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 |
---|---|
26354 | Might not the cultivation of the garden-- vegetables, fruits and flowers,--take the place of both, as simple means of display? |
26354 | When one contemplates building, and has put his thoughts and wishes into a tangible form, the leading question asked is, how much will all this cost? |
41781 | Another doubt suggested, is whether arches and vaulting can properly be admitted into the style above- named? |
41781 | Are there no exceptions? |
41781 | But what language would be adequate? |
41781 | What must be the character of works of art to which Raphael''s Corridor in the Vatican forms the mere approach? |
41781 | What then, with a view to your individual taste, is the style I would recommend as most suitable for the intended situation and purpose? |
37189 | And may I ask what Kitty says to this arrangement? |
37189 | And now,she said brightly as I put down my cup,"may I see Chris?" |
37189 | And what was in them? |
37189 | Are n''t they coming back? |
37189 | But the young lady? |
37189 | But where''s his little cot? |
37189 | Did n''t I tell you last night,he said,"that that does n''t matter?" |
37189 | Do I know her, Ward? 37189 Do they still have trouble with foxes at Steppy End?" |
37189 | Doctor,she said, her mild voice roughened,"what''s the use of talking? |
37189 | Five years ago? |
37189 | His relations with his father and mother, now? |
37189 | How can I? |
37189 | How do you know all this? |
37189 | How is he wounded? |
37189 | How old was he? |
37189 | How would you remind him? |
37189 | I''d better dress now, had n''t I? |
37189 | Is he coming back? |
37189 | Is he well? |
37189 | It''s a horrid little house, is n''t it? |
37189 | Jenny, are n''t they there? |
37189 | Jenny, is this true? |
37189 | Jenny, it ca n''t be true that they did that to Belgium? 37189 Not well? |
37189 | Stupid of me, I know; but where is Griffiths? |
37189 | That Kitty''s been a good wife? |
37189 | What boy? |
37189 | What can it mean? |
37189 | What do n''t I know? |
37189 | What does that matter? |
37189 | What else is it, do you think? 37189 What is it that I do n''t know?" |
37189 | Who is this? |
37189 | Who the devil is Kitty? |
37189 | Whose is this? |
37189 | Why did he die? |
37189 | Why did they do it? |
37189 | Why do n''t you say,''Jenny, you must n''t be rude to visitors''? 37189 Why should you bring him back?" |
37189 | Wounded, you mean? |
37189 | You see? |
37189 | You thought I meant to take them out to Chris? |
37189 | You''ve come about a reference? |
37189 | A shell burst--""Concussion?" |
37189 | Baldry?" |
37189 | But where''s his engine? |
37189 | Did n''t he love puffer- trains? |
37189 | Did she make them? |
37189 | Do n''t you see what that means?" |
37189 | Grey?" |
37189 | Has she been here before?" |
37189 | Has some woman been turning up with a cock- and- bull story of being my wife? |
37189 | He was n''t taught his letters too soon?" |
37189 | How does he look?" |
37189 | How does it matter so much?" |
37189 | I asked:"You ca n''t remember her at all?" |
37189 | I gasped,"How long has this been going on?" |
37189 | If you only knew--""And what regiment is that?" |
37189 | Is he dangerously ill?" |
37189 | Now, why did Kitty, who was the falsest thing on earth, who was in tune with every kind of falsity, by merely suffering somehow remind us of reality? |
37189 | She said:"He''s home?" |
37189 | Suddenly he stopped raving and asked,"Is father all right?" |
37189 | Was Baldry Court so sleek a place that the unhappy felt offenders there? |
37189 | Well,"--his winking blue eyes drew us all into a community we hardly felt,--"what''s the suppressed wish of which it''s the manifestation?" |
37189 | When at last I followed her she said:"Do you believe her?" |
37189 | Why did it matter so? |
37189 | Why had modern life brought forth these horrors, which made the old tragedies seem no more than nursery- shows? |
37189 | Why, Chris, ca n''t you see that I have grown old?" |
37189 | Wo n''t you go up- stairs and take off your things?" |
37189 | Yet Margaret continued to say, and irritated me by the implication that the matter was not settled:"I ought n''t to do it, ought I?" |
37189 | You did n''t overtax his brain? |
37189 | You''re going to keep me in lovely cabbages, just as you did last year, wo n''t you, darling?" |
37189 | [ Illustration:"I ought n''t to do it, ought I?"] |
15099 | ''Have you on your Sabbath shoon or have you no on your Sabbath shoon?'' 15099 And what about t''others?" |
15099 | Aunt Matilda, do you think Dorcas was afraid of sore eyes? |
15099 | Beautiful sunshine, is n''t it? |
15099 | But you''ll tell me what It''s all about, wo n''t you? |
15099 | Can you prove your age? |
15099 | Can you spell? |
15099 | Confound''The Pleasures of Hope,''he protested;"ca n''t I write anything else?" |
15099 | Did I ever go with your daughter Miranda? |
15099 | Did it? |
15099 | Did n''t you see the Sarpent inspirin''him? |
15099 | Did you hear the news? |
15099 | Did you see my boy? |
15099 | Do n''t you think I might go home now? |
15099 | Do n''t you think they ought to let me go home? |
15099 | Do you think I could begin without being baptized? |
15099 | Do you think he means you? |
15099 | Do you think he''d help a feller? 15099 Do you think that Jesus Christ would-- would-- well, do you think he''d help a poor, unlarnt Flat Cricker like me?" |
15099 | Does he? |
15099 | Has Henry fallen in and got a ducking, Shocky? |
15099 | Have you any friends? |
15099 | He do n''t scare you? |
15099 | How did you get here so early, Ralph? |
15099 | How do I''low? |
15099 | How do you''low he''ll get in? |
15099 | How long has the claimant lived on his claim? |
15099 | How old did you say you were? 15099 How old?" |
15099 | How_ did_ this happen? |
15099 | I guess you''re a little skeered by what the old man said, a''n''t you? |
15099 | I say, ole woman,broke in old Jack,"I say, wot is all this''ere spoutin''about the Square fer?" |
15099 | I suppose Mr. Hartsook rode your horse to Lewisburg? |
15099 | If it was n''t for what? |
15099 | Is my mother in that place? 15099 Is that the poor- house?" |
15099 | Is your arm improving? |
15099 | It was real good in Mr. Pearson to take me, was n''t it? 15099 No-- sir-- I was waitin''to see if you warn''t a- goin'', too-- I--""Well?" |
15099 | Pap wants to know ef you would spend to- morry and Sunday at our house? |
15099 | Want to be a school- master, do you? 15099 Well, a''n''t you afraid of me, then?" |
15099 | Well, fer one thing, what kind of gals did he go with? 15099 Well, what are you a- tremblin''about, you coward?" |
15099 | What d''ye say, Marthy? |
15099 | What is the condition of the enemy? 15099 What ort I to do?" |
15099 | What will you do with the tough boys? 15099 What would you do with me, for instance?" |
15099 | Where are you going? 15099 Where is Walter?" |
15099 | Who are you? |
15099 | Who d''ye s''pose''tis? |
15099 | Who goes there? |
15099 | Why a''n''t you afraid of me? |
15099 | Why do you say''poor old tree''? |
15099 | Why not? 15099 Why, Ralph Hartsook, where did you drop down from-- and what have you got?" |
15099 | Why, Shocky, have n''t you gone yet? |
15099 | Why, Shocky? |
15099 | Why, do you think an old soldier like me, hobbling on a wooden leg, is afraid of them thieves? 15099 Why, how do you feel?" |
15099 | Why, plague take it, who said Hanner? |
15099 | Would he thrash? |
15099 | Ya- as,said Schroeder,"put how did Yinkins vellers know dat I sell te medder to te Shquire, hey? |
15099 | You a''n''t a- goin to fight_ me_? |
15099 | You do n''t say? |
15099 | You do n''t say? |
15099 | You here, Miss Hawkins? |
15099 | You mean, then, that I''m to begin now to put in my best licks for Jesus Christ, and that he''ll help me? |
15099 | You''re a purty gal, a''n''t you? 15099 A purty son, a''n''t you? |
15099 | And he read about Nathanael, who lived only six miles away, saying,''Can any good thing come out of Nazareth?''" |
15099 | And he would come? |
15099 | And how could he explain his own walk through the pasture and down the road? |
15099 | And then what would be the effect on his prospects? |
15099 | And you know the cure fer rheumatiz?" |
15099 | Any other trustees? |
15099 | But had he turned coward and deserted his friend? |
15099 | But has n''t this little boy-- Shocking, or what do you call him?--got any mother?" |
15099 | But how should he influence Martha to give up Bud? |
15099 | But just at this moment who should stride into the school- house but Pearson, the one- legged old soldier basket- maker? |
15099 | But what about Bud? |
15099 | But what right had he to supplant Bud? |
15099 | But why speak of the driving of duty? |
15099 | But--""But what?" |
15099 | Could it be that Hannah''s mother was the room- mate of this loathsome creature, whose profanity and obscenity did not intermit for a moment? |
15099 | Could n''t you git him over to Lewisburg? |
15099 | Did Dr. Small shrug his shoulder? |
15099 | Did God concern himself with these things? |
15099 | Did he inflict corporal punishment? |
15099 | Did n''t I come home late last Wednesday night? |
15099 | Did n''t I face the Britishers? |
15099 | Did n''t he?" |
15099 | Did n''t she go all over the neighborhood a- warnin''people? |
15099 | Did not Miss Nancy enjoy a hundred weddings and have the love of five hundred children? |
15099 | Do n''t you?" |
15099 | Do not even the Pharisees the same? |
15099 | Do you know I think that hoss knows something''s up? |
15099 | Do you think He does? |
15099 | Fetch her here out of the poor- house? |
15099 | For if it wurn''t fer spellin''-books and sich occasions as these, where would the Bible be? |
15099 | For what is a bulldog but a stoic philosopher? |
15099 | For, was not the pure, unconscious face of Hannah on the Devil''s side? |
15099 | HAS GOD FORGOTTEN SHOCKY? |
15099 | Had Mr. Hartsook offered any explanations? |
15099 | Had he ever paid her any attention afterward? |
15099 | Hartsook?" |
15099 | Has God Forgotten Shocky? |
15099 | Hey? |
15099 | Hey? |
15099 | Hey?" |
15099 | Hey?" |
15099 | How tid Yinkins know anyting''bout the Shquire''s bayin''me dree huntert in te hard gash-- hey?" |
15099 | How''s that?" |
15099 | I wonder if God forgets all about poor folks when their father dies and their mother gits into the poor- house? |
15099 | I wonder what becomes of folks when God forgets''em?" |
15099 | Is it a poorer place than Means''s? |
15099 | Is it not wise to be happy? |
15099 | Is not that what He meant when he said of such as Miss Sawyer that they should have a hundred- fold in this life for all their sacrifices? |
15099 | Means?" |
15099 | Of his own accord? |
15099 | On Hannah? |
15099 | On the people at Lewisburg? |
15099 | Or, was it the recollection that Shocky was Hannah''s brother? |
15099 | Or, was it the weird thoughts that he expressed? |
15099 | Ought an old country to sow the fertile soil of a colony with such noxious seed? |
15099 | Pearson?" |
15099 | Ralph shivered a little at thought of this, but if it was right to knock Jones down at all, why might not Bud do it"heartily as unto the Lord?" |
15099 | Ralph would have explained, but how? |
15099 | See it nodding its head to them other trees in the woods? |
15099 | She could get happy in class- meeting( for who had a better right? |
15099 | Should he rise and give the alarm? |
15099 | So, with many adjustings of that most adjustable wig? |
15099 | The blue- grass pasture( was it not like unto the garden of Eden?) |
15099 | The trustees have n''t come to fill it up, have they?" |
15099 | Thomson?" |
15099 | To stay, or to flee? |
15099 | Underwood?" |
15099 | Was Hannah deceitful? |
15099 | Was it respect for muscle, or was it the influence of Small? |
15099 | Was it the brotherhood in affliction that made Shocky''s words choke him so? |
15099 | Was there any God? |
15099 | Well, what would_ you_ do in Flat Crick deestrick,_ I''d_ like to know? |
15099 | Were the robbers breaking into the house below? |
15099 | What about it? |
15099 | What business had he being out of bed at two o''clock in the morning? |
15099 | What business had he watching Dr. Small as he went home from the bedside of a dying patient near daylight in the morning? |
15099 | What could Bud do if he were there? |
15099 | What did Henry Small want to visit this old quack for? |
15099 | What did I take you fer? |
15099 | What did she mean? |
15099 | What do you want to know the meaning of a word for? |
15099 | What had the current of conversation to do with him? |
15099 | What if Shocky should die? |
15099 | What if he joined the conspiracy to marry him to this weak- eyed, weak- headed wood- nymph, or backwoods nymph? |
15099 | What is it?" |
15099 | What kind of a place is a poor- house? |
15099 | What need of analyzing her experiences_ in vacuo_ to find out the state of her soul? |
15099 | What shall I do?" |
15099 | What though she had not tasted food since the morning of that exciting day? |
15099 | What though the rain was in her face? |
15099 | What though there might be robbers in the woods? |
15099 | What though there were ten rough miles to travel? |
15099 | What was he that he should aspire to possess her? |
15099 | What was the connection between her and Shocky? |
15099 | What was the hidden part of her life? |
15099 | What would Gin''ral Winfield Scott say ef he knew that one of them as fit at Lundy''s Lane backed out, retreated, run fer fear of a passel of thieves? |
15099 | What would she say if he should confess? |
15099 | What''s him and her been a- courtin''fer for a year ef he did n''t think she was smart? |
15099 | What''s the use of tryin''? |
15099 | When Hannah was in one scale and the whole world in the other, of what account was the world? |
15099 | Which way did you come, Shocky?" |
15099 | White?" |
15099 | Who could it be? |
15099 | Who knows whether he''s a fit man fer anybody to go with? |
15099 | Who will volunteer to take turns sitting up with Henry?" |
15099 | Who would not stay in an earthy paradise ten minutes longer, even though it did make purgatory the hotter afterward? |
15099 | Why else did he avoid the session of the court? |
15099 | Why not walk? |
15099 | Why should he? |
15099 | Why should his evil genius haunt him? |
15099 | Why should men on horseback have any significance to him? |
15099 | With another he asked himself, What shall I do about the robbery? |
15099 | Would God indeed bring things out right? |
15099 | Would Small try to win Hannah''s love to throw it away again, as he had done with others? |
15099 | Would it all come out right if Bud married Hannah? |
15099 | Would it all come out right if he were driven from Flat Creek with a dark suspicion upon his character? |
15099 | Would you inflict corporal punishment if you were tiger- trainer in Van Amburgh''s happy family? |
15099 | Would"Meanses''Hanner"beat the master? |
15099 | You need not answer unless you choose; but what prompted you to take the direction you did in your walk on that evening?" |
15099 | You would n''t like to take a coon hunt nor nothin'', would you?" |
15099 | You''re a purty gal, a''n''t you? |
15099 | You? |
15099 | [ Illustration: BETSY SHORT]"Well, Shocky, what is it?" |
15099 | [ Illustration: MRS. MEANS]"Did you use the blood warm?" |
15099 | _ Wo n''t_ you take me in there, so as I can just kiss her once? |
15099 | beat the master that had laid out Jim Phillips? |
15099 | do n''t I remember when he was poarer nor Job''s turkey? |
15099 | is that you? |
15099 | said that astounded saint,"fetch a pauper here? |
15099 | why what do you think- ah? |
15099 | with many turnings of that reversible glass eye? |
37243 | A peaceful death, Mallet? 37243 And did Mr. Wantele bring the doctor back with him?" |
37243 | And do you really wish everything to come right between Hew Lingard and Jane Oglander? |
37243 | And the third course? |
37243 | And then they sent for you at once? |
37243 | And what do you think we can do? |
37243 | Anyone we know? |
37243 | Anyone we know? |
37243 | Are n''t you coming in, Dick? |
37243 | Are n''t you going away? |
37243 | Are you accusing me of breaking off Jane''s engagement? 37243 Are you quite sure of that, Dick? |
37243 | As I can not do what you wish, would you like me to end our engagement? |
37243 | At once? |
37243 | But never here? |
37243 | But surely a little noisy? 37243 But what has Una been doing on the Surrey side of the Thames?" |
37243 | But what will my life be like henceforth?--I mean when I sha n''t even have her to look forward to? 37243 But what will you do afterwards? |
37243 | But, father, you must admit Bayworth Kaye was quite cracked about Athena? 37243 D''ye know, Dick, if there''s any more news of Bayworth Kaye?" |
37243 | D''you know what to- day is? |
37243 | Dick? |
37243 | Did it all go off quite right? 37243 Divorce? |
37243 | Do n''t you see the change in Richard? |
37243 | Do you mean when-- when Richard is dead, Athena? |
37243 | Do you really think I should leave Rede Place-- now? |
37243 | Everything was over by the time we came back here? |
37243 | General Lingard and Jane Oglander? |
37243 | Has anyone told General Lingard, Mallet? |
37243 | Has anything happened to- day? |
37243 | Has he said anything about it in any of his letters to you? |
37243 | Has she been married as long as that? |
37243 | Have n''t you thought about it? 37243 Have you been told,"she asked,"about Bayworth Kaye? |
37243 | Have you told Athena? |
37243 | How did you know? 37243 How much?" |
37243 | I can not help wondering,he said in measured tones,"whether you have heard what has happened at Rede Place? |
37243 | I hope I sha n''t have to go and appear before a judge-- or shall I? |
37243 | I hope no one was hurt, Jupp? |
37243 | I mean, the piece of good fortune which has befallen the Paches? |
37243 | I say, Dick, is n''t this a_ go_? |
37243 | I sha n''t be offended, but-- but must you speak to me, Dick? 37243 I suppose it can all be managed very quietly?" |
37243 | I suppose you followed every step of the Expedition? |
37243 | I suppose you realise what the effect of your doing this now will be on Lingard? |
37243 | I suppose you will like to have a talk with General Lingard? |
37243 | I suppose you''ll come back here after dinner? |
37243 | I suppose,he said,"you mean General Lingard?" |
37243 | I thought I heard a car drive away a few moments ago, or did I dream it? |
37243 | I? |
37243 | I? |
37243 | If I were God-- Providence-- Fate-- and gave you your choice, would you choose that Lingard should marry Jane or that you should marry her? |
37243 | If you know her so well--she hesitated--"I wonder if you would mind going over and seeing her, Major? |
37243 | If you were free? |
37243 | If you will give me the name of any man who has talked unbecomingly of Mrs. Maule, I will deal with him----"Deal with him, Bayworth? 37243 In Italy----?" |
37243 | Is Jane engaged to General Lingard? 37243 Is Jane with Richard?" |
37243 | Is anyone there? |
37243 | Is it Hew? |
37243 | Is it a fine morning, Carver? |
37243 | Is n''t Miss Oglander here? |
37243 | Is n''t it funny,she said lightly,"how Jane the Good, and I, Athena the Bad, always attract the same man? |
37243 | Is n''t it in a hurry? |
37243 | Is n''t it odd to think,she whispered,"that in a few moments another day will begin? |
37243 | Is n''t it? |
37243 | Is she really very like that, Major Biddell? 37243 Is the lady in?" |
37243 | Is this true, Athena? |
37243 | It''ll be an awful bore,he said slowly,"and Richard-- are you sure that you wish it? |
37243 | Lingard? |
37243 | May I introduce you,she said,"I mean may I introduce to you my husband''s cousin, General Lingard? |
37243 | May I open it, Richard? |
37243 | Miss Oglander? |
37243 | No,she said indifferently,"what is it?" |
37243 | Shall I call Carver? |
37243 | Shall we go in by the Garden Room? |
37243 | Shall we wait here a few moments? |
37243 | Something which happened last night? |
37243 | Surely not always? |
37243 | Then is n''t she coming to- morrow? 37243 Then the Paches are bringing over General Lingard to dinner next Tuesday?" |
37243 | Then there is no doubt as to its having been an accident? |
37243 | Then will you see about it all, Dick? |
37243 | Then you saw I was there? |
37243 | To see me? |
37243 | Was it about that you wished to see him to- night? |
37243 | Was n''t it lucky? 37243 Well, Jane?" |
37243 | Well, Mabel? 37243 Well,"he said,"there''s a lot of excuse for her, is n''t there? |
37243 | Well? |
37243 | What do you mean? |
37243 | What made you hide yourself here, Jane? |
37243 | What''s all that whispering about? |
37243 | What''s the matter with her? 37243 When do you mean by at once, Hew?" |
37243 | Where''s Dick now? |
37243 | Who is she? 37243 Who went for the doctor?" |
37243 | Who''s there? |
37243 | Why is n''t Jane Oglander here? |
37243 | Why is n''t Miss Oglander here? |
37243 | Why should he wish to see me? |
37243 | Why!--Athena? |
37243 | Will you come out with me, Jane? |
37243 | Will you tell me again? 37243 Yes, Hew?" |
37243 | Yes, you are-- you are----What was I saying? 37243 You are going to the Rectory to see Mrs. Kaye? |
37243 | You did_ not_ explain that to her, Richard? |
37243 | You know that Jane Oglander intends to break her engagement? |
37243 | You mean Jane Oglander? |
37243 | You mean any lapse of time before the decree can be obtained? |
37243 | You mean in Italy, when I was ill? |
37243 | You mean you do n''t know whether he will accept what will be offered him? 37243 You never even suspected that such a plot was in the hatching?" |
37243 | You remember what Halnaver House used to look like in the days of poor dear old Lady Morell? 37243 You think well of the man?" |
37243 | ***** Here was the train at last, but where was Jane Oglander? |
37243 | *****"Mrs. Maule? |
37243 | *****"The Barkings? |
37243 | A happy death?" |
37243 | Almost as if she caught insomnia from you, eh?" |
37243 | An overdose of chloral?" |
37243 | And the other answered provokingly,"Surely you remember all about it?" |
37243 | And then Lingard said abruptly,"Well-- shall I go up and see him now? |
37243 | And then he went on, without waiting for her assent:"Do you remember the letter she wrote to you-- the letter you showed me? |
37243 | And then-- I want to know, it is rather important that I should know"--her husband bent his head gravely--"if there will be any delay?" |
37243 | Are you sure that you really wish to break off your engagement?" |
37243 | Bayworth Kaye-- Bayworth, whom he had known with an affectionate, kindly knowledge from his birth upwards-- dead? |
37243 | But Athena? |
37243 | But I understood it was a secret?" |
37243 | But how could Jane be brought to understand? |
37243 | But what was this Richard Maule was saying? |
37243 | But what was this that Dick was saying in so hushed a voice, in answer to her idle question? |
37243 | But when at last Jane turned to her with,"I suppose you will be going down to the rectory this morning?" |
37243 | By the way, I''ve forgotten to ask how you like your motor?" |
37243 | CARDINAL.--Say you? |
37243 | CHAPTER VII"Who ever rigged fair ships to lie in harbours?" |
37243 | CHAPTER XX"Who spake of Death? |
37243 | Could Mabel Digby''s story be true? |
37243 | D''you really mean that I''m going to meet him?" |
37243 | Dead? |
37243 | Did n''t you know? |
37243 | Did she know, or did she not know, what he was about to say? |
37243 | Did she suspect her friend''s treachery? |
37243 | Do n''t you understand?" |
37243 | Do you know anything of it, Dick?" |
37243 | Eh? |
37243 | Had you a good time?" |
37243 | Has Jane written to you?" |
37243 | Have you seen Richard?" |
37243 | He felt a tremor run through him, a touch of the old fever...."Miss Oglander? |
37243 | He thrust the thought of Athena violently from him; and with the muttered words,"Ca n''t you understand? |
37243 | Her face clouded, and with hasty accord they changed the subject, and with exactly the same words:"Who had we better ask first?" |
37243 | Hew is not obliged to take up his new appointment yet, is he?" |
37243 | How can you imagine such a thing? |
37243 | How could he have forgotten? |
37243 | How could she have supposed that the law-- a law framed and devised by men-- would put such a power in a woman''s hand?... |
37243 | How could the trifling events which made up the sum of five or six days have brought about such a change? |
37243 | How did it all begin? |
37243 | How did you ever come to know each other so well before he went away? |
37243 | How else account for that which had befallen himself? |
37243 | How fortunate it was, how more than fortunate, that Lingard''s engagement to Jane had not yet been publicly announced...."Have you told Dick?" |
37243 | I mean, he looks at Athena as she looks at herself?" |
37243 | I never gave a thought to the world''s opinion in old days, and why should I do so now?" |
37243 | I suppose they will be married very soon?" |
37243 | I take it that Lingard knows nothing of the real woman? |
37243 | I take it that you and General Lingard"--he brought out the name of her betrothed with an effort--"have other joint visits to pay?" |
37243 | I take it that you wo n''t deny that Jane loves Lingard?" |
37243 | I''ll go over and enquire to- morrow morning----By the way, when did the accident happen?" |
37243 | I''m afraid you must have suffered a good bit, Dick?" |
37243 | I-- I suppose you will come with me?" |
37243 | If only one could slip away into nothingness how much better it would be, Dick-- wouldn''t it?" |
37243 | Instead he looked across to Wantele:"I wonder if you remember that curious phrase of George Herbert? |
37243 | Is anything troubling you, Hew? |
37243 | Is it a matter in which I can help?" |
37243 | Is that you? |
37243 | It seems a long time since Jane left us-- in August, was n''t it?" |
37243 | Jane and Lingard out together beyond her ken and pursuit? |
37243 | Lingard must give you but very poor sport, and what is sport to you-- eh, what, Athena?" |
37243 | Lingard, moving a little uneasily under their fixed scrutiny, asked himself whether she really heard and understood what he was saying? |
37243 | Mad? |
37243 | Maud Stanwood? |
37243 | Mrs. Maule threw back her head and spoke with a touch of angry excitement in her voice:--"Why did you tell me now, Dick, before breakfast? |
37243 | Of course you heard of the accident?" |
37243 | Please tell me? |
37243 | She hesitated--"You will be very careful what you say to Richard? |
37243 | She looked straight at him:"Do n''t you agree, Dick?" |
37243 | She made no answer, and a few moments later in a gentler tone he asked,"Ca n''t you understand, Jane?" |
37243 | So Jane, breaking her promise to wait for him, had gone on to the house? |
37243 | Some of these people will have to be asked here to meet him, I suppose?" |
37243 | Surely she must have known that they, the Paches, were closely related to him? |
37243 | Surely you know I always want you to do just what you like when you''re here?" |
37243 | Surely you know what I mean, Jane? |
37243 | Then Lingard was already here? |
37243 | Then after the man had asked,"Is there anything else you require, sir?" |
37243 | Then he stopped short--"What is it you mean to do, Richard?" |
37243 | Then where are the servants''quarters to be?" |
37243 | This is a queer,''unked''kind of world, is n''t it?" |
37243 | Wantele welcomed Jane with an eager,"What would you think, Jane, of putting a mass of starch hyacinths over in that corner?" |
37243 | Was Athena Maule a cruel, devouring Circe, lacking mercy, honour, shame? |
37243 | Was he not going to the Paches''simply because they lived near Rede Place? |
37243 | Was it a divorce case?" |
37243 | Was it conceivable that Lingard would push his scruples, his sense of absurd delicacy, as far as that? |
37243 | Was it not pitifully clear that Mrs. Maule, poor beautiful Athena, had no part or place in her husband''s house? |
37243 | Was it possible that Jane had gone off for the day to the Small Farm in order to avoid the very explanation Athena wished to provoke? |
37243 | Was it possible that Lingard was working himself free of the fetters of which he was-- Dick wished to think it possible-- still unaware? |
37243 | Was it possible that to- night her quarry would elude her? |
37243 | Was it possible-- perhaps it was possible-- that Athena was speaking in good faith? |
37243 | Was it that his unspoken, unconfessed treachery had killed, obliterated in her the power of response? |
37243 | Were they love letters, Jane? |
37243 | What case do you mean?" |
37243 | What could you do?" |
37243 | What did other people do when they broke off an engagement or-- or were jilted? |
37243 | What made him first write to you? |
37243 | What should Death do in such a merry house? |
37243 | What were his disagreeable associations with the name of Bayworth Kaye? |
37243 | What would Maud Stanwood say of her when she heard what Mrs. Maule was about to do? |
37243 | Where is the man who does not early make the woman who loves him weep? |
37243 | Which of them would give her shelter during the weeks, nay the months, that must perhaps elapse before she would be free? |
37243 | Who are they? |
37243 | Who is it?" |
37243 | Why did n''t you let yourself in? |
37243 | Why had Mabel looked at Athena with so strange-- so-- so contemptuous a look? |
37243 | Why had he failed where another had succeeded with such apparent ease? |
37243 | Why had he hastened to tell sad news which he must have known would so much distress Athena and Jane Oglander? |
37243 | Why not go up and see Jane now-- at once? |
37243 | Why should n''t we walk down to the station now, from here? |
37243 | Why should n''t you?" |
37243 | Why then had he put off seeing Dick till ten o''clock? |
37243 | Why, acting on a good- natured impulse, had she been so foolish as to write him a last word saying she would come and see him off? |
37243 | Will you come into the drawing- room?" |
37243 | Will you mind very much?" |
37243 | With but a wife, a husband, and a friend To give it greeting?..." |
37243 | Would Lingard himself ever allow her to see the truth, or would the task fall to her-- to Athena? |
37243 | Would you like me to tell him?" |
37243 | You know he''s engaged to Jane Oglander?" |
37243 | You know her, do n''t you?" |
37243 | You must have heard of marriages being annulled? |
37243 | You remember the staircase, the famous old carved oak staircase?" |
37243 | You say you met me at Undulah a good many years ago? |
37243 | what were his sufferings to those which Maule himself had endured eight years before? |
62516 | Agatha, you do n''t mean you''ve been wasting your money on candy? 62516 Agatha,"she hesitated,"it almost seems to me-- at least do n''t you think Mr. Doolittle is rather the best- looking?" |
62516 | Air they treatin''you right out to Kent''s? |
62516 | All right, but what''s the matter, Aggie? 62516 And are n''t you going to miss me a little when I go back to the city?" |
62516 | And does Aggie Kent take good care of you? |
62516 | And is Mr. Forbes, Mr. Burton Forbes, spending the summer here? |
62516 | And now you do? 62516 And you picked out that name yourself, just for the fun of it?" |
62516 | Are n''t you feeling well? |
62516 | Are the little girls twins? |
62516 | Are you ready to go home now, Mr. Forbes? 62516 Are you sure you know him?" |
62516 | Are you there? |
62516 | Away? 62516 Begin what, Agatha?" |
62516 | Burton,Julia cried, her voice sharp to the point of shrillness,"what are you talking about?" |
62516 | Burton,Julia screamed,"who and what is this person?" |
62516 | But he was n''t there, was he? |
62516 | But if a man is such a blasted fool as to need that assurance, it''s not worth troubling your little head about him, do n''t you see? |
62516 | But what if he asks me? |
62516 | But what is Burton to do, then? |
62516 | But what-- what about Julia? |
62516 | But where,he stammered,"where is the other Miss Kent?" |
62516 | But would n''t you like to be educated? |
62516 | But you''ll let me bring you in a cup of tea or coffee, wo n''t you? 62516 By the way, Howard, did you see a girl talking with me a few minutes ago?" |
62516 | Ca n''t you understand, Julia? |
62516 | Can you help me a little-- Hephzibah? |
62516 | Can you write, dear? |
62516 | Did Howard go? |
62516 | Did I frighten you terribly? |
62516 | Did you ever think of selling your place? |
