | Captain Beverley, you will have a cup of tea?" |
43168 | Confess now, Arthur, you hardly could, could you,_ imagine_ such a thing as any girl''s caring for me?" |
43168 | Could it be true, then, that Captain Beverley was engaged to this girl? |
43168 | Could it possibly, by any blessed chance, be Dr Brandreth himself returning from a country round? |
43168 | Could it still be true-- this wonderful news which so short a time ago had seemed to illumine the dark future so brilliantly and scatter every cloud? |
43168 | Could n''t Josey and I go? |
43168 | Could n''t Mrs Wills get you some tea?" |
43168 | Could no one have prevented it-- he was with your father at the time?" |
43168 | Could she ever hope for such an opportunity again? |
43168 | Could the mantle of Laurence''s recent anxiety have fallen upon him? |
43168 | Could they be brother and sister? |
43168 | Could they have told, or did it matter? |
43168 | Did it seem like contradicting you?" |
43168 | Did n''t you miss me dreadfully?" |
43168 | Did you ever hear anything so absurd, Laurence? |
43168 | Did you ever see anything more disgraceful than the younger girls''manners sometimes?--Alexa''s silly babyishness, and Josephine''s vulgar noisiness? |
43168 | Did you not see how he made some excuse for going away, when you would go on talking about them?" |
43168 | Do n''t you agree with me, Mr Greville?" |
43168 | Do n''t you intend to take any rest? |
43168 | Do n''t you know it is very rude to come peeping in like that? |
43168 | Do n''t you like him any better now that you have seen more of him?" |
43168 | Do n''t you see it, Cecilia? |
43168 | Do n''t you see the note is dated from there? |
43168 | Do n''t you think so, Laurence?" |
43168 | Do n''t you think we''d better just not bother for a little? |
43168 | Do you forget that I am Lilias''s sister?" |
43168 | Do you happen to know who she is, Miss Western?" |
43168 | Do you happen to know, did you ever hear how the Brooke property is left-- entailed, I suppose I should say?" |
43168 | Do you hear, child? |
43168 | Do you know it, miss?--Bartle''s farm, I mean? |
43168 | Do you know the gentleman she is dancing with?" |
43168 | Do you know what I did? |
43168 | Do you not know what I feel for you-- can you not see what you are making me suffer? |
43168 | Do you not remember how confident you were about never wanting to marry any one else?" |
43168 | Do you really dislike him so hopelessly?" |
43168 | Do you remember how I dreaded it from the first?" |
43168 | Do you remember that poor young Brooke, last winter, Frances?" |
43168 | Do you remember?" |
43168 | Do you see?" |
43168 | Do you think I could hold you more easily anyhow?" |
43168 | Do you think she would come?" |
43168 | Do you think they would like to come over to the Rectory and rest a little?" |
43168 | Do you think_ my_ position is a pleasant one?" |
43168 | Does that make you uncomfortable?" |
43168 | Even I, I would fain hope, may come in for a little of the benefit of the mellowing haze of distance and bygoneness?" |
43168 | For my new farm- house? |
43168 | Had her plainly expressed defiance and indignation raised Mr Cheviott to more decisive action than he had before contemplated? |
43168 | Had not Mrs Greville told her so that very morning? |
43168 | Had she been locked up here since the day before? |
43168 | Had she come with a frantic idea of winning him over even now to approve of an engagement between Arthur and her sister? |
43168 | Had she done harm? |
43168 | Had_ Mary_ known this?--had she, in a sense, deceived him? |
43168 | Had_ she_ ever so misjudged any one? |
43168 | Has all this trouble anything to do with my marrying some one, any one in particular? |
43168 | Has he been taking you into his confidence about any nonsense-- falling in love, or that kind of thing, I mean?" |
43168 | Has she been very frightened about me?" |
43168 | Have I no heart?" |
43168 | Have you enjoyed the ball? |
43168 | Have you forgotten about his sore knee? |
43168 | Have you looked at it? |
43168 | Have you read it?" |
43168 | He has had such a dreadfully_ superior_ sort of way of looking at one, and saying,` What for does you do that?''" |
43168 | He is a very sensitive man, is he not?" |
