Questions

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
33264Break me-- what would they break me for? 33264 Divy up?"
33264Do you suppose I''m crazy about them? 33264 Oh, you ai n''t got no money, and you ai n''t hauling down thirty a week, are you?"
33264Well,I said,"suppose I am, it''s mine, ai n''t it?"
33264What do you want of him?
33264Ai n''t I lost every good chance that I ever had to work in the good places, just because I''ve had to buck against the reputation of my family?
33264Ai n''t you got nothing in your head but your rat?"
33264And do you know what he would do?
33264And he said,"The only way you can hurt me, Nan, is to say you wo n''t have me and you do n''t say that, do you dear?"
33264And what do you think?
33264Anyway, even if you do n''t make much the first few years, you get your living, which is about all we get anyway, ai n''t it, Kate?
33264Can you beat that?
33264Did you ever eat at a table under a great big tree looking out on the water?
33264Did you ever know Tom Cassidy, a young cop at our Station?
33264Do I not hold myself as a gentleman should?"
33264Do I seem sort of stupid to you?
33264Do n''t you care for me a little?"
33264Do you remember Jenny Kerns?
33264Do you remember Jenny who was sick about a year ago, and whose mother come from Iowa or Kansas or somewhere to get her?
33264Do you remember Rosie O''Grady who got married about three years ago?
33264Do you remember Will Henderson who used to play in the orchestra in the Grand Opera and who lived next to us when we was at 129?
33264Do you remember how happy we was when we went down to court and heard him get that seven years''stretch?
33264Do you remember how you used to shake my teeth out for following the hand organ men around town?
33264Do you remember that fat old brewer that use to come hanging around you?
33264Do you remember that little English woman who had a baby in the hospital next to Billy?
33264Had n''t I better give them to some one?
33264Hain''t I had that to fight against all my life?
33264He kind of saw it was true I think, cause he started looking around the room, then he said,"Where''s the kid?"
33264He said to one of the men that was with him,"Ca n''t you see it, Phillip, ca n''t you see it?
33264He said,"Nancy darling, you do like me a little bit, do n''t you?
33264He said,"Well, what has that got to do with it?
33264He said,"Where else am I to go?"
33264He said,"Why not, do n''t you love me?"
33264He stood still a minute, and almost turned white and then what do you think the piker did?
33264He was all in and in an awful bad way, and I said to him,"For God''s sake, Jim, why did you come to me?
33264He was showing me the book the other day, and he come to an old man with long whiskers and I said,"Who is that old guy, Billy?"
33264Here it is now, Kate, do n''t you think it is wonderful?
33264I am glad you are getting along so well, Kate, you will get four months off, wo n''t you?
33264I asked him one day if he thought he could make it pay, and he said,"Sure, do n''t the Italians and the Chinamen out West make truck farming pay?
33264I followed her out into the hall and said,"What is the matter, Mary?"
33264I have give him enough to get to Australia, why do n''t he go?
33264I said low like,"Jim, for God''s sake, Jim, why do you come here?"
33264I said to her quick so she would not know how bad I felt,"What must I do to give you Billy?"
33264I said to him one day,"What are you studying farming for, that do n''t pay?
33264I said,"What do you mean?"
33264I wonder if country kids do have a better time than city kids?
33264If they have lettuce from Jack''s garden, Jack says to her,"Mother, ai n''t that the finest lettuce you ever et?"
33264Is n''t he your little boy?"
33264Is n''t that a come- down?
33264It is Hell to be crooked, ai n''t it?
33264It was Casey who knew me and I told Casey he was a liar, and Casey said to the man,"Are you going to court and make a charge against this girl?"
33264Jim come over to me again and stood in front of me and says,"He is, is he?
33264Jim laughed,"You give him a chance,"he said,"what kind of a chance can you give him?"
33264Jim looked at me a minit, then he said,"You''re getting dam nice lately, what''s the matter with you?"
33264Jim looked at me kind of curiously for a minit and said,"What are you so crazy about him for, why do you want him?"
33264Now what do you think that piker had done?
33264Now when everything was coming along so nice, why did he have to come and butt in and spoil it all?
33264Now, ai n''t that pretty?
33264Now, what do you know about that?
33264She could not speak for a minute then she blazed at me:"Take my baby, take Tommy?
33264She turned on me like a cat, and said,"What do you mean?"
33264Sounds kinda pretty, does n''t it?
33264That is just like a mother, ai n''t it?
33264That sounds all right, does n''t it?
33264Then all at once she dropped on her knees at my feet and put her face in my lap and said,"Oh, Nannie, why did n''t God take me too?
33264Then he said,"Why wo n''t you say we will be married?"
33264Then he sort of got sore and he said,"What do you mean by sendin''me the messages you have?"
33264There is one saucy robbin who comes toward me and cocks his little head and says,"Am I not a little dandy?
33264Well, what do you think?
33264Well-- well-- he do n''t look like me, does he?
33264What do you think?
33264What is the difference anyway?
33264What you going to do?"
33264What_ will_ I do?
33264Where is he?"
33264Why do n''t you go into the police like your father and like Tom?"
33264Why do n''t you send him up to my mother''s?
33264Wo n''t you give Billy to me?"
33264Wo n''t you marry me?"
33264Would n''t it be nice if we could make a noise as big according to our size as the bull- frog does to his?
33264XXX Oh, Kate, ca n''t you get word to Jim some way and call him off?
33264XXXVI_ Dear Kate_: What do you think?
33264You do need me, do n''t you, Kate?
33264You wo n''t be dead sore about Billy, will you, and some day you will understand?
33264You wo n''t be sore at me, say you wo n''t, Kate?
33264and he looked at me so shocked and said,"Why, aunt Nannie, where have you been?
4995A beggar? 4995 A chum?"
4995A mistake?
4995A rat?
4995Again I ask, what is there in it?
4995All right, Roger?
4995Am I to be roasted alive?
4995And all in a half an hour?
4995And all the rest of the Darbyville people? 4995 And did he?"
4995And did you see her?
4995And he accused you of stealing?
4995And how far is that from Chicago?
4995And how?
4995And if I make a clean confession you will not prosecute me?
4995And if he is n''t?
4995And what do you intend to do with it?
4995And what is it?
4995And what is your business with me, sir?
4995And what, was it?
4995And when does the train leave?
4995And when is this trial to come off?
4995And when shall you go?
4995And where is the cable road?
4995And where?
4995And who will believe you, I repeat? 4995 And who would believe you?"
4995And yet you hurried to see him?
4995And you have n''t found work anywhere?
4995Any one bring a rope?
4995Are n''t you afraid?
4995Are n''t you afraid?
4995Are they in this?
4995Are you able to go his bail?
4995Are you from Foley?
4995Are you going to drive around to the house for them?
4995Are you hard up?
4995Are you hurt?
4995Are you hurt?
4995Are you satisfied?
4995Are you still here?
4995Are you sure?
4995Arrested? 4995 Been to Newville?"
4995Better keep them?
4995Bind me over?
4995But how can I do that? 4995 But my reputation?
4995But where are you going? 4995 But why did n''t he speak of it before?"
4995But why did you want me arrested?
4995Ca n''t we roll the tree out of the way?
4995Can I ask for an examination at once?
4995Can I do anything for you?
4995Can you furnish bail?
4995Can you prove it?
4995Can you see anything of him outside?
4995Can you tell me anything about the lady that keeps the boarding- house below here?
4995Can you tell me where Chris Holtzmann''s place is?
4995Cast up on a lee shore, are you, Roger?
4995Darbyville?
4995Did I lose you, or vice versa?
4995Did he have you arrested?
4995Did n''t the woman who lives here just pay you?
4995Did n''t you as much as try to intimate he was lying-- down in Judge Penfold''s court this afternoon?
4995Did n''t you say so? 4995 Did you ever hear of a man by the name of Chris Holtzmann?"
4995Did you ever hear of him before?
4995Did you expect him?
4995Did you find the statement?
4995Did you hear that?
4995Did you hear what I said?
4995Did you see him yesterday?
4995Do n''t you know breaking jail is a-- a felony?
4995Do n''t you remember?
4995Do n''t you think we had better let them go ahead?
4995Do n''t you think you had better have this Woodward arrested first?
4995Do what?
4995Do you deny you have the packet?
4995Do you do that?
4995Do you expect me to believe all your lies?
4995Do you expect me to believe you, sir?
4995Do you expect them to- day?
4995Do you hear me, Strong?
4995Do you know anything about Mr. Holtzmann''s private affairs in the East?
4995Do you know anything about the trains?
4995Do you know much about that city?
4995Do you know what my advice is?
4995Do you know who I am?
4995Do you make a charge?
4995Do you remember the name?
4995Do you suppose I carry so much money with me?
4995Do you think I will submit to it?
4995Do you think it will be advisable for me to hunt up Mrs. Agatha Mitts to- night?
4995Do you think you can handle a pistol?
4995Do you think you can hurt men like Mr. Woodward and myself?
4995Does Mr. Samuel Simpson live here?
4995Does Mr. Simpson live here?
4995Does he have a variety theatre?
4995Does he run the place himself?
4995Does she blame me for what has happened?
4995Done, sir? 4995 Down to the Foley bridge,"was the reply,"Will you take a passenger?"
4995Eh?
4995Empty?
4995Excuse me, but who am I talking to?
4995Fifty dollars?
4995For the last time, Strong, will you give up the papers?
4995Give me a quarter, then, will you? 4995 Go down?"
4995Gone?
4995Gone?
4995Hand what over?
4995Has she many boarders?
4995Have we been here all night?
4995Have you any idea which way the fellow went?
4995Have you any objections to my remaining until the shower is over?
4995Have you been over to Brooklyn?
4995Have you destroyed all the evidence in this matter?
4995Have you finished hitching up?
4995Have you got an axe?
4995Have you heard anything of your money yet?
4995Have you heard from Mrs. Canby yet?
4995Have you heard from her yet?
4995Have you ink and paper handy?
4995Have you looked there?
4995Have you room for him?
4995Have you the statement with you?
4995Have you the time now?
4995He did, eh?
4995He stole the Widow Canby''s money,I heard one man whisper, to which another replied:--"Light fingered, eh?
4995Hello, what''s up?
4995Hello, you back again?
4995Hi, there, what are you doing in my boat?
4995Holtzmann''s? 4995 How about the horse and carriage?"
4995How about the message that gentleman just handed in?
