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 |
---|---|
59982 | Are you crazy? |
59982 | Can you see it, Jim? |
59982 | Going to the circus? |
59982 | Hey, Mike,he said to the other man,"Is n''t this the guy whose picture they''re sending out on the Communico Screen? |
59982 | What''s going on here? |
59982 | What''s your name, dad? |
59982 | How could he explain about what he had done and why he had done it? |
59982 | Is it? |
59982 | Oh, is it? |
59982 | Why even the circus was far better-- or was it?_[ Transcriber''s Note: This etext was produced from Worlds of If Science Fiction, June 1957. |
59982 | You know, the guy who ran away from his son''s house before they could send him to the Psych Center?" |
31371 | ''A bottle of lemonade-- have you got any ginger- beer?'' |
31371 | ''Am I to go to Aunt Ellen''s?'' |
31371 | ''Am I to go?'' |
31371 | ''And Winnie?'' |
31371 | ''And my mother too?'' |
31371 | ''And pray who is to take you?'' |
31371 | ''Are n''t you?'' |
31371 | ''Are they here?'' |
31371 | ''Are you really-- really?'' |
31371 | ''Are you sure there is nobody?'' |
31371 | ''But after that?'' |
31371 | ''But how about to- night?'' |
31371 | ''But how can she if she does n''t know the number?'' |
31371 | ''But is she like you?'' |
31371 | ''But is she?'' |
31371 | ''But suppose Aunt Selina is n''t at home either?'' |
31371 | ''But suppose it does n''t come?'' |
31371 | ''But suppose you do n''t catch it?'' |
31371 | ''But when do you go to sleep?'' |
31371 | ''But where is it?'' |
31371 | ''But where shall I sleep?'' |
31371 | ''Can I warm my hands?'' |
31371 | ''Can she be angry?'' |
31371 | ''Can you tell me how long she will be?'' |
31371 | ''Could n''t I stay here?'' |
31371 | ''Did she say anything about coming home?'' |
31371 | ''Do n''t you know?'' |
31371 | ''Do n''t you like your Aunt Selina?'' |
31371 | ''Do they often go to France?'' |
31371 | ''Do you know him?'' |
31371 | ''Do you know what it is?'' |
31371 | ''Do you know whether this house is empty?'' |
31371 | ''Do you mean Winnie?'' |
31371 | ''Do you think she''ll be very cross?'' |
31371 | ''Do you think she''ll be very long?'' |
31371 | ''Got nowhere to sleep?'' |
31371 | ''Got your sandwiches?'' |
31371 | ''Ham or beef?'' |
31371 | ''Ham-- do you like ham?'' |
31371 | ''Have you any other relations in London?'' |
31371 | ''Have you washed your face?'' |
31371 | ''Have you?'' |
31371 | ''How long shall we stay?'' |
31371 | ''How long were you asleep?'' |
31371 | ''How much are those?'' |
31371 | ''How much is it?'' |
31371 | ''How should you like to go to see your father?'' |
31371 | ''How was it you got out of the train at Meresleigh?'' |
31371 | ''Hullo,''it said,''what are you doing out here? |
31371 | ''Hungry?'' |
31371 | ''I have no doubt,''said Aunt Selina,''that they will go to Aunt Ellen''s at Chesterham----''''Could n''t I go to Aunt Ellen''s?'' |
31371 | ''I wonder what Miss Morton will say about it?'' |
31371 | ''Is Miss Morton at home?'' |
31371 | ''Is it stone- bottle ginger- beer?'' |
31371 | ''Is it?'' |
31371 | ''Is it?'' |
31371 | ''Is my mother as old as you?'' |
31371 | ''Is she like Aunt Selina?'' |
31371 | ''Is that for me to wash in?'' |
31371 | ''Is that the lion who had your head in his mouth?'' |
31371 | ''Is your name Wilmot?'' |
31371 | ''Is-- is she like you?'' |
31371 | ''Mean to say they''ve gone away and left you?'' |
31371 | ''Might n''t we wait just a little longer?'' |
31371 | ''Miss Selina Morton-- is that your aunt''s name?'' |
31371 | ''Must I?'' |
31371 | ''My mother?'' |
31371 | ''Oh, so you came to the show by yourself?'' |
31371 | ''Oh, you have n''t, have n''t you?'' |
31371 | ''Only what is it?'' |
31371 | ''Please can you tell me the way to Chesterham?'' |
31371 | ''Please, have you had a letter from Uncle Henry yet?'' |
31371 | ''Run away?'' |
31371 | ''Sha n''t I have the half- crown if I do n''t go to- day?'' |
31371 | ''Sha n''t you?'' |
31371 | ''Shall you be glad to see her?'' |
31371 | ''Shall you?'' |
31371 | ''So,''he added, as he put away the shovel,''you think you''d like something to eat?'' |
31371 | ''Surely he did not come alone?'' |
31371 | ''Then how do you know?'' |
31371 | ''Then what am I to do?'' |
31371 | ''Then why did n''t you get in again?'' |
31371 | ''Then you were really looking for me?'' |
31371 | ''Then,''asked the lady,''why did you run away from the circus? |
31371 | ''This is n''t Chesterham, is it?'' |
31371 | ''Was he?'' |
31371 | ''Well, you ca n''t sleep here,''said the clown,''and you do n''t see much to eat, do you?'' |
31371 | ''Well,''said the clown,''it is n''t in his mouth now, is it?'' |
31371 | ''What are those?'' |
31371 | ''What are you after?'' |
31371 | ''What are you doing here?'' |
31371 | ''What are you glad about?'' |
31371 | ''What are you going to be?'' |
31371 | ''What do you suppose I am to do with you then?'' |
31371 | ''What do you think about a bath?'' |
31371 | ''What do you think she''ll say?'' |
31371 | ''What do you want?'' |
31371 | ''What do you want?'' |
31371 | ''What is her number in Gloucester Place?'' |
31371 | ''What is the matter?'' |
31371 | ''What is your aunt''s name? |
31371 | ''What is your name?'' |
31371 | ''What number?'' |
31371 | ''What should you wish her to be like?'' |
31371 | ''What time does the train get to Chesterham?'' |
31371 | ''What time is it, please?'' |
31371 | ''What''s that?'' |
31371 | ''What, the sandwiches?'' |
31371 | ''What?'' |
31371 | ''When did you hear from your mother?'' |
31371 | ''Where am I going after breakfast?'' |
31371 | ''Where am I to sleep?'' |
31371 | ''Where are we going?'' |
31371 | ''Where does your Aunt Selina live?'' |
31371 | ''Where is Master Wilmot?'' |
31371 | ''Where is this?'' |
31371 | ''Where to?'' |
31371 | ''Where will you put them?'' |
31371 | ''Where''s your ticket?'' |
31371 | ''Where-- where to?'' |
31371 | ''Which do you want?'' |
31371 | ''Who brought him?'' |
31371 | ''Whose bed is it?'' |
31371 | ''Whose is that little clown''s suit?'' |
31371 | ''Why are we stopping here?'' |
31371 | ''Why did the people send you here?'' |
31371 | ''Why did you do that?'' |
31371 | ''Why did you run away from the policeman?'' |
31371 | ''Why do n''t you like her?'' |
31371 | ''Why not?'' |
31371 | ''Why not?'' |
31371 | ''Why, could n''t I go alone?'' |
31371 | ''Why,''he asked,''you look as if you''ve come from a circus?'' |
31371 | ''Will they come here?'' |
31371 | ''Will you kindly let me look at a Directory?'' |
31371 | ''Winnie is n''t really black, is she?'' |
31371 | ''Yes,''she answered,''and who do you think will meet you at Chesterham station?'' |
31371 | And if they were real, where had the clown''s dress gone to? |
31371 | And what would Miss Roberts do with you in that case?'' |
31371 | But if he had dreamed them, where was he? |
31371 | Do you know what''s done to them as travels without a ticket?'' |
31371 | Had he really done all these strange things or had he only dreamed them? |
31371 | Is it Wilmot?'' |
31371 | Morton or Miss Morton?'' |
31371 | Where''s your nurse?'' |
31371 | Why should n''t he wait until everybody else had gone and then lie down on one of the seats and sleep where he was? |
31371 | Why should she be cross?'' |
46709 | All right to- night, waiter? |
46709 | And I think, sir,continued Grimaldi,"that if it were in your power, you would willingly serve me?" |
46709 | And Jesson? |
46709 | And Williams? |
46709 | And pray what may be the amount? |
46709 | And the Jewish- looking man,--I forget the rascal''s name,--the man who sings Kelly''s songs; what is he? |
46709 | And what am I to do? |
46709 | And what did you want to wake me for? |
46709 | And why was it not done, sir? 46709 And why, pray?" |
46709 | Are there plenty of birds this year? |
46709 | But what has our killing these pigeons to do with cutting away? |
46709 | Did he give you his name, or do you know who he is? |
46709 | Do n''t attempt to touch him without a warrant; or--"Or what? |
46709 | Do n''t you recollect, Mr. Grimaldi, that he would not join the party to Woolwich? |
46709 | Do you know him, sir? |
46709 | Do you want to see him on any particular business? |
46709 | Friends of yours-- hey? |
46709 | Grimaldi, do you mean to take supper every night? |
46709 | Grimaldi,whispered this young nobleman, just as dinner commenced,"did you ever meet Byron before?" |
46709 | Harmer? |
46709 | Have you looked at the box- book? |
46709 | Have you? |
46709 | How do_ you_ do? |
46709 | I beg your pardon, sir, did you, sir? |
46709 | In the name of wonder, Grimaldi,said this agreeable character,"what are you doing here?" |
46709 | Indeed!--is that true? |
46709 | Is Mr. Hughes alone? |
46709 | Is he here now? |
46709 | Is the squire very angry? |
46709 | It''s right, sir, is it? |
46709 | Joe,said Kemble, with great dignity,"what is the matter?" |
46709 | Joe,said Mr. Hughes, gravely,"is this the first meeting you have attended?" |
46709 | Lucas,--Lucas,said Richer;"that is the old man who wears spectacles, is n''t it?" |
46709 | Not paid? |
46709 | Now, then, pit or box, pit or gallery, box or pit? |
46709 | Now, then, what''s the matter? |
46709 | Oh, I really do n''t know, sir,she replied;"there is nothing particular about him, except--""Well, except what?" |
46709 | Pray, may I inquire why you ask the question? |
46709 | Quite right? |
46709 | Soy, my lord? |
46709 | That is not what I meant,said De Cleve:"what I meant was, to ask you what business might have taken you to Gravesend?" |
46709 | The what? |
46709 | Then I expect you wo nt assist me in finding them out? |
46709 | Then you''ll go to- morrow? |
46709 | Then, of course, you have not met him at a dinner- party? |
46709 | Then,asked Miss Kelly,"why not take a farewell benefit? |
46709 | There is one other man whom I have not named-- that fellow Jones; what is he? 46709 To come, then, at once to the point,"said Mr. Harmer,--"do you not know a person of the name of Mackintosh?" |
46709 | Well, Bologna,said Grimaldi, with a triumphant air,"are you satisfied?" |
46709 | Well, Joe,said he,"I hope you have come to say that you feel able to be with us again?" |
46709 | Well, mother,he said,"has anything strange occurred here to- night?" |
46709 | Well, sir,said the patrol,"there they are; can you swear to them all, or to any of them?" |
46709 | Well, then, sir, of course you can tell, whether_ he_ is one of the men who robbed you? |
46709 | Well, will you take it? |
46709 | Well,said Mr. Blamire, after the bustle of entrance had ceased,"what''s the matter, now? |
46709 | What are you talking about? 46709 What can be the matter with him?" |
46709 | What did you expect to find? 46709 What do you call rather early?" |
46709 | What do you mean? |
46709 | What do you mean? |
46709 | What do you mean? |
46709 | What for?--what for? |
46709 | What is it? 46709 What on earth can he want with me? |
46709 | What on earth is the meaning of this? |
46709 | What should you recommend for that purpose? |
46709 | What will you like to order, sir? |
46709 | What will you wager? |
46709 | What''s that? |
46709 | Where are you going to take the box? |
46709 | Where''s your warrant? |
46709 | Where? 46709 Which way?" |
46709 | Who are you looking for, Joe? |
46709 | Who is the lady? |
46709 | Who wants me? |
46709 | Who? |
46709 | Why not? |
46709 | Why, Jack,shouted the other man, starting back with great surprise:"can you speak?" |
46709 | Why, what have you been about, Joe? |
46709 | Why? |
46709 | Will any of us do Joe? |
46709 | Will not, Joe,--eh? |
46709 | Will you listen to me for half a minute? |
46709 | You do n''t surely mean to say that you have apprehended the burglars? |
46709 | You have more money about you; I know you have: come, hand over, will ye? |
46709 | _ Samp._(_ aside_) Is the law on our side if I say ay? 46709 --What''s the matter?" |
46709 | --said one of the men:"what the devil does this mean?" |
46709 | After he had finished his speech, the former quietly said,"Will you favour me by coming here at nine o''clock to- morrow morning, sir?" |
46709 | At the commencement of the season he met Mr. Sheridan, when the following colloquy ensued:--"Well, Joe, still living-- eh?" |
46709 | But, Joe, what will your poor little wife do while you are at the theatre of an evening? |
46709 | Byron looked at him for a moment, and then said, with much seeming surprise--"Why, Mr. Grimaldi, do you not take soy with your tart?" |
46709 | Cross?" |
46709 | Do you mean to say you do not recollect it?" |
46709 | Farmer?" |
46709 | He advanced towards the door as he spoke, and then suddenly turning round, added,"Have you anything else to say to me?" |
46709 | He nodded as Grimaldi entered, and said,"Are you going to Finchley to- night?" |
46709 | He paused for a few seconds, and, looking up in his face, said,"And so you really are Grimaldi, are you?" |
46709 | Here arose a great outcry, mingled with various exclamations of,"Where''s your warrant?" |
46709 | How do you do it?" |
46709 | How is it that I never see you at tea now?" |
46709 | I suppose you left Newcastle the same day you received my letter?" |
46709 | I suppose, now, there are a good many Clowns and Harlequins in London,--eh?" |
46709 | In von more minuet, Sheridan leave his dinner party, enter de room hastily-- stop suddenly, and say,''How dare you, Grim, play me such a trick?'' |
46709 | Is that agreed?" |
46709 | It is an odd circumstance, is it not, that I should be charged with robbing an old friend like you? |
46709 | Just get it altered, will you?" |
46709 | Now, sir, will you come along with me?" |
46709 | Now, what can be plainer, if he is very angry, as I know he will be, then if you are here, he''ll put you in prison? |
46709 | Pray, sir, are you the great Mr. Grimaldi, formerly of Covent Garden Theatre?" |
46709 | Pretty young woman, Joe?" |
46709 | Suppose the money were to be found upon him by the loser, who would believe him, when he declared that he picked it up in the street? |
46709 | The Prince merely laughed: and Sheridan, taking up the crown, offered it to him, adding--"''Will you deign to accept this trifle?'' |
46709 | The audience laughed at its gigantic size, and the pantaloon, looking suspiciously at him, demanded,"Where did you get this box?" |
46709 | The man at the horse''s head looked sharply on, and cried,"Tom, what has he given you?" |
46709 | There were a great many other dishes that you might have had; but you recollect giving a particular order for a Welsh rare- bit, sir?" |
46709 | They were young men of gentlemanly appearance, and upon hearing the words,"Here''s Mr. Grimaldi-- who wants him?" |
46709 | Well mounted, is he not?" |
46709 | What do you keep on knocking for, at this time of night?" |
46709 | What do you propose? |
46709 | What does my father say?" |
46709 | What is the cause of this infernal clamour?" |
46709 | What is the nature of the disorder? |
46709 | What mattered it that the stage was three yards wide, and four deep? |
46709 | What say you?" |
46709 | What was your motive for taking me into the company of these men and women, and why did they want to have me among them?" |
46709 | Where could he be gone to? |
46709 | Where is Joe, sir?" |
46709 | Who is not at home?" |
46709 | Who knows?" |
46709 | Why was it not done? |
46709 | Why, surely you can not have been so imprudent as to have formed an attachment to Joe yourself? |
46709 | Why, what is the matter?" |
46709 | Will that do?" |
46709 | Will you get out?" |
46709 | Will you take a glass of madeira?" |
46709 | Would it not appear much more probable that he had stolen it? |
46709 | You''ll not forget?" |
46709 | You, sir, you are the gentleman who suddenly went into the grave, and forgot to come out again, I think?" |
46709 | a murderer?" |
46709 | and if such a charge were brought against him, by what evidence could he rebut it? |
46709 | and pay outside fare?" |