62516 | Did you say she was red- haired? |
62516 | Do n''t you love this stillness here in the shade? 62516 Do n''t you want an assistant?" |
62516 | Do they? |
62516 | Do you dare to say,shrieked Julia,"that you were the friend of Mr. Forbes''father?" |
62516 | Do you happen to know Miss Kent''s address at the present time? |
62516 | Do you happen to_ want_ Miss Kent''s address at the present time? |
62516 | Do you know anybody around here,he brought out with irritating deliberation,"by the name of Diggs-- Hep-- Hephzibah Diggs? |
62516 | Do you mean that Forbes has been spending all his time with her for the past three months and never suspected that she was n''t an old woman? |
62516 | Do you mean that she''s engaged? |
62516 | Do you mean that you''re tired? |
62516 | Do you mean to tell me that you have been the victim of a hoax all summer, that this girl has passed herself off on you for an old woman? 62516 Do you mean you do n''t know?" |
62516 | Do you realize those are the first words you''ve ever spoken to me-- the real_ me_, that we''ve just been introduced? 62516 Do you really think so?" |
62516 | Do you think it necessary to mention that the cook and the proprietor are one and the same? |
62516 | Do you think she''s capable of learning? |
62516 | Does he seem to be hurt? |
62516 | Eh? |
62516 | Fritz, dear, had n''t you better come to the house and lie down? 62516 Fritz, dear,"cried the girl, her voice vibrant with tenderness,"are you sick? |
62516 | Fritz, what it is? |
62516 | Fritz,began Agatha impressively,"why on earth are n''t you asleep?" |
62516 | Fritz,she asked with unusual, gentle gravity,"are you sure you want either of them? |
62516 | Fritz,the girl breathed at last,"do you believe in reincarnation?" |
62516 | Had she better come here? 62516 Have n''t any asbestos envelopes, have you?" |
62516 | Have you any reason to think that it may be contagious? |
62516 | Have you got anything to say to me? |
62516 | Have you had long enough,he said a trifle unsteadily,"to decide on that proposition I made you nine months ago to a day?" |
62516 | How did you know she was beautiful? 62516 How do you know,"questioned Agatha interestedly,"that I''m not already married to a widower with four small children?" |
62516 | How were they before? |
62516 | How''d you like it yourself if folks you did n''t know came butting in, telling you how to manage your business? |
62516 | How''s Julia? |
62516 | How? |
62516 | Howard coming? 62516 I hardly suppose you would have known me?" |
62516 | I-- I-- What proposition do you mean? |
62516 | I-- why-- you see--"You know her handwriting, do n''t you? |
62516 | In twenty years? 62516 Is he coming to see you?" |
62516 | Is she your sister? |
62516 | Is that Aggie Kent in the brown dress with her hair hanging? |
62516 | Is there one from her? |
62516 | It wo n''t inconvenience you to put him up, will it, Miss Kent? |
62516 | It''s Miss Kent, is n''t it? |
62516 | Just as businesslike as if you had been planning to go into partnership to raise chickens, were n''t you? 62516 Let me take him with me, wo n''t you? |
62516 | Miss Kent is still here, is she not? |
62516 | Miss Kent? |
62516 | Must I go on with this? |
62516 | Nice prospect for him, ai n''t it? |
62516 | Oh, do you think Hephzibah an odd name? 62516 Oh, you did, did you?" |
62516 | Perhaps you''re going to be magnanimous enough to forgive her? |
62516 | Phemie? |
62516 | Really? |
62516 | Shall I read it to you? |
62516 | That we should set up housekeeping together? |
62516 | That''s you, is n''t it, Miss Kent? |
62516 | The waitress? |
62516 | Then what do you say to a little walk when you''ve finished your work? |
62516 | Then where''s the pain? |
62516 | There_ is_ a book of poems in the basket, but I do n''t care for reading to- day, do you? 62516 To you?" |
62516 | Too late? |
62516 | Too strenuous a program, is it? |
62516 | Us too? |
62516 | Wait? 62516 Was n''t that for last winter only?" |
62516 | Was that why you kissed me? |
62516 | Was_ she_ old? |
62516 | Well, how does it seem to have two eyes again? 62516 Well, why do n''t you begin?" |
62516 | Well,said Forbes at length, his voice curiously shaken,"where shall I find her?" |
62516 | Well? |
62516 | Well? |
62516 | Well? |
62516 | Well? |
62516 | Well? |
62516 | Well? |
62516 | Well? |
62516 | What are you going to tell her? |
62516 | What are you shooting at this time of year, boy? 62516 What did you call her?" |
62516 | What do you think of it all? |
62516 | What do you think of it? |
62516 | What do you think, Miss Kent? 62516 What does a little paint more or less matter to a summer boarder?" |
62516 | What for? 62516 What is her name?" |
62516 | What is the matter? |
62516 | What is there to say, except to wish her all happiness? |
62516 | What letter? |
62516 | What wo n''t do? |
62516 | What''s become of the nice little chap who has been on the job all summer? |
62516 | What''s the difference? 62516 What''s the post- mark?" |
62516 | What_ is_ the matter? |
62516 | When is it to be, Hephzibah? |
62516 | Where were they going? |
62516 | Where''ve you been? |
62516 | Which is the more-- what is that word-- mellifluous in your ears, Mrs. Wiggins, Mrs. Deacon Wiggins, or Mrs. James Doolittle? |
62516 | Who are these children anyway? |
62516 | Who are you, please? |
62516 | Who else was in the party, please? |
62516 | Who? 62516 Why are n''t you wearing your glasses?" |
62516 | Why should n''t I take a furnished apartment and have you as a sort of mother confessor? 62516 Why, Fritz, what ails you? |
62516 | Why, in heaven''s name, dearest? 62516 Why, what can he want? |
62516 | Why, what was wrong? |
62516 | Will you pack Mr. Forbes''things yourself? |
62516 | Wo n''t you let me stay with the children while you eat? 62516 Words seem such inadequate things, do n''t they, when one''s heart is full? |
62516 | Would n''t you have thought that Burton''s misfortune would have appealed to the better instincts of the most depraved? 62516 You are sure you feel equal to taking charge of the four, Miss Kent?" |
62516 | You are-- what did you say, Fritz? |
62516 | You ca n''t find the number of the check among the scraps, can you? |
62516 | You did n''t enjoy yourself? |
62516 | You do n''t know? |
62516 | You do n''t mean there''s another? |
62516 | You know what a fraud I am, then? |
62516 | You mean that Mr. Forbes and Miss Kent have gone off for the day with-- sandwiches? |
62516 | You mean when Miss Kent was reading me my letters? |
62516 | You mean you are going to pay a premium for being tricked and deceived? |
62516 | You mean you''ve got another fellow up your sleeve, do n''t you? 62516 You mean,"gasped Miss Finch,"that you''re going to deceive him?" |
62516 | You think not? |
62516 | You was n''t looking to see me, eh? |
62516 | You were starting for the mail, were n''t you, Aggie? 62516 You''re going to be somebody else?" |
62516 | You''re not going that way, are you, Agatha, with your hair all down? 62516 You''re not going to blame her, then?" |
62516 | You''re stayin''out to Kent''s ai n''t you, for the summer? 62516 You''re sure that if we talked it over, we would n''t find a way out? |
62516 | You''re writing the letter, are n''t you? 62516 Ai n''t that a name for your life? |
62516 | And since this is the case, is n''t it a pity that her morbid sensitiveness should shut her out of making something of herself?" |
62516 | And that puts quite a new light on Warren''s plan for educating her, do n''t you see?" |
62516 | And you advise me to demand the money she has saved for his schooling, and ask her to charge up my board for those months to charity?" |
62516 | Anything more I can do for you people before I go?" |
62516 | Are n''t you ever lonely here in winter?" |
62516 | As they turned up the driveway at Oak Knoll, Forbes said with the pride of a proprietor,"Fine old place, is n''t it?" |
62516 | But say, Forbes, are you sure it''s a good thing for you to be cooped up here all summer with two old hens?" |
62516 | But why the devil should a young girl want to make herself out an old maid of seventy?" |
62516 | But wo n''t it help a little if you remember that you''ve saved my life?" |
62516 | But you''re not going to be as hard on the son as you were on the father, are you?" |
62516 | By the way, is n''t there something I could call you for short?" |
62516 | Ca n''t you guess who it was?" |
62516 | Ca n''t you let me help you, little girl? |
62516 | Ca n''t you trot out some pretty girls for me to fall in love with?" |
62516 | Can you ever forgive me?" |
62516 | Could it be that Hephzibah''s existence had come to her attention? |
62516 | Could n''t they be prosecuted, Burton, for obtaining money under false pretenses?" |
62516 | Did Howard tell you?" |
62516 | Did he see him?" |
62516 | Did you call?" |
62516 | Did you come out to find us? |
62516 | Do n''t you think you''d be happier just to stay on with me?" |
62516 | Do you know you walk with wonderful lightness for a woman of your age?" |
62516 | Do you mean Howard?" |
62516 | Do you mean away from this hole in the woods?" |
62516 | Do you remember the scheme we hatched to send Hephzibah to school?" |
62516 | Do you want to rub it in how she''s outraged the sacred name of truth and all that rot?" |
62516 | Does he make''em long?" |
62516 | Does this stuff spot?" |
62516 | Does your head ache? |
62516 | Forbes? |
62516 | Forbes?" |
62516 | Forbes?" |
62516 | Got to go on with that knitting, have n''t you?" |
62516 | Have you ever thought of changing your state? |
62516 | He turned his wistful face toward her as if it helped to visualize the picture, and then added,"Just the hour for confidences, is n''t it?" |
62516 | He waited for a moment and then asked casually,"Well, what''s the fuss about? |
62516 | How am I going to get along without you; tell me that?" |
62516 | How can you ever forgive me?" |
62516 | How does that appeal to you?" |
62516 | How''s the poor feller getting on? |
62516 | I should have realized-- Of course, this is n''t a boarding- house, but the fact that you advertised for boarders, misled me, do n''t you see? |
62516 | I would n''t have thought he had so much poetry in him?" |
62516 | If you''re lonely here, and if you''re going to miss me, why should n''t you and I set up housekeeping together?" |
62516 | Is she really such a stunning beauty?" |
62516 | Is that why you''re telling me about it?" |
62516 | Is there some dark fate in whose hands we are only puppets?''" |
62516 | It was over the soup that Warren said cheerily,"Well, now, what''s it all about?" |
62516 | Or shall I have Howard take me to her home?" |
62516 | Putting her hand to her ear with the immemorial gesture of the deaf, she quavered,"What did you say?" |
62516 | Saw the doctor and Mr. Warren and then--""Warren? |
62516 | Say, Mr. Forbes, would you mind staying alone a few minutes while I run down the hill and see if I can find him?" |
62516 | See?" |
62516 | Shall I get you the hot water bottle, or is it the camphor that you need? |
62516 | Shall I help you?" |
62516 | Shall we go to the porch? |
62516 | Shall we shake hands on the bargain?" |
62516 | She stared out over the serene landscape as she said unsteadily,"Did you ask her to wait?" |
62516 | She took possession of the letters, saying to her brother,"You''d better put the pony up, had n''t you, Howard? |
62516 | She was going to marry you, was n''t she? |
62516 | She''s not too self- respecting for that, is she?" |
62516 | The question is, how are we to find her?" |
62516 | The substance of his remark, as far as Miss Finch could grasp it in her confusion, seemed to be,"What did I tell you?" |
62516 | Then as Miss Finch groaned aloud, the girl repented of her little witticism and hastened to ask,"Are n''t you any nearer to making up your mind?" |
62516 | Two heads are better than one, you know?" |
62516 | Warren?" |
62516 | Was it a touch of the sun or something worse? |
62516 | What are you crying for?" |
62516 | What did he do yesterday to tire him so?" |
62516 | What do you think of sending her to school somewhere, and having her educated? |
62516 | What do you think of the idea?" |
62516 | What do you think?" |
62516 | What harm did it do?" |
62516 | What is your opinion of Hephzibah? |
62516 | What on earth was Forbes doing in this tumbledown building with two old women for company? |
62516 | What was Hephzibah to him or he to Hephzibah, that for her sake he was ready to affront his father''s old friend and his own? |
62516 | Where does it hurt?" |
62516 | Which is it to be?" |
62516 | Which one is it to be?" |
62516 | Who do you suppose has been getting married?" |
62516 | Who is it?" |
62516 | Who was the girl hitting, with her talk of deceit and imposture? |
62516 | Why are they not sent for?" |
62516 | Why could n''t I have called her Mamie Thompson? |
62516 | Why did n''t you call me? |
62516 | Why do n''t you put it up to that girl of yours that she can take you or leave you?" |
62516 | Why do n''t you put them out of their misery, Fritz?" |
62516 | Why the devil should you care what he thinks? |
62516 | Why wait?" |
62516 | Why, what''s the matter?" |
62516 | Will you be equal to reading this to me every day till the next one comes?" |
62516 | Will you marry me, Agatha?" |
62516 | Will you send her word, some time to- day?" |
62516 | Wo n''t you sit down? |
62516 | Wo n''t you sit on the porch till the carriage is ready?" |
62516 | Would you mind taking him along while I see if I''ve got a rat in my trap?" |
62516 | You never heard of old Studley''s losing any sleep over the men he''d ruined on the street, did you? |
62516 | she murmured, and whether her emotion was real or assumed, he did not know,"why do n''t you kiss me?" |
41010 | ''All is fair in----''Which is it, Jean? |
41010 | About what? |
41010 | Ah, I have frightened you, sweetheart,Farr cries contritely,"and you are not very strong yet, are you, dear? |
41010 | Ah, Val,she said with an assumption of ease,"I suppose you have been at the manor?" |
41010 | Ah, dear old fellow,he said gently, when they were alone,"pretty well done-- for an accident? |
41010 | Already? |
41010 | Am I forgiven? |
41010 | And do you go back to- morrow? |
41010 | And does Miss Jean always keep her promises? |
41010 | And have you no sisters? |
41010 | And how is she now? |
41010 | And now can I not see you to your door? |
41010 | And to whom am I indebted for this kind and flattering interest? |
41010 | And what in the world shall we do? |
41010 | And what of the message the servant gave me? 41010 And why do you ask?" |
41010 | And why should Miss Stuart be so particular? |
41010 | And you are quite sure it is convenient now? 41010 And you dine?" |
41010 | Are you angry with me, Helen? |
41010 | Are you tired already of so much pleasuring, Jeanie? |
41010 | Baby, baby,''Larry an''me is buildin''?'' |
41010 | But what about luncheon? |
41010 | But wo n''t you let me extend to you an invitation to occupy it whenever you feel inclined? |
41010 | But your home is in the country, is it not? |
41010 | By not marrying according to her desire? |
41010 | By the way,asked Jean, with well- feigned indifference,"what did you think of the naval officers?" |
41010 | Ca n''t you tell me the reason, dear? |
41010 | Can I fly, too? |
41010 | Cares for me? |
41010 | Comfort, Dolly? 41010 Dearie,"she said, as she drew on her gloves,"will you please be very attentive to Aunt Helen while I am away, and not leave her too much alone? |
41010 | Dick is lovely, is he not, Miss Stuart? |
41010 | Did you think to provide any cold meat for sandwiches? |
41010 | Do I? |
41010 | Do n''t you know the little kitty he gave me? 41010 Do n''t you know?" |
41010 | Do n''t you see how hard it is for me? |
41010 | Do n''t you see that the_ Sylph_ is in the harbor? 41010 Do n''t you think Miss Nathalie looks very much like Mrs. Desborough? |
41010 | Do n''t you think he is in love with her? |
41010 | Do n''t you understand me? 41010 Do n''t you want to come up to my room for a few moments, Helen? |
41010 | Do n''t you want to come with us, Jean? 41010 Do not what?" |
41010 | Do you feel so badly to- day, dear? |
41010 | Do you know him? |
41010 | Do you love me, Jean? |
41010 | Do you remember that day down on the cliffs, so long ago? |
41010 | Do you think Jean will be happy so far away from you all? |
41010 | Do you want to go to the station with sister? |
41010 | Do you? |
41010 | Dorothy, will you please come here, and speak to little Gladys Lawrence, who has come to see you? |
41010 | Early? 41010 Eh, Jean? |
41010 | Eleanor, did you know the_ Vortex_ had gone? |
41010 | Girls, what do you suppose has happened? 41010 Gladys, precious, where does it hurt you?" |
41010 | Gladys,she whispered, after a moment,"what do you think I saw just now?" |
41010 | Going in, Nan? |
41010 | Have a cigar, Farr? |
41010 | Have you ever thought what it might be? |
41010 | Have you forgotten Mr. Appleton, Gladys-- Guy Appleton? |
41010 | Helen, can I open the beer and ginger ale now? |
41010 | Helen,says Eleanor''s voice from the doorway,"may we all come in? |
41010 | Helen,she said, very low,"are you ever really unhappy?" |
41010 | How are you, puss? |
41010 | How can I help it,groaned Nan,"when it characterizes him so perfectly?" |
41010 | How is Gladys to- night? |
41010 | How was it, Miss Helen? 41010 How will Nathalie like that?" |
41010 | I agree to the drive,replied Miss Stuart, stifling a yawn,"but why must we call on that stupid woman? |
41010 | I suppose that means that he is in love with your sister? |
41010 | I suppose you love her dearly, and do your best to spoil her? |
41010 | I wonder if the girls are not ready yet? 41010 I wonder where he got it, do n''t you?" |
41010 | I wonder why we could n''t have a swim this morning, Jean? |
41010 | In which direction would it lead us, if we should take it now? |
41010 | Indeed, I do,she assented with a frank laugh,"but what are we going to do about it?" |
41010 | Indeed? 41010 Is everyone here?" |
41010 | Is it cool enough for a wrap? |
41010 | Is it not delicious? |
41010 | Is my valise in, Jean? |
41010 | Is n''t Em in her element? |
41010 | Is not this a sylvan retreat, and are you not glad you came? |
41010 | Is that the woman you mean? |
41010 | Is that why you act so strangely? |
41010 | Is there nothing we can do for Gladys? |
41010 | Is this your wrap? |
41010 | It is not surprising, is it, that her husband should find Mrs. Desborough a pleasing contrast? |
41010 | It would be the pot calling the kettle black, would n''t it? |
41010 | Jean, do you know how glad I am to see you again? |
41010 | Jean, my little love, have you no word of welcome for me? |
41010 | Jean, will you please go up and see if Gladys is asleep? |
41010 | Little one,he went on to Gladys,"will you be a good, brave little girl and let me carry you? |
41010 | May I come in, Aunt Helen? |
41010 | May I say something still further, dear? |
41010 | Miss Helen, if God is good to me, if all goes well, is there a welcome for me at the manor? |
41010 | Miss Jean,he began, after a brief silence,"Did you not tell me once that there was a pretty walk through the shrubbery?" |
41010 | Must friendship necessarily be as blind as love? |
41010 | My dear, will you not come up and read to me for a while? 41010 My dear,"said gentle Aunt Helen, leaning over her,"wo n''t you take the poor little baby? |
41010 | Nan, are you sure that Mr. Farr is in love with Jean? |
41010 | Nan, will you share my room? |
41010 | No? |
41010 | Now, what are you girls whispering about? |
41010 | Now, when shall we tell Aunt Helen we will be back? |
41010 | O Helen, how is mamma? |
41010 | Of course she is devoted to men? |
41010 | Of course, and did n''t I keep it well? 41010 Oh, Mr. Farr, what can I do? |
41010 | Oh, darling, what is it? 41010 Only friends, Jean?" |
41010 | Really? |
41010 | Shall I ever really possess her heart? |
41010 | Shall we sit down here and have our talk first? |
41010 | So you find it hard to give me up, Helen? 41010 Suppose I should give you one?" |
41010 | Surely that does not include Clarisse? |
41010 | That Jean has gone away? |
41010 | That enough? |
41010 | The question is, how shall we drive over? |
41010 | Then why did he treat Jean so? |
41010 | There is no curing you, is there, dear? 41010 There is quite a fragrance to this box- wood, is there not?" |
41010 | To Europe? |
41010 | To the question''What is taste?'' 41010 Warm enough for this, is n''t it?" |
41010 | Was I vewy heavy? |
41010 | We are friends again, are we not? |
41010 | We have not seen the pictures, have we? |
41010 | Well, Eleanor, what started you so early? |
41010 | Well, Mr. Farr, is it so great a surprise to you to see such an old friend in Hetherford? |
41010 | Well, well,cried Nathalie at last,"what will Miss Stuart think of us? |
41010 | Well, well,she cried laughingly, at length,"are you spellbound, and have you forgotten your guests?" |
41010 | Well, what did he tell you of me? 41010 Well, what if I am?" |
41010 | Well,she cried,"where are you going?" |
41010 | Well? |
41010 | Were you surprised at my message? 41010 What can I do?" |
41010 | What could she do? |
41010 | What do you mean, Nan? |
41010 | What do you mean? 41010 What do you mean?" |
41010 | What in the world has come over you? |
41010 | What is comfort, sister? |
41010 | What is it, Jean? 41010 What is it? |
41010 | What is the matter, Jean? 41010 What is the matter?" |
41010 | What made you think of Jean, dear? |
41010 | What move can I make? |
41010 | What right has Maynard to monopolize you? |
41010 | What shall we do with ourselves? |
41010 | What ship? |
41010 | What train do you take? |
41010 | What would Nan do if she knew this? |
41010 | What, Jeanie? |
41010 | What? 41010 What?" |
41010 | When do you go, old man? |
41010 | When will Cliff go? |
41010 | Where are Willie and Gladys? 41010 Where are you from?" |
41010 | Where are you going to stay? |
41010 | Where did Jean go? |
41010 | Where did these delicious strawberries come from? |
41010 | Where have you kept yourself? |
41010 | Where is Em this morning? |
41010 | Where were you all yesterday? 41010 Where were you going, Miss Lawrence?" |
41010 | Where? |
41010 | Who are the men? |
41010 | Who doubted her willingness? |
41010 | Who is that? |
41010 | Who is your little friend, coz? 41010 Who were you bowing to?" |
41010 | Who''s that, sister? |
41010 | Why did you never tell me about her? |
41010 | Why did you run away? |
41010 | Why do n''t you let me alone, then? 41010 Why do you think so?" |
41010 | Why, Helen, what world of melancholy does that sigh proclaim? |
41010 | Why, I am quite in the navy, am I not? |
41010 | Why, Lillian, do you know of anything to make Jean unhappy? |
41010 | Why, Lillian, what makes you say that? 41010 Why, Nan, are you going out of your mind?" |
41010 | Why? |
41010 | Will you let me accompany you? 41010 Wo n''t you let me walk home with you, Miss Varian?" |
41010 | Wo n''t you please have it removed? |
41010 | Would you be happy with Guy and his mother, Jean? |
41010 | Would you like to go away where you would have a complete change of scene? |
41010 | Would you mind very much if I should turn back? 41010 Yes, but what of it?" |
41010 | Yes? 41010 Yes?" |
41010 | You do n''t mean Lillian Stuart, that beautiful girl about whom everyone is raving? |
41010 | You have lived here all your life, Miss Lawrence? |
41010 | You must go now,Jean told him,"but you will come back to- morrow, wo n''t you?" |
41010 | You shine in a kind of reflected glory; do n''t you, Dick? |
41010 | You will forgive me, will you not? |
41010 | You wo n''t mind if I read for a while, will you, Nat? 41010 _ Married?_"they cry in one breath. |
41010 | After a slight pause he added:"What has been going on?" |
41010 | After all, had not Miss Stuart been chiefly at fault, and had he not honestly striven to make amends? |
41010 | Almost before the door was closed Miss Stuart began:"Now, Helen, will you please explain to me why you must return to Hetherford in such haste? |
41010 | Am I not right?" |
41010 | And now, ca n''t I persuade you to rest a little after your climb, Miss Lawrence?" |
41010 | Appleton?" |
41010 | Are not your wishes my law?" |
41010 | Are they coming over from the inn?" |
41010 | Are you angry with me for speaking to you so abruptly? |
41010 | Are you not going to help me?" |
41010 | Are you sure it is necessary?" |
41010 | Are you sure the fault lay there? |
41010 | Are you willing they should?" |
41010 | Been sticking close to your quarters?" |
41010 | But who will dare to say that these are nothing? |
41010 | But why do you ask? |
41010 | But, girls and boys what do you think? |
41010 | Can I come in?" |
41010 | Could it be possible that the_ Vortex_ was already forgotten-- its officers banished to the indifferent past? |
41010 | Did I presume too much on your great kindness to me, Jean?" |
41010 | Did I presume too much on your sister''s kindness to me? |
41010 | Did you not see it?" |
41010 | Do I not prove it to you, Miss Jean?" |
41010 | Do n''t you see that big schooner just rounding the point?" |
41010 | Do you hear me? |
41010 | Do you mind if I braid my hair here?" |
41010 | Do you remember my friend Miss Stuart? |
41010 | Do you think I would have spoken else?" |
41010 | Do you think it will ever be in my power to help to overcome it?" |
41010 | Do you think that for any light or insufficient reason he would have thwarted you? |
41010 | Eh, Mollie?" |
41010 | Emily, ca n''t you make room for Mr. Dudley on the settle?" |
41010 | Farr?" |
41010 | Farr?" |
41010 | Farr?" |
41010 | Farr?" |
41010 | Gladys ai n''t afraid; are you, Gladys?" |
41010 | Going ashore?" |
41010 | Had he not always shown himself thoroughly unselfish in everything that concerned you? |
41010 | Had she heard aright? |
41010 | Has--"She paused, then went on desperately--"has Mr. Farr anything to do with it?" |
41010 | Have not many things gone wrong since your acquaintance with Miss Stuart? |
41010 | Have you got room enough for me?" |
41010 | Helen, can you never hold out any hope to me? |
41010 | How are you?" |
41010 | How do you do, Miss Stuart? |
41010 | How do you suppose she is hurt?" |
41010 | How is that for a piece of news?" |
41010 | How was it? |
41010 | I do n''t want to be impertinent, Jean, but is there not some one thing weighing on you at present? |
41010 | I suppose we might as well say''yes,''Auntie?" |
41010 | If you do care for me, dear, why will you not tell me so? |
41010 | In four days Jean and Mrs. Fay would sail for home, and Guy had written:"Will you not send for me, Helen? |
41010 | In which direction is the parsonage from here?" |
41010 | Is n''t she beautiful? |
41010 | Is that not so, darling? |
41010 | Is the boy waiting?" |
41010 | It has been a pleasant walk, and one to be remembered, has it not?" |
41010 | It has made such a difference having the_ Vortex_ here, has n''t it, Jean?" |
41010 | It seems to me that everything went happily until----""Until when? |
41010 | Jean, my child, did I not present Farr to you?" |
41010 | Love at first sight?" |
41010 | Maynard?" |
41010 | Maynard?" |
41010 | Miss Jean, will you help me lift her?" |
41010 | Must I wait forever, in strange lands, for one word from you? |
41010 | Must this season of peace come and go, leaving my heart as lonely as ever? |
41010 | Nan gained her feet, and looked gravely down at her friend:"Is it not true, dear? |
41010 | Nan longed to shake her, to say"You ought to know; it depends solely upon you; why do n''t you do something about it?" |
41010 | Nan ushered them into the dining room:"Miss Stuart, will you sit here on my right? |
41010 | No? |
41010 | Now what are you two doing, philandering in this secluded spot?" |
41010 | Now, shall I read you what the letter says?" |
41010 | O Willie, where is Gladys?" |
41010 | Once or twice it was on the tip of her tongue to say,"Why did you never tell me that you knew Miss Stuart?" |
41010 | Pardon my curiosity, but by what right do you hold your title to this spot?" |
41010 | Say, Moll, will you go in?" |
41010 | Shall I find you here?" |
41010 | She came a step nearer, and laid her hand on the girl''s shoulder:"Who has influenced you against me, Helen? |
41010 | She had not been at all well, and----""Not well?" |
41010 | Suppose you see what you can do?" |
41010 | Tell me frankly, would not your answer always be the same now, whenever I might ask you for a visit?" |
41010 | Tell me, Helen, was it not Miss Stuart who separated you from Guy? |
41010 | The message read thus:"Can you come to town for the night? |
41010 | Then added in a lower tone to Jean,"Do n''t you want to read your note, dearie? |
41010 | There was a brief pause, which was broken by a question from Helen:"Does Mr. Farr still care for you, Lillian?" |
41010 | There was a pause of brief duration, then Helen drew a long breath, and resumed more lightly:"How sweet and sunny it is, is n''t it, Nan? |
41010 | They had reached a turn in the road where their paths diverged, and Nan asked:"You will come over and sing hymns this evening, wo n''t you, Helen?" |
41010 | Want a lift?" |
41010 | Was it not on her account that you quarreled?" |
41010 | We all miss Jean very much, do n''t we, darling?" |
41010 | We will have some fun, wo n''t we?" |
41010 | Were n''t we, Moll?" |
41010 | What are you thinking of, Jean?" |
41010 | What do you think?" |
41010 | What has happened?" |
41010 | What in the world does she do with herself in this out- of- the- way place?" |
41010 | What is the meaning of that weird expression?" |
41010 | What return had she made for the kindness and hospitality of these friends under whose roof she had spent the last three weeks? |
41010 | What was a pleasant friendship compared to the love of a true man''s heart? |
41010 | What was there in that upturned face, in those eyes, which made Helen feel so strangely, as if something were going to happen? |
41010 | What will she do in this colony of girls, with scarcely a man to say a pretty thing to her?" |
41010 | What would uncle think of you?" |
41010 | When she had finished she spoke in a low tone to her sister:"Let''s play Guy''s old favorite, will you, dear?" |
41010 | When they were in bed and the lights were out, Nan ventured to ask:"Do n''t you think Guy will ever return to Hetherford?" |
41010 | When will you return?" |
41010 | Where did you ever know her?" |
41010 | Where did you learn such gallantry?" |
41010 | Who do you think arrived to- day?" |
41010 | Why did you stay so long? |
41010 | Why in the world should you worry? |
41010 | Why should I be unhappy?" |
41010 | Why, Guy,"excitedly,"do you know her? |
41010 | Why, what''s the matter?" |
41010 | Will you give this mandolin to my sister Nathalie?" |
41010 | Will you not let me see you before we sail? |
41010 | Will you not tell me what I have done to have forfeited your friendship?" |
41010 | Wo n''t you be seated, Mr. Farr? |
41010 | Wo n''t you come with me?" |
41010 | Wo n''t you please believe me when I tell you that?" |
41010 | Wo n''t you try and rest a little?" |
41010 | Would you mind telling me who has helped you to it?" |
41010 | You remember that shortly after Bridget came over for me, and I was so cross at having to leave our game of tennis?" |
41010 | You understand, do n''t you?" |
41010 | You wo n''t go in, dear?" |
41010 | You----"His voice broke, but after a moment he resumed:"You are not holding out a vain hope to me-- you are sure?" |
41010 | is n''t this jolly? |
41010 | laughed the man at her side,"not that demure little girl who was dining with Miss Hill?" |
41010 | sighed Jean softly, as they dropped anchor in Hetherford Harbor,"why do all pleasant things come to an end?" |
41010 | what should she do? |
434 | A young woman? |
434 | Am I, indeed? |
434 | And Gertrude''s story of a telephone message? |
434 | And Halsey? |
434 | And Mr. Arnold Armstrong came there, while you were talking? |
434 | And Mrs. Armstrong-- is she also ill? |
434 | And he brought it? |
434 | And he knew who the tenants were? |
434 | And our ghost? 434 And so you showed it to Sam, at the club, and asked him if he knew any one who owned such a link, and Sam said-- what?" |
434 | And tell me this: has your firm made any plans for a house recently, for a Doctor Walker, at Casanova? |
434 | And the broken china-- in the basket? |
434 | And then? |
434 | And what did you say? |
434 | And when she went back, it was to get-- the telegram? |