4995How about the robbery at the Widow Canby''s?
4995How about the two hundred dollars you stole last night?
4995How did you come here?
4995How did you come here?
4995How did you get here?
4995How did you get out?
4995How do I know? 4995 How do you know I am going to Chicago?"
4995How do you know but what the widow said I could have the pears?
4995How do you know?
4995How long have you been out?
4995How long must you stay here?
4995How long will it take to send a message to Chicago?
4995How long will this delay us?
4995How much more do you want?
4995How shall we sit?
4995How would you like to board with me? 4995 How?"
4995Humph; do n''t you suppose I know who you are?
4995I suppose you did n''t expect me so soon?
4995I telegraphed to?
4995I told him I would send it as soon as possible,"Did you tell him it would n''t go before noon?
4995I will?
4995I wonder what Dunc''s father will say when he hears of it?
4995I''m not dreaming?
4995I''m not on business, and--"Say, Decker, how long is it going to take you to hitch up?
4995I''m the president of the Models, am I not?
4995I? 4995 I?"
4995If I am, who made me so?
4995In Brooklyn?
4995Indeed? 4995 Indeed?
4995Indeed? 4995 Is Mr. Holtzmann about?"
4995Is Mr. Woodward in?
4995Is Mrs. Agatha Mitts in?
4995Is it loaded?
4995Is it loaded?
4995Is it possible?
4995Is it?
4995Is n''t my word enough?
4995Is n''t there danger of trains coming from the other way?
4995Is n''t this what you came about?
4995Is that all you wish to know?
4995Is that so? 4995 Is that so?"
4995Is that straight?
4995Is that what you want?
4995Is there any possible way I can get to Chicago before noon?
4995Is there anything to be made out of it?
4995It looks like it, does n''t it?
4995Judge Penfold, do you remember me?
4995Let''s see, where did I leave them tools? 4995 Lost the money?"
4995May I ask how you happened to come in?
4995May I ask what kind of a woman she is?
4995May I ask your name?
4995Mr. Holtzmann, I believe?
4995Mr. Strong here, sir?
4995My handkerchief?
4995No, I''m not, but what''s the use of letting him know anything?
4995No? 4995 No?
4995No?
4995Now about-- What was that?
4995Now will you do as I say?
4995Oh, Roger, how do you know?
4995Oh, ho, you do, do you? 4995 Oh, sir, I hope you are not getting him into trouble?"
4995Other reasons?
4995Quite com''table, boy?
4995Really? 4995 Roger, do n''t you hear me?"
4995Ruin us both?
4995Say, young feller, do you want to make some money?
4995Say, young man, can you help a fellow as is down on his luck?
4995See here, Moran, who''s the president of this club?
4995Shall I speak to him? 4995 Shall you go?"
4995Shoo-- you do n''t say? 4995 So they''ve thought better of it and set you free, Roger?"
4995So you think I''m telling you a falsehood? 4995 Staying?
4995Strong, please step in, will you?
4995Suppose I refuse to pay?
4995Suppose you admit that you are mistaken-- that Mr. Stumpy is not the man? 4995 Supposing I have?"
4995Terrible rain, this, is n''t it?
4995That is your name?
4995That so? 4995 The Models?"
4995The hundred dollars?
4995The thing of it is,broke in Henry Morse,"what has become of this Stumpy?
4995Then I ca n''t have''em back?
4995Then why do n''t you take the train to Newville and go home?
4995Then why not chop it off?
4995Then will you do as I wish?
4995Then you do n''t think I''m guilty?
4995Then you know him quite well?
4995They were n''t here yesterday?
4995Think you''re smart, do n''t you?
4995This is Mrs. Agatha Mitts?
4995To Brooklyn? 4995 To Chicago?"
4995Tramp? 4995 Treated Duncan?
4995Under arrest?
4995Variety actor?
4995Want me arrested?
4995Want to see Holtzmann first?
4995Was, eh? 4995 Well, was n''t we all partners in the good times gone by?"
4995Well, well, Roger, struck port again, have you? 4995 Well, what do you think?"
4995Well, what do you want?
4995Well, what is it, my boy? 4995 Well, what is your charge against Strong?"
4995Well, what of it? 4995 Well, where is he now?"
4995Were you going to Brooklyn?
4995What I am called?
4995What are going to do with that?
4995What are you doing here?
4995What are you doing here?
4995What are you doing in New York, Duncan?
4995What are you doing in Widow Canby''s orchard?
4995What are you doing with my valise?
4995What are you going to do about it?
4995What are you going to do?
4995What are you talking about? 4995 What became of him?"
4995What brought you here?
4995What brought you?
4995What conditions, Dick?
4995What do I want? 4995 What do I want?"
4995What do you intend to do now?
4995What do you intend to do with me?
4995What do you intend to do? 4995 What do you intend to do?"
4995What do you intend to do?
4995What do you intend to do?
4995What do you know about Nick Weaver?
4995What do you know about it?
4995What do you know about me?
4995What do you know about that?
4995What do you know of Nicholas Weaver?
4995What do you know of his private affairs?
4995What do you mean by coming to Darbyville, sir, when I have repeatedly written you to stay away?
4995What do you mean by treating me in this way?
4995What do you mean by valuable?
4995What do you mean, sir?
4995What do you mean? 4995 What do you mean?"
4995What do you mean?
4995What do you mean?
4995What do you mean?
4995What do you think fair?
4995What do you want of me?
4995What do you want?
4995What do you want?
4995What does Woodward want of the papers?
4995What does he do?
4995What for?
4995What for?
4995What for?
4995What for?
4995What have you got to say to the charge?
4995What have you to say to this, Strong?
4995What is it, Kate?
4995What is it?
4995What is it?
4995What is the nearest station on the other side of the bridge?
4995What is the trouble here?
4995What kind of a man is this Holtzmann?
4995What kind of tools?
4995What of it, Dick? 4995 What papers?"
4995What right has a fellow like you to talk to me in this manner? 4995 What time will you land me in Chicago?"
4995What will she say? 4995 What will the old gent say when he hears of it?"
4995What will you take for the papers you hold?
4995What would you do?
4995What''s all this about?
4995What''s that?
4995What''s that?
4995What''s the matter here?
4995What''s the matter, Roger?
4995What''s the trouble?
4995What''s the value to you?
4995What''s this on the handkerchief?
4995What''s your idea of calling on Chris Holtzmann?
4995What, tend bar and so?
4995What?
4995What?
4995When de you see Holtzmann?
4995When does the next train arrive behind us?
4995When was the robbery committed?
4995When will you start?
4995When?
4995When?
4995Where am I to look for him? 4995 Where am I?"
4995Where are you going?
4995Where are you going?
4995Where are you staying?
4995Where did he jump over the fence?
4995Where did you come from?
4995Where did you lose the money?
4995Where do you want to go?
4995Where have you been?
4995Where have you been?
4995Where have you been?
4995Where have you hidden them?
4995Where is it?
4995Where is the fellow?
4995Where to?
4995Where''s my pocketbook?
4995Where?
4995Which one?
4995Which way is it?
4995Who are they?
4995Who are you, if I may ask?
4995Who are you?
4995Who are you?
4995Who are you?
4995Who asked you to?
4995Who can prove it?
4995Who did he write to? 4995 Who did you say those boys were that tied you up?"
4995Who has been here?
4995Who has this statement?
4995Who is it?
4995Who is this chap?
4995Who put it there?
4995Who said I had the papers?
4995Who said I took any document out of his safe?
4995Who says so?
4995Who shall I say it is?
4995Who shall I say it is?
4995Who was fool enough to tell them?
4995Who? 4995 Whom did you say, sir?"
4995Whom do you work for now?
4995Why did n''t he untie you?
4995Why do n''t you destroy all the evidence on hand?
4995Why do n''t you give up the statement?
4995Why do n''t you send John Stumpy to jail, too?
4995Why do you take an interest in it?
4995Why do you want them back?
4995Why not let me have it?
4995Why not?
4995Why should I?
4995Why should n''t I?
4995Why so? 4995 Why, how did you know?"
4995Why, what do you mean, Roger?
4995Why, where are they?
4995Why-- why-- where did you come from?
4995Why? 4995 Will you give them back if I let you see them?"
4995Will you let me see them?
4995Will you mind paying in advance?
4995Will you offer a reward for the capture of the man?
4995Will you pay the price?
4995Will you please step into the parlor?
4995Will you promise to go to bed and not to drink any more if I do?
4995Will you promise to hand it back if I do?
4995Will you promise to keep silent if I tell?
4995Will you stay here with Kate?
4995Will you take me with you?
4995Wo n''t you?
4995Would five dollars a week be too much?
4995Would n''t you like to stay with the children?
4995Would you shoot me?
4995Wrong?
4995Yes; thirty dollars--"And did n''t you put the bills in with a big roll in your vest pocket?
4995Yes? 4995 Yes?
4995Yes? 4995 Yes?"
4995Yes?
4995You are Carson Strong''s brother- in- law, I believe?
4995You are interested in the case?
4995You are not fooling me?
4995You are not from Chicago, young fellow?
4995You are sure?
4995You are telling me the truth?
4995You defy me?
4995You did n''t think to be caught as easily, did you? 4995 You did n''t?"
4995You do n''t mean to say you would play me false?
4995You expect me to pay you a thousand dollars?
4995You fool you, what do you mean?
4995You had nothing to do with that handkerchief?
4995You intend to use it against me?
4995You knew my father quite well, did n''t you?
4995You know the lady?
4995You know who I am? 4995 You meant to burn him up, did you?"
4995You refuse?
4995You saved me from those toughs that wanted to rob me last night?
4995You say you worked for Holtzmann two years ago?
4995You want me?
4995You will arrest him at once?
4995You''re not going on any more voyages?
4995You-- you-- Who says he made such an admission?
4995Your honor? 4995 Your president?
4995A friend?
4995After that tramp?"
4995All three of my listeners repeated the words in chorus; then Captain Enos continued:--"And what are you going to do there?"
4995And these papers-- ought you to have them?"
4995And were they afraid he could be bought up or threatened into a confession?
4995And what for, I''d like to know?"
4995And would Mr. Aaron Woodward be along?
4995Are there any charges to pay?"
4995Are you sure it''s enough?
4995Besides, what had I done to call for an apology?
4995Both of us would willingly have left Darbyville, but where should we go?
4995But do n''t you think you had better wait until all is settled?
4995But how was this to be done?