46709 | cried the Pantaloon:"and pray, who gave it to you?" |
46709 | exclaimed Dubois, rising angrily,"how dare you come here?" |
46709 | exclaimed this person, holding out his hand, in some agitation,"how goes it with you now, old fellow?" |
46709 | father, what for?" |
46709 | have you forget?'' |
46709 | have you forgotten the pickled salmon again?" |
46709 | he shouted out of the window, displaying the brace of pistols and the broadsword to the best advantage;"what''s the matter there?" |
46709 | inquired Lucas;"or what, Mr. Dubois? |
46709 | is that you?" |
46709 | look at the accommodations: what do you suppose they''ll charge for all this? |
46709 | properties?" |
46709 | said the leader of the guard; upon which Grimaldi summoned up courage, and echoing the inquiry, said,"What''s the matter?" |
46709 | said the other,"you have heard of it, then?" |
46709 | what is it called?" |
46709 | without leave, I suppose?" |
46709 | you cruel boy,"said Joe, in a passion of tears,"had n''t you any love for your dear father? |
8430 | ? |
8430 | Am I what? |
8430 | And I then? 8430 And I, my young friend? |
8430 | And Madame Patou? |
8430 | And do you know how I got rid of him? 8430 And he said:''What would you have, Monsieur? |
8430 | And if I show no talent at all? |
8430 | And if he does n''t? |
8430 | And indeed, General,she flashed,"what_ has_ become of you?" |
8430 | And now that I''ve told you the story of my life, what about you? 8430 And now that there''s no longer any mystery?" |
8430 | And now,cried Elodie,"what were you going to say about fashions in necklaces made of dogs''teeth?" |
8430 | And now,said I,"what did Lackaday, in terms of plain fact, tell you down there?" |
8430 | And that''s final, my dear? |
8430 | And that''s the end of it? |
8430 | And the uniform? 8430 And then?" |
8430 | And what''s that? |
8430 | And when you complained, he looked like this-- eh? |
8430 | And you are pleased to have me again? |
8430 | And you have been supporting yourself all the time, on the stage? |
8430 | And you have looked enough at the street? |
8430 | And you must be proud of something? |
8430 | And you''d sooner keep on throwing up three balls in the air for the rest of your natural life than just be comfortably dead? 8430 And you''re proud of it?" |
8430 | And-- forgive me if I am impertinent-- you have also that of the lady whom we have just left? |
8430 | Are you sure that it does n''t come from the respectability of an English General? |
8430 | Are you? |
8430 | Arras? |
8430 | Artist? |
8430 | At that dinner-- what did you do? 8430 Besides, what?" |
8430 | Black ones--_hein?_ They have made you little infidelities? |
8430 | Black ones--_hein?_ They have made you little infidelities? |
8430 | Bricks? |
8430 | But do n''t you see? |
8430 | But during these few days----? |
8430 | But how did you get it? |
8430 | But how will you give the performance this evening without him? |
8430 | But how? 8430 But now?" |
8430 | But real Pierrots who make money? |
8430 | But since you have known her since she was three years old? |
8430 | But tell me,he said, after a few moments''perplexity,"why were you so agitated all yesterday after you had seen that photograph?" |
8430 | But what about me? 8430 But what can he be doing?" |
8430 | But what shall I do? |
8430 | But where can I find a human Prépimpin? |
8430 | But who is going to war, these days, my good fellow? |
8430 | But why elope at dawn? |
8430 | But why on earth do you want to see the wretched Lackaday make a fool of himself? |
8430 | But why,he asked again,"did n''t you tell me?" |
8430 | But your hundred louis at Longchamps? |
8430 | But, damn it all, man,I cried angrily,"what have I just been saying? |
8430 | Can we take the dog anywhere for you? |
8430 | Can you doubt it? |
8430 | Children? |
8430 | Clicked? |
8430 | Demobilized? |
8430 | Demobilized? |
8430 | Did he tell you? |
8430 | Did n''t I write to you? |
8430 | Did n''t you know? |
8430 | Did n''t you say something about-- what was it, dear-- Borneo? |
8430 | Did you ever see anything so idiotic? |
8430 | Did you ever see such a cow? |
8430 | Did you tell her so? |
8430 | Do n''t you know that he is the greatest_ blagueur_ an existence? |
8430 | Do n''t you realize I''m just transplanted from a forcing bed of High Anglican platitude? |
8430 | Do n''t you see how you must have changed? 8430 Do n''t you think,"said he,"I''m the model of a Colonel of the Rifles?" |
8430 | Do you know why? |
8430 | Do you mean that? 8430 Do you think that''s a dignified way for General Andrew Lackaday, C.B., to make his living-- in the green skin tights of Petit Patou?" |
8430 | Does Cousin Auriol know? |
8430 | Does the guide- book say that? |
8430 | Doing? 8430 Fix up what?" |
8430 | Have n''t I always said so? 8430 Have they been badgering you?" |
8430 | Have you an engagement here in Avignon? |
8430 | Have you ever heard of Pierrots? |
8430 | Have you seen our good friends, the Verity- Stewarts lately? |
8430 | Have you signed a Caruso contract for Covent Garden? |
8430 | He ill- treats you? |
8430 | How could I, after all you have told me? |
8430 | How could you help me? 8430 How dare you insinuate such a thing?" |
8430 | How do you know that, young woman of wisdom? |
8430 | How far? |
8430 | How long have you been out? |
8430 | How many people are there in the world whom you would see off by a midnight train, three or four miles from your comfortable bed? |
8430 | How old are you? |
8430 | How old is she? |
8430 | Hundreds or thousands, what does it matter? |
8430 | Hylton, why did you let her do it? |
8430 | I hope not,said he,"for what will become of me when it''s all over? |
8430 | I knew there was a woman-- wife and children-- what does it matter? 8430 I know it''s not much of a position to offer you,"said he, almost apologetically,"but if you care to accept it----""Of your assistant?" |
8430 | I presume,she continued,"I was quite as intimate a friend as Anthony?" |
8430 | I prevented you? |
8430 | I wonder if you have anything to do with an old friend of my fattier, Archdeacon Bakkus? |
8430 | I wonder whether you would care to try the experiment? |
8430 | I? 8430 If it''s a question of playing the game"--I had carried the war into the enemy''s quarters--"may I repeat my original rude question this morning? |
8430 | If you gave me the key to your material Shadow Land, it would not be playing the game? |
8430 | If you had n''t to dress the part what should I have known of your rank and orders? 8430 If you were a soldier what would you do if you were made a General?" |
8430 | In England? 8430 In the name of goodness, why?" |
8430 | In what way? |
8430 | Indeed? 8430 Is a guide- book human?" |
8430 | Is my French so villainous? |
8430 | Is n''t it a little bit mad, your idea? |
8430 | Is n''t it? |
8430 | Is that true? |
8430 | Is that your name, sir? |
8430 | Is that your own? |
8430 | It does not please you that I should talk about it? |
8430 | It never occurred to you that I might value your friendship and take a little trouble to seek you out? |
8430 | It''s a sorry show, is n''t it? 8430 Known what?" |
8430 | Like to come? |
8430 | Mad? 8430 Madame----?" |
8430 | Madame? |
8430 | May I ask when you came to this decision? |
8430 | May I ask why you tell me all this? |
8430 | May I tread,said he,"on the most delicate of grounds?" |
8430 | May they not come to tell me at any minute that you are killed? |
8430 | Monsieur had a good reception? |
8430 | Monsieur le Capitaine Hylton? |
8430 | My dear fellow, why ca n''t you always talk like that? |
8430 | My dear fellow,I said,"why all this apologia? |
8430 | My dear fellow,said the cynic,"is n''t it rather overdoing your saintly simplicity? |
8430 | Need I? 8430 No difficulty in what?" |
8430 | No, really? 8430 Now what''s that?" |
8430 | Now, my dear Anthony,said Sir Julius,"ca n''t you do something?" |
8430 | Oh that''s it, is it? |
8430 | Oh? |
8430 | Original? |
8430 | Pardon me,said I,"but have n''t you turned this marvellous gift of yours to-- well to practical use?" |
8430 | Rather fatalistic, is n''t it? |
8430 | Shall we go? |
8430 | Song? |
8430 | Suppose I think they are? |
8430 | Tell me--to the chauffeur--"how did you come by it?" |
8430 | Tell me,she said, with a swift change of manner,"do you know anything about Colonel Lackaday?" |
8430 | Tell me,she said,"is it better that I should come and see you to- night or that I should throw myself over the bridge into the Rhone?" |
8430 | Tell you what, my dear? |
8430 | That is true? |
8430 | That is true? |
8430 | That''s a bit dogmatic, is n''t it? 8430 That''s sudden, is n''t it?" |
8430 | That''s the beginning and end of the whole thing? 8430 The Balkans-- Turkey-- Bulgaria? |
8430 | The Cirque Rocambeau? |
8430 | The General could n''t go around shouting''I''m to command a brigade mother, I''m to command a brigade,''could he? |
8430 | The matter? 8430 Then how the devil do you manage to talk both languages like a Frenchman?" |
8430 | Then what on earth made you drag me all the way from the North of Scotland? |
8430 | Then what''s the good of being a General? |
8430 | Then why do you go on reading, reading all the time instead of telling me so? |
8430 | Then why not go back to it? |
8430 | Then why the blazes did you pick her out? |
8430 | Then why, my dear, resent, as you seem to do, the inevitable reassertion, in your own case, of the vital principle? |
8430 | Then, my good Andrew, what are you talking about? |
8430 | They? 8430 This is a charming spot, is n''t it, Madame Patou?" |
8430 | To get a middle seat in a crowded carriage, for an all- night journey, with the windows shut? |
8430 | To see the Sealyhams and the rabbits? |
8430 | To- morrow? |
8430 | Topping, is n''t it? |
8430 | Was there anything particular you wanted to say to me? |
8430 | Was there ever a man living who used his breath for any other purpose? |
8430 | We do n''t disturb you, Monsieur? |
8430 | We will write to each other? |
8430 | Well, do n''t you see? 8430 Well?" |
8430 | Well? |
8430 | Well? |
8430 | Well? |
8430 | Well? |
8430 | Well? |
8430 | Were they, after all, so very happy? |
8430 | What about Germany? |
8430 | What about our bookings next month? |
8430 | What are talents in a napkin? 8430 What are you doing here?" |
8430 | What are you going to do when the war is over and Othello''s occupation is gone? |
8430 | What are you going to do? |
8430 | What do you mean? |
8430 | What do you think, Horace? |
8430 | What experiment? |
8430 | What for me? |
8430 | What have they been doing now? |
8430 | What have you done on the stage? 8430 What have you done?" |
8430 | What is it? |
8430 | What on earth do you mean? 8430 What on earth do you suppose was the meaning of our talk about playing the game?" |
8430 | What prevents you? |
8430 | What song? 8430 What the devil did she mean by that?" |
8430 | What the devil do you mean? |
8430 | What the devil----? 8430 What time shall we start?" |
8430 | What would be the good? |
8430 | What would become of you? |
8430 | What would you have? 8430 What would you like to do?" |
8430 | What would you suggest-- just plain black or red-- Mephisto-- or stripes? |
8430 | What year was that? |
8430 | What''s Hecuba to me or I to Hecuba? |
8430 | What''s one Brigadier- General to me or I to one Brigadier- General? 8430 What''s the good of it?" |
8430 | What''s the good unless you promise to write to me? |
8430 | What''s the matter? |
8430 | What''s the matter? |
8430 | What''s the trouble? |
8430 | What? |
8430 | When did I say such a thing? 8430 When was that?" |
8430 | When? |
8430 | Where do you keep it-- that organ? |
8430 | Where is it? |
8430 | Whereabouts is this circus? |
8430 | Which means? |
8430 | Whither away? |
8430 | Who invented this elegant and disgustingly humiliating entertainment? |
8430 | Who took her luggage down? |
8430 | Who was his father? |
8430 | Why all the fellow''s unnecessary duplicity? 8430 Why did n''t you book a_ coupé- lit_, even a seat, beforehand?" |
8430 | Why did n''t you let me do it? |
8430 | Why did n''t you tell me? |
8430 | Why did n''t you tell me? |
8430 | Why did n''t you want us to know? |
8430 | Why have you waited all these years? |
8430 | Why is it, my dear Tony, you always seem to pretend there has never been anything like a war? |
8430 | Why not? |
8430 | Why now? |
8430 | Why should it matter so much? |
8430 | Why the devil did n''t you tell me? |
8430 | Why-- for getting married? |
8430 | Why? 8430 Why?" |
8430 | Why? |
8430 | Why? |
8430 | Why? |
8430 | Will you accompany us ignorant people and act as cicerone? |
8430 | With this-- and all these? |
8430 | Wo n''t you join us? |
8430 | Would ten be too early? |
8430 | Yes, who? |
8430 | You are going to enlist in the Legion? |
8430 | You are not pleased with me? |
8430 | You are of the_ Midi?_he said. |
8430 | You could have eaten him up alive,_ n''est- ce pas_, André? |
8430 | You desire it as much as that? |
8430 | You do n''t mean that she has left the hotel with her luggage? |
8430 | You do n''t recognize me? 8430 You do n''t suppose these subtle diplomatists have left us alone to discuss Bolshevism or Infant Welfare?" |
8430 | You do n''t wish to say''good- bye,''Elodie? |
8430 | You drove the automobile? 8430 You have had a great misfortune, monsieur?" |
8430 | You have n''t been made a General? |
8430 | You have n''t given me away? |
8430 | You love me so much, my little Elodie? |
8430 | You mean a fool can be egged on to do great things and still remain a fool? |
8430 | You mean,said he, coming to a halt,"that this has removed the reason for my remaining on the stage?" |
8430 | You really think André if he enlists in the English Army will be a hero? |
8430 | You remember my telling you of a man I met in Marseilles called Arbuthnot? |
8430 | You say, Monsieur----? |
8430 | You surely are n''t jesting? |
8430 | You throw up an engagement-- just like that-- because the audience does n''t laugh? |
8430 | You too? |
8430 | You were born an imitator? 8430 You will excuse me?" |
8430 | You''re sure it would n''t be inconvenient? 8430 You''re sure there''s no hope in this country?" |
8430 | You? 8430 You? |
8430 | _ C''est vrai?_He held his wrist towards her. |
8430 | _ Eh bien?_"He says there will be no difficulty. |
8430 | _ Eh bien_,said Elodie, as they were driving home to the Faubourg Saint- Denis,"and is it all fixed up, the Paris contract?" |
8430 | _ Mais dis donc André, tu veux attraper un coup de soleil?_We heard his voice in reply:"_ Nous rentrons_." |
8430 | _ Mais tu es toujours Général?_she asked anxiously. |
8430 | _ Moi?_She shifted round on her seat with Southern excitability and pointed her finger at her bosom. |
8430 | _ Mon Dieu!_ What do you expect a woman to be when she learns that her husband, whom she thinks alive, has been killed two years ago? |
8430 | _ Mon Dieu, ma chérie_, what do you want me to say? |
8430 | _ Qu''est- ce que c''est que cela?_asked Elodie, sharply. |
8430 | _ Tu dis?_"I must do like all other demobilized men-- return to my trade. |
8430 | _ Un tour de valse, Mademoiselle?_"_ Je vieux bien_. |
8430 | _ Ça ne vous gênera pas?_She asked the question with such a little air of serious solicitude that he laughed, for the first time. |
8430 | ''What will happen to me if he does get a foreign appointment?'' |
8430 | A clean cut you call it? |
8430 | A man''s work, what? |
8430 | After all, why should she trouble herself further with so dull a dog? |
8430 | Already one of her friends, Jeanne Duval, comedienne, was a widow... What would life be without André? |
8430 | Am I making an ass of myself?" |
8430 | And do you know what I found? |
8430 | And he; with a flash in his blue eyes and his two- year- old grin:"May I really?" |
8430 | And here she is in love with a fine fellow who''s in love with her or I''ll eat my hat, and-- well-- don''t you see what I mean?" |
