Questions

This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.

identifier question
21382A sailor, then?
21382About getting the wrong pig by the ear, as I did?
21382And how did you know?
21382Does it matter how many years old a person is,cried Philip sternly,"if he can point out what is right?
21382Had n''t we better turn down here now, Master Hexton?
21382Have I been asleep, mother?
21382Man enew for me? 21382 My dear James,"said Mrs Hexton,"I do wish you would not be so fond of talking about those-- those--""Ragged breeches, mother?"
21382Nobbut a boy, eh?
21382Now then, lads, who wants a leet?
21382Now,said Philip,"does not the barometer speak truly?
21382Oh, it''s thy mine, is it?
21382S''pose men are going to wuck here through a night shift and not want a pipe o''''bacco?
21382T''pit was reet enew,he said to himself; and what need was there of"peeking and poking about this how?"
21382Villain, eh?
21382Well, why not be a soldier?
21382What do you think o''that, lad?
21382Who''s going to hev a smoke?
21382Why not, mother dear?
21382Why should anyone be at work here? 21382 Why, you do n''t think I ever took any of the stuff you left out for me, do you?"
21382Yes, my boy; but what are you going to prevent instead of cure?
21382Yo''hear me? 21382 You want to know what I mean to settle to be, sir?"
21382And now wheer''s the man as''ll go and tell him what I say?"
21382At this point there are a couple of those George Manville Fenn situations, which find you wondering"how ever will Philip get out of this?"
21382Because you work in a seam and it is safe to- day, do you suppose it follows that it will be safe to- morrow?
21382But what brought you down to- neet?"
21382Could you find a better man than Davy, whom we bless for his lamp?"
21382Haul him up before the bench for threatening language-- have him bound over?"
21382Have you ever thought about the matter, Phil?"
21382How came he here?"
21382How did you open that Davy- lamp, sir?"
21382How does he do it?
21382I say, my boy, had she aired your night- cap for you last night, and warmed the bed?"
21382Look here,"he said, as he stopped short in a low- roofed and distant part of the mine,"do you see this?"
21382Not an accident?"
21382Remember our climbing up the Gummy Pass, mother, last year?"
21382S''pose we do n''t know when she''s safe and when she is n''t?"
21382Stop, man, what are you going to do?"
21382Suppose his lamp should go out: how would it be possible to get back?
21382Think I do n''t know?
21382Was there no hope?
21382What could it be?
21382What shall you do?
21382What would be the consequences if I were to open our lamp?"
21382What, then, was to be done?
21382Why should it not now?
21382Yo''all hear me, do n''t''ee?
21382You know the old saying, father?"
21382back again?"
21382exclaimed the young man,"why have n''t you both gone to bed?"
21382how wouldst thou like to wuck all neet on the neet shift?"
21382roared the great pitman, staggering up with his head bleeding from a cut caused by his fall,"villain, am I, lad?
21863A bumping- mule?
21863Ai n''t I offering you a pleasanter job than that of driving a bumping- mule all day?
21863And all alive?
21863And do n''t they look just like little negro minstrels? 21863 Are you all here, men?"
21863Are you sure?
21863But is n''t there a great deal of coal that would burn in this mountain of refuse?
21863By- the- way, Derrick,he asked,"how did the breaker catch fire?"
21863Did n''t I holler to ye to run? 21863 Did you ever hear him speak of owning any property there?"
21863Do n''t you call from six o''clock in the morning to nearly the same hour of the evening all day?
21863Do n''t you think,continued the girl, turning to Derrick,"that he might be mended if anybody would take the time and trouble?"
21863Do ye think I can hang onto this''ere blessed tail all day? 21863 Do yer know what he''s doing it for?"
21863Do you know what is the matter now, sir?
21863Do you know whether he ever lived in Crawford County?
21863Do you think, sir, they would pay any attention to a boy like me?
21863Do you, mother, really? 21863 Does n''t he look wise?"
21863For my son? 21863 Going to the bad, is he?"
21863Have you any place in which to take care of him?
21863Have you?
21863Here''s something for you; and if I do n''t live to get out, you''ll always keep it to remember me by, wo n''t you?
21863I hope you do n''t mean that I am to be a spy in the mine, sir?
21863I only asked why you did n''t?
21863In what way?
21863Is anybody with you?
21863Is it true? 21863 Looks as if we''d got to go out the way we came in, after all, does n''t it, sir?"
21863No, Polly, I''m all right, as you can see; but I wish you''d run home and tell mother I am-- will you?
21863Now what am I to do about him?
21863Shall I go back to the breaker, then, mother?
21863She''s allus a- cracklin''an''a- sputterin''when she''s uneasy and workin''hersel''comfortable like; do n''t ye know that, lad? 21863 So he''s de one as stole''em, is he?"
21863Then you were in the village at the time? 21863 Was his name Gilbert?"
21863Well, if he''s helpless I''d like to know what you''d name helpful?
21863Wellnigh helpless, is he?
21863What are you down here for, and what does all this mean, Bill?
21863What are you so sure of, my son?
21863What did he say?
21863What has happened to you? 21863 What has happened?
21863What is the matter?
21863What is the matter?
21863What is the meaning of all this? 21863 What''s the use of bothering with it when there''s an inexhaustible supply of coal in the ground?"
21863Where did that mule come from?
21863Where is Derrick Sterling?
21863Where''d yer get''em, Boodle?
21863Where?
21863Who are you?
21863Who first discovered coal, anyway, Uncle Warren? 21863 Who is Polly?"
21863Who is it?
21863Why, Derrick, is that you?
21863Why, mother,he said,"are n''t you glad?
21863Will he die, do you think?
21863You do n''t mean to say that it is nearly six o''clock?
21863You do n''t mean to say,exclaimed Derrick,"that you are Allan McClain''s father?"
21863Another voice, which was hardly audible, asked,"What about the kid?"
21863Are you Paul Evert?"
21863Are you badly hurt?"
21863Are you willing that I should, and do you think Derrick is strong enough to receive visitors?"
21863As he opened his own door he called out in his loud, rough voice,"Bill come in yet?"
21863At the supper- table that evening Derrick asked:"Does it hurt people who have a fever to give them water, mother?"
21863Been studying de effect of blarsts, and a- testing of''em by pussunal experience?"
21863But oh, Uncle Warren, you wo n''t have him killed, will you?"
21863But what could be done?
21863Can you have made a mistake in regard to the plans?"
21863Can you tell just how far in t''breast lies?"
21863Could Derrick leave him down there, to take his chances of getting out or drowning, while he sought safety for himself?
21863Could it all be true?
21863Could it be that he should never again see his mother and little Helen and the sunlight?
21863Could it be the very light of day that he had longed for and prayed for and despaired of ever seeing again?
21863Could they cheer loud enough or long enough to do him honor, and testify their joy at his deliverance?
21863Derrick shouted,"Where is Paul Evert?
21863Did he see a light only a few paces before him?
21863Did his dear friend''s body lie at the bottom of it?
21863Did it signify that there were nine persons in the breast, or only three?
21863Did iver I moind de likes of that?"
21863Did n''t I give yer fair warnin''that I was shootin''a blarst?
21863Did n''t I?
21863Did n''t you bring me out of the burning breaker?
21863Did this girl know of the hopes and ambitions of the boy who sat beside her?
21863Did you know his father?"
21863Do n''t I owe you more than anything I can ever do will pay for?
21863Do n''t you see the breaker''s afire?"
21863Do n''t you think I may, sir?"
21863Do ye hear?"
21863Do yer know dat he''s give up his own bed ter my Bill, an''dat he sets up nights awaitin''on him an''a- nussin''of him?
21863Do you mean it?"
21863Do you suppose he knows we are visitors?"
21863Do you wonder at it?
21863Eh, lad?"
21863Following is list of victims: Sterling, Evert, Tooley----''""Not Derrick Sterling, father, nor Paul Evert, nor Bill Tooley?"
21863GOOD- BY TO THE COLLIERY ILLUSTRATIONS In the burning breaker"Here, lad, lead this mule down the rest of the way, will ye?"
21863Had a plenty ter eat, hain''t yer?"
21863Had he already got out of the mine, or was he still at his station back in the dark gangway, unmindful of danger?
21863Had he heard a human voice?
21863Had not his name been a household word throughout the land for days?
21863Halford?"
21863Has anybody seen him?"
21863He ended by saying,"Now, mother, when I go to Philadelphia to prepare for college, ca n''t Polly go with me and study to be an artist?
21863He only stops to call louder than before, but with a tremble in his voice,"Is-- Paul-- Evert-- alive?"
21863He was a miner, of course, for he was dressed in mine clothes, and was as begrimed as the sootiest delver of them all, but who was he?
21863How did you know this was the bumping- mule you were to drive?"
21863How do you account for it?
21863How many were alive?
21863How many years have you been driving him?"
21863How''s Bill this evening?"
21863I suppose you have had enough of the breaker, have n''t you?"
21863I wonder what''s got into him?"
21863If indeed he had been left just inside the door of an old gangway, near the foot of the slope, might he not find his way back to it and escape?
21863If only three, where were the others?
21863If we could only get to the top of the slope, could n''t we somehow escape by it?"
21863Is anybody in there?"
21863Is it a joke?"
21863Is it not so, Derrick?"
21863Is not that a good bit of logic for you?"
21863Is the man daft?"
21863Jones?"
21863Mr. Mule- driver,"he shouted,"what are you a- doing here in de dark, an''how do yer like mining far as ye''ve got?
21863Must he, then, die, alone in that awful place with no sound save the roar of waters in his ears?
21863Now, why do n''t you beat the mule?"
21863Paul''s pitiful"What else can I do, Derrick?
21863Perhaps you know a brave young fellow named Derrick Sterling?"
21863See it, men?"
21863The door was opened before the bell had stopped jingling, and an anxious voice inquired,"Is it fire?"
21863The father said,"Well, lad, how goes it?"
21863They began to congratulate him, and continued to do so until in great bewilderment he exclaimed,"What''s it for, mates?
21863They reached it at the same moment, and the somebody recognizing him, said heartily,"Ah, Derrick, is that you?
21863Was he not a brave fellow whom they all loved?
21863Was his life over, and must he be carried away by the black flood that was reaching out to seize him?
21863Was it a light produced by human agency, or was it one of those weird illuminations that sometimes arise from the dampness and foul air of old mines?
21863Was the overworked mother to have a release from the toil and the bitter anxieties that made her look so thin and careworn?
21863We wo n''t have him killed; will we, mother?"
21863Were Derrick''s dreams of a college education and a profession about to be realized?
21863Were all there, or were some left?
21863Were any dead?
21863Were their days of poverty really over?
21863What should he do?
21863What was the meaning of the three taps three times repeated?
21863Whatever''s happened?"
21863Where''s the bumping- mule?"
21863Who are you?"
21863Who says I wanted to kill you?"
21863Who were coming?
21863Who were the three?
21863Why did the place appear so strange to him?
21863Why do n''t he ring the bell, I wonder?
21863Why not?
21863Why should he be afraid of a girl anyhow?
21863Why?
21863Will you do this for me?"
21863Wo n''t you walk in?
21863You are of course sure of the correctness of the plans?"
21863You would n''t run over a stranger, would you?"
21863[ Illustration:"HERE, LAD, LEAD THIS MULE DOWN THE REST OF THE WAY, WILL YE?"]
21863a fortune awaiting the widow Sterling and Derrick?
21863and do n''t I love you more than most anybody on earth?"
21863and how did people find out that it would burn?"
21863and what do you want at this time of night?"
21863and where''s your light?
21863exclaimed the gentleman;"are you the young man who went back into the mine and risked his life to save a friend?"
21863has there been an accident?
21863look at that new breaker,"or,"Is n''t that a capital idea for a slope?"
21863was there anything strange in that?"
21863what''s the matter?"
21863where are the ladies?"
21863where was he amid all this danger and confusion?
21863where''s your mule?
21863which of''em?"
21726''Twas a keenly lode, did''ee say?
21726A powerful man,observed the managing director as they went out;"your clergyman, I suppose?"
21726A young fellow like you may face up against such difficulties, but what is an old man to do? 21726 All right, Bill?"
21726And are all the winzes bridged with a single plank in this way?
21726And do you neither drink nor smoke, Tom?
21726And pray what are winzes?
21726And who may that be?
21726And, pray, how many such winzes are there in the mine?
21726Any children, Spankey?
21726Any more coming?
21726Any news?
21726Any one offer more for this pitch?
21726Are you coming, Zackey?
21726Are you going to work?
21726Are you married, Spankey?
21726Are you married?
21726Are you prepared to die?
21726Are''ee safe, my dear man?
21726Aw, my dear,said Maggot, looking very sad, and shaking his head slowly,"did n''t''ee hear the noos?"
21726Ay, how many?
21726Bad still, Uncle David?
21726Bin down in the mines, I dessay?
21726Braave, thank''ee,said Trezise;"we''ve come for a drop o''brandy, missus, havin''heard that you''ve got some here, an''sure us can smell it-- eh?"
21726But can you not sell your shares in Botallack and refund with the proceeds?
21726But if you die?
21726But surely he might find employment better suited to his talents?
21726But surely you do n''t mean to use fire- arms against them in such a quarrel?
21726But tell me, Oliver, have you heard of the accident to poor Batten?
21726But would it be right,said Rose earnestly,"to sell our shares at a high profit if things be as you say?"
21726By the way, Jack,said Maggot,"was n''t it hereabouts that the schooner went ashore last winter?"
21726By the way, how comes it, sir,said Oliver,"that Cornishmen are so much more addicted to wrestling than other Englishmen?"
21726Can you really see all these places at once from Wheal Dooem?
21726D''ee knaw where he is?
21726D''ee think so?
21726Ded''ee call, uncle?
21726Did he paint landscape at all?
21726Did n''t I tell''ee to leave them things behind?
21726Did you ever travel underground in the dark?
21726Did''ee find any more daws''pon clift?
21726Do n''t you find this bad air tell on your health?
21726Do you believe it has any foundation?
21726Do you know where his house is?
21726Do you know who the girl is?
21726Do you not see them? 21726 Do you really think,"he said at length,"that the man means to do me bodily harm?"
21726Do you suffer much?
21726Do''ee?
21726Does Mr Thomas Donnithorne live here?
21726Good- hevenin'', Eben Trezise; how are_ you_?
21726Good- hevenin'', missus; how dost do?
21726Has Cuttance got off?
21726Hast fought side by side with Jim Cuttance, and then knocked him down?
21726Hast''ee found the brandy?
21726Have I?
21726Have you ever seen them at work?
21726Have you got your pare?
21726Hold on a bit, my son.--P''raps,he said, turning to Trezise,"you''d come up hum with me and have a dish o''tay?
21726How are you, Charlie my boy?
21726How are you, Jack?
21726How can you tell? 21726 How could you make so cowardly an attack on an old man?"
21726How deep does it go?
21726How does Penrose get on?
21726How far down have we come?
21726How fares my suit?
21726How in all the world did you manage to let him go?
21726How long, sur?
21726How many child''n say''ee?
21726How many children has Tom had, Jim?
21726How many children have you had?
21726How old are you, Jim?
21726How''s your son, Matthew?
21726I do wish,said the younger with a slight sigh,"that our work was more in the sunshine?"
21726I hope the daws ai n''t the worse of their ducking?
21726I say, it looks awful real- like, do n''t it?
21726I say, my dear man,asked another,"have''ee bin takin''a waalk''pon the clifts lately?"
21726I suppose that you have frequent changes of fortune?
21726I''m ready to act in any way you propose, Oliver; what do you intend to do? 21726 Is all right?"
21726Is he then so notorious?
21726Is it on the way, Spankey?
21726Is that faither?
21726Is that you, Zackey?
21726Is the sun shining?
21726Miners?
21726Nothing wrong, I hope?
21726Now, David,said he to himself,"the question is, what shall us do-- shall us keep on, or shall us knack?"
21726Oliver,said Mr Donnithorne, sitting down opposite the invalid when his friend had left, and frowning portentously,"d''you know I''m a ruined man?"
21726Pilchards been seen?
21726Pray,interrupted Oliver,"what may be the meaning of` scat''em all in jowds''?
21726So, friend,he said, with a smile,"it seems that smuggling is not your only business?"
21726St. Just, sur?
21726Sur?
21726That leaves us nearly a couple of hours to spare; how shall we spend it?
21726That, Mr Clearemout, is the man I spoke of-- what think you of his personal appearance?
21726That, sur?
21726The wrong road-- eh?
21726Their names?
21726Then I suppose I am not far from the Land''s End?
21726Then you have never seen him, I suppose?
21726Then you never loved him?
21726There''s no saying,replied Eben Trezise;"you''ve heerd as well as we of lodes takin''the bit in their teeth an''disappearing-- eh?"
21726Villain?
21726Well, Jack, what''s doing?
21726Well, Maggot,said Mr Donnithorne,"what is your business with me?
21726Well, sur,said he, without any of the bold expression that usually characterised him,"what can a man do when he''s to be well paid for the job?
21726Well, well, he and I do n''t agree, that''s all; besides, has he never expounded to you that obedience to your husband is a virtue? 21726 Well, what if I do?
21726Well,continued our hero,"I believe that your intentions against Mr Hitchin were not so bad as they would appear to be--""Who told''ee that?"
21726Well,said he, smiling,"how fares your suit?"
21726What can be the matter with it?
21726What care_ I_ for the minister?
21726What danger may that be?
21726What do un look like?
21726What do you think of Mr Clearemout''s new mine?
21726What do''ee grizzle like that for?
21726What does that pump?
21726What have we here, George,he said, rising, and fitting a gold glass in his eye--"not a portrait of Wheal Dooem, is it?"
21726What interests you?
21726What is it?
21726What say you to the Wherry Mine at two o''clock?
21726What say you, boy?
21726What says your friend?
21726What shall us do?
21726What think''ee now, my son?
21726What was that, booy? 21726 What would you say if I told you it was Miss Rose Ellis?"
21726What''s that?
21726What''s the matter with the cheeld-- bad, eh? 21726 What''s wrong with him?"
21726What''s wrong?
21726What? 21726 Where bound to this mornin'', Jack?"
21726Where got you these?
21726Which? 21726 Who is he?"
21726Why do you ask?
21726Why do you laugh?
21726Why so?
21726Why, Frankey, is that thee, booy?
21726Why, what''s this for?
21726Why, whatever brought''ee here?
21726Why, whatever shud we git into trouble''bout it for?
21726Will any one offer for this pitch?
21726Will he see-- a_ little_, sur?
21726Would it not be well at once to relieve your conscience, sir,suggested Oliver respectfully,"by giving up the things that cause it pain?
21726Yes; you have heard the story of its destruction, I suppose?
21726You do tell me that you''ve come so close to water that you''re''fraid to go on? 21726 You have heard of the Gump, I suppose?"
21726You have heard, I dare say, of the burning of Penzance by the Spaniards more than two hundred years ago; in the year 1595, I think it was?
21726You have n''t found a bunch o''copper yet, I dessay?
21726You look well for an old miner,said Oliver;"what may be your age?"
21726You mean, I suppose, the fabled land of Lionesse?
21726You''re a doctor, sur, I think?
21726Your brother Tom is at work here, is n''t he?
21726Zackey, booy, are''ee slaipin''?
21726` Hope I have n''t hurt''ee, Sampy?'' 21726 ` How so?''
21726After six or seven hours I do feel my head like to split, an''my stummik as if it wor on fire; but what can us do?
21726But why go to Penzance?
21726But, after all he is only the cat''s- paw; those who employ him are the real sinners-- eh, Mr Donnithorne?"
21726But, reader, you will say, What has all this to do with our story?
21726But, sure, a walk thither, and thence to St. Just, could not have detained you so long?"
21726Can you show me one of the particular grips or twists that are said to be so effective?"
21726Can you tell me anything of his personal history?"
21726Connected with the Methodist body, I presume?"
21726D''you see?"
21726Did I not hear you, only a few nights ago, say that you had the utmost confidence in the success of your undertaking?"
21726Do you ask,"Why all this excitement?"
21726Do you feel much pain in your head?"
21726Do you happen to know my uncle personally?"
21726Do you hear, little man?"
21726Do''ee see the boat out over?"
21726Dost a hear, my son?"
21726Going to work, I suppose?"
21726H''m-- so old Tom Donnithorne is your uncle, is he?"
21726Had I judged of you at first sight, I should have thought you a--""Well, what?
21726Have you got anything to make a bandage of?"
21726He seized her hand at this point, and-- but really, reader, why should we go on?
21726How comes it that you look so fresh?"
21726However, let me tell you that you do n''t understand these matters--""Then why ask my advice, Tom?"
21726I do confess that I do n''t half like it, but, after all, what have we got to do weth the opinions of owld aunts or uncles?
21726I question much whether you could find his match, Captain Dan, amongst all your men?"
21726I suppose you were going to say that you have heard a different account of him-- eh?"
21726I''spose I cud claim salvage on''em?"
21726If a gurl do choose to go off wi''the man she likes, that''s no matter to we, an''if I be well paid for lendin''a hand, why should n''t I?
21726Is it not something like a violation of good taste to be too particular here?
21726Is it not too bad?
21726Is that so?"
21726Just?"
21726Just?"
21726Just?"
21726May I ask what corps you belong to?"
21726May I venture to ask this favour of you?"
21726Meanwhile, where is this mine?"
21726Mr Clearemout, do n''t you know what a local preacher is?"
21726Now the question is, how are we to find him, for searching in that crowd is almost useless?"
21726Of course I do; who could fail to know him after the graphic description the lawyer gave of him?
21726Oliver at once accosted him,"Pray, sir, is your name Hitchin?"
21726Pray, what is a local?"
21726Reader, shall we follow the two knowing fellows to that shaft?
21726Shall we not behold their dear faces again when we see our blessed Lord face to face?"
21726Some of the lodes( that''s the word, is n''t it?)
21726Something may come of it-- who knows?"
21726Surely your own good sense must compel you to admit that Rose sings splendidly?"
21726There''s a certain shaft near by that has got a bad name for drinkin'', missus; p''raps you may have heard on it?
21726Tom Donnithorne?"
21726Well, Oliver, talking of explanations, how comes it that you are so late?"
21726What mean you by galloping over the country thus like a wild ass-- eh?"
21726What said he about me?"
21726What say you, Molly-- shall we convict Oliver on his own confession?"
21726What say you?"
21726What think''ee, Captain Dan?"
21726What was it?"
21726What will you have-- brandy, gin, or rum?
21726What''s the meanin''of it?''
21726Where did you pick it up?"
21726Where is aunty?
21726Where is he?"
21726Will you explain yourself?"
21726Will your head stand stepping from beam to beam, and can you lower yourself by a chain?"
21726Will''ee come to the berryin, Billy?"
21726You have heard of him, of course?"
21726a smuggling old brandy- loving rascal-- eh?
21726a_ preacher_?
21726and it might, you know, for it_ was_ a real one once, was n''t it?
21726baby gone lost?"
21726but are they not untrained men, liable to teach erroneous doctrine?"
21726cried the old gentleman, losing his temper;"who made_ him a_ judge of my doings?"
21726did I say smuggler?"
21726do miners sometimes work for a month, and receive only two shillings, or_ nothing_ as wages?"
21726exclaimed Mr Donnithorne in surprise;"are ye sure they were not smugglers-- eh?"
21726exclaimed Mrs Maggot in surprise;"what sort o''company?"
21726exclaimed one,"goin''to become an honest man, Maggot?"
21726exclaimed the youth in surprise;"did you not tell me just now that he is a very good fellow?"
21726he exclaimed after a moment''s pause;"the villain, the scoundrel-- what of him?
21726he exclaimed;"where away?"
21726he replied with a sad smile,"how can thee say so?
21726hope you''ll let John an''me have a pitch in the noo bal, wo n''t''ee?"
21726how comes it that they found out the value of them?"
21726interposed Jack,"all the_ chiar_ being on the surface, and the_ oscuro_ down in the mine, eh?"
21726interrupted Hitchin angrily,"have I not said_ can not_?
21726interrupted the old man;"then what''s the use of troubling me about it?"
21726is that you, old Maggot?"
21726is_ he_ a local preacher also?"
21726knocked down the man who saved your life, nephew?
21726my dear men, has any of''ee got a chaw of baccy about''ee?"
21726my dear,"gasped John;"have''ee lost th''rope?"
21726not hurt, are''ee, Dan?"
21726said Maggot;"go to grass to slaip, or slaip in the bal?"
21726said Oliver remonstratively,"before you were born?
21726said Oliver;"pray whereabouts do they dwell?"
21726that martello- tower- like object?"
21726the local''s family?"
21726the miner?"
21726the one painted green, and a scraggy horse with a bag hanging to its nose?"
21726what of him?
21726what''s that?"
21726why?
31128Ah, Jack, lad, how be it with''ee?
31128All right, Jack; but what be''est thou going to do?
31128And after that?
31128And canst do any sum in thy head, Jack, as quick as that?
31128And do you like it?
31128And dost thou mean to get oop i''the world?
31128And thou really lik''st reading, Jack? 31128 And what did your united wisdom arrive at?"
31128And what is the exact degree of intimacy in which one may say as you denoted,''Miss Merton, your dress is a most becoming one?''
31128And what''s you and t''dogs been doing to- day, Jack?
31128And why do they call you Bull- dog, Jack?
31128And will they go for the strike, Jack?
31128And you did n''t doubt I''d do it, Jack?
31128And you have come to tell me now?
31128Anything wrong wi''dad?
31128Are you better now?
31128Are you hurt, John?
31128Are you?
31128Aye, they be sore surely; why did n''t''ee speak afore, Jack? 31128 Aye, what be''t?"
31128Be it?
31128Be''st afeard, Jack?
31128Bless my heart, Merton, why did you not tell me before? 31128 Bless the boy, what hast got in your head now?"
31128But bain''t''ee got larning?
31128But ca n''t you tell me what is the difference?
31128But how didst do that, Jack?
31128But if I doan''t?
31128But is there nothing that we can do?
31128But suppose they spiles''em?
31128But what be''est thou going to do, Jack?
31128But why do n''t you make up your mind to be something better still, Jack-- a manager?
31128But why not, mother?
31128But, Harry, you are as old as I am, and are earning the same wage; why do n''t you marry her?
31128Can it never be?
31128Can you advise anything?
31128Can you bite his tail?
31128Can you suggest nothing, Jack?
31128Coom,Jack shouted to the boys on the top,"what bee''st feared of?
31128Could you work out the cube- root of say 999,888,777?
31128Dang thee, how dare''st meddle here?
31128Did ye think as I was n''t to be trusted not to split on my own lad?
31128Do the waggons often get off the metals along this road, Evans?
31128Do you know his suggestions are exactly what I had intended to offer to you myself? 31128 Do you know how many thousand cubic feet of air a minute you pass?"