43168 | He said he had business with you, but that you could settle it in town as well as at Romary, if you could stay-- and so you will stay, wo n''t you? |
43168 | He told you?" |
43168 | Her heart was beating fast with excitement and anxiety, her sight surely was growing confused, for could_ that_ be he? |
43168 | His own house?" |
43168 | How are his circumstances different from Laurence''s, or any other man''s who has a place and a good income?" |
43168 | How can I tell her?" |
43168 | How can I think you will consider it even an act of friendliness? |
43168 | How can we ever tell Lilias?" |
43168 | How could I dislike him? |
43168 | How could I? |
43168 | How could I_ bear_ to see her trust broken?" |
43168 | How could he help it? |
43168 | How could she escape? |
43168 | How could she tell how he might look upon her presence beside his sister, and what she had done to help poor Alys? |
43168 | How did you know we were alone?" |
43168 | How did you like Mr Cheviott, Mary? |
43168 | How different from Lilias and me-- ah, yes, it is_ that_ that makes what her brother has done so awfully wrong-- so_ mean_--but will he understand? |
43168 | How is it? |
43168 | How is she, and where?" |
43168 | How is she? |
43168 | How long might I not have lain here without any one knowing? |
43168 | How long shall you be-- an hour?" |
43168 | How shall we ever get on without Miss Western?" |
43168 | How? |
43168 | How_ could_ it be Mr Cheviott? |
43168 | However, suppose we try?" |
43168 | I am beginning to feel a little tired, Mary; are n''t you?" |
43168 | I am not likely ever to see him again, so what does it matter? |
43168 | I can depend upon you?" |
43168 | I could not help having a foolish wild sort of fancy that perhaps you were Sir Ingram de Romary-- you know the story?" |
43168 | I do n''t understand; does Mrs Golding know of your being here?" |
43168 | I have never loved any woman before-- am I to give up all hope on account of this terrible prejudice of yours? |
43168 | I have not been_ very_ troublesome, I hope, have I, Miss Western?" |
43168 | I hope Miss Cheviott is not seriously hurt?" |
43168 | I must break my pledged word, or I must behave dishonourably to you-- which shall it be? |
43168 | I promised her you would go back in half an hour, and in the mean time-- why, has your sister gone, and alone?" |
43168 | I sent it to her mother, because her father is ill.""And what did you say?" |
43168 | I suppose you are like your mother, Miss Western?" |
43168 | I suppose you have_ not_ done anything definite? |
43168 | I think she''s awfully pretty, do n''t you?" |
43168 | I think you first fancied I was Dr Brandreth, did you not?" |
43168 | I think you must be very like what mamma was at your age, but I fancy you are cleverer and--""And what?" |
43168 | I think,"she added, turning to Mr Cheviott,"it was the afternoon of that Sunday you all drove over to church here-- do you remember?" |
43168 | I wonder if Arthur Beverley will hear of it? |
43168 | I wonder if it was that horse we met, that the gentleman belonged to that bowed to you?" |
43168 | I wonder if that old fool is going to give me any breakfast?" |
43168 | I wonder if the groom will have the sense to fetch Mr Cheviott as well as the doctor? |
43168 | I wonder on which of the two of us that idiotic will has entailed the greater suffering?" |
43168 | I wonder what all the people who were there last night are doing with themselves now? |
43168 | I wonder why you dislike that unfortunate Mr What''s- his- name so? |
43168 | If it is still open I would like to look round it, if I may?" |
43168 | If not, what_ was_ she doing here? |
43168 | If only we were back to all that-- if only-- would I_ ever_ grumble again?" |
43168 | If she did_ not_ care much for Captain Beverley, if I was mistaken in imagining her whole heart to be given to him, should I not rejoice? |
43168 | If she knew, what_ would_ she think or feel? |
43168 | If we could arrange for her to go away somewhere for a while, for instance?" |
43168 | If, indeed, it were"all philosophy,"thought Mary''s shrewd cousin, and not, to some extent, preoccupation? |
43168 | In two words, what do you mean to do?" |
43168 | Is he going to be married? |
43168 | Is it anything in which I can do instead of him, or will you leave a message? |
43168 | Is it because you suspect that at one time Laurence discouraged my knowing you? |