8430 | And how could he love any other dog than Prépimpin? |
8430 | And love? |
8430 | And prospects for the immediate future? |
8430 | And the_ patron_, eh? |
8430 | And then, in her queer, twisted logic, she said, clutching the lapels of his coat and looking up into his face:"And it''s not true what she said? |
8430 | And when he had patiently explained--"They give you nothing at all for being a General?" |
8430 | And you''ve chucked it?" |
8430 | And you?" |
8430 | And"_ f---- moi le camp!_"Why had n''t he taken Coinçon by the neck then and there with his long strong fingers and strangled him? |
8430 | And, if I please you, you will keep me always?" |
8430 | Andrew breathed freely, relieved from the dread lest this genial and unsuspecting brother in arms should wander into Olympia and behold-- what? |
8430 | Andrew, to his great gladness, noted that no hint of the cry"What is to become of me?" |
8430 | Are n''t you glad it''s all over?" |
8430 | Are n''t you paying for this very mouthful now?" |
8430 | Are you going off to the other end of the world?" |
8430 | As I told him-- the pity of it-- all that he must have suffered-- for he has suffered, has n''t he?" |
8430 | As all this sad, mad, glad affair seems to have come to a sudden stop, what do you propose to do?" |
8430 | As for Elodie, if it were not dangerous-- she had the street child''s instinct-- what did a kiss or two matter? |
8430 | As the fag end of the comet''s tail should I have made my name and a big position? |
8430 | At last:--"When are you going to be demobilized?" |
8430 | At the lift, he said:"Can you give me a minute?" |
8430 | At what? |
8430 | Besides, was not Fate accomplishing itself by presenting this solution of both their difficulties? |
8430 | But all she said was:"You''ll write and tell me how you get on?" |
8430 | But by what feminine process of divination had she guessed it? |
8430 | But do n''t you see?" |
8430 | But does he do it contentedly? |
8430 | But first I asked:"What does Auriol say about it?" |
8430 | But if the horse had lost would n''t you have pested against me? |
8430 | But oh, darling Uncle Tony, could n''t we fix it up?" |
8430 | But on the latter hypothesis, what was she doing in this galley? |
8430 | But on thinking over the matter-- how could he? |
8430 | But was it of the heart? |
8430 | But what about Lackaday?" |
8430 | But what is the good of presenting the unsophisticated public of Brest or Béziers with an imitation of Monsieur le Bargy? |
8430 | But what retrieval of lost comeliness could be effected in a day or two? |
8430 | But what would be the good of it, when you had done it and they had seen it? |
8430 | But what would you have? |
8430 | But while I am absent, what will happen to him?" |
8430 | But you see, do n''t you, that I could n''t do it?" |
8430 | But you, my dear fellow-- with your fifty billiard cues on top of your nose? |
8430 | But your uniform? |
8430 | But, thought I, with elderly sagacity, was it all thunder? |
8430 | But,_ que voulez- vous?_ It is as effective as many another. |
8430 | By the way, how do you spell your name? |
8430 | By the way,"he added, after a pause,"what really happened afterwards? |
8430 | Ca n''t you see? |
8430 | Can you be there at ten o''clock?" |
8430 | Did I not? |
8430 | Did ever anyone hear of such a dirty trick? |
8430 | Did he know what those were? |
8430 | Did he realize that it was two years since he had seen her? |
8430 | Did it not rather proceed from childish disappointment at his lack of enthusiastic praise of her splendid exploit? |
8430 | Did n''t he know that servants did not grow like the leaves on the trees in the Champs Elysées? |
8430 | Did not Monsieur know?" |
8430 | Did she look like a_ grue?_ Did her toilette in any way suggest the Batignolles? |
8430 | Did she look like a_ grue?_ Did her toilette in any way suggest the Batignolles? |
8430 | Dismiss Ernestine? |
8430 | Do I appeal to you as a squire of deserted dames, grass- widows endowed with plenty? |
8430 | Do n''t you know English?" |
8430 | Do n''t you see?" |
8430 | Do you deny that the_ amour sacré_ exists for the Englishman?" |
8430 | Do you like it?" |
8430 | Do you refuse mine? |
8430 | Do you remember the farce''Occupe- toi d''Amélie?'' |
8430 | Do you suppose I''m having an evening out?" |
8430 | Do you think I''m talking swollen- headedly, Colonel Lackaday?" |
8430 | Elodie asked:"Who is that lady?" |
8430 | Elodie, preening herself, asked:"Is it true that I have that gift?" |
8430 | Ernestine, a treasure dropped from Heaven? |
8430 | Even if he had found a semi- military or administrative career abroad, what would become of Elodie? |
8430 | Every day, when he got home, Elodie would ask:"_ Eh bien?_ Have you found anything?" |
8430 | Every day, when he got home, Elodie would ask:"_ Eh bien?_ Have you found anything?" |
8430 | For mine-- why should I disturb her superbly regained balance with idle chatter about our morrow''s meeting? |
8430 | France''s gem of Romanesque churches? |
8430 | Had Monsieur Patou seen any service? |
8430 | Had Monsieur le Général then been making her infidelities? |
8430 | Had he lost that personal touch, merely gone through his conjuring with the mechanical precision of a soldier on parade? |
8430 | Had he tried this, that or the other opening? |
8430 | Had n''t I heard of it? |
8430 | Had n''t they had their explanation? |
8430 | Have n''t they been discussing me and Andrew Lackaday?" |
8430 | Have n''t you betrayed them?" |
8430 | Have you?" |
8430 | He said very thoughtfully,"I wonder--""What?" |
8430 | He said:"Whom are you come to fetch? |
8430 | Helping Bakkus he asked:"And now, what are you going to do?" |
8430 | Here a hand was clapped on his shoulder and a voice said:"Surely you''re Lackaday?" |
8430 | How can I know that you, whom I have trusted more than any other man with my heart''s secrets------?" |
8430 | How could it be? |
8430 | How could she know that Lackaday was here? |
8430 | How dare you assume there''s anything between them save the ordinary friendship of a distinguished soldier and an English lady?" |
8430 | How did she know that the war would not last longer than Andrew''s savings? |
8430 | How the deuce could a wandering, even though successful, young mountebank assure the future of a forlorn and untalented young woman? |
8430 | How, I asked myself, could the man into which he had developed, ever have become an acrobat? |
8430 | I cried,"what on earth do you mean?" |
8430 | I had risen from the ranks, had n''t I? |
8430 | I knew Tit? |
8430 | I love talking for talking''s sake-- good talk-- don''t you?" |
8430 | I mean what does it matter to the course of this narrative? |
8430 | I protested,"what do you take me for?" |
8430 | I stretched out my hand mechanically and, regardless of manners, I said:"What the devil are you doing here?" |
8430 | I-- a man of such indefinite morals that so long as I have mutton cutlets I do n''t in the least care who pays for them? |
8430 | If he could in honour have said,"I am a free live man as you are a free live woman, and I love you as you love me"--wouldn''t he have said it? |
8430 | If he shrank from training another dog and yet distrusted a solo performance, what was he going to do? |
8430 | If his soul, through reaction, is contented at first, will it continue to be so through the long uneventful stocking- selling years? |
8430 | If you''re on the music- hall stage, what the deuce are you doing in Marseilles?" |
8430 | In altered circumstances would she not have the right to cry out against his absence? |
8430 | Into the mind of what woman of her upbringing would not the idea come? |
8430 | Is it a gallop or is it a crawl? |
8430 | Is my English then so villainous?" |
8430 | Is n''t it rotten?" |
8430 | Is she very rich?" |
8430 | Is this the relaxation of the great or the aberrations of the asylum?" |
8430 | It all comes down to a worthless little Montmartroise? |
8430 | It is agreed?" |
8430 | It is true that, when, in answer to the question,"A battle-- what is that like?" |
8430 | It is true? |
8430 | It was gay, was n''t it? |
8430 | Lady Auriol cried:"You''re not going already?" |
8430 | May I ask if you have any warrant for what you''re saying?" |
8430 | May I order another of this_ mastroquet''s_ bowel- gripping absinthes in order to expound a scheme? |
8430 | Money? |
8430 | Monsieur heard the singer before his turn? |
8430 | Must I tour with you, as before?" |
8430 | Oh ca n''t I do anything for you?" |
8430 | On our way to the hotel the only thing she said was:"I do n''t seem to have much chance, do I, Tony?" |
8430 | Otherwise how can I understand your''for ever''?" |
8430 | Parliament? |
8430 | Public life for women? |
8430 | Rain? |
8430 | Retorted: Why could n''t he spend a few hours in relaxation like everybody else? |
8430 | Savvy?" |
8430 | Say?" |
8430 | See?" |
8430 | Seriously, however, as you all seem to take such an interest in me, what s a woman like me to do in this welter? |
8430 | Shall I go on, or shall I pull myself up with a jerk?" |
8430 | She said:"Am I really as bad as that, Tony?" |
8430 | She said:"Do you mean at Royat or in the world in general?" |
8430 | Suppose it was only the former? |
8430 | Tell me have you ever been to England?" |
8430 | That artistic sense of expressing personality? |
8430 | That being so, why should they not be married? |
8430 | That meaningless bit of moonshine ineptitude I quoted the other day? |
8430 | The Queen of Spain?" |
8430 | The awful pity of it? |
8430 | The full moon shone down in a clear sky in the amiable way that the moon has-- as though she said with an intimate smile--"My dear fellow-- clouds? |
8430 | The missive, reply paid, ran: Will you swear that there are real live cannibals in the Solomon Islands? |
8430 | Then he said:"Did you ever hear of Les Petit Patou?" |
8430 | Then she said:"What''s the good of going round and round in a circle? |
8430 | They''ve shown you in the most single- hearted way that they''re your friends, have n''t they?" |
8430 | To my friends I am Elodie_ tout court_--and you?" |
8430 | Tony?" |
8430 | Voilà!_""And that''s all?" |
8430 | Was it not good to smell Paris again after London with its fogs and ugliness and raw beefsteaks? |
8430 | Was it the green silk tights or the possible woman in the background that restrained the gallant General? |
8430 | Was not Monsieur Patou glad to return to the stage? |
8430 | Was this her mental conception which he had been striving for years to realize? |
8430 | We were lunching very well-- the_ petit vin_ of Auvergne is delicious--"_Mais voyons donc_--why all this ceremony among friends? |
8430 | Well, my dear Tony, what do they want to know?" |
8430 | Well, transport or madness, what does it matter? |
8430 | Well, what then? |
8430 | Were British Generals real, like French Generals, Lyautey and Manoury and Foch before he became_ Maréchal?_ She was bitterly disappointed. |
8430 | What I want to know is, where did he get his power of mimicry? |
8430 | What are you doing here in Clermont- Ferrand?" |
8430 | What are your plans?" |
8430 | What ca n''t a man do in two years? |
8430 | What can I give you in return?" |
8430 | What can you do? |
8430 | What could I do? |
8430 | What could a woman with brains and energy do? |
8430 | What could one say? |
8430 | What could they do now by way of amends? |
8430 | What did I say? |
8430 | What did he gain by it?" |
8430 | What did she want? |
8430 | What did you think of the performance?" |
8430 | What do you mean?" |
8430 | What does that mean? |
8430 | What else is there?" |
8430 | What else was there to do? |
8430 | What in his modesty could the good fellow say? |
8430 | What kind of a performance? |
8430 | What kind of a reception? |
8430 | What more can a man do than lay down his bachelor life for a friend? |
8430 | What remains to be said?" |
8430 | What right had that_ tortoise_ of a Madame Coinçon to put on airs? |
8430 | What the deuce was I to do? |
8430 | What the devil are you doing here?" |
8430 | What was a flying visit-- a night''s journey to Royat? |
8430 | What was the matter with Madame? |
8430 | What was the reason? |
8430 | What worm was in the head of Moignon( the Paris music- hall agent) that he should send him such a monstrosity? |
8430 | What would I have? |
8430 | What would happen? |
8430 | What''s a contract? |
8430 | What''s her wages?" |
8430 | What''s that got to do with civilized England and France?" |
8430 | What''s the good of it all? |
8430 | What''s the meaning of this--"he waved a hand--"this reversion to type?" |
8430 | What? |
8430 | When a woman employs her last weapon, her confession of unreason, and demands forgiveness, what can a man do but proclaim himself the worm that he is? |
8430 | When?" |
8430 | Whence came they, these patient humans, wresting their life from these lonely spots of volcanic wildernesses? |
8430 | Where am I? |
8430 | Where in this universe, then, could I find a fitter mate than Elodie? |
8430 | Where is Monsieur Bakkus?" |
8430 | Where should they go? |
8430 | Where the deuce did he get his long, thin delicate fingers from? |
8430 | Who but she could have summed up in a parable the whole dismal situation? |
8430 | Who do you mean-- they?" |
8430 | Who was I to stand in the way of her eating a third or a fourth or a fifth? |
8430 | Who was she, waste rag of a woman, to attract a man? |
8430 | Who would have thought it?" |
8430 | Why could not she find pleasure in some intelligent occupation? |
8430 | Why did n''t she do this or that? |
8430 | Why did n''t you tell me?" |
8430 | Why do n''t you chuck it and come out with me on a business footing?" |
8430 | Why does your pride forbid you to tell me that you are in great distress?" |
8430 | Why had he not been informed of the departure of Madame? |
8430 | Why had he tarried? |
8430 | Why had n''t he worried the people at home for a foreign billet? |
8430 | Why hide the light of your frame under a bushel of clothing? |
8430 | Why his private conversation with me? |
8430 | Why is it that no woman has loved you?" |
8430 | Why not me?" |
8430 | Why not sacrifice my not over- valued celibacy on the altar of friendship? |
8430 | Why should he not go to the hotel for a workman and a spade? |
8430 | Why should n''t I go off to Paris and bring him back? |
8430 | Why should n''t I go to a circus if I want to?" |
8430 | Why should n''t he go back and break Coinçon''s neck? |
8430 | Why should n''t she work? |
8430 | Why the deuce did n''t you let me know?" |
8430 | Why the devil could n''t you have given me the tip? |
8430 | Why the devil do n''t you take advantage of your physical peculiarities? |
8430 | Why then the failure? |
8430 | Why then, asked the outraged Ernestine, did Madame declare she was miserable? |
8430 | Why throw dust into my sleepy eyes? |
8430 | Why worry him with such vulgarities? |
8430 | Why, had n''t she a troupe of trained birds? |
8430 | Why, in the name of Macchiavelli, did he seize upon my ten o''clock invitation with such enthusiasm? |
8430 | Why? |
8430 | Why?" |
8430 | Why?" |
8430 | Will it bring into his resumed activities a new purpose or more than the old lassitudes? |
8430 | Will not the war change he has suffered cause nostalgias, revolts? |
8430 | Will you do me a favour? |
8430 | Would I be so kind as to regard this as a_ dies non_ in the rota of our pleasant gatherings? |
8430 | Would it upset his budget, involve the sacrifice of a tram ride or a packet of tobacco, if he spent a few sous on more syrup for her delectation? |
8430 | Would my Lady Auriol jib at them? |
8430 | Would n''t you say so, Horace? |
8430 | Would she not be justified in the eyes of every right- thinking man? |
8430 | Would you go about saying''I''m a dam fine fellow''?" |
8430 | Yes? |
8430 | You can ride bare back and jump through hoops?" |
8430 | You can wear it? |
8430 | You did see something to admire in my performance?" |