434 | And where did you live before you came here? |
434 | And you are still going to stay? |
434 | And you never thought then that the intruder who came later that night might be a woman-- the woman, in fact, whom you saw on the veranda? |
434 | And you think Halsey helped him to escape? |
434 | And you think Louise knows something? |
434 | And you? |
434 | And-- after that,Mr. Jamieson went on,"you went directly to bed?" |
434 | And-- did you see a man who limped? |
434 | And-- this thing to- night? |
434 | Another thing, Halsey,I said,"have you ever heard Louise mention a woman named Carrington, Nina Carrington?" |
434 | Are n''t there traces in the mud-- anything? |
434 | At that time had you any suspicion that the Traders''Bank had been wrecked? |
434 | But the man who did it-- he would be known? |
434 | But the motive? |
434 | But what could have done it? |
434 | But when the bonds are offered for sale, Halsey, wo n''t the thief be detected at once? |
434 | Can you tell me when these intrusions occurred, and what the purpose seemed to be? 434 Carrington? |
434 | Carrington? |
434 | Clocks have to stop, do n''t they, if they''re not wound? |
434 | Could n''t you stop him, Halsey? 434 Did Mrs. Watson say that anything had happened to alarm her?" |
434 | Did he ask for Halsey? |
434 | Did he chase you out of the house and back again? |
434 | Did he not meet you? |
434 | Did n''t he have a guest with him? 434 Did n''t he say anything else you could understand?" |
434 | Did n''t you sleep last night? |
434 | Did she say what store it was? |
434 | Did they go toward the club? |
434 | Did you ever long, and long, for money-- money to use without question, money that no one would take you to task about? 434 Did you have two cups of coffee at your dinner?" |
434 | Did you help with that? |
434 | Did you know Mrs. Armstrong and Louise are in the village? |
434 | Did you know of this? |
434 | Did you notice on the six- o''clock train any person-- any man-- who limped a little? |
434 | Did you see if there was any one missing in the house? |
434 | Do you KNOW at what time they left? |
434 | Do you know what I believe? |
434 | Do you know where he went? 434 Do you suppose,"Gertrude asked doubtfully,"that she really meant that blanket for Thomas?" |
434 | Doctor,I asked at a venture,"have you ever heard of a child named Lucien Wallace?" |
434 | Doctor,I asked,"is there any one in the neighborhood named Carrington? |
434 | Five children, has n''t she? |
434 | Flinders? |
434 | For how long? |
434 | Gertrude, when you brought down a revolver that night for Jack to take with him, what one did you bring? 434 Going to build that house at Rock View?" |
434 | Good gracious, Aunt Ray,she exclaimed,"what is the matter?" |
434 | Halsey,I asked gravely, leaning forward,"have you the slightest suspicion who killed Arnold Armstrong? |
434 | Halsey,I asked,"have you any idea of the nature of the interview between Louise Armstrong and Arnold the night he was murdered?" |
434 | Halsey,I said when he sauntered in,"is there a policeman in Casanova?" |
434 | Halsey? |
434 | Has Mr. Bailey gone back to the city,I demanded,"or to the club?" |
434 | Has she been informed of this-- double bereavement? |
434 | Has the mother come? |
434 | Have n''t you a thumb- print, too? |
434 | He had not been living with the family for some years, I believe? |
434 | He has not come back? |
434 | He is not-- dead? |
434 | He was here yesterday evening, I believe? |
434 | He was here, was n''t he? |
434 | He was sober? |
434 | Her? |
434 | How can I thank you, Miss Innes? |
434 | How did you hear it? |
434 | How did you know the watch? |
434 | How do you know that? |
434 | How is your patient? |
434 | How long did he stay? |
434 | How long did she stay? |
434 | How long has Lucien been here? |
434 | How much is the child''s board? |
434 | I mean,he persisted,"do you feel as though you could go through with something rather unusual?" |
434 | I-- I did not leave the billiard- room at once--"Why? |
434 | In cash? |
434 | In what part? |
434 | Is King''s a children''s outfitting place? |
434 | Is everything-- right? |
434 | Is he efficient? 434 Is n''t it a fact, Mr. Innes, that you took Mr. Bailey away from the club- house because you were afraid there would be blows?" |
434 | Is n''t it something that we could attend to instead? |
434 | Is that the horse''s name? |
434 | Is that you, Liddy? |
434 | Is that your business, or mine? |
434 | Is the gentleman down in the town? |
434 | Is there any one you can think of who could be relied on to watch the outside of the house to- night? |
434 | Is there anything new? |
434 | It''s bad enough, is n''t it? 434 Leaving Mr. Bailey alone in the billiard- room?" |
434 | Let him alone? |
434 | Liddy,I said sternly,"did you breathe a word about everything not being right here?" |
434 | Lucien Wallace? |
434 | May Riggs come up? 434 Miss Innes, has it occurred to you that Mr. Bailey might know something of this?" |
434 | Miss Innes,Mr. Jamieson was saying,"in the last three days, have you seen a-- any suspicious figures around the grounds? |
434 | Miss Innes,he said quickly,"will you come with me and light the east corridor? |
434 | Miss Innes,he said, stopping me as I was about to go to my room up- stairs,"how are your nerves tonight?" |
434 | Miss Innes,he said, taking of his hat,"do you know where Alex, the gardener, is?" |
434 | Miss Innes,he said,"I am in a peculiar position; I understand your attitude, of course; but-- do you think you are wise? |
434 | Miss Innes,she said,"has my stepbrother Arnold gone away?" |
434 | Mr. Bailey did not see him on his way across the lawn? |
434 | Mr. Innes,the coroner said,"will you tell under what circumstances you saw Mr. Arnold Armstrong the night he died?" |
434 | Mr. Jamieson, did you ever think that Paul Armstrong might not have died a natural death? |
434 | Mr. Jamieson, do you know what your words imply? 434 Mrs. Watson,"I said severely,"will you be so good as to explain this rather unusual occurrence?" |
434 | My sister was there? |
434 | No news? |
434 | Nobody hurt, is there? |
434 | Not any member of the family? |
434 | Now then,I said, when we got outside,"will you tell me why you choose to take Alex into your confidence? |
434 | Oh, Halsey, what can he do now? |
434 | Oh, Halsey, where have you been? |
434 | Really, Miss Innes, do n''t you think you exaggerate? 434 Riggs,"I asked suddenly,"did you get into this house a day or two after I took it, at night?" |
434 | Shall I bring him in? |
434 | She was not-- pock- marked? |
434 | Somebody-- had it? |
434 | Tell me everything, wo n''t you, Halsey? |
434 | That is-- unless-- you did n''t see any one crossing the lawn or skulking around the house, did you? |
434 | That whole end of the cellar is kept locked, so nobody can get at the clothes, and then the key''s left in the door? 434 The Children''s Hospital, you say, Doctor?" |
434 | The creek? |
434 | The family consists of yourself alone, Miss Innes? |
434 | The nature of the discussion-- was it amicable? |
434 | The what? |
434 | Then it would be unlikely that he came here last night to get possession of anything belonging to him? |
434 | Then why did he leave at all? |
434 | Then you did n''t lock the laundry last night? |
434 | Then you know nothing of Mr. Armstrong''s movements after he left the house? |
434 | There is little in the paper itself,he admitted;"but why should Arnold Armstrong carry that around, unless it meant something? |
434 | There is no one but yourself and your niece? |
434 | There is nothing in that, is there? 434 There was no one with Mr. Armstrong when he entered?" |
434 | Thomas ill? |
434 | To see Louise? |
434 | To the station, Gertrude? 434 Toothache?" |
434 | WHY did they go away? |
434 | Was he ill when he came? |
434 | Was he in the habit of carrying money? |
434 | Was not his apparent friendliness a change from his former attitude? |
434 | Well, Mary,I said encouragingly,"what''s the matter? |
434 | Well,I asked,"did n''t your young man enjoy his meal?" |
434 | Well? |
434 | What about Thomas? |
434 | What are you doing up there? |
434 | What can I say to you, Miss Innes? |
434 | What did I tell you? 434 What did I tell you?" |
434 | What did he say? |
434 | What did he say? |
434 | What do you mean? |
434 | What do you mean? |
434 | What does it matter about any one in the world but just the two of us? 434 What have you got there?" |
434 | What in the world are you doing here? |
434 | What in the world are you driving at? |
434 | What in the world is the matter with you? |
434 | What innocent man would run away from here at three o''clock in the morning? 434 What is it, Miss Innes?" |
434 | What is it? |
434 | What name did that woman in the kitchen give? |
434 | What occurred next? |
434 | What occurred then? |
434 | What sort of a looking chap is that Walker, Gertrude? |
434 | What was in the telegram? |
434 | What was it Warner overheard the woman say to Mr. Innes, in the library? |
434 | What was that sound? 434 What was that you said to me, Miss Innes, about the murder at the house being a beginning and not an end? |
434 | What woman was a man? |
434 | What''s the matter, Liddy? |
434 | What''s wrong? |
434 | When did they leave? |
434 | When you get to thinking about it, Aunt Ray, it looks bad for all three of us, does n''t it? 434 Where am I in this?" |
434 | Where did-- you-- find it? |
434 | Where is Halsey? |
434 | Where is Halsey? |
434 | Where is Warner? |
434 | Where is the freight car that was rammed? |
434 | Where was it to be built? 434 Where was it? |
434 | Where''s the laundry key kept? |
434 | Where? 434 Who and what is the woman Nina Carrington? |
434 | Who is Nina Carrington? |
434 | Who is it? |
434 | Who is it? |
434 | Who packed it? |
434 | Why did I step into the tulip bed? |
434 | Why did he do it? |
434 | Why did n''t you do what I asked you to, Gertrude? 434 Why did n''t you trust me, and send for me before?" |
434 | Why do n''t you trust me, Miss Innes? |
434 | Why was Mr. Bailey not present at the inquest? |
434 | Why, Elm Street is the main street; do n''t you remember, Halsey? |
434 | Why, Jack took my revolver with him, did n''t he? |
434 | Why, how are you, Rachel? |
434 | Why, what would Halsey do to me if I even ventured such a thing? 434 Why?" |
434 | Will you come with me for a moment, Miss Innes? |
434 | Will you give me the link,he said, when I finished,"or, at least, let me see it? |
434 | Will you pardon me for a personal question? |
434 | Will you tell me his mother''s name and address? |
434 | Will you tell me what it was you had forgotten? |
434 | Will you tell me what you mean, Thomas Johnson, by not telling me this before? |
434 | Will you tell us the nature of his errand? |
434 | Wo n''t the description do? |
434 | Wo n''t you sit down? |
434 | You are sure of that, Miss Innes? |
434 | You are sure the hole was not here yesterday? |
434 | You are sure this was not the real mother? |
434 | You did n''t see him at all? |
434 | You heard no other sound? |
434 | You let me attend to this fellow, whoever it is, Aunt Ray, and go to Louise, will you? 434 You mean-- the murderer?" |
434 | You say there have been intruders in the house? |
434 | Your theory is that Mr. Armstrong was followed here by some enemy, and shot as he entered the house? |
434 | A capable man?" |
434 | After all, what had I to tell? |
434 | And came to work here Saturday morning?" |
434 | And now, ca n''t you see where this thing puts me? |
434 | And what''s your mother''s name?" |
434 | And where was Paul Armstrong? |
434 | And why had the thief, if he were a thief, picked up the broken china out of the road and left it, with his booty? |
434 | Another man?" |
434 | Any one who might wish him out of the way?" |
434 | Any-- woman?" |
434 | As I leaned over I fancied I heard a groan-- or was it the wind? |
434 | BAILEY?" |
434 | Bailey?" |
434 | Bailey?" |
434 | Before the murder, no doubt, but who would believe that? |
434 | But as long as I learn only parts of the truth, from both you and her, what can I do? |
434 | But what? |
434 | But where had Rosie carried her basket? |
434 | But why was he there, if it were indeed he? |
434 | But, first of all, did you bring what you promised?" |
434 | CHAPTER IV WHERE IS HALSEY? |
434 | CHAPTER XXVII WHO IS NINA CARRINGTON? |
434 | Could it have been Thomas? |
434 | Could this veiled woman be the Nina Carrington of the message? |
434 | Did Louise and her mother know of the shameful and wicked deception? |
434 | Did any one come out here yesterday to repair the telephone, and examine the wires on the roof?" |
434 | Did either of them know where Halsey was or what had happened to him? |
434 | Did you ever see this cuff- link before?" |
434 | Did you wait to see who it was?" |
434 | Do you know how much money there was in that worn- out wallet of his? |
434 | Do you know if he had any enemies? |
434 | Do you know that every dollar you have, both of you, is in that bank?" |
434 | Do you know that you are practically accusing Gertrude Innes of admitting that man?" |
434 | Doctor, has any one come to you, either early this morning or to- day, to have you treat a bullet wound?" |
434 | Does n''t it look rather as though he thought it impossible to escape?" |
434 | Especially--""Especially what?" |
434 | Even now I wonder-- what did Thomas know? |
434 | Gertrude, I do n''t think Halsey knew the-- the murdered man, did he?" |
434 | Get up, wo n''t you?" |
434 | Had Gertrude been the fugitive in the clothes chute? |
434 | Had Mr. Halsey any possible reason for going away like this, without warning?" |
434 | Had this unknown visitor been there a third time, the night Arnold Armstrong was murdered? |
434 | Have you employed him long?" |
434 | He was shrewd enough to disarm suspicion as to the graver charge?" |
434 | Her prostration ever since, her-- Aunt Ray, you do n''t think it was Gertrude who fell down the clothes chute?" |
434 | How did it get there? |
434 | How had he gone, and when? |
434 | How is Miss Armstrong?" |
434 | How-- does-- it-- open?" |
434 | How?" |
434 | I was askin''did you want the ladder left up the clothes chute?" |
434 | If Gertrude had been on the circular staircase that night, why had she fled from Mr. Jamieson? |
434 | If Halsey and Jack Bailey had left before the crime, how came Halsey''s revolver in the tulip bed? |
434 | If any such case comes to you, will it be too much trouble for you to let me know?" |
434 | If either he or Jack Bailey had heard an intruder in the house and shot him-- as they might have been justified in doing-- why had they run away? |
434 | If it had not been the murdered man who had entered the house that night, who had it been? |
434 | If it was she who came here as Mattie Bliss, what did she tell Halsey that sent him racing to Doctor Walker''s, and then to Miss Armstrong? |
434 | If it was some member of the household, who could it have been? |
434 | If the fugitive had come from outside the house, how did he get in? |
434 | In the bottom of the hamper?" |
434 | Is it laid?" |
434 | Is it likely I would kill her brother?" |
434 | Is it-- because there is some one else?" |
434 | Is n''t he here?" |
434 | Is n''t that the act of an innocent man?" |
434 | Is she-- is she very bad, Mis''Innes?" |
434 | Is that you, Thomas? |
434 | It was not a new idea, but why had she done it? |
434 | Jamieson?" |
434 | Jamieson?" |
434 | Might it not have been the mysterious intruder again? |
434 | Mine?" |
434 | Mr. Bailey left--""Which way?" |
434 | Mr. Harton, did Mr. Arnold Armstrong know that Sunnyside had been rented?" |
434 | Nina Carrington?" |
434 | Not ill?" |
434 | Now, Miss Innes, you had no such visitor, I believe?" |
434 | Or a fourth, the time Mr. Jamieson had locked some one in the clothes chute? |
434 | Or perhaps it''s the one the milk- boy heard: a tramp washing a dirty shirt, presumably bloody, in the creek below the bridge?" |
434 | Or was our whole theory wrong? |
434 | Shall I send it out?" |
434 | Suppose Louise grew worse? |
434 | Tate?" |
434 | The list was something like this: Who had entered the house the night before the murder? |
434 | The window or the door? |
434 | Then it was decided that-- that they should both go away--""Ca n''t you be more explicit?" |
434 | Then she sat down on the side of her bed, and, feeling faint-- she was subject to spells--("I told you that when I came, did n''t I, Rosie?" |
434 | Then where shall I be?" |
434 | Then-- who had dug the other hole in the false partition? |
434 | There must certainly be some explanation-- but what was it? |
434 | Therefore-- but was it Gertrude? |
434 | This young Doctor Walker-- have you any idea why Mr. Innes should have gone there last night?" |
434 | WHAT were your reasons for thinking that?" |
434 | Warner, what did he say when you found him on the porch?" |
434 | Warner, whose bag is this?" |
434 | Was Gertrude''s lover a villain or a victim? |
434 | Was Jack Bailey an accomplice or a victim in the looting of the Traders''Bank? |
434 | Was Louise under surveillance? |
434 | Was he alone in his guilt, or was the cashier his accomplice? |
434 | Was it on the mission Louise had mentioned? |
434 | Was it robbery?" |
434 | Was it the one the parlor maid brought up yesterday, about a ghost wringing its hands on the roof? |
434 | Was it the right or the left? |
434 | Was the detective right, and were the bonds and money from the Traders''Bank there? |
434 | Watson?" |
434 | What all- powerful reason made Louise determine to marry Doctor Walker? |
434 | What am I to think?" |
434 | What did Bailey do when he went back to the Knickerbocker apartments that night? |
434 | What did Thomas see in the shadows the night he died? |
434 | What did he bring?" |
434 | What did he suspect? |
434 | What had Gertrude left in the billiard- room? |
434 | What had Thomas known, and Mrs. Watson? |
434 | What has happened?" |
434 | What have you locked in the laundry?" |
434 | What if Eliza did see some men around the stable? |
434 | What is this about your nephew?" |
434 | What is wrong?" |
434 | What possible connection could there be between Halsey and Gertrude, and the murder of Arnold Armstrong? |
434 | What sort of man was Mr. Paul Armstrong, anyhow?" |
434 | What was it he had said to Louise, that had sent her up to Sunnyside, half wild with fear for him? |
434 | What was simpler? |
434 | What was the meaning of the subtle change in Gertrude? |
434 | What was the mysterious cause of their sudden flight? |
434 | What was the significance of the cuff- link, and where was it? |
434 | What would I find if I did get in? |
434 | What''s your mother''s name?" |
434 | Where can I find him?" |
434 | Where had Halsey gone? |
434 | Where is Louise?" |
434 | Where was Halsey? |
434 | Where was it? |
434 | Where was the money? |
434 | Where was your nephew?" |
434 | Where''s the gardener these days?" |
434 | Which way had the fugitive escaped? |
434 | Who admitted him? |
434 | Who had accosted Rosie on the drive? |
434 | Who had been locked in the clothes chute? |
434 | Who had fallen down the clothes chute? |
434 | Who had made the hole in the trunk- room wall? |
434 | Who had passed Louise on the circular staircase? |
434 | Who was Alex? |
434 | Who was I to play Providence in this case? |
434 | Who was Lucien Wallace? |
434 | Who was Nina Carrington? |
434 | Who was Nina Carrington? |
434 | Who was it fell down the clothes chute? |
434 | Who was it scared Miss Louise almost into her grave?" |
434 | Who was it?" |
434 | Who was the child''s mother and where was she? |
434 | Who was the man on the drive near the lodge, and whose gold- mounted dressing- bag had I seen in the lodge sitting- room? |
434 | Who was the man whose body we had resurrected? |
434 | Who was the midnight intruder who had so alarmed Liddy and myself? |
434 | Who would it be that Mr. Jamieson had trapped in the cellar? |
434 | Whose bag is this?" |
434 | Why did Arnold Armstrong come back after he had left the house the night he was killed? |
434 | Why did both she and Doctor Walker warn us away from the house? |
434 | Why did n''t you tell me, Halsey?" |
434 | Why did the trunk- room have both a radiator and an open fireplace? |
434 | Why had Louise left her people and come home to hide at the lodge? |
434 | Why was the doctor so afraid of her? |
434 | Why, what could it be but flight? |
434 | Why, what have you been doing up at the big house, Miss Innes?" |
434 | Why?" |
434 | Will you answer my question?" |
434 | Will you tell me what was the nature of the conversation you held with him the night he was attacked and carried off?" |
434 | Would not Paul Armstrong have taken his booty with him? |
434 | Would we find a body or some one badly injured? |
434 | You ai n''t took notice that the big clock in the hall is stopped, I reckon?" |
434 | You are sure?" |
434 | You came here Friday night to see Miss Innes, did n''t you? |
33325 | ''Even''the Maltese cross? |
33325 | About Mona? |
33325 | About bringing home to you? |
33325 | Afraid, you mean, of the legal steps you may take? |
33325 | Ah, all the while you_ cared_? |
33325 | Ah, really? |
33325 | Ah, the little melancholy, tender, tell- tale things: how can they_ not_ speak to you and find a way to your heart? 33325 All about it?" |
33325 | All day long? |
33325 | Alone? |
33325 | Always? |
33325 | Am I? 33325 An immense little fib?" |
33325 | And did she ask you also particularly to see him here in town? |
33325 | And did you remember the little letter that, with your hands tied, you still succeeded in writing to him? |
33325 | And did you think your mother would see you? |
33325 | And do you mean, as it is, that_ she_''ll prevent him? |
33325 | And do you say you love her? |
33325 | And having done that, you departed? |
33325 | And how does_ she_ take it? |
33325 | And leave his house as bare as your hand? 33325 And no one at Poynton said anything? |
33325 | And pray who''s to take you? |
33325 | And that he has no feeling on_ his_ side? |
33325 | And was Mrs. Brigstock satisfied with your answer? |
33325 | And what did you say to that? |
33325 | And what had she got? |
33325 | And what if Mona does n''t give you up? |
33325 | And when did all this take place? |
33325 | And you do n''t really think it''s fair, do you? 33325 And you''re not afraid now?" |
33325 | Another footing? 33325 Anywhere in particular, ladies?" |
33325 | Are they right? |
33325 | Are you safe? 33325 Are you so very sure she will?" |
33325 | Are you sure? |
33325 | As if I were one of those bad women in a play? |
33325 | As long as what, please? |
33325 | At that place you spoke of in town? |
33325 | Away from Mona? 33325 Awfully, have n''t we?" |
33325 | Back to the inn? |
33325 | Back? 33325 Beautiful things?" |
33325 | Because I contrasted you-- told him_ you_ were the one? |
33325 | Before he has even married her? |
33325 | But have they made no sound? 33325 But if he knew that so well, what chance was there in it for her?" |
33325 | But if you do have a set- to with her? |
33325 | But plead with you for what? |
33325 | But surely not because she understands and appreciates them? |
33325 | But twice? |
33325 | But what did she expect to get of you, with your opposition so marked from the first? |
33325 | But what if there''s one that it''s no difficulty at all for me to give? |
33325 | But what to do? |
33325 | But what''s a fellow to do if she wo n''t meet a fellow? |
33325 | But why on earth? |
33325 | But why should I tell you such things, for any good it does me? 33325 But would n''t they have gone down as soon as you left?" |
33325 | But you''ve heard nothing? |
33325 | By letting myself go? |
33325 | Can you ask me that question when I only wanted to please you? 33325 Can you take such pleasure in her being''finished''--a poor girl you''ve once loved?" |
33325 | Come round? |
33325 | Derived from_ him_? |
33325 | Determined her to what? |
33325 | Did he abuse me? |
33325 | Did he seem very angry? |
33325 | Did he tell you so? |
33325 | Did n''t he answer the note in which you let him know that I was in town? |
33325 | Did n''t he tell you-- didn''t he say anything about it? |
33325 | Did n''t you ask? |
33325 | Did n''t you say anything in return? |
33325 | Did you see_ her_? |
33325 | Did you tell her all about it? 33325 Did_ you_ see them?" |
33325 | Do n''t you think it''s rather jolly, the old shop? |
33325 | Do n''t you think that if I''m here she may hate it worse-- think I may want to make her reply bang off? |
33325 | Do n''t you understand, Fleda, how immensely, how devotedly, I''ve trusted you? |
33325 | Do you mean he''s at Waterbath? 33325 Do you mean in the way of justifying you?" |
33325 | Do you mean that great house is_ lost_? |
33325 | Do you mean to say that, Mona or no Mona, he could see you that way, day after day, and not have the ordinary feelings of a man? |
33325 | Do you mean to say you''ll have a regular kick- up with her? |
33325 | Do you mean to tell me I must marry such a woman? |
33325 | Do you mean to tell me at such an hour as this that you''ve really lost him? |
33325 | Do you mean to tell me that I must marry a woman I hate? |
33325 | Do you mean your marriage is off? |
33325 | Do you really think so? |
33325 | Do you suggest that I shall propose to him to come down here again? |
33325 | Do you wish to appear as if you do n''t care? |
33325 | Does Mona? |
33325 | Does it happen to be in your power to give it a name? |
33325 | Does n''t it occur to you,she asked in a moment,"that if Mona is, as you say, drawing away, she may have, in doing so, a very high motive? |
33325 | Everything? |
33325 | Everything? |
33325 | Fancy your putting a question so indelicate? 33325 Fearfully?" |
33325 | For Mummy''s answer? |
33325 | For me? |
33325 | For what do you take me? 33325 For whom did he ask?" |
33325 | Forever? |
33325 | Give everything back? |
33325 | Give them up to whom? |
33325 | Give what up? |
33325 | Go away? |
33325 | Has let herself go? |
33325 | Have I kept you off to- day? |
33325 | Have n''t I had it from your own mouth that he cares for you? |
33325 | Have they come back? |
33325 | He wo n''t live with her? |
33325 | He_ was_ eloquent, then, poor dear-- he poured forth the story of his wrongs? |
33325 | His dreadful quarrel? |
33325 | His engagement to marry? 33325 How came you not to let me know that you were there?" |
33325 | How came you to know my house? |
33325 | How can I back her up, Mr. Gereth, when I think, as I tell you, that she has made a great mistake? |
33325 | How can I get at him? 33325 How can I tell you? |
33325 | How could he, when our situation is such that he communicates with me only through you, and that you are so tortuous you conceal everything? |
33325 | How could n''t I care? 33325 How could you_ not_ like him, when he''s such a dear? |
33325 | How do you know what has happened? 33325 How do_ I_ know, with my wretched relations with him?" |
33325 | How should I have? 33325 How should she be aware of it?" |
33325 | How then do you come to know that your son has ever thought--"That he would give his ears to get you? |
33325 | How_ can_ I get him away from her? |
33325 | I do n''t know, Mrs. Gereth; how can I say? |
33325 | I do n''t like your cross- questioning her, do n''t you see? 33325 I forget when it is that your marriage takes place?" |
33325 | I made a point of letting Mona know that I should be here, do n''t you see? 33325 I mean I could put up with it just as it was; it had a lot of good things, do n''t you think? |
33325 | I mean, does he, after the fact, as it were, accept it? |
33325 | I suppose she''s tremendously proud, is n''t she? |
33325 | I was n''t sure, but I thought it right to try-- to put it to her kindly, do n''t you see? 33325 If Mona has got him?" |
33325 | If he does n''t care? |
33325 | If he went,Fleda asked,"does n''t that exactly prove that he recognized one?" |
33325 | If he''s not lost, why are you unhappy? |
33325 | If she wo n''t do that--? |
33325 | If you speak for yourself I can understand, but why is it hideous for_ me_? |
33325 | In the first place, eh? 33325 In_ your_ name?" |
33325 | Is Mona very angry? |
33325 | Is he going to send them down here? |
33325 | Is it a part of his kindness never to come near you? |
33325 | Is it a part of his kindness to leave you without an inkling of where he is? |
33325 | Is it permitted to be surprised,Fleda deferentially asked,"at Mrs. Brigstock''s thinking it would help her to see you?" |
33325 | Is n''t it there, when he''s in town, that he has a room? 33325 Is that what he calls it?" |
33325 | Is that what you came to ask me? |
33325 | Is that what you came to say to her? |
33325 | Is that what you said to her? |
33325 | Is there an up- train? |
33325 | Is there any purpose for which you would like my father to call on you? |
33325 | It must n''t seem to come from_ her_ at all, do n''t you know? 33325 It''s none of their business, is it?" |
33325 | Leaving you quite to yourself? |
33325 | Liked best? |
33325 | Marry him if he were to ask me? 33325 Mine?" |
33325 | Must_ you_ do it bang off? |
33325 | My just giving everything back? |
33325 | Not Mr. Gereth, I mean-- nor his wife? |
33325 | Not even to have Poynton? |
33325 | Not in any way? |
33325 | Now? |
33325 | Of its opposite? |
33325 | Of the old things? |
33325 | Oh, how in the world can you fancy? |
33325 | Owen-- what I''ve done? 33325 Painful?" |
33325 | Poynton''s on fire? |
33325 | Puts you in the situation of expecting that I shall do this thing just simply to oblige you? |
33325 | Quite a''demand,''dear, is it? |
33325 | Read it? |
33325 | Ready for what? 33325 She takes such an interest in them?" |
33325 | She went down to Ricks? |
33325 | Should I love him for all he has made you suffer? |
33325 | Since I did n''t let you know, why did you come? |
33325 | Smoke? |
33325 | So as not to aggravate Mona? |
33325 | So much that they''re_ all_, and that she can let everything else absolutely depend upon them? |
33325 | So that she''ll break altogether if I keep them? |
33325 | So you did n''t ask? |
33325 | Superstitious? |
33325 | Tells her what? |
33325 | That you had had a long talk with me, without seeing your mother at all? |
33325 | That''s your great feeling about_ him_,Fleda said;"but how, after what has happened, can it be his about you?" |
33325 | The honor and good name of a man you hate? |
33325 | The maiden aunt''s, the nicest, the dearest old woman that ever lived? 33325 The old things?" |
33325 | The other day? |
33325 | The strain of what? |
33325 | Then how am I to know that you''really''love-- anybody else? |
33325 | Then if you''re thinking of Owen, how can you_ bear_ to think? |
33325 | Then she''s not to live there? |
33325 | Then what do you make of his aversion to her? |
33325 | Then what further passed? |
33325 | Then what''s the matter with you? 33325 Then where is he?" |
33325 | Then why does n''t he marry her? 33325 Then why does n''t she do it?" |
33325 | Then wo n''t yours do? |
33325 | Then you think I ought to have told her? |
33325 | Then you think he lies when he tells you that he has recovered his liberty? |
33325 | Then, in God''s name, what must I do? |
33325 | They''re married? |
33325 | To Waterbath? 33325 To give them up?" |
33325 | To his club, do you mean? |
33325 | To me, do you mean? |
33325 | To move the furniture? |
33325 | To save you? 33325 To say to you?" |
33325 | To take means? |
33325 | To the Registrar? |
33325 | To- night-- to- morrow? |
33325 | Well, darling, what did you tell him? |
33325 | Well, if she had? |
33325 | Well, was it_ I_, pray, who perpetrated the wrong? 33325 Well, you would n''t at all events have ceased to like me, would you?" |
33325 | Were they saving the things? |
33325 | What I mean to say is, if she''s angry at your backing me up-- what will you do then? 33325 What alarm should there have been? |
33325 | What answer do you wish me to write to him? |
33325 | What bearing have_ her_ feelings, pray? |
33325 | What can you call it, miss, if it ai n''t really saved? |
33325 | What did she mean by that? |
33325 | What did you do to them? |
33325 | What did you say to that? |
33325 | What do people say of that? 33325 What do you call meeting a fellow?" |
33325 | What do you know about his''loving''me? |
33325 | What do you want of him,Fleda sadly asked,"feeling as you do to both of us?" |
33325 | What else can I really pretend when you threaten so to cast me off if I speak the word myself? |