4995But in the meantime, how would Kate fare?
4995But what''s the use of being high toned when it do n''t pay?"
4995But why did he leave the statement?"
4995But you''ll promise, wo n''t you?"
4995By the way, do you drink?"
4995Ca n''t you let me have the papers cheaper?"
4995Can I use this room for a while?"
4995Can you furnish me with dinner?"
4995Canby?"
4995Captain Moss, I believe?"
4995Come, what will you give?"
4995Did n''t I write to you?"
4995Did n''t Stumpy admit he had taken the money?"
4995Did this man possess the entire key to the situation?
4995Did you ever make a clear statement concerning the transactions that took away my father''s honest name?"
4995Did you, Millie, my pet?"
4995Do n''t you believe I''ll confess?
4995Do you expect me to pay any attention to that?"
4995Do you intend to pay or not?"
4995Do you intend to show me the way out, or shall I fire?"
4995Do you know breaking jail is a serious offence?"
4995Do you know him or the woman?"
4995Do you know of any close at hand?"
4995Do you know what the papers contain?"
4995Do you mean to say you can stand up against me?"
4995Do you smoke?
4995Do you suppose I''d tell him without pay?
4995Do you think I''m going to do all your work for nothing?"
4995Do you think I''m to be defeated by a boy?"
4995Do you think you can get along while I am gone?"
4995Do you think you can hurt me?
4995Do you want the lantern?"
4995Do you?"
4995Does oo like dollies?"
4995Funny I mistook your valise for mine, last night, was n''t it?"
4995Go into the house?"
4995Got taken in short, did n''t you?"
4995Had the merchant returned home?
4995Had the thief jumped over?
4995Have they heard anything of John Stumpy yet?"
4995Have you read it?"
4995How dare you?"
4995How does he know but what the papers were destroyed long ago?"
4995How in the world had he found out about the statement dropped by Stumpy?
4995How is it that my father is in prison while you live in style on money you never earned?
4995How long do you expect to be away?"
4995How so?"
4995How was it to be done?
4995How was the thing to be accomplished?
4995How will you have it-- in cash?"
4995How would he have accounted for all his money if I had n''t had a rich aunt die and leave it to him?"
4995How would the good lady who had done so much for Kate and myself receive me?
4995I hope you do n''t think I was trying to rob you?"
4995I like to have some one going along, do n''t you?"
4995I suppose you read that paper clear through, did you?"
4995I want to know what you know of Holtzmann of Chicago?"
4995I was arrested for having them, and what''s the use of my having the name without the game?"
4995I was fully three- quarters of a mile from any house and half that distance from the road, and who would be likely to hear me so far off?
4995I wonder if I could n''t send my father the good news by telegraph?"
4995If I did, do n''t you suppose I''d go back and pick it up?"
4995If attacked in the middle of the night, what would my sister do?
4995If he did, who could tell what indignities he might visit upon me?
4995If his mission was robbery pure and simple, why had he not selected some one who looked richer than myself?
4995If so, which way had he gone, up, down, or into the woods beyond?
4995If the documents were produced at once, how could I save them from destruction?
4995If you were n''t here, how did that come here?"
4995In another moment the deception I had practised would be known-- and then?
4995Is n''t it so, Aaron?"
4995Is there any water around?"
4995It would be the simplest way to do, but would it be the best?
4995May I ask his name?"
4995May I ask the cause of your sudden impatience?"
4995Meg, shall I give them to him?"
4995My name is Allen Price; what is yours?"
4995Newville?"
4995Not that I was frightened by his threat, but what made the man take such a strong personal interest in the matter?
4995On a visit?"
4995Parsons?"
4995Perhaps you desire board?"
4995Say, how much does the young cub know?"
4995Say, take me to the hotel, will you?
4995See the spade covered with blood?
4995Shall I call him?"
4995Should I attack him or endeavor to slip to one side?
4995Should I enter such a hole of iniquity?
4995Should I go on to Brooklyn or retrace my steps to the hotel?
4995Should I tell Dick the secret?
4995Should I tell him?
4995Six to one was heavy odds, and who could tell what these wild fellows would not do?
4995So you''re going to Chicago?
4995Stumpy?"
4995Suppose the trio should come out?
4995The man scowled,"How do you know?"
4995The merchant taking my part?
4995The people in this village must be asleep-- not to know better''n that?"
4995Then your business with me is--?
4995There was a pause after this speech, then Duncan addressed me:--"Perhaps you are anxious to know why I brought you here?"
4995To what papers did he refer?
4995Want to find out all about Chris Holtzmann?"
4995Want to hire my rig?"
4995Was it possible he was telling the truth?
4995Was it possible that he contemplated doing me physical harm?
4995Was it possible that the train from Smalleyville had managed to come through, after all?
4995Was it possible that this envelope contained the solution of the mystery that had taken away our good name and sent my father to prison?
4995Was it possible that this seedy- looking individual had once been intimate with Duncan Woodward''s father?
4995Was it possible there had been a meeting between the two?
4995Was it possible they had seen me?
4995Was it the foreshadowing of coming events that disturbed me?
4995Was the safe door open?"
4995Was this man speaking of Mrs. Canby?
4995Well, Strong, what have you to say for yourself?
4995Wentworth?"
4995Were they the ones that Holtzmann of Chicago is after?
4995What became of him?"
4995What brings you back to- night?"
4995What brought you to New York?"
4995What brought you?
4995What could I say?
4995What could be done?
4995What did he want, I wonder?"
4995What did it mean?
4995What did it mean?
4995What did the tramp know of the events of the past?
4995What did they mean by going to the very place I had just vacated?
4995What did you say your name was?"
4995What do you intend to do now?"
4995What do you know of them?"
4995What do you mean?"
4995What do you say, Strong?"
4995What do you suppose the Strongs would pay for them?"
4995What do you wish me to do, gentlemen?"
4995What does that amount to?"
4995What for?"
4995What good would an exposure to Holtzmann do?"
4995What healthy country boy would not be?
4995What if Booth should see the damage I had done?
4995What if Mrs. Canby should consider me at fault?
4995What makes you think so?"
4995What on earth could they be doing out at this time of night?
4995What papers have you missed?
4995What right had people to look down on my sister and myself?
4995What right have you got to set yourself up to be any better than your father was afore you?"
4995What was I to do?
4995What was the job that he contemplated?
4995What was to be done next?
4995What was to be done?
4995What was to be done?
4995What was to be done?
4995What will Mr. Woodward say to that, I wonder?"
4995What will Mrs. Canby say?"
4995What will you do?
4995What would Chris Holtzmann think of my visit, and what would be the result of our interview?
4995What''s my father''s business?"
4995What''s to be done?"
4995What, then, could he have in common with my father?
4995Where be you a- running to?
4995Where has Holtzmann gone?"
4995Where is the rope, boys?"
4995Where was the door?
4995Where''re you from?
4995While waiting for her return I could not help but remember the old lines:--"''Will you walk into my parlor?''
4995Who are you and what do you want to know?"
4995Who is the relative that left it to you?
4995Who is this man?
4995Whom do you assert stole the Widow Canby''s money?"
4995Why are you so anxious to gain possession of Nicholas Weaver''s dying statement?"
4995Why did you come here?"
4995Why did you do it?"
4995Why not escape through the floor?
4995Why was my visit to Chris Holtzmann considered of such importance that every possible means was taken to prevent it?
4995Will you come in?"
4995Will you give it back?"
4995Will you go his bondsman?"
4995Woodward?"
4995Woodward?"
4995Woodward?"
4995Would he commit deliberate perjury?
4995Would it be advisable for me to remain or had I better get out?
4995Would they get their man?
4995Yet what was to be done?
4995You did n''t meet Chris Holtzmann or this Aaron Woodward, did you?"
4995You live here in Chicago, I suppose?"
4995You mean Duncan?"
4995You thought to get away in fine style, did n''t you?"
4995You''re afraid of him, are you?"
4995a lad with your bearing a thief?
4995do you know?"
4995do you think I''m to be bluffed by a boy?
4995he gasped"Who was he going to rob?"
4995how did you get in here?"
4995of the best, and--""Why is my character not of the best?"
4995what''s that?"
4995you know my name?"
1476About me?
1476After papa''s money? 1476 And did you enlighten her on the point?"
1476And did you know the man who was here before you?
1476And did you set him going?
1476And how did Captain Anthony receive this interesting information?
1476And is the precious pair of them out?
1476And she did?
1476And so you gave up that walk you proposed to take?
1476And then what happens?
1476And to the point?
1476And what could I have done then? 1476 And you could n''t go about in it without finding somebody to fall in love with?"
1476And you have got what you wanted? 1476 Any children?"
1476Are n''t you anxious to see the ship?
1476Are you reproaching me with being too impulsive?
1476Are you serious in what you say?
1476Are you thinking of leaving us, sir; of going home by steam? 1476 Beg you pardon, ma''am-- but are you going away for good?"
1476Being what?
1476But do you think there''s time yet to do anything?
1476But have you discovered all these fine things in the story; or has Mr. Powell discovered them to you in his artless talk? 1476 But how can I forget?
1476But is he ready to join at once?
1476But tell me, Marlow,I interrupted,"how do you account for this opinion?
1476But what else could we do?
1476But what induced that man to marry you? 1476 But why this secrecy?
1476Captain gone below?
1476Could n''t you wait at least till I came out? 1476 Did he?"
1476Did the poor girl admit firing off her confidences at Mrs. Fyne-- eight pages of close writing-- that sort of thing?
1476Did you hear what this gentleman was saying to me?
1476Did you notice? 1476 Do n''t know where your ship is?"
1476Do n''t you agree with me?
1476Do n''t you believe me?
1476Do n''t you know it''s illegal?
1476Do n''t you know there''s no admittance that way?
1476Do n''t you know?
1476Do n''t you think she ought to be given a chance?
1476Do you believe that?
1476Do you conclude from this that nothing whatever was said?
1476Do you expect me to agree to all this?
1476Do you know French, Miss de Barral?
1476Do you mean the captain did? 1476 Do you mean to say that you made a young lady known to me under a false name?"
1476Do you mean you''ve got him here?
1476Do you really believe what you have said?
1476Do you think a man with a face like that can hope to live his life out? 1476 Does he think he is in danger of dying?"
1476Does he?
1476Does it matter how I feel?
1476Duplicity is a strong word, Mrs. Fyne-- isn''t it?