8430 | You do believe I wish I had never come?" |
8430 | You do n''t think it better we were all dead?" |
8430 | You have never made me infidelities?" |
8430 | You have no other engagement?" |
8430 | You hear?" |
8430 | You know Auguste-- the clown? |
8430 | You must be proud, eh? |
8430 | You remember? |
8430 | You understand? |
8430 | You will listen-- eh? |
8430 | You will put it on sometimes to please me?" |
8430 | You wo n''t interrupt?" |
8430 | You''re going to be a good and very faithful colleague?" |
8430 | You''re not going to play me any dirty tricks? |
8430 | You''re sure of that, Tony, are n''t you?" |
8430 | You''ve danced at the music- hall this afternoon, you''ll be dancing again this evening-- why do you dance here?" |
8430 | _ Enfin_, why should you?" |
8430 | _ Tiens!_ Did n''t you tell me you were apprenticed to a dressmaker?" |
8430 | _ Tiens_, would you like me to tell you something? |
8430 | _ Un sale tour_--eh? |
8430 | _"Mais tu es ma vie toute entière._ Have n''t you understood it?" |
37961 | Her father? |
37961 | A Beethoven sonata played on a broom, for instance, or Mozart on a bottle? |
37961 | A funny profession, is n''t it, Baron? |
37961 | A genuine one? |
37961 | A little? |
37961 | A man died and you.... What''s the matter with you, HE? |
37961 | ACTRESS A ghost? |
37961 | ANGELICA You''ll dance the Tango with her to- night, so how is she a countess? |
37961 | After your sudden and mysterious disappearance-- when you left that strange and insulting letter---- HE[_ Laughs_]: Insulting? |
37961 | Ah, ah, why does she do it? |
37961 | Alfred, dear, why do n''t you come? |
37961 | And Bezano? |
37961 | And I asked you,"What is it, they''re applauding me?" |
37961 | And I? |
37961 | And do you know why? |
37961 | And how about Father and the Baron? |
37961 | And how do you like the name, Consuelo? |
37961 | And if the Baron asks you to be his wife, will you accept? |
37961 | And she knows it? |
37961 | And suppose suddenly you should die? |
37961 | And that I love my Briquet, did you notice that, too? |
37961 | And what happened? |
37961 | And what if I shoot myself? |
37961 | And what is the matter with the crowd? |
37961 | And who is this Prince? |
37961 | And why could n''t you help me, Mother? |
37961 | And you are saying this, you, Queen Zinida, who want to awaken the feeling of love, even in the heart of a lion? |
37961 | And you guessed that Consuelo is not Mancini''s daughter? |
37961 | And you shall see your country, your sky.... CONSUELO[_ Bringing the glass to her lips_]: I shall see all this; is that true? |
37961 | And you too, Prince, you know my queer fellow? |
37961 | And you want to be ahead of me even_ there_? |
37961 | And you? |
37961 | And you? |
37961 | Anything else? |
37961 | Are those her flowers? |
37961 | Are you coming to see me? |
37961 | Are you crazy? |
37961 | Are you going to marry the Baron? |
37961 | Are you laughing or crying? |
37961 | Are you rested? |
37961 | Are you, Father? |
37961 | As a rule you choose your own names, do n''t you? |
37961 | As for myself----[_ Enter CONSUELO and BEZANO in circus costume._] CONSUELO You here, Daddy? |
37961 | At last you have taken me, have n''t you? |
37961 | BARON And Bezano, Consuelo.... Do you like him? |
37961 | BARON And does HE speak to you very often? |
37961 | BARON Did you like the jewels? |
37961 | BARON What is the matter with you, dear little Consuelo? |
37961 | BARON[_ Indignant_]: You were there? |
37961 | BEZANO Did she tell you that herself? |
37961 | BEZANO Then why not look at me straight? |
37961 | BEZANO What more do you want? |
37961 | BEZANO[_ Entering_]: Consuelo, where are you? |
37961 | BEZANO[_ Entering_]: You called me, Zinida? |
37961 | BEZANO[_ Stops, without looking up_]: What do you want? |
37961 | BEZANO[_ With a smile_]: And who will kill the others, to come? |
37961 | BRIQUET And you''re glad already? |
37961 | BRIQUET But what can you do? |
37961 | BRIQUET Literature? |
37961 | BRIQUET Some story, hey? |
37961 | BRIQUET Well, what do you want? |
37961 | BRIQUET What about the police? |
37961 | BRIQUET What are you teaching her? |
37961 | BRIQUET What''s the matter with him? |
37961 | BRIQUET[_ Familiarly_]: Where did you work before? |
37961 | BRIQUET[_ Indignant_]: What the hell shall I do with him if he does n''t know a thing? |
37961 | BRIQUET_ Papa_ Briquet? |
37961 | Bezano-- you love her? |
37961 | Bezano? |
37961 | Both bend over it._] Am I lucky? |
37961 | Both men take a step toward each other._] GENTLEMAN Is this you? |
37961 | But I am happy that this lovesick beast is neither a duke nor a prince-- or she would be a princess and I-- what would become of me? |
37961 | But I thought, Alfred, you were mad at me? |
37961 | But do n''t you think it is too conspicuous? |
37961 | But how can we help it, Count? |
37961 | But tell me how to explain this passion? |
37961 | But tell me, is it my fault that I ca n''t do anything to- day? |
37961 | But that''s improper, is n''t it? |
37961 | But what do they understand about heroism? |
37961 | But what does a queen care about the permission of her enamoured fool? |
37961 | But what idea? |
37961 | But what is the matter with you? |
37961 | But what more could you take from me now? |
37961 | But what will the Baron make of her? |
37961 | But where is HE? |
37961 | But where is the Countess? |
37961 | But why are you so pale? |
37961 | But why do you want to come? |
37961 | But you were running, HE? |
37961 | By the way, do you know what automobile firms are the best? |
37961 | CONSUELO Alfred? |
37961 | CONSUELO Already? |
37961 | CONSUELO Am I so simple, Father? |
37961 | CONSUELO And what will become of Father? |
37961 | CONSUELO And where is yours? |
37961 | CONSUELO Bezano? |
37961 | CONSUELO Do you know how? |
37961 | CONSUELO Do you want me to write him a little note? |
37961 | CONSUELO Gods go crazy, too? |
37961 | CONSUELO HE Who Gets Slapped? |
37961 | CONSUELO In the woods or mountains? |
37961 | CONSUELO It''s a bore, Daddy---- Where''s my handkerchief, Alfred? |
37961 | CONSUELO Like Adam and Eve? |
37961 | CONSUELO Like Eve? |
37961 | CONSUELO Must I drink so much? |
37961 | CONSUELO Through the crowd? |
37961 | CONSUELO What prediction? |
37961 | CONSUELO Where to? |
37961 | CONSUELO Whom, then, would you ask me to marry? |
37961 | CONSUELO Why? |
37961 | CONSUELO Yes, light.... Is that the ring? |
37961 | CONSUELO You are cold? |
37961 | CONSUELO You are not angry because I struck you? |
37961 | CONSUELO[_ Eating_]: And when I leave, will you find another queen? |
37961 | CONSUELO[_ Getting up_]: What? |
37961 | CONSUELO[_ In a dull and distant voice_]: You are joking, HE? |
37961 | CONSUELO[_ Indifferently_]: Yes? |
37961 | CONSUELO[_ Laughs_]: You? |
37961 | CONSUELO[_ Quieting down_]: You''re playing again? |
37961 | CONSUELO[_ Sits_]: Then you were playing? |
37961 | CONSUELO[_ Thinking_]: And what is-- death? |
37961 | Ca n''t I lose it as I might lose my hat? |
37961 | Can one come across them? |
37961 | Clown? |
37961 | Come on, HE, why do n''t you lie down? |
37961 | Consuelo passes on._] ZINIDA Are you going back to work, BEZANO? |
37961 | Consuelo''s voice it heard._] CONSUELO And where is Bezano? |
37961 | Consuelo, do you know who can save you? |
37961 | Consuelo, silly girl, I love you unbearably... unbearably, do you understand? |
37961 | Consuelo? |
37961 | Count Mancini has the honour of asking you to be his wife.... ZINIDA[_ To_ BRIQUET]: Money? |
37961 | Daddy, are there such dogs? |
37961 | Dear HE, what does"love"mean? |
37961 | Dear little girl, did you forget that I am your magician? |
37961 | Did n''t I, Papa Briquet? |
37961 | Did they all die? |
37961 | Did you ever see a drunken ghost? |
37961 | Did you ever see a lover with such a face? |
37961 | Did you ever see her? |
37961 | Did you forget it? |
37961 | Did you imagine that Count Mancini would leave a woman when she needed help? |
37961 | Did you laugh, Polly? |
37961 | Did you like my note, Alfred-- or did you laugh, too? |
37961 | Did you see his car? |
37961 | Did you see how he pressed my arm? |
37961 | Did you see? |
37961 | Did you see? |
37961 | Did you see? |
37961 | Did you? |
37961 | Do I look drunk? |
37961 | Do I want to do it? |
37961 | Do n''t you feel that you are the foam, white sea- foam, and you are flying to the sun? |
37961 | Do n''t you hear how I laugh, Consuelo? |
37961 | Do n''t you remember, Mother, how much it is? |
37961 | Do n''t you see how pale she has become? |
37961 | Do n''t you think so, Zinida? |
37961 | Do n''t you understand that I_ can not_ marry you? |
37961 | Do n''t you understand? |
37961 | Do n''t you want to sit down, Count? |
37961 | Do not the mountains, in the blue cloud of incense, sing their hymn of glory? |
37961 | Do the gods really exist? |
37961 | Do you hear me? |
37961 | Do you hear? |
37961 | Do you hear? |
37961 | Do you know what happened? |
37961 | Do you know what? |
37961 | Do you like it? |
37961 | Do you really think we still have something to talk over? |
37961 | Do you really want a slap? |
37961 | Do you recognize his music? |
37961 | Do you remember? |
37961 | Do you see, Grab? |
37961 | Do you think I do n''t understand? |
37961 | Do you think he did n''t weigh the diamonds when he got them back? |
37961 | Do you think she would get a benefit performance otherwise? |
37961 | Do you think that it was ever stained with blood? |
37961 | Do you understand that, you fool? |
37961 | Do you understand, HE? |
37961 | Do you understand? |
37961 | Do you, Tilly? |
37961 | Do you...? |
37961 | Does he want to see me or the Count? |
37961 | Does it hurt very much? |
37961 | Does it mean that I will live long? |
37961 | Does it taste good? |
37961 | Does n''t he look like me? |
37961 | Father, ought n''t I to let him kiss my hand yet? |
37961 | Father, what are you talking about? |
37961 | Father, what is it? |
37961 | Father, why is it that everybody seems so nice to me? |
37961 | Flattery? |
37961 | For Consuelo? |
37961 | From time to time a tremor shakes his body._] JACKSON[_ Clasping his hands_]: Then it is all true? |
37961 | GENTLEMAN But if something should happen to you... you are a healthy man, but in this environment, these people... how will I know? |
37961 | GENTLEMAN Certainly, I do not dare to ask you--[_makes a grimace_] to ask you to die, but tell me: you''ll never come back there? |
37961 | GENTLEMAN I am not late? |
37961 | GENTLEMAN I can be at peace? |
37961 | GENTLEMAN I do n''t understand? |
37961 | GENTLEMAN It''s not, is it? |
37961 | GENTLEMAN You are determined to continue talking to me like this? |
37961 | GENTLEMAN You want to insult me again? |
37961 | GENTLEMAN[ Looks at them smiling]: You see I made even you laugh-- is that easy? |
37961 | GENTLEMAN[_ Humbly_]: You have not forgiven me, HE? |
37961 | GENTLEMAN[_ In a low voice_]: You will not give me your hand when we say good- bye? |
37961 | GENTLEMAN[_ Rather helpless, but still smiling and looking around_]: We can invent something---- BRIQUET[_ Ironically_]: From literature? |
37961 | GENTLEMAN[_ Surprised_]: Count? |
37961 | GENTLEMAN[_ Who does not hear the music_]: I pray you to tell me: will you ever come back? |
37961 | HE Am I laughing? |
37961 | HE And the Baron? |
37961 | HE And what about the girl? |
37961 | HE Are those your own words--"his honest, faithful wife"? |
37961 | HE Automobiles and diamonds? |
37961 | HE Bezano? |
37961 | HE But it is an honest marriage, Duchess, is it not? |
37961 | HE But why? |
37961 | HE But you know the Baron? |
37961 | HE Did n''t you understand that you are a queen, and I a fool who is in love with his queen? |
37961 | HE Do n''t you know that widows or divorced women often have children by the new husband, which resemble the old one? |
37961 | HE Do you want it? |
37961 | HE Have you any pride? |
37961 | HE How are you, Bezano? |
37961 | HE I did.... Give Consuelo to the Jockey-- MANCINI To Bezano? |
37961 | HE Is n''t there a way of settling it somehow? |
37961 | HE Is that so? |
37961 | HE It is nice, to have everything done according to law, is n''t it, Zinida? |
37961 | HE May I take my coat? |
37961 | HE My own self, dear little Consuelo---- CONSUELO How do you do it, all of you? |
37961 | HE The Baron, too? |
37961 | HE Until you get it? |
37961 | HE What did she do? |
37961 | HE What for? |
37961 | HE Where did you learn that pose? |
37961 | HE Why? |
37961 | HE Why? |
37961 | HE Will I not be superfluous? |
37961 | HE You are talking to me about_ your_ book? |
37961 | HE You have forgotten my name again? |
37961 | HE You order me? |
37961 | HE You think that that''s being strong? |
37961 | HE You were crying, my little Consuelo? |
37961 | HE You''ve left her already? |
37961 | HE grimaces and thumbs his nose._] GENTLEMAN What is that? |
37961 | HE, are you sorry for ZINIDA? |
37961 | HE, did you hear the march that Tilly and Polly will play? |
37961 | HE, did you paint the laughter on your face yourself? |
37961 | HE, did you see how the Count walks? |
37961 | HE--[_Wipes his eyes with a dirty handkerchief._] Why do n''t I like things which are not forbidden? |
37961 | HE[_ Bowing low, with a large gesture_]: How do you do, Baron? |
37961 | HE[_ Bows before the_ BARON,_ affecting intimacy_]:_ You_ do not recognize me, Baron? |
37961 | HE[_ Confused_]: A passport? |
37961 | HE[_ Gets up_]: Who is it? |
37961 | HE[_ Goes to him, touches his shoulder gently_]: What is the matter, Papa Briquet? |
37961 | HE[_ In a depressed voice_]: What can I do for you? |
37961 | HE[_ Introducing, nonchalantly_]: My friend.... For the benefit performance? |
37961 | HE[_ Laughing_]: I? |
37961 | HE[_ Lifting his head with difficulty; he sees only dimly with his dulled eyes_]: What more? |
37961 | HE[_ Looking himself over_]: Why? |
37961 | HE[_ Rubs his head, thinking_]: What shall I do? |
37961 | HE[_ Stands up, lifted to his feet by the last gleam of consciousness and life, speaks strongly and indignantly_]: You loved her so much, Baron? |
37961 | HE[_ Taps on the floor with his foot_]: And can you wait very long? |
37961 | HE[_ Thinking it over_]: Baron? |
37961 | HE_ takes_ MANCINI_ roughly by the elbow, and draws him aside._] HE[_ In a low voice_]: How are your girls, Mancini? |
37961 | Have you a passport? |
37961 | Have you seen my Sun here? |
37961 | He has a new suit, but the same cane, and the same noiseless smile of a satyr._] ZINIDA[_ Whispering_]: Will you stay? |
37961 | He is silent._] HE In what way would you like me to entertain you, Baron? |
37961 | He only called me and disappeared, and how can you find him? |
37961 | He shot himself?... |
37961 | He''s decided? |
37961 | He''s going to marry? |
37961 | He''s not lying? |
37961 | Heavens, who do you think I am? |
37961 | How are things getting on with your girl? |
37961 | How are you? |
37961 | How are your lions, Zinida? |
37961 | How can I? |
37961 | How can we understand all that goes on there? |
37961 | How can you stand it? |
37961 | How can you understand Family Traditions? |
37961 | How does she work, Thomas? |
37961 | How much does he want, Papa? |
37961 | I assumed, that since we are_ tête- á- tête_.... MANCINI But tell me, what kind of_ tête- á- tête_ is possible, between a clown and me? |
37961 | I beg of you, as the Manager, what is this-- a stable? |
37961 | I ca n''t... Ah---- HE Something has happened? |
37961 | I do n''t get you? |
37961 | I do n''t know---- Got a card? |
37961 | I do n''t like him, he''s too shrewd a beast.... Is he in love with you, too? |
37961 | I have no other name, do you hear? |
37961 | I have often heard him speak of a Marquis Justi but I have never seen him---- BARON And do you know that your father is just a charlatan? |
37961 | I hope I am not disturbing you? |
37961 | I should say, since all the orchestra seats.... And what will it be when they see the Tango? |