31128Do you like her better than me, Jack?
31128Do you want a dress suit, sir?
31128Do''st mean that, sir?
31128Doan''t,Jack said crossly;"what be there good in teaching a lass to spell?
31128Dost feel skeary, Jack?
31128Dost know what''s going to be done to- night Harry?
31128Dost think there''s any hope, Harry?
31128Eight shillings a week now, ai n''t it?
31128Foind it dark and lonesome, eh? 31128 Ha''ye got another strap?"
31128Harry, Harry,he shouted,"bee''st killed?"
31128Hast seen Brook?
31128Have you been doing this sort of work long?
31128Have you got either of the others?
31128Have you seen the gaffers?
31128Have you told Nelly?
31128He is killed?
31128He is really in earnest, Merton; it is not a mere freak?
31128Honour, you have n''t the least idea what it is?
31128How are they to earn bread if they flood the mines? 31128 How are you, Jack?
31128How are you, Jack? 31128 How could you do it then?"
31128How dar''ee hit my lad?
31128How dare''ee kick my dorg?
31128How do it make a differ whether this door be open or shut, father?
31128How do you know?
31128How much powder have you, Bill?
31128How often do the corves come along?
31128How often would it be held, sir?
31128How on earth did you do that?
31128How would you measure the velocity, theoretically?
31128How''s Annie?
31128I had better have them,he said;"it would look strange, I suppose, not to be dressed so when others are?"
31128I mean,the artist said with a smile,"have you anything to do?
31128I never gave up hope, did I, Harry?
31128I suppose it is Alice Merton?
31128I suppose that be a guess, Jack, eh?
31128I?
31128Is Harry in?
31128Is it fire, Jack?
31128Is t''dad like to be at home soon, Jack?
31128Is there anything else, Jack?
31128Is there no hope?
31128Is your father down, Harry? 31128 Just tell us frankly what you would do if you were manager of the Vaughan?"
31128Look at him, Bill; he''s something like Jack, do n''t thou see it?
31128Look here, John; Mr. Brook has been a good master, will you do him a good turn?
31128May I ask you a question or two?
31128More important, sir?
31128Mr. Brook,Jack said after a time,"it is agreed, is it not, that all here will obey my orders?"
31128No lass, I darena; but why should it be an insult? 31128 No,"Jack said consciously,"I know I dare not, though I should like to; but why do n''t I dare?"
31128Noa, why should I?
31128Noa,Jack said;"what be there to be skeary aboot?
31128Not Jack Simpson?
31128Not anything likely to interest me, Jack?
31128Now, mother,Jack said promptly, not heeding her appeal,"what police are there within reach?"
31128Oh yes, sir,Jack said, in a tone of delight;"and, please, sir, may I read when I am not wanted?"
31128Oh, Bill, how can I do it, and she ill, and with a two- month baby? 31128 Oh, Jack, and didst really think I wanted to welt thee?"
31128Oh, Mrs. Dodgson, you can not mean it?
31128Oh, Mrs. Dodgson,she sobbed,"how can I thank you enough?"
31128Only sewing and cutting out and cooking and such like, and not lessons?
31128Please, Mr. Merton, can I speak to''ee?
31128Put what?
31128She did?
31128Stuff and nonsense,Mrs. Dodgson said,"what has that to do with it?
31128That is the young un they call Bull- dog, ai n''t it, Bill?
31128Thee baint to be frighted by one man, be''est''ee? 31128 Then if she could take the thing which would be no manner o''use to her, why could n''t she take the thing that would?"
31128They''ll be a cocking they noses oop aboove their feythers, joost acause they know moore reading and writing, but what good ul it do they I wonder?
31128Thou art not down with them then, Harry?
31128Thou canst read and write foine, which is more nor I can do and what dost want more?
31128Very well,Jack said,"are you all agreed?"
31128Well, Jack, and now about this question of the soup dinner?
31128Well, lad, what are you doing?
31128Well, mother, and how goes it?
31128Well, mother, what is it?
31128Well, sir, and what do you think of things?
31128What are you going to do there? 31128 What bee''st goin''to do, Jack?"
31128What brings he up at this hour?
31128What can have happened?
31128What can one lad do against two or three hundred men?
31128What day is it, sir? 31128 What dost think o''t?"
31128What dost want done, lad?
31128What dost want, Harry Shepherd? 31128 What ha''ye been doing all the arternoon, Jack?"
31128What hast brought un here for?
31128What is a dress suit?
31128What is it then, lass? 31128 What is it, Bill?
31128What is it, Jack?
31128What is it?
31128What is the matter with him?
31128What is to be done now?
31128What news?
31128What o''clock is it now, sir?
31128What on earth can have happened? 31128 What should I do wi''out my work, Jack?
31128What should put such a thought in your head, lass? 31128 What steam is there in the boiler?"
31128What then, Jack?
31128What ud be t''good o''t?
31128What will you look forward to after that?
31128What would have been the use?
31128What would you advise?
31128What''s oop, lad?
31128Whatever they are?
31128Where be the girls to make the tidy wife a''cooming from, I wonder?
31128Who be he?
31128Who be you?
31128Who is alive? 31128 Who is this?
31128Who says so? 31128 Who should know it before you?"
31128Who would have dared do it but you? 31128 Who would have thought that just a little difference in the make of a coat would have made such an alteration in one''s look?"
31128Why did n''t you tell me? 31128 Why did you not write to me?"
31128Why dost like larning so much, Jack?
31128Why should she?
31128Why, Nell, what ha''done to t''yself? 31128 Why, Nelly, would n''t you have liked me to have helped you?"
31128Why, it bean''t nigh two o''clock, surely?
31128Why, lauk a''mercy, Jack, you ai n''t going to fight the whole place all by yourself, are you?
31128Why, man, I owe you my life,he said;"what are these little things in comparison?"
31128Why, you would rival Bidder himself,Mr. Hardinge said;"and how far have you worked up in figures?"
31128Will you two carry him to the cage? 31128 Wouldst like to learn?"
31128Yes, Bill; did n''t you feel it?
31128Yes, lad; and what then?
31128Yes, sir, thank you very much,Jack said, quietly;"only, please tell me, do you yourself recommend it?"
31128You do n''t mean to use powder, Jack?
31128You do n''t say anything,Jack remarked one day;"do you think my castles in the air will never come true?"
31128You mean the coal- waggons?
31128You''ve been to school, I suppose, Jack?
31128All that''s been agreed, ai n''t it?"
31128And do you really care for her, Harry?"
31128And how are things here?"
31128And how''s the dogs?
31128And so you never heard a whisper about the schoolmistress?
31128And when do you mean to ask her?"
31128And you are quite in earnest, Jack?"
31128At any rate you will always think of me as your true friend, Nelly, always trust me?"
31128Be''st thy first day doon the pit?"
31128Bill, will you bind yourself to produce Jack Simpson t''morrow?"
31128Brook?"
31128Brook?"
31128Brook?"
31128But be''est sure it be true, Sally?"
31128But what''ud be th''use of it?
31128Canst read, Nell?"
31128Canst walk now?"
31128Curious, is n''t it, Jack?"
31128Did n''t I know you were here an hour or two before, and you think I needed telling who it was as faced all the pitmen?
31128Did n''t you think I could be trusted?
31128Did you give Juno that physic ball I got for her?"
31128Did''st e''er hear tell o''such a thing?"
31128Did''st know o''t, Bill Haden?"
31128Do n''t I know you are as true as steel?
31128Do we mean to keep it to ourselves, or to let in other chaps?"
31128Does the bell act, I wonder?"
31128Fifty fathoms, three hundred feet; he was fifty below the mouth, two hundred and fifty to sink; how long would his body be getting to the bottom?
31128Hardinge?"
31128Hast felt it lonely, lad?"
31128Hast heard t''news, Bill?"
31128Have you got tea ready, mother?"
31128Have you heard that Miss Bolton is going to leave us?"
31128Have you never thought of marrying Nelly?"
31128Have''ee got a strap?"
31128How did you manage to breathe, dad?"
31128How have things gone on?"
31128I never was laughed at, and why should you be?
31128I wanted to ask''ee what books I orter read, so that I may grow up a clever man?"
31128IN THE OLD SHAFT-- CAN HE BE SAVED?
31128If they wreck the engines and flood the mines there will be no work for months; and what''s to become of the women and children then?
31128Is Williams''s office open?"
31128Is Williams, the underground manager, in the pit?"
31128It bain''t likely, be it?"
31128It can not be put down, I suppose?"
31128It seems joost the same sort o''thing, doan''t it, Jane?"
31128It would be only natural like friends, would n''t it?"
31128Jack exclaimed in astonishment;"how could that be, sir?"
31128Jack said astonished,"what makes you think that?
31128Let me think, you are nearly seventeen, Nelly?"
31128Merton?"
31128Merton?"
31128My wife is going to have the girls''school, have you heard?"
31128Nelly asked, as Jack was severely reproaching his friend with not having looked at a book for some days;"what good do it do?"
31128Nothing the matter at home, I hope?"
31128Now what is it?
31128Now,"he went on, as his friend rejoined him, and they turned up the street,"will you do a job for me?"
31128Of course you have been thinking what to do?"
31128Perhaps you would like to look at the plan of the pit before you go down?
31128That is so, bean''t it?"
31128That''s a creditable piece of work for a working collier, is it not?"
31128Then after a pause the girl asked suddenly,"How do you like Alice Merton, Jack?"
31128There is no chance of any of the ruffians pursuing them, do you think, Jack, when they find they have only us to deal with?"
31128There''s no one she cares for, why should n''t she take you?"
31128There, do n''t you see their lights down the heading?
31128This is Number Ten door, is it not?"
31128We''ll suppose you would n''t take it, but you would n''t be angered, would you?"
31128Well, Jack, have ee cum from meeting?"
31128Well, dad, how are you?"
31128Were n''t frighted at t''dark?"
31128Were you nearly pinning Mother Brice too?"
31128What are you going to do, Jack?"
31128What be wrong with''ee?"
31128What be you staring at, Jack?
31128What be''st thinkin''o''?"
31128What can have put the light out forty feet from the bottom of the shaft?
31128What did''ee hit I and Bess for?
31128What do you say, sir?"
31128What dost think o''t?"
31128What dost think o''that, right over heads o''us all?
31128What ever put such a ridiculous idea in your head?
31128What has a man got to do who ai n''t learnt to be fond o''reading?
31128What is she a doing now?"
31128What is the use of Davy- lamps?
31128What is your opinion?"
31128What on airth made her tak it into her head to go into t''water noo, I wonder?"
31128What on earth have you been doing to yourself?
31128What time have you to study?
31128What would his mother and Bill Haden say?
31128What would''ee say to I if Bess got had up afore the court for pinning t''parson''s coo?"
31128What''s that when the whole district depends upon it?
31128What''s your name?"
31128Where be ye, Nelly Hardy?
31128Who be''st thou?"
31128Who could know whether those dearest to them were not among the shapeless forms each day consigned to their last resting- place?
31128Who will go with me?
31128Who''d a thawt it?
31128Who''d take''ee to be a pitman?"
31128Why didst stop, lad?
31128Why should n''t she take it?
31128Will any one here who has food give it for them?"
31128Will you do that for me, sir?"
31128Would they ever try to get his body up?
31128You have gone into the Vaughan pit, have you not?"
31128You see this cord?
31128You work the same stall as Haden, do you not?"
31128You''ll be careful with it, lad, and not let it fall?"
31128You''ll join, woan''t you, Fred Wood?"
31128You''ve got some unions, have n''t you?"
31128Your dad gets his eight shillings from the union, I suppose?"
31128[ Illustration: IN THE OLD SHAFT-- WILL HE BE SAVED?]
31128a miner said coming angrily forward;"how dare''ee come here and hinder sport?"
31128a new hand, is he not?"
31128are you mad, Harry?
31128could n''t I have gone to fetch the redcoats for you?
31128could n''t I have sat by you in the engine- house, and waited and held your hand when you stood against them all?
31128five hundred Staffordshire miners afeard o''one?
31128he said, seeing a young man at work making a copy of a mining plan;"who are you?"
31128he said, shaking himself,"let me up, I be all right; how''s Harry?"
31128just tell me who says so?"
31128other lasses take presents from their lads, why should n''t Nell take one from her friend?
31128said a sleepy voice upstairs;"be''t thou, Harry and Sally?"
31128she cried;"do n''t go a foot further-- where be my Jack?"
31128that''s what thou be''est looking forward to, Jack, eh?
31128what is the use of all our care as to the ventilation, if at any moment the gas may be fired at a lamp opened for lighting a pipe?
31128what''s brought thee home before time?"
31128what''s that?"
31128what''s the difference?"
31128who is alive?"
6338And Tunnel Six is the haunted corridor, is n''t it?
6338And look here,Will went on,"do you see these threads hanging to the teeth of the saw?
6338And where did he go?
6338And which level is this?
6338And you geezled them all?
6338And you searched them for the money and did n''t find it?
6338Are there really robbers in there?
6338Are we all working in the dark?
6338Are you going to let the ginks flood the mine?
6338Are you sure?
6338Are you the boys who came on from Chicago?
6338Are you thinking of going down the mine tonight?
6338Aw, how are you going to find these boys if you do n''t go into the mine?
6338But ghosts would n''t be giving signals of the Wolf Patrol, would they?
6338But how about this detective?
6338But how do you know there is such a boy?
6338But what caused the partition to fall?
6338But where did you say you came from?
6338But why should two healthy, active boys want to seek such a hiding place?
6338But you know, do n''t you?
6338Can you climb?
6338Can you crawl around there and see who it is,asked George,"or shall I go?
6338Can you find it?
6338Can you find your way back to headquarters alone?
6338Can you find your way out of this dump, now?
6338Can you imagine any reason for their wanting to linger about the mine?
6338Can you see who it is?
6338Can you tell me where Canfield, the caretaker of the mine may be found?
6338Did Mr. Horton say anything to you about your lodgings while here?
6338Did any one come down after us?
6338Did he see you?
6338Did n''t I say it was all right for a theory?
6338Did n''t I tell you about that?
6338Did n''t you hear that noise behind the cribbing?
6338Did this attorney ever inform you why he wanted the boys found?
6338Did you ever see any medals or badges on their clothing which told of Boy Scout experiences?
6338Did you get it?
6338Did you hear the call of the pack a minute ago? 6338 Did you meet the boys who stole our provisions?"
6338Did you notice the suit he had on when he stood talking with us at the station?
6338Did you see any one?
6338Did you see his face? 6338 Disappeared?"
6338Do n''t you know your Indian signs?
6338Do we get the reward now?
6338Do you boys know anything about mines?
6338Do you know how many corners we''ve turned since we came in here?
6338Do you know what those fellows did?
6338Do you know who did this?
6338Do you know, whether these breaker boys belonged to the Boy Scouts or not?
6338Do you mean to say that there is some go- between the boys who may or may not be in the mine and some persons outside who are interested in them?
6338Do you mean to tell me,screamed Carson,"that there are actually robbers here, and that they have taken possession of Tunnel Six?"
6338Do you suppose Canfield is coming here in the middle of the night to turn on the power?
6338Do you suppose they''ve got lost in the mine?
6338Do you think he was drowned?
6338Do you think it''s safe for us to try to navigate that shaft in the dark?
6338Do you think it''s that bum detective?
6338Do you think that is the gink who was prowling around our room?
6338Do you think the boys are hiding in the mine?
6338Does anyone ever go there now?
6338Does he always go alone?
6338Does he know where he left the money?
6338Does he often get foolish in the head like that?
6338Does the fall open into the system of chambers in the center or to the north? 6338 Dream, is it?"
6338Foxy game, eh?
6338Ghosts?
6338Had any strangers been seen talking with them?
6338Has any one passed up the shaft?
6338Has he now recovered from the injury he received that night?
6338Has that fellow got into the mine again? 6338 Has this man Ventner visited the mine often?"
6338Have n''t you forgotten something?
6338Have n''t you got a boat?
6338Have we been traveling all this time to come out in this same old hole at last?
6338Have we got plenty of eatings?
6338Have you figured out how we''re going to get into the mine?
6338Have you got it in camp with you?
6338He did n''t go up in a pillar of fire, did he?
6338He did speak of strange noises and mysterious lights, did n''t he?
6338He sawed the rungs in the shaft, did n''t he? 6338 He''s using the phosphorus, all right, and I can begin to understand what he''s trying to say?
6338His help?
6338His help?
6338How did it ever get loose?
6338How did you pass the night, boys?
6338How do you know it''s been moved?
6338How do you know some one cut it?
6338How do you know that?
6338How do you know that?
6338How do you know they did?
6338How do you think one of these mammoth coal mines looks, any way?
6338How long are these gangways?
6338How long did this new boy stay here?
6338How long since you''ve seen Jimmie Maynard and Dick Thompson?
6338How long will it take to repair the pump?
6338How many bites did you get?
6338How much reward was offered for the return that two hundred thousand dollars?
6338I hope you do n''t expect to pull these boys up through fifty or a hundred feet of shale?
6338I presume he told you all about the case?
6338I wonder how deep the shaft is?
6338I wonder if he thinks he can find two boys in that heap of refuse?
6338I wonder if the Labyrinth mine is so much of a labyrinth after all?
6338I wonder what''s become of that bum detective?
6338If I should light a match, would it set it on, fire?
6338If it is n''t one of the boys, who is it?
6338If they''re anywhere within hearing distance, they ought to answer us when we called out, had n''t they?
6338In the face of my warning?
6338In the meantime,Tommy continued,"do you think you could send one of the county officers out to round up this bum detective?"
6338In this gangway?
6338In what kind of trouble?
6338Is Ventner one of them?
6338Is he always doing that when you see him? 6338 Is he liberal with his money?"
6338Is that a guess, or a piece of positive information?
6338Is there any way by which the mine could be intentionally flooded?
6338Is this Tunnel Six?
6338Is this the gentleman who went batty and lost two hundred thousand dollars?
6338It would be a nice thing to have him blow that money out of the pillar and get away with it, would n''t it?
6338It would be something of a joke if we should butt into that detective now, would n''t it?
6338It''s a sure thing, is n''t it?
6338Lawyer Burlingame never took you into his confidence so far as to post you on the details of the case?
6338Look here, Mr. Canfield,Will said,"how well do you know this mine?"
6338Look here, Will,Tommy said,"Are you sure we made a good search of those three ginks?
6338Looking for the money in the darkness?
6338Loose?
6338Making too much noise in order to attract the attention of a couple of lost youngsters?
6338Me for the elevator?
6338Not a thing about it?
6338Now what do you think of that for a fool?
6338Now who''s in that other boat?
6338Now, what is it?
6338Oh, well, of course the kids would want to test us, would n''t they, seeing that we were only boys?
6338Oh, you''re there, are you?
6338Rats do n''t make sounds like people whispering, do they? 6338 Right about here, or further on?"
6338So he caused the mine to be flooded, did he?
6338So he got in here at last, did he?
6338So he knows where the money is?
6338So he''s in the mine again, is he?
6338So it was n''t hidden back there in that cross cutting at all?
6338So that''s what you came down here after, is n''t it?
6338So the money is there?
6338So you do n''t know who wants these boys, or what they''re wanted for?
6338So you found them, did you?
6338So you saw him doing it, did you?
6338Something exciting?
6338Suppose I slip back there and see what he''s doing?
6338Suppose it should be Jimmie Maynard and Dick Thomson?
6338Suppose that fellow did get the money?
6338That was a blue serge suit, was n''t it?
6338The boys did n''t go up in the air, did they?
6338Then this detective has no right here at all?
6338Then where is it?
6338Then why did he send us?
6338Then why do n''t you tell?
6338Then why does n''t he tell what he did with the money?
6338Then why not fire him?
6338Then you think they are not here?
6338There is no reason why they should be here, is there?
6338They have n''t got wings, have they?
6338Under water?
6338Was he in his right mind?
6338Was the money hidden on this level?
6338We can stick to the ladders, ca n''t we?
6338We''re looking for Carson''s money?
6338We''ve got him blocked in, have n''t we?
6338Well, are you going down?
6338Well, how''re you going to get out?
6338Well, is n''t that water out there running?
6338Well, we had to wait until Elmer reported kind of fellows you were, did n''t we?
6338Well, what are we going to do?
6338Well, what do you know about that?
6338Well, what is it we''ve got to look for now?
6338Well, what''ll we do now to get out?
6338Well, why do n''t we go down and see about it?
6338Well, you did n''t starve, did you?
6338Were these three boys together much after that?
6338Were you boys out there a few moments ago?
6338What Patrol did they belong to?
6338What are those boys in the mine for? 6338 What are we going to do all the afternoon?"
6338What are you doing here?
6338What are you doing that for?
6338What are you fellows trying to do down there?
6338What are you going to do?
6338What are you looking for?
6338What can we do now?
6338What did Mr. Canfield call those two boys we are looking after?
6338What did you do?
6338What did you find in the mine?
6338What do you make of it?
6338What do you mean by leaving us in this plight?
6338What do you mean by some one cutting your string?
6338What do you mean by that?
6338What do you mean by that?
6338What do you mean by trick?
6338What does it look like, and does it always smell like this?
6338What have you done with the highwaymen?
6338What is the next move you are thinking of making?
6338What part of the mine is he in?
6338What part of the world is he searching?
6338What time was this?
6338What was he doing here?
6338What was he doing to you?
6338What was he doing when you saw him?
6338What would he be doing there?
6338What would he be sneaking around here in the night for, if he was n''t engaged in some underhand game? 6338 What''d you say about other boys being hungry?"
6338What''s a blower?
6338What''s coming off here?
6338What''s doing now?
6338What''s he butting in here for?
6338What''s he doing it for?
6338What''s that for?
6338What''s that got to do with this mine mystery?
6338What''s the matter with passing the ham and eggs around?
6338What''s the matter?
6338What''s the meaning of this show of firearms?
6338What''s the trouble?
6338When do you want your first load of provisions?
6338Where are the others?
6338Where are these boys?
6338Where are they now?
6338Where did he go?
6338Where did he go?
6338Where did that fat man come from?
6338Where did these boys lodge?
6338Where did they come from when they came here?
6338Where did you leave, Tommy and Dick?
6338Where do these boys belong?
6338Where does all this gas come from?
6338Where is the money?
6338Where is this town?
6338Where was the use of his sending us down here and making monkeys of us? 6338 Where''d that bum detective go?"
6338Where''d you come from?
6338Where''s Elmer?
6338Where''s Tommy and George?
6338Where''s the fifth boy?
6338Who did it?
6338Who fired that shot?
6338Who is it?
6338Who said anything about going down the ladders tonight?
6338Who sent you here?
6338Who''s looking for these boys?
6338Who''s that talking?
6338Why continue this senseless talk about highwaymen?
6338Why did n''t we geezle him?
6338Why did n''t you say so before?
6338Why did n''t you stay here and watch, then?
6338Why did n''t you tell me there were wild animals in the mine?
6338Why did they shoot you?
6338Why did you go off and leave the camp all alone? 6338 Why do n''t we go and see where he went?"
6338Why do n''t you come out and show yourselves?
6338Why do n''t you go on and tell the story? 6338 Why do n''t you lower the cage?"
6338Why do n''t you stay and see the fun? 6338 Why do you ask?"
6338Why do you say that?
6338Why do you think we will wish you had remained in case you are sent out of the mine?
6338Why on this level?
6338Why were you sleeping in an empty?
6338Why, that''s where I put my--"That''s where you put your money, is it?
6338Why, we''re on the bottom, ai n''t we?
6338Why, you do n''t think that he had anything to do with the trouble at the mine, do you?
6338Yes, but what''s he looking for?
6338You do n''t seem to take to this detective?
6338You do n''t think he had any directions from anyone, do you?
6338You do n''t think he knows, where to look for the money any more than you do?
6338You found it empty?
6338You going back after than bum detective tonight?
6338You know, then, do you?
6338You mean that you want him watched?
6338You never believed in the ghost stories told about Tunnel Six?
6338You remember the shot we heard?
6338You''re not going to venture into the lower level again, are you?
6338You''re not steering us up against a haunted mine, are you?
6338You''re the original little mystery boy, ai n''t you?
6338Almost unable to believe his ears, Will turned to George with a question on his lips:"Did you hear that?"
6338Are you sure the boys will come if you ask them to?"
6338As the boys looked down into the shaft, Tommy seized his chum by the arm and whispered:"Did you see that light down there?"
6338Besides, where would they get their provisions?"
6338Buck?"
6338CHAPTER III WHO CUT THE STRING"Do you suppose he would understand the call of the Beaver Patrol?"
6338CHAPTER IX WHO DISCOVERED THE LEAK?
6338CHAPTER V THE FLOODED MINE"What makes you think it''s Ventner?"
6338CHAPTER X THE BOY IN THE"EMPTY""Did n''t I tell you,"whispered Will,"that he is there with a product of his imagination?
6338Did you?"
6338Do n''t you see what it means?"
6338Do you mean to say,"he added turning to Tommy,"that you bumped into this kid while returning to the mine from the tracks?"
6338Do you see the color?"
6338Do you think we''re going to walk six miles in from the country in order to dodge the detective, and then let him run across us in the mine?"
6338Does he know you''re here?"
6338Have you matches with you?"
6338He''s a nervy old follow, is n''t he?"
6338I guess this Boy Scout training is pretty poor, ai n''t it, eh?
6338I guess you boys can work together without scrapping, ca n''t you?"
6338I wonder if he really has fired the fuse?"
6338In a moment he asked:"Was he cutting into one of the pillars?"
6338In the first place, who knows that we are here on this job?"
6338Is it possible to enter any of the benches or chambers connecting with the north gangway on the lower level by means of this deserted shaft?"
6338Is it very far back?"
6338Is that anywhere near right, Elmer?"
6338Is that anywhere near right?"
6338It was blue, was n''t it?"
6338Now, how could he have known anything about where to look for that money?"
6338Now, what sort of a suit did the detective wear this morning?
6338That room ca n''t be wet yet, can it?"
6338That''s perfectly clear, is n''t it?
6338That''s reasonable, is n''t?"
6338The system works fine, does n''t it?"
6338There was no reply whatever, and in a moment the caretaker called again, this time rather peremptorily:"What are you prowling about the yard for?"
6338Want to hear about it?"
6338We do n''t know how many men were in the mine with Ventner?"
6338What did you say about the pumps stopping, Canfield?"
6338What do they want there?
6338What do you know about that?"
6338What gets me is how are we going to find our way back?
6338What''s your name anyhow?"
6338Who discovered the break in the dividing wall?"
6338Why did n''t they answer our Boy Scout challenge when we replied to their call of the pack?"
6338Why do n''t some one go up and get Canfield, and why is n''t that young rowdy thrown out of the mine?