1476Eh? 1476 Eh?
1476Eh? 1476 Eh?
1476Even if I managed to lay hold some time to- day of a man ready to go at such short notice I could n''t ship him regularly here-- could I?
1476Has she her soft moods, then?
1476Have you a more compassionate scheme ready?
1476He was there, of course?
1476How do you do, sir?
1476How do you know all this?
1476How on earth can I know?
1476I say,I tackled him at once,"how can you be certain that Flora de Barral ever went to sea?
1476I wonder why?
1476Is Mrs. Anthony in England now?
1476Is Mrs. Anthony not feeling well?
1476Is it worth while talking about that awful time? 1476 Is it?"
1476Is that you, Powell?
1476It was something beginning with an S- was n''t it?
1476Know her?
1476Know what?
1476Knows what?
1476Leaving the child?
1476Let''s see,says he,"what did you tell me your name was?"
1476More coffee, Mr. Franklin? 1476 Mrs. Anthony lighted the flare?
1476No? 1476 Oh, you did?
1476Regarding Miss de Barral?
1476She did n''t tell you, I suppose?
1476She was not very much upset?
1476So Captain Anthony joined you-- did he?
1476So she thinks of her father-- does she? 1476 So tremendously in love with each other-- was that it?
1476Takes interest-- eh?
1476Tell me, Fyne,I cried,"you do n''t think the girl was mad-- do you?"
1476Tell me, is it so bad as that?
1476That surprises you? 1476 That?
1476The father was there of course?
1476The financier?
1476The master of the_ Ferndale_? 1476 Then what do you mean?
1476To your brother?
1476Upon my word, Marlow,I cried,"what are you flying out at me for like this?
1476Was he a foreigner?
1476Was it appealing?
1476Was it frightened, angry, crushed, resigned?
1476Was n''t that the best thing to do?
1476Was-- was Mrs. Anthony lost too?
1476We got to know each other by chance?
1476Well, then, Mrs. Fyne, does it not strike you that it would be reasonable under the circumstances to let your brother take care of himself?
1476Well? 1476 What am I to do?"
1476What are you doing here?
1476What are you screaming for, you little fool?
1476What day?
1476What do you know about it?
1476What do you mean? 1476 What do you want?"
1476What effect did you expect anyhow? 1476 What is it you are concealing from me?"
1476What is it you are hinting at?
1476What is it, Symons?
1476What on earth are you so dismal about?
1476What on earth do you mean?
1476What the deuce are they worrying about?
1476What the devil do you mean by this?
1476What understanding?
1476What was the name of your chance again?
1476What was very simple?
1476What would have been the good?
1476What''s crushing you?
1476What''s the matter?
1476What? 1476 Where are they now?"
1476Where does he belong to? 1476 Where was the captain?"
1476Who are like passengers?
1476Who do you take me for?
1476Who the devil is he?
1476Who?
1476Why are you glad? 1476 Why ca n''t you leave that alone?"
1476Why did n''t you ask him to leave you?
1476Why did n''t you do it?
1476Why do you ask?
1476Why do you look startled? 1476 Why do you say this?"
1476Why does n''t he go below?
1476Why is it? 1476 Why not?
1476Why should I? 1476 Why should a girl be more considerate than anyone else?
1476Why undeserved?
1476Why was it carried on clandestinely?
1476Would nothing less do for once?
1476Would you go to her?
1476Would you like better a man who let his notions lie curled up?
1476You are n''t too big to be told how to do things-- are you? 1476 You could n''t wait-- eh?"
1476You did n''t suppose he was to be kept in jail for life?
1476You did see him then?
1476You did? 1476 You do n''t believe in an accident, Mrs. Fyne, do you?"
1476You do n''t mean that I should give way-- do you?
1476You do n''t mean to say you have forgotten the connection?
1476You have-- eh? 1476 You knew I was here?"
1476You make it your business to know them-- don''t you? 1476 You see him often?"
1476You smile? 1476 You talked together a lot?"
1476You think it''s so bad as that?
1476You think so? 1476 You understand?"
1476You wo n''t fail to join-- eh?
1476You would go with me?
1476You-- what? 1476 *****You made him talk?"
1476--I am thirteen years older than he is-- you would think it would be all right, would n''t you?
1476?"
1476A deep sigh was heard followed by the mate''s voice asking dismally if that was the way one would speak of a man to whom one wished well?
1476A man may land anywhere and bolt inland-- but what about his five- ton cutter?
1476A straight question-- eh?
1476After a bit he says in his gentle soft tone:"Did you see it?"
1476Altogether the proceedings of a desperate drunkard-- weren''t they?
1476An agitated"What is it?"
1476And I pondered: How is one an orphan"to a certain extent"?
1476And I went on in deferential accents:"Am I to understand then that you entertain the theory of suicide?"
1476And by the by what was his name?"
1476And for what-- for what?"
1476And he asked her with that invariable gentleness, in which she seemed now to detect some rather ugly shades, what else had he to think about?
1476And if a wife could be made comfortable by a little dexterous management then why not a daughter?
1476And if you ask me, how, wherefore, for what reason?
1476And may I ask at what conclusion he had managed to arrive?
1476And remembering Mrs. Fyne''s hints that the girl was unbalanced, I added:"Was it an unreserved confession you wrote?"
1476And since when?"
1476And that was somewhat perverse-- wasn''t it?
1476And the question I asked was:"So he''s going to show you the ship?"
1476And then I said acidly:"Am I to understand that you have ferreted out something comic in the history of Flora de Barral?"
1476And then how sound?
1476And then, why should I upset myself?
1476And then-- what sort of man?
1476And then-- what would have been the use, anyhow-- and where was the necessity?
1476And then-- why the devil should he?"
1476And then:"Have you seen Miss Smith anywhere?"
1476And there we were looking at each other, dumb, brought up short by the question"What next?"
1476And were you very much terrified?"
1476And what did he do?
1476And what do you think of it?"
1476And what else can be objected to the girl?
1476And what is it for?
1476And what was one to say to him?
1476And what was she to say to him?
1476And why?
1476And you?
1476And your brother- in- law?
1476Are you ashamed of letting people think you are my wife?"
1476Are you cold?
1476Are you much concerned?"
1476Are your sides aching yet, Marlow?"
1476Because he''s got seven years?"
1476Between us two?
1476But before I go home let me ask you, my girl, to think if by any chance you throwing us over like this wo n''t be rather bad for your father later on?
1476But could it be the same?
1476But do n''t you know that people laugh at absurdities that are very far from being comic?
1476But have you a notion who I am?
1476But he looked very hard at me before he ventured to ask in a sort of timid whisper:"Got through all right, sir?"
1476But how was one to venture so far?
1476But in a little while he made her jump by asking suddenly:"Who has got hold of the Lone Valley Railway?
1476But only think what it is to me?
1476But then have n''t the most flattered, the most conceited of us their moments of doubt?
1476But what could a man coming out of jail do?
1476But what does a silly sailor know of business?
1476But what had I ever to think about?"
1476But what sort of conquest would you call it?
1476But what will you say to the end of his career?
1476But what would you think of the feelings of a man who should have had his life stolen from him?
1476But what''s the good?
1476But what''s the good?
1476But where could she lead him?
1476But where to go?
1476But where was he all that time?
1476But who would you be parting from?
1476But why did n''t she go then to her generous man?
1476But why do n''t you say something?"
1476But why should you and your wife take to heart so strongly mere folly-- or even a want of consideration?"
1476But you will come-- won''t you?"
1476Ca n''t love you?
1476Ca n''t you guess?
1476Call her a wife, do you?"
1476Can I turn my back on him?
1476Can we go back across the fields?"
1476Compunction?
1476Could he be departing for good?
1476Could the girl be already gone?
1476Could they have gone to sleep?)
1476Devil-- eh?
1476Did Anthony wish to appear sublime in his own eyes?
1476Did I tell you that if you want the captain for anything you must stamp on the port side of the deck?
1476Did I tell you these people lived in Hamburg?
1476Did he shout, or jump, or even look aloft to see if the yard was n''t coming down too about our ears in a dozen pieces?
1476Did he think of his child at the last moment?
1476Did n''t you read the latest books about laughter written by philosophers, psychologists?
1476Did n''t you remember that?"
1476Did n''t you?
1476Did she see him enter?
1476Did you ever hear of the captain''s room being on the port side?
1476Did you notice if the captain was at all affected?
1476Did you notice?
1476Did you notice?"
1476Did you say you did not know Captain Anthony?"
1476Did you think of telling him you were happy?"
1476Did you think she cared for him?
1476Do n''t look very happy-- eh?"
1476Do n''t tell me you did n''t?
1476Do n''t you know?"
1476Do n''t you see?
1476Do n''t you think so yourself?
1476Do n''t you think that I have hit on the psychology of the situation?
1476Do you hear what I am saying to you?
1476Do you know that I have had no order given me since we left port?
1476Do you know that he has never once opened his lips to me unless I spoke to him first?
1476Do you look upon governesses as creatures above suspicion or necessarily of moral perfection?
1476Do you see now?"
1476Do you understand me?"
1476Does n''t it?
1476Does your husband object to that?
1476Eh?
1476Eh?
1476Eh?
1476Eh?
1476Eh?
1476Eh?
1476Fits all right, does n''t it?''
1476For how could she warn the girl?
1476For of what other person could they be speaking?
1476Force or corruption?
1476Franklin grew very uncomfortable, but the captain asked negligently:"What makes you think that there''s something wrong?"
1476Frightened?
1476Fyne?"
1476Fyne?"
1476Fyne?"
1476Had Mr. Powell noticed his appearance?
1476Had he discovered in himself a capacity and a taste for that sort of thing?
1476Had n''t her cousin told her?
1476Had n''t you better see if you can be of any assistance?"
1476Had she any relations?
1476Had she not endured already?
1476Had the word"jailer"really been pronounced?
1476Has that occurred to you?
1476Have n''t I been looking at you?
1476Have n''t they?
1476Have n''t you been working on board of her?"
1476Have n''t you noticed a smashed fir tree at the bottom?
1476Have n''t you read the accounts of the trial?"
1476Have you ever seen as much as its shadow?
1476Have you ever?
1476Have you thought of it?
1476Have you two been having good healthy laughs together?
1476Have you?
1476Have you?"
1476He added brusquely:"And you?"
1476He added:"Is n''t it unusual?"
1476He arguing"What''s the hurry?