43168 | Is it her horror of putting herself under any obligation?" |
43168 | Is it you, Mrs Golding? |
43168 | Is it your home?" |
43168 | Is n''t it strange that Hathercourt, a part of it at least, should come back to me after all these generations?" |
43168 | Is she still alive? |
43168 | Is that Mrs Wills''s? |
43168 | Is there anything you want to do this afternoon?" |
43168 | It is barely habitable, is it?" |
43168 | It is like reading all I have written over again in a looking- glass, only then the letters would be all the wrong way, would n''t they?" |
43168 | It is something to feel, as I hope to do when I die, that at least I have n''t left my people_ worse_ men and women than I found them-- eh, Polly?" |
43168 | It is very natural I should cry after all the worry I have had the last few days; and who has caused it all? |
43168 | It was a plan of mine-- one that I had made in my head, do n''t you understand? |
43168 | It was your first ball, was it not?" |
43168 | It would be a stab indeed, but a stab that would kill the best part of me-- all my faith and trust, Mary, do you see?" |
43168 | Laurence, is it you? |
43168 | Laurence, is there nothing-- are you certain there is nothing that can be done to get me out of this cursed complication? |
43168 | Laurence, were you vexed with what I said of the Westerns? |
43168 | Lilias felt giddy, and almost sick with apprehension-- was her faith about to be uprooted? |
43168 | Lilias''s eyes filled with tears-- was he_ not_ a man to trust? |
43168 | Lily, what can I do for you? |
43168 | Mary, could n''t it be one of the wild bulls running after us?" |
43168 | Mary, do you remember what I said yesterday about` this time to- morrow''? |
43168 | Mary, what can I have done to my back?" |
43168 | Mary, wo n''t you come? |
43168 | May I call, do you think?" |
43168 | May I not hear that?" |
43168 | May n''t I go back? |
43168 | Miss Western, has it never occurred to you as possible that you have misjudged me?" |
43168 | Mother, you will try not to take_ any_ notice of it at first, wo n''t you? |
43168 | Mr Cheviott, do you not_ know_ that what you have done is a wrong and bad thing?" |
43168 | My child-- my poor Lilias, is it_ possible_?" |
43168 | My only misgiving is,"she hesitated--"you would like me to speak frankly?" |
43168 | Now can you climb up to the front beside me? |
43168 | Now that you have got to know_ me_, or like_ me_ a little, you are not going to keep to your horrible resolution?" |
43168 | Now, Laurence, what is now my position? |
43168 | Now, aunt, has this anything to do with the peculiar terms of his will, which I have very often heard alluded to?" |
43168 | Now, aunt, what I want to know is_ this_--is Arthur''s future in any way dependent on_ me_, or anything I may or may not do?" |
43168 | Now, dear Mr Greville, the question is this-- what, or how much should I write home of all that I have heard?" |
43168 | Oh, Laurence, is n''t it a pity? |
43168 | Oh, Miss Western?" |
43168 | Oh, Mr Morpeth,"she went on, as a new idea struck her,"do you think you could possibly get out of the window?" |
43168 | Oh, yes, by- the- bye, I do wish you would tell me-- I shall be as discreet as possible--_is_ Lilias engaged to him?" |
43168 | Papa,"she continued, as her father came up to them,"do you know that one of those gentlemen who came to church is called Beverley?" |
43168 | Shall I be able to show it him?" |
43168 | Shall I pour it out, Lilias, or will you?" |
43168 | Shall I take you back to the Edge, or home?" |
43168 | Shall I tell you, Arthur, what seems to me the only thing for you to do?" |
43168 | Shall I thank you, Alys, or would you rather not?" |
43168 | Shall I, may I, go on trusting you?" |
43168 | She did not hear us speak of going back to the gardens though, did she? |
43168 | She was in Mr Cheviott''s own house-- how could she possibly refuse to tell him how she had got there? |
43168 | She''s that pretty lady that came to church that Sunday-- do you remember? |
43168 | Should she write to Mrs Greville and ask her to convey some message? |
43168 | Should you be afraid of marrying a poor man-- a really poor man?" |
43168 | Simmons, their own factotum, was out for the evening-- what was to be done? |
43168 | So yours is from Arthur, too, is it?" |