6338Will asked,"that the boys we are in search of are in the mine?
6338You remember about my seeing some one sneaking in here just ahead of us, do n''t you?"
6338asked Sandy, as the boys cleared away the heaps of slate,"what then?"
6338exclaimed George, taking the depth of the water with an oar,"if the water is four feet deep here, how deep must it be at the middle of the dip?"
6338shouted Carson, starting forward with his stomach out and his fat shoulders thrown back,"what''s all this conversation about?
15503An''does she bide here too?
15503An''what aboot it?
15503An''what are you gaun to quarrel aboot?
15503An''what did ye do wi''the tawse, son?
15503And who are you?
15503And will there be jeely for the pieces?
15503Are ye feart Mag bites ye? 15503 Are ye no''awfu''dizzy?"
15503Are you all safe?
15503Are you gaun to stay here now, too?
15503Are you often hungry, too, mither?
15503Are you right?
15503Are you sure that''s true? 15503 Are you sure you are no''proposin''this just because o''the trouble?
15503Ay, an''what did you do?
15503Ay, mither; but do you no''mind what Bob Smillie said?
15503Ay, that''s a''richt; but what aboot your ain feelings in the matter? 15503 Ay,"came the answer,"what do ye want?"
15503But if she does as muckle work, would ye gie her the same money?
15503But if she picks as many stanes as a laddie, will ye gie her the same pay as me?
15503But wad that be a true marriage?
15503But wha said Mysie Maitland has gang wrang?
15503But what are you driving at?
15503But what''s wrang?
15503But you said jist the noo, that you sometimes thocht you wadna marry onybody else?
15503Can ye len''me yours, Geordie, to get a smoke? 15503 Can ye tell me where Black Jock is a''this time?"
15503Can you suggest anything to help us? 15503 Come now, tell me what led to the fight?
15503Could ye no''try Mysie, too?
15503Could you care for me, Mysie? 15503 Dae you no''?"
15503Dae you no?
15503Did I, Mysie?
15503Did she really think that, Rob?
15503Did they miss me muckle, Rob? 15503 Did ye fin the smell o"her breath?"
15503Did you manage to get away all right, without anyone knowing?
15503Do n''t you think so?
15503Do they ken naething at a''aboot her at Rundells''?
15503Do ye ken onything aboot where he is this nicht?
15503Do ye mind the day she was goin''to tell aboot you takin''hame the bit auld stick for firewood? 15503 Do ye no'', Rob?"
15503Do ye think there''s any truth in that story aboot Smillie havin''sell''t us?
15503Do ye think there''s onything in what he said about them bein''weel- aff?
15503Do ye think, Peter, they are in such need?
15503Do you greet when you are hungry?
15503Do you no''ken me? 15503 Do you not ken me?"
15503Do you remember how we used to fight at school? 15503 Do you think she''ll be living, Matthew?"
15503Do you think the time has come now, Bob?
15503Do you think we couldna''be better folk if we had no poverty?
15503Do you?
15503Does he mean to think I''m goin''to see decent folk starve afore my e''en?
15503Hae you a ticket?
15503Hae you ony idea, mither, as to what has brought this aboot?
15503Has ony o''you onything to suggest?
15503Have you any luggage that I can assist you with?
15503Have you naething else to dae than that? 15503 He''s a wee eatin''-an''-spued''lookin''thing when you see him sittin''there, is n''t he?"
15503Hoo are they a''at hame?
15503Hoo has Nellie taken it, Jenny?
15503Hoo is Jean?
15503Hoo is my mither an''my faither?
15503How are ye a''keepin''the night?
15503How are ye a''the night?
15503How can they be? 15503 How many failed?"
15503How muckle pay will we get?
15503How the hell do ye ken whether I will or no''?
15503How''s that?
15503I canna understand at a''what way you hae bidden oot in a''that rain, Lod''s sake? 15503 I suppose you an''Andrew are goin''to gather for Geordie Sinclair the morn?"
15503I wonder what''s wrong wi''him?
15503If I ha''e been advocatin''the startin''o''a union? 15503 If I had kent onything, dae you think I''d hae kept quiet?"
15503If you stay here, will she need to stay too?
15503In Edinburgh?
15503In the name o''Heavens what''s that?
15503In the name of Heaven, Geordie, are ye gaun to kill my bairn afore my een?
15503Is Tam away yet, Jamie?
15503Is he ill?
15503Is he waur the nicht?
15503Is it not enough? 15503 Is it-- is it-- am I the cause of it, Mysie?
15503Is n''t it a beautiful song, Mysie?
15503Is n''t this better than anything else, just to be happy with everything so peaceful? 15503 Is that a fact, Peter?
15503Is that a''?
15503Is that no''awfu''? 15503 Is that the woman you stay wi''?"
15503Is there no chance of getting down? 15503 Is there no''?"
15503Is yer faither in?
15503It wad be awfu''to hear folk cryin''''Blackleg''after yir faither, wadna''it, Mysie?
15503Jist this minute? 15503 Man, Geordie, what ails ye the nicht?"
15503Man, it''ll no''do muckle guid,said another,"ye mind hoo''big Geordie Ritchie ran awa''wi''the money o''the last union we started?
15503My, that''s a lot o''money, Rab, is n''t it?
15503Mysie, wad you marry me yet?
15503Mysie,he cried, taking her head between his hands and raising it up,"what is it that''s wrang with you?
15503Mysie,he said, and his voice had a note of tender anxiety in it,"what is it, dear?
15503No work yet, Andra?
15503Oh, are you?
15503Oh, is that you, Geordie?
15503Oh, mammy, will I get sweeties noo?
15503Oh, nothing serious, I hope, is it?
15503Surely you can tell me what ails you? 15503 Then, if you do n''t ken, why the damn should you quarrel?
15503Wad I get marriage lines?
15503Wad it no''be wrang to ha''e onything to dae wi''me? 15503 Wad you gie me your address, so that I''ll ken where you bide?"
15503Wad you hae married me, Mysie, if I had asked you afore you went awa''?
15503Wad you tak''me to it, an''I''ll gie you a shillin''?
15503Was you feart for the wind and the rain? 15503 Was you hungry, mither?"
15503We''ve left the school the day, Mr. Walker, an''Mysie an''me want to ken if ye can gie us a job on the pitheid?
15503Well, how do ye think other folk mak''a fortune? 15503 Wha the hell''s this noo?"
15503Wha''s gaun to sing next? 15503 Wha''s gaun to win the day, Andrew?"
15503What aboot the three wives noo, Tam?
15503What are ye goin''to do about it, then?
15503What are ye shovin''at? 15503 What are you drinkin'', chappie?"
15503What are you laughing at, Robin?
15503What are you ravin''at this morning?
15503What brings you here this morning?
15503What dae you think is wrang?
15503What did you think of the games to- day?
15503What do I mak''o''t?
15503What do ye mak''o''that, Andrew?
15503What do you mean by something real, Robert?
15503What does it a''mean? 15503 What does it all mean?"
15503What has happened, mother?
15503What have you to say to me, Mysie?
15503What have you to say, Sinclair?
15503What is it that is wrang? 15503 What is it, Mysie?"
15503What is it, Mysie?
15503What is the matter then?
15503What is the matter, Mysie?
15503What is the meaning of this?
15503What is wrang wi''you? 15503 What is''t that''s wrang with you, Mysie?"
15503What is''t you''re readin''noo?
15503What kind o''conduct''s this I hear ye''ve been up to?
15503What kind o''word did Jenny get frae the polis?
15503What made you greet, mother?
15503What mak''s ye think that?
15503What makes you ask that?
15503What the hell are ye afert for?
15503What the hell are ye girnin''at?
15503What the hell do I ken?
15503What the hell''s a''this to me?
15503What the hell''s wrang wi''you?
15503What think ye o''the fecht noo, Tam?
15503What way are you breakin''my rate?
15503What way hae they sent you?
15503What way is it no''?
15503What way is my place going on?
15503What''ll your folks say?
15503What''s that?
15503What''s wrang wi''her?
15503What''s wrang wi''him, Rob?
15503What''s wrang wi''you, mother?
15503What''s wrang wi''you? 15503 When did this happen?
15503When did this happen?
15503Where are ye goin'', Rab?
15503Where are you gaun?
15503Where away did the roof break?
15503Where do I come in? 15503 Where do you live, Mysie?"
15503Where hae ye been?
15503Where the hell hae ye been, Mag?
15503Where''s my faither?
15503Where''s yir faither? 15503 Whit station?"
15503Why do you ask? 15503 Why is it no use?
15503Why should you not?
15503Why, what could you do otherwise?
15503Why?
15503Will I no''?
15503Will ye wait here, Jamie, so that I can try an''get a meetin''held wi''the rest o''the men when they come alang?
15503Will you no''tell me what is wrong? 15503 Would Nellie no''ken, think ye, what it was that Geordie had against Black Jock that kept him sae quiet?"
15503Would she no''?
15503Would ye no''raither gang to the school a while langer?
15503Ye''ll be gaun to do something decent the day, Tam, when we take ye hame?
15503Yes, I know; but do you think, Robert, that the time has come to put it to the test?
15503Yes, but when you know that why do you allow yourselves to be wheedled?
15503You dinna mean tae tell me that Mysie Maitland has disappeared? 15503 You''ll no''ken, I suppose?"
15503You,said Geordie in some surprise,"hoo''can that be?"
15503A FIGHT WITH DEATH CHAPTER I THE THONG OF POVERTY"Is it not about time you came to your bed, lassie?"
15503After an interval a woman''s voice enquired,"Wha''s that?"
15503Am I just to disappear oot o''everybody''s kennin''altogether?
15503Am I the lass you wad hae ta''en, Peter, if this hadna happened?"
15503And forby,"he went on, as if now more sure of his ground,"what the hell''s wrang in it?
15503And the sea?
15503And what is it you want?"
15503And what is the reason?
15503Another silence; and then came the query--"What way do we not get plenty o''pieces when my daddy''s no''working?
15503Are the handicaps out yet?"
15503Are we a''goin''to be buried thegither?
15503Are ye in there?"
15503Are you angry wi''me, faither?
15503Are you going to marry me?
15503Are you in ony trouble o''ony kind?
15503Are you sure you hinna made a mistake?"
15503But hoo''the hell can folk be happy and worship God on two and sixpence a day?
15503But what if I do n''t have onything mair to dae with you?"
15503CHAPTER XVIII MAG ROBERTSON''S FRENZY"I want to ken what has gone wrong with you?"
15503Can ye no''look what you''re doin''?"
15503Can ye no''watch folk''s toes?"
15503Could you care for me, Mysie?"
15503Dae you think we dinna ken the reason that Sanny has lost his contracts an''the reason why Tam Granger has stepped into them?
15503Did immortality carry with it pain and suffering for them?
15503Did n''t I make a horrible mess of things in the Red Hose?"
15503Did you see the look in her e''en?"
15503Dis a''your customers get the Catechism when they come in here?"
15503Div you ken what has happened?"
15503Do they live a better life than your man or mine?
15503Do ye ken what he does to mak''them nippy?
15503Do ye think they work harder than your man does?
15503Do you think I have no thought o''mysel''?
15503Do you think any of them will be safe so far?"
15503Do you think onybody ever made a lot o''money by their ain work?
15503Does folk no''get them then?"
15503Does he mean to say that we can let folk starve?"
15503Does she think I dinna ken her?
15503God knows where she may be?"
15503Had he at last spoken to her and been discouraged?
15503Had the stranger any connection with her disappearance, he asked himself?
15503Hae I vexed you by speakin''like that?
15503Hae you been oot in it a''?"
15503Have I done anything to ye, for I do n''t ken o''it?"
15503Have you been oot in a''that rain?"
15503He stepped out as Walker advanced, and said:"Is that you, Walker?"
15503Hoo much will it be, think you?"
15503How are they a''keepin''?"
15503How big would it be?
15503How tell her that John was dead, and her father perhaps dying?
15503How tell of her mother eating out her heart in the hungry longing for news of the missing girl, and killing herself with work and worry?
15503How was he to tell Mysie of this?
15503How''s yersel''?"
15503However, we hae a hale day to oorsel''s now, what dae you say to gaun to the length of Kew Gardens?
15503I dinna ken what the world''s comin''to at a'', I''m sure?
15503I wonder what''ll be the cause o''t?
15503If I want religion I''ve a guid richt to hae it; an''forby, if they abolish religion, hoo wad folk do wi''the funerals?
15503If not, did it carry happiness and balm?
15503In the name o''a''that''s guid, what has happened to bring aboot sic news?"
15503Is he awfu''ill?"
15503Is it because they are honester than us?
15503Is it me that is the cause o''you being vexed?"
15503Is it true, mither?"
15503Is n''t it?"
15503Is she in want this nicht, the same as we are oorsels?
15503Is the pain in your back worse the nicht, that you are so restless?"
15503Is-- is it--?"
15503My, it''s awfu'', is n''t it?"
15503Now what do you say?"
15503Oh, Matthew,"she cried out, again bursting into tears, and sobbing pitifully,"what is''t we hae done to be tried like this?
15503Oh, can you no''see, lassie, that it wad be a''richt if you''d do as I want you?"
15503Or if he was doing this deliberately, and did not mean to meet her?
15503Rundell?"
15503She stopped peeling the potatoes to look up and smile, as she replied:"Passed the fifth standard, Robin?"
15503Should he tell of that?
15503So ye mind, Mysie, hoo Tam Graham''s lass aye clashed on the rest o''us on the pit- head?
15503Suppose Peter failed to be at the station, what would she do in a strange city?
15503Tam Donaldson and Robert compared notes after the meeting was over in the following conversation:"What do you think o''it, Tam?"
15503Tam, clearing his throat, led of: Hey, Johnnie Graham, are ye wauken yet, Or is yer fire no''ken''lt yet?
15503Then after a short pause,"Wha was he, Mysie?
15503Then as she choked and spluttered in her anger he said:"But what the hell odds is''t to you, you baggage?"
15503Then the figure of the man drew nearer, and he whispered"Are they all sleeping?"
15503Then, his voice becoming more pleading in its tones,"Wad you be feart to be my wife, Mysie?
15503This was Robert Smillie''s task, and who shall say, looking at the rank and file to- day, that he has failed?
15503Was he dreaming?
15503Was it worth living and going on in this way?
15503Was it worth while to continue?
15503Was it yirsel''?"
15503Was there nothing to be done?
15503Was this Mysie-- this faint apparition of the girl whom he had loved?
15503Were they awfu''vexed at what I did?
15503Wha put it on for ye?
15503Wha the hell hae we to quarrel wi''onyway, I''d like to ken?"
15503What ails you?
15503What are they but shameless lumps who dinna ken what modesty is?"
15503What did my faither say aboot it?
15503What do they think o''me, Rob?
15503What do ye a''think o''it, men?"
15503What do ye think?"
15503What else is there to do?"
15503What had happened to her?
15503What had she done to reap all this suffering?
15503What has happened to you a''this time?
15503What has happened?"
15503What if he were ill, and would not come?
15503What is it, Mysie?
15503What is the matter?"
15503What kin''o''a man is Hardie?"
15503What might his mother not do with a pound?
15503What the hell right has ony gaffer wi''what a man does?
15503What the hell wad a workin''man dae wi''three wives?
15503What was a city like?
15503What was beyond it after death?
15503What was the meaning of all this?
15503What was the meaning of life?
15503What was the nature of her terrible grief?
15503What was wrong with her?
15503What way would the gentry hae a''thae things, an''us hae nane?"
15503What would be waiting for her at the end of the journey?
15503What''s that?"
15503What''s the matter wi''ye?"
15503What''s wrang?"
15503What''s wrang?"
15503What''s wrang?"
15503Where are ye?
15503Where are ye?"
15503Where hae you been?
15503Where has she gane?
15503Where have you been?
15503Where have you been?
15503Where have you been?"
15503Where was Mysie, he wondered?
15503Who shall catch that glow of strength and health, and work it into deathless song?
15503Who shall sing in lyrical language the exhilaration of such splendid men''s work?
15503Why did you go away?"
15503Why were you fighting with Peter?"
15503Will I hae to gang away, an''no''tell her?"
15503Will I kiss you held and make it better?"
15503Will she be hungry an''homeless, ill clad, an''oot in the storm?
15503Will you come?"
15503Will you come?"
15503Will you let me have a try?
15503Will you let me try?"
15503Will you marry me, Mysie?"
15503Willn''t ye, Mysie?"
15503Would he be in time to blast the barrier down before the steadily creeping moss rose to cut off his only avenue of escape?
15503Would he, indeed, have to wait till after death before knowing anything of real happiness or comfort?
15503Would immortality, if such there were, be worth having?
15503Would n''t you like to marry me?"
15503Would she choose him before all these others?
15503Wull there be onything wrang?"
15503Yet what could be the meaning of all this mystery?
15503You are wet to the skin, an''there''s no a dry steek on you?
15503You say you never intended to be onybody''s wife but mine; an''what wye should you no''do as I propose?
15503You''re ill. What''s the matter?
15503he enquired, his hands at once going tenderly over her bent head, and caressing it as he spoke,"What is it, Mysie?
15503my dochter, what is it?"
15503where have you come from?
4240After all, is it not the teaching of Christ?
4240After all, what good was this?
4240After all, who can take the nationalisation of Ireland seriously?
4240Ah, but would their kisses be fine and powerful as the kisses of the firm- mouthed master?
4240Ah, if only he would have made this demand of her?
4240And Birkin, would he acknowledge, or would he deny her?
4240And at her side Winifred chuckled with glee, and said: â � � It isnâ � � t like him, is it?
4240And do you think I ever shall?
4240And if she did, would he acknowledge her?
4240And now, she doesnâ � � t take any more notice than if it was one of the servants.â � � â � � No?
4240And that kills everything, doesnâ � � t it?
4240And was he fated to pass away in this knowledge, this one process of frost- knowledge, death by perfect cold?
4240And werenâ � � t you ever afraid?â � � â � � In my life?
4240And what did she say then?
4240And what does it mean to me, after all?
4240And what then?
4240And what would she do with herself, when she had destroyed herself?
4240And who can take political England seriously?
4240And who wants a third heaven?
4240And why?
4240And why?
4240And why?
4240And youâ � � ll be sure to come?
4240Angelâ � � angelâ � � donâ � � t you think sheâ � � s good enough and beautiful enough to go to heaven, Gudrun?
4240Apart from that, I live because I am living.â � � â � � And whatâ � � s your work?
4240Are you going for a walk?
4240Are you going?
4240Arenâ � � t we exchanging the substance for the shadow, arenâ � � t we forfeiting life for this dead quality of knowledge?
4240As a man as of a knife: does it cut well?
4240As for her, when would she so much go beyond herself as to accept him at the quick of death?
4240But I am no good at those thingsâ � � they donâ � � t interest me.â � � â � � They donâ � � t?
4240But after all, what did it matter?
4240But after all, why not?
4240But he took off his hat and smiled at them with a real smile in his eyes, so that Brangwen cried out heartily in relief: â � � How do you do?
4240But isnâ � � t it really an illusion to think you can get out of it?
4240But opinions vary, donâ � � t they?
4240But the other is our real realityâ � � â � � â � � But what other?
4240But there, what did it matter?
4240But was she herself any better?
4240But what did it matter?
4240But what made her do that?
4240But why come to any road?
4240But why do you look so cross?
4240By the way, how did things go off with Pussum after I left you?
4240Can anybody lend me a shilling?
4240Can you believe you lived in this place and never felt it?
4240Can youâ � � â � � she sniffed, and sniffed at the bottleâ � � â � � can you smell bilberries?
4240Canâ � � t you be together without marriage?
4240Canâ � � t you go away and live somewhere without marriage?
4240Could he fold her in his arms and sheathe her in sleep?
4240Could she give herself to it?
4240Did all enjoy it?
4240Did all enjoy the thrill?
4240Did he not think her good looking, then?
4240Did he think that pride or masterful will or physical strength would help him?
4240Did it?â � � or was thereâ � �?
4240Did one have to die like thisâ � � having the life extracted forcibly from one, whilst one smiled and made conversation to the end?
4240Did she want â � � goodnessâ � �?
4240Did you ever see anything like Sir Joshua?
4240Did you sleep well?
4240Didnâ � � t Winifred tell you?
4240Do you mind putting out the flame under the chafing- dish, Rupert?
4240Do you notice how it exalts everything?
4240Do you think he is your property, that you can come whenever you like?
4240Do you think if I drink water it would take off this hiccup?
4240Do you think you can hire a woman like Gudrun Brangwen with money?
4240Do you understand what I mean?
4240Does he think itâ � � s manly, to torture a horse?
4240Does it matter, whether I drink white wine this evening, or whether I drink nothing?
4240Does one begrudge it her?
4240Doesnâ � � t it destroy all our spontaneity, all our instincts?
4240Donâ � � t the botanists put it highest in the line of development?
4240Donâ � � t you think I might have a room to myself, now Ursula has gone?
4240Down the old, old Imperial road?
4240Dresden, Paris, or London, what did it matter?
4240For where was life to be found?
4240Gerald himself, who was responsible for all this industry, was he a good director?
4240Geraldâ � � who was he?
4240Good God, do you think I should sleep?
4240Gudrun, you will dance, wonâ � � t you?
4240Has it?
4240Has_ everything_ that happens a universal significance?
4240Have we not the courage to go on with our journey, must we cry â � � I darenâ � � tâ � �?
4240Have you got it?
4240He was only talking to himself, saying â � � Over, is it?
4240He was so healthy and well- made, why did he make one ashamed, why did one feel repelled?
4240How are the rest of your affairs progressing, apart from the business?â � � â � � The rest of my affairs?
4240How can there be any secrecy, when everything is known to all of us?
4240How can there be any secrets, we are all the same organisms?
4240How can you know anything, when you donâ � � t believe?
4240How could anything that gave one satisfaction be excluded?
4240How could he say â � � Iâ � � when he was something new and unknown, not himself at all?
4240How could it matter, what he did?
4240How did we live?
4240How disentangle the passion for equality from the passion of cupidity, when begins the fight for equality of possessions?
4240How do you do, Mrs Brangwen?
4240How far, in their inverted culture, had these West Africans gone beyond phallic knowledge?
4240How much more of him was there to know?
4240How much was there?
4240How should Gerald hope to satisfy a woman of Gudrunâ � � s calibre?
4240How should he close again?
4240How was it?
4240I can manage perfectly well with my old Oxford Turkish.â � � â � � But may I give it to you?
4240I donâ � � t really know enough about it.â � � â � � You know what they say?
4240I shall see you again, shanâ � � t I?
4240I want them only for reference.â � � â � � But canâ � � t I give you a new book?
4240I was never so taken aback in my life.â � � â � � And werenâ � � t you furious?â � � â � � Furious?
4240I will write to you here, at the school, shall I?
4240If a man can see the next step to be taken, why should he fear the next but one?
4240If the deepest desire be now, to go on into the unknown of death, shall one forfeit the deepest truth for one more shallow?
4240If the latter, how was it he was always talking about sensual fulfilment?
4240If this were human life, if these were human beings, living in a complete world, then what was her own world, outside?
4240In one mood, not a bit, in another, very much.â � � â � � But doesnâ � � t it make you feel ashamed?
4240Is Mr Birkin in?
4240Is every manâ � � s life subject to pure accident, is it only the race, the genus, the species, that has a universal reference?
4240Is it not rather an appeal to the proprietory instinct, the_ commercial_ instinct?
4240Is our day of creative life finished?
4240Is_ that_ spiritual, her bullying, her conceit, her sordid materialism?
4240Isnâ � � t he funny?
4240Isnâ � � t it a sweetling?
4240Isnâ � � t it delightful to live here?
4240Isnâ � � t it wonderful?
4240Isnâ � � t the young green beautiful?
4240Isnâ � � t_ anything_ better than this?
4240It is death to oneâ � � s selfâ � � but it is the coming into being of another.â � � â � � But how?
4240Italy?
4240Itâ � � s no trouble just to hear what they have to say.â � � â � � How many more have been here today?
4240Itâ � � s quite nuts for you?
4240Iâ � � m sure youâ � � ve never loved a woman.â � � â � � You feel that, do you?
4240Just as he had decided this, one of the Crich daughters came up, saying: â � � Wonâ � � t you come and take your hat off, mother dear?
4240Just because humanity was wiped out?
4240Matrimonial?
4240Mi ricordi, mi ricordi beneâ � � non è vero, piccolo?
4240Must he see, must he know?
4240Must one go through all the horror of this victory over death, the triumph of the integral will, that would not be broken till it disappeared utterly?
4240Nevertheless, when her husband was away, she would come down like a wolf on the crawling supplicants: â � � What do you people want?
4240Nothing?
4240Oh, God, could one bear it, this past which was gone down the abyss?
4240Oh, why wasnâ � � t somebody kind to her?
4240One doesnâ � � t know her in five minutes, does one?
4240One must have oneâ � � s workshop, otherwise one never ceases to be an amateur.â � � â � � Is that so?
4240Only, I neednâ � � t be churlish to her, need I?
4240Or can he not?
4240Or is this not true, is there no such thing as pure accident?
4240Oriental?
4240Shall I?
4240She said to herself, in torment recalling the blow and the kiss, â � � after all, what is it?
4240She seemed sorry afterwards.â � � â � � Did she?
4240She was suspended in perfect consciousnessâ � � and of what was she conscious?
4240Should he climb the other ridge, or wander along the hollow?
4240Social passionâ � � what social passion has she?â � � show it me!â � � where is it?
4240Supposing he did something he would not wish to be seen doing, thinking he was quite private?
4240Supposing this old social state_ were_ broken and destroyed, then, out of the chaos, what then?
4240That was Whatmore Villageâ � �?
4240The daffodils were pretty, but who could see them?
4240The little things seem to be more subtle to herâ � � â � � â � � But they arenâ � � t, are they?
4240The moment he saw her, he dropped his tools and came forward, saying: â � � How do you do?
4240The south?
4240The wind still sits in that quarter, does it?
4240Then Birkin said: â � � Am I hindering you?
4240Then he said: â � � Waste it?
4240Then she said with strange assumption of authority: â � � Yes, but even so, is the patriotic appeal an appeal to the racial instinct?
4240Then the elder man, with the whiskers round his face, said in a prurient manner to the young man: â � � What price that, eh?
4240Then what made her do it?
4240Then, reluctantly, he answered: â � � Wellâ � � what else is in front of them, but disappearance?
4240Then, rousing, â � � And what is it you donâ � � t want?
4240Then, switching off and becoming cold, he asked, in a voice full of considerate kindness: â � � Is there anything we can eat here?
4240Then, upon reconsideration, very uneasy: â � � Though Gudrun isnâ � � t so very simple, is she?
4240They hated his words â � � in the public road.â � � What did they care for the public road?
4240Want money?
4240Want_ more_ money?