33325 | What game are they all playing? |
33325 | What good does it do me to be here when I find you only a stone? |
33325 | What has made the difference? |
33325 | What is Mrs. Gereth going to do? |
33325 | What of that? |
33325 | What on earth am I to see him for? |
33325 | What on earth have you done? |
33325 | What pain can I ever feel again? |
33325 | What she ought to do? |
33325 | What sort of an obligation do you call that? 33325 What sort of coercion?" |
33325 | What then did she mean to do? |
33325 | When I got into this I did n''t know you, and now that I know you how can I tell you the difference? 33325 When did you say Mrs. Brigstock was to have gone back?" |
33325 | When you went to Waterbath after seeing me,she asked,"did you tell her all about that?" |
33325 | Where did you separate? |
33325 | Where on earth did you put your hand on such beautiful things? |
33325 | Where will they send it? |
33325 | Why did n''t you wait, dearest? 33325 Why do you need saving, when you announced to me just now that you''re a free man?" |
33325 | Why had you a''delicacy''as to speaking of Mona? |
33325 | Why have you given, for a reply, your sister''s address? |
33325 | Why have you left me just when I want you most? |
33325 | Why in the world, if everything had changed, did n''t you break off? |
33325 | Why in the world, then,that lady cried,"does he still not breathe a breath about the day, the_ day_, the day?" |
33325 | Why is it you hate him so? |
33325 | Why must I? |
33325 | Why not to Waterbath at once? |
33325 | Why not? 33325 Why on earth has she reason?" |
33325 | Why should he, if you did n''t? |
33325 | Why should_ I_ loathe it? |
33325 | Why so? 33325 Why the devil, at any rate, does n''t it come off?" |
33325 | Why then does n''t she prove it in the only clear way? |
33325 | Why, in the name of goodness, when you adore him? 33325 Why, she simply wo n''t marry me, do n''t you see?" |
33325 | Would n''t it perhaps after all be better,she asked,"before doing this, to see if we can make his whereabouts certain?" |
33325 | Yes, that does n''t happen very often, does it? |
33325 | Yesterday? |
33325 | You bad, false thing, why did n''t you tell me? |
33325 | You can understand it''s spoiling her temper and making her come down on_ me_? 33325 You did n''t ask him?" |
33325 | You did n''t know I was here? |
33325 | You do mean literally everything, to the last little miniature on the last little screen? |
33325 | You do n''t mind her seeing it? |
33325 | You do n''t think I''m rough or hard, do you? |
33325 | You do n''t, then? |
33325 | You don''t-- a-- live anywhere in particular, do you? |
33325 | You have n''t any idea if they are waiting for the things? |
33325 | You mean makes her hesitate to keep you-- not hesitate to renounce you? |
33325 | You mean that I was watched-- that he had his myrmidons, pledged to wire him if they should see what I was''up to''? 33325 You mean that she''ll be the soul of the row?" |
33325 | You mean their marriage? |
33325 | You mean you_ will_ talk of them? |
33325 | You mean, even if she does n''t let you off? 33325 You pegged at her so hard?" |
33325 | You really have it from Mr. Gereth that he''ll give us his company? |
33325 | You really pretend,Fleda asked,"to think me capable of transmitting him that news?" |
33325 | You smooth it down because you see more in it than there can ever be; but after my hideous double game how will you be able to believe in me again? |
33325 | You tell me you''say''you love her, but is there nothing more in it than your saying so? 33325 You think, then, as she does, that I_ must_ send down the police?" |
33325 | You wo n''t go away, I hope? |
33325 | You wo n''t receive him here with me? |
33325 | You wo n''t wait for what we may hear? |
33325 | You''d know this one soon enough, would n''t you? 33325 You''ll all the same come abroad with me?" |
33325 | You''ll tell her what you think she ought to do? |
33325 | You''ve been capable, just to tell me, of this wretched journey, of this consideration that I do n''t deserve? |
33325 | You''ve come down to it, miss, already? |
33325 | You_ can_? |
33325 | Your issue? |
33325 | _ Am_ I to tell my solicitor to act? |
33325 | _ Do n''t_ you think it-- I mean that she ought to give them up? |
33325 | _ Gone?_She was in the man''s hands; she clung to him. |
33325 | _ I_ watch her,_ I_ count on her: how can I do anything else? 33325 _ Now_ do you know how I feel?" |
33325 | ''We are here-- what do you want?''" |
33325 | ''What wo n''t a mother do, you know?'' |
33325 | A pack o''servants in charge-- not the old lady''s lot, eh? |
33325 | After waiting fruitlessly now for him to say more, she continued:"She has been there again? |
33325 | Ah, why did n''t you wait?" |
33325 | Ai n''t I doing what I can to get the thing arranged?" |
33325 | Ai n''t it quite too dreadful? |
33325 | And if he did, Fleda asked, what was the matter with her own silly self? |
33325 | And what does he mean in the second?" |
33325 | And what was the matter still more if he was n''t? |
33325 | And what_ else_ had he originally liked?" |
33325 | Are n''t you looking after them for him?" |
33325 | As Fleda made no answer to this she sharply went on:"_ Have_ they put it off?" |
33325 | As far as_ I_''m concerned, if I could n''t meet him a month ago, how am I to meet him to- day? |
33325 | At Waterbath, do n''t you know? |
33325 | At last she spoke once more:"Even the Maltese cross?" |
33325 | But all the same he wanted her to come somewhere and have luncheon with him: what was that a tribute to? |
33325 | But do you mean,"she went on,"that if you had known I was with your mother you would n''t have come down?" |
33325 | But how shall you possibly be more out of it? |
33325 | But if you have, why have n''t you let a fellow know?" |
33325 | But it made her think a little, and the thought found utterance, with unconscious irony, in the simple interrogation:"Mona?" |
33325 | But whom and what, in that case, would Fleda herself resemble? |
33325 | But why should he be nervous? |
33325 | Ca n''t she say what she''ll do, one way or the other? |
33325 | Ca n''t you see me, Fleda, and would n''t you do it yourself?" |
33325 | Can I utter it?" |
33325 | Could n''t the same roof cover them? |
33325 | Did Fleda really see_ her_, Mrs. Gereth demanded, spending the remainder of her days with such a creature''s elbow in her eye? |
33325 | Did n''t she do so from the moment she began to put it off? |
33325 | Did n''t you seem to show me, in your wonderful way, that that was exactly how? |
33325 | Did she go to you to complain of me?" |
33325 | Did she want him now when he was estranged, when he was disgusted, when he had a sore grievance? |
33325 | Did you make her understand you want me?" |
33325 | Do I strike you so? |
33325 | Do n''t you know what I mean, Miss Vetch? |
33325 | Do n''t you see what I mean?" |
33325 | Do you know what she asked me?" |
33325 | Do you know what she had the cheek to tell me?" |
33325 | Do you understand what I mean by the difference?" |
33325 | Does n''t he appreciate anything? |
33325 | Finally she was able to breathe:"And if she_ is_ there-- if she''s there already?" |
33325 | Fleda gave a colorless smile, and her companion continued:"Do you literally mean that you ca n''t put your hand upon him?" |
33325 | For what in the world would you have taken me?" |
33325 | G.?" |
33325 | Gereth?" |
33325 | Gereth?" |
33325 | Great God, how_ could_ you?" |
33325 | Had n''t she been admonished, months before, that people considered they had lost her and were reconciled on the whole to the privation? |
33325 | Had n''t she, after her clumsy flight, been pressed upon Owen in still clearer terms? |
33325 | Had n''t that been exactly the sort of service she longed to render him? |
33325 | Had not Mrs. Brigstock quitted that residence for the very purpose of laying her hand on the associate of Mrs. Gereth''s misconduct? |
33325 | Has he given you absolutely no symptom-- not looked a look, not breathed a sigh?" |
33325 | Have n''t you known all the while that I''m counting the hours? |
33325 | Have you heard nothing at all?" |
33325 | He appeared puzzled by this statement, but he presently rejoined:"You have n''t then said to mamma what you think?" |
33325 | He looked up at her so hard that she took an alarm and before alighting broke out to him:"They''ve come back?" |
33325 | He might mean many things; and what if the many should mean in their turn only one? |
33325 | Her passion for beauty leaped back into life; and was not what now most appealed to it a certain gorgeous audacity? |
33325 | How can I talk of such horrors? |
33325 | How can I tell? |
33325 | How could Fleda doubt they had been tremendous when she knew so well what any pledge of her own would be? |
33325 | How could I suppose you_ do_, with your extraordinary ways? |
33325 | How could Owen use such an expression without being conscious of his hypocrisy? |
33325 | How could a Brigstock possibly understand what it was all about? |
33325 | How could it make right that he should give up Mona for another woman? |
33325 | How could she after all know what, in the disturbance wrought by his mother, Mona''s relations with him might have become? |
33325 | How did she stand by him if she hid from him the single way to recover it of which she was quite sure? |
33325 | How in the world--?" |
33325 | How, really, could a Brigstock logically do anything but hate it? |
33325 | I have n''t breathed a breath of any sort to you, have I? |
33325 | I mean the''gem of the collection,''do n''t you know? |
33325 | I''ll be hanged if I have n''t been good, have n''t I? |
33325 | If he did n''t dislike Mona, what was the matter with him? |
33325 | If he was in love, what was the matter? |
33325 | If that friend should on the other hand part with them, what on earth would there be to return to? |
33325 | If you_ should_ leave my mother, where would you go?" |
33325 | Is the whole house full of them?" |
33325 | Is_ that_ the gem of the collection? |
33325 | It put me on the scent, but I did n''t show you, did I? |
33325 | It was intensely provisional, but what was to come next? |
33325 | It was the furniture she would n''t give up; and what was the good of Poynton without the furniture? |
33325 | Listen to me a little: ca n''t something be done?" |
33325 | Meanwhile he had exclaimed with his uncomfortable laugh:"That''s a good one for me, Miss Vetch, is n''t it?" |
33325 | Mrs. Gereth had really no perception of anybody''s nature-- had only one question about persons: were they clever or stupid? |
33325 | Mrs. Gereth spoke as if she might have said,"What then were you doing all the while?" |
33325 | Mrs. Gereth submitted, then after a little brought out:"If we_ have_ lost--""If we have lost?" |
33325 | Oh, you dear, you dear-- when, when?" |
33325 | Ready to see me ruined without a reason or a reward?" |
33325 | She appeared to hesitate; then she brought out:"You could n''t then, if I release you, make your message a little stronger?" |
33325 | She bethought herself and she broke out--"Isn''t the day past?" |
33325 | She completed her thought by a resolute and perfectly candid question:"How in the world did you get off with them?" |
33325 | She has seen the state of the house?" |
33325 | She heard herself repeat mechanically, yet as if asking it for the first time:"Poynton''s_ gone_?" |
33325 | She means of course that you''ve something to tell me from her, eh? |
33325 | She used to write me every week, do n''t you know? |
33325 | She was to have spent the night in town, do n''t you know? |
33325 | She_ must_ love you-- how can she help it? |
33325 | Should n''t you like him to go?" |
33325 | So she looked as innocent as she could and said as quickly as possible:"For me? |
33325 | So we_ are_ in correspondence again, are n''t we? |
33325 | Something at least of this was in the encouraging way she said:"Yesterday morning?" |
33325 | That she had indeed been premature who should say save those who should have read the matter in the full light of results? |
33325 | That was simply what it was; for did n''t she refuse to move when she as good as declared that she would move only with the furniture? |
33325 | That was stupefying if he really hated Mona; and if he did n''t really hate her what had brought him to Raphael Road and to Maggie''s? |
33325 | That''s why she''s drawing off so hard, do n''t you see?" |
33325 | Then as he began to take the flood of assent from her eyes:"You_ will_ listen to me? |
33325 | Then as the other faltered:"Do you know where Mr. Owen is to- day?" |
33325 | Then he suddenly broke out:"If she_ does_ chuck me, will mother come round?" |
33325 | Then she added:"How can I go on living with you on a footing of which I so deeply disapprove? |
33325 | There are a lot of differences, but are n''t some of the smaller things the most remarkable? |
33325 | There was no alarm?" |
33325 | They''re awfully valuable, are n''t they?" |
33325 | Was it Owen who was mainly responsible for that poverty? |
33325 | Was n''t it at all events the rule of communication with him to say for him what he could n''t say? |
33325 | Was n''t it just one of these?" |
33325 | Was n''t this latter fancy then so great after all? |
33325 | Was n''t this practical unanimity just practical success? |
33325 | Was no good- humored, graceful compromise to be imagined or brought about? |
33325 | We can only, all round, do what we can, eh? |
33325 | We have n''t had much pleasure since we met, have we? |
33325 | What business is it of mine what she does? |
33325 | What did he want her to understand? |
33325 | What did it mean, what did it represent, to what did it correspond in his imagination or his soul? |
33325 | What did it prove in fine but that she was producing the effect she had toiled for-- that she had settled or was rapidly settling Mona? |
33325 | What do I know? |
33325 | What else does he give us all this time for? |
33325 | What had her whole life been but an effort toward completeness and perfection? |
33325 | What had she become, on the spot, but a traitress to her friend? |
33325 | What has been the matter with you all the while? |
33325 | What in the world has become, in so short a time, of the affection that led to your engagement?" |
33325 | What in the world''s a fellow to do?" |
33325 | What indeed was her spoliation of Poynton but the first engagement of a campaign? |
33325 | What is it you demand?" |
33325 | What other footing?" |
33325 | What sort of a visit is that?" |
33325 | What was behind it, what was beyond it, what was, in the deepest depth, within it? |
33325 | What was it he had postponed? |
33325 | What was it he wanted still to postpone? |
33325 | What was it? |
33325 | What would n''t a mother do indeed? |
33325 | What, however, was the poor woman, in that case, to begin with? |
33325 | Where is it yet, where, your freedom? |
33325 | Where on earth was the double game, when you''ve behaved like such a saint? |
33325 | Where_ is_ a man if he does n''t? |
33325 | Who but she, all of a sudden, demanded an unnatural wait? |
33325 | Who would save_ them_ for me-- I ask you who_ would_?" |
33325 | Why did n''t you tell me sooner? |
33325 | Why did she consent to such contacts, why did she so rashly expose herself? |
33325 | Why do you want me to give in?" |
33325 | Why in the world did n''t you let me know? |
33325 | Why in the world for me?" |
33325 | Why not, in the name of wonder, if she absolutely_ was_ the right sort? |
33325 | Why then had he originally rejoiced so in its touch? |
33325 | Why then had she pretended so tremendously to care for me? |
33325 | Why, Fleda, it is n''t a crime, do n''t you know that?" |
33325 | Will you believe it if you see the letter?" |
33325 | Will you read it?" |
33325 | Will you swear he does n''t know?" |
33325 | Will you wait?" |
33325 | With such a mother to give him the pitch, how could he take it so low? |
33325 | Would she act upon his offer? |
33325 | Would they really wish to proceed to extremities? |
33325 | You may personally take it as you like; but what conceivable good will it do?" |
33325 | You were n''t wired? |
33325 | You would n''t say so, would you, if it''s not true? |
33325 | You''d have been down on me hard if I had, would n''t you? |
33325 | You''re down on me pretty hard as it is, I think, are n''t you? |
33325 | _ Have_ you been kind to her?" |
33325 | _ Shall_ I request him to act?" |
61246 | A little strange, is n''t it,she asked,"for you to offer to finance us?" |
61246 | A lovely, solemn little chit? |
61246 | About what, Joe? |
61246 | About young Turner and Eleanor? |
61246 | All alone? |
61246 | All the same, you know that your grandfather wants to keep you here? |
61246 | Am I the least like them? |
61246 | Am I? |
61246 | And are you staying on indefinitely? |
61246 | And are you? |
61246 | And he would n''t let you become an artist? |
61246 | And how long do you think you could stand being shut in here? |
61246 | And how much notice d''you think the old man''ll take of that? |
61246 | And if I went? 61246 And if he wo n''t?" |
61246 | And now you''re pining to get back into the struggle again, eh? |
61246 | And that other favour? 61246 And the little man talking to Hubert, who is he?" |
61246 | And the thought of going down there has unsettled you, has it? |
61246 | And then, sir? |
61246 | And then? |
61246 | And there''s Elizabeth,she put in,"you rather like her, do n''t you?" |
61246 | And what do you think about when you''re out all by yourself in Sussex? |
61246 | And what good do you expect to do to yourself or anybody else by speaking to my father about Hubert''s engagement? |
61246 | And what''s your game? |
61246 | And yet he never loses his temper with them, does he? 61246 And you do n''t think the old man could do without you?" |
61246 | And you wish...? |
61246 | And you would n''t say anything to my grandfather in the meanwhile? |
61246 | And you''re staying on? |
61246 | And you, what did you say? |
61246 | And you? 61246 And you?" |
61246 | And your promise? |
61246 | Any way, what is it you''re hankering after, my good chap? |
61246 | Anything out of the ordinary? |
61246 | Anything the matter? |
61246 | Are n''t there some cousins of mine I ought to know? |
61246 | Are n''t they all rather alike in one way? |
61246 | Are we to understand, Joe,she said,"that Arthur Woodroffe knows all about us now? |
61246 | Are you always with your grandfather? |
61246 | Are you going to say anything to him about Hubert? |
61246 | As a matter of fact? |
61246 | As medical attendant to a hypochondriac millionaire? |
61246 | Been playin''golf? |
61246 | Bit of an autocrat in his way? |
61246 | Blowing a bit, were n''t you, at the mention of Canada? |
61246 | Both of you? |
61246 | But I say, how did it happen? |
61246 | But are you quite sure of yourself? 61246 But do you really think,"Mrs Kenyon began unhopefully,"that it would be any_ good_ for you to come into the affair at all?" |
61246 | But he wants you to? |
61246 | But is he actually cruel? |
61246 | But not that he is-- inhuman? |
61246 | But now you know why I''m going, do n''t you? 61246 But shall I see you to- morrow?" |
61246 | But suppose,Arthur suggested,"that you simply_ did n''t_ do what he wanted you to? |
61246 | But surely you must be pining to get back to your golf and billiards and croquet? |
61246 | But that does n''t weigh with you? |
61246 | But what about those fits of his? |
61246 | But what did you tell him? |
61246 | But what happened to make you change your mind just lately? |
61246 | But what has made you change your mind? 61246 But where''s she going to-- to- morrow? |
61246 | But why have you gone on staying there if you feel like that? |
61246 | But why is he going up to town? 61246 But why?" |
61246 | But why? |
61246 | But will you promise? |
61246 | But you do n''t deny that you had that in your mind, when you began to speak to me about Hubert? |
61246 | But you do n''t now? |
61246 | But you still believe in him? |
61246 | But you think he''ll object? |
61246 | But you''re not going to give it up, are you? |
61246 | But you, yourself, came through without any permanent disaffection? |
61246 | But you_ would_ stick to your idea of going at the end of a week from now? |
61246 | But, good Lord, where could you_ go to_? 61246 But, good Lord, why does Mr Kenyon want him to come and live here?" |
61246 | But, good Lord;_ why_? |
61246 | Ca n''t you tell me? |
61246 | Ca n''t? |
61246 | Can you see Arthur now? 61246 Care to come and have a look at the garden?" |
61246 | Care to have a game of pills? |
61246 | Care to take me on for nine holes-- haven''t time for more? |
61246 | Compensations? |
61246 | Could n''t you tell me how things are, a bit more? |
61246 | Damn it, Esther, what do you mean by everything? |
61246 | Did he say anything to you about my father yesterday? |
61246 | Did he tell you how my father pleaded with him, offered to do or to be anything, if only he might be allowed to marry my mother? |
61246 | Did he tell you that? |
61246 | Did n''t I begin by saying that? |
61246 | Different from the others? |
61246 | Do I look uplifted? |
61246 | Do n''t you know what it is? |
61246 | Do n''t you remember, Hannah? |
61246 | Do n''t you want me to stay? |
61246 | Do you know how I worship you? |
61246 | Do you know this girl, Dorothy Martin? |
61246 | Do you mean that you did n''t despise me? |
61246 | Do you mean that you have only been feeling like that just lately? |
61246 | Do you mean,he put in,"that he is sort of intimidating you by going up to town?" |
61246 | Do you really mean that? |
61246 | Do you really, sir? |
61246 | Do you think he''ll have a down on you for gambling? |
61246 | Do you think, after all, that we had better go? |
61246 | Does he believe that you are n''t capable of looking after your own interests too? |
61246 | Does n''t it to you? |
61246 | Does n''t the old man allow them anything? |
61246 | Does that count for nothing with you? |
61246 | Does that mean that you''re staying on indefinitely? |
61246 | Does the old man know that? |
61246 | Does the old man know? |
61246 | Eh? 61246 Eleanor? |
61246 | Esther? 61246 Exactly; so why have them?" |
61246 | Fairly soon? |
61246 | Feel a bit doubtful about settling down here? |
61246 | Feel pretty young, what? |
61246 | Giving up the Canada idea, any way? |
61246 | Go alone? |
61246 | Going out? |
61246 | Got the cigars? |
61246 | Got the money for your passage? |
61246 | Had n''t you better toddle up and see him at once? |
61246 | Had n''t you? |
61246 | Has he asked you to prolong your visit to us? |
61246 | Has n''t it? 61246 Has n''t it?" |
61246 | Have n''t you changed your mind because you''re afraid of having to leave here? |
61246 | Have you all got some terrible secret that you''re hiding? |
61246 | Have you been trying to milk him, then? |
61246 | Have you done much speculating about life in general since_ you''ve_ been here? |
61246 | Have you got names for all these different parts of the garden? |
61246 | Have you had it in your mind that you might be married quite soon? |
61246 | Have you no battles of your own to fight? |
61246 | Have you really? |
61246 | Having your usual game to- night? |
61246 | He keeps awfully fit, though, does n''t he? |
61246 | He''s getting on for ninety, is n''t he? |
61246 | He? 61246 Heard? |
61246 | How did you pick''em up again? |
61246 | How do you mean? |
61246 | How long have you been making these plans? |
61246 | How''re you? |
61246 | I believe it is true, is it not,he asked,"that the really normal man was not subject to these nerve troubles?" |
61246 | I could n''t possibly refuse him, could I? 61246 I do n''t know what we''re waiting here for?" |
61246 | I hope I have n''t bored you with all this? |
61246 | I mean what possible reason could I have for giving you away? |
61246 | I suppose you do really believe that? |
61246 | I suppose you''re very proud of yourself? |
61246 | I thought that we agreed...."Do n''t you want me to go? |
61246 | I wonder how long it''ll be before he comes back? |
61246 | I wonder if it''s wise to let you stay a week? |
61246 | I wonder if you''ll let me say something to you all about a rather delicate matter? |
61246 | I''m to respect_ your_ motives, of course,he said defiantly;"but you''re at liberty to impute any sort of cowardice to me?" |
61246 | I? 61246 I? |
61246 | If he''ll ever come back? |
61246 | If that''s quite out of the question, is it possible that we might both stay? |
61246 | Indefinitely? |
61246 | Is anything up? |
61246 | Is he very annoyed? |
61246 | Is it possible to live on that, in these days? |
61246 | Is my brother out there? |
61246 | Is n''t it cowardice then? |
61246 | Is that all? |
61246 | Is there so much for me to learn here? |
61246 | It is n''t exactly a gay house, is it? |
61246 | It''ll be rather too wet for tennis, wo n''t it? |
61246 | It''s almost too hot to talk here, is n''t it? |
61246 | Just come down to have a look at us, then? |
61246 | Known him twenty- five years, have you? |
61246 | Like the rest of them? 61246 Like to pretend I''m still in leading strings, do n''t you?" |
61246 | Loose end? 61246 Lord, no-- secret? |
61246 | Mean? 61246 Might I speak to you a minute, sir?" |
61246 | My father said that, did he? |
61246 | Need we go back to that? |
61246 | No harm in trying, though, is there? |
61246 | No hope, I suppose? |
61246 | No money? |
61246 | Nor let it affect your relations with my family? |
61246 | Not even Miss Kenyon? |
61246 | Not even you? |
61246 | Not here? |
61246 | Not likely to recover consciousness before the end? |
61246 | Of_ this_ sort? |
61246 | Oh, well,he said,"no good discussing that, is it? |
61246 | On what grounds? |
61246 | One of your perquisites? |
61246 | Only for his sake? |
61246 | Plus two, is n''t it, now, Hubert? |
61246 | Quite,Arthur agreed, and then added:"This wo n''t affect you in any way, will it, uncle?" |
61246 | Rather soon, is n''t it? |
61246 | Reason? |
61246 | Remember, Esther? 61246 Shall we go now?" |
61246 | She has no money of her own, I suppose? |
61246 | Since when have you been afraid? |
61246 | Six months or a year at the outside? |
61246 | So Hubert wants to marry Miss Martin, does he? |
61246 | So you did speak to him after all? |
61246 | So you''re going to stay on indefinitely? |
61246 | So you''re thinking of joining the family party for a time, I hear? |
61246 | Surely you do n''t mean it? |
61246 | That how you feel about it? |
61246 | Then what''s your objection? |
61246 | Then why are you so keen on-- on my taking the chance of offending Mr Kenyon? |
61246 | Then why does n''t Eleanor wait until you''ve felt your feet a bit? |
61246 | Then why stay? |
61246 | Then you saw service in the trenches? |
61246 | There''s no reason why I should be, is there? |
61246 | Thinks he''ll be company for you and me, perhaps? |
61246 | This holiday of yours is not altogether an exception to the general rule, then? |
61246 | To what? |
61246 | True, though, in a way, is n''t it? |
61246 | Uncle Joe told you? |
61246 | Was I right? |
61246 | Was it really? |
61246 | Well what is it you do n''t understand? |
61246 | Well, I''ve no personal interest to serve, have I? |
61246 | Well, have I? |
61246 | Well, is it possible for a man to lose all decent, human feeling even for his own family? |
61246 | Well, it''s no good arguing that, is it? |
61246 | Well, no need to go into that, eh, Charles? |
61246 | Well, shall you be ready in ten minutes? |
61246 | Well, then, why does n''t he? |
61246 | Well, what happened this morning? |
61246 | Well, will you tell me why he does these things if he is not an inhuman, heartless brute? |
61246 | Well? |
61246 | What I mean is, you''ve never been here since you came as a boy, and you''ve never kept in with us or anything? |
61246 | What a wonderful girl she is, is n''t she? 61246 What about a last game?" |
61246 | What are you going to do with your holiday? |
61246 | What are you going to live on? |
61246 | What do you mean, by having no money? |
61246 | What else? |
61246 | What happened to it during the war? |
61246 | What is it, then? |
61246 | What is it, then? |
61246 | What is the point then? |
61246 | What is this business? |
61246 | What made you ask that? |
61246 | What sort of things? |
61246 | What time is Mr Kenyon going? |
61246 | What was? |
61246 | What you going to live on? |
61246 | What? |
61246 | When are you going to see him? |
61246 | Which of them shall I be like if I stay long enough, Uncle Joe, or Mr Turner, or Hubert...? |
61246 | Who is the girl he wants to marry? |
61246 | Who''s going to make him? 61246 Why a week?" |
61246 | Why are you going? 61246 Why are you so anxious that I should get myself into trouble by interfering-- unless it is that you want to be rid of me? |
61246 | Why are you so sure that your grandfather will refuse? |
61246 | Why do n''t you finish your breakfast? |
61246 | Why from the''outside''? 61246 Why have you changed your mind?" |
61246 | Why me? |
61246 | Why me? |
61246 | Why should he want to keep me as much as all that? |
61246 | Why should n''t you? |
61246 | Why''s that? |
61246 | Why? 61246 Why?" |
61246 | Why? |
61246 | Will my going have the least effect on your own plans? |
61246 | Will you give Hubert the message or shall I send some one? |
61246 | Will you let me explain my case to you in the first instance? |
61246 | Worried, Arthur? |
61246 | Worried? 61246 Would it be risking too much if I stayed on for just one more week?" |
61246 | Would you stay on if I went? |
61246 | Yes, I see,Arthur agreed sympathetically;"but what was it you were going to say about your having some agreement among yourselves, uncle? |
61246 | Yes, but why take it for granted that I should be wasting my life? |
61246 | Yes, it is pretty good, is n''t it? |
61246 | You believe he''d do that, then? |
61246 | You ca n''t mean that Mr Kenyon has deliberately tried to-- throw us together, in order to keep me in the house? |
61246 | You ca n''t seriously believe,she said,"that I should be so mean and small as to persuade you into this for any purely selfish purpose of my own? |
61246 | You could hardly be called a relation of Mr Kenyon''s, could you? |
61246 | You despised me for wanting to stay, did n''t you? |
61246 | You do n''t find anything wrong with him, do you? 61246 You do n''t know him, do you?" |
61246 | You had your little talk with my father this evening? |
61246 | You interested? |
61246 | You know that much, then? |
61246 | You know the whole amount''s under fifteen hundred, and what''s that to a man worth over half a million? 61246 You mean that you can still take a pleasure in reading about modern life, and hearing about it?" |
61246 | You mean that you''re afraid to face life with me on five hundred a year? |
61246 | You mean,he said,"that we might both go?" |
61246 | You might get a job somewhere else as an estate agent? |
61246 | You realise, of course,Mr Kenyon continued,"that this will put an end to your engagement? |
61246 | You surely do n''t mean that you would care to stay-- to_ live_ here? |
61246 | You were n''t in it yourself? |
61246 | You would n''t accept_ anything_, not even a thousand pounds, for instance? |
61246 | You''re not afraid of him, are you? |
61246 | You''re rather great on giving advice, are n''t you? |
61246 | You''re supposed to know something about psychology, are n''t you? |
61246 | You''ve been having a talk with Eleanor? |
61246 | You''ve definitely made up your mind to chuck this job, then? |
61246 | You''ve gone in for medicine, I hear,Turner began, and without waiting for a reply, continued:"Depressing kind of profession, is n''t it? |
61246 | Your job? |
61246 | ( He might possibly retain just enough to give him a small-- a very small independent income?) |
61246 | After Aunt Hannah had written and invited me to come down?" |
61246 | After all, why should n''t they? |
61246 | All that side of the affair was comprehensible enough, but what of that other point from which the narrative had so casually rambled away? |
61246 | Allow the old man to regard him as an ungrateful cad? |
61246 | Always listening to other people''s complaints?" |
61246 | And Mr Kenyon? |
61246 | And did he not keep his whole family in idleness from one year''s end to another? |
61246 | And how d''you think the old man''s looking? |
61246 | And if that release were denied, what could he do? |