43168 | Stay, do n''t you see? |
43168 | Supposing we make the children have tea by themselves in the dining- room for once, and we have it in here for mother on a little table?" |
43168 | Supposing we practice that duet, Lilias?" |
43168 | Surely Arthur can not have been writing anything about them to Basil Brooke? |
43168 | Surely, whatever the world might say, I have_ not_ done wrong, Lilias? |
43168 | That''s not like a country girl, is it, Captain Beverley?" |
43168 | The doctor is with her?" |
43168 | The horse would n''t run after me, would it?" |
43168 | The voice was not altogether unfamiliar, when had she heard it before? |
43168 | Then after a moment''s pause,"How is Miss Cheviott?" |
43168 | There, is something rather melancholy about a sunset, is there not?" |
43168 | This morning you were distressing yourself about Arthur''s prospects, and now you are worrying yourself about mine?" |
43168 | To explain what, and how? |
43168 | To you, I mean?" |
43168 | True, he had not been alone with her, but had he sought any opportunity of being so? |
43168 | WHO-- WHENCE AND WHY? |
43168 | Was Laurence joking? |
43168 | Was ever man placed in such a position before?" |
43168 | Was he laughing at Mr Cheviott? |
43168 | Was he not most certainly still at Hyeres? |
43168 | Was he talking for talking''s sake, or with the intention of setting her at her ease by showing her how completely so he was himself? |
43168 | Was her husband kind and good, and did she love him and look up to him? |
43168 | Was it Aunt Winstanley?" |
43168 | Was it about recognising that gentleman, Captain Beverley, you called him, I think? |
43168 | Was it all"the reward of a good conscience?" |
43168 | Was it much to be wondered at? |
43168 | Was it not better to be honest at all costs? |
43168 | Was it possible that even yet all might come right between Lilias and Arthur Beverley, or had Lilias quite left off caring for him? |
43168 | Was it true that Arthur, influenced by motives she could but guess at, had deserted her for his cousin? |
43168 | Was it true? |
43168 | Was it--? |
43168 | Was n''t that considerate, Mrs Greville?" |
43168 | Was she dreaming,_ could_ it be that her very worst misgiving was realised? |
43168 | Was that all you hesitated about, Mary?" |
43168 | Was_ she_ to blame? |
43168 | We''ll take him by surprise-- drive over to see him in his bachelor quarters at the farm- house the day after we get home, eh?" |
43168 | Were Mary''s misgivings about to be realised? |
43168 | Were her eyes deceiving her? |
43168 | What about his objections or non- objections?" |
43168 | What are you talking about, Frances?" |
43168 | What are you talking about?" |
43168 | What can I be made of? |
43168 | What can I, too, think of your principle and disinterestedness?" |
43168 | What can have become of Mr Morpeth? |
43168 | What can have put all this into her head?" |
43168 | What can have put it into the child''s head to want to set up a romantic friendship with these Westerns? |
43168 | What can it all be? |
43168 | What could be the meaning of it all? |
43168 | What could have put such an idea in your head, my dear aunt? |
43168 | What could it be? |
43168 | What could she say? |
43168 | What did they talk of? |
43168 | What do people do to tea to make it taste so fearful, I wonder?" |
43168 | What do you mean?" |
43168 | What do you think?" |
43168 | What does Mrs Brabazon write about?" |
43168 | What does he say to you?" |
43168 | What else could she be? |
43168 | What evil genii have conspired to bring about such a scheme? |
43168 | What fearful injustice-- for a moment she felt too staggered to speak-- how_ could_ Lilias misjudge her so? |
43168 | What good is the Brocklehurst ball, Mary? |
43168 | What had become of all her low spirits? |
43168 | What has put all this into your head? |
43168 | What have you been doing to yourself?" |
43168 | What have you been doing? |
43168 | What have you been doing?" |
43168 | What is it?" |
43168 | What is the good of a man''s being rich if he ca n''t do that? |
43168 | What is the matter with you?" |
43168 | What is the matter?" |
43168 | What might he not contrive to say by_ not_ saying, in this note he had obtained permission to write? |
43168 | What mischief are Arthur and you concocting over there?" |