37961 | I suppose that good- looking bareback rider is in love with Consuelo, is n''t he? |
37961 | I trust you will be there, too? |
37961 | I, Count Mancini, and she a-- a simple-- HE[_ Jumping up_]: What did you say? |
37961 | I. CONSUELO[_ Laughing_]: You, HE? |
37961 | If he loves you, why is he so sad? |
37961 | In the ring, music, shrieks, and laughter begin again._] HE Consuelo---- CONSUELO Is that you, HE, dear? |
37961 | Is he glad? |
37961 | Is he there? |
37961 | Is it my fault if I must pay such crazy prices for what my ancestors got free of charge? |
37961 | Is it possible to catch you? |
37961 | Is it true? |
37961 | Is n''t it time yet? |
37961 | Is n''t that enough for you, you miser? |
37961 | Is she, too, in the circus? |
37961 | Is that admissible? |
37961 | Is that all right? |
37961 | Is that death? |
37961 | Is that written here, too? |
37961 | Is there nothing about him here? |
37961 | Is this the way to play? |
37961 | It is n''t true, is it, HE? |
37961 | It''s a great trick-- wasn''t the idea Bezano''s? |
37961 | It''s a play, do n''t you understand? |
37961 | JACKSON How old are you? |
37961 | JACKSON[_ Coming forward_]: The rulers of the world? |
37961 | Jackson gives him a real slap._] HE[_ Holding his face_]: Why? |
37961 | Jackson turns him round, looking him over critically._] JACKSON Clown? |
37961 | Juggler? |
37961 | Like the strings of a divine harp, spread the golden rays---- Do you not see the hand of God, which gives harmony, light, and love to the world? |
37961 | Listen, all you honest vagabonds, tell me-- who is it draws the crowd that fills the circus every night? |
37961 | Listen-- what''s that? |
37961 | Look in my eyes, do such eyes lie? |
37961 | MANCINI A ring? |
37961 | MANCINI But is that not sad? |
37961 | MANCINI But you had your breakfast? |
37961 | MANCINI By the way, my dear, how do you like my suit? |
37961 | MANCINI Did I say it was anything else? |
37961 | MANCINI Do you know what blood flows in the veins of an Italian woman? |
37961 | MANCINI Have you a billion? |
37961 | MANCINI How are you, my dear? |
37961 | MANCINI In jail? |
37961 | MANCINI Is that all? |
37961 | MANCINI Is there a way of getting money, somehow? |
37961 | MANCINI The Baron? |
37961 | MANCINI The Baron? |
37961 | MANCINI Wait a minute, what''s the hurry-- what is this, a new costume? |
37961 | MANCINI What do you mean by"decided?" |
37961 | MANCINI What girls? |
37961 | MANCINI What''s the matter, did you ask? |
37961 | MANCINI What? |
37961 | MANCINI Yes, my child, you are not tired? |
37961 | MANCINI Yes? |
37961 | MANCINI[_ Angrily_]: A little note? |
37961 | MANCINI[_ Draws himself together, puffs up_]: A society man? |
37961 | MANCINI[_ Raising his eyebrows haughtily, quite indignant_]: From the Baron? |
37961 | Make of_ her_? |
37961 | Manager, would n''t you like to change me a thousand franc note? |
37961 | May I presume to ask you, Baron, did you get your jewels back? |
37961 | May I shake hands with them? |
37961 | Mine? |
37961 | Must n''t I uphold the glory of my name now, eh? |
37961 | My Bezano? |
37961 | My Consuelo? |
37961 | My fool''s cap with its bells? |
37961 | Not even a little? |
37961 | Now if I give up the girls, what will be left of Mancini? |
37961 | Now tell me, why do you want those beasts to love you? |
37961 | Of course I mean, comparatively, at peace? |
37961 | Of course[_ tries to laugh_] how silly you are-- haven''t you noticed the family resemblance? |
37961 | On your word of honour? |
37961 | Or can you hear the sun, singing? |
37961 | Or did n''t you get it? |
37961 | Or do n''t you like it? |
37961 | Or do you like the circus so much, and since when? |
37961 | Or do you want me to lick your hands too, like a dog? |
37961 | Or does the street, from which I have come, bother you? |
37961 | Or is it that you can not forgive me my success? |
37961 | Or let someone else take it by mistake? |
37961 | Or perhaps he has wings, like a god? |
37961 | Or were you afraid that you had n''t robbed me of_ everything_ I possessed, and you came for the rest? |
37961 | Outside, great stillness._] HE[_ Listening_]: Why is it so quiet out there? |
37961 | POLLY Do you like music? |
37961 | POLLY Do you want some moosic? |
37961 | People say that you are clever, too clever perhaps; tell me then, for how much could one buy me? |
37961 | Perhaps a joke about the creation of the world and its rulers? |
37961 | Philosophizing again, Briquet? |
37961 | Shall I, HE? |
37961 | She has an honest job, wonderful comrades, and the atmosphere--? |
37961 | She is in her lion tamer''s costume._] HE, what were you doing near my lions? |
37961 | She knows everything they teach out there-- geography, mythology---- Does it make her any happier? |
37961 | She leaves us soon, you know? |
37961 | Silence._] BRIQUET[_ Touching_ ZINIDA''S_ arm_]: Tired? |
37961 | Silence._] HE Can you be silent very long? |
37961 | Simpler? |
37961 | Since when do you speak to me like this, Papa Briquet? |
37961 | So much? |
37961 | Some one calls,"Cognac"--an actor runs to get it._] BRIQUET[_ Helpless_]: What is the matter, Zinida darling? |
37961 | THE SECOND How much are roses now? |
37961 | TILLY May I clink glasses with you, Consuelo? |
37961 | Tell me frankly if you can; do you hate me very much? |
37961 | The Baron? |
37961 | The Baron? |
37961 | The actors disappear one by one._] CONSUELO[_ Laughing_]: Do I really write so badly? |
37961 | The gentleman raises his head, and bending forward, looks straight into HE''s eyes._] GENTLEMAN And my pride? |
37961 | The only one who can save you? |
37961 | The same as everyone loves? |
37961 | The waiters smile._] BRIQUET[_ To the waiters_]: What are you laughing about? |
37961 | The wrap-- where''s the wrap? |
37961 | Then if anyone kills himself, or----[_ Again comes the sound of the Tango, and calls from the ring._] ZINIDA What is your name? |
37961 | Then, at the tenth slap, I said:"It seems to me that they sent for me from the Academy?" |
37961 | There is something, yes-- but for full developments----[_ Sadly_]: Probably you ca n''t even turn a somersault? |
37961 | They do n''t know your name here? |
37961 | This misfortune did not befall you? |
37961 | Those hairy monsters, with diabolic eyes? |
37961 | Tigers, lions? |
37961 | To Alfred? |
37961 | To me? |
37961 | To_ BRIQUET] Are you finished? |
37961 | Too late? |
37961 | Unless you should break your neck---- HE[_ Hesitates_]: Honestly? |
37961 | Was it with slaps they threw you down from heaven, god? |
37961 | We will play you a song; do you want it? |
37961 | We''ve got to work, have n''t we? |
37961 | Well? |
37961 | Were you looking for me, or is it an accident? |
37961 | What a nice face he has, has n''t he? |
37961 | What am I talking about? |
37961 | What are you complaining of? |
37961 | What are you doing here? |
37961 | What are you doing? |
37961 | What are you laughing at, youth? |
37961 | What are you laughing at? |
37961 | What are you preparing? |
37961 | What are you standing here for? |
37961 | What are you standing here for? |
37961 | What are you thinking about now Consuelo? |
37961 | What business is it of yours? |
37961 | What can be simpler? |
37961 | What can you do against Fate? |
37961 | What can you do? |
37961 | What comes after? |
37961 | What did you give her? |
37961 | What did you say to him? |
37961 | What do they want here, these Barons? |
37961 | What do you do it for? |
37961 | What do you need papers for? |
37961 | What do you think? |
37961 | What do you want to do with me? |
37961 | What do you want, Father? |
37961 | What do you want? |
37961 | What do you want? |
37961 | What does she do it for? |
37961 | What for? |
37961 | What happened? |
37961 | What has it taught you? |
37961 | What if they did dare attack me-- ever seen this, Briquet? |
37961 | What is geography? |
37961 | What is it? |
37961 | What is it? |
37961 | What is sickness? |
37961 | What is the Baron worth, with his poor millions? |
37961 | What is the matter, my little Consuelo? |
37961 | What is the use of this self- torture, my friend? |
37961 | What is this, stupidity or blackmail? |
37961 | What language are you speaking? |
37961 | What more can you ask, Briquet? |
37961 | What more does she need here? |
37961 | What need has a woman of intelligence? |
37961 | What right has he to yell at me? |
37961 | What should the stars care about me? |
37961 | What''s a slap? |
37961 | What''s the matter? |
37961 | What''s the matter? |
37961 | What? |
37961 | What? |
37961 | What_ is_ Consuelo? |
37961 | Where are you going, Briquet? |
37961 | Where did you put them? |
37961 | Where''s the book? |
37961 | Who am I to love? |
37961 | Who am I? |
37961 | Who cares about my heavy abstractions, from which it was difficult for them to derive a single thought? |
37961 | Who dares to intrude in the castle of my queen? |
37961 | Who is going to dance with me? |
37961 | Who is old, my young man? |
37961 | Who is that new clown they call HE? |
37961 | Who is there who could stand such a deluge of slaps, such a hail- storm of slaps, and not get soaked? |
37961 | Who knows_ me_? |
37961 | Who strikes man with love, God or the Devil? |
37961 | Who wears lace and satin now? |
37961 | Who would have believed it? |
37961 | Who, then? |
37961 | Whom can those beasts love? |
37961 | Whose could they be? |
37961 | Why are there no women clowns? |
37961 | Why are you silent, Zinida? |
37961 | Why are you so silent, HE? |
37961 | Why are you without make- up? |
37961 | Why ca n''t you imagine that I have no name? |
37961 | Why did you joke that way, and frighten me? |
37961 | Why did you play so that I believed you? |
37961 | Why did you remind me of my childhood? |
37961 | Why do I love you so much, Consuelo? |
37961 | Why do n''t you want to believe me? |
37961 | Why do they all love me? |
37961 | Why do you look at me like that? |
37961 | Why do you tease them? |
37961 | Why does he run such a risk? |
37961 | Why does she need to learn? |
37961 | Why is that so? |
37961 | Why is there no music? |
37961 | Why should she know it? |
37961 | Why then are you unhappy, you poor devil? |
37961 | Why were you trying to find me? |
37961 | Why, I have to uphold our_ name_, the splendour of my family,[_ laughs_] have n''t I? |
37961 | Wider-- broader-- do you call that a smile? |
37961 | Will you pay this money, too? |
37961 | Will you permit me to make a toast? |
37961 | Will you step aside, sir? |
37961 | Will you work some more, Consuelo? |
37961 | Wo n''t you sit down, please? |
37961 | Would n''t that be a good trick to stage, Papa Briquet? |
37961 | Would you like a cigar, Count? |
37961 | Would you like to see me imitate them? |
37961 | Yes, my face is ugly, I make faces and grimaces, I am surrounded by laughter, but do n''t you see the god behind all this, a god, like you? |
37961 | Yes? |
37961 | Yes? |
37961 | You are ill? |
37961 | You are not going yet? |
37961 | You are not her father, Mancini? |
37961 | You are not satisfied with having taken only my wife? |
37961 | You are still able to feel insults? |
37961 | You came for me? |
37961 | You came from the street, and why should I trust you? |
37961 | You cried? |
37961 | You do n''t like them? |
37961 | You do n''t want it? |
37961 | You do something for me? |
37961 | You have great talent, HE-- or are you drunk? |
37961 | You invented it yourself? |
37961 | You know what I think, my friend? |
37961 | You know when one has to teach, and---- CONSUELO My goodness, do you think I do n''t understand? |
37961 | You remember? |
37961 | You think because of your words? |
37961 | You told me, did n''t you, that I... should... live... eternally? |
37961 | You too, love me? |
37961 | You understand? |
37961 | You wanted to see him? |
37961 | You will allow me? |
37961 | You would n''t dance very far with your idea alone, eh, Papa Briquet? |
37961 | You''re making fun of me? |
37961 | You, perhaps, you fool? |
37961 | You? |
37961 | Your Excellency? |
37961 | Your lion would be an ass, if he did not kiss your hand, as I do....[_ Kisses her hand._] ZINIDA May I congratulate you, Count? |
37961 | ZINIDA A baron''s crown? |
37961 | ZINIDA Am I not right? |
37961 | ZINIDA Do I command, Bezano? |
37961 | ZINIDA Do you love me? |
37961 | ZINIDA HE, what shall I do, to make my lions love me? |
37961 | ZINIDA I? |
37961 | ZINIDA Now tell me HE, could you love me? |
37961 | ZINIDA Still no? |
37961 | ZINIDA What are you doing here, gentlemen? |
37961 | ZINIDA What does it matter, your"want"or"do n''t want"? |
37961 | ZINIDA What is it, Consuelo? |
37961 | ZINIDA When did you see a beauty clad in simple cotton? |
37961 | ZINIDA Why do n''t you take it from your baron? |
37961 | ZINIDA[_ Listening too_]: For me? |
37961 | ZINIDA[_ Takes a step forward_]: No---- Tell me, Alfred, do you love her? |
37961 | [ Enter HE, TILLY, POLLY,_ and other actors, all in their costumes._] TILLY Do you really want champagne? |
37961 | [_ A clown hands it to him; they cover her._] TILLY[_ Timidly_]: Would n''t you like some moosic? |
37961 | [_ Aloud_] Consuelo, dear child, how do you feel? |
37961 | [_ Bends over the clown._] HE, shall I tell you a strange thing-- an unusual trick of nature? |
37961 | [_ Bows._] I am respected and I am famous, yes? |
37961 | [_ Closing her eyes._] And the roses, are they ready? |
37961 | [_ Consuelo laughs._] CONSUELO Will he eat me? |
37961 | [_ Eats._] And do you remember my prediction? |
37961 | [_ Eats._] HE, do you love me? |
37961 | [_ Enter an usher._] What do you want? |
37961 | [_ HE approaches Consuelo, who is alone._] CONSUELO HE, deary, how are you? |
37961 | [_ HE goes out._] ZINIDA And how is Bezano? |
37961 | [_ HE laughs._] A slap? |
37961 | [_ HE lifts his heavy head with difficulty._] HE They will cut off my head? |
37961 | [_ He goes._ MANCINI_ is reading the_ BARON''S_ note for the second time._] HE What''s the matter, Mancini? |
37961 | [_ In a low voice_] Did you notice Bezano? |
37961 | [_ Involuntarily_] You are not drunk, sir? |
37961 | [_ Laughs._] And if I do n''t want to? |
37961 | [_ Laughs._] And my Bezano is a god? |
37961 | [_ Laughs._] And now will you allow me to marry the Baron? |
37961 | [_ Laughs._] HE Then how were you born? |
37961 | [_ Laughs._] Then the Baron burst? |
37961 | [_ Looks around the room._] HE, do you see what a poster they made for my benefit performance? |
37961 | [_ Looks around._] These are your artists? |
37961 | [_ Looks at her in ecstasy and tears-- and gets a slap; starting back._] What''s this? |
37961 | [_ Nonchalantly_] Do n''t_ you_ think she''s stupid? |
37961 | [_ She stands up, shaking, still chilled._] BRIQUET But how? |
37961 | [_ She thinks a while and sighs._] BARON Do you think sometimes? |
37961 | [_ Shrugging her shoulders, and surprised_] How does she love him? |
37961 | [_ Silence._] BRIQUET I beg your pardon, sir, but I must ask you again, I must humbly ask you-- are you not drunk, sir? |
37961 | [_ Silence._] GENTLEMAN Must I believe my eyes? |
37961 | [_ Silence._] GENTLEMAN Will you allow me to sit down? |
37961 | [_ Silence._] HE Are you here with my wife? |
37961 | [_ Silence._] HE How do you want me to take that, Zinida? |
37961 | [_ Silence; pause._] What comes after? |
37961 | [_ Sits down, with his silk hat on his head._] MANCINI But why? |
37961 | [_ Slow strains of the Tango from a small orchestra in the ring._] HE[_ Listening absent- mindedly to the music_]: What question? |
37961 | [_ Smiles._] And you have already noticed that Bezano is in love with the horse- girl? |
37961 | [_ Smiling_] Do you hear the noise in there? |
37961 | [_ Somebody runs for a doctor._] JACKSON[_ In a voice full of fear_]: HE, what is the matter with you? |
37961 | [_ Stands up and shakes hands with clowns, who make silly faces._] BRIQUET Excuse me-- but what can I do for you? |