4240Was a manager a good manager?
4240Was a miner a good miner?
4240Was anybody any better?
4240Was he a messenger, an omen of the universal dissolution into whiteness and snow?
4240Was he going to ignore her, was he going to take no further notice of her secret?
4240Was he poking fun, or not?
4240Was it a way out?
4240Was it all real?
4240Was it any good going south, to Italy?
4240Was it even a union in love and goodness?
4240Was it mere social effect, fulfilment of ambition in the social world, in the community of mankind?
4240Was it really only an idea, or was it the interpretation of a profound yearning?
4240Was it sheer blind force of passion that would satisfy her now?
4240Was not death infinitely more lovely and noble than such a life?
4240Was not the adventure of death infinitely preferable?
4240Was she his mother?
4240Was that all a human being amounted to?
4240Was there left now nothing but to break off from the happy creative being, was the time up?
4240Was there no other way?
4240Was this then all that remained?
4240We had a_ fine_ party one night in Fanny Bathâ � � s studio.â � � â � � Did you?
4240What about Wupert?â � � â � � Rupert?
4240What are those?
4240What are you going to do to him, Miss Brangwen?
4240What could be happening, what was it, the great hammer- stroke resounding through the house?
4240What did Hermione matter, what did people matter altogether?
4240What did she care, that Gerald had created a richly- paying industry out of an old worn- out concern?
4240What did she care?
4240What did the small privacies matter?
4240What did they expect of her?
4240What do you mean?
4240What do you say?
4240What does all this knowing mean to me?
4240What does she care for, what is her spirituality?
4240What dâ � � you say?
4240What else is there to do with it?â � � â � � But leave this, wonâ � � t you?
4240What even is a blow?
4240What had he to do with her?
4240What had it all to do with her?
4240What had she to do with parents and antecedents?
4240What have you done to him?
4240What if the house were closed in darkness?
4240What is a kiss?
4240What is it but the worst and last form of intellectualism, this love of yours for passion and the animal instincts?
4240What is man doing, when he is at a fair like this?
4240What should she do?
4240What should she feel?
4240What should she say?
4240What then need we think for further?
4240What then, what next?
4240What then?
4240What then?
4240What then?
4240What was degrading?
4240What was he thinking, what was he feeling, as he stood there so rapt, saying nothing?
4240What was it all?
4240What was it, after all, that a woman wanted?
4240What was one to think or feel?
4240What was she short of now?
4240What was she to do?
4240What was the good of talking, any way?
4240What were the words about?
4240What would he do to her?
4240What?
4240What?
4240What?
4240When could she disturb him?
4240When could she rouse him and send him away?
4240Where shall we have it?â � � â � � Where would you like it?
4240Where then?â � � home?
4240Where was he going?
4240Where were they standing, on earth, or suspended in some cardboard box?
4240Where?
4240Which should it be?
4240Which?
4240Who but a fool would accept this of Gudrun?
4240Who can care a straw, really, how the old patched- up Constitution is tinkered at any more?
4240Who can take political Ireland really seriously, whatever it does?
4240Who can?
4240Who cared?
4240Who cares a button for our national ideas, any more than for our national bowler hat?
4240Who else?
4240Who wants what_ luck_ would bring?
4240Whoâ � � s coming then?â � � the Duchess of Portland?â � � â � � No.â � � â � � Oh, not her?
4240Why ask about the next but one?
4240Why bother about human relationships?
4240Why canâ � � t you be single by yourself, as you are always saying?
4240Why come to life again?
4240Why could they not remain individuals, limited by their own limits?
4240Why deny itâ � � why make any question of it?
4240Why did he ever forget it?
4240Why did she betray the two of them so terribly, in embracing the glow of the evening?
4240Why did she leave him standing there, with the ice- wind blowing through his heart, like death, to gratify herself among the rosy snow- tips?
4240Why did she so lose courage?
4240Why did they move her so strongly and mystically?
4240Why do you bother about humanity?â � � â � � Why do I?
4240Why does he give himself away to such_ canaille?_ Itâ � � s a thing that_ can not be borne._â � � Gerald wondered over her strange passion.
4240Why donâ � � t you establish open house for them?
4240Why form any serious connections at all?
4240Why is Rupert such a_ fool_ as to write such letters to them?
4240Why is this the goal of life?
4240Why must she do it?
4240Why must you force people to agree with you?
4240Why not be bestial, and go the whole round of experience?
4240Why not be casual, drifting along, taking all for what it was worth?
4240Why not drift on in a series of accidentsâ � � like a picaresque novel?
4240Why not leave the other being, free, why try to absorb, or melt, or merge?
4240Why not?
4240Why not?
4240Why seek to draw a brand and a curse across the life that had caused the accident?
4240Why should I?
4240Why should he pretend to have anything to do with human beings at all?
4240Why should he turn like this?
4240Why should the master be so out- of- all- proportion rich?
4240Why should we ask what comes after the experience, when the experience is still unknown to us?
4240Why should we consider ourselves, men and women, as broken fragments of one whole?
4240Why should you hate the moon?
4240Why should you want my opinion?
4240Why strive for a coherent, satisfied life?
4240Why take them seriously- male or female?
4240Why then should he forego it?
4240Why this dreadful all- comprehensiveness, this hateful tyranny?
4240Why were they not immolated on the pyre of the husband, like the sati in India?
4240Will you let me give it to you?
4240Wonâ � � t you come and see me?
4240Would he never come back?
4240Would you have it?
4240Yes?
4240Yet why be afraid?
4240You are so false, and untrue, how could you know anything?
4240You believe in nothing visible, except grass and birds?
4240You didnâ � � t definitely ask her for it, I suppose?â � � â � � I?
4240You know what I mean?
4240You know where your things are?
4240You know you can manage them.â � � â � � Do you weally?
4240You understand, donâ � � t you?
4240Your spiritual brides canâ � � t give you what you want, they arenâ � � t common and fleshy enough for you, arenâ � � t they?
4240Yours is, â � � Do you love me?
4240Youâ � � re not satisfied, are you?
4240_ Do_ I want a real, ultimate relationship with Gerald?
4240_ How_ could he look at her with those clear, warm, waiting eyes, waiting for her, even now?
4240_ How_ was he going to come to her?
4240_ She_ spiritual?
4240_ Why_ this public avowal?
4240_ Wohin?_ What a lovely word!
4240_ You_ never really mixed, did you?
4240Ã � vero che mi ricordi?
4240â � � And as to your earningsâ � � you donâ � � t mind taking from me what you have taken from the Education Committee, do you?
4240â � � And how do you propose to begin?
4240â � � And nothing else?
4240â � � And were you warm?
4240â � � Any hope of Englandâ � � s becoming real?
4240â � � Are they as far out as this?
4240â � � Are you gloomy or cheerful?
4240â � � Arenâ � � t they beautiful?
4240â � � Arenâ � � t they terrifying?
4240â � � Badly, I should think; seeing how self- conscious she is.â � � â � � She is self- conscious, is she?
4240â � � But I want it to be something else.â � � â � � But why?
4240â � � But I, myself, who am myself, what have I to do with equality with any other man or woman?
4240â � � But could you_ bear_ to have it swinging to your boat?
4240â � � But must one take no steps at all?
4240â � � But that way of arguing by imaginary instances is not supposed to be genuine, is it?
4240â � � But what about you, and the rowing?
4240â � � But why does he do it?â � � cried Ursula, â � � why does he?
4240â � � But why should you give me an expensive rug?
4240â � � But why?
4240â � � Can you tell me, â � � he said, â � � where this road goes?â � � â � � Road?
4240â � � Canâ � � t you feel in some way, a thick, hot attraction in it?
4240â � � Consciousness comes to them, willy- nilly.â � � â � � But do you think they are better for having it quickened, stimulated?
4240â � � Darling one, will you be drawn?
4240â � � Didnâ � � t want to be bothered just then, I suppose.â � � â � � But is this really so?
4240â � � Didnâ � � t you know?
4240â � � Do I?
4240â � � Do black- beetles bite?
4240â � � Do you ever consciously detest meâ � � hate me with mystic hate?
4240â � � Do you feel ill, Julius?
4240â � � Do you know the little red ovary flowers, that produce the nuts?
4240â � � Do you mind my coming to find you?
4240â � � Do you really think, Rupert, â � � she asked, as if Ursula were not present, â � � do you really think it is worth while?
4240â � � Do you want to know what it is in him?
4240â � � Donâ � � t they look saurian?
4240â � � Donâ � � t you find, that things fail to materialize?
4240â � � Eh?
4240â � � Eh?
4240â � � For your sins?
4240â � � Give Miss Brangwen some flowers?
4240â � � Go away with you?
4240â � � He might help me to get it down.â � � â � � But what about your hand?
4240â � � Hello, Hermione, are you back again?
4240â � � Heâ � � s dead?
4240â � � How can anybody ever be right, who is so cocksure?
4240â � � How do you know what my womanly feelings are, or my thoughts or my ideas?
4240â � � I didnâ � � t know you had company.â � � â � � No?
4240â � � I donâ � � t want to destroy it.â � � â � � Well do you mind having it instead of the crabs?
4240â � � I eat, thou eatest, he eats, we eat, you eat, they eatâ � � â � � and what then?
4240â � � I say, â � � he said to her one evening, in an odd, unthinking, uncertain way, â � � wonâ � � t you stay to dinner tonight?
4240â � � I?
4240â � � I?
4240â � � If I know about the flower, donâ � � t I lose the flower and have only the knowledge?
4240â � � Is it?
4240â � � Isnâ � � t it so?
4240â � � Itâ � � s just how it affects us, you see.â � � â � � You like to be affectedâ � � donâ � � t you?
4240â � � May we see?
4240â � � No, why should it?
4240â � � No?
4240â � � No?
4240â � � Now, â � � he said, when the envelopes were sealed and addressed, â � � shall we post them here, both together?
4240â � � Noâ � � why?
4240â � � Oh do call this one Lady Winifred, if she turns out perfect, will you?
4240â � � Oh is it?
4240â � � Oh, heâ � � s weally bwought it off then, has he?
4240â � � Oh, â � � he said, â � � I donâ � � t want to die, why should I?
4240â � � On your marriage?â � � or marrying?
4240â � � Rupert, you are coming to Shortlands to dinner?
4240â � � She is a living creature, why should she stand anything, just because you choose to make her?
4240â � � Somebodyâ � � s got to see it through, you know.â � � â � � Have they?
4240â � � That so?
4240â � � Thatâ � � s all you think of me, is it?
4240â � � The possibilities of love exhaust themselves.â � � â � � Do they?
4240â � � The question is, â � � he said, â � � what is madness?
4240â � � Theyâ � � re nasty, when they do turn.â � � â � � Turn where?
4240â � � Ursula, what are you saying?
4240â � � We can both of us row like water- spiders.â � � â � � You can?
4240â � � We knew you were going to get married, did we?
4240â � � We might have tea rather lateâ � � shall we?â � � and have high tea?
4240â � � Well then, â � � said Gerald; â � � shall we strip and begin?
4240â � � Well, Winifred, â � � said the father, â � � arenâ � � t you glad Miss Brangwen has come?
4240â � � Weâ � � re not like themâ � � are we?
4240â � � What are you doing?â � � â � � How do you do, Hermione?
4240â � � What comes next?
4240â � � What do you mean by a horse?
4240â � � What do you think of that figure there?
4240â � � What is it?
4240â � � What things, Mr Colliery- Manager Crich?
4240â � � What?
4240â � � What?
4240â � � Where, where?
4240â � � Where?
4240â � � Who is it that keeps on insisting?
4240â � � Who knew?
4240â � � Who told me?
4240â � � Why couldnâ � � t he take the horse away, till the trucks had gone by?
4240â � � Why do you grovel before it?
4240â � � Why donâ � � t you believe it?
4240â � � Why donâ � � t you stay in bed when you are seedy?
4240â � � Why make her stand all that time at the crossing?
4240â � � Why must you always praise the past, at the expense of the present?
4240â � � Why should love be a bond?
4240â � � Why should you hanker after other people?
4240â � � Why should you_ need_ others?
4240â � � Why should_ you_ take it on yourself?
4240â � � Why, why are people all balls of bitter dust?
4240â � � Why, â � � said Ursula, â � � did you make the horse so stiff?
4240â � � Why?
4240â � � Why_ does_ every woman think her aim in life is to have a hubby and a little grey home in the west?
4240â � � Winifred, â � � said the father, â � � have you a pair of shoes for Miss Brangwen?
4240â � � Wonâ � � t somebody dance?
4240â � � Wonâ � � t you leave it?
4240â � � Wonâ � � t you say good- night to Mr Birkin?
4240â � � Wonâ � � t you?
4240â � � Wouldnâ � � t it be pretty?
4240â � � Yes my boy?
4240â � � Yesâ � � what more do you want?
4240â � � You donâ � � t care for the water?â � � â � � For the water?
4240â � � You donâ � � t?
4240â � � You donâ � � t?
4240â � � You know, â � � he said, â � � that I am having rooms here at the mill?
4240â � � You must use me if I can be of any help at allâ � � but how can I?
4240â � � You think it would?
4240â � � You think your sister will come?
4240â � � You think, donâ � � t you, â � � she said slowly, â � � that I only want physical things?
4240â � � You?
4240â � � Youâ � � re not getting into a state, are you?
4240â � � Youâ � � re not?
4240â � �_E che lavoroâ � � che lavoro?
4240â � �_Really!_â � � Gudrun flushed darkâ � � â � � But anything really worth while?
4240â � �_Wohin?_â � � That was the questionâ � �_wohin?_ Whither?
4240â � �_Wohin?_â � � That was the questionâ � �_wohin?_ Whither?
28697A warrant for me?
28697According to that I sha n''t be here a great while unless this command is obeyed?
28697Ai n''t I here to protect yer?
28697Ai n''t we going to see Sam?
28697All well?
28697Am I to go out?
28697An''if I do n''t choose to swear?
28697And Billings, too?
28697And I''m to leave home?
28697And Sam?
28697And if we go home, what then?
28697And leave you alone?
28697And let them destroy the buildings?
28697And they mean to flog me for it?
28697And you are going into the breaker?
28697And you think he stole the package from Sam?
28697Are we to give up working?
28697Are we to stay there?
28697Are you acquainted with all the members?
28697Are you certain the money was in your pocket when you laid down?
28697Are you goin''on alone?
28697Are you goin''to fight?
28697Are you going into the street?
28697Are you hurt much?
28697Are you intending to hire a team?
28697Are you intending to stay here?
28697Are you likely to get one soon?
28697Are you shut in, too?
28697Are you sure the trade ca n''t be backed out of?
28697Are you sure we are right?
28697Are you willing to stay here until he returns?
28697Bill Thomas wants to know if you will start the pumps? 28697 Brace?"
28697But can we do nothin''?
28697But how are we helpin''ourselves by floodin''the mine?
28697But how''ll he get out?
28697But if Billings''crowd are watching for you?
28697But since they do n''t, what will be the result of this one?
28697But suppose Wright has sent for soldiers? 28697 But suppose he should be convicted?"
28697But the boys who are watching for you?
28697But the widow''s property?
28697But what about Fred? 28697 But what about Sam?"
28697But what am I to do?
28697But what effect can his innocence or guilt have on the other question?
28697But what good will it be to stay here?
28697But what good will that do''em?
28697But what has become of Fred?
28697But what is to be done in case we do n''t see them dig up the money?
28697But what is to prevent our leaving here?
28697But what''s become of him? 28697 But why are us miners barred out?"
28697But why is n''t something done to aid them?
28697Ca n''t we begin to dig? 28697 Ca n''t we dig our way through?
28697Ca n''t we dig through this bank and reach the hole in the roof?
28697Can we raise money enough to carry the thing through?
28697Can you get back?
28697Can you get out now?
28697Can you hold him, Tim, while I get something to tie his hands?
28697Could n''t you make it large enough to crawl through?
28697Did he say where he''d be?
28697Did n''t see anything of the villains, eh?
28697Did n''t you take any provisions?
28697Did they all get killed?
28697Did what?
28697Did you catch what Billings said when he left?
28697Did you see Fred?
28697Did you see anyone who might be following you?
28697Did you spend any time there looking for us?
28697Did you spend your money to buy us food?
28697Do n''t eh?
28697Do n''t the folks know what kind of a boy that Dobson feller is?
28697Do n''t you intend to call upon the superintendent?
28697Do n''t you intend to do anything toward trying to escape?
28697Do n''t you suppose Mr. Wright will try to do something if these fellows really mean to hang Brace?
28697Do n''t you suppose this is to prevent you from discovering that a portion of the rioters are getting in through the old shaft?
28697Do n''t you suppose we could manage to get a thousand dollars?
28697Do n''t you think that is a foolish idea?
28697Do you belong?
28697Do you fancy you, the regulators, or I, are so important that the whole force is laid off because of anything which may have happened between us?
28697Do you know the new breaker boy? 28697 Do you know the straight cut?"
28697Do you know the way home?
28697Do you know who owns it?
28697Do you mean his partner?
28697Do you mean the shutting down of the machinery?
28697Do you mean the whole of that?
28697Do you mean to accuse us of tryin to drown each other?
28697Do you mean to go back on a friend?
28697Do you mean to put his word agin ours?
28697Do you really mean to kill them?
28697Do you really mean to sleep in the woods?
28697Do you suppose I''ll run in debt for the purpose of treating you?
28697Do you suppose he thinks we do n''t want to see him just because we have been fortunate?
28697Do you suppose they really mean to hang him?
28697Do you suppose this land is valuable?
28697Do you think Billings would dare to force his way into the mine?
28697Do you think I could remain there knowing my boy is dying, or-- or-- dead?
28697Do you think I''ll let a boy steal eight hundred dollars, and do nothing toward recovering it?
28697Do you think anything could be accomplished by my visiting Sam?
28697Do you think it is near the time when the men are to flood the mine?
28697Do you think it will be possible to fight successfully a company as rich as ours?
28697Do you think the strike is really over?
28697Do you think the whole matter is finished?
28697Do you think there is any chance that we can get out of here?
28697Do you think there is any chance the men will try to hurt Brace now?
28697Do you think this fellow knows anything about the money?
28697Do you think we''ve got any chance of winning?
28697Do you want the cartridges?
28697Do you want to stay an''run the chance of bein''carried back to Blacktown?
28697Does Skip Miller think he can say who I shall talk with?
28697Does Wright know who did it?
28697Does he believe him guilty?
28697Does he say anything against us?
28697Even admittin''that''s so, which I do n''t, why should Fred Byram an''Bill be pulled into the fuss? 28697 Explosion?"
28697For thirty- five cents a day?
28697Fred, what have you got to say in answer to this boy''s story?
28697Got one for me?
28697Green?
28697Had n''t I the right to? 28697 Had they begun to dig a tunnel?"
28697Has Thomas quit also?
28697Has he really got any hold on the property?
28697Has he said anything about Sam?
28697Have the boys been tryin''to make you pay your footing?
28697Have they gone back?
28697Have we got to do more trampin''jest on account of a sneak like this?
28697Have you been at that work all this time?
28697Have you been here ever since?
28697Have you been there all day?
28697Have you been traveling all this time?
28697Have you given up all hope?
28697Have you got anything to eat?
28697Have you got the best of both?
28697Have you heard anything?
28697Have you left our employ?
28697Have you seen Mr. Wright to- day?
28697Have you seen Skip?
28697Have you seen your friend since you left him to go in search of provisions?
28697He does, eh?
28697How can I pick up anything while my legs are tied?
28697How could I find him there?
28697How could that be done, sir?
28697How could we raise so much money?
28697How did he know you had the bills?
28697How did you chance to find the boy?
28697How did you come here?
28697How did you do it?
28697How did you get this money from Thorpe?
28697How did you happen to get here just when you were most needed?
28697How do you know? 28697 How do you know?"
28697How do you know?
28697How do you make that out?
28697How far do you suppose we are from Farley''s?
28697How is Bill?
28697How large a cut is there through the wall where you are standing?
28697How long ago?
28697How long are we likely to remain on duty?
28697How long before you''ll be ready?
28697How long do you count on staying?
28697How long since you left him?
28697How long will it be before the works can be opened again?
28697How many are there?
28697How many of the company''s men are on guard at the slope?
28697How much farther must we go?
28697How much money do you want?
28697How so?
28697How so?
28697How will that affect our interest?
28697How will that mend matters?
28697How would it do for me to go and meet him?
28697How would that benefit him?
28697How?
28697How?
28697I ca n''t see what you want it for?
28697I do n''t feel like givin''over the search so easy; s''pose we four have a reg''lar hunt in the morning?
28697I wonder how it happened that I did n''t see that when they left the last camp?
28697I wonder what caused the first man to come here lookin''for it?
28697I wonder what the matter is with him?
28697I''ll never hurt you or anybody else again128 DOWN THE SLOPE CHAPTER I THE BREAKER BOY"Jest moved here, eh?"
28697If they are afraid to let the boys come nearer than hailing distance, what''ll be done when the mob get here?
28697If you think I''m a thief, why not send me to jail with Sam?
28697If you''re afraid, why not kill me? 28697 In the first place,"Billings began,"we want to know why the works have been shut down?"
28697Is Billings leadin''them?
28697Is Skip here?
28697Is he likely to go to any of the bosses?
28697Is it as good as that taken out at Farley''s?
28697Is n''t it possible to find the boy who first suggested Dobson was the thief?
28697Is that a fair division? 28697 Is that all?"
28697Is that the only thing he knows of to stop matters?
28697Is there any chance that the drift''s choked with gas?
28697Is there anything for us to do?
28697Is there anything new at Farley''s?
28697It ai n''t likely we could get into the jail now the day is so far spent, an''if we did, what would be the use? 28697 It begins to look as if we had made a big mistake; but if that is so, what was the meaning of the talk they made last night?"
28697It is, but how can we take advantage of the discovery? 28697 It''s tough, but there''s no way out of it unless----""What?
28697Matters are beginning to look brighter already,Bill cried, and Joe asked gruffly:"How do you make that out?"
28697Money gone, eh?
28697My footing?
28697Now tell us where that man is?
28697Now what are you drivin''at?
28697Now who will come? 28697 Now, look here, matey, what will be the good of gettin''yourself in jail?
28697Now, what can that fellow be doing?
28697Of course not; what makes you talk such nonsense?
28697Of course, else how could we find the boy? 28697 Perhaps Billings''gang worked a spell after the order to quit was given?"
28697S''pose I slip out an''watch for him? 28697 S''posen I did?
28697S''pposen they have? 28697 Say,"Skip began, as he stepped threateningly in front of Fred,"what''s the meanin''of all this?"
28697Shall you go back with me, or try to find the shaft?
28697Skip?
28697So I''m to get a double dose, eh?
28697So I''m to sneak over to the store, eh?
28697So they call themselves regulators, eh?
28697So to spite them as have done you a bad turn you''re willin''to murder me?
28697So we''re to be driven out?
28697So you''ve found out what you come for, eh?
28697Suppose they got in and did n''t find you?
28697Tell me what you''ve heard?
28697That''s jest the size of it; but what can be done? 28697 The story is too long for a telegram,"Fred said,"so suppose we say by wire that there is nothing particularly new, and write a letter?"
28697Then I ca n''t count on you?
28697Then he has n''t had enough of the riot?
28697Then he was lookin''for me?
28697Then how did it happen that the farmer could sell?
28697Then how did you get these notes?
28697Then it was n''t an accident?
28697Then nothing was accomplished by their going to Blacktown?
28697Then there''s no reason why we should come back?
28697Then they did n''t find him?
28697Then what about payin''your footing?
28697Then where is it?
28697Then why not let him stay? 28697 Then why not stay here yourself?"
28697Then you refuse the generous proposition?
28697Then you still think we oughter leave here?
28697Then you wo n''t go?
28697There are, but since it may be some time before you are in a condition to leave here, why not make yourself familiar with this branch of mining?
28697There''s no harm in talkin'', eh?
28697Tim? 28697 Tryin''to give us the slip, eh?"
28697Trying to get into the lower level, eh?
28697Wants grub, eh?
28697Was Mr. Wright''s house damaged very much?
28697Was it anything I''d like to know?
28697Was n''t he in this place when you got here?
28697Was you cuttin''up them monkey shines for me?
28697Was you there?
28697We shall have to go to the yard for boards; do you dare to try it, Fred?
28697We''ll starve to please you, eh?
28697Well, s''posin it did n''t, what of that?
28697Well, what are you stoppin''here for?
28697Well, what''s wanted?
28697Were you ever in a mine before?
28697Were you ever in the breaker?
28697Wha-- wha-- what does it mean?
28697What am I to do?
28697What am I to say to the superintendent if I see him?
28697What are you going to do about it?
28697What are you going to do now?
28697What are you up to? 28697 What can it mean?"
28697What can we do?
28697What can you do against the crowd?
28697What can you do to prevent it?
28697What could they have gained by reaching Joe again?
28697What could you do alone against two or three hundred men?
28697What did you want to buy land for?
28697What do you mean by that?
28697What do you mean by''too late''?
28697What do you mean? 28697 What do you mean?"
28697What do you mean?
28697What do you mean?
28697What do you mean?
28697What do you mean?
28697What do you mean?
28697What do you think about it, Fred?
28697What do you think of that?
28697What do you want me to do?
28697What do you want?
28697What does the farmer say?
28697What for?
28697What for?
28697What good will it do to have me put in jail?
28697What good will that do? 28697 What good will that do?"
28697What had Fred Byram done to you?
28697What had been done with the money?
28697What has happened?
28697What have I done?
28697What have you been doing?
28697What have you there?
28697What is the matter?
28697What is the price of a song according to that estimate?
28697What makes him so down on our crowd?
28697What makes you ask any questions if you know better than I?
28697What man?
28697What must I do?
28697What of that? 28697 What of that?"
28697What of that?
28697What was that?
28697What were you doin''at that grogshop?
28697What will you do there?
28697What''ll I do with the cub?
28697What''s he doin''out here, an''with such a load?
28697What''s he up to? 28697 What''s in the wind now?
28697What''s that for?
28697What''s that?
28697What''s the good? 28697 What''s the matter with you?"
28697What''s the matter, lad?
28697What''s the matter, old man? 28697 What''s the matter?"
28697What''s the matter?
28697What''s the other plan?
28697What''s to be gained by floodin''the mine, an''turnin''ourselves out of a chance to earn a living?
28697What''s your name?
28697What? 28697 What?"
28697What?
28697When are you fellers goin''home?
28697When are you going?
28697When are you going?
28697When did he leave?
28697When did you come?
28697When did you see him?
28697When do you expect them?
28697When is he coming home?
28697When that is done it''s safe to say tons of the roof will follow,Bill muttered, and Joe asked:"Does it hurt you much, lad?"
28697When will the case be tried?