43168 | What old perplexity is this?" |
43168 | What right has he to expect you to waste your youth and happiness for him? |
43168 | What shall I do?" |
43168 | What should she do? |
43168 | What should she do? |
43168 | What was her name, what had become of her, and did she and Mawde love each other very much? |
43168 | What was to be done? |
43168 | What will mamma say?" |
43168 | What would Mr Cheviott think of me if he heard of my being here, prying about his house the very day after?" |
43168 | What''s to prevent this Mr Anselm marrying and having half a dozen sons and daughters of his own?" |
43168 | What_ can_ I do?" |
43168 | What_ can_ have happened to change it all?" |
43168 | What_ could_ she say or do? |
43168 | What_ do_ you mean?" |
43168 | What_ will_ he think of me?" |
43168 | When does she return?" |
43168 | Where can they be going to? |
43168 | Where could she hide herself? |
43168 | Where indeed was the use of hurrying on, when every step, for all she knew, might but be taking her further and further in the wrong direction? |
43168 | Where is Gypsy?" |
43168 | Where or how had she done wrong? |
43168 | Where would you like to go?" |
43168 | Which way shall we go back, Lilias-- by the Southmore road, or all the way through the wood?" |
43168 | Who can it be? |
43168 | Who can not but remember the wild, even ludicrous, vagaries that flashed through our fancy at some"supreme moment"of our lives? |
43168 | Who has broken Lily''s heart and made us all miserable? |
43168 | Who is holding me? |
43168 | Who knows what might happen to you?" |
43168 | Who was it standing in frowning bewilderment before her? |
43168 | Who were they?--whence had they come, and wherefore?--and,"Will they come again next Sunday?" |
43168 | Who''s it from?" |
43168 | Who_ could_ have imagined such a thing as Mary''s being` domesticated''with the Cheviotts? |
43168 | Whose orders am I to be under?" |
43168 | Why ca n''t a man start clear in life, I wonder, without being weighted with the follies of those before him?" |
43168 | Why do you look so unhappy about it?" |
43168 | Why do you want him to marry?" |
43168 | Why should I care what such a man as that thinks of me?" |
43168 | Why should he have such a craze for hard work? |
43168 | Why should n''t he marry, poor fellow? |
43168 | Why should not the truce last till the end of the time here? |
43168 | Why should they dislike each other so? |
43168 | Why should you be ashamed of it?" |
43168 | Why this exaggerated anxiety about Alys Cheviott, and at the same time this tone of almost abject self- blame? |
43168 | Why was not Mary pleased? |
43168 | Why, I stayed up three nights in Bevan''s cottage when Jessie broke her leg, without a second thought?" |
43168 | Why, what''s the matter, child?" |
43168 | Why? |
43168 | Will it break her heart?" |
43168 | Will she ever tell it to Mary Western, I wonder? |
43168 | Will that do better?" |
43168 | Will you allow me to get you a glass of wine?" |
43168 | Will you be really so_ very_ kind as to say nothing more about this afternoon and all the trouble I have given you? |
43168 | Will you be so kind as to tell Mr Western that I shall hope to see him in a day or two? |
43168 | Will you come into the dining- room to tea, papa? |
43168 | Will you go up- stairs and ask her to come down, or shall I?" |
43168 | Will you now,"he went on,"tell me about Alys? |
43168 | Will you please try for to get her to swallow a spoonful before we move her, poor lamb?" |
43168 | Wo n''t you shake hands with me as usual?" |
43168 | Wo n''t you sit down, and I will get a light?" |
43168 | Wo n''t you tell her?" |
43168 | Would it increase or diminish the separation between them? |
43168 | Would n''t it have been nice, Arthur? |
43168 | Would she really be so glad to be home again? |
43168 | Would there be no use in getting another opinion upon the will?" |
43168 | Would you like to come, Frances? |
43168 | Yet he talks well But what care I for words? |
43168 | Yet how and where had she been wrong? |
43168 | You are not engaged to her?" |
43168 | You are not going to say` so_ insulted_''?" |
43168 | You are not in a hurry to go back to your new quarters, are you? |
43168 | You are so beautiful, my own Lily, why should you be so tried? |