37961 | [_ Takes his hands from his eyes, opens them wide._] Why does she do it? |
37961 | [_ They all look surprised._] I presume these two gentlemen are clowns? |
37961 | [_ They go off, playing._] GENTLEMAN[_ Smiling_]: These are your new comrades? |
37961 | [_ They take another step._] GENTLEMAN[_ Looking HE in the eyes; in a very low voice_]: Tell me, you are not mad? |
37961 | [_ They walk to the door, the gentleman stops._] GENTLEMAN May I come to the circus? |
37961 | [_ To_ HE]: How are you, my dear? |
37961 | [_ Walking and smiling._] Tell me, would you be relieved if I really had died? |
37961 | [_ With a rancorous laugh_] Are you crazy, my darling? |
37961 | [_ With a slight, deprecating smile._] Could I expect it? |
37961 | _[ Enter_ ANGELICA_ and_ THOMAS,_ an athlete._] ANGELICA Is this where we''re going to have champagne? |
37961 | a couple of musical donkeys? |
37961 | alone, dear? |
37961 | who do you think I am that I should be beholden to a stranger? |
12587 | A blue spot? 12587 A proposal?" |
12587 | A republican? 12587 Among the offices to which thou art unsuited, which dost thou desire?" |
12587 | An ambitious man disappointed? |
12587 | An appointment? 12587 An offer for the caravan, an offer for the two horses, an offer for the two gipsy women, an offer--""From whom?" |
12587 | And Aristides? |
12587 | And Cato? |
12587 | And Thomas More? |
12587 | And do you know,said the tavern- keeper,"the most wonderful thing of all?" |
12587 | And for that way of doing nothing, how is one paid? |
12587 | And if he gets well? |
12587 | And if you resist? |
12587 | And must you follow? |
12587 | And that he had a lawful heir by that marriage? |
12587 | And that is what thou callest uncorking the bottles of the ocean? |
12587 | And then? |
12587 | And then? |
12587 | And then? |
12587 | And then? |
12587 | And then? |
12587 | And thou wouldst trouble me for that much? |
12587 | And what is the_ proepositus hundredi_? |
12587 | And which carried six hundred soldiers, fifty sailors, and twenty- five guns? |
12587 | And wouldst thou like to be the jetsam officer? |
12587 | And you, Tom- Jim- Jack, what are you doing here? |
12587 | And you, too, Tom- Jim- Jack? |
12587 | And you? |
12587 | And--? |
12587 | Are many such bottles brought to the Admiralty? |
12587 | Are you sure that the sand has not worn the hole between the globes? |
12587 | As a devil? |
12587 | As beautiful as the queen? |
12587 | But he tells you where he is going to take you? |
12587 | But is it not always a question of many? |
12587 | But that is the difference merely of the vessel''s way and the rate at which the sea is running? |
12587 | But where? |
12587 | But where? |
12587 | But, Master Doctor, steer west? |
12587 | By what right? |
12587 | Can he see? |
12587 | Como dices que le llamas? |
12587 | Como le llamas? |
12587 | Did the sand run through the glass in exactly thirty seconds? |
12587 | Did you cross the bridge? |
12587 | Did you know Lord Linnæus Clancharlie? |
12587 | Did you take the trouble to look at the triangle? |
12587 | Do n''t you know the Laughing Man? |
12587 | Do you know something? |
12587 | Do you know that I have a great many things to say to you? |
12587 | Do you know what a snow- cloud is? |
12587 | Do you know, Lord Eure, that he married when in Switzerland? |
12587 | Do you own that the mandragora cries? |
12587 | Do you see that passer- by? |
12587 | Do you wish me to steer west? |
12587 | Done? |
12587 | El gefe? |
12587 | En vuestre tropa que esta? |
12587 | Etcheco jaüna, que es este hombre? |
12587 | Found? |
12587 | From whom? |
12587 | Gentlemen,said he,"whither are you taking me?" |
12587 | Gwynplaine, what does this gentleman''s dress mean? |
12587 | Gwynplaine,she resumed,"you will think of me, wo n''t you? |
12587 | Gwynplaine? |
12587 | Have you Hardquanonne''s flask? |
12587 | Have you a chart? |
12587 | Have you proved the sand- glass by the oscillations of a bullet? |
12587 | Have you taken into account the resistance of the rope supporting the shot to the waves? |
12587 | Have you tested the log? |
12587 | Have you tried how many knots she is running? |
12587 | Have you waxed the yarn lest it should stretch? |
12587 | He died in Switzerland? |
12587 | He was a republican under Cromwell, and remained a republican under Charles II.? |
12587 | Heavy enough? |
12587 | Here, and with swords? |
12587 | Hold,thought he;"can it be midnight already?" |
12587 | How can that be? |
12587 | How did you compute the resistance of the water to the shot? |
12587 | How do you compute the difference between the true and apparent course? |
12587 | How do you mean? 12587 How is that?" |
12587 | How is that? |
12587 | How is that? |
12587 | How is that? |
12587 | How long have you had that laugh? |
12587 | How should I know? |
12587 | How? |
12587 | I had not observed that gourd before; did it belong to Hardquanonne? |
12587 | I must enter the house,he said to himself;"but how?" |
12587 | I should like to know who is responsible for that woman''s death? 12587 If you did not exist, Gwynplaine?" |
12587 | In the dungeon at Chatham? |
12587 | In what does the appointment consist? |
12587 | Is Gwynplaine coming back? 12587 Is any one there?" |
12587 | Is it about politics? |
12587 | Is it possible? |
12587 | Is it possible? |
12587 | Is it regular? |
12587 | Is it you, then, for certain? |
12587 | Is she young? |
12587 | Is that you, wolf? |
12587 | Is there anything else we can throw overboard? |
12587 | It is clear that he is not dead; but can he have gone mad? |
12587 | It is not your sister? |
12587 | It is you, is it? 12587 Living?" |
12587 | Lords exist, you trespasser, do you see? 12587 Man,"he cried,"do you hear me?" |
12587 | Master Nicless? |
12587 | Master Ursus? |
12587 | Must we leave England, he and I? |
12587 | My Lord Cholmondeley, what will be the rank of this young Lord Clancharlie in the House? |
12587 | My child,said Ursus in a voice of anguish,"what do you mean by that?" |
12587 | Of what size was the shot? |
12587 | Of what? |
12587 | Oh, you believe in Cato, do you? |
12587 | Oh; were I powerful, would I not aid the wretched? 12587 On living things?" |
12587 | Over the way? |
12587 | Pretty? |
12587 | Pues que esta? |
12587 | Quai païs? |
12587 | Qual dios? |
12587 | Que cosas sabe? |
12587 | Que lenguas habla? |
12587 | She has palaces? |
12587 | Skipper, do you know what is for us the word of death? |
12587 | Skipper, have you an English sextant? |
12587 | Skipper,began the doctor, without taking his eyes off the cloud,"have you often crossed the Channel?" |
12587 | Some one else to speak to you? |
12587 | Some one knocked at the door? |
12587 | Suspended by a rope yarn drawn out from the top of a coil of soaked hemp? 12587 The man in black?" |
12587 | The sun!--what was it? |
12587 | The wapentake touches you with the iron weapon? |
12587 | Then he must have gone out very early? |
12587 | Then that son will inherit the Clancharlie peerage? |
12587 | Then thou wishest? 12587 Then you sail by rule of thumb?" |
12587 | They say she is rich? |
12587 | To- day? |
12587 | Tom- Jim- Jack, what does that officer''s uniform mean? |
12587 | Ursus,said Dea,"where is Gwynplaine?" |
12587 | Well, what then? |
12587 | Well, who goes there? |
12587 | Well, will you eat? |
12587 | Well? |
12587 | Well? |
12587 | Well? |
12587 | Well? |
12587 | What am I doing here? 12587 What are you doing here, Gwynplaine?" |
12587 | What are you doing there? |
12587 | What are you murmuring there? |
12587 | What can this mean? |
12587 | What department? |
12587 | What did he say? |
12587 | What did you answer? |
12587 | What do you mean? |
12587 | What do you mean? |
12587 | What do you mean? |
12587 | What do you think of it all? |
12587 | What does all this mean? |
12587 | What does he do with that? |
12587 | What does she send me? 12587 What does that mean?" |
12587 | What dost thou want? |
12587 | What dost thou wish to be? 12587 What has he got in his hand?" |
12587 | What has it got to do with me? 12587 What is a wapentake?" |
12587 | What is his name? |
12587 | What is it? |
12587 | What is it? |
12587 | What is that to me? |
12587 | What is the bailiff of the hundred? |
12587 | What is the iron weapon? |
12587 | What is the matter? |
12587 | What is the matter? |
12587 | What is to be done? |
12587 | What is wrong with me? |
12587 | What meanest thou? 12587 What o''clock is it?" |
12587 | What then? |
12587 | What then? |
12587 | What was that? |
12587 | What was the result? |
12587 | What''s wrong with you now? |
12587 | What? |
12587 | What? |
12587 | What? |
12587 | What? |
12587 | What? |
12587 | What? |
12587 | What? |
12587 | What? |
12587 | When? |
12587 | When? |
12587 | Where am I? 12587 Where am I?" |
12587 | Where am I?--on the summit? 12587 Where are you? |
12587 | Where do you live? 12587 Where is he?" |
12587 | Where is the boat? 12587 Where is the land?" |
12587 | Where? 12587 Where?" |
12587 | Where? |
12587 | Where? |
12587 | Wherefore? |
12587 | Which was in the Armada? |
12587 | Whither are you steering? |
12587 | Whither? |
12587 | Who am I? 12587 Who are those fellows kneeling down?--What are you doing? |
12587 | Who has a kind of mace in his hand? |
12587 | Who has brought this man into the House? 12587 Who has sent me a fellow like this, who is hungry and cold, and who does not come in?" |
12587 | Who have you got there, my dear? 12587 Who is he?" |
12587 | Who is in prison? |
12587 | Who is it then? |
12587 | Who is it? 12587 Who is that?" |
12587 | Who is the Laughing Man? |
12587 | Who is this man? |
12587 | Who talked to me of the queen? 12587 Who was it that knocked?" |
12587 | Who will give me shelter? |
12587 | Who? 12587 Who?" |
12587 | Who? |
12587 | Whom will she marry? |
12587 | Why do you laugh? |
12587 | Why do you unhook that? |
12587 | Why dost thou wish for the last- named place in preference to both the others? |
12587 | Why not a king? 12587 Why not?" |
12587 | Why not? |
12587 | Why not? |
12587 | Why not? |
12587 | Why? |
12587 | Why? |
12587 | Will you be kind enough to eat it all up, you cub? 12587 Will you drink?" |
12587 | With what? |
12587 | You ask if I knew him? 12587 You hear?" |
12587 | You practise medicine? |
12587 | You speak in public? |
12587 | You? 12587 ( What does Neptune write me?) 12587 --That fellow a peer of England?" |
12587 | --"What does it all mean?" |
12587 | A boat would contain that; but--""But what?" |
12587 | A caprice? |
12587 | A chain? |
12587 | A disinherited heir? |
12587 | A gipsy? |
12587 | A king obeys-- what? |
12587 | A royalist, certainly; a republican-- who knows? |
12587 | A vision? |
12587 | Again the voice spoke,--"What is the use of searching the earth, when we can only find in heaven?" |
12587 | Against the torturer? |
12587 | Against whom were the lords angered? |
12587 | Am I a fairy? |
12587 | Am I a goddess? |
12587 | Am I a princess? |
12587 | Am I not with you? |
12587 | An ugly one? |
12587 | And Fibi and Vinos, where are they? |
12587 | And addressing Gwynplaine haughtily,--"Who are you? |
12587 | And did you remark the plumed cap of the page? |
12587 | And do you think that the mole himself crushes nothing? |
12587 | And from what had this arisen? |
12587 | And he put the question with a loud voice--"Where are you?" |
12587 | And himself? |
12587 | And how was he to help plunging into it headlong? |
12587 | And if I am asked,''Why do you laugh?'' |
12587 | And raising her sightless eyes on high, she added,--"When shall I follow?" |
12587 | And then?" |
12587 | And this child, of whom we have caught a glimpse in the shadow of the solitudes of Portland, by whom had he been cast away? |
12587 | And those men who had dragged Gwynplaine on the hurdle of sarcasm, were they wicked? |
12587 | And was he even one of the people? |
12587 | And what did they make of these children? |
12587 | And what do you say about Anne of Austria? |
12587 | And what had they laughed at? |
12587 | And what social system is this which has for its base disproportion and injustice? |
12587 | And what was there for him in the future? |
12587 | And where? |
12587 | And who shall hinder that sling from hurling the sun into the sky? |
12587 | And who was this woman? |
12587 | And you? |
12587 | And, after all, what was this Lord Clancharlie? |
12587 | And, now, what would become of him without them? |
12587 | Any one there?" |
12587 | Are there laws no longer? |
12587 | Are we an accomplice of the cup which deprives us of reason? |
12587 | Are we to change the laws? |
12587 | Are we, on our inflexible axis, a moving sphere, a star when seen from afar, mud when seen more closely, in which night alternates with day? |
12587 | Are you a lord, you idiot? |
12587 | Are you come already? |
12587 | Are you deaf? |
12587 | Are you men of the woods? |
12587 | Are you of any religion? |
12587 | Are you selfish? |
12587 | At the acme of his agony, his eyes still closed, he heard an exquisite voice saying,"Are you asleep, Gwynplaine?" |
12587 | At what distance from the buoy? |
12587 | At what then? |
12587 | Awakened from what?--from sleep? |
12587 | Because you were cold one night, what was that to him? |
12587 | Besides, condemned and damned as Gwynplaine was, what was the good of further struggle? |
12587 | Besides, to sum up, are these perversities, these rugged notches, virtues? |
12587 | Besides, was he likely ever to see the lady again? |
12587 | Besides, was it not all due to him, who had waited so long on duty at the gate of chance? |
12587 | Besides, were they not already married? |
12587 | Besides, what could it matter? |
12587 | Besides, what did the service she rendered him cost her? |
12587 | Besides, what was the good of it? |
12587 | But can any one be enamoured of a flash of lightning? |
12587 | But her name? |
12587 | But how came all this about?" |
12587 | But how did you contrive to obtain access to me? |
12587 | But is laughter a synonym of joy? |
12587 | But tell me, how did it all happen? |
12587 | But the question was how to get rid of them? |
12587 | But then? |
12587 | But was it nature? |
12587 | But was there any preserved game? |
12587 | But were they of flesh and blood, like ourselves? |
12587 | But what am I? |
12587 | But what is history? |
12587 | But what is to be done next?" |
12587 | But what of the recoil? |
12587 | But what to eat, where to eat, how to eat? |
12587 | But where is the Green Box? |
12587 | But why are the people ignorant? |
12587 | But why are the waves of the Pacific four times higher near America than near Asia; that is to say, higher in the East than in the West? |
12587 | But why, then, had all this befallen him? |
12587 | By what measure did she weigh her love? |
12587 | Can anything more terrible be imagined? |
12587 | Can not you see the purple? |
12587 | Can you imagine a city ruled by its citizens? |
12587 | Can you prove it?" |
12587 | Can you read? |
12587 | Can you?" |
12587 | Caste? |
12587 | Change our direction, remain where we are, advance, go back? |
12587 | Come now, do I keep an inn, or do I not? |
12587 | Could he be sure that it contained Gwynplaine? |
12587 | Could he guess at it? |
12587 | Could it be said that a shadow had floated between Gwynplaine and Dea? |
12587 | Could it be that life had crumbled away behind him? |
12587 | Could the usurpation of the rich, the hateful elect of chance, go further? |
12587 | Cured of what? |
12587 | Dea had a thought--"What should I be without him?" |
12587 | Dea, what would you have me do? |
12587 | Destiny amazes us by a prolixity of unbearable suffering; who then can wonder that the old are garrulous? |
12587 | Did Gwynplaine love this woman? |
12587 | Did I foresee this? |
12587 | Did I tell you that the queen is my sister? |
12587 | Did any one read it to you? |
12587 | Did he drink, eat, sleep? |
12587 | Did he know why? |
12587 | Did he look at the water? |