28697When?
28697Where are we to go now?
28697Where are you going?
28697Where are you going?
28697Where are you?
28697Where are you?
28697Where can I see you to- morrow?
28697Where have you been?
28697Where have you been?
28697Where is Fred?
28697Where is Tim?
28697Where is he now?
28697Where is the superintendent?
28697Where was you last night?
28697Where you bound, Joe?
28697Where?
28697Where?
28697Where?
28697Who are they?
28697Who could have done it?
28697Who is Skip Miller?
28697Who is he, sir?
28697Who is inside?
28697Who will go with me?
28697Who will take the risk of trying to slip past them?
28697Who''s got the rope?
28697Who''s there?
28697Who? 28697 Who?"
28697Whom did you meet after leaving the town?
28697Why are you not at work?
28697Why did he strike you?
28697Why did n''t we go with him?
28697Why did n''t you tell me?
28697Why do n''t Mr. Wright have him arrested?
28697Why do n''t we jump right in on them? 28697 Why do they wish to throw all hands out of employment by flooding the mine?"
28697Why not buy one?
28697Why not send him word?
28697Why not stay here all night?
28697Why not tell the truth, and say you stole the money?
28697Why not throw him in an''run the chances? 28697 Why not, if by so doing the lower level could be flooded without any risk to themselves?"
28697Why not? 28697 Why not?
28697Why not? 28697 Why not?
28697Why not? 28697 Why not?"
28697Why not?
28697Why not?
28697Why not?
28697Why not?
28697Why not?
28697Why not?
28697Why should I do anything like that?
28697Why should I know anything about it?
28697Why were all hands thrown out?
28697Why, where does he think it was?
28697Why?
28697Why?
28697Why?
28697Why?
28697Will you agree to keep away from Farley''s?
28697Will you agree to walk now?
28697Will you tell my mother that I am all right?
28697Wo n''t Joe and Bill try to help us?
28697Wo n''t Mr. Wright do anything to help Sam?
28697Wo n''t he let up till we can run down them fellers what Bill was follerin''?
28697Wo n''t it do just as well in the morning?
28697Wo n''t they try to get us out?
28697Would n''t it be better to pay your''footing''as they call it? 28697 Would n''t it been better to have talked first, an''then begun the law business?"
28697Would you say that if you had n''t been thrown out of a job?
28697Yes, unless there''s another explosion I reckon we can stay here''til--"''Till what?
28697You surely ca n''t think he took it?
28697You wo n''t go back on me if I get into trouble?
28697You''ll keep us posted about what is goin''on?
28697You?
28697Afraid they''ll nab him for what was done to- day?"
28697After that has been done you may manage to get the best of me; but one is sure to go down-- which shall it be?"
28697Ai n''t this your first day in the breaker?"
28697Are we goin''peaceable, not liftin''a finger agin them as have got rich while we starved?"
28697Are you hurt?"
28697Are you hurt?"
28697Are you trying to reach home?"
28697Byram?"
28697Ca n''t you hear the sound of their picks?"
28697Can you carry oil enough in a bottle?"
28697Could you find your way back to where the men are at work on the pumps?"
28697Did he do somethin''last night?"
28697Did you fix that thing I told you about?"
28697Did you know what they were going to do?"
28697Do you boys feel in trim for a ten mile tramp across the mountain?"
28697Do you know where he is?"
28697Do you know where they went?"
28697Do you suppose I''ll let them try to kill me, and never open my mouth about it?"
28697Does that concern you?"
28697Fred explained to the best of his ability, and added:"Do you know of any way I can get out of here?"
28697Got through with your trip so soon?"
28697Have n''t we put up with enough from the mine owners an''bosses?
28697Have you heard whether Mr. Wright has got back?"
28697Have you thrown up the job?"
28697How are you?"
28697How can anybody find us if we walk up the track to the next station?"
28697How did you get here?"
28697How does that strike you for a firm?"
28697How long will the air hold out, Sam?"
28697How would you like that?"
28697I wanted you to hurry out with me?"
28697I''ve got a brother in the lower level; do you think I''ll stand by while he is bein''murdered?"
28697Is he making any more threats?"
28697Is it you, Joe?"
28697Is n''t it queer to stop the machinery so soon when Mr. Wright was anxious to keep everything a secret?"
28697Now do you believe it is possible to go to the camp and back by noon?"
28697Now, Fred, s''pose we go to see Sam?"
28697Reckon you''re glad to get it, eh?"
28697Sam was silent for a moment, and then turning to the kneeling boy, he asked:"Could you find your way out of here?"
28697Servin''warrants for that fool of a cashier?"
28697Shall you be here in the morning?"
28697So long as we can keep the stuff where it is, what''ll be gained by arrestin''us?
28697Suppose we have one square meal?"
28697The approaching miner cried while yet some distance away:"What are you comin''back so soon for?"
28697The one what''s so thick with Wright an''Joe Brace?"
28697The story was given in detail, and at its conclusion Mr. Wright asked:"How do you happen to know so much about this thing?"
28697The thing to be figgered out is, how''re we goin''to fix this job?"
28697The two men started at full speed, and the leader asked Sam:"Where is Joe Brace?"
28697Then turning to some of the loungers, he asked,"Has anybody seen Skip Miller lately?"
28697Thomas?"
28697Was this why you sent the telegram?"
28697Was you calculatin''to keep straight ahead?"
28697Were you out with the regulators?"
28697What are you doing here?"
28697What business has he here?"
28697What did you want of him?"
28697What do you want?"
28697What was that?"
28697What''s to prevent our smashin''the windows of his own house?"
28697What''s up now, I wonder?"
28697What''s up?"
28697Where are you working?"
28697Where are you?"
28697Where can you remain in hiding for a few days?"
28697Where did that slope lead to?"
28697Where do you s''pose Skip is keepin''himself all this time?"
28697Where is Billings now?"
28697Where is he?"
28697Where''s the other fellow?"
28697Who?"
28697Why are we thrown out of a job?"
28697Why ca n''t we go to the city?"
28697Why do n''t you try something else before it is too late?"
28697Why do n''t you try to make the company pay it?"
28697Why not come up with a little treat, an''settle the whole thing that way?
28697Why not let me stay here?
28697Why not stay here till I tell him part of the story?"
28697Will you go for the constable?"
28697Will you go on duty there until troops can be summoned?"
28697Will you go with me, or take the chances of bein''arrested?"
28697Will you wait for us, Joe?"
28697lads, are you near?"
20040A code message, was it?
20040About what?
20040Also, can you tell us which side he sleeps on nights?
20040And Tunnel Six is the haunted corridor, is n''t it?
20040And a patch missing from his hunting shirt?
20040And did you notice how the doctor paid special attention to every remark he made?
20040And he never caught up with you?
20040And he stole the code message you were carrying?
20040And he told you right where to find the moraine?
20040And he wears a leather hunting shirt, and leather leggings, and he took off a pair of serviceable leather gloves when he entered?
20040And look here,Will went on,"do you see these threads hanging to the teeth of the saw?
20040And what did you gain by it?
20040And where did he go?
20040And where does that leave us?
20040And which level is this?
20040And why not?
20040And you geezled them all?
20040And you have proof that he tried to maroon you?
20040And you searched them for the money and did n''t find it?
20040And you took the boat only to enforce the contract you had made?
20040And you, of course, understand your father''s code?
20040And your chum?
20040Another Boy Scout?
20040Are the machine plans hidden there?
20040Are the plans hidden in the cabin?
20040Are the plans really hidden in our cabin?
20040Are the plans which are claimed to hold the thumb prints of any value?
20040Are the thumb marks there?
20040Are there really robbers in there?
20040Are they dead?
20040Are those brilliant flowers growing over a glacier?
20040Are we all working in the dark?
20040Are we going out tonight?
20040Are you Will Smith?
20040Are you boys all safe?
20040Are you boys ready to write that note?
20040Are you expecting some one?
20040Are you going to let the ginks flood the mine?
20040Are you going to tell us where the plans are?
20040Are you looking for me?
20040Are you really going to steal the motor boat?
20040Are you sure that man Jamison is going out with you tonight?
20040Are you sure?
20040Are you the boys who came on from Chicago?
20040Are you the clerk who stole the plans from your employer?
20040Are you thinking of going down the mine tonight?
20040Are you thinking of going?
20040Aw, how are you going to find these boys if you do n''t go into the mine?
20040Because of the thumb prints?
20040Black or white?
20040But ghosts would n''t be giving signals of the Wolf Pack, would they?
20040But how about the code duplicate?
20040But how about this detective?
20040But how are you going to signal to the cabin?
20040But how do you know there is such a boy?
20040But how will you obtain possession of the wireless when it comes if you duck away in advance of the arrival of the tug? 20040 But how?"
20040But look here,George argued,"if the assassin was waiting here for the boy to come, why did n''t he jump us as soon as we made our appearance?"
20040But what caused the partition to fall?
20040But what''s all this got to do with the mark of a man''s right thumb?
20040But where did this kid come from?
20040But where did you say you came from?
20040But where does he get the red and blue lights?
20040But whereabouts in Alaska?
20040But why do n''t they come on out?
20040But why should he want to take us there?
20040But why should two healthy, active boys want to seek such a hiding place?
20040But why, when, where, how?
20040But you know, do n''t you?
20040But you think that they may know, for all that?
20040Ca n''t he land?
20040Ca n''t we get across this little crack in the earth?
20040Can you answer a straight question?
20040Can you climb?
20040Can you crawl around there and see who it is,asked George,"or shall I go?
20040Can you find it?
20040Can you find your way back to headquarters alone?
20040Can you find your way out of this dump, now?
20040Can you get us to Cordova and back by seven or eight in the morning?
20040Can you imagine any reason for their wanting to linger about the mine?
20040Can you see who it is?
20040Can you tell me where Canfield, the caretaker of this mine, may be found?
20040Caves, do you mean?
20040Did I get my feet wet?
20040Did Mr. Horton say anything to you about your lodgings while here?
20040Did any one come down after us?
20040Did he drop down out of the sky?
20040Did he see you?
20040Did he tell you why he was going to do that?
20040Did n''t I say it was all right for a theory?
20040Did n''t I tell you about that?
20040Did n''t you hear that noise behind the cribbing?
20040Did the bear hand him that?
20040Did this attorney ever inform you why he wanted the boys found?
20040Did you call out to him?
20040Did you ever see any medals or badges on their clothing which told of Boy Scout experiences?
20040Did you ever see such nerve?
20040Did you find the cabin?
20040Did you get it?
20040Did you get what you wanted?
20040Did you have a pleasant tramp through the woods?
20040Did you hear footsteps outside?
20040Did you hear the call of the pack a minute ago? 20040 Did you meet the boys who stole our provisions?"
20040Did you notice that any time he said anything to the officer that the officer just fell right in with his ideas?
20040Did you notice the suit he had on when he stood talking with us at the station?
20040Did you say that George and Sandy and Bert were all in there?
20040Did you see any one?
20040Did you see his face? 20040 Did you see those red and blue lights?"
20040Did you sleep all the afternoon?
20040Did you talk the matter over with him?
20040Did your father tell you all that?
20040Disappeared?
20040Do n''t you know your Indian signs?
20040Do n''t you think,Frank suggested to the officer,"that this man is too drunk to be out on the street?"
20040Do the manager and the clerk know what the defense in the robbery case expects to prove by the papers if they can be secured?
20040Do we get the reward now?
20040Do we have to cut a hole through the ice?
20040Do you boys know anything about mines?
20040Do you know any of the men with Jamison?
20040Do you know how many corners we''ve turned since we came in here?
20040Do you know what Jamison was up to?
20040Do you know what the code message contained?
20040Do you know what those fellows did?
20040Do you know what''s in it, Frank?
20040Do you know whether these breaker boys belonged to the Boy Scouts or not?
20040Do you know who did this?
20040Do you live here now?
20040Do you mean to tell me that you have followed us boys from Chicago?
20040Do you mean to tell me,screamed Carson,"that there are actually robbers here, and that they have taken possession of Tunnel Six?"
20040Do you really mean that?
20040Do you really think the miner is still hanging around this cabin?
20040Do you see the tug coming up the bay?
20040Do you suppose Canfield is coming here in the middle of the night to turn on the power?
20040Do you suppose he would understand the call of the Beaver Patrol?
20040Do you suppose he''d lie here and sleep and let some one come and carry away Bert?
20040Do you suppose they''ve got lost in the mine?
20040Do you think he got up and walked away?
20040Do you think he is the man who gave Bert the clout on the head? 20040 Do you think he was drowned?"
20040Do you think he will go straight to Bert?
20040Do you think it''s safe for us to try to navigate that shaft in the dark?
20040Do you think it''s that bum detective?
20040Do you think that is the gink who was prowling around our room?
20040Do you think the boys are hiding in the mine?
20040Do you think we can carry the rug home?
20040Do you think you can walk home now?
20040Does Bert know all about this?
20040Does any one doubt that Cameron is the man formerly known as Len Garman?
20040Does anyone ever go there now?
20040Does he always go alone?
20040Does he expect to go into the manufacturing business?
20040Does he know where he left the money?
20040Does he often get foolish in the head like that?
20040Does the fall open into the system of chambers in the center or to the north? 20040 Dream, is it?"
20040Earthquake?
20040Expect it to show through the rocks?
20040Fat or lean?
20040Fever?
20040Foxy game, eh?
20040Friend or foe?
20040Ghosts?
20040Had any strangers been seen talking with them?
20040Has any one passed up the shaft?
20040Has he now recovered from the injury he received that night?
20040Has he regained consciousness at all?
20040Has that fellow got into the mine again? 20040 Has the shock of this incident turned your head?"
20040Has this man Ventner visited the mine often?
20040Have any of the boys returned?
20040Have n''t you forgotten something?
20040Have n''t you got a boat?
20040Have we been traveling all this time to come out in this same old hole at last?
20040Have we got plenty of eatings?
20040Have you any idea what the stolen paper contained?
20040Have you figured out how we''re going to get into the mine?
20040Have you got it in camp with you?
20040Have you got the code message with you now?
20040Have you noticed anything peculiar about the plans?
20040Have you secured transportation yet?
20040He did n''t go up in a pillar of fire, did he?
20040He did speak of strange noises and mysterious lights, did n''t he?
20040He gave the name of Cameron here, did he?
20040He had the code message addressed to Will?
20040He sawed the rungs in the shaft, did n''t he? 20040 He''s a big one, is n''t he?"
20040He''s using the phosphorus, all right, and I can begin to understand what he''s trying to say? 20040 Hear any one around the cabin?"
20040His help?
20040His help?
20040Hooks and eyes?
20040How about leaving the cabin alone?
20040How could I, when I was sound asleep?
20040How did he ever get here all by his lonely? 20040 How did it ever get loose?"
20040How did they get in there?
20040How did you pass the night, boys?
20040How do the plans concern you?
20040How do you know it''s been moved?
20040How do you know some one cut it?
20040How do you know that?
20040How do you know that?
20040How do you know that?
20040How do you know they did?
20040How do you think one of these mammoth coal mines looks, anyway?
20040How far down does this mud go?
20040How far is it from here to Cordova?
20040How far is it to the creek?
20040How long are these gangways?
20040How long did this new boy stay here?
20040How long have you been in this district?
20040How long have you been in this neighborhood?
20040How long since you''ve had anything to eat?
20040How long since you''ve seen Jimmie Maynard and Dick Thompson?
20040How long were we gone from the cabin?
20040How long will it take to repair the pump?
20040How many bites did you get?
20040How much are you going to charge for the use of your boat?
20040How much do I know about what?
20040How much reward was offered for the return of that two hundred thousand dollars?
20040How tall should you say that fellow was?
20040How tall was this man who carried Bert, away?
20040How was it ever done?
20040How''d you come to ask for Sandy?
20040How''d you get out into this country in such a plight?
20040How''d you guess it?
20040I can run the boat,he whispered,"shall I?"
20040I can swim, ca n''t I?
20040I did n''t get any further than the mention of the human thumb, did I?
20040I do n''t think they''d be apt to murder the boys, do you?
20040I hope you do n''t expect to pull these boys up through fifty or a hundred feet of shale?
20040I presume he told you all about the case?
20040I see what you''re getting at,George replied,"Can you see whether there''s a buckle missing from his leggings?"
20040I wonder how deep the shaft is?
20040I wonder if Bert''s had anything to eat since he got the wallop on the coco?
20040I wonder if he expects to get a good night''s sleep, with Bert lying in some uncomfortable hiding place?
20040I wonder if he sees this?
20040I wonder if he thinks he can find two boys in that heap of refuse?
20040I wonder if his mug is sore where Bert extracted the whiskers?
20040I wonder if that means the Fox Patrol of Chicago? 20040 I wonder if the Labyrinth mine is so much of a labyrinth after all?"
20040I wonder if they''ll answer?
20040I wonder what''s become of that bum detective?
20040I wonder why he did n''t come to the cabin during the night?
20040If I should light a match, would it set it on fire?
20040If it is n''t one of the boys, who is it?
20040If it was so easy to get out in a few minutes,argued Tommy,"why did n''t you get out hours ago?"
20040If they''re anywhere within hearing distance, they ought to answer us when we called out, had n''t they?
20040If this is n''t a Boy Scout country, what is it? 20040 In code?"
20040In the face of my warning?
20040In the meantime,Tommy continued,"do you think you could send one of the county officers out to round up this bum detective?"
20040In this gangway?
20040In what kind of trouble?
20040In whose code?
20040Is Bert all right?
20040Is Ventner one of them?
20040Is he always doing that when you see him?
20040Is he dead?
20040Is he liberal with his money?
20040Is n''t it quite a climb?
20040Is that a guess, or a piece of positive information?
20040Is that all?
20040Is that right about your wanting a surgeon?
20040Is the doctor going with us?
20040Is the miner in there yet?
20040Is there any one at the cabin who can read it?
20040Is there any way by which the mine could be intentionally flooded?
20040Is this Tunnel Six?
20040Is this man Fenton the clerk who stole the machine drawings?
20040Is this the gentleman who went batty and lost two hundred thousand dollars?
20040It looks easy, does n''t it?
20040It will shoot, wo n''t it?
20040It would be a nice thing to have him blow that money out of the pillar and get away with it, would n''t it?
20040It would be a rotten proposition, would n''t it, if Tommy should get back with the surgeon before we found Bert?
20040It would be something of a joke if we should butt into that detective now, would n''t it?
20040It''s a sure thing, is n''t it?
20040Just traveling about for the fun of the thing, eh?
20040Locate him?
20040Look here, Mr. Canfield,Will said,"how well do you know this mine?"
20040Look here, Will,Tommy questioned,"did Mr. Horton direct you to this exact spot, or did he only tell you to locate somewhere in this vicinity?
20040Look here, Will,Tommy said,"are you sure we made a good search of those three ginks?
20040Looking for the money in the darkness?
20040Loose?
20040Making too much noise in order to attract the attention of a couple of lost youngsters?
20040Marked up with thumb prints, for instance?
20040Not a thing about it?
20040Now I''ve got it,cried Will almost dancing up and down in his excitement,"you know what that means, do n''t you?"
20040Now what do you think of that for a fool?
20040Now who''s in that other boat?
20040Now, how do we get to the cabin?
20040Now, look here, Sandy,George replied whimsically,"have you any idea that I''d ever go away with you without taking something to eat?
20040Now, what is it?
20040Now, what''s up?
20040O. K., do n''t you see? 20040 Oh well, of course the kids would want to test us, would n''t they, seeing that we were only boys?"
20040Oh, you''re there, are you?
20040Prospecting for gold on a glacier?
20040Rats do n''t make sounds like people whispering, do they? 20040 Right about here, or further on?"
20040Say, who is that kid?
20040Say, you two fellows,he added, waving the paper in the direction of Cameron and Fenton,"would, you like to hear this code despatch read?"
20040Shall I open the door?
20040Signalling, how?
20040So he caused the mine to be flooded, did he?
20040So he got in here at last, did he?
20040So he knows where the money is?
20040So he''s in the mine again, is he?
20040So it was n''t hidden back there in that cross- cutting at all?
20040So that''s what you came down here after, is it?
20040So that''s where Bert went, is it?
20040So that''s why you came to the cabin is it?
20040So the money is there?
20040So you do n''t know who wants these boys, or what they''re wanted for?
20040So you found them, did you?
20040So you paid him three hundred dollars, did you?
20040So you saw him at Katalla, did you?
20040So you saw him doing it, did you?
20040So you''re the one that got wet?
20040Something exciting?
20040Sound asleep?
20040Suppose I slip back there and see what he''s doing?
20040Suppose it should be Jimmie Maynard and Dick Thompson?
20040Suppose that fellow did get the money?
20040That was a blue serge suit, was n''t it?
20040That you, Sandy?
20040That''s a nice weather for the Arctic regions, is n''t it?
20040That''s your name is n''t it?
20040The boys did n''t go up in the air, did they?
20040The cabin?
20040The message to you simply requested the delivery of the code message?
20040The mother lode in a glacier?
20040The untranslated code message?
20040Then this detective has no right here at all?
20040Then where is it?
20040Then why ca n''t Frank slip away and get the message to camp?
20040Then why did he send us?
20040Then why did n''t you come right to me and say so?
20040Then why do n''t you tell?
20040Then why does n''t he tell what he did with the money?
20040Then why not fire him?
20040Then you think they are not here?
20040Then you wo n''t tell us where the plans are?
20040Then you would n''t have told us anything about the plans or the robbers?
20040Then, of course, Jamison will want us arrested for piracy?
20040Then, what''s all this mystery about? 20040 Then, who carried him away?"
20040There is no reason why they should be here, is there?
20040They have n''t got wings, have they?
20040Time to get up?
20040Under water?
20040Was he in his right mind?
20040Was n''t it arranged that Mr. Horton should communicate with you after we reached this point?
20040Was the code message stolen?
20040Was the money hidden on this level?
20040We can stick to the ladders, ca n''t we?
20040We ought to tell the boys we are coming, had n''t we?
20040We''re looking for Carson''s money?
20040We''ve got him blocked in, have n''t we?
20040Well you got into the mine at last,Will suggested,"what is the next move you are thinking of making?"
20040Well, are you going down?
20040Well, how''re you going to get out?
20040Well, is n''t that water out there running?
20040Well, then, why did n''t you come up like a man and say so?
20040Well, we had to wait until Elmer reported what kind of fellows you were, did n''t we?
20040Well, what are we going to do?
20040Well, what do you know about that?
20040Well, what is it we''ve got to look for now?
20040Well, what''ll we do now to get out?
20040Well, when''s it going to stop quaking?
20040Well, why do n''t we go down and see about it?
20040Well, you did n''t starve, did you?
20040Well, you got it, did n''t you?
20040Were these three boys together much after that?
20040Were they actually sent?
20040Were you boys out there a few moments ago?
20040What I mean is, is the alleged invention of any account? 20040 What I want to know is: Why was it done?
20040What Patrol did they belong to?
20040What about those plans?
20040What are those boys in the mine for? 20040 What are those fellows trying to do with the boat?"
20040What are we going to do all the afternoon?
20040What are you boys doing out here in the scenery, anyhow?
20040What are you boys talking about?
20040What are you doing here?
20040What are you doing that for?
20040What are you doing, you drunken hobo?
20040What are you going to do?
20040What are you going to do?
20040What are you looking for?
20040What are you talking about?
20040What business is he in?
20040What can it be?
20040What can we do now?
20040What did I do to the bear?
20040What did Mr. Canfield call those two boys we are looking after?
20040What did he tell you?
20040What did the message in code say?
20040What did you do?
20040What did you find in the mine?
20040What did you hit him with?
20040What do you fellows expect to do with the plans?
20040What do you know about his leather leggings, hunting shirt and gloves?
20040What do you know about that, Cameron?
20040What do you know about that?
20040What do you make of it?
20040What do you mean by leaving us in this plight?
20040What do you mean by some one cutting your string?
20040What do you mean by that?
20040What do you mean by that?
20040What do you mean by that?
20040What do you mean by that?
20040What do you mean by that?
20040What do you mean by trick?
20040What do you think it means?
20040What do you think of a fish in his right mind that''ll try to eat red flannel?
20040What do you think of that?
20040What do you want of the machine plans?
20040What do you want to know about the code despatch?
20040What does it look like, and does it always smell like this?
20040What have we got to eat?
20040What have you done with the highwaymen?
20040What have you got to do about it, anyhow?
20040What kind of a boat have you?
20040What kind of a night did you pass?
20040What kind of fish can you get?
20040What name did he give there?
20040What next?
20040What part of the mine is he in?
20040What part of the world is he searching?
20040What time was this?
20040What was he doing here?
20040What was he doing to you?
20040What was he doing when you saw him?
20040What was there about it?
20040What were you doing in the edge of the thicket?
20040What would he be doing there?
20040What would he be sneaking around here in the night for, if he was n''t engaged in some underhand game? 20040 What you fellows trying to do down there?"
20040What''d you say about going up to the end of the moraine?
20040What''d you say about other boys being hungry?
20040What''d you steal Bert for?
20040What''s a blower?
20040What''s a nigger- head?
20040What''s coming off here?
20040What''s doing now?
20040What''s he butting in here for?
20040What''s he doing it for?
20040What''s that for?
20040What''s that got to do with this mine mystery?
20040What''s that strange noise?
20040What''s that?
20040What''s the good of crossing over at all?
20040What''s the matter with passing the ham and eggs around?
20040What''s the matter?
20040What''s the meaning of this show of firearms?
20040What''s the trouble?
20040What''s the use of making a monkey of yourself? 20040 What''s the use of starting anything?
20040What''s your idea about this boy coming in, anyway? 20040 What''s your name?"
20040When can you start?
20040When do you want your first load of provisions?
20040Where are the others? 20040 Where are the others?"
20040Where are the plans now?
20040Where are the plans?
20040Where are these boys?
20040Where are they now?
20040Where are you taking the motor boat?
20040Where did he come from?
20040Where did he go?
20040Where did he go?
20040Where did that fat man come from?
20040Where did these boys lodge?
20040Where did they come from when they came here?
20040Where did you come from?
20040Where did you find this one?
20040Where did you get it?
20040Where did you get''em?
20040Where did you leave Tommy and Dick?
20040Where do these boys belong?
20040Where do you belong?
20040Where do you expect to find it?
20040Where does all this gas come from?
20040Where is Cameron?
20040Where is he wanted?
20040Where is the money?
20040Where is this town?
20040Where shall I take her?
20040Where was the use of his sending us down here and making monkeys of us? 20040 Where''d that bum detective go?"
20040Where''d you come from?
20040Where''d you come from?
20040Where''d you find it?
20040Where''d you go, Frank?
20040Where''s Bert?
20040Where''s Cameron?
20040Where''s Elmer?
20040Where''s Tommy and George?