43168 | You are surely not afraid that we shall have to get out by the window?" |
43168 | You do believe I care for her, I think? |
43168 | You do n''t mean that?" |
43168 | You do n''t understand, and I do n''t want you to think me a sentimental fool, but ca n''t you understand a little? |
43168 | You have heard that there are to be three beauties--_noted_ beauties, have you not? |
43168 | You heard of his romantic legacy?" |
43168 | You here? |
43168 | You know Romary, of course?" |
43168 | You know--""What do I know?" |
43168 | You may have heard of old John Birley''s strange will?" |
43168 | You must be very unlike other girls, Miss Western?" |
43168 | You poor child, what is-- what can be the matter?" |
43168 | You refer to Alys, of course? |
43168 | You remember what a fine young fellow Basil was only last year?" |
43168 | You said these Western girls were pretty, did you not, Miss Cheviott?" |
43168 | You see that, Arthur, surely? |
43168 | You seem to be coming from the farm-- tell me, I implore you, have you by any chance heard how my poor cousin is? |
43168 | You were not so very frightened, surely?" |
43168 | You will wait and go back with us to Romary, as Alys wishes, wo n''t you?" |
43168 | You would like that, would n''t you?" |
43168 | You would like to be there before Brandreth arrives?" |
43168 | You would not like to marry a Frenchman, would you, Alys?" |
43168 | You would not mind, I suppose, if I arranged to go home rather sooner than I intended?" |
43168 | Your fancies about me are the reverse of complimentary, do you know, Miss Western? |
43168 | Your father, as a rule, is so equable, is he not? |
43168 | Your pledging yourself to me is surely not going to ruin you? |
43168 | _ Can_ he be so utterly base and dishonourable?" |
43168 | _ Can_ it be true? |
43168 | _ Could_ I? |
43168 | _ Could_ it be true? |
43168 | _ Surely_ not-- yet why did this assertion of his recur to her so often, and not altogether in the sense of re- arousing her indignation? |
43168 | _ Too_ rapidly indeed was her next fear-- how, amidst the pouring rain and the darkness, could she attract the driver''s attention? |
43168 | _ Was_ it all personal pride and offended feeling that had actuated her conduct, under the guise of unselfish devotion? |
43168 | _ You_ are not going to school again, are you, Mary?" |
43168 | ` Girls,''you say-- are they all girls, then-- no sons?" |
43168 | child, tell me--_do_ you hate me? |
43168 | did you get out of the window? |
43168 | exclaimed Lilias, growing scarlet, and with a touch of indignation in her tone,"why should you allude to such a thing? |
43168 | exclaimed Mary, severely,"how_ can_ you be so unladylike? |
43168 | he exclaimed,"how do you mean? |
43168 | he said, across the table,"that splendid place near Withenden?" |
43168 | he said, anxiously, humbly almost,"will you not allow me to say how deeply I admire and-- and respect your courage and sisterly devotion?" |
43168 | he said, if truth be told, ever so slightly nettled-- for what man likes to be"damned with faint praise,"by a girl in her teens, whoever she may be? |
43168 | her trust flung back into her face? |
43168 | how dreadful it would be to live in a town?" |
43168 | how many are there?" |
43168 | or rather,"Who can they be?" |
43168 | repeated Mary;"do n''t you see how? |
43168 | repeated Mr Cheviott, with a shade of contempt in his tone,"what in this world could you explain? |
43168 | said Alys, pricking up her ears,"what''s the matter? |
43168 | said Mr Cheviott, gruffly,"there was no reason for it, and-- you can not have forgotten what I said about the Westerns, Alys?" |
43168 | she said,"and that Captain Beverley is here?" |
43168 | she said,"you do n''t need to go over again?" |
43168 | she said.--"Oh, you are not going away from me are you? |
43168 | she thought,"is` he''worthy of it all?" |
43168 | supposing-- just_ supposing_ the ghost were to come in, what should I do? |
43168 | thought Mary,"was ever any one so unlucky as I?" |
43168 | thought Mr Cheviott--"or was it through some foolery of his that she got locked in?" |
43168 | well, here comes the heggs, and letters, too!-- What''s going to happen, Mrs Bowker? |
43168 | what had become of them all? |
43168 | what have I done to it? |
43168 | what shall we do?" |
43168 | would she ever wish to see me again? |