12587 | Did he not know from whom that came? |
12587 | Did he not see an envelope, a seal, paper, and writing? |
12587 | Did he understand it? |
12587 | Did he, perchance, already exercise judgment? |
12587 | Did he, then, desire to extinguish their love, or to cool it even? |
12587 | Did it strike you that you failed a little in respect towards myself? |
12587 | Did she know that he was one? |
12587 | Did she wish her good or evil? |
12587 | Did the Pope twitter? |
12587 | Did the birds speak? |
12587 | Did they hate each other? |
12587 | Did they think they had unchained me for nothing? |
12587 | Did this court policy, invented by James I., succeed? |
12587 | Did this licence to shoot permit him to break the wing or the leg of one like the sister of her Majesty? |
12587 | Did you read it yourself? |
12587 | Did you see me naked? |
12587 | Die? |
12587 | Do I dare to be your mistress-- your concubine-- your slave-- your chattel? |
12587 | Do I dare to lose caste? |
12587 | Do n''t you know that without that cold, Dea would not have been blind, and if Dea were not blind she would not love you? |
12587 | Do n''t you see it is thirsty? |
12587 | Do souls require mortal eyes to see each other?" |
12587 | Do we inherit sin as a debt? |
12587 | Do we not cease to belong to our own circumscribed circle, and become part of the great family of all? |
12587 | Do you hear me? |
12587 | Do you hear? |
12587 | Do you know of these things? |
12587 | Do you know that I was domestic doctor to a lord, who was called Marmaduke, and who had thirty- six thousand a year? |
12587 | Do you know that the Archbishop of Canterbury has a revenue of £ 40,000 a year? |
12587 | Do you know that the herring fishers at Harlech eat grass when the fishery fails? |
12587 | Do you know that there is a duke in Scotland who can ride ninety miles without leaving his own estate? |
12587 | Do you know that, with rabbits only from the warrens of Earl Lindsay, they could feed all the riffraff of the Cinque Ports? |
12587 | Do you know what has happened, Dea? |
12587 | Do you know what there is outside? |
12587 | Do you not hear your mistress? |
12587 | Do you not see that you are in a balance, and that there is in one scale your power, and in the other your responsibility? |
12587 | Do you seriously consider that you are made for her? |
12587 | Do you think that occasion for tears has been wanting, had I felt disposed to weep?" |
12587 | Do you think that you can ever recapture a crowd once it has escaped your grasp? |
12587 | Do you understand that I am with you? |
12587 | Do you understand why I idolize you? |
12587 | Do you understand? |
12587 | Do you understand?" |
12587 | Do you wish this? |
12587 | Does he know that there is a dangerous pass, and that he can help his master to surmount it? |
12587 | Does it please you to answer to justice?" |
12587 | Does twilight fall fatally for all? |
12587 | Enter their order? |
12587 | Family? |
12587 | Fancy every one''s having a hand in the government? |
12587 | For instance, what has become of the may- pole, which the citizens of London erected on the 1st of May, when the peers went down to the House? |
12587 | For what end? |
12587 | For what was it? |
12587 | For what would he have to support Dea? |
12587 | From without, a voice, the voice of Ursus, said,--"You, boy, who have just eaten up my supper, are you already asleep?" |
12587 | Gwynplaine had a thought--"What should I be without her?" |
12587 | Gwynplaine, in a low voice, in which a tremor of fear was to be distinguished, murmured,--"What does it all mean?" |
12587 | Had Dea not been blind, would she have chosen Gwynplaine? |
12587 | Had Gwynplaine not been disfigured, would he have preferred Dea? |
12587 | Had Gwynplaine when a child been so worthy of attention that his face had been subjected to transmutation? |
12587 | Had he not a letter in his hand? |
12587 | Had he the right to withdraw his head from under the tongue of fire descending from on high to rest upon him? |
12587 | Had it ever occurred? |
12587 | Had she eaten a spoonful the less of turtle soup for it? |
12587 | Had she ever seen the sun? |
12587 | Had she not been assisted? |
12587 | Had they any pretext? |
12587 | Had this absence depended on him? |
12587 | Had this critical moment in Gwynplaine''s life arrived? |
12587 | Has any one ever had a beginning?" |
12587 | Has man, like the globe, two poles? |
12587 | Has not the blind man his dog? |
12587 | Has the heart two aspects-- one on which its love is poured forth in light; the other in darkness? |
12587 | Has the soul the wings of the bat? |
12587 | Have I committed crimes? |
12587 | Have we a queen-- yes or no? |
12587 | Have we not all our itch? |
12587 | Have you gnawed the bone-- yes or no? |
12587 | Have you remarked, in certain mechanisms, the smallness of the motive wheel? |
12587 | Have you seen"Chaos Vanquished?" |
12587 | Have you the plague, you thief? |
12587 | He continued,--"How much time have we still?" |
12587 | He had come out of it, having received a blow, and from whom? |
12587 | He knew that the police- officer summoned him to follow; but why? |
12587 | He said to him,--"Do you know how the Almighty lights the fire called love? |
12587 | He wished to tear himself away from this magnet; but how was he to carry out his wish? |
12587 | How am I going to manage to fit three into this caravan? |
12587 | How am I sure of what I know? |
12587 | How are you to resist, once flung? |
12587 | How arm himself against her-- or against himself? |
12587 | How came you by this child? |
12587 | How can any one be such a fool as to die and leave a child behind? |
12587 | How could I know the man? |
12587 | How could he escape? |
12587 | How could he resist? |
12587 | How could that be? |
12587 | How could they stand such nonsense? |
12587 | How could this be? |
12587 | How did the queen feel towards the Duchess Josiana? |
12587 | How do you get your living?" |
12587 | How far was it going to drag them? |
12587 | How long had they proceeded thus? |
12587 | How long have you been here? |
12587 | How render the thickets of foam, blendings of mountains and dreams? |
12587 | How should he set to work to drive them out? |
12587 | How to double that cape? |
12587 | How was he to combat that horrible anonyma, the law? |
12587 | How was he to set about it? |
12587 | How was it possible to refuse Anne admiration for taking the trouble of living at the period? |
12587 | How, then, could he have lost sight of her for a moment? |
12587 | How? |
12587 | How? |
12587 | I am a monster, do you say? |
12587 | I am an exception? |
12587 | I am beautiful, am I not? |
12587 | I am noble; what can be more tiresome? |
12587 | I forgive you; and do you know the reason? |
12587 | I will be there to conduct you--""Whither?" |
12587 | If he ever had a Me, where was the Me? |
12587 | If he looked forward to the morrow, what did he see? |
12587 | If our good king only knew it, would he not have you thrown into the bottom of a ditch, just to teach you better? |
12587 | If the indissoluble existed anywhere, was it not in their union? |
12587 | In all that had happened, had he been a free agent? |
12587 | In our own days do they not dye dogs blue and green? |
12587 | In tetanus who would feel a prick? |
12587 | In the great twilight world, open on all sides, what was there for the child? |
12587 | In the obscure and giddy debate of conscience, what had he said to himself? |
12587 | In this whirlwind, did he feel faintness and fatigue? |
12587 | In what measure is the moth responsible? |
12587 | In which direction?" |
12587 | Is all this to be borne? |
12587 | Is it a right? |
12587 | Is it man? |
12587 | Is it not so? |
12587 | Is it possible that demons are also essential? |
12587 | Is it possible that the bird and the moth should resist the attraction? |
12587 | Is it possible that the leaf should resist the wind? |
12587 | Is it possible that the stone should refuse obedience to the laws of gravitation? |
12587 | Is it possible? |
12587 | Is it that the justice of man works in twilight, and the judge gropes his way? |
12587 | Is it that the outpourings of our wishes flow naturally to the direction to which we most incline-- that of evil? |
12587 | Is it that you are afraid of tearing a hole in your rags? |
12587 | Is it their fault? |
12587 | Is it towards those nearest to ourselves, or is it towards mankind generally? |
12587 | Is n''t he a greedy scoundrel? |
12587 | Is she Fatality? |
12587 | Is she Providence? |
12587 | Is she an exception? |
12587 | Is she asleep? |
12587 | Is she in a swoon? |
12587 | Is sin an integral and inevitable part of our destiny? |
12587 | Is that you, Barkilphedro?" |
12587 | Is there a providence of demons as well as of God? |
12587 | Is there an appointment of that kind?" |
12587 | Is there any one in the bathroom? |
12587 | Is there any one there? |
12587 | Is there not in these excessive advertisements of self- abnegation and of honour a good deal of ostentation? |
12587 | Is there such an appointment?" |
12587 | Is this fair? |
12587 | Is this scaffolding of wild reasoning absolutely absurd? |
12587 | It charms, it terrifies; who knows which? |
12587 | It is Eternity saying,"What does it matter to me?" |
12587 | London Bridge, the page? |
12587 | Lord Clancharlie, does your lordship renounce transubstantiation, adoration of saints, and the mass?" |
12587 | Lord David? |
12587 | Lord Scarsdale translated the impression of the assembly in one exclamation,--"What is the monster doing here?" |
12587 | Made by whom? |
12587 | Marriage? |
12587 | Mischievous pick- pocket, evil- minded abortion, so you walk the streets after curfew? |
12587 | Montagu spoke with that accent, and sneering with his face close to that of Gwynplaine, shouted,--"What are you talking about?" |
12587 | Moreover, what are lords? |
12587 | Must we accept evil as part and portion of our whole? |
12587 | My lord, will you be a peer of England; yes or no? |
12587 | My lords, do you know who pays the taxes you vote? |
12587 | Needed there a greater motive than the speculation of his future exhibition? |
12587 | Nevertheless, we must remark that, strange as it may appear at first sight, he never once put himself the question,"Should he go?" |
12587 | Nevertheless-- and his conscience pressed him on this point-- had he merely submitted to what had been offered him? |
12587 | No? |
12587 | Now, who was this woman? |
12587 | Of course it was a woman, but was it not a chimera as well? |
12587 | Of what butterfly is, then, this earthly life the grub? |
12587 | Of what family was she? |
12587 | Of what good had been his early triumphs? |
12587 | Of what good is a king? |
12587 | Of what lion is this the lair? |
12587 | Of what providence? |
12587 | Of what use is the sun if not to reawaken that dark sleeper-- the conscience? |
12587 | Of what was he thinking? |
12587 | Of whom else should he dream? |
12587 | Of whom? |
12587 | Oh, you who are masters, do you know what you are? |
12587 | Oh, you would not make me desperate-- have me become a villain, a madman, drive me to perdition? |
12587 | One can only fight one''s equal; who is one''s equal if not one''s brother? |
12587 | One day Barkilphedro said to Josiana,--"Would your Grace like to make my fortune?". |
12587 | One question, Gwynplaine: do you believe in predestination? |
12587 | Over such serenity why cast his shadow? |
12587 | Peace, War, Legislation, Finance-- what have the people to do with such things? |
12587 | Perhaps in the barn, perhaps in the cellar; what does it matter? |
12587 | Pity for whom? |
12587 | Presence of what? |
12587 | Presently he asked himself, What could he do? |
12587 | Protector of whom? |
12587 | Providence acts advisedly, it crowns him who deserves the crown; do you pretend to know better than Providence? |
12587 | Reaching the side, he looked into space, and said, in a deep voice,--"Bist du bei mir? |
12587 | Really? |
12587 | Rising, and offering his chair to Gwynplaine, the sheriff added,--"My lord, will your lordship deign to seat yourself?" |
12587 | Shall I accept them? |
12587 | Shall we have the performance of''The Laughing Man''this evening?" |
12587 | She had asked,--"Are women admitted?" |
12587 | She laughed, a strange and childlike laugh; and, putting her mouth close to his ear, whispered,--"Do you want to see a mad woman? |
12587 | She murmured,--"You will think of me, wo n''t you? |
12587 | She replied,--"What for? |
12587 | She said to him,--"It is very fine, but--""But what?" |
12587 | She will say,''What am I to do in the world?'' |
12587 | Should he advance and re- enter the solitudes? |
12587 | Should he continue this journey? |
12587 | Should he go? |
12587 | Should he return and re- enter the streets? |
12587 | Sinister for whom? |
12587 | Situation? |
12587 | Society? |
12587 | Something wandering about something in chains-- can one imagine a more mournful lineament in the darkness? |
12587 | Still, what was the meaning of the bell? |
12587 | Suddenly Ursus cried out,--"What are you doing? |
12587 | Suddenly transformed into a lord, what ought he to have done? |
12587 | Take away the star, and what is the sky? |
12587 | Tapping the glass with her finger, she called,"Is any one there? |
12587 | Terrible to whom? |
12587 | That magical and malevolent abode, that strange and prison- like palace, was it also in the plot? |
12587 | That useful Colonel, one day, hung and rehung the same man, a republican, asking him each time,"Will you renounce the republic?" |
12587 | The chief cried out,--"What does that mean?" |
12587 | The child was near the voice; but where was it? |
12587 | The day came when Fabre d''Eglantine said to the Duchesse de Rohan,"N''est- tu pas la Chabot?" |
12587 | The doctor went on,--"To Hardquanonne, the Fleming of Flanders?" |
12587 | The doctor, having completely returned to the contemplation of the sea, pointed to this atmospheric arc, and said,--"Skipper, do you see?" |
12587 | The duchess asked,--"And who is Gwynplaine?" |
12587 | The duchess, turning her head, said,--"What does she want of me?" |
12587 | The first point to make clear was, did the queen love her sister? |
12587 | The head began again,--"Is any one there?" |
12587 | The lords are peers-- that is to say, equals-- of whom? |
12587 | The morrow, midnight? |
12587 | The skipper asked himself again this question,--"Is he a madman?" |
12587 | The skipper, remembering the two names given by the chief to this man, asked himself the question,--"Is he a madman, or is he a sage?" |
12587 | The vulgar ingrate is full of ashes; what was within Barkilphedro? |
12587 | The whole disturbance which the word used by Gwynplaine had produced in her ended in her saying one day,--"To be ugly-- what is it? |
12587 | Then he touched his satin clothes, and asked himself,--"Is it I? |
12587 | Then seizing the child with a grasp which would have been one of fury had it not been one of pity, he asked him: roughly,--"Who did that to you?" |
12587 | Then, under the form of interrogation so familiar to children and to the blind, she resumed,--"To see-- what is it that you call seeing? |
12587 | They have bought you-- and how? |
12587 | They may say to me,''But you give up politics, then?'' |
12587 | This being-- was it a being? |
12587 | This black witness was a remainder, and an awful remainder-- a remainder of what? |
12587 | This woman, how and why was she there? |
12587 | Thus ideal felicity was found, the perfect joy of life was realized, the mysterious problem of happiness was solved; and by whom? |
12587 | To adore each other in the shadows, to love in the plenitude of silence; who could not become reconciled to such an eternity? |
12587 | To be beloved, is not that everything? |
12587 | To be comic without and tragic within, what suffering can be more humiliating? |
12587 | To be liable to contribute, and to be liable to serve; is not that enough? |