1476He ceased abruptly, and remained still long enough for the astonished Powell to stammer out an indistinct:"What do you mean?
1476He could n''t have taken part against his aunt-- could he?
1476He kept quiet for a while, then asked in a totally changed tone, a tone of gloomy curiosity:"You ca n''t stand me then?
1476He nodded significantly:"Where is she now?"
1476He said to her severely:"You have understood?"
1476He said:''Are you going far this morning?''"
1476He said:''How do you do?''
1476He sighed then hardly above a whisper because they were near the state- room door,"Upset, eh?"
1476He thought to himself: Who can he be?
1476He turned to the girl:"What''s this game, Florrie?
1476He was miles away and muttered as if to himself:"Where could he want to stop though?"
1476He would have dismissed all this out of his mind with a contemptuous:''What the devil do I care?''
1476Her lips moved very fast asking me:"And they believed you at once?"
1476How can I?"
1476How can it be true?"
1476How could I have done so, with Fyne right there in the room?
1476How could he abandon her?
1476How could he have made that mistake?
1476How could one have expected her to throw off the unholy prestige of that long domination?
1476How did he get you?"
1476How did you know that I wanted anybody to be kind to me?"
1476How do they do it?
1476How long is it since you are married?"
1476How many sympathetic souls can you reckon on in the world?
1476How to keep body and soul together?
1476How was it possible not to like Charley?
1476How was it that he had not got rid of Fyne long before in any case?
1476How was one to deal with him?
1476How''s one to tell?
1476I ask you-- have you seen?
1476I asked him if he really and truly supposed that any sane girl would go and hide in that shed; and if so why?
1476I asked him if his impression was that his wife meant to entrust him with a letter for her brother?
1476I asked him if this was the same young lady I saw a day or two before I went to town?
1476I asked him why?
1476I asked myself: was n''t that ill- luck exhausted yet?
1476I asked shocked,"who would think of such a scurvy trick, sir?"
1476I asked:"Does that sort of thing happen often so near the dock gates?"
1476I asked:"Tell me what is it you said in that famous letter which so upset Mrs. Fyne, and caused little Fyne to interfere in this offensive manner?"
1476I became a little impatient but without raising my tone:"What thing?"
1476I come out-- and what do I find?
1476I could not have started quarrelling with him-- could I?
1476I mean now, to- day, to- night?
1476I raved like a maniac, like a devil, with a lot of fools crowding round me and asking,"Are n''t you the captain?"
1476I said perfunctorily,"Do you?"
1476I said to Fyne, mistrusting the supine attitude of the dog:"Why do n''t you let him come inside?"
1476I subdued my voice still more and not looking at her:"You found him sympathetic?"
1476I suppose it_ was_ his name?"
1476I suppose you are shocked to hear me talk like that?"
1476I wonder what can touch them?
1476I would have liked to ask her for instance:"Do you know what you have done with yourself?"
1476I would n''t use an ill- sounding word about women, but what right have you to imagine that I am looking for gratitude?"
1476I?
1476If only:''What do you think of it, Franklin?''
1476Ill- luck which is like the hate of invisible powers interpreted, made sensible and injurious by the actions of men?
1476In eternal punishment?
1476In regard to Captain Anthony, he used to say that: why should he leave him?
1476In strangled low tones he cried out,"You-- married?
1476In what sense-- to resist what?
1476Is he anything like his sister?"
1476Is it ever the business of any pressman to understand anything?
1476Is it possible?
1476Is it possible?"
1476Is it that we may amuse ourselves gossiping about each other''s affairs?
1476Is n''t it so?
1476Is n''t it?"
1476Is that how a happy man looks?
1476Is that it?
1476Is that it?
1476Is that it?"
1476Is that it?"
1476Is that too a provision of nature?
1476Is there a human being that is n''t that-- more or less secretly?
1476It could hardly be called intrusion-- could it?
1476It is well known that lurid visions haunt secluded men, monks, hermits-- then why not prisoners?
1476It seemed queer to Powell that instead of going himself to see the captain should ask him:"Is she there now?"
1476It was n''t a delusion-- was it?
1476It was the flight of a raider-- or a traitor?
1476It''s my affair, is n''t it?
1476Jailer-- eh?"
1476Likely to be right-- wasn''t it?
1476Luckily, people, whether mature or not mature( and who really is ever mature?)
1476More than any man, for instance?"
1476More?
1476Mr. Powell''s comment was:"Fancied had enough of it?"
1476Mrs. Anthony then said:"Why are you sending me away?"
1476Mrs. Fyne moved her shoulders slightly--"What else could she have done?"
1476Mrs. Fyne, am I really such a horrid thing as she has made me out to be?"
1476No harm to anybody?"
1476Not even when the man remarked with false simplicity that Florrie-- her name was Florrie was n''t it?
1476Not: What has happened?
1476Of course?
1476Oh, I laughed-- did I?
1476On what ground did he cease to wonder at the inexplicable?
1476One in ten, one in a hundred-- in a thousand-- in ten thousand?
1476One night he inquired( they were then alone on the poop) what they had been talking about that evening?
1476Or perhaps some scoundrel?
1476Or was it only something other?
1476Others wonder what she could have seen in him?
1476Our mental conclusions depend so much on momentary physical sensations-- don''t they?
1476Parfitts and Co. grabbed it-- eh?
1476Perhaps you will tell us that his eyes are not yellow?"
1476Putout?
1476Queer fish-- eh?
1476Queer-- eh?
1476Rare?
1476See the might of suggestion?
1476Sent away to her father?
1476She did n''t think he could go to sleep, did she?
1476She had had an ugly pilgrimage; but whether of love or of necessity who could tell?
1476She jumped up saying to herself:"Why not now?
1476She responded with a slow inclination of the head while her luminous, mistrustful, maiden''s glance seemed to whisper,"What is this one doing here?"
1476She said decisively:"And of course you would n''t think of deserting me, papa?"
1476She said simply:"You are waiting for Mr. Fyne to come out; are you?"
1476She seemed to be asking herself; Is it after all, worth while to talk to that man?
1476She was looking at me with extreme attention, and murmured:"Is that what you called it to them?
1476She was n''t an invalid was she?
1476She whispered quietly:"Is anything going to happen?
1476Silly?
1476Smell the singed hair?"
1476Smith?"
1476Some people always ask: What could he see in her?
1476Somebody hails from the bridge,"Have you got them all on board?"
1476Strange, is n''t it?
1476That''s nothing very much out of the way-- is it?
1476The Fynes looked at each other eloquently, doubtfully: What do you think of this?
1476The man, however, ran out after him asking:"What do you require?"
1476The mate grumbled"Seems to you?
1476The mate snorted angrily, tapping the deck with his foot; then:"Is n''t he?
1476The mild Uncle Roderick turned upon her with a"What do you know about it, young lady?"
1476Then closing it with a kick--"Not your name?
1476Then says he looking very hard at me:''I do n''t think I know you-- do I?''
1476Then she burst out with a"What has happened?"
1476Then suddenly he asked:"What''s your name then?"
1476Then the captain, his hat pulled down over his eyes, laid his stick on the table and asked in his kind way:''How did you find your mother, Franklin?''
1476Then, once, during a pause in business, while we were waiting for the production of a document for which he had sent( perhaps to the cellar?)
1476There would be no gentle knock, followed by her appearance with her equivocal stare and the intolerable:"Can I do anything for you, ma''am?"
1476They set down their load in the light and honest Ted asked hoarsely:"Where''s your ship, guv''nor?"
1476This Socrates was a wise man, I believe?"
1476This is no great proof of sagacity-- is it?
1476To do what?
1476To take that jump?
1476Unconscious?
1476Unfair to that girl?
1476Very likely one of the parents only was dead?
1476Want to see her again?"
1476Was Flora going to be taken to her father; or were these people, that woman and her horrible nephew, about to carry her off somewhere?
1476Was he a man for a_ coup- de- foudre_, the lightning stroke of love?
1476Was he afraid of your wife too?"
1476Was he arguing, preaching, remonstrating?
1476Was it a tragedy?
1476Was it possible that they all had vanished to the last penny?
1476Was it true?
1476Was it want of courage?
1476Was n''t it as Miss Smith that Miss de Barral had been introduced to me?
1476Was n''t there, somewhere, something palpable; some fragment of the fabric left?
1476Was she a girl with dark hair and blue eyes?
1476Was she going to cross over?
1476Was that a proof of confidence and love?
1476Was that the trust she had in him?
1476Was the girl afraid of your wife?
1476Was the girl born to be a victim; to be always disliked and crushed as if she were too fine for this world?
1476Was there anything more to disclose-- some other misery, some other deception of which that girl had been a victim?
1476Well, as you want to bolt like this, why do n''t we go now?"
1476Well, have you ever seen a shipmaster walking his own deck as if he did not know what he had underfoot?
1476Well, what happened that time?"
1476Well?"
1476Were then the feelings of friends, relations and even of strangers to be disregarded?
1476Were they looking at each other in silence and feeling they were alone in the world as lovers should at the moment of meeting?
1476What about Franklin?"
1476What about lifting that money without wasting any more time?
1476What about that stile over there?
1476What am I afraid of?
1476What can it be?
1476What could have been more seductive to the scared, starved heart of that girl?
1476What could he have said?
1476What could you expect?
1476What did I know of life then?
1476What did he want to pretend for, like this?
1476What did he want with a girl?
1476What did it mean?
1476What do you know about it?
1476What do you say to that?"
1476What do you think of that?
1476What do you think?
1476What do you want to do?"
1476What does that letter say?"
1476What else could he have expected?
1476What else could he have thought?
1476What else could you expect?
1476What else is it?
1476What for?
1476What for?
1476What have we here?''
1476What is he coming out to, I want to know?
1476What is he?
1476What is it now?"
1476What is it to be deprived of life?
1476What is it you want to save him from?"
1476What is it?
1476What is it?
1476What is it?
1476What is it?"
1476What made you come so near the edge of that quarry?
1476What made you like this?
1476What makes you say?
1476What on earth are you grinning at in this sarcastic manner?
1476What on earth possesses him to make a clandestine match of it?
1476What sense, what meaning, what value has it either for you or for me?
1476What superiority?
1476What to do with him?
1476What was a mile to him-- or twenty miles?
1476What was distressing him?
1476What was the good of telling him the story of all these miseries now past and gone, of all those bewildering difficulties and humiliations?
1476What was the good?
1476What was the good?