61246 | And so long as a man has that, you know, and there''s nothing organically wrong....""Might easily live another ten years?" |
61246 | And so you like doctoring, do you? |
61246 | And then, what about the idea of marrying Elizabeth if she would have him? |
61246 | And yet, what else had life, any life, to offer him? |
61246 | And you know, do n''t you, that thirty years ago it began in just the same way with the others? |
61246 | And, possibly, Eleanor would be on his side? |
61246 | Are you absolutely determined to go?" |
61246 | Are you sure that at the end of the week you wo n''t want to put it off again?" |
61246 | Arthur did not know, but he nodded as he replied,"Are they staying here for the week- end?" |
61246 | At the same time I suppose you realise what it may mean for you?" |
61246 | Be pretty much like murder, would n''t it?" |
61246 | But I know a fellow, a Harley Street specialist, great authority on the heart....""Sir Stephen Hunt?" |
61246 | But are_ you_?" |
61246 | But as it is what difference will a year, two years at most, make to you at your time of life? |
61246 | But does n''t it strike you as probable that if the affair comes off you may change your mind about those possible expectations? |
61246 | But does n''t it strike you that this is a queer household? |
61246 | But it might be that she had not yet heard of the unsigned agreement that he had made in imitation of her own method? |
61246 | But suppose, just for the sake of argument, that the old man left him, Arthur, nothing after all? |
61246 | But surely, my dear boy, you can at least see that you''ve got it in your power to give any of us away to the old man?" |
61246 | But what was the matter with them all? |
61246 | But why should he, in either case, want him to come and live at Hartling? |
61246 | But you can tell me about that, ca n''t you?" |
61246 | But you said one or two things on that occasion, did n''t you, that made me feel you understand better than any of the others? |
61246 | But-- I do n''t know-- I wanted to tell you, and that affair of Ken''s makes you think a bit, does n''t it? |
61246 | But_ why_ does he? |
61246 | Ca n''t you put yourself in that position and see what a temptation it would be?" |
61246 | Can he?" |
61246 | Coming back into the other room?" |
61246 | Could Eleanor put it in his hands? |
61246 | Did he feel like that now because Elizabeth was in a different class of life, or because that kiss would be the seal of his engagement to her? |
61246 | Did n''t I tell you that I thought of going out to Canada for a year or two?" |
61246 | Did n''t he say anything to you about his will?" |
61246 | Did n''t you meet her up at the club- house? |
61246 | Did she know? |
61246 | Did you know they were n''t trances, by the way?" |
61246 | Do n''t you feel exalted by being in the presence of all this wealth?" |
61246 | Do n''t you find yourself getting in the way of looking at every one as a possible patient?" |
61246 | Do n''t you think I might say something to Mr Kenyon about it? |
61246 | Do n''t you think it looks very orderly and business- like?" |
61246 | Do you know that there are securities in this room worth well over half a million? |
61246 | Do you know? |
61246 | Do you mean that this is a new freedom for you?" |
61246 | Do you mean that you''re leaving here for good?" |
61246 | Do you mind if I go on? |
61246 | Does n''t he approve of Miss Martin for some reason?" |
61246 | Does n''t it seem to you as if he were their master rather than their father?" |
61246 | Eh, Joe?" |
61246 | Ever heard of_ him_?" |
61246 | Got a practice, or what?" |
61246 | Had Fergusson been promised a place in that untidy will as compensation? |
61246 | Had a letter this morning asking me to spend a week- end with a wealthy sort of connection of mine in Sussex-- or Surrey, is it? |
61246 | Had he and his sister been quarrelling? |
61246 | Had he, perhaps, had his sister''s hands also; those white, strong managing hands that were now so threateningly clenched? |
61246 | Had he, perhaps, heard or guessed at the quarrel between them in the next room? |
61246 | Had not Turner been right after all? |
61246 | Had she not impugned his? |
61246 | Had they waited in just the same way when James Kenyon had defied his father twenty- five years earlier? |
61246 | Had you ever seen him lose his temper?" |
61246 | Has anything happened?" |
61246 | Have n''t you heard?" |
61246 | Have n''t you realised that they never interfere with him? |
61246 | Have you finished your tea? |
61246 | Have you told him everything?" |
61246 | He believed that he had convinced her, until she said gently,--"And if my grandfather lives more than five years? |
61246 | He keeps himself so aloof-- if you know what I mean? |
61246 | He thought he detected the suggestion of some reservation in her answer, and said,"Only lately? |
61246 | He wondered if it might be a case of_ petit mal_, minor epilepsy? |
61246 | He wondered if she still remembered her early troubles, if she occasionally grieved for her father and mother? |
61246 | He would have liked to have beaten_ her_, but what possible chance had he of doing that? |
61246 | Honestly, Arthur, how long do you think it''s_ possible_ he might hang on?" |
61246 | How d''you mean?" |
61246 | How did it go? |
61246 | How long will he be away?" |
61246 | How on earth could one open the subject to him without impertinence? |
61246 | However, he told me to ask you if you could n''t stay on for a day or two; whether you need go back to town on Monday? |
61246 | I ca n''t boast that I''m any sort of example for you, eh, Catherine?" |
61246 | I can trust you, ca n''t I?" |
61246 | I dare say you ca n''t understand that?" |
61246 | I do n''t know if they have told you anything about him?" |
61246 | I should think we could get some sort of binding deed drawn up to that effect, could n''t we?" |
61246 | I suppose nothing particular has upset you lately, has it? |
61246 | I suppose you''ve asked her advice?" |
61246 | I told him about Jim, if that''s what you mean?" |
61246 | I wonder if Miss Martin will?" |
61246 | I''ve had my youth stolen from me and I want to get a little of it back-- six months or a year is n''t too much return to ask surely? |
61246 | I-- do you know I meant to tell him last night, that I-- that we were going? |
61246 | If Elizabeth was willing to marry him, would not her companionship alleviate the occasional tediousness and loneliness of life at Hartling? |
61246 | If Hubert''s own family would not put in a word for him, why should a comparative stranger interfere? |
61246 | If I broke my promise and went instead, would you stay?" |
61246 | If she goes to- morrow?" |
61246 | If she merely despised him, as she obviously did, what was the use of trying to win her confidence? |
61246 | If that warm generosity of hers did not betray her? |
61246 | If you_ are_ going? |
61246 | Indeed, was not that the explanation of the pretended secret of Hartling? |
61246 | Insist? |
61246 | Is he going to see Ken himself?" |
61246 | Is it about him-- Mr Kenyon?" |
61246 | Is n''t that how they all began?" |
61246 | Is n''t that visit of yours being amazingly protracted? |
61246 | Is n''t this rather a new departure for you?" |
61246 | Is that so?" |
61246 | Is there some secret about it?" |
61246 | Is this as much of the garden as you''ve seen?" |
61246 | Jolly? |
61246 | Make a clean breast of everything and say that one or the other of them had to go, and he preferred that it should be himself, for excellent reasons? |
61246 | May I come in?" |
61246 | Might it not be said that old Mr Kenyon had made a worthy use of his wealth in creating this garden? |
61246 | Not that that matters, does it? |
61246 | Now, d''you mean to tell me honestly that you can help looking out for symptoms like that, more or less? |
61246 | Or do n''t you think you''d ask to be let off?" |
61246 | Or do n''t you want to tell me that?" |
61246 | Or do you think it takes longer than that to get assimilated?" |
61246 | Or have you got a permanent job there as tame medico to the old man? |
61246 | Or is it a girl? |
61246 | Or is it just this beastly money of yours? |
61246 | Or is it that I have suffered for overstepping the reasonable limit of mortality?" |
61246 | Or make Eleanor bear witness? |
61246 | Or threatens them in any way?" |
61246 | Or with him? |
61246 | Putting that hypothetical legacy out of the question, would he not be doing this old man a real service by accepting his offer? |
61246 | Reason with him? |
61246 | Say calmly that he meant to go whether he were released or not? |
61246 | Seen my son anywhere?" |
61246 | Shall we go to that place where you found me with Hubert the day I came? |
61246 | She looked round at him as she added,"Are n''t you dazzled? |
61246 | She might not have heard of his verbal compact with the family made the previous day? |
61246 | She turned towards the staircase as they entered the hall, and afraid that she might run away, he began at once,"Could I speak to you for one minute? |
61246 | She waited while her uncle played his shot and then turning to Arthur said:--"Would you mind dressing early to- night, Mr Woodroffe? |
61246 | Should he go down now and try his luck? |
61246 | So Hubert wants to marry Miss Martin, does he?" |
61246 | So will you ask Mr Kenyon if he can see me to- morrow morning?" |
61246 | Something in the pose of those indifferently diligent women, perhaps? |
61246 | Supposing I''d got protuberant eyes, for instance?" |
61246 | Surely she liked him better since they had been alone together? |
61246 | These are the fancies of a very old man, no doubt, but after all why should I not indulge them if I can? |
61246 | They had sat there in absolute silence for more than ten minutes when Arthur at last said,--"Well, shall we talk now and-- and get it over?" |
61246 | Unless that alternative was being held over him as a kind of threat? |
61246 | Was he pledged in any way to plead Hubert''s cause with his grandfather? |
61246 | Was he, perhaps, extending the interval of waiting after he had recovered consciousness, exulting in the exercise of his power? |
61246 | Was it not possible that the head of the house was slightly insane? |
61246 | Was it possible that that quiet expression veiled a threat? |
61246 | Was it possible that the old man had temporarily escaped from his keeper? |
61246 | Was it possible that they wanted him to be a sort of intermediary between them and the old man? |
61246 | Was it worth while attempting his own defence? |
61246 | Was she afraid that he might be designing to cut out the rest of the family? |
61246 | Was she doing this, he wondered, in order that he might stay on? |
61246 | Was she inclined to be critical of her grandfather''s whims? |
61246 | Was she, perhaps, desperately ready to marry young Turner in order to escape from Hartling? |
61246 | Was that the reason for their tepidity? |
61246 | We''ve all passed through that stage, but you soon become reconciled; why should n''t you? |
61246 | Were the Kenyons to be pitied? |
61246 | Were you practising there?" |
61246 | What could he do?" |
61246 | What could you do?" |
61246 | What did Eleanor say?" |
61246 | What did it matter whether or not she despised him? |
61246 | What did she mean by saying,"He means to have you?" |
61246 | What did you do?" |
61246 | What difference would a few thousands out of the Kenyon fortune make to them? |
61246 | What the devil were they, then?" |
61246 | What then?" |
61246 | What was his objection?" |
61246 | What was it he had said? |
61246 | What was it his uncle had called her? |
61246 | What was it the place and the people reminded him of? |
61246 | What was the good of all this luxury if you were not the captain of your own soul? |
61246 | What was there to wait for in such a life as that-- except death? |
61246 | What''s that?" |
61246 | What''s the matter?" |
61246 | What? |
61246 | What?" |
61246 | What?" |
61246 | Whatever is the good of talking to_ me_ about it?" |
61246 | When are you going to Canada? |
61246 | Where does Eleanor come in?" |
61246 | Who knew what the old man might do in some fit of eccentricity? |
61246 | Who succeeds?" |
61246 | Why could not Eleanor have undertaken this mission herself? |
61246 | Why had she done that? |
61246 | Why not?" |
61246 | Why should n''t he enjoy life in his own way? |
61246 | Why should the old man trade on these rather equivocal promises of future reward? |
61246 | Why should there be?" |
61246 | Why the devil should n''t he? |
61246 | Why? |
61246 | Why? |
61246 | Why?" |
61246 | Will you give me at least one more chance to talk to you alone before I go?" |
61246 | Would he stay as long as he could? |
61246 | Would it be possible for me to see you ever, after you go to stay with those people?" |
61246 | Would it be very rotten to take on a job like that with the idea of having money left to you? |
61246 | Would it not be better from every point of view to leave it alone? |
61246 | Would you care to come out into the garden?" |
61246 | Would you, honestly? |
61246 | You know Miss Martin, do n''t you? |
61246 | You know enough for that?" |
61246 | You would n''t like, would you, to stay here indefinitely, even if you could?" |
61246 | You''re a full- fledged doctor, are n''t you? |
61246 | You''re practically one of us now, are n''t you?" |
61246 | You''ve got to admit now, have n''t you, that ours is a dirty job, take it all round?" |
61246 | did you? |
61246 | do you play for medical reasons?" |
61246 | he asked eagerly, and then as an afterthought,"But in that case why were you so fearfully down on me?" |
61246 | he repeated, and then,"I suppose you have n''t got a cigar on you? |
61246 | is it all right, do you think?" |
61246 | that was the way he took you, was it?" |
61246 | to trust his word without any damned deeds and so on?" |
61246 | what can he_ do_, when it comes to the point? |
61246 | what could_ he_ do?" |
61246 | what do you think we ought to do? |
61246 | you''ve met her too, have you?" |
41228 | A good ruin-- isn''t it? |
41228 | A good- looking young gentleman, tall and slight, eh? |
41228 | A little chilly to- night, is not it? |
41228 | A tremendous agreeable man, Sir Jekyl-- don''t you think so, Jennie? |
41228 | About what, papa? |
41228 | An age since we met, hey? 41228 And I wish to know_ why_?" |
41228 | And both the same name? |
41228 | And did not you see what occurred? 41228 And do n''t you really know who he is?" |
41228 | And do you really think, sir, that my grandfather lost those deeds_ here_? |
41228 | And does the ballad end tragically? |
41228 | And his mother, is_ she_ living? |
41228 | And how dare you talk to me in that way, young lady; how dare you attempt to hector me like your maid there? |
41228 | And how do you feel now, you dear old soul? |
41228 | And how do you know you have any interest in the old fellow''s demise? |
41228 | And how is old Parson Moulders? |
41228 | And how soon do you say the Bishop is to be here? |
41228 | And how, sir, do you suppose this occurred-- by what agency? |
41228 | And is now in your employment, madam? |
41228 | And now about the other room,said Monsieur Varbarriere;"have you had an opportunity?" |
41228 | And now you have won, have not you? |
41228 | And pray what_ do_ you mean exactly? |
41228 | And pray, Mademoiselle Marlowe, in what part of the house is this so wonderful room situated? |
41228 | And so you are going to keep house at Marlowe? |
41228 | And the servants called the men Strangways, I suppose, eh? |
41228 | And this, you say, is his nephew? |
41228 | And was it from these cousins you apprehended lawsuits? |
41228 | And what Deverells are now living? |
41228 | And what did you see there? |
41228 | And what do you want of him, Dives? |
41228 | And what has she to say for herself; what about things in general? |
41228 | And what is he like? |
41228 | And what o''clock is it? |
41228 | And what''s his business? |
41228 | And what_ do_ you want of that key? 41228 And where is the young gentleman?" |
41228 | And who occupies the room at present, Monsieur? |
41228 | And why is it not done? |
41228 | And you acted, beside, as his confessor, did not you, and heard some revelation he had to make? |
41228 | And you prayed with him? |
41228 | And you slept in it, did not you, and saw something? 41228 And you''re glad to see us, I know?" |
41228 | And you? |
41228 | And your grandmamma told you nothing of her adventure in church? |
41228 | And, pray, does he perceive-- did he ever mention a most astonishing likeness in that young person to my poor son? |
41228 | Any commands in particular, please, my lady, before you leave? |
41228 | Any sign of a door? |
41228 | Are there here the ground plans? |
41228 | Are you serious? 41228 Are you sick?" |
41228 | Aukworth? 41228 Beatrix, why do n''t you sing us a song, by- the- bye?" |
41228 | But Deverell, poor fellow, was a bit of a dandy-- wasn''t he? 41228 But this room, you know; it''s anything but a comfortable one-- don''t you think?" |
41228 | But those sprites always come with a particular message; do n''t they? |
41228 | But why do n''t you see to it? |
41228 | But you understand what he means? |
41228 | By- the- bye,he said, suddenly recollecting a topic,"what a sweet scene that is of Gryston Bridge? |
41228 | Can the old woman have anything to do with it? 41228 Champagne, my lady?" |
41228 | Charming weather, is n''t it? 41228 Come in, will you?" |
41228 | Did I? 41228 Did he know from the first he was dying?" |
41228 | Did he seem pretty well? |
41228 | Did n''t I? 41228 Did not grandmamma tell you about it?" |
41228 | Did she happen to mention a person named Gwynn, a housekeeper in her service? |
41228 | Did she make an alarm or call her husband? |
41228 | Did she? 41228 Did you remark that fat, mountainous French fellow, in that cursed suit of black, was very inquisitive about the green chamber?" |
41228 | Do n''t be a little hypocrite, Beatrix; why should I more than another? 41228 Do n''t you think so? |
41228 | Do they return here? |
41228 | Do you know who that fat old personage is who dresses like an undertaker and looks like a Jew? |
41228 | Do you like people in spite of great faults ever, Beatrix? |
41228 | Do you mean to say you have no friends? |
41228 | Do you remember him now? |
41228 | Do you remember, Sir Harry, your father? |
41228 | Do you think it an advantage to know that any particular person_ is_ your neighbour? |
41228 | Do you_ really_, my dear Jane, expect him here the day after to- morrow? |
41228 | Does he sleep here to- night? |
41228 | Does it strike you that he is_ anxious_ about anything? |
41228 | Does your father preserve that river? |
41228 | Early bird, Dives, pick the worm-- eh? 41228 England is, I dare say, quite new to you, Monsieur Varbarriere?" |
41228 | Frequently? |
41228 | Had not you better restore my key before you die, old lady? |
41228 | Has he a friend with him? |
41228 | Has he_ promised_ you anything? |
41228 | Have I? 41228 Have we anything to note to- day about that apartment verd? |
41228 | Have we quite light enough, do you think? |
41228 | Have you heard-- I hope you have not-- any ill news? |
41228 | He did not speak, I think, of restoring life-- did you, Guy? |
41228 | He does not question you? |
41228 | He does not suppose any object? |
41228 | He gave you nothing then or since? |
41228 | He has written a great deal, has not he? |
41228 | He said something about that green chamber, as you call it, I always understood? |
41228 | How can it be? 41228 How d''y''do, Jenny, my dear?" |
41228 | How d''ye do, Mr. Strangways? 41228 How do you do?" |
41228 | How far will it be, Bill? |
41228 | How is grandmamma this morning? |
41228 | How is little mamma? |
41228 | How long does he stay? |
41228 | How many rooms have we here in a row? |
41228 | How old are you, Beatrix? |
41228 | How soon, dear? |
41228 | How, sir? |
41228 | I do n''t care; why should I? |
41228 | I do n''t remember,said Lady Jane, hardly turning toward him;"ten or twelve miles-- is not it? |
41228 | I do n''t see, for the life of me, why I should not-- eh? 41228 I do n''t think I conversed with him-- did I? |
41228 | I had no idea the Bishop was so young; he''s by_ no means_ an old- looking man; and so very admirable a prelate-- is not he? |
41228 | I hope General Lennox is not ill? |
41228 | I hope you gave him a smelling- bottle? |
41228 | I know,_ Smithers_? |
41228 | I mean, how does he amuse himself? |
41228 | I say, Mrs. Jones, who''s that good- looking young fellow that went out just now? |
41228 | I say, my good fellow, you can point it out, I dare say, from the steps here? |
41228 | I suppose Beatrix is ready; may I ring the bell? |
41228 | I suppose she told you all about it? |
41228 | I''m afraid it''s a true bill,admitted Sir Jekyl, with a chuckle,"So you''ll come to Marlowe and see us there-- won''t you?" |
41228 | If flattery be to speak more highly than one thinks, who can flatter Miss Marlowe? |
41228 | Ill? 41228 In Heaven''s name, sir, what do you mean?" |
41228 | Is he? 41228 Is it possible, Miss Marlowe, that_ you_ were there this evening? |
41228 | Is it worth all this? |
41228 | Is not that very true, papa-- hospitality, enjoyment, mystery? |
41228 | Is there not among these drawings a view of the side of the house where this room lies? |
41228 | Jacques, you must tell me the whole truth-- did he make you a present? |
41228 | Jealous? 41228 Jekyl''s his own master; what can I do?" |
41228 | Lady Jane does not use it, though? |
41228 | Let me see her note? |
41228 | Let me see-- what day''s this-- why, that will be--he was counting with the tips of his fingers, pianowise, on the table--"Wednesday week, eh?" |
41228 | Madame Maberly? 41228 Made of wood?" |
41228 | May I beg one other favour first, before the crowning one of the song? |
41228 | Mean-- mean-- why, what have I said? |
41228 | More than two dozen left, Sir Jekyl; would you please some? |
41228 | Mr. Marlowe is fascinated, do n''t you think? |
41228 | My father''s wish-- egad, he did not leave many of his wishes unsatisfied-- eh? |
41228 | Near the front-- eh? |
41228 | No name beginning with D-- eh? |
41228 | No, I did not hear him mention it; what was it? |
41228 | No,she repeated;"but_ why_ do you ask? |
41228 | Not a friend of yours, is he? |
41228 | Nothing with a D? |
41228 | Nothing-- what could they have done, or why should they have sought to make any such impression? 41228 Now, Janet,_ is_ this reasonable-- you know you never thought of it-- you know it would not have done-- would you have liked Beatrix? |
41228 | Now, what d-- d fool, I beg pardon-- but who the plague has been filling your mind with those ridiculous stories-- my dear little mamma? 41228 Of the door of communication between the two rooms?" |
41228 | Oh, did he? |
41228 | Old Granny''s a fool-- isn''t she, Trixie, and a little bit vicious-- eh? |
41228 | Ought not Lady Jane Lennox to be warned if you really think there is any-- any_ danger_? |
41228 | Over there, then? |
41228 | Residing there now? |
41228 | Shall we play any more? |
41228 | She''s not there? |
41228 | Should you like another game? |
41228 | So you ca n''t go with your ladies to Lonsted to- day? |
41228 | So you wo n''t advise? |
41228 | So you''ve no more to tell me? |
41228 | So_ there_ was your ghost? |
41228 | Stand what? 41228 Stern-- do I?" |
41228 | Stop an odious old woman!--why, who ever did? 41228 Supernaturally; of course it was-- how else could it be?" |
41228 | Suppose we go to our beds? |
41228 | Suppose we make a little party, will you venture? |
41228 | Surely-- you mean, of course to the parlour? 41228 That''s ten years ago?" |
41228 | The Abbey-- that''s Wail Abbey-- eh? 41228 The gentleman in the low- crowned hat, sir, with the gold- headed cane, please?" |
41228 | The room we call Sir Harry''s room, I know-- capital room-- eh? |
41228 | The servants not all come? 41228 Then it''s true, the General and his wife are going on a visit to Marlowe?" |
41228 | Then she''s a friendly sort of old woman, at least on certain topics, and garrulous? 41228 Then_ why_?" |
41228 | There''s nothing I should so like as a haunted room; it''s a charming idea-- isn''t it, Arthur? |
41228 | These are the rooms your letter says are not furnished-- eh? 41228 They did not proceed at all-- how could I? |
41228 | Three years, by Jove, I think-- eh? |
41228 | To be sure it is, damme!--why not? |
41228 | To- morrow? |
41228 | Very good, dear-- then I suppose you are quite satisfied with your former conduct? |
41228 | Was not he very much frightened? |
41228 | Well, Dives, there is a case of''sick and weak''for you; you''ll have prayers for him at Queen''s Chorleigh, eh? |
41228 | Well, Dives,cried Sir Jekyl,"how do the bells ring? |
41228 | Well, I shall venture-- may I? 41228 Well, I think it might do you good-- hey? |
41228 | Well, Jacques, any more offers? 41228 Well, and what is he about; where is he gone; where is he now?" |
41228 | Well, may be; but what_ is_ it? |
41228 | Well, old Donica, and how do ye do? |
41228 | Well, there is a room opening at the back of Sir Jekyl''s room-- what is it? |
41228 | Well, what about it-- come, woman, did not you sleep for years in that room? |
41228 | Well, what of Strangways? 41228 Well, you pretty little devil, what can you do for me-- hey? |
41228 | Well, you''ll give me a little time, wo n''t you, to look about me? |
41228 | Well,_ of_ them? |
41228 | Well-- well, of course; but what next? |
41228 | Well? |
41228 | Were you in the room yourself since? |
41228 | What did poor Lady Marlowe see there? |
41228 | What did they proceed for? |
41228 | What do you mean? |
41228 | What do you think of Lady Jane Lennox? |
41228 | What do you think of our fellow Jacque-- is he trustworthy? |
41228 | What do you think of these foreign personages? |
41228 | What does he think about it all? |
41228 | What else can it be? |
41228 | What more did you see, Jacques? |
41228 | What nonsense was that going on at the piano to- night? 41228 What room is it you speak of-- the green chamber, is not it?" |
41228 | What room? |
41228 | What stay does he make with you? |
41228 | What the devil can the fellow mean? 41228 What the devil puts that in your head? |
41228 | What was I going to say? |
41228 | What was his reason, have you any notion? |
41228 | What was that fellow laughing at-- Varbarriere? 41228 What''s all this about? |
41228 | What''s that? |
41228 | What? |
41228 | When did you last see the elder Mr. Strangways, whom you mentioned at dinner? |
41228 | When do they leave you? |
41228 | When he was dying? |
41228 | Where are they? 41228 Where are you, Guy?" |
41228 | Where has he got, I wonder, by this time? |
41228 | Where have you put Beatrix? |
41228 | Where is Miss Beatrix? |
41228 | Where is he? |
41228 | Where is the door? |
41228 | Where''s that? |
41228 | Whereabout is that in the wall? |
41228 | Which is the best? |
41228 | Which of them? 41228 Who''s lost his sheep, my lord?" |
41228 | Who''s there? |
41228 | Who? |
41228 | Who_ is_ that Monsieur Varbarriere? |
41228 | Why do you laugh, Jekyl? |
41228 | Why, what could it be? 41228 Will ye please to come in, sir?" |
41228 | Will you place your ear to that door,_ s''il vous plait_--your eye to that keyhole? 41228 With Guy Deverell, you mean?" |
41228 | With an object? |
41228 | Would you like to come to my room and have a cigar, Monsieur Varbarriere? |
41228 | Yes, about that-- about three- and- thirty years; and what did you think of him? 41228 Yes, and you were here-- let me see-- just thirty years since, when Sir Harry died-- weren''t you?" |
41228 | Yes, perfectly, a very nice- looking quiet young woman-- how is she? |
41228 | Yes, what does Mrs. Maberly say? |
41228 | You are best acquainted with the south of France? |
41228 | You can manage it all in a day or two, ca n''t you? |
41228 | You did not give him a hint of your discovery? |
41228 | You do n''t mean that you assert your liberty at capricious hours, and affright your guests in the character of a ghost? |
41228 | You do n''t object to my smoking a cigar, Beatrix? 41228 You do n''t, I know, think it occurred supernaturally?" |
41228 | You have not heard? |
41228 | You hear from him constantly? |
41228 | You knew by the sound? |
41228 | You know what was your father''s wish about it, sir? |
41228 | You know, Jekyl, about that room? 41228 You mean the tall, slight young man at Lady Jane''s right?" |
41228 | You mean-- what the devil do you mean? |
41228 | You never happened to hear any other name? |
41228 | You never saw him peep into letters, or that kind of thing? |
41228 | You prayed for him, and read with him? |
41228 | You really mean it? |
41228 | You remember when he died, poor man? |
41228 | You said so before, eh? |
41228 | You think me faultless, do you? |
41228 | You''d better get up your parochial experiences a little, and your theology, eh? 41228 You''ll have dinner put back, Sir-- please, Sir Jekyl?" |
41228 | You''re not a going, I suppose, Sir Jekyl, to put anyone into it? |
41228 | You''re not thinking of any folly, surely? 41228 You''re very much annoyed with vermin out there in India?" |
41228 | You''ve heard from them? |
41228 | Your mistress quite well, hey? 41228 _ From_ the front?" |
41228 | _ I?_said Sir Jekyl. |
41228 | _ Is_ not it? |
41228 | _ Very_ well-- and you? |
41228 | _ What''s_ strange? 41228 _ What_ key?" |
41228 | _ What_ two gentlemen? |
41228 | _ What_, I say? |
41228 | _ Why_ should I take it; you would not have me lock her up? |
41228 | _ You_ are quite well, Jones? |
41228 | _ You_ were n''t frightened, General? |
41228 | ''You are at my feet, sir,''she will think,''but is your worship inspired by love or by avarice?'' |
41228 | A lurid flush appeared on the old man''s forehead for a moment, and he rang out fiercely--"And why the devil, sir, did you not mention that before?" |
41228 | Again he thought,"Who could he be?" |
41228 | And Sir Jekyl-- what do you think of_ him_; is he going to marry?" |
41228 | And at this point Boots emerged, and Sir Jekyl continued, addressing him--"Well, where are the gentlemen who left this morning?" |
41228 | And how is Beatrix? |
41228 | And this is the work of the Italian artist? |
41228 | And was it not on reflection manifestly, even to him, the sound view? |
41228 | And what does he say of the paper that disappeared?" |
41228 | Are you talking like a sane person, Jane? |
41228 | But I think he is making eyes at the_ married_ ladies-- eh?" |
41228 | But a young man, though never so ugly, is rather a bold comparison-- eh? |
41228 | But have not the charities of society their claims? |
41228 | But the likeness in church amazed and shocked me, and made me ill.""In church, you say?" |
41228 | But was there anything in the triumph? |
41228 | But what could it be? |
41228 | But what the deuce can you want of me at this hour of night? |
41228 | But who knows what sort of a temper she''s in?" |
41228 | By- the- bye, is your master at home?" |
41228 | Can I do anything?" |
41228 | Can you imagine why General Lennox was put to sleep there?" |
41228 | Come, it''s your turn, is not it, to play?" |
41228 | Come, now, young lady, what is it?" |
41228 | Confound the fellows, if they did not appreciate his hospitality, should he run after them; or who were they that he should care a pin about them? |
41228 | D''ye mind?" |
41228 | Did he build anything more here?" |
41228 | Did he succeed? |
41228 | Did not you hear that about the duel?" |
41228 | Did not you see him staring?" |
41228 | Did you manage the measurement of the two recesses?" |
41228 | Dives Marlowe that night knocked at the door, crying,"May I come in, Jekyl?" |
41228 | Do I?" |
41228 | Do n''t you love it? |
41228 | Do n''t you think it might be awkward?" |
41228 | Do n''t you think my granddaughter very lovely?" |
41228 | Do they want me to blow up the room with old Lennox and his wife in it? |
41228 | Do you hear him, mamma?" |
41228 | Do you intend extending your tour to Wales and Scotland?" |
41228 | Do you like her, Beatrix?" |
41228 | Do you read German?" |
41228 | Do you remember Peery still? |
41228 | Do you think I imagine he cares twopence about your stupid old husband, and that I do n''t know he was once making love to you? |
41228 | Do_ you_? |
41228 | Does Sir Jekyl still wish to engage you?" |
41228 | Does he know the Abbey here is mine?" |
41228 | Does n''t it look odd?" |
41228 | Eh?" |
41228 | Eh?" |
41228 | Eh?" |