20040Where''s the Bulldog Patrol located?
20040Where''s the fifth boy?
20040Where?
20040Which one of those men gave you the clout on the head?
20040Which way did they go?
20040Who are you?
20040Who did it?
20040Who did it?
20040Who fired that shot?
20040Who is it?
20040Who is that freshie?
20040Who said anything about getting dinner?
20040Who said anything about going down the ladders tonight?
20040Who sent you here?
20040Who''s Bert, then?
20040Who''s got a searchlight handy?
20040Who''s got the wireless?
20040Who''s looking for these boys?
20040Who''s that talking?
20040Why ca n''t we get to Cordova and get back here with the surgeon before he can communicate with the officers?
20040Why continue this senseless talk about highwaymen?
20040Why did n''t I jump in and swim across?
20040Why did n''t some of you boys tell me that the mosquitos here are as large as robins?
20040Why did n''t we geezle him?
20040Why did n''t you ask me if I was the boss of the bunch? 20040 Why did n''t you bring the sick boy out with you?"
20040Why did n''t you say so before?
20040Why did n''t you say something about being a Boy Scout before you tried to hold us up for a hand- out? 20040 Why did n''t you stay here and watch, then?"
20040Why did n''t you tell me there were wild animals in the mine?
20040Why did n''t you tell us all this before we left Chicago?
20040Why did they shoot you?
20040Why did you go off and leave the camp all alone? 20040 Why did you want to make trouble for us?"
20040Why do n''t we go and see where he went?
20040Why do n''t you answer my question?
20040Why do n''t you come across?
20040Why do n''t you come in?
20040Why do n''t you come out and show yourselves?
20040Why do n''t you go on and tell the story? 20040 Why do n''t you hurry up and get us out?"
20040Why do n''t you lower the cage?
20040Why do n''t you open a door or window and let in some air?
20040Why do n''t you stay and see the fun? 20040 Why do you ask such a question?"
20040Why do you ask?
20040Why do you say that?
20040Why do you think we will wish you had remained in case you are sent out of the mine?
20040Why on this level?
20040Why should these gutter snipes want the papers for the thumb prints?
20040Why suspicious?
20040Why were you going to wait?
20040Why were you sleeping in an empty?
20040Why, that''s where I put my----"That''s where you put your money, is it?
20040Why, we''re on the bottom, ai n''t we?
20040Why, you do n''t think that he had anything to do with the trouble at the mine, do you?
20040Why?
20040Will it never stop?
20040Will you answer a straight question?
20040Will you be kind enough to tell us what he had for supper last night?
20040Yes, but what''s he looking for?
20040You ca n''t read them, can you?
20040You do n''t seem to take to this detective?
20040You do n''t think he had any directions from anyone, do you?
20040You do n''t think we''re going to stay here till night, do you?
20040You do n''t, think he knows where to look for the money any more than you do?
20040You found it empty?
20040You going back after than bum detective tonight?
20040You know, then, do you?
20040You mean that if we follow him in his journeys over the country we''ll be apt to find Bert?
20040You mean that you want him watched?
20040You never believed in the ghost stories told about Tunnel Six?
20040You remember the line of hills across the little creek? 20040 You saw how the trees tumbled into the chasm, did n''t you?
20040You think he came here for a purpose?
20040You''re a Beaver?
20040You''re not going to venture into the lower level again, are you?
20040You''re not steering us up against a haunted mine, are you?
20040You''re the original little mystery boy, ai n''t you?
20040Your father has an agent here?
20040Almost unable to believe his ears, Will turned to George with a question on his lips:"Did you hear that?"
20040Are you here alone?"
20040Are you sure the boys will come if you ask them to?"
20040As the boys looked down into the shaft, Tommy seized his chum by the arm and whispered:"Did you see that light down there?"
20040Besides, where would they get their provisions?"
20040Buck?"
20040By the way, how did you know that he wore leather leggings?"
20040CHAPTER III WHO CUT THE STRING?
20040CHAPTER IX WHO DISCOVERED THE LEAK?
20040CHAPTER V FISHING IN ALASKA"Are you sure this is the same cabin?"
20040CHAPTER V THE FLOODED MINE"What makes you think it''s Ventner?"
20040CHAPTER VII A LOST"BULLDOG""How much do you know about this case?"
20040CHAPTER VIII ON THE GULF OF ALASKA"Where are the Barren islands, and why should he want to take us there?"
20040CHAPTER X THE BOY IN THE"EMPTY""Did n''t I tell you,"whispered Will,"that he is there with a product of his imagination?
20040CHAPTER XV A BREAK IN THE GLACIER"An earthquake?"
20040Cameron almost shouted,"can either one of you boys read that code despatch?"
20040Cameron and Fenton who had been listening intently to the recital, now both spoke at once:"Were the plans really rejected by the experts?"
20040Can you find your way to Cordova, Frank?"
20040Can you get up a good hot run if you have to?"
20040Canfield?"
20040Did they leave one of the searchlights?"
20040Did you see any one around your camp in the night?"
20040Did you?"
20040Do n''t I look dignified enough?"
20040Do n''t you see what it means?"
20040Do you believe it?"
20040Do you know how the boys are going to get in from the coast?
20040Do you mean that he strayed away in the darkness?"
20040Do you mean to say,"he added turning to Tommy,"that you bumped into this kid while returning to the mine from the tracks?"
20040Do you see the color?"
20040Do you think that possible?"
20040Do you think we''re going to walk six miles in from the country in order to dodge the detective, and then let him run across us in the mine?"
20040Does he know you''re here?"
20040Finally Will went back to where Cameron lay on the ground by the fire and asked abruptly:"Is your name Garman, Cameron or Brooks?"
20040Have n''t seen anything of a stray Boy Scout, have you?"
20040Have you got anything to eat?"
20040Have you matches with you?"
20040Have you the red and blue caps with you?"
20040He would n''t make much of a Boy Scout when it came to stalking, would he?"
20040He''s a nervy old fellow, is n''t he?"
20040How about something to eat?"
20040I guess this Boy Scout training is pretty poor, ai n''t it, eh?
20040I guess you boys can work together without scrapping, ca n''t you?"
20040In a moment he asked:"Was he cutting into one of the pillars?"
20040In the first place, who knows that we are here on this job?"
20040Instead, he pushed closer to the lad and asked:"What is it?
20040Is it possible to enter any of the benches or chambers connecting with the north gangway on the lower level by means of this deserted shaft?"
20040Is it very far back?"
20040Is that anywhere near right, Elmer?"
20040Is that anywhere near right?"
20040It was blue, was n''t it?"
20040Now, how could he have known anything about where to look for that money?"
20040Now, what sort of a suit did the detective wear this morning?
20040Of course I have no proof, but I''m sure that, in the long run, you''ll find that I''m right?"
20040Say, Abe, when are you coming back after Mary?
20040Shall I take hold?"
20040Shall we go inside?
20040Tell me the truth about the plans,"he went on,"what do you want of them?"
20040That room ca n''t be wet yet, can it?"
20040That''s perfectly clear, is n''t it?"
20040That''s reasonable, is n''t it?"
20040The boys examined the hairs curiously, and then Will asked:"What do you think of it?"
20040The system works fine, does n''t it?"
20040There was a show of excitement in his manner as he exclaimed:"So you found the lost boy, did you?"
20040There was no reply whatever, and in a moment the caretaker called again, this time rather peremptorily:"What are you prowling about the yard for?"
20040This, I suppose,"he added, turning to the surgeon,"is the doctor you brought from Cordova?"
20040Want to go with me, George?"
20040Want to hear about it?"
20040Was it stolen?"
20040What I mean is, have you any idea which way they will take on leaving Katalla?"
20040What are we here for?"
20040What are you doing in there?"
20040What are you making fun of me for?"
20040What did he want of the plans?"
20040What do they want there?
20040What do you know about that?"
20040What do you know of him?"
20040What do you say?"
20040What gets me is, how are we going to find our way back?
20040What object could any one have in carrying away that kid?
20040What shall we do if he asks us to go ashore?"
20040What time did Tommy say he would be back with the doctor?"
20040What''ll you have now, pie or cake?"
20040What''s wrong?"
20040What''s your name, anyhow?"
20040Which one of you bears the name of Will Smith?
20040Which way did he come from, anyway?"
20040Who discovered the break in the dividing wall?"
20040Why are you in such a hurry?"
20040Why did n''t they answer our Boy Scout challenge when we replied to their call of the pack?"
20040Why did n''t you tell us something about it before we had all that trouble?"
20040Why do n''t some one go up and get Canfield, and why is n''t that young rowdy thrown out of the mine?
20040Why do n''t you pass the information around?"
20040Will asked,"that the boys we are in search of are in the mine?
20040You remember about my seeing some one sneaking in here just ahead of us, do n''t you?"
20040You were here all the time?"
20040asked Sandy, as the boys cleared away the heaps of slate,"what then?"
20040cried Tommy,"and who is he?"
20040declared Tommy;"Who''re you going with?"
20040exclaimed George, taking the depth of the water with an oar,"if the water is four feet deep here, how deep must it be at the middle of the dip?"
20040he said excitedly,"what do you know about that?"
20040shouted Carson, starting forward, with his stomach out and his fat shoulders thrown back,"what''s all this conversation about?
56528A strike? 56528 Afraid of what?
56528And Cécile?
56528And Lydie?
56528And Maheude?
56528And is your company rich?
56528And let it be well glazed, wo n''t you?
56528And my mother, eh, and the little girl? 56528 And school, mother?"
56528And that imp, Jeanlin,cried the mother;"where is he now, I should like to know?
56528And that makes you cough so?
56528And the doctor?
56528And the little one?
56528And the means of execution? 56528 And the soup?
56528And what steps do you decide on? 56528 And where do you come from?"
56528And why pillage me?
56528And you, my little darlings,asked Deneulin of his daughters;"have they broken any of your bones?"
56528And you-- nothing new, always from bad to worse? 56528 Are our brawlers getting angry at last?"
56528Are the little ones back?
56528Are there factories at Montsou?
56528Are they going to bed here?
56528Are we Cossacks?
56528Are we at the end?
56528Are you a coward? 56528 Are you here?"
56528Are you in pain?
56528Are you never thirsty?
56528Are you ready? 56528 Are you sorry?"
56528Are you sure you have not made a mistake?
56528But I shall see you again?
56528But what has taken you? 56528 But where shall we go, mother?
56528But, anyhow, do you know where to go to?
56528But,said Négrel,"what in the name of creation have you come up for, then?
56528Can I come down yet?
56528Come down, will you?
56528Did I beat her when she took this Chaval?
56528Did n''t I say so?
56528Did n''t I tell you that they care nothing?
56528Do they want a hand here for any kind of work?
56528Do you remember?
56528Do you see that scoundrel, Rasseneur, over there on the threshold of the public- house?
56528Do you see them?
56528Do you think you will benefit me if you stop work at my place? 56528 Do you think, then, that I''ve got thousands coming in?
56528Do you think,he asked,"if I''m not punished, that they''ll give me a month''s leave in two years?"
56528Do you understand?
56528Does it concern you?
56528Eh, are you the father?
56528Eh? 56528 Eh?
56528Eh? 56528 Eh?
56528Father, what is it?
56528Getting up at this hour?
56528Has it been windy? 56528 Have n''t the Piolaine people told you to go and see them?"
56528Have n''t they ugly faces?
56528Have the children had any of it?
56528Have you anything to tell me?
56528Have you been working long at the mine?
56528Have you got money, then?
56528Have you got one of your two rooms free, and will you give him credit for a fortnight?
56528Have you seen in the paper about Pluchart''s success at Paris?
56528He''s robbing us, Lydie, is n''t he? 56528 Here we are, are we not, Dansaert?"
56528Here we are,said the former to Étienne;"will you come in?"
56528Here, I owe you six francs; would you like to settle it? 56528 How are things going with Pluchart?"
56528How can one stir with a child that''s always screaming? 56528 How can they live in such dirt?"
56528How is the old man?
56528How much have you in the fund?
56528How the devil did I come to get such a jade? 56528 I say, Mouquet,"whispered Zacharie in the lander''s ear,"are we off to the Volcan to- night?"
56528I say, then, is this how you make fun of people?
56528I say,she murmured, all at once coming and putting her arms round him prettily,"why do n''t you like me?"
56528I suppose no one has been left at the bottom?
56528I thought,said Madame Grégoire,"that the Company gave you lodging and firing?"
56528If I were to take the box?
56528If Jean- Bart bothers you as much as that,said he, laughing,"why do n''t you give it up to us?"
56528Is Jeanlin working?
56528Is Rasseneur in?
56528Is he going to drag me about long?
56528Is it a nickname?
56528Is it blood?
56528Is it deep?
56528Is it serious, then, that you look at us like this? 56528 Is it true, then,"asked Maheu of Chaval, whom he met before the Estaminet Piquette,"that they''ve played the dirty trick?"
56528Is n''t it a pity, all this nonsense?
56528Is not my husband with you?
56528Is that meant for me?
56528It is n''t that big Chaval now?
56528Jealous of what?
56528Just leave me alone, will you? 56528 Just leave me alone, will you?"
56528Let me go, do you hear?
56528Long? 56528 Mates, what is your decision?
56528Now, come, decide; where would you like me to take you? 56528 On her?
56528Over where? 56528 People can find lovers when they all live together, ca n''t they?"
56528Rasseneur,called Étienne,"bring a glass, will you?"
56528Shall I tell you what it is?
56528Since the Company professes to leave us free,he repeated,"what is there to fear?
56528Souvarine, wo n''t you have one?
56528Tell me, what have you got in your skin, at your age?
56528That''s it, old man, is n''t it? 56528 The little one?
56528Then Maheude is not coming this morning?
56528Then if you think the game''s lost,asked Rasseneur,"why do n''t you make the mates listen to reason?"
56528Then it is at night that the moles come out? 56528 Then it''s to me that you''re saying that?"
56528Then what''s your name?
56528Then you are against the strike?
56528Then you put yourself against me, wench? 56528 Then you''ll keep me, and it will be all right this time?"
56528Then you''ll stay?
56528Then you''re not afraid?
56528Then you''re still going?
56528Then, sir, that is all that you reply? 56528 Then, there''s no news?"
56528Then, what? 56528 Then,"he murmured,"if I were to ask you to put a hundred thousand francs in my affair you would refuse?"
56528Then,said Madame Grégoire,"you have worked for a long time at the mines?"
56528Well, are you going to take it?
56528Well, do you refuse?
56528Well, my good man,said the father,"you have a cold, then?"
56528Well, philosopher, what troubles you? 56528 Well, what are you going to do?"
56528Well, what do you think of it?
56528Well, what has that to do with us? 56528 Well, what''s going on then, my lads?"
56528Well, what?
56528Well, wo n''t you come in and drink a little glass?
56528Well,he asked,"what have you to say to me?"
56528Well,he asked,"what would you do in my place?
56528Well,replied Mouquette, in a good humour,"what''s that to do with you?
56528Well?
56528What are we stuck here for, blast it? 56528 What are you angry about?
56528What are you doing up there?
56528What are you up to there, all of you? 56528 What do you mean, the Black Man?"
56528What do you say about it, eh?
56528What do you say? 56528 What do you want?"
56528What do you want?
56528What do you want?
56528What does that matter, if it amuses her? 56528 What does that matter?
56528What does that matter?
56528What for?
56528What have you come after here, you pack of meddlers?
56528What have you done that for?
56528What have you got to say, eh, about their society?
56528What ideas?
56528What is it now?
56528What is it they have at the end of that stick?
56528What is it, then?
56528What is it?
56528What is she doing, then?
56528What is that lazy Chaval up to? 56528 What is that, then?"
56528What on earth have you come here for?
56528What other one?
56528What the devil''s that to do with you?
56528What would you have? 56528 What would you have?
56528What''s that there? 56528 What''s that, then?"
56528What''s to be done?
56528What''s up with you?
56528What''s up?
56528What, then?
56528What? 56528 What?
56528Where are you going to?
56528Where are you off to?
56528Where are your sweethearts?
56528Where is Jeanlin?
56528Where is Poland, then?
56528Where is she, then, your mother?
56528Where''s my coffee and my sugar and the meat? 56528 Where, then, is Chaval?"
56528Who does it all belong to, then?
56528Who is it?
56528Who is that?
56528Who is that?
56528Who says so? 56528 Who, then?"
56528Whom do you mean?
56528Whom do you mean?
56528Why did you lie?
56528Why, did n''t she have the cheek to say just now that she would strangle Catherine if she were to come to that? 56528 Why?
56528Will you be still, vermin?
56528Will you come and dine with me?
56528Will you come for a moment, my child?
56528Will you drink, by God? 56528 Will you drink?"
56528Will you have a game?
56528Will you hold your tongue, eh? 56528 Will you make them be still?"
56528Will you share with me?
56528Work for an engine- man? 56528 Would you rather he had remained below?"
56528Yes, the Man-- you know? 56528 You after Chaval; and after you another, eh?
56528You believe in those stupid things? 56528 You belong to Belgium, perhaps?"
56528You come and gorge yourself here, when we are dying of hunger up above?
56528You do n''t eat?
56528You must be about fourteen then?
56528You only have these two?
56528You will allow me, will you not, my good woman?
56528You''ll have a glass with me?
56528Your notion, then, is to pillage over there?
56528A bit of veal, eh?
56528A little glass of sweet, wo n''t you?"
56528A thing which we ca n''t get into our heads, do n''t you see?
56528After an awkward silence he made up his mind:"Poland?
56528All sorts of confused questions came before him: Why are some miserable?
56528Already there was not enough to eat, and what would happen if wages were still further lowered?
56528Am I not right to act as I do?
56528And as he hesitated:"Then you''re still afraid of me?"
56528And do n''t say anything, will you, if you want to be kind?"
56528And first, who says that my wife said so?"
56528And from behind, the Levaque woman added, more violently:"Must we eat you to get through?
56528And he quickly spoke to the manager:"It has come, then?
56528And he took her again and pressed her, out of bravado, crushing his red moustache against her mouth, and continuing:"Will you leave us alone, eh?
56528And he went on calling to the men; did not the goods in there belong to the colliers?
56528And his dream of popular leadership again soothed him: Montsou at his feet, Paris in the misty distance, who knows?
56528And how can we set about it?"
56528And how were they to prevent these furious people from impaling themselves?
56528And it''s you that pay him, eh?
56528And she questioned him; had she been seen so, without even a handkerchief around her waist to cover her?
56528And the other struggled and protested furiously:"What''s all this for?
56528And the others?
56528And then, you silly beast, how can I divide eleven sous into three?
56528And what do they pay you in your house, your wife and the gentleman who is this minute wearing out her skin?"
56528And what have you invented instead?
56528And what would be the end of it all if no help arrived, and starvation came to beat down their courage?
56528And what''s to be done?
56528And where do you go?"
56528And who was cutting them, when the men were below?
56528Another girl given a tumble on a pile of stones?
56528Another?
56528Any work here?"
56528Are they going to send us any money?"
56528Are they to come in here?"
56528Are you coming, up there?"
56528Are you going to fill your tub?
56528Are you going to let your mates be carried off to prison?
56528Are you going to try and create a section at Montsou?"
56528As to the masters, they''re often rascals; but there always will be masters, wo n''t there?
56528At last he said:"I suppose I ought to jump on the boss?
56528At what spot should they cut into the bed?
56528Besides, where could they fly?
56528Besides, who would hear them?
56528But at that moment Madame Hennebeau''s voice called from the first story:"Is that you, Paul?
56528But he could not understand its presence here: how could it have got into Paul''s bed?
56528But one thinks, does n''t one?
56528But what could one do?
56528But what was the good?
56528But what was to be done?
56528But why?
56528Can it be possible?
56528Can you believe that the Company has not as much to lose as you have in the present crisis?
56528Chase them away on their return from Marchiennes, like stinking animals whom he would no longer have beneath his roof?
56528Could he anticipate, for instance, that his followers in the settlement would one day stone him?
56528Could it be that any were cowardly enough to go back on their word?
56528Could they not go away quietly?
56528Could you give it me back?"
56528Did he frighten her, that she always refused?
56528Did he still desire her, that he felt so troubled, gradually warmed at the heart by a fresh longing?
56528Did he want to hurt such a little darling, who was as soft as silk, so tender that he could have devoured her?
56528Did it matter a hang what the Company wanted?
56528Did not my great- grandfather gain, and hardly, too, the sum originally invested?
56528Did she not love him enough?
56528Did she want, then, to remain in the pit to die of hunger?
56528Did you hear?
56528Did you see anything?"
56528Do I know you?
56528Do they want to make fools of people?"
56528Do you call yourself a man to lower yourself like that before one of these beasts who devour us?"
56528Do you know that it is beastly to stuff yourself like this?
56528Do you see?
56528Do you think the bourgeois would ever consent to work as we do?"
56528Do you understand?
56528Do you understand?"
56528Do you vote for the strike to go on?"
56528Do you want the strike to go on?
56528Does it work?
56528Does n''t Zacharie owe us any respect?
56528Double the timbering-- do you understand?"
56528Eh, do you hear?
56528Eh, what do you say to it?"
56528Eh?
56528Eh?
56528Eh?
56528Eh?
56528Eh?
56528Eh?
56528Eh?
56528Eh?
56528Even if he mended the cables and lit the fires, where would he find men?
56528Had n''t we enough misery, that He had to make her ill too, just when I ca n''t even give her a cup of warm gruel?"
56528Had she let her tongue fall?
56528Had she not been with a man?
56528Had she not made him suffer with the same suffering here, on this Réquillart road, when she had given herself to that man?
56528Had she not suffered too much already?
56528Had they not the right to take back their property from this thief who had exploited them so long, who was starving them at a hint from the Company?
56528Have n''t we got enough to do with our misery?
56528Have n''t you got it in your own power to make yourselves happy on earth?"
56528Have they not a Provident Fund?"
56528Have we not run all the risks of the enterprise, and do I today make a bad use of my income?"
56528Have you examined?"
56528Have you got nothing?"
56528Have you just a little vermicelli by way of loan?"
56528He asked:"Then Monsieur Hennebeau owns the mine?"
56528He discussed no more, he simply said:"We have gone far; shall we go back?"
56528He had, in fact, arrived, and another voice cried from the bottom of the cutting:"Well, is this the way to treat people?
56528He has cost us something, has n''t he?
56528He hesitated at first: was it indeed she, that young girl in the coarse blue dress, with that bonnet?
56528He remained a moment motionless, then added, in his hollow voice:"What is it that you want?
56528He said in a low voice, with abstracted gaze, as if to himself:"Raise wages-- how can you?
56528He said, smiling:"Will you come and see?"
56528He was expecting the postman at two o''clock; ought he at once to ask for troops?
56528He was sleeping, then?
56528He went on:"Do you see that?
56528He went on:"Where is the beast who does not understand that?
56528His anxiety became extreme, every minute was of importance; what decision should he take?
56528His eyes lifted and his face was very pale; he said softly to his companion:"Did I ever tell you how she died?"
56528His voice changed, his eyes grew bright, he fixed them on Étienne, directly addressing him:"Now, do you understand that?
56528How can one tell how things are going to turn out?
56528How can we make the strike general if we do n''t force all the mates to be on our side?"
56528How can you do good to such creatures?"
56528How can you talk such folly, you who ought to know the enormous risks which capital runs in industry-- in the mines, for example?
56528How could Bonnemort, nailed to his chair, have been able to seize her throat?
56528How could he defend these buildings, open on every side?
56528How could he keep his engagements?
56528How could she come back now if the miners were to prolong their joking?
56528How do you expect me to go on?
56528How do you reckon to set about it?"
56528How far ought they to flee to reach shelter at the end of this abominable day, beneath this leaden cloud which also seemed about to crush the earth?
56528How is it with you?"
56528How many hours passed by thus?
56528How was this known?
56528How were nine people to live for a fortnight on fifty francs?
56528How were they to live, seven persons without counting Estelle, on his three francs?
56528How would the nations spring up again?
56528I said nothing; and who told you so?"
56528I say, you knew Roussie?"
56528If any class must be devoured, would not the people, still new and full of life, devour the middle class, exhausted by enjoyment?
56528Is it cooked, then?"
56528Is it honest, whenever a crisis comes, to leave the workers to die with hunger in order to save the shareholders''dividends?
56528Is it not so?
56528Is it not true that all citizens are equal since the Revolution, because they vote together?
56528Is it possible to make oneself so wretched through wanting justice?"
56528Is it ready yet?"
56528Is it you lighting up, Catherine?"
56528Is n''t a man free?
56528Is n''t it best for us to join this association?"
56528Is n''t it enough, then, all these abominations?
56528Is n''t it true, Alzire, that we have all had some?"
56528Is n''t the good God making fun of us?
56528Is that little chat nearly done?"
56528Is that nice?"
56528It is not the Emperor''s fault, perhaps; but why should he go and fight in America?
56528It was Maheude who replied:"To mass, sir?
56528It was good that they should want their work paid for at what it was worth, but why occupy oneself with such things as the bourgeois and Government?
56528It was the downfall of their very life; what was the good of living, now that they would have to live without her?
56528It was the end; what could they expect, reduced to this niche where they dared not move, exhausted, starving, having neither bread nor light?
56528It''ll do, wo n''t it?
56528It''s filling, then, to live on other people''s deaths?"
56528It''s nothing, is it?"
56528It''s the neighbour that you want?
56528It''s to spare your arms, eh?
56528It''s true, is n''t it, old un, that the doctor''s mistaken, and that you can still work?"
56528Just tell me you did n''t say so, eh?"
56528Let them pay you more, eh?
56528M. Grégoire began again:"And everything goes well at the pit?"
56528Maheu asked him another question:"Is it the Voreux''s turn now?"
56528Maheude?
56528Must I spit in your face before people to get your spirits up?"
56528Must he leave his carcass behind a wall, like a strayed dog?
56528Must he still push them on in obstinate resistance, now that there was neither money nor credit?
56528Need one be so particular with these damned soldiers who were worrying the colliers in their own homes?
56528No one knew exactly, the shouts made it impossible to hear; were they going to bed there?
56528No politics, no conspiracies, is it not so?
56528Nothing at Piolaine, nothing at Maigrat''s: then where?
56528Négrel, who was exhausted, shouted to the overseers:"Ca n''t you make them be still?
56528On what were they to count now since even their brothers had abandoned them?
56528Only I say things as they are, and I know neighbours who could n''t say as much, do n''t you think?"
56528Only what will that lead you to?"
56528Perhaps it required a lawyer, a learned man, able to speak and act without compromising the mates?
56528Pierronne, is it?
56528Put some potatoes on to boil; we''ll eat them with a little butter and some coffee, eh?
56528Say it''s time to get up?"
56528Shall I go and fetch her?"
56528Shall I try and get you credit somewhere?"