1476What was the hurry?"
1476What was the matter with her then?
1476What was the use of altering anything?
1476What whale?
1476What will he do?
1476What will he say?
1476What words of cheer, of courage and of hope?
1476What would become of them both?
1476What would have happened if he had made a noise about his discovery?
1476What would he have to say?
1476What would he think?
1476What would he want to laugh for?"
1476What''s he doing?"
1476What''s the matter now?"
1476What''s the matter?
1476What''s up here?"
1476What?
1476What?
1476What_ he_ thought of it who can tell?
1476When he had come up quite close he said again,"Yes, sir?"
1476When?
1476Where could she escape from this?
1476Where could you go?
1476Where did he spring from?"
1476Where do you come from?
1476Where is it going to rest?
1476Where to go?
1476Where was she?
1476Where would you take him?
1476Where''s the difficulty?
1476Where?
1476Whether he recognized her?
1476Who are you, then?"
1476Who could he be?
1476Who could that old man be?
1476Who else could he have asked?
1476Who to?
1476Who was it?"
1476Who would have believed it?
1476Who would n''t be before the ideal?
1476Who, did you say?"
1476Why are you here?
1476Why clear out like this?"
1476Why could n''t Florrie get up and have her breakfast at eight like other people?
1476Why could n''t he dismiss all these people from his mind?
1476Why crudely?
1476Why did she?
1476Why did they elope-- if it is an elopement?
1476Why do n''t you tell me?"
1476Why do you gasp?
1476Why is it more right than if it had been Brown?"
1476Why is it that the stillness of a human being is often so impressive, so suggestive of evil-- as if our proper fate were a ceaseless agitation?
1476Why limping?
1476Why not let yourself be persuaded?"
1476Why not?"
1476Why not?"
1476Why on earth was he bothering his head?
1476Why should I have gone away?
1476Why should they?
1476Why should you?"
1476Why stand there as if clinging to this solid earth which she surely hated as one must hate the place where one has been tormented, hopeless, unhappy?
1476Why''s that?"
1476Why?
1476Why?
1476Why?
1476Wonderful man?
1476Would anybody have thought so?
1476Would you believe it?"
1476Would you have run two ways at once?
1476Would you?
1476Yes?
1476Yes?
1476Yes?
1476Yet to this day there are moments when it comes into my mind, and involuntarily I ask myself,''What if it were true?''
1476Yet what sentiment could there have been on her part?
1476Yet, where could she have got any experience?
1476You ai n''t going to throw over your own father-- are you?"
1476You are listening to me-- eh?
1476You are not so proud that you ca n''t understand that I as a man have my pride too?"
1476You are on the honest lay, Ted, ai n''t you?"
1476You did n''t say anything?"
1476You did n''t?
1476You do n''t know anything of it?
1476You do n''t mean to say that he wants you to appropriate the girl''s clothes?"
1476You do n''t mean to say you have been waiting for me?"
1476You do n''t suppose I should be afraid of getting married?
1476You hear, my dear?
1476You like him?--Don''t you?"
1476You pass by and wonder what mysterious rites are going on in there, what prayers, what visions?
1476You said just now he resembled Socrates-- didn''t you?
1476You smile?
1476You think so?
1476You told your brother- in- law what you thought of it?
1476You understand?
1476You want to interfere-- do you not?"
1476You will note that she cried: What do you want?
1476You''re smart and willing( this to me very sudden and loud) and all that, are n''t you?"
1476eh?"
1476or do n''t you expect him ever to come out?"
1476or would you go again to my sister?"
1476with the indignant retort"_ What_ have I had out of them?"
23506About me?
23506After papa''s money? 23506 And after all if anything..."I became a little impatient but without raising my tone:"What thing?"
23506And did you enlighten her on the point?
23506And did you know the man who was here before you?
23506And did you set him going?
23506And does n''t it haunt you, Mrs Fyne?
23506And how did Captain Anthony receive this interesting information?
23506And is the precious pair of them out?
23506And she did?
23506And so you gave up that walk you proposed to take?
23506And then what happens?
23506And to the point?
23506And what could I have done then? 23506 And you could n''t go about in it without finding somebody to fall in love with?"
23506And you have got what you wanted? 23506 Any children?"
23506Are n''t you anxious to see the ship?
23506Are you reproaching me with being too impulsive?
23506Are you serious in what you say?
23506Are you thinking of leaving us, sir; of going home by steam? 23506 Beg you pardon, ma''am-- but are you going away for good?"
23506But do you think there''s time yet to do anything?
23506But have you discovered all these fine things in the story; or has Mr Powell discovered them to you in his artless talk? 23506 But how can I forget?
23506But what else could we do?
23506But what induced that man to marry you? 23506 But why this secrecy?
23506Captain gone below?
23506Could n''t you wait at least till I came out? 23506 Did the poor girl admit firing off her confidences at Mrs Fyne-- eight pages of close writing-- that sort of thing?"
23506Did you hear what this gentleman was saying to me?
23506Did you notice? 23506 Do n''t you agree with me?"
23506Do n''t you believe me?
23506Do n''t you know?
23506Do n''t you think she ought to be given a chance?
23506Do you believe that?
23506Do you conclude from this that nothing whatever was said?
23506Do you know French, Miss de Barral?
23506Do you mean the captain did? 23506 Do you mean to say that you made a young lady known to me under a false name?"
23506Do you really believe what you have said?
23506Do you think a man with a face like that can hope to live his life out? 23506 Do you think so, Mrs Fyne?"
23506Does he think he is in danger of dying?
23506Does he?
23506Does it matter how I feel?
23506Duplicity is a strong word, Mrs Fyne-- isn''t it?
23506Eh? 23506 Eh?
23506Eh? 23506 Has she her soft moods, then?"
23506Have you a more compassionate scheme ready?
23506He was there, of course?
23506How on earth can I know?
23506I have n''t heard yet; but I expect to hear any moment... What on earth are you grinning at in this sarcastic manner? 23506 I say,"I tackled him at once,"how can you be certain that Flora de Barral ever went to sea?
23506I should think you were mad to tie yourself to... How long is it since you are married?
23506I wonder why?
23506Is Mrs Anthony in England now?
23506Is Mrs Anthony not feeling well?
23506Is it worth while talking about that awful time? 23506 Is that you, Powell?"
23506It was something beginning with an S-- wasn''t it?
23506Know her?
23506Know what?
23506More coffee, Mr Franklin? 23506 Mrs Anthony lighted the flare?
23506No use? 23506 Oh, you did?
23506She did n''t tell you, I suppose?
23506She struck me at first sight as the most inconsiderate wrongheaded girl that I ever..."Why should a girl be more considerate than anyone else? 23506 She was not very much upset?"
23506So Captain Anthony joined you-- did he?
23506So she thinks of her father-- does she? 23506 So tremendously in love with each other-- was that it?
23506Takes interest-- eh?
23506Tell me, Fyne,I cried,"you do n''t think the girl was mad-- do you?"
23506Tell me, is it so bad as that?
23506That surprises you? 23506 That?
23506The father was there of course?
23506The financier?
23506The master of the_ Ferndale_? 23506 Then what do you mean?
23506To your brother?
23506Was it appealing?
23506Was it frightened, angry, crushed, resigned?
23506Was n''t that the best thing to do?
23506Was-- was Mrs Anthony lost too?
23506We got to know each other by chance?
23506Well, then, Mrs Fyne, does it not strike you that it would be reasonable under the circumstances to let your brother take care of himself?
23506Well?...
23506What Mr Smith?
23506What day?
23506What do you know about it?
23506What do you mean? 23506 What do you want?"
23506What effect did you expect anyhow? 23506 What is it you are hinting at?"
23506What on earth are you so dismal about?
23506What on earth do you mean?
23506What the deuce are they worrying about?
23506What the devil do you mean by this?
23506What understanding?
23506What was the name of your chance again?
23506What was very simple?
23506What would have been the good?
23506What''s crushing you?
23506What? 23506 Where are they now?"
23506Where does he belong to? 23506 Where was the captain?"
23506Who are like passengers?
23506Who do you take me for?
23506Who the devil is he?
23506Why are you glad? 23506 Why ca n''t you leave that alone?"
23506Why did n''t you ask him to leave you?
23506Why did n''t you do it?
23506Why do you ask?
23506Why do you look startled? 23506 Why does n''t he go below?"
23506Why is it? 23506 Why should I?
23506Why undeserved?
23506Would nothing less do for once?
23506Would you go to her?
23506Would you like better a man who let his notions lie curled up?
23506You dare... What''s the matter now?
23506You did n''t suppose he was to be kept in jail for life?
23506You did? 23506 You do n''t believe in an accident, Mrs Fyne, do you?"
23506You do n''t mean that I should give way-- do you?
23506You do n''t mean to say you have forgotten the connection?
23506You have-- eh? 23506 You knew I was here?"
23506You made him talk?
23506You make it your business to know them-- don''t you? 23506 You see him often?"
23506You smile? 23506 You talked together a lot?"
23506You think it''s so bad as that?
23506You think so? 23506 You understand?"
23506You would go with me?
23506You-- what? 23506 ` Did he?''
23506` Do n''t know where your ship is?'' 23506 ` Do n''t you know it''s illegal?''
23506` Do you mean you''ve got him here?'' 23506 ` Even if I managed to lay hold some time to- day of a man ready to go at such short notice I could n''t ship him regularly here-- could I?''
23506` Let''s see,''says he,` what did you tell me your name was?'' 23506 ` What am I to do?''
23506` What is it, Symons?'' 23506 ` What''s the matter?''
23506` Who?'' 23506 ` You are n''t too big to be told how to do things-- are you?
23506` You wo n''t fail to join-- eh?'' 23506 --I am thirteen years older than he is-- you would think it would be all right, would n''t you? 23506 --I asked shocked,` who would think of such a scurvy trick, sir?'' 23506 ... Oh, I laughed-- did I? 23506 ... Who was it?
23506A deep sigh was heard followed by the mate''s voice asking dismally if that was the way one would speak of a man to whom one wished well?
23506A man in love... You hear, my dear?
23506A man may land anywhere and bolt inland-- but what about his five- ton cutter?
23506A straight question-- eh?
23506After a bit he says in his gentle soft tone:` Did you see it?''"
23506Altogether the proceedings of a desperate drunkard-- weren''t they?
23506An agitated"What is it?"
23506And I pondered: How is one an orphan"to a certain extent"?