41228 | Glass of sherry? |
41228 | Guy Strangways, with his foreign accent and manner-- did anything strike you about him?" |
41228 | Had he not Pelter and Crowe''s letter? |
41228 | Had he offended him-- had anything occurred during the sitting after dinner last night? |
41228 | Had she missed him? |
41228 | Had they come as a bequest? |
41228 | Hang it, I wish you could tell it right; and what the d-- l do you mean by Strangers? |
41228 | Have a weed, old boy?" |
41228 | Have you a notion?" |
41228 | Have you bottled the pipe of port yet, and how is old Moulders, as I asked you at dinner? |
41228 | Have you ever been in this part of the world before, Lady Jane?" |
41228 | Have you ever been to see it before?" |
41228 | Have you seen the lake? |
41228 | Here followed some more smoke, and after it the question--"What do you think of the young lady, Mademoiselle Marlowe?" |
41228 | His family? |
41228 | How can I stop you? |
41228 | How could I be such an ass?" |
41228 | How did he come to choose such a companion?" |
41228 | How did she interest you all that time?" |
41228 | How do, Beatrix? |
41228 | How does the dog I sent you get on? |
41228 | How far is it?" |
41228 | How have I showed, I entreat, any evidences of a disposition so contrary to my feelings?" |
41228 | How is he dreadful?" |
41228 | How is it that people in love see so well without eyes? |
41228 | How is old Gwynn?" |
41228 | How many scruples of fine gold were floating in that cloud? |
41228 | How much did that aromatic blue canopy that rolled dimly over this Turkish divan cost that off- handed Sybarite? |
41228 | How the devil could such a fellow have any harm in him?" |
41228 | How was it, and whose were they? |
41228 | I am Sir Jekyl Marlowe, and own two or three places in this county, which are thought pretty-- and, may I give you my card?" |
41228 | I do n''t think it unbecoming; your_ embonpoint_ does very well; and you''re quite well?" |
41228 | I forgot,"said Sir Jekyl;"you know Wardlock and all our distances, do n''t you, Lady Jane-- can you tell me?" |
41228 | I remember hearing there_ was_ a person in your company that unlucky night; but you never heard more of him?" |
41228 | I remember you, here, Donica, and I do n''t think I ever heard that you saw a ghost-- did I?" |
41228 | I want the room for old General Lennox, that''s all-- though I''m not bound to tell you for whom I want it-- am I?" |
41228 | I wonder I was such a fool-- hey? |
41228 | I''ll write to town for Sinnott, as you insist on it, but you wo n''t leave us in confusion, and you''ll make her_ au fait_--won''t you? |
41228 | I''m to pull down my house, I suppose, for a sentiment? |
41228 | I''ve been doing you a mischief, hey? |
41228 | If the speaker succeed with his audience, what more can oratory do for him? |
41228 | In fact, there_ ca n''t_ be_ any_--eh? |
41228 | Is it not so?--wide room?--how long? |
41228 | Is it possible to hold by our conclusions, or even to remember them long? |
41228 | Is it possible? |
41228 | Is n''t his French very bad-- did it strike you? |
41228 | Is n''t it?" |
41228 | Is she a widow?" |
41228 | Is there time here to think out anything completely? |
41228 | It ca n''t be a_ ruse_ to get quietly off the ground? |
41228 | It does n''t pay, and I''m growing old-- you''ll not mind if I smoke it?" |
41228 | It just crossed his sunshine like the shadow of a flying vapour--"that cross- grained old Gwynn would not venture to meddle?" |
41228 | It looks good- humoured, do n''t you think?" |
41228 | It''s well I can do it for myself-- who knows where we''re driving to, or what''s coming? |
41228 | It''s_ their_ fault; and where are they gone to? |
41228 | Just hand this pillow and bag to the man; and I suppose you wish your respects to Miss Beatrix?" |
41228 | Lady Alice nodded, and raised her voice--"Lady Jane Lennox, you''ve heard, no doubt-- pray, when does the General return?" |
41228 | Lady Blunket rather testily-- for she neither heard nor understood very well, and her daughter''s voice was shrill-- asked--"_ What_ is it? |
41228 | Linnett?" |
41228 | Mason?" |
41228 | May I be permitted to inquire whether you think there exists proof of the fact?" |
41228 | Mischief--_what_? |
41228 | Monsieur Redcliffe-- your son-- is it possible he should have been so much older?" |
41228 | Mr. Strangways-- I did not see-- do_ you_ play?" |
41228 | My daughter ready?" |
41228 | No-- well, sit down-- won''t take a chair!--why''s that? |
41228 | Once more, will you give me my key or not?" |
41228 | Or, was he that heir- at- law, or embodied Nemesis, that the yawning sea or grave will sometimes yield up to plague the guilty or the usurper? |
41228 | Ought not all this to have satisfied Guy? |
41228 | Perhaps they are very new friends?" |
41228 | Perhaps, sir, I do not quite apprehend you?" |
41228 | Racket-- something, is n''t it, Beet?" |
41228 | Servants, had they?" |
41228 | She is some kind of cousin, I think-- is not she? |
41228 | She looked eager, even imploring, so that Lady Alice challenged her with--"What on earth, Jane, brings you to my bedside at this hour of the night?" |
41228 | She was not more secret than young ladies generally are; but whom could she have told at Wardlock? |
41228 | She would have liked to shake him by the arm, and cry,"In God''s name, do you mean us any harm?" |
41228 | She''s your new housekeeper, is not she?" |
41228 | Sinnott?" |
41228 | Sir Jekyl his host, too, frank and hospitable-- how could he have earned the misfortune, be it great or small, that threatened? |
41228 | Sir Paul Blunket, having a bit in his mouth, grunted politely--"Only for your own table, though?" |
41228 | Sir Paul Blunket, having delivered it, merely added, after a decent pause, as he ate his dinner--"Dartbroke mutton this-- five years old-- eh?" |
41228 | Slept well, eh?" |
41228 | So you saw nothing, and have nothing to tell? |
41228 | Stay; have you had any talk with Sir Jekyl Marlowe-- you must be quite frank with me-- has he noticed you?" |
41228 | Strangers go, Bill, just now?" |
41228 | Strangways?" |
41228 | Strangways?" |
41228 | Strangways?" |
41228 | Strangways?" |
41228 | Such a pack of lies did any human being ever hear fired off in a sentence before? |
41228 | Suppose we come by- and- by?" |
41228 | Surely you''re not going to vex yourself about that?" |
41228 | The Sterndale Road, is n''t it?" |
41228 | The conversation was here arrested by a voice which inquired--"Pray, can you tell me what day General Lennox returns?" |
41228 | The old gentleman-- what''s his name?" |
41228 | These proud English people-- and those dark designs, what are they? |
41228 | Trixie, dear, would not grandmamma like to see her room? |
41228 | Turn it over in your mind-- do you see? |
41228 | Varbarriere?" |
41228 | Was he a relation? |
41228 | Was he an outcast member of that proud family? |
41228 | Was it by chance or design? |
41228 | Was there any lady who might conceive herself jilted? |
41228 | Was there not something insidious in this? |
41228 | We must not let him marry, you know; it would be so cruel to poor little Mademoiselle Beatrix-- eh?" |
41228 | We''ll take our luncheon there, it''s such a warm, bright day-- that is, if you like the plan-- and, which do you say?" |
41228 | We''re pretty well on though, Donnie-- eh? |
41228 | We_ both_ know it-- you a young bride-- what does Jekyl Marlowe invite you down here for? |
41228 | Well, I suppose you''ll be ready in half- an- hour-- eh, my dear?" |
41228 | Were those jewels a gift from the General''s rich old sister, who had a splendid suit, she had heard, which she would never put on again? |
41228 | What business was it of hers, and how could she divine his motives? |
41228 | What change was this? |
41228 | What could he do but hear and smile, and declare how happy it would make him? |
41228 | What could the associations have been that were painful enough so to overcome that grim, white woman? |
41228 | What do you advise to- day?" |
41228 | What do you mean, madam?" |
41228 | What do you say to a walk here after breakfast? |
41228 | What do you say, Lady Jane?" |
41228 | What do you say?" |
41228 | What do you think of him?" |
41228 | What do you think of it?" |
41228 | What do_ you_ say, Sir Jekyl?" |
41228 | What does Mrs. Maberly say?" |
41228 | What have you got for a hungry fellow? |
41228 | What hour did they go?" |
41228 | What hurry need there be? |
41228 | What is it to me? |
41228 | What the devil can have come over you about these trumpery diamonds?" |
41228 | What the devil can it mean?" |
41228 | What the plague harm does the room to anybody? |
41228 | What was he like?" |
41228 | What were the evidences? |
41228 | What were_ they_ there for? |
41228 | What will you say to her?" |
41228 | What young lady, so appealed to by a parent, ever did object? |
41228 | What''s the meaning of this lecture? |
41228 | What, sir?" |
41228 | What, then, were the proofs which had long quite settled the question in Guy''s mind? |
41228 | What?_"said the Rev. |
41228 | What_ can_ be the matter with you?" |
41228 | What_ is_ my fault?" |
41228 | When M. Varbarriere and his nephew this night sat down in their dressing- room, the elder man said--"How do you like Sir Jekyl Marlowe?" |
41228 | Where is that Strangways-- is he living?" |
41228 | Which is my ball?" |
41228 | Which, I entreat, is the particular room you speak of?" |
41228 | Who could guess what it might be? |
41228 | Who the plague says that? |
41228 | Who was he? |
41228 | Who will sum up the mischief one of those prating fellows does in a lifetime?" |
41228 | Who''s there? |
41228 | Why do you go there now?" |
41228 | Why should he take guilt, if such it were, on his soul for vanity and vexation of spirit? |
41228 | Why should old General Lennox be placed within the unhallowed precincts of that chamber? |
41228 | Why this more than another? |
41228 | Why?" |
41228 | Will you oblige me by bribing that domestic with five pounds sterling? |
41228 | Will you peep into that letter, Monsieur?" |
41228 | Will you permit me to present him? |
41228 | Would you please to wish dinner?" |
41228 | You ca n''t remember your poor mamma? |
41228 | You do n''t hunt now?" |
41228 | You do n''t mean to have your bed into this room, do you?" |
41228 | You do n''t think they''re going by a false name?" |
41228 | You had better tell her to withdraw, had n''t you?" |
41228 | You have not been plagued with apparitions, General? |
41228 | You know we''re old friends-- hey? |
41228 | You understand?" |
41228 | You understand?" |
41228 | You understand?" |
41228 | You used to be rather good at theology-- usen''t you?" |
41228 | You were with him to the moment of his death-- nearly a week, was it not?" |
41228 | You wo n''t forget?" |
41228 | You''ll have some tea, Jekyl?" |
41228 | You''ll not forget to write-- you''ll not fail? |
41228 | You''re_ quite_ certain?" |
41228 | You''ve the advantage of me there-- eh, Don?" |
41228 | _ Can_ you see anything threatening in it?" |
41228 | _ Smith?_"whispered Linnett in his neighbour''s ear. |
41228 | _ dear_ Lady Jane, how_ can_ you be so_ horribly_ brave?" |
41228 | and do n''t stand at the door there, hang it-- come in, ca n''t you? |
41228 | could he have meant living? |
41228 | did I?" |
41228 | did he?" |
41228 | do you think so? |
41228 | exclaimed Beatrix;"then how do you feel towards the bad?" |
41228 | exclaimed the large gentleman in black, graciously;"and where is it situated?" |
41228 | he ejaculated, in high glee;"little fool, what''s put that in your head?" |
41228 | is it all a dream?" |
41228 | murmured the Baronet, eagerly:"why is it so strange?" |
41228 | pencils and paint- boxes-- eh?" |
41228 | then she mentioned it? |
41228 | what parcel?" |
41228 | which of the old women of that time- honoured sisterhood was she to have invited to talk romance with her? |
41228 | why did not you marry me when you might, and save me from all this?" |
41228 | why should we? |
41228 | you do n''t believe in apparitions?" |
41228 | young gentleman, why do n''t you read your prayer- book?" |
12164 | A successful one too, do n''t you think, for the boys? 12164 A-- what?" |
12164 | Afternoon tea on the lawn? 12164 Al, why do n''t you get her some ice- water? |
12164 | Alec? |
12164 | All about it? |
12164 | All hands on deck? 12164 Am I? |
12164 | Am I? 12164 And Jarvis-- how is he? |
12164 | And is n''t Sally perfectly dear? 12164 And still you wo n''t come to us and let us make you comfortable?" |
12164 | And you do n''t sit down in your shirt- sleeves? |
12164 | And you do n''t want me to? |
12164 | Any idea what you''ll make the chief crop? |
12164 | Anybody been by the place lately? |
12164 | Anybody get wet? |
12164 | Are n''t sick, are you? |
12164 | Are they coming over before we call on them? |
12164 | Are they quite as bad again? |
12164 | Are we to stay here to- night? 12164 Are you dressed? |
12164 | Are you going to do anything in particular the rest of the afternoon? |
12164 | Are you happy, little girl? |
12164 | Are you in such a hurry to be rid of me? |
12164 | Are you people sewing for an orphan asylum? |
12164 | Are you prepared to do your duty by those prettiest and jolliest girls? |
12164 | Are you really glad? |
12164 | Are you really going to do it, Jarve? |
12164 | As for me-- do you care to know how I feel about your coming home? 12164 Awful situation, is n''t it? |
12164 | Bachelors''hall? 12164 Beautiful, is it?" |
12164 | Better than the limb of an oak tree? 12164 Boys, what are you doing?" |
12164 | But had n''t you better let the boys know, before you go at your preparations? 12164 But have n''t you made things worse by using your eyes every now and then against orders?" |
12164 | But how can they come? 12164 But the drop in the fever and the quiet sleep surely mean a promising change?" |
12164 | But they''ll be back to- night? |
12164 | But who ever thought Uncle Maxwell Lane would ever leave his poor relations anything? |
12164 | But you still do n''t want the welcoming done--''_two and two_''? 12164 But, Sally, will it never end? |
12164 | But, Sally-- really-- shouldn''t you ask old Maxy''s consent? |
12164 | Ca n''t you get plants somewhere? |
12164 | Can I believe my eyes-- or am I dreaming that I see you, Sally Lane? |
12164 | Can you brace up to get through breakfast? |
12164 | Coming to- day? 12164 Company due pretty soon?" |
12164 | Daylight? |
12164 | Did it ever strike you,said Jarvis, quickly, in Max''s ear,"that this_ is_ Sally''s land, and Alec''s, and Bob''s, quite as much as yours?" |
12164 | Did n''t you hear the breakfast- bell? |
12164 | Did you ever see finer corn than this? |
12164 | Did you get him up one? |
12164 | Do I try to make it''two and two''? |
12164 | Do I? 12164 Do n''t you know Sally well enough to know she''s not afraid of her shadow? |
12164 | Do n''t you know that fried salt- pork and potatoes, in the kitchen, in your shirt- sleeves, is your only consistent meal, in the work season? |
12164 | Do n''t you suppose the upstairs rooms are just the shape of the lower ones? |
12164 | Do n''t you think he must see the beauty of it when he looks at Sally? |
12164 | Do n''t you think we may as well own up? |
12164 | Do n''t you want to invite me to drive out into the country in your trap? 12164 Do n''t you?" |
12164 | Do they look as if they needed cheering? |
12164 | Do they? 12164 Do you dare?" |
12164 | Do you know another girl in the world who would have thought of doing that? |
12164 | Do you know any gentlemen in frock coats who wish to be asked? |
12164 | Do you know that you have n''t answered my last letter? 12164 Do you know what you are?" |
12164 | Do you mind? |
12164 | Do you people flatter yourselves there''s anything for you to own up to, that we do n''t already know? |
12164 | Do you realize you''re treating me like a small boy? |
12164 | Do you suppose if I were seriously to talk of buying the place it might make Max want to keep it? 12164 Do you think I''m proposing for Sally to camp by herself out here, while Mary Ann Flinders keeps house for you in town? |
12164 | Do you think Max will be willing for us to come? |
12164 | Do you think mother really dislikes the idea? 12164 Do you wonder I want to live here?" |
12164 | Expect to see horse- hoes and threshing machines sticking out from under his furs? 12164 Going to consider it?" |
12164 | Going to get him out by wireless? |
12164 | Had the house painted and moved in? |
12164 | Has Jarvis gone? 12164 Has she told you so?" |
12164 | Have I ever laid hands on anybody to keep him, for you to talk of''slipping away''? |
12164 | Have n''t we all been working our heads off to pay expenses, and giving her every cent we could get to run things with? |
12164 | Have n''t we been taking care of her all that time? |
12164 | Have n''t we though? |
12164 | Have you been up a tree too? |
12164 | Have you heard that I''m coming back to practise in the city? |
12164 | Have you seen the place lately? |
12164 | Have you sent an answer saying you will come, on your own responsibility? |
12164 | Have you thought of the cooking question? 12164 He looked a pretty good sort, did n''t he? |
12164 | Headed for the farm, are we? 12164 Hello, what''s up?" |
12164 | Hi, what''s this? |
12164 | How about the dead beetles now, Max? |
12164 | How can I tell? |
12164 | How could it help being hospitable,cried Sally, happily,"with friends like ours for guests?" |
12164 | How did Maxwell ever come to let this place go to seed like this? |
12164 | How did you manage not to let me in for this affair, Sis? |
12164 | How do I know so much about it? 12164 How do you know I did?" |
12164 | How do you know so much about it? |
12164 | How do you know that you will? 12164 How long were you there?" |
12164 | How many classes do you have? |
12164 | How on earth are we to have any breakfast? |
12164 | How would May till November do? |
12164 | I do n''t talk sense? |
12164 | I look like a little boy now, do n''t I? |
12164 | I suppose I''ve said something awful? |
12164 | I think that is the best plan, do n''t you, Max? |
12164 | I wonder if hearts are any help in solving problems? |
12164 | I''d like to know how you came to have him here? |
12164 | If I happen to see you alone in the garden, must I go and get your Uncle Tim or my mother? |
12164 | In an empty house? |
12164 | Is he taking it worse or better than you expected? |
12164 | Is n''t he that chap the papers are full of, who holds forth to a crowd of men every day down in the Old Dutch Church? |
12164 | Is n''t it absolutely enchanting? |
12164 | Is n''t she looking splendidly? |
12164 | Is n''t she_ dear_? |
12164 | Is n''t that lovely off there? |
12164 | Is n''t that the prettiest thing you ever saw? |
12164 | Is n''t the air glorious? 12164 Is n''t there a thing that can go in late, and produce a late crop?" |
12164 | Is n''t this more fun than the jolliest picnic you ever went to? |
12164 | It is n''t a very cozy nest, is it, Sis? |
12164 | It made you want to live here more than ever, did n''t it? |
12164 | It''s-- just a little hot to- day, is n''t it? |
12164 | It_ has_ been a lovely summer, has n''t it? |
12164 | Jarvis, dear, how can you do that? 12164 Joey, will you and mother drive out with me this evening and decide on where to put the tent?" |
12164 | Just one more, will you? |
12164 | Looks fairly well in order, eh? |
12164 | Max, are you going up to find out if any burglars got in overnight? |
12164 | Max,she asked, quite suddenly,"how much light do you have in your office?" |
12164 | May I go, too? |
12164 | May we come in? |
12164 | Mind taking me about? |
12164 | Miss Sally put us all to the test in that minute, did n''t she? 12164 Mother, could you spare Joanna for a week or two, till they can find somebody? |
12164 | Mother, have you seen Jarvis look so waked up since he put on goggles? |
12164 | My trunk is n''t here-- what in the world shall I put on? |
12164 | No bad news, I hope? |
12164 | No flowers for you, child? |
12164 | Not if it''s paid for? |
12164 | Not let Neil take you back? 12164 Not?" |
12164 | Now where is that gate? |
12164 | Of convictions? 12164 Of course-- the mother''s always an invalid, is n''t she? |
12164 | Oh, ca n''t you? |
12164 | Oh, dear, is n''t it horrid? |
12164 | Oh, it will be a corker, will it? |
12164 | On two tickets, then? |
12164 | Only yesterday? |
12164 | Pessimist, am I? 12164 Really? |
12164 | Run down to Max for the keys, will you, dear? |
12164 | Sally, O Sally, are you all right? |
12164 | Sally, may I write to you? |
12164 | Sally, what do you take us for? 12164 Sally, where on earth are you? |
12164 | Sewing-- as usual? 12164 Shall I ever be anything again but an owl in daylight? |
12164 | Stay there, please-- Do you really want me to come up? |
12164 | Tell me,--wistfully--"do you think-- He-- walks in mine?" |
12164 | The Reverend-- how odd that sounds!--Who are they? |
12164 | The disc- harrow-- or the plan? 12164 Then what will happen?" |
12164 | Then you do n''t have the daylight at all? |
12164 | There''s something perfectly irresistible about her, is n''t there? |
12164 | There''s such a lovely girl next door-- I''ve heard--"What have you heard? |
12164 | They look dreadfully droopy, do n''t they? |
12164 | They''re all right, are n''t they? |
12164 | Think so? |
12164 | Thinking of investing out here? 12164 This you, Sally?" |
12164 | Three days? 12164 Tired out, little girl?" |
12164 | Tired out, old fellow? |
12164 | Too full? |
12164 | Two more guests, and the room would burst, would n''t it? |
12164 | Uncle Timmy, are you sure you ca n''t manage just a little more? 12164 Uncle Timmy? |
12164 | Valuable offering it would make, would n''t it? 12164 Was ever anything so good? |
12164 | Was n''t he? 12164 We''d like to get you where nature would attend to putting on the rouge-- eh, mother?" |
12164 | We''re just a lot of boys and girls--"Are we? 12164 Well, primed to the muzzle?" |
12164 | Well, well, this stairway is certainly a quaint one-- risers about five inches, are n''t they, Max? 12164 Well, well-- old Neil''s coming to show us his chest expansion, is he? |
12164 | Well, what do you think now? |
12164 | Well, what is it? |
12164 | Well, you_ are_ sort of down on your friends to- day, are n''t you? 12164 Well?" |
12164 | Well? |
12164 | What are you doing, prowling round your own back door? |
12164 | What are you expecting to find there, Sis? 12164 What can you people expect of a patient just out of the hospital?" |
12164 | What could be more appropriate for picking strawberries than a pink gingham? |
12164 | What do you think about it? |
12164 | What do you think about the old place, Uncle Timmy? |
12164 | What do_ you_ think? |
12164 | What does it all mean? |
12164 | What does she want? 12164 What have you been doing to yourself? |
12164 | What in the world do you mean? |
12164 | What made you start with that? |
12164 | What promise? |
12164 | What''s the matter with you and Don hitting it off? 12164 What''s the matter with you, Jo Burnside?" |
12164 | What''s the matter? |
12164 | What''s the matter? |
12164 | What, start to- night? |
12164 | When do you make the move? |
12164 | When will you go? |
12164 | Where are you all? 12164 Where''s Jarve?" |
12164 | Which is the tree? |
12164 | Which way? |
12164 | Who cares for clothes when there''s a runaway? |
12164 | Who cares what the walking is like, on an April day like this? |
12164 | Who wants a camping party without any adventures? 12164 Who''d ever have thought of seeing you to- night? |
12164 | Who''ll venture first? |
12164 | Who, please? |
12164 | Whom-- Joanna? |
12164 | Why be practical? 12164 Why did he ever conceive the idea of doing two years''work in one-- and why did his friends let him do it?" |
12164 | Why did n''t you wait? 12164 Why do n''t you go to bed?" |
12164 | Why not, at a dollar a bunch? |
12164 | Why not? 12164 Why not? |
12164 | Why not? |
12164 | Why not? |
12164 | Why should n''t I? 12164 Why, from Wednesday to-- when did we leave there, Neil? |
12164 | Why, indeed? 12164 Why?" |
12164 | Will you and Janet sing''My Garden''with me-- especially for Sally? |
12164 | Will you answer? |
12164 | Will you be contented to see a very little way? |
12164 | Will you come? |
12164 | Will you give me sixty seconds''start? |
12164 | Will you let such new acquaintances join in that song? |
12164 | Will you tell him, please? 12164 Will you tell me how you know all this?" |
12164 | Without saying good- by? 12164 Wo n''t they? |
12164 | Would n''t you like to ask your friends in the bank, Max? |
12164 | Would you dare mention it to Sally? |
12164 | Would you-- clear off out here among the snow- drifts? 12164 Yes, you do-- friends of Mrs. Sears-- just stopping over a day?" |
12164 | Yet you are the one who comes out to look over the place? 12164 You and Sally have n''t quarrelled, have you?" |
12164 | You are sure brother Jarvis did n''t have a hand? |
12164 | You ca n''t hold your head up yet? |
12164 | You did? 12164 You exquisite person-- may I venture to sit beside you?" |
12164 | You like it, Sally? |
12164 | You really mean it? 12164 You say they were all down, Sally? |
12164 | You wo n''t be all the evening about it? |
12164 | You would n''t mind, would you? |
12164 | You''d rather see through that door than into any other spot in the house that is n''t locked up, would n''t you, Sally Lunn? |
12164 | You''ll take good care of them, wo n''t you, Joanna? |
12164 | You''re certainly not angry with me for running away with you? |
12164 | You''re not afraid of her next- door neighbour, are you? |
12164 | You''re not hurt anywhere, dear? |
12164 | Your head aches? 12164 _ Not God-- in gardens!--when the eve is cool_?" |
12164 | _ What_? |
12164 | *****"Why so late?" |
12164 | --Now, by all that''s eccentric, what''s a colourful name?" |
12164 | --as that young man passed with an inquiring look at her which meant,"Do you want me for anything in connection with these new arrivals?" |
12164 | A year from this June? |
12164 | Am I never to come to one?" |
12164 | An office grind, am I? |
12164 | And I may tell mother you will prove your good friendship by taking the white elephant of a piano? |
12164 | And till then I must walk on neutral ground?" |
12164 | And what did you and Miss Josephine do?" |
12164 | And what would she do out here, all by herself?" |
12164 | And will you tell me why brains, even amateur ones, ca n''t solve such problems as we have to face? |
12164 | And wo n''t it be lovely, across the bridge and along the river, as soon as the leaves are out?" |
12164 | And you do n''t get a crop the first year, either-- eh, Jarve? |
12164 | And you''ll try bluffing, will you? |
12164 | Anybody here we know, or is it a neighbourhood blowout?" |
12164 | Anybody hurt?" |
12164 | Are n''t they imposing society ladies now?" |
12164 | Are n''t we old friends enough to take things into our own hands?" |
12164 | Are n''t you and she the best friends in the world?" |
12164 | Are n''t you glad you''re alive?" |
12164 | Are they all members of the firm?" |
12164 | Are we to stay? |
12164 | Are you crazy?" |
12164 | Are you going to get out?" |
12164 | Are you going to leave them off to- night?" |
12164 | Are you ready?" |
12164 | As for the cooking, is that specimen they have in the flat now good enough to import to the camp?" |
12164 | Besides, what difference, if Sally gets strong again as fast as out- door life can make her?" |
12164 | Better than going to school? |
12164 | Bob-- how do you like sweeping out offices? |
12164 | But I hope, do n''t you, Jo? |
12164 | But all he said was:"Ready? |
12164 | But do n''t you think he''s looking better since he''s been sleeping out here? |
12164 | But first-- have you had a good time to- night?" |
12164 | But then--""Then you''ll come?" |
12164 | But where?" |
12164 | But you do n''t mind? |
12164 | But you''re not going yet?" |
12164 | But, Sally-- have you let Max know?" |
12164 | But, Sally-- how long before I may see round another corner?" |
12164 | But, see here, miss-- you do n''t do this thing again-- understand? |
12164 | But-- I''d rather like the advantage of being on the ground all summer, do n''t you see? |
12164 | By the way, has Max taken any steps to sell that?" |
12164 | CHAPTER VI IN THE PINE GROVE"Sally, will you and Max go for a drive with us? |
12164 | CHAPTER XII IN THE OLD GARDEN"Mother, wo n''t you drive out to the farm with us? |
12164 | Ca n''t I go, too? |
12164 | Can I tell by the feel of the ground? |
12164 | Can we have them next June? |
12164 | Come on, shall we walk back to the timber tract? |
12164 | Could any stage be set to equal this one?" |
12164 | Could that really be the aristocratic old place of her memory? |
12164 | Could you find a pleasanter place to spend the summer? |
12164 | Did Constance have a bad time of it, too? |
12164 | Did Mr. Neil Chase himself rise to the occasion and play the genial host as he should?" |
12164 | Did n''t you rather enjoy doing it?" |
12164 | Did n''t you see a flash of something?" |
12164 | Did you hear what Jo said? |
12164 | Did you know he put up that rustic bench out there this afternoon? |
12164 | Do n''t you almost wish so yourself?" |
12164 | Do n''t you feel like a new person? |
12164 | Do n''t you let people plot, at Christmas time and on birthdays, to take you by surprise? |
12164 | Do n''t you think we can get our prices for such berries as these? |
12164 | Do n''t you want to ask them out to- night?" |
12164 | Do n''t you want to get over the fence and stroll up one of the rows? |
12164 | Do n''t you want to go?" |
12164 | Do you care to know?" |
12164 | Do you expect to keep us here all night?" |
12164 | Do you feel like the mistress of an ancestral home?" |
12164 | Do you mean it? |
12164 | Do you realize it''s more than a year since I took my degree? |
12164 | Do you suppose Constance would be willing to sing in it? |
12164 | Do you suppose we can ever settle down to slumber again to- night? |
12164 | Do you think it would be out of the question for us to live there?" |
12164 | Does n''t he look like a martyr? |
12164 | Does n''t it wear well?" |
12164 | Does n''t that give you courage to face the evening?" |
12164 | Does one leave the most interesting letter or package till the last-- or does one eagerly open it first? |
12164 | Er-- I suppose you''ll sell this place?" |
12164 | Er-- not intending to furnish up and stay here, are you? |
12164 | Er-- that is-- suppose you could make six chairs, a table, and an old couch furnish that room in there-- for the winter?" |
12164 | Expect to make a living off those?" |
12164 | Family papers, leaving all the Maxwell Lane estate to the Lanes of Henley Street?" |
12164 | Ferry proposed, if you think the house ca n''t be lived in? |
12164 | Ferry to the prettiest, jolliest girls we know, wo n''t you? |
12164 | Ferry?" |
12164 | Ferry?" |
12164 | Fit to cumber the earth?" |
12164 | Gained a lot, did n''t I? |
12164 | Going to put your hair up when you get to be thirty or forty?" |
12164 | Got your skates on to- night, have n''t you?" |
12164 | Has he left the bank?" |
12164 | Has n''t an old friend like me a right to try to keep things straight? |
12164 | Has n''t he always taken your part, even against me, since we used to quarrel over which should have the shady side of the sand pile? |
12164 | Has n''t he been funny to- night, with his solemn''hoping we''re satisfied''? |
12164 | Have we missed getting a message?" |
12164 | Have you seen Max and Alec lately, Mrs. Burnside? |
12164 | Have you the least idea how many men, boys, and babies he has on his lists? |
12164 | Have you told Max?" |
12164 | Have you your best Chesterfieldian manner with you? |
12164 | He has reason to give me my head in every way, has n''t he? |
12164 | He lives next door to you here, does he? |
12164 | Head still ache?" |
12164 | Her whisper came from very near his ear:"Max, are you awake? |
12164 | How I wish they were here-- don''t you, Max?" |
12164 | How are his eyes?" |
12164 | How are you coming home?" |
12164 | How are you, my dear sir?" |
12164 | How could it be anything else on an August night? |
12164 | How did you come to think of it?" |
12164 | How have you done it?" |
12164 | How is my nephew Robert?" |
12164 | How long have you been out?" |
12164 | How much do you think all this would cost? |
12164 | How on earth do they come to be here? |
12164 | How will you get back? |
12164 | I do n''t suppose they appreciate it at all, do they? |