56528She had then consented?
56528She looked at him without listening, and said at last, speaking familiarly:"Eh?
56528She said again, stammering:"What would you have?
56528She was always there, looking at him with her large fixed eyes, laughing her good- natured laugh, as if to say:"Are you willing?"
56528She was astonished; what had that got to do with politics?
56528Should he remain?
56528So what was to be done?--to go elsewhere, to die of hunger, to yield beneath the blows of every man who might pass?
56528Speaking as though they had left each other good friends an hour before, he simply asked:"Have you looked down below?
56528Strangle Pierronne and the others, and fight the whole settlement?
56528Suddenly he called out:"I say there, Maheu; have you no care for life?
56528The Company was, then, in luck since the terrible Montsou wrestler had come back to it to ask for bread?
56528The best is, is it not, to try and live honestly in the place in which the good God has put us?"
56528The former said at last:"Is it Chaval you''re waiting for?
56528The little urchins came back hungry, they wanted to eat; why could they not have something to eat?
56528The lodger, hiding his timid gentleness in his great beard, protested and stammered:"Oh, that?
56528The manager went on:"But, as a matter of fact, is it our fault?
56528The other man wanted to interrupt him, but he added:"Why do n''t you be frank?
56528The other turned pale and his lips trembled; then, with a movement of excuse:"What would you have?
56528The water had already filled that hole, then?
56528Then he cried:"Have n''t you got any blood in your veins, by God?"
56528Then he imagined that Catherine must be ill."I say, is it you?
56528Then he made a gesture of resignation: what was the good?
56528Then someone was dead?
56528Then the colliers were no longer masters in their own place?
56528Then they wanted to turn him into the street?
56528Then what was to be done?
56528Then what would they do afterwards?
56528Then Étienne asked, pointing to the sombre pile of buildings at the foot of the platform:"A pit, is n''t it?"
56528Then, as he still scraped, he added proudly:"Is n''t it comfortable in my house?
56528Then, when he had expectorated and wiped the black froth from his lips, he replied in the rising wind:"Eh?
56528There is nothing to say to them; what could you do?
56528There was, then, not even passion, not even jealousy at the bottom of this persistent sensuality?
56528There were twenty of them; were those bloody bosses going to abandon them thus?
56528They are delicious, are they not?"
56528They do tell stories--""Eh?
56528They went back towards the Voreux slowly, and he added, after a few paces:"Have you seen the new placards?"
56528They were known to be there; why weary oneself more?
56528To listen to you talking useless foolery?
56528Toussaint Maheu, is it not?
56528Towards whom should they go, since no once appeared to be there?
56528Unfortunately, the difficulty began when the question arose, What could be done?
56528Was Darwin right, then, and the world only a battlefield, where the strong ate the weak for the sake of the beauty and continuance of the race?
56528Was So- and- so among them?
56528Was he going to be left on the road, hanging in the blackness?
56528Was he, then, a coward?
56528Was he, then, making fools of people?
56528Was it his fault if they had left that fat lazy fellow to come to him?
56528Was it not a cry of famine that the March wind rolled up across this naked plain?
56528Was it not fearful?
56528Was it not the common lot?
56528Was it not what he always met, girls tumbled over at the bottom of every ditch, beggars who crammed themselves with the only joy that cost nothing?
56528Was it possible to kill oneself at this hard toil, in this deadly darkness, and not even to gain the few pence to buy one''s daily bread?
56528Was it resolved to destroy them?
56528Was it some mates, then, who had also found the road barred and were returning?
56528Was it the thunder of a landslip bringing on to their heads the enormous mass which separated them from the light?
56528Was it true?
56528Was it true?
56528Was it, then, all over?
56528Was it, then, done with for ever?
56528Was life worth living when one had to keep one''s daughter''s fatherless children while she went off with her lover?
56528Was n''t it so?"
56528Was not justice on the side of the miners?
56528Was not that Maheude beneath the beetroots, with bent back and hoarse respiration accompanying the rumble of the ventilator?
56528Was not that a superb effort, a campaign in which justice would at last triumph?
56528Was not that better than to roam the streets like a vagabond?
56528Was that all?
56528Was that the terrible thing which blew everything up?
56528Was that the urchin whom he had seen in breeches, with her head in the canvas cap?
56528Was the old social order cracking this very evening?
56528Was there anything in life worth more?
56528We are not going to leave off eating, I suppose?"
56528We ca n''t pass through the cuttings, then?"
56528We do n''t ask a man to cut his own throat, do we?
56528We have left her free, have n''t we?
56528We want five centimes more, do n''t we, you others?"
56528We''ll go, eh?
56528Well, are you coming, Louis?
56528Were his eyes out?
56528Were there, then, neither soldiers nor police at the Victoire?
56528Were these people going to bed at the Maheus''?
56528Were they being made fun of?
56528Were they going to abandon the meeting?
56528Were they making fun of people?
56528Were they not very fortunate?
56528Were they to let themselves be worried much longer?
56528Were they very dirty?
56528What a hustling, eh?
56528What accident could thus have driven away their mates?
56528What are you doing, then?"
56528What do I want to do with the singers?
56528What do they want me to do with him?"
56528What do you think they can do with that?
56528What does it matter to you?
56528What does that matter?"
56528What fault had she committed, then, that misfortune would never give her any rest?
56528What for?
56528What good would it do us, what you ask, now that I have a lover and you have a woman yourself?"
56528What had he got in his bones, then?
56528What has she got in her skin, then, not to be able to wait till I married her after she had helped to get us out of difficulties?
56528What have we done, then, that we should have such troubles-- some under the earth, and the others with nothing left but to long to get there too?
56528What he wants I''m obliged to want too, are n''t I?
56528What is the good of letting men be killed for nothing?"
56528What is the matter?"
56528What is your aim?"
56528What more could she take off?
56528What now?
56528What now?
56528What rancour, unknown to himself, by some slow process of poisoning, had risen from his bowels to his brain?
56528What right have they to freeze us in this way?"
56528What shall we do with all this?"
56528What should he do to them?
56528What should he do with a putter?
56528What stories?"
56528What the devil are you doing there?"
56528What the devil was she doing down there?
56528What then had happened that they did not meet a soul?
56528What then?
56528What then?
56528What then?
56528What was going on, then, to bring all these people into the roads?
56528What was it, then?
56528What was the good of a scandal?
56528What was the good of anything else?
56528What was the good of bothering over the strike?
56528What was the good of destroying the galleries?
56528What was the good of disturbing him?
56528What was the good of explaining, for she would not understand in her grief?
56528What was the good of having a possible act of cowardice on one''s conscience?
56528What was the good of it all?
56528What was the good of knocking?
56528What was the good of persisting?
56528What was the good of risking a useless massacre?
56528What was the good of stirring up this abomination?
56528What was the good of this dream of fraternizing with the soldiers?
56528What was the good?
56528What was the good?
56528What was the matter with her, then, today?
56528What was the matter, then?
56528What was the use?
56528What was to be done?
56528What was to be done?
56528What was to become of them if Maigrat persisted in cutting short their credit, and if the Piolaine people would not give them the five francs?
56528What will become of us, eh, if our children begin at once to work for others?
56528What would his wife do, and what would become of them if she were to return with empty hands?
56528What would you do?
56528What would you have?
56528What''s the use of doing it?"
56528What''s the use of racking your brains over those things?"
56528What''s this?"
56528What, then, was going on outside?
56528What, then, was happening?
56528What, then, was happening?
56528When a man came up, she rose and questioned him with her eyes: Nothing?
56528When he saw Étienne he asked, with contemptuous surprise:"What''s that?"
56528When justice came, would it be thanks to the cartridges distributed by the middle class?
56528When one has right on one''s side, do n''t you think it gives you heart, and one ends always by being the strongest?"
56528When one has to work, one works; is n''t it true?
56528When shall it be?"
56528When the young man had folded the letter, she questioned him:"Is the news good?
56528When they had finished their omelette and cheese, the engine- man proposed to depart, and as the other tried to detain him:"What for?
56528Where am I to get it from, eh?
56528Where are you going to?"
56528Where could he be?
56528Where do the bandits spring from?"
56528Where should he go, and what was to become of him in this country famished for lack of work?
56528Where should they go to?
56528Where the devil could that madcap Paul have stuffed it?
56528Where was he going?
56528Where was it, over there?
56528Where was it, that Plogof which had appeared to him beneath the dazzling sun?
56528Where was it, then?
56528Where was it?
56528Whispers ran around:"It''s Trompette, is n''t it?
56528Who are those who want to work?"
56528Who could say that the workers had had their reasonable share in the extraordinary increase of wealth and comfort during the last hundred years?
56528Who had ever seen such boobies?
56528Who knows whether Alzire had sponged over the table?
56528Who then was the guilty one?
56528Who thought of it first, eh?"
56528Who was it?
56528Who was the fool who placed earthly happiness in the partition of wealth?
56528Who would dare to be first to speak of submission?
56528Who would have expected such a thing?
56528Who would pay the interest on the sums his friends had confided to him?
56528Why are you going over to the bourgeois?"
56528Why could he not imitate others, demand a part for himself, obtain shares, succeed in something at last?
56528Why could no one say?
56528Why could not things be done coolly?
56528Why cut the cables?
56528Why did he want her to leave her man?
56528Why had Cécile come near?
56528Why had he found her ugly?
56528Why had she not seen them in the settlement?
56528Why had the strikers gone to Deneulin instead of attacking one of the Company''s pits?
56528Why had they not come across any soldiers?
56528Why him, more than any one else?"
56528Why lose a lunch that was already cooking?
56528Why mix oneself up with other people''s affairs, when one would get nothing out of it but hard knocks?
56528Why not hold this meeting?
56528Why risk displeasing fate by doubting it?
56528Why should he be so zealous, this man who had sold himself?
56528Why should he interfere?
56528Why should he not talk with this soldier?
56528Why should it prove the stronger in this war of labour against gold?
56528Why should the worker remain the slave of the master who pays him?
56528Why should they not take a lodger?
56528Why should they thus sulk against what they desired?
56528Why, then, at the same idea to- day did she feel repugnance and something like regret?
56528Why, was he afraid of a glass?
56528Why?"
56528Why?"
56528Will it be soon?
56528Will that hold?
56528Will you be good enough to look over there if we are at it?"
56528Will you come?"
56528Will you just fill your tram and push?"
56528Will you listen?"
56528Would he then end as a murderer?
56528Would it not be better if they were to shut up their bellies, and press their thighs together, as at the approach of misfortune?
56528Would it not be better to die at once in the effort to destroy this tyranny of capital, which was starving the worker?
56528Would it not soon be done with, this cursed life of misfortune?
56528Would the Company refuse to take them on again?
56528Would the settlement itself pass into it?
56528Would they never dare to love each other some day, now that they were free?
56528You are going to flog our daughters, are you?"
56528You do n''t want to have anything to do with me?"
56528You see if she is confined, and obliged to marry, what shall we do for a living then?"
56528You were bothered, eh?
56528Zacharie, is it done?"
56528a bit of grilled cod?
56528all that belong to?
56528and if so, what do you expect to do to beat the Company?"
56528and that one?
56528and the marriage with little Négrel?"
56528and this one?
56528and why had this child just killed a soldier whose very name he did not know?
56528and why this demand?
56528and you, what do you say about it?"
56528are you alone?"
56528are you asleep?"
56528asked Étienne again;"do you bring her here sometimes?"
56528could tubbing be demolished like that?
56528cried Chaval,"what the devil have you come here for?"
56528did I tell you?
56528did you hear?"
56528do n''t you think so?"
56528do they want a hand here for any kind of work?"
56528exclaimed Maheu, furious at being dragged out of his dejection,"what is all this clatter again?
56528exclaimed Étienne in a stifled voice;"where the devil is he going to?"
56528from what side could they attack the rocks?
56528gone away?"
56528growled Étienne,"are they going to flatten us?
56528had anything really changed in his house?
56528had something happened?
56528has the wind prevented you from sleeping, poor darling?"
56528have n''t we got to the end yet?"
56528he asked,"is n''t she up yet then?"
56528how could they go down?
56528how many are there in there?"
56528is it forbidden to work, then?"
56528is it possible?
56528is it you?"
56528is it you?"
56528is it you?"
56528is there any need to say where one goes?
56528is this the rendezvous you called us to?"
56528murmured the innkeeper;"what''s the good of it?
56528or would it be better to wait patiently, and not to act until he had received the directors''orders?
56528repeated M. Hennebeau;"am I happy?"
56528said a miner grinning;"did that little fellow have you?
56528said the young man;"why do you need a good God and his paradise to make you happy?
56528she cried merrily;"was n''t it lucky that I leant my head?"
56528so the strong man was thrown?
56528that''s nice, is n''t it?
56528the water was rising; what could he do?
56528they come a little late, do n''t they, my worthy fellow?"
56528they have money, why should they care?"
56528to- morrow morning at Jean- Bart, is it agreed?"
56528was it another accident?
56528was it humbug, a pretence of going to sleep?
56528was it possible that they were reduced to such misery?
56528we are reaching the bottom: do you hear?"
56528were the men also in the party?
56528what has my little girl there done to Him, to be shaking with fever?
56528what is it, then?"
56528what is it?"
56528what pleasant odour did he find in him?
56528what the devil does it matter to me?"
56528what will you do with all that?
56528what''s happening, then?"
56528what''s he done there?
56528when your heads are smashed, is it you who will have to bear the consequences?
56528where am I to get it from?
56528where are you hurt?"
56528where are you off to so quick?"
56528where was it to be found, what was to be done?
56528why are others rich?
56528why are the former beneath the heel of the latter without hope of ever taking their place?
56528why are the others such fools?"
56528why did you take this trouble?"
56528why do n''t you reply?
56528why do you not take us?
56528why have you done this?"
56528why, in the devil''s name, do n''t you watch them?"
56528why?
56528will you climb up in front of me?"
56528will you take that?
56528would you like me to make it if you come back late?"
56528you do n''t know?"
56528you knew that, and said nothing?
56528you''re going away?"
56528Étienne narrated his vain wanderings of the past week: must one, then, die of hunger?
56528Étienne recognized Rasseneur and was turning away, when the latter added:"You do n''t want to see me, eh?
56528Étienne said again:"And if it breaks?"
56528Étienne, for example, who was looking out for quarters?
56528Étienne, losing his self- possession and trembling with anger, turned his eyes on his mate''s and stammered:"You''ve done that, you''ve done that?"
10449A boy?
10449A rawhide, was it?
10449A-- are you pretty well off for money? 10449 About how much money, all together, do you expect to make out of this estate?"
10449About how old?
10449Ah, indeed?
10449Ai n''t there some way you could get bonds for me?
10449Ai n''t there something we can start on?
10449Ai n''t this nice, Uncle Billy?
10449Am I the boy-- am I the Ralph she lost?
10449An''do I owe my life to him?
10449An''have ye not heard?
10449An''the Widow Maloney, she do gi''us''mazin''proper food, now, do n''t she? 10449 An''then-- an''then I''d stay right along with you, would n''t I?"
10449An''when can I see''em? 10449 An''where do ye be goin''Ralphy?"
10449An''where do ye be goin''now?
10449An''where do yez be goin''to I donno?
10449An''wo n''t she never believe it? 10449 And I presume you made diligent inquiry afterward?"
10449And are you Ralph?
10449And did the child return to him?
10449And did you not assure him that the child who went to the city, on the train that night after the accident was not his son?
10449And do you think this can be done against my positive testimony?
10449And had your dinner?
10449And has Mr. Sharpman returned?
10449And have a home, a beautiful home, with books, pictures, horses, fine clothes, everything that wealth could furnish?
10449And how do you propose to proceed when you have money enough?
10449And is the child whom you rescued that night from the burning car this boy who is sitting beside you here to- day?
10449And last night you came to the conclusion that we were deceiving you?
10449And so,continued Goodlaw,"when you returned from one of your trips into the country you found that the boy had disappeared?"
10449And suppose you should find your parents, and they should be rich and give you a great deal of money, how would you spend it?
10449And the nurse lost her life?
10449And the other child, where was he?
10449And the others?
10449And this, Mrs. Burnham, do you recognize this?
10449And to control the moneys and properties that may come into your hands?
10449And what of Rhyming Joe''s story?
10449And when was that?
10449And when will the trial come off? 10449 And where was he found?"
10449And whom do you choose for your guardian?
10449And will you come to live with us?
10449And will you follow my advice to the letter, and do just what I tell you to do in this matter?
10449And will you play with me?
10449And would n''t you like to have a father too?
10449And you have consulted with us and followed our advice until yesterday, have you not?
10449And, from hearing that conversation, did you become convinced that you are Simon Craft''s grandson and not Robert Burnham''s son?
10449Any clothing or jewelry?
10449Appeared to like it, did he?
10449Are they alive now? 10449 Are you Robert Burnham''s son?"
10449Are you doing all that can be done?
10449Are you familiar with his face, his expression, his manner?
10449Are you positive that the boy in court is not your grandson?
10449Are you sure he is dead?
10449Are you sure this is the boy?
10449Are you sure,he cried out,"that I am her boy?
10449As the service continued through a period of years, the bill will amount now to quite a large sum, I presume?
10449At what hour did you reach my office last evening?
10449At what hour?
10449At what time did you leave my office last night?
10449At which time, sir, would you be better able to form an opinion,--one week after this accident occurred, or ten years afterward?
10449Awful strong wind goin''in there, ai n''t they?
10449Be ye sure o''that, Ralph? 10449 Been readin''some more o''them love- stories?"
10449Beggin''your pardon, Mistress Burnham,he said,"but ha''ye seen aught o''Ralph?"
10449Burnham''s widow? 10449 But how can you expect me to decide on your proposition without first consulting my client?
10449But suppose I should not recognize nor acknowledge as my son the person whom you will bring?
10449But where did Billy get you?
10449But, Ralph, where had you come from when Billy found you?
10449Ca n''t you do sumpthin''for me?
10449Called a doctor for him, did n''t you?
10449Can you not spare me that recital, sir?
10449Can you prove it?
10449Can you recognize this boy,pointing to Ralph,"as the one whom you saw with the nurse and afterward with the old man on the night of the accident?"
10449Can you tell me where Joe is, please?
10449Could you, at this time, recognize the man whom you saw with the child after the accident?
10449D''ye want the bill for both of ye?
10449Did Mike come out?
10449Did Mr. Sharpman know that you were in his office when this conversation took place?
10449Did Rhyming Joe know you were there?
10449Did any of these slaps ever happen to push him over?
10449Did he go alone?
10449Did he go far fra the openin,''thenk ye?
10449Did he have anything to eat during that time?
10449Did he have anything to eat?
10449Did he tell you where he came from?
10449Did she say that?
10449Did the boy think it had been stolen?
10449Did you beat him for not bringing money to you when you sent him out to beg?
10449Did you beat this boy for not bringing back money to you when you had sent him out to beg?
10449Did you bring him?
10449Did you call me, Uncle Billy?
10449Did you compel this boy to lie to the officers when they came?
10449Did you eat a good deal?
10449Did you ever lock him up in a dark closet?
10449Did you explain to him the facts concerning his parentage and history?
10449Did you find any trace of him?
10449Did you find out where he came from?
10449Did you find this Rhyming Joe?
10449Did you make him lie?
10449Did you make him steal?
10449Did you never strike him with the palm of your hand?
10449Did you not command the boy to say that there were no such goods in the house?
10449Did you pull his ears?
10449Did you reach this decision alone or did some one help you to it?
10449Did you say to him, at that time, that the child must have perished in the wreck?
10449Did you see Mrs. Burnham alone?
10449Did you see Rhyming Joe last night?
10449Did you see any one to talk with except Bachelor Billy that night after you left me?
10449Did you see either of these children after the disaster?
10449Did you see him?
10449Did you see me last night?
10449Did you see that other child after the accident?
10449Did you see this person whom you call Rhyming Joe?
10449Did you see, on your train that night,asked Sharpman,"the witness who has just left the stand?"
10449Did you send him?
10449Did you send this boy out on the streets to beg?
10449Did you sometimes whip him for not bringing back money to you from his begging excursions?
10449Did you tell Mr. Burnham of seeing this old man and child after the accident?
10449Did you think that I knew when you came into the office?
10449Did you think you would like to go there to live?
10449Do I know that boy?
10449Do I understand you, then, to claim that Ralph, the slate- picker, is my son? 10449 Do n''t that agreement bind his heirs?"
10449Do n''t you see I ca n''t? 10449 Do ye belong in Pittston, I don''no''?"
10449Do you know him?
10449Do you know this boy?
10449Do you mean William Buckley, with whom you are living?
10449Do you not propose to present such a bill in case the plaintiff is successful in this suit?
10449Do you recognize him as your son Ralph?
10449Do you recognize it, madam?
10449Do you recognize it?
10449Do you recognize this cloak?
10449Do you recognize this gentleman?
10449Do you remember,the old man asked,"the Cherry Brook bridge disaster that occurred near Philadelphia some eight years ago?"
10449Do you still think me wild?
10449Do you think, Uncle Billy,asked Ralph,"''at Rhymin''Joe was a- tellin''the truth?
10449Does a man by the name of Buckley live here? 10449 Does any one appear for Mrs. Burnham in this matter?"
10449Does anybody work in there?
10449Does he work with you in the mines?
10449Find your man?
10449Footed the doctor''s bill, I suppose, did n''t you?
10449For how long a time did you say he stayed there?
10449For how long at a time?
10449For what purpose?
10449For whom did you sell the jewelry?
10449From the conversation overheard by you, have you reason to believe that Rhyming Joe is acquainted with the facts relating to your parentage?
10449From there where did you go?
10449Gave the good old man the slip Ere the cup could touch the lip?
10449Get your hat and come along, I say; and be quick about it? 10449 Good joke on the lad, was n''t it?"
10449Gran''pa Simon ai n''t anywheres around is he?
10449Had a good many things that were new to you, I presume?
10449Had it been stolen?
10449Had to pay the woman to nurse him and look after him, I take it?
10449Had you any idea why he went away?
10449Has Mike Conway come out yet?
10449Has any one come out from there?
10449Has she got a ticket for you?
10449Has the bald, bad eagle of the plain Swooped down upon his prey again?
10449Has the lawyer said aught to mak''ye unhappy, Ralph?
10449Has the mother been notified,he said finally,"that this child is living, and, if so, why does not she appear here to make this application?"
10449Has your opinion in that matter changed since then?
10449Have a good dinner?
10449Have a long talk together?
10449Have n''t seen him since when, man?
10449Have n''t you a faint recollection of having been in a big accident sometime; say, for instance, a railroad disaster?
10449Have the city police found stolen goods on your premises?
10449Have you a handkerchief?
10449Have you any business with me?
10449Have you any reason for this opinion aside from the conversation you allege that you heard?
10449Have you ever seen this boy before?
10449Have you got your pipe smoked out, Uncle Billy?
10449Have you heard from him since the accident?
10449Have you learned anything new about your grandson?
10449Have you presented any bill to Ralph''s guardian for services to the boy?
10449Have you seen anything of Ralph since the fire?
10449Have you seen him to- day?
10449Have you seen this boy before?
10449Heard what, Andy?
10449How did it happen?
10449How did the plaintiff in this case find you out?
10449How did you know it was he?
10449How do you happen to know all this?
10449How do you know it?
10449How long did he stay with you?
10449How long did you stay there?
10449How long did you stay there?
10449How long has he been working there?
10449How long have you known Rhyming Joe?
10449How long is it since you have been accustomed to hearing him talk?
10449How long was it after the accident before you began the search for your child?
10449How long was it before the power to speak returned to you?
10449How many children were in that car besides your son?
10449How many men are up there?
10449How much have ye got?
10449How much money have you got saved up?
10449How much money have you now?
10449How soon will you be able to go down and begin the search?
10449How''d he find out?
10449I am to understand, then, that you positively decline to acknowledge this boy as your son?
10449I invited you to ride up with me, did n''t I? 10449 I see my clerk has gone,"he said;"are you afraid to go home alone?"
10449I''ve been thinkin'', s''pose this suit should go against us, do you b''lieve Mrs. Burnham would do anything more for me?
10449Immediately before that occurred where was your child?
10449In cash?
10449In pursuance of that advice, did you have an interview with the boy Ralph?
10449In the mines? 10449 In what way?"
10449Is Simon Craft your grandfather?
10449Is it a hotel ye''re after?
10449Is it drawn up in legal shape? 10449 Is it mornin''?
10449Is it your belief that Ralph perished in that disaster?
10449Is that all?
10449Is that you, Uncle Billy?
10449Is that you, Uncle Billy?
10449Is there any, any doubt about it now?
10449Is this Ralph?
10449Is-- is Bachelor Billy his father?
10449It was his,he said at last, very gently;"they were all his; tell me now-- where did you get them?"
10449Joe? 10449 Knock him down with your fist?"
10449Luk at that un, now!--don''t he beat all? 10449 May I speak confidentially?"
10449Mayhap ye got a bit frightened a- comin''up i''the dark?
10449Men,he said,"are you ready?
10449Might not a child of very lowly birth do all the things you speak of under proper training and certain influences?
10449Mike Conway? 10449 Mike Conway?"
10449More cash?
10449More than once?
10449Mr. Bummerton, did Joe say when he would be back?
10449Mr. Burnham,he whispered,"is-- is he alive?"
10449Mr. Goodlaw,continued the judge, addressing Mrs. Burnham''s attorney,"will you look at the bond and see if it is satisfactory to you?"
10449Mr. Goodlaw,he said,"ai n''t they goin''to let me tell what I heard Rhymin''Joe say?"
10449Mrs. Burnham,asked Ralph,"do you really an''truly believe''at I''m your son?"
10449Mrs. Burnham,continued Sharpman,"will you kindly take the stand?"
10449Must I tell Mrs. Burnham? 10449 No, I do n''t know him,--why?"
10449Not so as to recognize him by sight?
10449Now, Ralph, when you left me at the Scranton station on Saturday night, did you go straight home?
10449Now, did n''t you lock him up that way once, and keep him locked up all day and all night?
10449Of whom did you buy it?
10449Oh, by the way,he asked,"did ye have a ticket for your passage up, or was ye goin''to pay your fare?"
10449Oh, may I?
10449On what did you base your opinion?
10449On what road was it?
10449Pinch his flesh?
10449Pull his hair?
10449Ralph who?
10449Ralph,he said, hastily,"ye''re not goin''now for gude?
10449Ralph,he said,"Ralph, lad, dinna ye see me?
10449Ralph,he said,"is that yo''a- stannin''there i''the rain?
10449Ralph,he said,"is this application for a guardian made according to your desire?"
10449Res''lutions,said another,"w''at''s them?"
10449Robert Burnham''s son? 10449 Seems kind o''home- like an''happy, do n''t it?"