23506And I went on in deferential accents:"Am I to understand then that you entertain the theory of suicide?"
23506And being a physiognomist...""Being what?"
23506And by the by what was his name?"
23506And for what-- for what?"
23506And he asked her with that invariable gentleness, in which she seemed now to detect some rather ugly shades, what else had he to think about?
23506And if a wife could be made comfortable by a little dexterous management then why not a daughter?
23506And if you ask me, how, wherefore, for what reason?
23506And may I ask at what conclusion he had managed to arrive?
23506And remembering Mrs Fyne''s hints that the girl was unbalanced, I added:"Was it an unreserved confession you wrote?"
23506And since when?"
23506And that was somewhat perverse-- wasn''t it?
23506And the question I asked was:"So he''s going to show you the ship?"
23506And then I said acidly:"Am I to understand that you have ferreted out something comic in the history of Flora de Barral?"
23506And then how sound?
23506And then, why should I upset myself?
23506And then-- what sort of man?
23506And then-- what would have been the use, anyhow-- and where was the necessity?
23506And then-- why the devil should he?"
23506And then:"Have you seen Miss Smith anywhere?"
23506And there we were looking at each other, dumb, brought up short by the question` What next?''
23506And were you very much terrified?"
23506And what did he do?
23506And what do you think of it?"
23506And what else can be objected to the girl?
23506And what is it for?
23506And what was one to say to him?
23506And what was she to say to him?
23506And why?
23506And you?
23506And your brother- in- law?
23506Are you ashamed of letting people think you are my wife?"
23506Are you cold?
23506Are you much concerned?"
23506Are your sides aching yet, Marlow?"
23506Because he''s got seven years?"
23506Because in such completeness there is power-- the kind of thrill they love most...""Do you expect me to agree to all this?"
23506Between us two?
23506But I wonder how your father will take it when he comes out-- or do n''t you expect him ever to come out?"
23506But before I go home let me ask you, my girl, to think if by any chance you throwing us over like this wo n''t be rather bad for your father later on?
23506But could it be the same?
23506But do n''t you know that people laugh at absurdities that are very far from being comic?
23506But have you a notion who I am?
23506But he looked very hard at me before he ventured to ask in a sort of timid whisper:` Got through all right, sir?''
23506But how was one to venture so far?
23506But in a little while he made her jump by asking suddenly:"Who has got hold of the Lone Valley Railway?
23506But only think what it is to me?
23506But then have n''t the most flattered, the most conceited of us their moments of doubt?
23506But to look at him one could n''t tell...""You did see him then?"
23506But what could a man coming out of jail do?
23506But what does a silly sailor know of business?
23506But what had I ever to think about?"
23506But what sort of conquest would you call it?
23506But what will you say to the end of his career?"
23506But what would you think of the feelings of a man who should have had his life stolen from him?
23506But what''s the good?
23506But what''s the good?
23506But where could she lead him?
23506But where to go?
23506But where was he all that time?
23506But who would you be parting from?
23506But why did n''t she go then to her generous man?
23506But why do n''t you say something?"
23506But why should you and your wife take to heart so strongly mere folly-- or even a want of consideration?"
23506But you will come-- won''t you?"
23506Ca n''t love you?
23506Ca n''t you guess?
23506Call her a wife, do you?"
23506Can I turn my back on him?
23506Can we go back across the fields?"
23506Compunction?
23506Could he be departing for good?
23506Could the girl be already gone?
23506Could they have gone to sleep?)
23506Devil-- eh?
23506Did Anthony wish to appear sublime in his own eyes?
23506Did I tell you that if you want the captain for anything you must stamp on the port side of the deck?
23506Did I tell you these people lived in Hamburg?
23506Did he shout, or jump, or even look aloft to see if the yard was n''t coming down too about our ears in a dozen pieces?
23506Did he think of his child at the last moment?
23506Did n''t you read the latest books about laughter written by philosophers, psychologists?
23506Did n''t you remember that?"
23506Did n''t you?
23506Did she see him enter?
23506Did you ever hear of the captain''s room being on the port side?
23506Did you notice if the captain was at all affected?
23506Did you notice?
23506Did you notice?"
23506Did you say you did not know Captain Anthony?"
23506Did you think of telling him you were happy?"
23506Did_ you_ think she cared for him?
23506Do n''t look very happy-- eh?"
23506Do n''t tell me you did n''t?
23506Do n''t you know?"
23506Do n''t you see?"
23506Do n''t you think so yourself?
23506Do n''t you think that I have hit on the psychology of the situation?..."
23506Do you hear what I am saying to you?
23506Do you know that I have had no order given me since we left port?
23506Do you know that he has never once opened his lips to me unless I spoke to him first?
23506Do you look upon governesses as creatures above suspicion or necessarily of moral perfection?
23506Do you see now?"
23506Do you understand me?"
23506Does n''t it?
23506Does your husband object to that?
23506Eh?
23506Eh?
23506Eh?
23506Eh?
23506Eh?
23506Eh?
23506Fits all right, does n''t it?''
23506For how could she warn the girl?
23506For of what other person could they be speaking?
23506Force or corruption?
23506Franklin grew very uncomfortable, but the captain asked negligently:"What makes you think that there''s something wrong?"
23506Frightened?
23506Had Mr Powell noticed his appearance?
23506Had he discovered in himself a capacity and a taste for that sort of thing?
23506Had n''t her cousin told her?
23506Had n''t you better see if you can be of any assistance?"
23506Had she any relations?
23506Had she not endured already?
23506Had the word"jailer"really been pronounced?
23506Has that occurred to you?..."
23506Have n''t I been looking at you?
23506Have n''t they?
23506Have n''t you been working on board of her?''
23506Have n''t you noticed a smashed fir tree at the bottom?
23506Have n''t you read the accounts of the trial?"
23506Have you ever seen as much as its shadow?
23506Have you ever?
23506Have you thought of it?
23506Have you two been having good healthy laughs together?
23506Have you?
23506Have you?"
23506He added brusquely:"And you?"
23506He added:"Is n''t it unusual?"
23506He arguing,"What''s the hurry?
23506He ceased abruptly, and remained still long enough for the astonished Powell to stammer out an indistinct:"What do you mean?
23506He could n''t have taken part against his aunt-- could he?
23506He had n''t enough imagination for it...""Was he a foreigner?"
23506He kept quiet for a while, then asked in a totally changed tone, a tone of gloomy curiosity:"You ca n''t stand me then?
23506He literally did not know anything...""But tell me, Marlow,"I interrupted,"how do you account for this opinion?
23506He lowered the accommodation ladder down on to the jetty...""How do you know all this?"
23506He nodded significantly:"Where is she now?"
23506He said to her severely:"You have understood?"
23506He said:` Are you going far this morning?''"
23506He said:` How do you do?''
23506He sighed then hardly above a whisper because they were near the state- room door,"Upset, eh?"
23506He thought to himself: Who can he be?
23506He turned to the girl:"What''s this game, Florrie?
23506He was miles away and muttered as if to himself:"Where could he want to stop though?"
23506He would have dismissed all this out of his mind with a contemptuous:` What the devil do I care?''
23506Her lips moved very fast asking me:"And they believed you at once?"
23506How can I?"
23506How can it be true?"
23506How could I have done so, with Fyne right there in the room?
23506How could he abandon her?
23506How could he have made that mistake?
23506How could one have expected her to throw off the unholy prestige of that long domination?
23506How did he get you?"
23506How did you know that I wanted anybody to be kind to me?"
23506How do they do it?
23506How many sympathetic souls can you reckon on in the world?
23506How to keep body and soul together?
23506How was it possible not to like Charley?
23506How was it that he had not got rid of Fyne long before in any case?
23506How was one to deal with him?
23506I ask you-- have you seen?
23506I asked him if he really and truly supposed that any sane girl would go and hide in that shed; and if so why?
23506I asked him if his impression was that his wife meant to entrust him with a letter for her brother?
23506I asked him if this was the same young lady I saw a day or two before I went to town?
23506I asked him why?
23506I asked myself: was n''t that ill- luck exhausted yet?
23506I asked:"Tell me what is it you said in that famous letter which so upset Mrs Fyne, and caused little Fyne to interfere in this offensive manner?"
23506I asked:` Does that sort of thing happen often so near the dock- gates?''
23506I come out-- and what do I find?
23506I could not have started quarrelling with him-- could I?
23506I mean now, to- day, to- night?
23506I raved like a maniac, like a devil, with a lot of fools crowding round me and asking,` Are n''t you the captain?''
23506I said perfunctorily,"Do you?"
23506I said to Fyne, mistrusting the supine attitude of the dog:"Why do n''t you let him come inside?"
23506I said:"You want absolutely to interfere...?"
23506I subdued my voice still more and not looking at her:"You found him sympathetic?"
23506I suppose it_ was_ his name?"
23506I suppose you are shocked to hear me talk like that?"
23506I wonder_ what_ can touch them?
23506I would have liked to ask her for instance:"Do you know what you have done with yourself?"
23506I would n''t use an ill- sounding word about women, but what right have you to imagine that I am looking for gratitude?"
23506I?
23506If only:` What do you think of it, Franklin?''
23506Ill- luck which is like the hate of invisible powers interpreted, made sensible and injurious by the actions of men?
23506In eternal punishment?
23506In regard to Captain Anthony, he used to say that: why should he leave him?
23506In strangled low tones he cried out,"You-- married?
23506In what sense-- to resist what?
23506Is he anything like his sister?"
23506Is it ever the business of any pressman to understand anything?
23506Is it possible?
23506Is it possible?"
23506Is it that we may amuse ourselves gossiping about each other''s affairs?
23506Is n''t it so?
23506Is n''t it?"
23506Is that how a happy man looks?
23506Is that it?
23506Is that it?
23506Is that it?"
23506Is that it?"
23506Is that too a provision of nature?
23506Is there a human being that is n''t that-- more or less secretly?
23506It could hardly be called intrusion-- could it?
23506It is really our first difference...""Regarding Miss de Barral?"
23506It is well- known that lurid visions haunt secluded men, monks, hermits-- then why not prisoners?
23506It is with the accent of perfect sincerity that she cried out at me:"But it is n''t at all the same thing?
23506It seemed queer to Powell that instead of going himself to see the captain should ask him:"Is she there now?"
23506It was n''t a delusion-- was it?
23506It was the flight of a raider-- or a tractor?