12587 | To escape was now his whole thought-- to escape from what? |
12587 | To have_ le tour_--what does it mean? |
12587 | To heaven? |
12587 | To make his fortune? |
12587 | To protect the being who loves you, to give what she requires to her who shines on you as your star, can anything be sweeter? |
12587 | To see what? |
12587 | To serve and to defend the people? |
12587 | To unmake that of others? |
12587 | To what colossus did all this grandeur appertain? |
12587 | To whom has it not happened to be free in appearance, yet to feel that his wings are hampered? |
12587 | To whom? |
12587 | To- day, what was he? |
12587 | Towards whom is our first duty? |
12587 | Ursus addressed him abruptly,--"What are you laughing about?" |
12587 | Ursus raised his voice severely,--"Oh, you are happy, are you? |
12587 | WHY SHOULD A GOLD PIECE LOWER ITSELF BY MIXING WITH A HEAP OF PENNIES? |
12587 | Was London Bridge an illusion? |
12587 | Was ever anything so mad? |
12587 | Was he a lord? |
12587 | Was he about to fall without consciousness on the pavement? |
12587 | Was he about to succumb? |
12587 | Was he conscious of it? |
12587 | Was he going to commit the folly of dreaming about the unknown beauty? |
12587 | Was he going to knock at the gate of the jail? |
12587 | Was he made a peer of England expressly for this duchess? |
12587 | Was his temptation prearranged? |
12587 | Was it God who was being deceived? |
12587 | Was it ever anything? |
12587 | Was it not absurd? |
12587 | Was it off Ortach? |
12587 | Was it possible that it was all effaced? |
12587 | Was it possible? |
12587 | Was it possible? |
12587 | Was it the corpse? |
12587 | Was it the fault of ventriloquism? |
12587 | Was it the wind? |
12587 | Was it to come? |
12587 | Was it when they touched the Caskets? |
12587 | Was it when they were whirled about the shallows west of Aurigny? |
12587 | Was no one left? |
12587 | Was not he, the mountebank, below the lowest of the low? |
12587 | Was not his first duty towards her? |
12587 | Was not his name written on the letter--"_To Gwynplaine_?" |
12587 | Was not that entrance into a place where oppression could be discussed and resisted the realization of one of his deepest aspirations? |
12587 | Was she a maiden? |
12587 | Was she a woman? |
12587 | Was she free? |
12587 | Was she married, widow, maiden? |
12587 | Was there any excuse? |
12587 | Was this intentional or not? |
12587 | We will draw it, wo n''t we, Homo?" |
12587 | We will obey thee, what must we do? |
12587 | Well, and Homo? |
12587 | Well?" |
12587 | Were there snares, traps, dangers about her? |
12587 | Were they of brass or of silver- gilt? |
12587 | Were they softened by them? |
12587 | Were those fugitives Comprachicos? |
12587 | Were you born with that frightful laugh on your face? |
12587 | What advantage did it give him? |
12587 | What am I to do with them now? |
12587 | What amount of remorse was there in his despair? |
12587 | What are concessions? |
12587 | What are we sketching in these few preliminary pages? |
12587 | What are we to do? |
12587 | What availed it that he had commenced life by immediate victory over obstacle? |
12587 | What benefit, we ask again, would accrue to him in so doing? |
12587 | What business had I to follow Gwynplaine?" |
12587 | What can I do to prevent people walking about here? |
12587 | What can I do? |
12587 | What can be more savage than the gibbet? |
12587 | What can hinder it? |
12587 | What can there be to make us shudder in a fixed star? |
12587 | What could affect Dea, what could affect Gwynplaine, with such a fortress around them? |
12587 | What could be better? |
12587 | What could be more touching? |
12587 | What could have happened? |
12587 | What could he do against such a temptation? |
12587 | What could he do to harm the duchess? |
12587 | What could he do with all that was himself? |
12587 | What could he hope for more-- he so obscure against her so radiant? |
12587 | What could he not tell them? |
12587 | What did Gwynplaine feel? |
12587 | What did he know about her? |
12587 | What did he owe Josiana? |
12587 | What did he realize? |
12587 | What did he see around him? |
12587 | What did it all mean? |
12587 | What did this mean? |
12587 | What do I know of such things? |
12587 | What do they implore? |
12587 | What do they signify? |
12587 | What do they threaten? |
12587 | What do you desire? |
12587 | What do you mean by all that love- making nonsense? |
12587 | What do you set yourself up to be, I wonder? |
12587 | What do you think of all this scum, Gwynplaine? |
12587 | What do you want of me? |
12587 | What do you want that you have not already? |
12587 | What do you want?" |
12587 | What does it matter? |
12587 | What does the bell prove? |
12587 | What evil can I do him in return? |
12587 | What fearful thing is about to take place?" |
12587 | What for? |
12587 | What for? |
12587 | What good was a Josiana? |
12587 | What had been done to them? |
12587 | What had happened to them all? |
12587 | What had happened? |
12587 | What had he accepted? |
12587 | What had put it into her head to be born? |
12587 | What had she now before her? |
12587 | What had they to do in my caravan, the little blackguards? |
12587 | What harm did his deformity do Gwynplaine? |
12587 | What has the bird done at which you fire? |
12587 | What have I done to you? |
12587 | What intention possessed him? |
12587 | What is Chaos? |
12587 | What is a hurricane but a caprice? |
12587 | What is an envious man? |
12587 | What is his laugh? |
12587 | What is his son? |
12587 | What is it that this hammer, the bell, forges on the anvil of thought? |
12587 | What is it which is bearing down on us? |
12587 | What is moving? |
12587 | What is night? |
12587 | What is that great tower yonder? |
12587 | What is the father of Privilege? |
12587 | What is the queen to me? |
12587 | What is there in a king? |
12587 | What is this that they have done to me?" |
12587 | What kind of band was it which had left the child behind in its flight? |
12587 | What kind of scales could there be in the heart of this woman? |
12587 | What latent meaning have they? |
12587 | What mattered that? |
12587 | What matters? |
12587 | What means did his wretched appointment offer to attain so difficult an object? |
12587 | What merit had she? |
12587 | What more could he want? |
12587 | What more should they want? |
12587 | What part had that look in fate? |
12587 | What power could ever break that iron chain, bound with knots of flowers? |
12587 | What put it into my head to come to this Weymouth seven times devoted to the infernal deities? |
12587 | What sin can we have committed in the sight of God? |
12587 | What the devil has your bundle got to croak about?" |
12587 | What then? |
12587 | What time is it then? |
12587 | What to? |
12587 | What trumps has he? |
12587 | What was Barkilphedro''s age? |
12587 | What was Barkilphedro? |
12587 | What was I saying? |
12587 | What was destiny? |
12587 | What was he to do between those two silences-- the mute plain and the deaf city? |
12587 | What was he to do? |
12587 | What was he? |
12587 | What was it all about, and what could it all mean? |
12587 | What was she doing to be so? |
12587 | What was that shoal? |
12587 | What was that which had arrested and detained him-- a prison? |
12587 | What was the crime? |
12587 | What was the crime? |
12587 | What was the outrage? |
12587 | What was there behind that letter? |
12587 | What was this animal? |
12587 | What was this? |
12587 | What was to become of him? |
12587 | What were they going to do with him? |
12587 | What were those living creatures of which his wandering life showed him so many specimens, changed every day? |
12587 | What wind from the tomb had swept over them? |
12587 | What would become of him without Dea? |
12587 | What would become of the state if no one consented to serve it? |
12587 | What would have become of that poor child, the sweet blind girl who loved him? |
12587 | What would she have said could she have suddenly obtained her sight? |
12587 | What would the surf do with them? |
12587 | What would you have me do there? |
12587 | What? |
12587 | What? |
12587 | What? |
12587 | What? |
12587 | When Wolsey robbed the nation of Whitehall, and when Henry robbed Wolsey of it, who complained? |
12587 | When a man is made out of night, how is he to forgive so many beams of light? |
12587 | When did you arrive? |
12587 | When is this to end? |
12587 | When one comes to a fresh place, how is one to know anything about it? |
12587 | When people asked Democritus,''How do you know?'' |
12587 | When shall we see him again? |
12587 | Whence arise those strange, visible changes which occur in the soul of man? |
12587 | Whence came this improvement from the miserable hut to the Olympic caravan? |
12587 | Whence do you come?" |
12587 | Whence do you come?" |
12587 | Whence had come the succour? |
12587 | Where am I to begin? |
12587 | Where am I?" |
12587 | Where are the servants? |
12587 | Where can I find a stone to throw at him? |
12587 | Where is Dea? |
12587 | Where is Dea? |
12587 | Where is Gwynplaine? |
12587 | Where is he, I wonder? |
12587 | Where is he, that I may insult him? |
12587 | Where is he?" |
12587 | Where is it that I have just alighted?--on the highest peak? |
12587 | Where should we be if every one had his rights? |
12587 | Where was he? |
12587 | Where was he? |
12587 | Where was it gone? |
12587 | Where was she, the star? |
12587 | Where was the leak? |
12587 | Where was the use of depriving myself of everything for their sakes? |
12587 | Where were they? |
12587 | Where were they? |
12587 | Where? |
12587 | Wherefore the malevolent? |
12587 | Wherefore these deviations in the swell of the ocean? |
12587 | Wherefore? |
12587 | Which is, thenceforth, the straight line? |
12587 | Which of the two refusals should he choose? |
12587 | Which shall we take? |
12587 | Which way did you get in? |
12587 | Which way were they going to turn? |
12587 | Whither flew his thoughts? |
12587 | Who are you? |
12587 | Who are you? |
12587 | Who can paint the alternating hollows and promontories, the valleys, the melting bosoms, the sketches? |
12587 | Who can swim?" |
12587 | Who can tell? |
12587 | Who can tell? |
12587 | Who could be the inhabitant of this stately palace? |
12587 | Who could have hoped for this? |
12587 | Who could tell what sinister mysteries lurked behind this phantom? |
12587 | Who had brought them together? |
12587 | Who has dug this gulf? |
12587 | Who has not at some time felt this pendulum in his brain? |
12587 | Who has not heard the deep clamours of the soul? |
12587 | Who has turned over the leaves of the Doomsday Book? |
12587 | Who healed and nourished me? |
12587 | Who is in danger? |
12587 | Who is it who led me astray? |
12587 | Who is that man?" |
12587 | Who is there who has not remarked a kind of intelligent anxiety in animals? |
12587 | Who is there? |
12587 | Who knows all the mysterious forms assumed by God? |
12587 | Who knows? |
12587 | Who laughs at what? |
12587 | Who mutilated me? |
12587 | Who now knows the word Comprachicos, and who knows its meaning? |
12587 | Who of you have been to Newcastle- upon- Tyne? |
12587 | Who speaks of me? |
12587 | Who the victim? |
12587 | Who was Rodope but a queen loving Pteh, a man with a crocodile''s head? |
12587 | Who was he? |
12587 | Who was it brought you in? |
12587 | Who was it who was thus being hurried on-- a prince, a prisoner? |
12587 | Who was the dupe? |
12587 | Who was this intruder? |
12587 | Who was this man? |
12587 | Who would have believed it? |
12587 | Who? |
12587 | Whom? |
12587 | Whose simplicity was being abused? |
12587 | Whose the generosity? |
12587 | Whose the glory? |
12587 | Why Should a Gold Piece Lower Itself by Mixing with a Heap of Pennies? |
12587 | Why are you getting up? |
12587 | Why did he stop? |
12587 | Why did they come like that? |
12587 | Why do you cry?" |
12587 | Why had he been persecuted? |
12587 | Why has it all passed away? |
12587 | Why hasten the conclusion? |
12587 | Why have I been brought into this dungeon? |
12587 | Why her? |
12587 | Why him? |
12587 | Why is the contrary true of the Atlantic? |
12587 | Why monsters? |
12587 | Why not erect statues to him? |
12587 | Why not? |
12587 | Why not? |
12587 | Why not? |
12587 | Why object to such manners? |
12587 | Why redeemed? |
12587 | Why should I trade with these travellers? |
12587 | Why should James II., whose credit required the concealment of such acts, have allowed that to be written which endangered their success? |
12587 | Why should he want to speak and to reason? |
12587 | Why such exaggeration of solitude and exile? |
12587 | Why talk of a man in love? |
12587 | Why this Josiana? |
12587 | Why this stigma? |
12587 | Why was she a Protestant? |
12587 | Why, then, had he come there? |
12587 | Why, under the Equator, are they highest in the middle of the sea? |
12587 | Why? |
12587 | Why? |
12587 | Why? |
12587 | Why? |
12587 | Why? |
12587 | Why? |
12587 | Will you answer? |
12587 | Would not everything come to a standstill? |
12587 | Would they set Gwynplaine at liberty? |
12587 | Would you have states driven like clouds? |
12587 | Yesterday, what was he? |
12587 | You are masked for ever by your own flesh-- what can be more ingenious? |
12587 | You are not angry with me, are you? |
12587 | You disguised yourself in order to get here, Gwynplaine?" |
12587 | You doubt it? |
12587 | You imitate successfully the cries of beasts; but what would you say if, when you were making love to a lady, I passed my time in barking at you? |
12587 | You take notice of what I say, father, do you not? |
12587 | You will remember my song? |
12587 | You will remember the Green Box, wo n''t you, and poor blind little Dea? |
12587 | [ Footnote 8: Art thou near me?] |
12587 | _ That_ he? |
12587 | _ You_ die, my Dea? |
12587 | _ You_ die? |
12587 | a destiny so reptile? |
12587 | and we must think it good that they do; and even if we do not, what harm will it do them? |
12587 | be accepted by them? |
12587 | could he look thus askance at order reconstituted, a nation exalted, and a religion restored? |
12587 | could it be that Barkilphedro should miss his aim? |
12587 | did you pick her up?" |
12587 | do you know what the man is who is happy by right? |
12587 | do you see what you are doing? |
12587 | does it lack a certain justice? |
12587 | does such a thing exist? |
12587 | had she deprived herself of anything in the hateful overflowing of her superfluous luxuries? |
12587 | he cried, shuddering,"what is the matter?" |
12587 | he cried;"what are you about? |
12587 | how do the oaks fall? |
12587 | how many teeth have you in your jaws? |
12587 | how were they to prove that they held it from God? |
12587 | lost? |
12587 | or...."He raised his eyes, but looked beyond the ceiling, and his lips murmured,--"Is it Thou?" |
12587 | so this is your first time in these waters?" |
12587 | the same person?" |
12587 | to throw off his mask and have his former face restored; to be the creature he had perchance been created, handsome and charming? |
12587 | was the dangerous and desirable object of his dream lurking all the while behind these successive glimpses of heaven? |
12587 | what can I do? |
12587 | what had they done to them? |
12587 | what is to become of us? |
12587 | what of that? |
12587 | what pain deeper? |
12587 | what''s your name? |
12587 | what?" |
12587 | whence do you come?" |
12587 | where was she? |
12587 | where was the Green Box, poverty, joy, the sweet wandering life-- wandering together, like the swallows? |
12587 | who says it was n''t? |
12587 | why do you not enter?" |
12587 | why had he allowed himself to be separated from Dea? |
12587 | you believe that effrontery is confined to abandoned women? |
12587 | you do n''t know?" |