12164 | I hardly knew there was a house there, did you?" |
12164 | I hope she uses it?" |
12164 | I hope the first night was a comfortable one?" |
12164 | I hope you wo n''t go back on letting me rent a few acres, though, to try my hand at farming, in the spring?" |
12164 | I say, wo n''t that gateway be a corker, when it''s put right?" |
12164 | I suppose he has lost some of the summer''s tan?" |
12164 | I suppose you wo n''t object to my cutting there? |
12164 | I wonder if Max noticed it? |
12164 | I''d sell it to Jarve Burnside before I''d sell it to you, but I-- Hello, where are you going?" |
12164 | I''ll wager a fiver you come in and get your bath every night before dinner, eh?" |
12164 | I''m not a patch on--""What''s the matter with Bob, Sally Lunn?" |
12164 | If I am still a girl--""Are you still a girl? |
12164 | If I could just furnish the west wing for you--""Why not let us furnish it?" |
12164 | If I tell you all about it, wo n''t you eat just half the egg?" |
12164 | If it was n''t for the Ferrys--""Are they over much?" |
12164 | If you were so sure of it, why did n''t you ask for it?" |
12164 | Is everybody well?" |
12164 | Is he going to see us? |
12164 | Is it a satisfactory picture? |
12164 | Is it-- is it a_ surprise_?" |
12164 | Is n''t it horrible? |
12164 | Is n''t it lucky they''re staying at least one more year? |
12164 | Is n''t that a beautiful scene at this hour of day, even through blue glasses?" |
12164 | Is n''t that the word?" |
12164 | Is that so, Sally?" |
12164 | Is that still your greatest desire?" |
12164 | It depends upon one''s point of view, does n''t it? |
12164 | It seemed rather a good idea to me-- what do you think of it? |
12164 | It will be winter soon, and you must go tobogganing--""Why, you are n''t going to stay away all winter, are you?" |
12164 | It''s funny a preacher should be such an all- round sort of fellow, is n''t it?" |
12164 | It''s nonsense, and--"Sally''s voice interrupted from behind:"Max, is n''t this glorious? |
12164 | Joey, what made you put on a white dress? |
12164 | Judging by appearances Don would n''t object a bit.--I say-- where are you going?" |
12164 | Keep him with you all the time?" |
12164 | Let''s--""Are you so eager to see Joanna again? |
12164 | Looks like a farmer, does n''t he, now? |
12164 | Make our things furnish that room? |
12164 | Max here? |
12164 | Maxwell Inn-- eh, Sally? |
12164 | May I go on Saturday? |
12164 | May I have them?" |
12164 | May Jarvis go? |
12164 | May we come through? |
12164 | May we send it right away? |
12164 | Miss Burnside?" |
12164 | Mother, Jo, where are you? |
12164 | Mother, have we any cots?" |
12164 | Mrs. Chase will bring four trunks and a lot of hand stuff, will she? |
12164 | Neil, how are you? |
12164 | No May freezes, no droughts, no--""You_ are_ a pessimist, are n''t you?" |
12164 | No matter how blue she felt herself, she''s never acted blue before you-- now has she?" |
12164 | Not got it right yet, Sally? |
12164 | Now who''ll let us in?" |
12164 | Now will you be good?" |
12164 | Now, will you let us come?" |
12164 | Oh, here''s a new picture of Alec, on the chimney- piece-- why did n''t he send it to me?" |
12164 | Oh, how are you all? |
12164 | Oh, is n''t this air delicious? |
12164 | Oh, is there a closet behind that curtain? |
12164 | Oh, was n''t it dear and kind of these people to plan this for us?" |
12164 | Oh, what''s that at the back? |
12164 | One who had never before seen him might have argued many things from the style of his opening address:"This is Alec, eh? |
12164 | Ought n''t we to have sowed them last fall?" |
12164 | Out of your own garden? |
12164 | PART TWO THE LANES AND THE ACRES CHAPTER XI WHAT''S IN A NAME? |
12164 | Quite a distance from town, is n''t it?" |
12164 | Ready, Sis?" |
12164 | Red and blue make purple, on cheeks as well as palettes, do n''t they? |
12164 | Remember my telling you about him? |
12164 | Rudd?" |
12164 | Sally, do n''t you adore the old- fashioned clove- pinks, with their dear, spicy smell? |
12164 | Sally, do you suppose they can dry the tent and get it up again by to- morrow night?" |
12164 | Sally, how did you ever come to it, after that great roomy old house of yours? |
12164 | Sally, where are your men? |
12164 | See Mary Ann out there; does n''t she look dazed and serious? |
12164 | See here, could we keep warm in that barracks this winter?" |
12164 | See those porch pillars-- were they ever white? |
12164 | Shall I go for her?" |
12164 | Shall I man a lifeboat? |
12164 | Shall we drive in? |
12164 | Shall we go and ask?" |
12164 | Shall we try to supply the utensils?" |
12164 | She is pleased is n''t she?" |
12164 | She-- Why, what''s that?" |
12164 | Should I refrain from telling them about the only one in sight, even though it could n''t be said to have reached the show stage?" |
12164 | Snow- drifts and isolation, empty rooms and cold winds, and all?" |
12164 | So old Neil was helping the thing along, was he? |
12164 | So you honestly want to stay here, do you, Sally Lunn? |
12164 | Something lovely out of nothing at all, I suppose?" |
12164 | Standing on his head?" |
12164 | Suddenly she wanted to say:"You do n''t mind, do you?" |
12164 | Tell me, is it a beautiful old place, and shall you go there to live? |
12164 | That so? |
12164 | That would leave Jarve to Janet, and make a mighty nice combination of us-- eh? |
12164 | The boys-- Max?" |
12164 | The garden was of overwhelming importance to Sally, why should n''t it be interesting to everybody? |
12164 | The house furnished for the two months?" |
12164 | The mistress of a mansion like this must always have herself in hand, must n''t she?" |
12164 | The next instant the umbrella was tilted back at a reckless angle, and a voice called guardedly out of the mist:"O Joanna-- is that you? |
12164 | Then he turned to Sally with a quite audible comment:"The old gentleman has n''t changed much, has he? |
12164 | Think a fellow in a silk- lined overcoat and driving- gloves like those knows anything about farming?--Or ever can know?" |
12164 | This all your baggage? |
12164 | This you?" |
12164 | Too dull to know a good thing when I own it, eh? |
12164 | Trunks full of gold? |
12164 | Was it he at the window? |
12164 | Was it intended to do so? |
12164 | Was it very hot?" |
12164 | Was there ever anything so inviting as those beds and cots? |
12164 | We could camp out in a corner of it, but that would be lonesome, do n''t you think so? |
12164 | We''ll go out to- morrow, wo n''t we?" |
12164 | Well, Max, this the old place you had left you? |
12164 | Well, now-- who can that be?" |
12164 | Well, shall we go to work? |
12164 | Well, well,"in astonishment, as he came nearer,"where are you, anyhow? |
12164 | Well, where shall the tent go?" |
12164 | Well, you can raise some kind of a light to trot round by, ca n''t you? |
12164 | What am I, do you think?" |
12164 | What are we, a family of bank clerks and office boys, to shoulder a proposition like this? |
12164 | What are you doing, idling here, Mr. Farmer? |
12164 | What are you making now? |
12164 | What could he do or say against it all without seeming a churl and an ingrate? |
12164 | What do you mean by that?" |
12164 | What do you say?" |
12164 | What do you suppose she does to it?" |
12164 | What do you suppose they''ll be like? |
12164 | What do you suppose they''ll think of things here?" |
12164 | What do you suppose you''ll find?" |
12164 | What do you think I am, anyhow? |
12164 | What do you think a ground- floor banking house gets, between a lot of ten- story buildings? |
12164 | What do you think?" |
12164 | What do you want of that?" |
12164 | What has that to do with it?" |
12164 | What if you should let me see just a little way round the corner? |
12164 | What if-- what if-- Max should, after all, jump at the offer? |
12164 | What in the world is that? |
12164 | What in the world is the matter with you?" |
12164 | What is it?" |
12164 | What jollier place for a lot of fun? |
12164 | What of that? |
12164 | What on earth are we to do now?" |
12164 | What possesses the weather to start in like this, before June''s half over? |
12164 | What would you give, Jo Burnside, to know how we''ve been described?" |
12164 | What would you have me do-- wire them not to stop? |
12164 | What''s he doing? |
12164 | What''s that coming up in the corner there?" |
12164 | What''s that?" |
12164 | What''s the money?" |
12164 | What''s the reason for that?" |
12164 | When did you come? |
12164 | When--?" |
12164 | Where are they?" |
12164 | Where can I get an axe?" |
12164 | Where shall I hang my coat? |
12164 | Where was his ill- temper? |
12164 | Where''s the tent?" |
12164 | Who is it-- do you know?" |
12164 | Who minds a little walk in the rain? |
12164 | Who''s that assisting her? |
12164 | Why did n''t you take that absurd creation off in the vestibule? |
12164 | Why is n''t being away the same thing as_ being away_?" |
12164 | Why must Alec follow Max''s lead? |
12164 | Why not? |
12164 | Why should the door be locked so securely if there''s nothing behind it?" |
12164 | Why, that''s-- how big would that be?" |
12164 | Why?" |
12164 | Will you come up, or shall I come down?" |
12164 | Will you have a concert grand in the west wing? |
12164 | Will you have the goodness to look at my sweet- peas?" |
12164 | Will you tell me how, with Sally out here in a tent, we fellows are going to get along in the flat? |
12164 | With your father''s firm?" |
12164 | Wo n''t you just bend your rigid little elbow a trifle at the joint when you shake hands with me the first of May? |
12164 | Would an eighteen by twenty- four wall- tent-- of the heaviest duck-- be about right?" |
12164 | Would it be asking too much of you to allow it to stand in one of your rooms through the summer, where Janet could do some practising on it? |
12164 | Would n''t it sound like a part of the summer night out here?" |
12164 | Yes-- there is a little bit of a dark cloud in the south beyond the woods, but you do n''t think it will bring rain right away, do you?" |
12164 | You did n''t know that four and a half yards of Swiss muslin would make a whole frock, did you? |
12164 | You do n''t expect any more of them this hot night? |
12164 | You do n''t mind going, Neil? |
12164 | You do see, do n''t you, Sis?" |
12164 | You know that, do n''t you?" |
12164 | You like Janet yourself, do n''t you?" |
12164 | You see they was n''t expecting you, so--""Oh, are they_ away_? |
12164 | You''ll have him, wo n''t you, Sally?" |
12164 | You''ll keep on being good to them all winter, wo n''t you?" |
12164 | You''re going, you say?" |
12164 | You-- you-- are getting--""Well, what am I getting? |
12164 | Young ladies from two years''residence in Germany, or just plain, jolly girls?" |
12164 | when the eve is cool? |
41229 | A gentleman been inquiring for Monsieur Varbarriere? |
41229 | A lean ugly old man is he, with white bristly whiskers, you know, and a white head, and little grey eyes, eh? |
41229 | A little trunk of stamped red leather-- was that like it? |
41229 | A thrust, eh? 41229 A year, you say, before my poor boy''s death?" |
41229 | About how long ago? 41229 Always about the same time?" |
41229 | Am I to understand, sir,inquired the attorney,"that what has just occurred modifies our instructions to proceed in those cases?" |
41229 | And Lady Alice,he murmured with a lowering countenance,"pretty well, I hope? |
41229 | And Lady Jane is called, I suppose, a little before that hour? |
41229 | And Sir Jekyl? |
41229 | And Sir Jekyl? |
41229 | And Turpin, the gardener? |
41229 | And assuming a favourable opinion, sir, are my instructions to proceed? |
41229 | And grown such a fine''oman-- bless ye-- I allays said she would-- didn''t I? |
41229 | And must you really leave me to- day? |
41229 | And now the war-- the campaign-- what next? |
41229 | And pray, Monsieur Varbarriere, are you married? |
41229 | And pray, sir, what_ is_ your name? |
41229 | And the diamonds came? |
41229 | And there''s no gout at all, then? |
41229 | And this as you sat in the butler''s room? |
41229 | And to whom, sir, pray, was my son married? |
41229 | And was it he-- was there any altercation? |
41229 | And what did that red box contain? |
41229 | And what do you suppose, Monsieur Varbarriere, to have been the contents of that red leather box? |
41229 | And what is he a- doing hout o''doors this time o''night, Mr. Jack? 41229 And what the devil, Mr. Jack, are you doing here, please, sir?" |
41229 | And what was the subject, pray? |
41229 | And what, may I ask, do you suppose it_ is_? |
41229 | And which first-- the action or the indictment? 41229 And which side, pray, Lady Jane, would you have taken in that ancient debate?" |
41229 | And why do you think them-- but maybe you don''t-- of more consequence now? |
41229 | And why wish for me? |
41229 | And why, Lady Jane? |
41229 | And wo n''t you tell? 41229 And you did urge him?" |
41229 | And you love him-- and what more is needed to make you both happy? |
41229 | And you think he''ll not get over it? |
41229 | And you think-- you think it''s very bad? |
41229 | And_ why_ do you think so? |
41229 | Are you sure? |
41229 | As how? |
41229 | Ay, sir; how can I help it? |
41229 | Ay? 41229 Bad? |
41229 | Ca n''t I do that for you? 41229 Ca n''t you answer, and not talk?" |
41229 | Can I do anything? |
41229 | Can the Ethiopian change his skin, or the leopard his spots? 41229 Can you tell me, child, anything about that horrible fat old Frenchman, who has begun to speak English since his return?" |
41229 | Come away, I say-- hadn''t we better? |
41229 | Come, Dives, have n''t those fellows been talking of me-- eh?--as if I were worse than you say? |
41229 | Come, sir, I have a right to know it-- have you not an object in fooling me? |
41229 | Could that episode be evaded? |
41229 | Did I not say, yesterday, that Monsieur Varbarriere would vote for the country, in our town or country argument, if he were here? |
41229 | Did Sir Harry never tell you? |
41229 | Did he afterwards give it into anybody''s charge? |
41229 | Did he ever show you that paper? |
41229 | Did he ever_ tell_ you he had done it? 41229 Did he mention any unpleasantness ever between us?" |
41229 | Did he open the press? |
41229 | Did he show you where that thing was which he wanted you to take charge of? |
41229 | Did he tell you where it was? |
41229 | Did n''t know,whispered the woman, with another faint courtesy;"but she''s better out o''this, do n''t you think, ma''am?" |
41229 | Did that fellow say anything? |
41229 | Did they tell you what it is? |
41229 | Did you ever read Vathek? |
41229 | Did you feel faint when it happened, or after? |
41229 | Did_ you_ give that name? 41229 Do you know him?" |
41229 | Do you paint, sir? |
41229 | Do you think I''ll get over it, Dives? |
41229 | Do you think-- do you think I''m in_ danger_? |
41229 | Do you_ think_ he took it? |
41229 | Does Lady Alice know anything of it? |
41229 | Drayton''s very spoony on her-- eh?--the young lady, Miss Marlowe-- haven''t you observed? |
41229 | General Lennox has not been down- stairs yet? |
41229 | General Lennox?--I know, I think, a millentery man, white-''aired and spare? |
41229 | Get over? 41229 Glad you''re come-- how d''ye do?" |
41229 | Go before-- is that lighted? |
41229 | Gone? 41229 Good morning, sir-- how d''ye do? |
41229 | Guy? 41229 Hand or foot?" |
41229 | Have you been to town since? |
41229 | Have you got it still in your possession? |
41229 | Have you your old Bible yet, miss? |
41229 | He told you the reason, then? |
41229 | He''ll be back, I hope, immediately? |
41229 | Hey-- no-- no_ pain_? |
41229 | Hey? 41229 Hope I have n''t interrupted a conversation? |
41229 | How do you do, Mr. Strangways, sir? |
41229 | How do you feel now, papa? 41229 How is Sir Jekyl?" |
41229 | How is your papa now, Mademoiselle? |
41229 | How soon can you let me have the notes, sir? |
41229 | How, what do you mean? |
41229 | How_ can_ I say more? |
41229 | I ca n''t say, little fool; who ever knows why they like or dislike? 41229 I can look no one in the face; no-- never again-- and Beatrix; and-- oh, Jekyl, how will it be? |
41229 | I do n''t know-- I am confused-- did you ever see such a face? 41229 I forget--_had_ the Bishop come when you left us?" |
41229 | I mean to steal away-- will you come with me to the foot of the stair? |
41229 | I must go home for the things, d''ye see? 41229 I must read about that Algeria; have they got any diseases there? |
41229 | I never said_ that_, Sir Paul, of course; you mistake me, but_ we_ might, do n''t you think, Monsieur Varbarriere, have played a little better? 41229 I say,_ do_ you?" |
41229 | I see, Donnie-- nothing bad has happened? |
41229 | I see, no pain; all nicely fixed in the toe;_ that_ could not be better, and what do you refer it to? 41229 I''ll go with you-- shall I?" |
41229 | I''ll return, my lady, I suppose, and tell you what Miss Jane says, ma''am? |
41229 | I''m not blaming you, mind; but is it not odd we should have known nothing of this son, and this pretended marriage till now? |
41229 | I-- I suppose we had better get on at once to the house? |
41229 | I_ may_ then discharge_ that_ quite from my mind? |
41229 | Immediately, sir? |
41229 | In the Almighty''s name, are you Guy Deverell? |
41229 | In the drawing- room? |
41229 | In the library? 41229 Is he better?" |
41229 | Is it anything_ I_ can answer? |
41229 | Is not your name Varbarriere, sir? |
41229 | Is that d-- d doctor_ ever_ coming? |
41229 | Is there more than one secret door into that room? |
41229 | Is there? 41229 It could not have been the wind, the shaking or creaking of the floor or windows?" |
41229 | It is only to learn whether my-- my poor boy''s son, my grandson, the young man in whom I must feel so deep an interest, is about to return here? |
41229 | It''s very sudden, sir; whom do you advise? |
41229 | Jacques,said he, in a whisper,"there''s no mistake about those sounds?" |
41229 | Lady Alice Redcliffe here? |
41229 | Lady Alice Redcliffe? 41229 Lady Alice Redcliffe?" |
41229 | Lie down, woman, and take your sleep; you sleep_ well_? 41229 May I ask what it is? |
41229 | May I see you, Monsieur Varbarriere, to- morrow, in the room in which I saw you to- day, at any hour you please after half- past eleven? |
41229 | May I walk a little with you, General Lennox? |
41229 | Miss Jennie, dear; it''s me-- old Donnie-- don''t you know me? |
41229 | Monsieur Varbarriere? |
41229 | My nephew has n''t come? |
41229 | No corners there, sir-- ribs well covered-- hey? 41229 No notion of coming; maybe you will?" |
41229 | No one writes to you? |
41229 | No--_no_--not a word; and-- and you think, sir, it may begin bleeding afresh? |
41229 | No? |
41229 | No_ acute_ pain, I hope? |
41229 | Nor Sir Jekyl? |
41229 | Nor any wandering sensations here, you know, and there, hey? |
41229 | Nor you to anyone? |
41229 | Not flying-- well fixed in the toe, eh? |
41229 | Nothing in the knuckles-- old acquaintance, you know, when you meet, sometimes a squeeze by the hand, eh? 41229 Nothing since?" |
41229 | Now,_ do_ you really hope that? 41229 Of course subject to counsel''s opinion?" |
41229 | Oh no, I fancy not; it''s only the old question, when are we to see the General; is he coming back at all? |
41229 | Oh!--is that all? 41229 Oh, Miss Jane!--oh, Miss Jane!--oh, Miss Jane!--and is_ that_ it?" |
41229 | Oh,_ General_ Lennox? 41229 Old Pratt, baint_ he_ here neither?" |
41229 | On your grandson, madam? |
41229 | One word more,said Varbarriere, recollecting suddenly;"you have not arranged a correspondence with any person? |
41229 | Perfectly; many thanks-- and Mademoiselle Beatrix? |
41229 | Pulse? 41229 Say? |
41229 | See-- you answer upon your honour-- do you hear? |
41229 | Sermons, do you mean? |
41229 | Shall I read it? 41229 Shall I run away-- is it a secret?" |
41229 | Shall I send again, sir? |
41229 | Sir Paul has a way of hitting people very hard, has not he, Lady Alice? 41229 Sit down, and tell me everything-- how all the old people are, and how the old place looks-- you live there now? |
41229 | Steps, you say? |
41229 | Strangways, please, sir? 41229 Surely, Colonel Lennox, you do n''t mean-- you ca n''t mean-- you''re not going to resort to violence, sir?" |
41229 | Thanks-- and what are your instructions? |
41229 | That I have, sir, as you shall see, pencil though; but that does n''t matter-- no? |
41229 | That is less than a month hence? |
41229 | That water''s cold, miss; shall I fetch hot? |
41229 | The General used to be down early? |
41229 | The condition being that it should be all country or all town, of course, and that we were to retain our incomes? |
41229 | The criminal proceedings? |
41229 | The doctors, you mean? 41229 The great toe-- the best place, is n''t it?" |
41229 | The special minister of Christ!--am I what I''m sworn to be? 41229 The steps quick, not slow; was n''t it?" |
41229 | Then, Jekyl got it when he came of age? |
41229 | They have not been telling you it''s anything serious? |
41229 | Thirty- four? 41229 This is Wardlock?" |
41229 | Those rambles of yours are not much to the purpose, my friend, and cost some money-- don''t you see? |
41229 | Three nights running, you say? |
41229 | To be sure; so tell me, do you recollect Mr. Deverell''s losing a paper in that room? |
41229 | Troublesome to talk, hey? |
41229 | Turn that d-- d fellow out of the room, and bolt the door, will you? |
41229 | Upon your honour? |
41229 | Very good, Mrs. Gwynn; have you anything to say to me? |
41229 | Very grateful-- very much flattered; and your ladyship, how are_ you_? |
41229 | Very heavy, was it? |
41229 | Very well, Mrs. Gwynn; we''re quite secret, hey? |
41229 | Want_ me_ here? |
41229 | Was she a person at all his equal in life?--a person of-- of any education, I mean? |
41229 | We are going to the garden; are you ready, darling? |
41229 | We are to go on, then? |
41229 | We are to go to the drawing- room-- aren''t we? |
41229 | We must not frighten the ladies, you know; but I''m very much afraid of something in the stomach, eh? 41229 Well, Jekyl, my dear fellow-- and how do you feel now? |
41229 | Well, Miss Jennie, where''s the good? 41229 Well, Mrs. Sinnott, ma''am, how''s the master now?" |
41229 | Well, Sir Jekyl, how d''ye do, hey? 41229 Well, Sir Paul; we earned our winnings, eh? |
41229 | Well, and how is papa now? |
41229 | Well, but you''ll come back some time, not very far away? |
41229 | Well, he told you something, did not he? |
41229 | Well, sir, how is Sir Jekyl? |
41229 | Well, then, sir, the upshot of the matter is that_ I may_ rely on what you say, and expect my grandson''s visit at Wardlock? |
41229 | Well, then, what''s to hinder? 41229 Well, what''s better?--a little of the Bible?" |
41229 | Well, yes-- only a sort of conjecture, you know-- haven''t you? |
41229 | Well-- a-- well, and what has brought you down here? 41229 Well?" |
41229 | Well? |
41229 | Well? |
41229 | What General?--Lennox-- eh? |
41229 | What abbot? |
41229 | What do you mean by them fellows? |
41229 | What do you mean, sir? |
41229 | What do you mean, woman? 41229 What do you mean, you foreign masquerader, whom nobody knows? |
41229 | What do you think he has done? 41229 What do you_ mean_, Jekyl Marlowe-- what_ can_ you mean by bringing such persons here? |
41229 | What do you_ mean_, sir? 41229 What is it now?" |
41229 | What is it? |
41229 | What is man that thou art mindful of him, or the son of man that thou so regardest him? |
41229 | What kind of looking person? |
41229 | What phrase, pray, does your ladyship allude to? |
41229 | What shall we do to- morrow? |
41229 | What sort of nose? |
41229 | What the devil''s all this? |
41229 | What''ll be the matter now? |
41229 | What''s his name? |
41229 | What''s the man like? |
41229 | What? |
41229 | What_ are_ you, a builder or a hartist? |
41229 | What_ is_ it-- I suppose I may_ know_? |
41229 | Where have you put him? |
41229 | Where is he? 41229 Where is the door placed with which_ you_ are acquainted?" |
41229 | Where''s General Lennox? |
41229 | Where''s Pratt? 41229 Where''s my watch? |
41229 | Where''s the use in promising, Donnie? 41229 Who brought that woman, Gwynn, here? |
41229 | Who do you want? |
41229 | Who is she? |
41229 | Who knows? |
41229 | Who the devil did it, I wonder? |
41229 | Who the devil''s Pullet, and what the plague can Pullet want? 41229 Who told you-- who says it will be made up?" |
41229 | Who''s there?--who is it? 41229 Who?" |
41229 | Who? |
41229 | Why did not you tell me that before? |
41229 | Why does n''t he come? |
41229 | Why the plague do n''t you come? |
41229 | Why, you said, sir, did not you, that the Frenchwoman he married was your sister? |
41229 | Why-- why, if it_ is_ not gout, eh? 41229 Why? |
41229 | Will you, Mrs. Gwynn, allow me the right to sit down, by yourself taking a chair? |
41229 | Wo n''t admit-- won''t allow, hey? |
41229 | Wo n''t you get your things on, darling? 41229 Wo n''t you sit down?--do sit down, Pelter; and you have n''t had wine?" |
41229 | Wo n''t you, darling? |
41229 | Would you like to go to your room? 41229 Yes, Arthur; Arthur, what''s the matter? |
41229 | Yes, I know that; but who is he-- what is he? 41229 Yes, everything-- quickly-- I wish to dress; and what''s this? |
41229 | Yes, prison; and is not anything better than liberty with its liabilities? 41229 Yes-- what?" |
41229 | Yes; and how do you open it? 41229 You are angry, Arthur; you are excited; something has happened-- something bad-- what is it? |
41229 | You do n''t go to town to- night? |
41229 | You do n''t mean to say he''s hout a- larkin? |
41229 | You do n''t recollect what he said, I dare say? |
41229 | You fish to- day? |
41229 | You have been quarrelling-- h''m? |
41229 | You have brought the cases and opinions with you? |
41229 | You have, I presume, disclosed your name to the people at Marlowe as frankly as to those at Slowton? |
41229 | You lost a good deal of blood? 41229 You never_ saw_ General Lennox?" |
41229 | You promise? |
41229 | You promise? |
41229 | You recollect, General Lennox, what you promised me? |
41229 | You see? |
41229 | You see_ that_? |
41229 | You will, will you? |
41229 | You''ll allow me to speak with your brother? |
41229 | You''ll remember, General, that you arrived late; you understand? 41229 You''re well? |
41229 | You''ve done as I ordered? |
41229 | Young man, for Heaven''s sake, will you tell me who you are? |
41229 | _ Gone!__ Is_ he? |
41229 | _ Head_ all right, too; nothing queer there? |
41229 | _ What_ negotiation? 41229 _ Who?_"said Dives, a good deal alarmed, for he feared that his brother''s mind was wandering. |
41229 | --and, at last--"Who was right about that_ benet_--you or I? |
41229 | --or,"Did you ever read such Galamathias?" |
41229 | A life of drudgery or listlessness? |
41229 | A quarrel? |
41229 | All the world''s lying-- why should not I?" |
41229 | Always was rising in his mind the one thought,"What does she think of my deception and my agitation-- what can she think of_ me_?" |
41229 | And Lady Alice sniffed at her smelling- salts, and added--"And Monsieur Varbarriere gone away on business for some days-- is not he?" |
41229 | And how was it, do you know?" |
41229 | And if that young fellow and Beatrix-- don''t you see? |
41229 | And turning to that sage, she said--"You got my letter, and have well considered it, I trust?" |
41229 | And why do you go on crying, Jennie? |
41229 | And, sir,"he continued, suddenly stopping short, and turning full on Varbarriere--"for God''s sake,_ do_ you think it is_ certainly true_?" |
41229 | Arthur, is it you?" |
41229 | But his dangers seemed to be dispersing; and, at the worst, were not negotiation and compromise within his reach? |
41229 | But is there any promise that repentance shall arrest the course of the avenger that follows sin on earth? |
41229 | But there''s no good in looking to secondary causes, Wo n''t you sit down?" |
41229 | But what was to be done? |
41229 | But what were these feeble angelic Varbarrieres? |
41229 | But_ what_ hæmorrhage? |
41229 | Ca n''t you listen to me, and not run from one thing to another? |
41229 | Can I do anything for you at Llandudno? |
41229 | Can I even now feel the hope, and lead the prayer as I ought to do?" |
41229 | Can I go in and talk to him of those things that concern eternity with any effect? |
41229 | Can the dumb earth answer, or the empty air hear you? |
41229 | Can_ I_ do anything? |
41229 | Come-- d---- you; yes or no?" |
41229 | Could a young fellow fancy a duller entertainment? |
41229 | Could it be? |
41229 | Did Mr. Drayton show them to you?" |
41229 | Did ever beauty read letter of compliment and adoration with keener absorption? |
41229 | Did he ever meet you, Lady Alice?" |
41229 | Did he quail, and seriously think of retiring_ re infectâ_? |
41229 | Did he still hear smothered sobs? |
41229 | Did not you hear me say that?" |
41229 | Did you ever quite succeed in defining your own motives, and arriving at the moral base of any action you ever did? |
41229 | Did you ever see a fellow look so queer?" |
41229 | Did you never hear say, it''s better to be an old man''s darling than a young man''s slave?" |
41229 | Do n''t we promise everything-- the whole Christian religion, at our baptism-- and how do we keep it?" |
41229 | Do n''t you believe me, Arthur?" |
41229 | Do n''t you know?" |
41229 | Do not often these agitations subside in darkness? |
41229 | Do they say I''m in a bad way?" |
41229 | Do you promise?" |
41229 | Do you really mean it, Monsieur Varbarriere?" |
41229 | Do you remember?" |
41229 | Do you see?" |
41229 | Do you think Guy Deverell, whose father that_ lache_ murdered before my eyes, could ever endure to call_ him_ father? |
41229 | Do you think I could tempt you to return, maybe, when your business-- this particular business, I mean-- is over?" |
41229 | Do you think me a fool? |
41229 | Do you think you can?" |
41229 | Do you think, as we now stand, success is_ certain_?" |
41229 | Do you understand yourself? |
41229 | Do_ you_ know anything of gout? |
41229 | Down- stairs to- day, eh?" |
41229 | Eh?" |
41229 | Fresh discoveries, have you? |
41229 | Go, make out where he is, and let him know that his uncle, Monsieur Varbarriere, has just arrived, and wants to see him--_here_, may I?" |
41229 | Gout, is it not?" |
41229 | Guy Deverell know anything of the measures you contemplate in his behalf?" |
41229 | Guy Strangways, I hope we are soon to see him again?" |
41229 | Guy Strangways, arrived last evening?" |
41229 | Gwynn?" |
41229 | Gwynn?" |
41229 | Had Lennox despatched Sir Jekyl, or Sir Jekyl wounded the General? |
41229 | Had he not alarmed his wife?--what signal might not be contrived to warn off her guilty accomplice? |
41229 | Had not the General arrived express very late last night? |
41229 | Had she called in Sir Jekyl himself to counsel? |
41229 | Had she written the name of the flower, which perhaps she sowed? |
41229 | Had the old woman been conjecturing and tattling? |
41229 | Had the tone or the look something ineffably ominous? |
41229 | Has he had many attacks?" |
41229 | Have they been talking? |
41229 | Have you got those notes prepared you mentioned?" |
41229 | He has things to complain of, you know, and we might as well square the account in a friendlier way, eh?--don''t you think?" |
41229 | He heard a step crossing the lobby softly toward his own room, and whispered,"Who''s there?" |
41229 | He knocked again more sharply, and he heard the gabble of female voices; and at last a rather nervous inquiry,"Who''s there, please?" |
41229 | He looks like Torquemada, the Inquisitor-- mysterious, plausible, truculent-- what do you think? |
41229 | How are we there, eh?" |
41229 | How are_ you_, Mr. Tomlinson-- no return of that bronchial annoyance, eh? |
41229 | How can I reach him, even with the tip of my finger, to convey that one drop of water for which he moans now and now, and through all futurity?" |
41229 | How can they move-- how can they stir? |
41229 | How dare they? |
41229 | How did it happen?" |
41229 | How on earth did you procure such a person? |
41229 | How was he, Varbarriere, to meet Sir Jekyl? |
41229 | How was it with him? |
41229 | How''s that?" |
41229 | I did not hear,"and Dives looked frightened, and inquiringly on Pratt, who said--"Not hear, did n''t you? |
41229 | I know perfectly there was, my lord; what was it, pray?" |