23506It''s my affair, is n''t it?
23506Jailer-- eh?"
23506Likely to be right-- wasn''t it?
23506Luckily, people, whether mature or not mature( and who really is ever mature?)
23506Married?"
23506More than any man, for instance?"
23506More?
23506Mr Powell''s comment was:"Fancied he''d had enough of it?"
23506Mrs Anthony then said:"Why are you sending me away?"
23506Mrs Fyne moved her shoulders slightly--"What else could she have done?"
23506Mrs Fyne, am I really such a horrid thing as she has made me out to be?"
23506My shout checked you..."She moved her head gently from right to left in negation.--"No?
23506No harm to anybody?"
23506Not even when the man remarked with false simplicity that Florrie-- her name was Florrie was n''t it?
23506Not: What has happened?
23506Of course?
23506On what ground did he cease to wonder at the inexplicable?
23506One in ten, one in a hundred-- in a thousand-- in ten thousand?
23506One night he inquired( they were then alone on the poop) what they had been talking about that evening?
23506Or perhaps some scoundrel?
23506Or was it only something other?
23506Others wonder what she could have seen in him?
23506Our mental conclusions depend so much on momentary physical sensations-- don''t they?
23506Parfitts and Co. grabbed it-- eh?
23506Perhaps you will tell us that his eyes are not yellow?"
23506Put out?
23506Queer fish-- eh?
23506Queer-- eh?
23506Rare?
23506See the might of suggestion?
23506Sent away to her father?
23506She could n''t imagine any connection in which... Why should they?
23506She did n''t think he could go to sleep, did she?
23506She had had an ugly pilgrimage; but whether of love or of necessity who could tell?
23506She jumped up saying to herself:"Why not now?
23506She responded with a slow inclination of the head while her luminous, mistrustful, maiden''s glance seemed to whisper,"What is this one doing here?"
23506She said decisively:"And of course you would n''t think of deserting me, papa?"
23506She said simply:"You are waiting for Mr Fyne to come out; are you?"
23506She seemed to be asking herself; Is it after all, worth while to talk to that man?
23506She was looking at me with extreme attention, and murmured:"Is that what you called it to them?
23506She was n''t an invalid was she?
23506She whispered quietly:"Is anything going to happen?
23506Silly?
23506Smell the singed hair?"
23506Some people always ask: What could he see in her?
23506Some plausible vagabond..."You could n''t wait-- eh?"
23506Somebody hails from the bridge,"Have you got them all on board?"
23506Strange, is n''t it?
23506Ted here is honest... You are on the honest lay, Ted, ai n''t you?''
23506That sentiment is rare in women...""Is it?"
23506That''s nothing very much out of the way-- is it?
23506The Fynes looked at each other eloquently, doubtfully: What do you think of this?
23506The man, however, ran out after him asking:"What do you require?"
23506The mate grumbled"Seems to you?
23506The mate snorted angrily, tapping the deck with his foot; then:"Is n''t he?
23506The mild Uncle Roderick turned upon her with a"What do you know about it, young lady?"
23506Then closing it with a kick--"Not your name?
23506Then says he looking very hard at me:` I do n''t think I know you-- do I?''
23506Then she burst out with a` What has happened?''
23506Then suddenly he asked:"What''s your name then?"
23506Then the captain, his hat pulled down over his eyes, laid his stick on the table and asked in his kind way:` How did you find your mother, Franklin?''
23506Then, once, during a pause in business, while we were waiting for the production of a document for which he had sent( perhaps to the cellar?)
23506There is a Nemesis which overtakes generosity too, like all the other imprudences of men who dare to be lawless and proud..."Why do you say this?"
23506There would be no gentle knock, followed by her appearance with her equivocal stare and the intolerable:"Can I do anything for you, ma''am?"
23506They set down their load in the light and honest Ted asked hoarsely:` Where''s your ship, guv''nor?''
23506This Socrates was a wise man, I believe?"
23506This is no great proof of sagacity-- is it?
23506To do what?
23506To take that jump?
23506Unconscious?
23506Unfair to that girl?
23506Very likely one of the parents only was dead?
23506Want to see her again?"
23506Was Flora going to be taken to her father; or were these people, that woman and her horrible nephew, about to carry her off somewhere?
23506Was he a man for a_ coup- de- foudre_, the lightning stroke of love?
23506Was he afraid of your wife too?"
23506Was he arguing, preaching, remonstrating?
23506Was it a tragedy?
23506Was it possible that they all had vanished to the last penny?
23506Was it true?
23506Was it want of courage?
23506Was n''t it as Miss Smith that Miss de Barral had been introduced to me?
23506Was n''t it cruel, Mrs Fyne?"
23506Was n''t there, somewhere, something palpable; some fragment of the fabric left?
23506Was she a girl with dark hair and blue eyes?
23506Was she going to cross over?
23506Was that a proof of confidence and love?
23506Was that the trust she had in him?
23506Was the girl afraid of your wife?
23506Was the girl born to be a victim; to be always disliked and crushed as if she were too fine for this world?
23506Was there anything more to disclose-- some other misery, some other deception of which that girl had been a victim?
23506Well, as you want to bolt like this, why do n''t we go now?"
23506Well, have you ever seen a shipmaster walking his own deck as if he did not know what he had underfoot?
23506Well, what happened that time?"
23506Well?"
23506Were then the feelings of friends, relations and even of strangers to be disregarded?
23506Were they looking at each other in silence and feeling they were alone in the world as lovers should at the moment of meeting?
23506What about Franklin?"
23506What about lifting that money without wasting any more time?
23506What about that stile over there?
23506What am I afraid of?
23506What can it be?
23506What could have been more seductive to the scared, starved heart of that girl?
23506What could he have said?
23506What could you expect?
23506What did I know of life then?
23506What did he want to pretend for, like this?
23506What did he want with a girl?
23506What did it mean?
23506What do you know about it?
23506What do you know of thinking?
23506What do you say to that?"
23506What do you think of that?
23506What do you think?
23506What do you want to do?"
23506What does that letter say?"
23506What else could he have expected?
23506What else could he have thought?
23506What else could you expect?
23506What else is it?
23506What for?
23506What for?
23506What have we here?''
23506What is he coming out to, I want to know?
23506What is he?
23506What is it now?''
23506What is it to be deprived of life?
23506What is it you want to save him from?"
23506What is it?
23506What is it?
23506What is it?
23506What is it?"
23506What made you come so near the edge of that quarry?
23506What made you like this?
23506What makes you say?
23506What on earth possesses him to make a clandestine match of it?
23506What sense, what meaning, what value has it either for you or for me?
23506What superiority?
23506What to do with him?
23506What was a mile to him-- or twenty miles?
23506What was distressing him?
23506What was the good of telling him the story of all these miseries now past and gone, of all those bewildering difficulties and humiliations?
23506What was the good?
23506What was the good?
23506What was the hurry?
23506What was the matter with her then?
23506What was the use of altering anything?
23506What whale?
23506What will he do?
23506What will he say?
23506What words of cheer, of courage and of hope?
23506What would become of them both?
23506What would have happened if he had made a noise about his discovery?
23506What would he have to say?
23506What would he think?
23506What would he want to laugh for?"
23506What''s he doing?"
23506What''s the matter?
23506What''s up here?''
23506What?
23506What?
23506What_ he_ thought of it who can tell?
23506When he had come up quite close he said again,"Yes, sir?"
23506When?
23506Where could she escape from this?
23506Where could you go?
23506Where did he spring from?"
23506Where do you come from?
23506Where is it going to rest?
23506Where to go?
23506Where was she?
23506Where would you take him?
23506Where''s the difficulty?
23506Where?
23506Whether he recognised her?
23506Who are you, then?"
23506Who could he be?
23506Who could that old man be?
23506Who else could he have asked?
23506Who to?
23506Who would have believed it?
23506Who would n''t be before the ideal?
23506Who, did you say?"
23506Why are you here?
23506Why clear out like this?"
23506Why could n''t Florrie get up and have her breakfast at eight like other people?
23506Why could n''t he dismiss all these people from his mind?
23506Why crudely?
23506Why did she?
23506Why did they elope, if it is an elopement?
23506Why do n''t you tell me?"
23506Why do you gasp?
23506Why is it more right than if it had been Brown?"
23506Why is it that the stillness of a human being is often so impressive, so suggestive of evil-- as if our proper fate were a ceaseless agitation?
23506Why limping?
23506Why not let yourself be persuaded?"
23506Why not?
23506Why not?"
23506Why not?"
23506Why on earth was he bothering his head?
23506Why should I have gone away?
23506Why should you?"
23506Why stand there as if clinging to this solid earth which she surely hated as one must hate the place where one has been tormented, hopeless, unhappy?
23506Why''s that?"
23506Why?
23506Why?
23506Why?
23506Wonderful man?
23506Would anybody have thought so?
23506Would you believe it?"
23506Would you have run two ways at once?
23506Would you?
23506Yes?
23506Yes?
23506Yes?
23506Yet to this day there are moments when it comes into my mind, and involuntarily I ask myself,` What if it were true?''
23506Yet what sentiment could there have been on her part?
23506Yet, where could she have got any experience?
23506You ai n''t going to throw over your own father-- are you?"
23506You are listening to me-- eh?
23506You are not so proud that you ca n''t understand that I as a man have my pride too?"
23506You are the only person who knows... who knows for certain...""Knows what?"
23506You did n''t say anything?"
23506You did n''t?
23506You do n''t know anything of it?
23506You do n''t mean to say that he wants you to appropriate the girl''s clothes?"
23506You do n''t mean to say you have been waiting for me?"
23506You do n''t suppose I should be afraid of getting married?
23506You like him?-- Do n''t you?"
23506You pass by and wonder what mysterious rites are going on in there, what prayers, what visions?
23506You said just now he resembled Socrates-- didn''t you?
23506You smile?
23506You think so?
23506You told your brother- in- law what you thought of it?
23506You understand?
23506You want to interfere-- do you not?"
23506You will note that she cried: What do you want?
23506` But is he ready to join at once?''
23506` Do n''t you know there''s no- admittance that way?''
23506` Eh?
23506` How do you do, sir?''
23506` Looks smart, though... You''re smart and willing( this to me very sudden and loud) and all that, are n''t you?''
23506` What are you doing here?''
23506` What are you screaming for, you little fool?''
23506` What is it you are concealing from me?''
23506eh?"
23506or would you go again to my sister?"