10449She was very kind to you, was n''t she?
10449Sir?
10449Sonny,said he,"can you tell me who that boy is, over yonder, with his hand done up in a white cloth?"
10449Still, you insist upon the absolute truth of your story?
10449That boy w''ats a- talkin''to Jimmy Dooley, you mean?
10449That is my name,said the lawyer, regarding his visitor with some curiosity,"will you walk in?"
10449The boy''s mother; she''s living, ai n''t she?
10449The fire was the most distressing part of it; but why do you ask me these questions?
10449Then Ralph is--?
10449Then are you comin''to bed now?
10449Then let''s get at it right away,said the boy, impatiently,"it wo n''t take very long, will it?"
10449Then why do n''t you live in the Burnham mansion?
10449Then you did make him lie?
10449Then you rest here?
10449Then you went away without letting me know of your presence there, did you?
10449Then, why will you not come?
10449This is rather a high- priced hotel; but they get up everything in first- class style, do you see? 10449 Ticket?"
10449To do what?
10449To whom did he make that promise?
10449Under what circumstances?
10449W''y do n''t you''member? 10449 Was he at Craft''s house frequently?"
10449Was he the same elderly man whom you saw with the child before the accident?
10449Was it dark?
10449Was it the kind of a strip of leather commonly known as a rawhide?
10449Was that the reason he would not go?
10449Was the car in which you were riding well filled?
10449Was the door open?
10449Was the jewelry yours?
10449Was there a light in the office when you came in?
10449Was your decision to disclose your knowledge reached with a fair understanding of the probable result of such a disclosure?
10449We''ll stay together, wo n''t we, old fellow? 10449 Well, I do n''t know; there''s Uncle Billy, he''s the best friend I''ve got; would n''t he do?"
10449Well, Mr. Sharpman,he said,"what have you to offer on the part of your client?"
10449Well, Ralph, can you take a little walk with me this evening, as far as Lawyer Sharpman''s office?
10449Well, gentlemen,he said,"are you ready to proceed in the case of''Craft against Burnham''?"
10449Well, had you not better go to him?
10449Well, how shall we begin?
10449Well, my friend; what can I do for you?
10449Well, then, I''ll try to; I''ll try to wait an''do what you tell me to; what shall I do first?
10449Well, then, what is your proposition? 10449 Well, what other means of grandfatherly persuasion did you use in correcting the child?"
10449Well, what then?
10449Well, what''s your plan?
10449Well, what''s your plan?
10449Well, why could n''t she jes''take my part, an''give it to her daughter''s guarden, an''then take me home to live with her without any propaty? 10449 Well, you see, we had pretty hard work sometimes to get along and get enough to eat, and--""I say, did you send this boy out on the streets to beg?"
10449Well, you''ve housed and clothed and fed the boy for a matter of three years or thereabouts, have n''t you?
10449Well,continued Rhyming Joe,"is n''t it strange how and under what circumstances old cronies sometimes meet?
10449Well,continued Sharpman,"as a result of that meeting what were you to do?"
10449Well,said Mr. Burnham, calmly,"what can you do for me?"
10449Well,said Sharpman,"when you had found the boy, what did you do?"
10449Well?
10449Were my father an''mother killed?
10449Were there any other children on the train?
10449Were you surprised at that?
10449Wh-- what?
10449Wha''for do ye want the lad?
10449What about the men?
10449What breaker?
10449What conversation did you have with him?
10449What did he do?
10449What did he say he wished you to do for him?
10449What did you do after that?
10449What did you do then?
10449What did you sell?
10449What do you mean?
10449What does he say?
10449What else has the boy done or said to make you think he is of gentler birth than his companions in the breaker?
10449What else have you that he wore?
10449What else? 10449 What else?"
10449What else?
10449What is his name?
10449What is it, Ralph, lad, what''s ailin''ye?
10449What is it, lad?
10449What is it?
10449What is it?
10449What is this old man''s story?
10449What is your occupation?
10449What kind of a boy is he, any way? 10449 What kind of an accident?"
10449What man?
10449What other mode of punishment did you practise on this child besides rawhiding him?
10449What reason have you, if we can all be happy?
10449What thenk ye,said Bachelor Billy to him,"that the lady wants for ye to do?"
10449What was his business?
10449What was it he refused to do?
10449What was your occupation during the time that this boy lived with you?
10449What would he do with it?
10449What''ll your miner do to- morrow when he finds this place?
10449What''s that?
10449What''s the boy to you?
10449What''s the first thing to be done?
10449What''s the matter wi''ye, Ralph? 10449 What''s the reason?"
10449What''s to be done now?
10449What''s your bill, landlord?
10449When did you first see him?
10449When did you first see him?
10449When do you want me to come again?
10449When does the next one go?
10449When will you bring him?
10449When you lived with Craft?
10449When?
10449When?
10449Where did he leave you?
10449Where did this conversation take place?
10449Where did you go on Sunday morning?
10449Where did you obtain the goods you sold?
10449Where does he live? 10449 Where does it go to?"
10449Where was it?
10449Where were you?
10449Where''s your ticket, sonny?
10449Where-- where to?
10449Where?
10449Where?
10449Where?
10449Where?
10449Where?
10449Which one?
10449Which station d''ye want to go to, bub?
10449Which train for Scranton d''ye want to take?
10449Whin did ye ate last?
10449Who are Farnum and Furkison?
10449Who are you, then?
10449Who his father an''mother waur?
10449Who is Rhyming Joe?
10449Who is going to carry on the suit for you?
10449Who is he? 10449 Who told you?"
10449Who was he?
10449Who were in the back room?
10449Whom else can you think of?
10449Why did n''t you wait for me,he said, turning angrily to Craft,"instead of coming here to pick a quarrel with these people?"
10449Why did you go there?
10449Why did you not make your presence known?
10449Why did you not tell me,he asked,"when the child left you, so that I might have assisted you in the search for him?"
10449Why did you suppose so?
10449Why don''ye speak, lad? 10449 Why not?
10449Why not?
10449Why, Mrs. Maloney, are you sure? 10449 Why, Ralph, lad, is that yo''?
10449Why, what''s the matter with your identity?
10449Why, where''s Ralph?
10449Why,he exclaimed,"what are you doing?
10449Why?
10449Will more men, more money, more of anything, help you in your work?
10449Will you come with me?
10449Will you give me a writing to this effect?
10449Will you have a hoss of your own?
10449Will you own the breaker, an''boss us boys?
10449Will you step into my office, sir?
10449With whom was he travelling?
10449With whom was she travelling?
10449Wo n''t Mrs. Burnham do?
10449Would he no''most like stay near whaur he cam''through?
10449Would it take strong evidence to convince you to the contrary?
10449Would n''t I''a''been saved if he had n''t''a''saved me?
10449Would n''t have been quite so bad if the cars had n''t taken fire and burned up after they went down, would it?
10449Ye mak''high choice, Ralph, high choice; but why not? 10449 Ye would n''t like a bit to ate now, would ye?"
10449Ye''ve been a lang time gone, lad?
10449Yes, long ago; did n''t he, Jimmy?
10449Yes, would you like that?
10449Yes; an''will the trial be over to- morrow, do you think?
10449Yes? 10449 Yes?
10449You and your husband were both injured in the disaster, were you not?
10449You are very anxious that the plaintiff should succeed in this suit, are you not?
10449You certainly do not mean what you are saying?
10449You collect his wages, I presume?
10449You do not expect me to believe that?
10449You expect to retain the usual commission for your services as guardian, do you not?
10449You have n''t got any more hidden around the house anywhere, have you? 10449 You mean that boy there with the blue patch on his pants?"
10449You took dinner with her, I suppose?
10449You will come, will you not, Ralph? 10449 You would like to have this boy declared to be a son of Robert Burnham, would you not?"
10449You''member that night I come home a- cryin'', an''I could n''t tell w''at the matter was? 10449 Your long walk accounts for your dusty and shoeless condition, I suppose?"
10449''An''ha''ye no place to go?''
10449''Who''s lef''ye?''
10449A man was passing along the street, and Ralph accosted him:--"Please, can you tell me where Mr. Sharpman lives?"
10449Ai n''t it splendid?"
10449Ai n''t ye gittin''a little hungry?
10449All night?
10449Am I right?"
10449Am I right?"
10449And do you think that such a boy as this would lie?
10449And had not the court ordered judgment to be entered on the jury''s verdict?
10449And how long would they be obliged to wait here?
10449And is that all you know about yourself?
10449And so he was, was he not?
10449And suppose it should be known after a year, after two years or longer, who would blame him?
10449And what is his state of mind concerning you now?"
10449And who would ever know that he was not Mrs. Burnham''s son?
10449Anything gone wrong?"
10449Are you glad you are coming here to live with me, Ralph?"
10449Are you interested in the case?"
10449Are you prepared to say, definitely, that no evidence would induce you to believe your child to be living?"
10449Before Ralph could reply to this startling and embarrassing question, some one else asked:--"How''d you find out who you was, anyway?"
10449Before Ralph could reply, Sharpman interrupted:"And has the boy been with you ever since?"
10449Bring the child to me also; why did you not bring the child?"
10449Burnham?"
10449Burnham?"
10449Burnham?"
10449But how about Grandpa Simon?
10449But suppose Ralph should refuse to go, and suppose Bachelor Billy, with his strong arms, should stand by to protect the lad from force, what then?
10449But this accident, this delay, might it not be providential?
10449But wait; does Mrs. Burnham know of your interview with her husband, or about this paper?"
10449But what does this boy whom my learned friend has lauded to the skies for his manliness and honor do next?
10449But what if the man''s story were true?
10449But what''s the use o''tellin''ye?
10449But whom would it wrong?
10449But whom would it wrong?
10449But why should it do this?
10449But why, I repeat, are you asking me these questions?
10449But you would n''t tell me a lie about it, would you?
10449But, Uncle Billy-- can''t I tell him?
10449But-- you may change your mind in the meantime; will you give me a writing to secure me?"
10449By the way, did ye know that the law do n''t allow hotel- keepers to let boys stay in the bar- room?
10449Ca n''t you see my mother again, Mr. Sharpman, an''get her to take me-- some way?"
10449Can I go to''em to- night?
10449Can you find your way back to the station?"
10449Can you surely save him?
10449Cheekerton?"
10449Could Buckley do that?"
10449Could he endure that?
10449Could he, in his wildest flight of fancy or desire, have ever hoped for more than that?
10449Could n''t we make it so plain to her, some way,''at I''m her son that we need n''t have any suit?"
10449Could-- could you lend me enough to pay my fare up?
10449Craft and I were acting in your interest in this case, did you not?"
10449Craft present?"
10449Craft''s grandson?"
10449Craft, that you could take upon your shoulders the duties and responsibilities attendant upon such a trust?
10449Craft,"said the judge,"what have you to offer in this matter?
10449Craft?"
10449Craft?"
10449Craft?"
10449Craft?"
10449D''ye hear me?"
10449D''ye min''that opple pie we had for sooper, lad?"
10449D''ye min''the time''e jumpit on the carriage an''went doon wi''the rest o''them to bring oot the burnit uns?
10449D''ye mind the old openin''ye can see in the side- hill when ye''re goin''up by Tom Ballard''s to the Dunmore road?"
10449D''ye''member that time w''en I froze my ear, an''he give me money to buy a new cap with ear- laps on to it?"
10449Did he get that up alone or did he have a little legal advice?
10449Did it mean simply a renewal of the old hope, destined to fade away again into a hopelessness duller than the last?
10449Did n''t I tell ye not to shpake of it?"
10449Did not her love for him and his love for her demand that he should keep silence?
10449Did only people cry who had some gentler cause for tears?
10449Did the child whom you rescued from the wreck have on, when you found him, this cap, cloak, and locket?"
10449Did ye ever hear the like?
10449Did ye ever hear the like?"
10449Did ye fin''the air bad?"
10449Did-- did you find that?"
10449Do n''t somebody have to pay me that money, when I bring the boy?"
10449Do n''t ye think ye''d better excuse yourself?
10449Do n''t you hear''i m?"
10449Do n''t you see that if I were to give those things to you I would be putting out of my hands the best evidence I have of the truth of my assertions?"
10449Do n''t you see the hole ai n''t big enough?
10449Do ye want for anything?"
10449Do you get dinners here for people?"
10449Do you know how you were saved?"
10449Do you know how?"
10449Do you mean that boy?"
10449Do you mean to say mat you care as much for this boy''s rights as you do for the dust in your path?"
10449Do you mean to say that the boy is still living?"
10449Do you remember that he used often to be away from home?"
10449Do you see how the management of such an estate would be a fortune to a guardian, acting within the strict letter of the law?"
10449Do you see?"
10449Do you think I can really place full confidence in you?"
10449Do you think he will?"
10449Do you think she would?
10449Do you think that such a boy as this would say to you one word that did not rise from the deep conviction of an honest heart?
10449Do you think you''ve_ got_ to put me off-- right away?"
10449Do you understand?"
10449Don''t-- don''t you s''pose the things we ca n''t have is the things we want worst?"
10449Finally he asked:--"Did you know Robert Burnham in his lifetime?"
10449Finally he said:"What would you consider my silence on this subject worth, for a period of say twenty- four hours?"
10449Finally he said:--"You want to go to Scranton?"
10449Finally, the lawyer said:--"He was pretty sick when you first found him, was n''t he?"
10449For was not Mr. Sharpman there, himself?
10449Friday morning?"
10449Gin a mon has a guid fire to sit to, an''a guid pipe o''''bacca to pull awa''on, what more wull ye?
10449Goodlaw?"
10449Got any money, or any rich friends?"
10449Had he a right to place a burden so appalling on himself?
10449Had he not fed and clothed and cared for him during five years?
10449Had he not rescued him from oblivion, and made every effort to endow him with wealth and position and an honored name?
10449Had he not saved the child from death?
10449Had it not already made a coward of him?
10449Had not Ralph sworn that he was Simon Craft''s grandson?
10449Had not the jury accepted Ralph''s testimony as true?
10449Had the necessity arisen for the use of his last match?
10449Has he been identified, then, since the trial?"
10449Has he discovered your retreat?
10449Have n''t you got one for me?
10449Have some?"
10449Have you a lawyer?"
10449Have you consulted with the boy in this matter?
10449Have you had any dinner, Ralph?"
10449Have you no clew to your parentage or birthplace?"
10449He bowed low and said:--"Have I the honor of addressing Mr. Sharpman, attorney at law?"
10449He came up on the noon train, did n''t he?"
10449He drew the boy down tenderly on the bench beside him, and said:--"Tell me about yourself, Ralph; where do you say you live?"
10449He had time enough at his disposal now, however; why not make the trip up there?
10449He has more to make out o''it, do ye see?"
10449He went up to the conductor and asked,--"How long''d it take to walk to Wilkesbarre?"
10449How can you prove it?"
10449How could he ever bear it?
10449How could he ever endure them?
10449How could he hope it?
10449How could he now, with the remotest sense of honor or of pride, step into the place that should have been occupied by Robert Burnham''s son?
10449How did she find it out?
10449How did you meet that emergency?"
10449How often have I wished that it were possible for me to earn my bread by the sweat of my brow; but, alas!--""Ai n''t it?"
10449How old is he now?"
10449I mean, do his manners, modes of thought, impulses, expressions, indicate, to your mind, better blood than ordinary?"
10449I s''all no''gae oot till I gae wi''the boy or wi''''is body; what say ye?
10449I says to''i m,''What''s the matter wi''ye, laddie?''
10449I shall be glad to have it done; shall not you?"
10449I take it, however, that you must first establish his identity as an heir?"
10449I think she wants me to come, do n''t you?
10449I want to know when saw ye the lad last?"
10449I wonder where she is; would n''t you like to see her?"
10449I''ll-- I''ll give you-- I''ll give you--"Well, what''ll you give me?
10449I''m sorry if I''ve ever hurt your feelin''s, but--""How do you think you would like to belong to a nice family, Ralph?"
10449If he was the child''s grandfather, then he had authority to take him, to govern him, to punish him for disobedience-- was not that true?
10449If such a thing were to occur, without his fault, against his will and effort, what then?
10449If the boy was able to earn anything, he was entitled to his earnings, was he not?
10449In short, could you act as this boy''s guardian?"
10449Is Conway back yet?"
10449Is he better?"
10449Is it binding on the man that signed it?"
10449Is it daylight?"
10449Is it possible that anything has happened to him?"
10449Is n''t that so?"
10449Is the boy here still?"
10449It ai n''t like most law- suits, is it?"
10449Martin?"
10449May I go into your house and find a chair?"
10449May I have it, sir?
10449May I have them both?
10449Mayhap an''ye''re a bit sick?"
10449Mr. Goodlaw, are you ready to go to the jury?"
10449Mr. Goodlaw, do you desire to cross- examine the witness further?"
10449Mr. Sharpman, can you close your case before adjourning time?"
10449Mrs. Burnham was his mother; was not that beautiful, beautiful?
10449Must I go an''tell her''at I ai n''t her son, an''''at I ca n''t live with her, an''''at we ca n''t never be happy together the way we talked?
10449Must he always be striving against fate?
10449Must he, for the sake of some farfetched moral principle, throw himself into the merciless clutch of Simon Craft?
10449Now she spoke:--"What is the prospect?
10449Now what do you think?"
10449Now, are you coming, or do you want me to help you?"
10449Now, do you see?"
10449Now, men, who will go down?
10449Now, who do you suppose your mother is?
10449Now, who would you prefer to have act in that capacity?"
10449Now, you will come, wo n''t you?"
10449Now, you''ll take my advice, and do that much, wo n''t you?"
10449Of what use was it to establish the boy''s identity if he could not control the boy''s fortune?
10449Of what use were these things, if motherly recognition was to be denied him?
10449On what facts do you rest your belief, if I am at liberty to ask?"
10449One of them, in the midst of his agony, cried out:--"Whaur is he?
10449Ought he not to be spared this pain?
10449Pretty clear- headed?"
10449Ralph shouted at him as he passed:--"Please, sir, may I have a ride?
10449Ralph stood for a moment, in deep thought, then he asked:--"Did Joe say when he would be back?"
10449Ralph, did you say?
10449Receiving no answer to his question, he continued:--"But the boy, the boy Ralph, he perished, did n''t he?
10449See?"
10449Sharpman?"
10449Sharpman?"
10449Sharpman?"
10449Sharpman?"
10449Sharpman?"
10449Sharpman?"
10449Should he try?
10449So say you all?"
10449Suppose it should?
10449Suppose the case at Wilkesbarre should go on to its predicted end, and the jury should bring in their expected verdict, what then?
10449Suppose you can prove your story to be true; what then?"
10449Supposing it to be true, there was nothing strange or wrong in it, was there?
10449Terrible accident, was n''t it?"
10449That is our firm belief; what then?"
10449That''s a pretty shrewd scheme Old Simon has on foot just now, is n''t it?
10449The lady stopped in surprise, but in a moment she recognized the man, and, throwing aside her veil, she replied:"Oh, Billy, is that you?
10449The question is, what can_ I_ do for_ you_?"
10449Then Ralph asked, quietly,--"Does-- does she know?"
10449Then Sharpman, pointing to Ralph, asked the witness:--"Do you know this boy?"
10449Then he continued:"Coom, sit ye, then; sit ye, an''tell us aboot it a''; how happenit it, eh?"
10449Then he rose to his feet and continued:"Can ye no''tell when a lad speaks the truth?
10449Then will I have a right to take the boy again?"
10449Then, changing his tone to one of appealing, he continued:"You did n''t come for me, did you, gran''pa?
10449There was silence for a time, then Bachelor Billy continued:--"Gin ye had your choice, lad, what kin''o''a mither would ye choose for yoursel''?"
10449They are both here; what further do you desire?"
10449This is Mr. Robert Burnham, I suppose?"
10449This was a little more than Sharpman wanted, but he kept on:--"How long were you under the control of this spirit of muteness?"
10449To what better use could he put them than to make them light him as far as possible on his way?
10449W''at we want a treasher for?
10449Was burned up in the wreck, was n''t he?"
10449Was he not doing what was best?
10449Was it her child who escaped from him, and wandered, sick and destitute, almost to her own door?
10449Was it not absurd to cloud his happiness with the dread of something which would never come?
10449Was it not degrading him in his own eyes?
10449Was it not the duty of a boy to do it?
10449Was it not trying to stifle the voice of conscience in his breast?
10449Waur ye dreamin''?
10449We want you so much, so very much; do we not, Mildred?"
10449Well, if the court had declared the boy to be his grandson, he was entitled to him, was he not?
10449Well, would it not?
10449Were you on that train?"
10449What aboot you''re gaein''to Wilkesbarre?"
10449What are the chances?
10449What do you say?"
10449What do you say?"
10449What do you say?"
10449What does he say?"
10449What for had ye such a hole there, an''where to?"
10449What if the boy were really in life?
10449What proof have you?
10449What right had he to inflict such torture as this on a lady who had been so kind to him?
10449What right?
10449What shall I do, Uncle Billy?"
10449What then?"
10449What was it that he heard, gentlemen?
10449What was the first thing to be done?
10449What was to be done now?
10449What was to be done now?
10449What was to be done?
10449What was to be done?
10449What would be the effect of this man''s story, with its air of genuineness, on the mind of so conscientious a boy as Ralph?
10449What''s happenit to ye, Ralph, that ye s''ould be so fearfu''?"
10449Whaur ye been, eh?"
10449When did you say you would bring him?"
10449Where did you get it, I say?"
10449Where did you get it?
10449Where do you want to go?"
10449Where does the boy live?
10449Where is Ralph?"
10449Where is he now?
10449Where is the boy who, you say, is my son?"
10449Where would I take you?"
10449Which is the bes''way to go?"
10449Which route had Ralph taken?
10449Who are you, then?"
10449Who be ye, then?"
10449Who doth not crave for rest?
10449Who volunteers?"
10449Why did n''t ye go with it?"
10449Why, a boy''s silly story of an absurd and palpable lie?
10449Why, then, should he fear?
10449Why, what''s your name?"
10449Why?"
10449Will ye have a chair, ma''am?"
10449Will ye wash up a bit?"
10449Will you come?"
10449Will you have him here by Friday?
10449William Buckley?"
10449William Buckley?"
10449Would he counsel him to hold his tongue?
10449Would it not be better even to die than to live a life like that?
10449Would it not be better for Uncle Billy, for Mrs. Burnham, for himself?
10449Would it not be better to face the toil, the pain, the poverty, the fear?
10449Would it not make of him a living, walking lie?
10449Would n''t that do?
10449Would trifling loan be of any benefit to you?"
10449Would you like to go to school and study?"
10449Would you ruther I would n''t go, Uncle Billy?"
10449Ye''ll coom back the nicht, wo n''t ye, Ralph?
10449Yet, how could he bear to be forgotten by the child?
10449You do n''t mean the rich coal proprietor who died at his mine in Scranton last spring?"
10449You remember, of course, the Cherry Brook disaster and what occurred there?"
10449You want to hear them, do n''t you?"
10449You want to see''i m?
10449You were very liberal on account of old acquaintance''s sake, were you not?
10449You would come to me then, would you not, Ralph?"
10449You''ll do everything you can for me, wo n''t you?
10449You''ll do that, wo n''t you?"
10449You''ll get out there, wo n''t you?
10449You''member the time I told you''bout, w''en we breaker boys went down there, all of us, an''she cried kin''o''soft, an''stooped down an''kissed me?
10449You''ve done it once, Ralph, you can do it again, ca n''t you?"
10449You''ve had one, ai n''t you, Uncle Billy?"
10449Your boy Ralph was burned up in the wreck at Cherry Bridge, was n''t he?"
10449a thing to be shunned and scorned?
10449against every circumstance that would tend to relieve him?
10449against every obstacle thrown into his path to prevent him from bringing calamity on his own head?
10449ai n''t he funny?"
10449an''cam''up alive when Robert Burnham met his death?
10449and did not he know that it was all real and true?
10449and was not your house in the city a place for the reception of stolen wares?"
10449are you Buckley?
10449are you going to have a suit over it?"
10449are you sure I''m the right one?"
10449as quick as you can?"
10449be ye sure o''it?"
10449by what name is he known?"
10449continued Rhyming Joe;"have you got a lawyer?"
10449could he?
10449did you find the locket, a little gold locket?
10449did you not leave the patriarch''s sweet home circle, somewhat prematurely, eh?
10449did you say he had been cruel to the child?
10449did you say that he is living?"
10449do n''t let him throw me-- Uncle Billy, is that you?"
10449do n''t you think it''s beautiful?
10449do you?"
10449does she?
10449entertained the boy till his pocket was empty, did n''t you?"
10449exclaimed Billy,"Ralph, lad, whaur ye been?"
10449had ye not, eh, Ralph?"
10449he asked,"and leave rude toil for others?"
10449he asked;"to- morrow?"
10449he exclaimed, at last,"have I found-- do I behold-- is this indeed the long lost Ralph?"
10449he exclaimed,"Ralph, why have you done this?"
10449he exclaimed,"an''will she do it?"
10449he exclaimed,"is it possible that you are afraid of your affectionate old grandfather?
10449he exclaimed,"what do ye take me for; a reg''lar home for the friendless?
10449he exclaimed,"what''s orders when a life''s at stake?
10449he gasped,"or his estate?
10449he said,"did you know that Robert Burnham died last night?"
10449he said,"so you spent a portion of yesterday afternoon at Mrs. Burnham''s house, did you?"
10449he said;"ai n''t you home early?"
10449himself?
10449just so; you do n''t know me, I presume?"
10449no; you must not call me''mother''yet, not until the trial is over, then we shall call each other the names we like best, shall we not?"
10449said the lawyer, smiling, and shaking his head,"do n''t you think you are presuming a little too much on my friendship?
10449said the old man,"or do you believe now that I have some knowledge of what I am talking about?"
10449say, have n''t you got one?"
10449the one with his hand bandaged; do n''t you see?"
10449then, turning to Sharpman,"it was no''his fau''t, thenk ye?"
10449there was a thought-- would it be wronging himself?
10449this boy and no other?"
10449well, yes; but she needit the money, mon, an''the lad he needit the noorsin'', an''it was doin''a bit double good wi''ma siller, do ye see?"
10449what do you think?"
10449what does he do?"
10449what suit?
10449what would Uncle Billy say when he should tell him what he had heard?
10449what would you like to study?"
10449what''d I be doin''wi''the wee bit money that a baby like him''d earn?
10449what_ do_ you think?
10449whaur''s Robert Burnham?
10449where are they?"
10449who cares for him?"
10449who would ever suspect him of knowing that the verdict was unjust?
10449who?"
10449whole books?--through?"
10449wo n''t she never take me?"
10449wull ye help?"
10449you wo n''t make me go back with you, will you?"
10449you would n''t do that, would you?"
10449you''re not going?