41229 | I made your class recite it, do you remember?" |
41229 | I mean from the green chamber?" |
41229 | I mean--""Who?" |
41229 | I never heard it-- and_ old_? |
41229 | I often think of her-- and do you remember how you used to make me read the two lines at the end of the epitaph? |
41229 | I see, exactly; and I-- I know that Slowton doctor wo n''t speak any more than you, my dear Pratt, but I may as well see him, do n''t you think? |
41229 | I shall get rid of him with a word or two-- you''ll excuse me? |
41229 | I suppose you can show it?" |
41229 | I suppose you''ve considered consequences, if anything should go wrong?" |
41229 | I wonder has he had any breakfast; did you see his trowsers all over mud?" |
41229 | I would not put it in his head, d''ye see, hey?" |
41229 | I''d like to know how they can touch my title? |
41229 | I''d like to know, sir, in what relation-- in-- yes-- in what relation, as a soldier, sir, or as a gentleman, sir, or as--_what_?" |
41229 | I''m vexed, am I? |
41229 | If we choose to live out of it, what the plague do we really lose?" |
41229 | If you ca n''t command yourself, how can you hope to bear with one another''s infirmities? |
41229 | In the storm, as cloud and rack fly by, the momentary gleam that comes-- what is it? |
41229 | Is Tomlinson there?" |
41229 | Is it_ possible_ you_ can_ hope that my mind, in the state in which you left it has been one minute at ease since I saw you? |
41229 | Is my uncle here?" |
41229 | Is my-- is General Lennox in the house?" |
41229 | Is that Tomlinson?" |
41229 | Is there-- have you any correspondence in this house?" |
41229 | It ca n''t be Paulett-- can it? |
41229 | It is not all here, eh?" |
41229 | It may be a serious case-- upon my word a_ very_ serious case-- do you see? |
41229 | It''s not any harm to tell, is it? |
41229 | Lady Jane was not thinking of the debate, and asked in her quiet haughty way--"What is it?" |
41229 | May I give you a little wine?--Well, a little water?" |
41229 | May I presume to inquire particularly whether you have divulged the name of my nephew to anyone?" |
41229 | May I say a word?" |
41229 | May it be_ there_ and somewhere else at the same time? |
41229 | Maybe you''d like some port better?" |
41229 | Maybe you''ll advise with me, sir, to- morrow? |
41229 | Monsieur Varbarriere-- very welcome, monsieur-- when did you arrive?" |
41229 | My son married?" |
41229 | Not a_ cut_; I mean a_ stab_?" |
41229 | Nothing wrong in the stomach-- no chill-- retching?" |
41229 | Oh, Arthur, what_ do_ you mean?" |
41229 | Oh, Guy, Guy,_ Guy_ is it credible?" |
41229 | Oh, Gwynn, is it all true? |
41229 | Oh, can you; can you; can you?" |
41229 | Old enemy, hey-- all in the foot-- fast in the toe-- isn''t he?" |
41229 | On your honour you wo n''t tell, and you''ll call it gout?" |
41229 | Or had Lady Jane been killed? |
41229 | Or was all right, and no one of the actors stretched on the green baize carpet before the floats? |
41229 | Perhaps, though,_ you_ paint?" |
41229 | Pratt?" |
41229 | Quite well, I hope?" |
41229 | Quite well, I hope?" |
41229 | Regent''s--_what_ is it? |
41229 | Rumsey?" |
41229 | Rumsey?--How do you do? |
41229 | Shall I, ma''am?" |
41229 | She''ll come just as she is, and we''ll send again for her things, d''ye mind? |
41229 | She''s at home?" |
41229 | She''s very careful, I_ think_; and you promise you''ll come?" |
41229 | Still they instantly recognised, and shook hands cordially, and when the salutation was over--"Well, and what''s wrong with the Baronet?" |
41229 | Strangways? |
41229 | Strangways?" |
41229 | Suppose I take your advice, and draw stakes?" |
41229 | The Bishop? |
41229 | The lean practitioner from Slowton bowed low, and the ceremony over--"Well, gentlemen?" |
41229 | The lights all out on the stairs and lobbies?" |
41229 | The servants, the butler, have they retired?" |
41229 | The_ furniture_, though, that''s changed-- is not it?" |
41229 | Then Donica looked up sharply, and asked--"And, please, my lady, what is your ladyship''s orders?" |
41229 | Then, he still standing, she took his hand, and said, in tones unexpectedly soft and fond--"Well, dear, how have you been? |
41229 | There''s a room in there, eh? |
41229 | These things seem pretty dry-- bleeding away_ still_? |
41229 | This was not articulated, spoken only in thought, and aloud he said--"Ha!--Guy?" |
41229 | Tiresome old lass, baint she? |
41229 | Turning about he removed this with a slight bow and a grave smile, and with his sonorous foreign accent inquired--"Mrs. Gwynn, I suppose?" |
41229 | Wait, will you? |
41229 | Was it something in the tone and cadence of this cry that made each in that party of three feel that a dreadful tragedy was consummated? |
41229 | Was not I, Monsieur?" |
41229 | Was she indeed safe now and for ever? |
41229 | Was this to be a lasting sunshine, though saddened for her? |
41229 | We''re all mortal, Dives-- is not that your discovery?" |
41229 | Well, and do you fancy that''s a genuine thing now?" |
41229 | Well, what does it matter?" |
41229 | Well, what precise measures were to be taken? |
41229 | What a fool,"and then very fiercely he suddenly added,"You can prove all this, sir? |
41229 | What can I do for you?" |
41229 | What did he mean by trying to set a man against his wife? |
41229 | What do they say?" |
41229 | What do they want of her?" |
41229 | What do you mean? |
41229 | What do you mean?" |
41229 | What do you mean?" |
41229 | What does Doctor Pratt say it_ is_?" |
41229 | What else can I expect, sir, but sickness?" |
41229 | What had gone wrong? |
41229 | What hour?" |
41229 | What is it with-- how the plague did it all come about?" |
41229 | What is it?" |
41229 | What is their staring and whispering to me? |
41229 | What kind of book shall I take?" |
41229 | What more can one say? |
41229 | What o''clock now? |
41229 | What o''clock?" |
41229 | What shall I say? |
41229 | What shall I tell him? |
41229 | What the plague''s frightening you and Crowe_ now_? |
41229 | What was the matter with the old fellow? |
41229 | What will you take?--tea, or dinner, or what?" |
41229 | What would Varbarriere, who could be stern and violent, say or do, when he learned it? |
41229 | What''s brought him here?" |
41229 | What''s your question, Lady Alice?" |
41229 | What_ can_ it be? |
41229 | What_ is_ this hæmorrhage? |
41229 | What_ was_ it?" |
41229 | What_ will_ become of my poor niece? |
41229 | When does Lady Jane''s maid go to her?" |
41229 | When does he come back to us?" |
41229 | When shall we open the battle?" |
41229 | When you came down to Dartbroke, for the Easter, you know, and wrote to me for the thing with the ether, hey? |
41229 | Where did you find that man? |
41229 | Where was Jekyl now? |
41229 | Where was he now? |
41229 | Where''s your luggage?" |
41229 | Which am I to call you, by- the- bye?" |
41229 | Which is the one you saw used? |
41229 | Who knows what confusion may be here to day? |
41229 | Who or what can it be?" |
41229 | Who''d have imagined such villains? |
41229 | Why are you vexed?" |
41229 | Why did Lady Hester Stanhope go into exile in the East, and why do sane men and women go into monasteries?" |
41229 | Why did not I ask Lady Alice whether she really wrote for her?" |
41229 | Why did not you tell me?" |
41229 | Why not? |
41229 | Why the devil should I help Jekyl Marlowe to deceive and disgrace that withered old gentleman? |
41229 | Why wo n''t you tell me?" |
41229 | Why, what hæmorrhage is apprehended?" |
41229 | Will Monsieur please to desire his cup of coffee?" |
41229 | Will he mind me? |
41229 | Will that do?" |
41229 | Will ye come with me to Wardlock?" |
41229 | Will ye put''em to or_ no_?" |
41229 | Will you be so kind, sir, as to say what you want of me, having business to attend to up- stairs?" |
41229 | Wo n''t you speak to me?" |
41229 | You do n''t leave us, Mr. Pelter, till the afternoon, d''ye see? |
41229 | You do n''t think that woman will leave us in the lurch?" |
41229 | You do n''t think you could possibly postpone?" |
41229 | You hardly know me now?" |
41229 | You recollect him-- Lord Elstowe he was then? |
41229 | You recollect the deed?" |
41229 | You remember Elstowe at school?" |
41229 | You remember Havre, sir?" |
41229 | You remember poor mamma, Donnie-- don''t you?" |
41229 | You remember the graceful farewell in Lucretius? |
41229 | You said always you did not think they had destroyed the deed?" |
41229 | You say he will be here again in the morning?" |
41229 | You see?" |
41229 | You understand?" |
41229 | You will, I am sure, first be so good as to tell me, though, whether anyone but you knows that the foolish young man''s name is Deverell?" |
41229 | You would not desert me?" |
41229 | You''re ill--_are_ you ill?" |
41229 | You''ve been at that d-- d bin, I''m afraid, the forbidden fruit, hey? |
41229 | You''ve just arrived, I dare say?" |
41229 | _ Could_ you, do you think?" |
41229 | _ This?_--aw-- you_ brought_ it, did n''t you?" |
41229 | _ Walk?_ By all means; I''m going to London,"rejoined the General, without, however, moving from the spot where he had halted. |
41229 | _ Water_ is it? |
41229 | _ What_ frightens you? |
41229 | _ Will_ ye put_ them_ horses to?" |
41229 | _ respeckable_, I hope? |
41229 | _ well_, sir?" |
41229 | _ who''ll_ stop it?" |
41229 | and happy? |
41229 | and how''s all this? |
41229 | and where to?" |
41229 | come back again, Monsieur Varbarriere? |
41229 | demanded the unseen speaker--"long or short?" |
41229 | did you? |
41229 | do n''t you see? |
41229 | grandmamma,_ is_ there anything very bad?" |
41229 | grandmamma,_ what_ is it?" |
41229 | has he hurt her?" |
41229 | hey, Jacques?" |
41229 | how''s this? |
41229 | is it true, or am I mad?" |
41229 | it is not connected with gout, is it?" |
41229 | it''s you? |
41229 | neither town nor country-- and how then?" |
41229 | nervous; you think I''ll knock him, eh? |
41229 | no doubt happy?" |
41229 | no; who said gout? |
41229 | or both together?" |
41229 | quite well? |
41229 | said Dives,"is he really in that state? |
41229 | said Lennox, setting down his candle on the table near the bed,"and glad to see me?" |
41229 | sir,"cried the old man, with a quaver that sounded like a laugh,"do you tell me so?" |
41229 | was it possible-- could it be true? |
41229 | what is it?" |
41229 | what is it?" |
41229 | why is this?" |
41229 | yes, I saw him, Mr. Jack, I did; and what, Mr. Jack, is the doors opened for at these hours, unbeknown to me?" |
41229 | yes, well, she can be quartered_ there_, and talk with no one but you and me; in fact, see no one except in your presence, do n''t you see? |
41229 | you_ all_ do-- of course you sleep? |
45749 | ''To a Pretty Saint''? 45749 A bachelor does n''t entertain ladies, does he?" |
45749 | A change? 45749 A dirty trick, is n''t it?" |
45749 | A week- day hat? |
45749 | Against you? 45749 Ah, Miss Delane, how do you do?" |
45749 | Ah, does he? |
45749 | Ah, how can I? |
45749 | Ah, my darling, how soon will it be when we need never part? 45749 Ah, the spring bubbling again?" |
45749 | Ah, you are here? 45749 Ah, you do love him?" |
45749 | Ai nt there any more going from the town? |
45749 | All the houses about here are yours, are n''t they? |
45749 | An honor? 45749 And Dale?" |
45749 | And are n''t his poems very odd, George? |
45749 | And now-- Bannister, you''re not going to-- to throw us over? |
45749 | And pray, why? 45749 And slow?" |
45749 | And what may the Mayor want? |
45749 | And where was Dale? |
45749 | And why do you write me such dreadful things? |
45749 | And wo n''t he go? |
45749 | And you stand to it? |
45749 | And you''ll take them? 45749 And, Dale, have you a Sunday coat?" |
45749 | Are n''t you pleased to see what notice they are attracting? 45749 Are n''t you rather contradicting yourself? |
45749 | Are these things really yours? |
45749 | Are we going to have a rubber or not? |
45749 | Are you against me too, Ethel? |
45749 | Are you engaged now? |
45749 | Are you going back soon? |
45749 | Are you going skating? |
45749 | Are you nervous? |
45749 | Are you staying here long? |
45749 | Are you surprised? |
45749 | Are you thinking of it? |
45749 | Are you tired? |
45749 | Are you,she demanded,"going to stand by and see him captured by the Grange?" |
45749 | As far as you have gone? 45749 As soon as that?" |
45749 | Aye? 45749 Bannister? |
45749 | Beggin''your pardon, sir? |
45749 | Broke out? 45749 But do you mean to deny your own words?" |
45749 | But if it were allowed, would you allow it? |
45749 | But of course,she asked, with serious eyes,"you believe what you write?" |
45749 | But what would people say if they heard I had poems of Mr. Dale Bannister''s about me? 45749 But will she?" |
45749 | But, my dear fellow,said Mr. Delane,"what has Cransford''s suggestion to do with politics? |
45749 | By the way, who is Miss Fane? |
45749 | Ca n''t he ride? |
45749 | Ca n''t you do anything for''em, Dale? |
45749 | Ca n''t you understand? |
45749 | Can I prevent fools suffering for their folly? |
45749 | Can you put off a Prince? 45749 Did I frighten you, my beauty? |
45749 | Did he? 45749 Did n''t you think I meant you to keep them?" |
45749 | Did she take the things? |
45749 | Did you see Roberts? |
45749 | Do I want it so badly, Miss Smith? |
45749 | Do n''t you ever blow him up? |
45749 | Do n''t you like him to be here? |
45749 | Do n''t you want us to? |
45749 | Do n''t you? 45749 Do n''t you?" |
45749 | Do you admire Dale''s writings? |
45749 | Do you contemplate remodeling yourself? |
45749 | Do you imagine, Jan, I could see you now-- after it all-- except as your lover? 45749 Do you know this country?" |
45749 | Do you like her? |
45749 | Do you mind that? |
45749 | Do you see how this fellow disposes of us, Arthur? |
45749 | Do you seriously expect me to be content with what you said then-- to go away and never come near you again? |
45749 | Do you think I shall? |
45749 | Do you think it''s that, dear? |
45749 | Do you think us great shams? |
45749 | Do you think you help your wishes by asking her to use her influence to make Dale Bannister write poems? |
45749 | Do you think-- I mean, do you call him an attractive fellow? |
45749 | Does Miss Delane? |
45749 | Does he still love you? |
45749 | Does n''t one? 45749 Does she? |
45749 | Does the Squire like him? |
45749 | Does the ice bear? |
45749 | Dr. Spink? 45749 Eh? |
45749 | Eh? |
45749 | Enough of it? |
45749 | Even my opinions? |
45749 | Even to counteract Miss Smith''s illicit influence? |
45749 | Ever since-- but you must n''t tell I came to you-- or spoke to anybody, I mean-- will you? |
45749 | Except appreciating''Amor Patriæ,''eh? |
45749 | Fair or dark? |
45749 | For the Radical meeting? |
45749 | For the poem? |
45749 | Girls, you mean? 45749 Going to publish something?" |
45749 | Going to write your own epitaph, like Swift? |
45749 | Good eyes? |
45749 | Had n''t you a good time skating? |
45749 | Had n''t you better wait till you''re less----"Less what, Ethel? 45749 Has he a wife at all?" |
45749 | Has he got any money? |
45749 | Has n''t Mrs. Delane called? |
45749 | Have n''t you one? |
45749 | Have none of you any sincerity? 45749 Have you any daughters?" |
45749 | Have you done your round, dear? |
45749 | Have you heard the news? |
45749 | Have you seen him, Tora? |
45749 | Have you told Nellie? |
45749 | Have you? 45749 He came to see you, did he? |
45749 | He ought to be with us, ought n''t he? |
45749 | He told you before? |
45749 | He wants to see me? |
45749 | His poems have such magnificent restlessness, have n''t they? 45749 How can I take what is hers?" |
45749 | How can you imagine I was thinking of Gerard? 45749 How did you like the Smiths?" |
45749 | How did you manage to shock the Squire so? |
45749 | How do I know, dear? 45749 How do you find it?" |
45749 | How do you know he loves you? |
45749 | How do you mean, mamma? |
45749 | How have we had the misfortune to offend the lady? |
45749 | How is she? |
45749 | How should he? |
45749 | How the deuce can I now? |
45749 | How the deuce does Hedger know everything? |
45749 | Hunting? 45749 I beg pardon?" |
45749 | I ca n''t tell him till he asks me, can I, dear? 45749 I could hardly venture to keep them, could I?" |
45749 | I dessay, now,said the Mayor,"that you ai nt been in the way of seein''the Squire lately?" |
45749 | I do n''t mean he''s a fool; I believe he''s an efficient officer----"Officer? 45749 I expect she blew him up, did n''t she?" |
45749 | I hope Mr. Roberts is not ill? |
45749 | I hope we shall see Miss Fane about soon, sir? |
45749 | I hope we shall see some more of them? |
45749 | I know what you mean, Jan. How can I, when I never have a chance of saying what I want to say to you? 45749 I know what you mean,"Tora continued;"but surely while they''re actually waiting, Mr. Bannister, we ca n''t treat them quite like ourselves? |
45749 | I know you are frozen,he went on;"and-- where is the servant?" |
45749 | I say, Phil, old chap, will you stop playing the fool for once, and give me your advice? |
45749 | I say, Phil, what do you think of Ripley? |
45749 | I should have been very conceited if I had, should n''t I? |
45749 | I should think not; and you have n''t found us thirsting for battle, have you? |
45749 | I suppose I do, but how can I help it? 45749 I suppose you do n''t like meeting those men?" |
45749 | I suppose you think Mr. Bannister''s right too? |
45749 | I suppose you think, just like me, too? |
45749 | I wonder how long they are going to stay at Littlehill? |
45749 | I wonder,pursued Dale,"if I shall ever be allowed to name that lady?" |
45749 | I? 45749 If I do, may I dedicate it to you?" |
45749 | If I wo n''t do it for two hundred sovereigns, does it stand to reason, sir, as I should do it to obleege? |
45749 | Ill? |
45749 | In London? 45749 Indeed?" |
45749 | Is Colonel Smith''county society''? |
45749 | Is Dale at home? |
45749 | Is anything the matter, Dale? |
45749 | Is he bad again? |
45749 | Is he crazy? |
45749 | Is he ill? |
45749 | Is he staying to- night? |
45749 | Is it insolent to spread the sale of your books? |
45749 | Is it my sort? 45749 Is n''t he? |
45749 | Is n''t it one? 45749 Is that a bad sign?" |
45749 | Is that all you have to say? |
45749 | Is that all? 45749 Is there any difference?" |
45749 | Is there? 45749 Is there?" |
45749 | It could n''t have been anything you said? |
45749 | It will be rather sport, wo n''t it? |
45749 | It''ll look rather ungracious, wo n''t it? 45749 It''s a pity to offend people, Jim, dear, is n''t it?" |
45749 | It''s lucky he knew this, is n''t it? |
45749 | Jim,she said,"did you know that Mrs. Gilkison was ill?" |
45749 | Johnstone''s window? 45749 Keep them? |
45749 | Lord, child,said the Squire,"are you only just back?" |
45749 | May I come in for a moment? |
45749 | May I go to her? |
45749 | May I not be serious? |
45749 | May n''t I help? |
45749 | Meanness? 45749 Might it?" |
45749 | Might n''t she come, Phil? |
45749 | Miss Delane sent this? |
45749 | Miss Fane? 45749 Mr. Delane, is n''t it?" |
45749 | Mr. Hume, do you think-- what do you think is the matter with Jim? |
45749 | Mr. Roberts? 45749 Mrs. Delane has not called, has she?" |
45749 | My dear Doctor, are n''t you a little----"Are you like that, too? |
45749 | My dear boy, what has that got to do with it? 45749 My dear fellow, how are the rest of us to get our masterpieces noticed? |
45749 | My other fancy? |
45749 | My sweet, who ever expected you to condemn yourself to certain death on the chance of saving me? 45749 No fire?" |
45749 | No reason to give? |
45749 | Not brilliant, papa? |
45749 | Not mean them? |
45749 | Now why do you say that? 45749 Now, honestly, do n''t you think these perfect yourself?" |
45749 | Oh, I suppose not; though how you didn''t---- I say, now, before you came to Denborough, did n''t you? |
45749 | Oh, did you? |
45749 | Oh, she''s come round, has she? |
45749 | Oh, wo n''t you let me? |
45749 | Oh, you''ve been there? |
45749 | On the publishers? 45749 One what, my dear?" |
45749 | Poetry? 45749 Possibly that is why Miss Smith failed to see me twice just now?" |
45749 | Quarrel? 45749 Queer start Mr. Bannister showin''up at the church bazaar, eh? |
45749 | Rash, Mr. Hume, sir? 45749 Really, Delane,"said the Colonel,"what possible business is that of yours?" |
45749 | Really, my dear, why should n''t she be fond of him? 45749 Really?" |
45749 | Roberts? 45749 Saw what, man?" |
45749 | Seen the_ Chronicle_, sir? |
45749 | Shall I? |
45749 | She never knew you had asked Miss Delane before? |
45749 | She thought, or I thought rather, that you might like to come with us for a while? |
45749 | She was running toward him, I suppose, to warn him? |
45749 | She''s a very old and good friend of mine,he said,"and it was just like her brave, unselfish way to----""What had you done to make her love you so?" |
45749 | She''s got no delusions? |
45749 | So Bannister has been at you? |
45749 | So the fat''s in the fire? |
45749 | Soft? 45749 Some things are right and some are wrong, are n''t they?" |
45749 | Spoils it? |
45749 | Supposing''e did, what then? 45749 Surely, Mr. Bannister,"added Janet,"we are all loyal, whatever our politics? |
45749 | Suspicions? 45749 That she was running away?" |
45749 | That''s away from Bannister? |
45749 | The Squire is shocked, eh? |
45749 | The only question is, will she think it a liberty? |
45749 | The worse? 45749 Then what the deuce is the good of asking me? |
45749 | Then why did n''t she? |
45749 | Then why do you go? |
45749 | Then you are a great man? |
45749 | Then you have n''t seen Johnstone''s window? |
45749 | Then you wo n''t have the verses? |
45749 | Think so? 45749 This is your house, is n''t it?" |
45749 | This wretched jingo doggerel yours? |
45749 | Those were the shocking political ones, I suppose? |
45749 | Thought you were tarred with the same brush as Dale, I suppose? |
45749 | To leave her and come and see me? |
45749 | Twice as good? |
45749 | Was I? 45749 Was he shocked? |
45749 | Was n''t he going? 45749 Was n''t it a pretty wedding?" |
45749 | Was she looking nice, Dale? |
45749 | Well, I shall tell people that-- may I? 45749 Well, Roberts, how are you?" |
45749 | Well, been stroked the right way, old man? |
45749 | Well, he is n''t in need of encouragement, is he? 45749 Well, we should be slow without Nellie, should n''t we? |
45749 | Well, what did''e say? |
45749 | Well, what do you say? 45749 Well, what do you suppose he meant?" |
45749 | Well, what is it this time? |
45749 | Well, why not? |
45749 | Well, will you ask him to? |
45749 | Well, wo n''t you come? |
45749 | Well, you do n''t suppose I wanted you to tell her to pack up? |
45749 | Well,she said, after tea was brought,"and what do you think of us?" |
45749 | Well? |
45749 | Well? |
45749 | Well? |
45749 | What I told her was right, I suppose? |
45749 | What about Nellie? |
45749 | What about? |
45749 | What are your eyes red for? 45749 What brings you here, Arthur?" |
45749 | What business is it of his? |
45749 | What business,he demanded,"has the fellow to quote me in support of his balderdash without my leave?" |
45749 | What did she say? |
45749 | What do I care for Dr. Roberts''fury? 45749 What do they say?" |
45749 | What do you mean, darling? 45749 What do you mean?" |
45749 | What do you say, Jan? |
45749 | What do you say? |
45749 | What do you want him for? |
45749 | What does Jan say? |
45749 | What does she say? 45749 What does the dear girl mean?" |
45749 | What does this mean, Bannister? |
45749 | What have you been, doing now? 45749 What in the world else is there?" |
45749 | What is she like? |
45749 | What sort of songs do you like? |
45749 | What the deuce do you know about it, Phil? 45749 What then?" |
45749 | What things? |
45749 | What title? |
45749 | What was it you said the other day-- was it only yesterday?--that you would die for me? |
45749 | What was n''t so bad? 45749 What will respectable circles say to''The Clarion,''eh, Dale?" |
45749 | What would the Squire say? |
45749 | What young woman? |
45749 | What''s he coming here for? |
45749 | What''s he like? |
45749 | What''s his name? |
45749 | What''s it about? 45749 What''s that got to do with it? |
45749 | What''s that, Jim? |
45749 | What''s that? |
45749 | What''s the matter with the man, my dear? |
45749 | What''s the matter, Dale? |
45749 | What''s the matter? |
45749 | What''s the meaning of this? |
45749 | What''s up now? |
45749 | What''s wrong with Nellie? |
45749 | What, are you going, Hedger? |
45749 | What, toward the house? |
45749 | What, you mean that Grange girl? |
45749 | What,said Dale gravely, filling his pipe,"do you think about getting married?" |
45749 | What? 45749 What? |
45749 | What? 45749 What?" |
45749 | What? |
45749 | When are we to see her? |
45749 | When are you going back? |
45749 | When? 45749 Where are the coals?" |
45749 | Where are you goin''? |
45749 | Where is it, Dale? |
45749 | Where will he go with great pleasure? |
45749 | Where''s Gerard? |
45749 | Where''s the joke in making Dale unhappy and-- and absurd? 45749 Where?" |
45749 | Who cares what they say? |
45749 | Who is she? 45749 Who is she?" |
45749 | Who is the fellow? |
45749 | Who knows,he concluded,"that Mr. Bannister may not figure as Sir Dale before long?" |
45749 | Who''s done this? |
45749 | Who''s taken it? |
45749 | Why could n''t he do it in London? 45749 Why did n''t you tell me? |
45749 | Why do you think that? 45749 Why does he want her to take them?" |
45749 | Why not? |
45749 | Why not? |
45749 | Why not? |
45749 | Why should n''t he like to dine at the Grange? |
45749 | Why should n''t he? |
45749 | Why should n''t you? |
45749 | Why should that shock him? |
45749 | Why the deuce does n''t he get his hair cut? |
45749 | Why what, child? |
45749 | Why, Nellie, what in the world''s the matter? |
45749 | Why, in Heaven''s name? |
45749 | Why, what''s he been up to now? |
45749 | Why? |
45749 | Wicked? 45749 Will she?" |
45749 | Will you do me a great favor? |
45749 | Wo n''t you have another cup? 45749 Would Mrs. Delane come?" |
45749 | Would you like to know him, Jan? |
45749 | Written a poem to a girl? 45749 Yes, he might as well be miserable somewhere else, might n''t he?" |
45749 | Yes, is n''t it? |
45749 | Yes, was n''t he? 45749 You ai nt seen the_ Standard_, sir?" |
45749 | You call it''Amor Patriæ?'' |
45749 | You do n''t mean that he sticks to that idea? |
45749 | You do n''t really think that, Miss Delane? |
45749 | You do n''t say? |
45749 | You do n''t take it ill of me, Dale? 45749 You do n''t think, Hume, do you, that he''s getting any less-- less in earnest, you know?" |
45749 | You do n''t, do you, Dale? |
45749 | You have n''t asked Hedger and Johnstone, have you? |
45749 | You have no pleasure in obedience? |
45749 | You have read my poetry? |
45749 | You know Janet is in a dreadful state? 45749 You know how censorious people are, and how a girl takes alarm at the very idea of anything-- you know?" |
45749 | You like people who lead their friends on and then forsake them? |
45749 | You like them? |
45749 | You mean Bannister? |
45749 | You mean I ought to go to her? |
45749 | You mean it was impertinent? |
45749 | You mean very slow? |
45749 | You too? 45749 You were there, were n''t you?" |
45749 | You will not let me do it for you? |
45749 | You wo n''t do it? |
45749 | You wo n''t withdraw this? |
45749 | You would cut short your honeymoon in order to come back? |
45749 | You would have kept them? |
45749 | You wrote that poem? |
45749 | You''ll see Miss Fane about it? 45749 You''ll stay?" |
45749 | _ Crying_, Dale? 45749 ''What''s your figger, sir?'' 45749 After all, good looks do go for something, do n''t they? |
45749 | Ah, but why, why had she not called? |
45749 | All I want to know is if you wrote this thing?" |
45749 | And Miss Fane-- I say, have you seen her, Colonel?" |
45749 | And ah, why did he go so much to the Grange? |
45749 | And what was he plotting? |
45749 | And why did I ever make him love me? |
45749 | And you dedicate it----""Oh, is that there?" |
45749 | And, Dale, may I ask Arthur Angell down for a day or two?" |
45749 | And-- wasn''t it splendid?" |
45749 | Anything in our line, sir?" |
45749 | Are n''t we, Phil?" |
45749 | Are you frightened?" |
45749 | As I said to my daughters, says I:''Now, girls, which of you is goin''to save your young man''s life?'' |
45749 | As to Dale''s poem, who knows the value of Dale''s poem? |
45749 | At any other time, of course----""You''d take a walk with them?" |
45749 | Bannister?" |
45749 | Bannister?" |
45749 | Bannister?" |
45749 | Bannister?" |
45749 | Bannister?" |
45749 | Bannister?" |
45749 | Bannister?" |
45749 | Bannister?" |
45749 | Bannister?--Have I the pleasure?" |
45749 | Besides, who wants a change? |
45749 | But Janet did not mind his sulkiness; she smiled, and sang, and smiled, for she was thinking-- but is nothing to be sacred from a prying race? |
45749 | But a lot depends on the girl, does n''t it?" |
45749 | But afterward----""You were actually engaged then?" |
45749 | But if I fail? |
45749 | But what can I do? |
45749 | But when are you going to give me the pleasure of seeing you at Littlehill?" |
45749 | But why did he leave her so much-- leave her to Arthur Angell? |
45749 | But why is she staying there?" |
45749 | But why should you?" |
45749 | Could not these people let him alone? |
45749 | Dale pressed her hand and said:"Well, Nellie?" |
45749 | Dale, in his good humor, said:"Why the deuce, Phil, do you go on fidgeting with that thing? |
45749 | Delane?" |
45749 | Did you have any talk with her to- day?" |
45749 | Did you leave Tom quiet?" |
45749 | Did you say you''d seen it, sir?" |
45749 | Do n''t you agree with me, Nellie?" |
45749 | Do n''t you agree with me, Nellie?" |
45749 | Do n''t you like seeing me?" |
45749 | Do n''t you think so, Squire?" |
45749 | Do you hear? |
45749 | Do you hear?" |
45749 | Do you know Miss Delane?" |
45749 | Do you know what his next move is?" |
45749 | Do you like the title?" |
45749 | Do you love me?" |
45749 | Do you think I could learn to hunt, Sir Harry?" |
45749 | Do you think she will-- hereafter?" |
45749 | Do you think she will?" |
45749 | Do you think you could dress and see him?" |
45749 | Do you want to keep them?" |
45749 | Do you want to see him about anything?" |
45749 | Do you''ear_ me_? |
45749 | Does he like you?" |
45749 | Does this stuff bore you?" |
45749 | Enough? |
45749 | From what your father said?" |
45749 | Had the man been a hypocrite from the first? |
45749 | Has he asked her?" |
45749 | Has n''t he, Sir Harry?" |
45749 | Has that ruffian driven her out of her senses?" |
45749 | Have you also provided a Sunday hat?" |
45749 | Have you any news from the Grange?" |
45749 | Have you been crying?" |
45749 | Have you been in the town to- day, Dale?" |
45749 | Have you met her?" |
45749 | Have you seen him lately?" |
45749 | He said nothing, and she went on:"People who are clever and-- and great, you know, ought to be so careful that they are right, ought n''t they?" |
45749 | He strode quickly across the road to where the Doctor stood, and said to him hotly:"This is your work, is it?" |
45749 | He was not a bad bird as birds go-- but not a bird to break one''s heart about, Nellie: what bird is?" |
45749 | Hedger?" |
45749 | Hodge really would n''t do, would it, Mrs. Hodge? |
45749 | Hodge?" |
45749 | How am I to afford a change? |
45749 | How could he? |
45749 | How could people speak of friendship or gratitude, or both together, as if they were, or were in themselves likely to lead to, love? |
45749 | How do you like it?" |
45749 | How for shame shall men rebuke them? |
45749 | How have you forsaken me?" |
45749 | How much money has he left you?" |
45749 | How nice it was of her to be so brave, was n''t it?" |
45749 | How soon? |
45749 | How?" |
45749 | Hume?" |
45749 | I believe----""Well, what?" |
45749 | I ca n''t do what I think wrong, can I?" |
45749 | I do_ love_ that severe, statuesque style, do n''t you? |
45749 | I hope she is going?" |
45749 | I hope the ladies are well?" |
45749 | I met Mr. Hume, and asked him about it, and he said----""It wan''t no business o''yours, did n''t he?" |
45749 | I suppose you''re going to skate?" |
45749 | I think I had better write a note, though-- don''t you think so, Phil? |
45749 | I think she had an idea I liked Jan.""Yes, but not more?" |
45749 | I wanted to drop politics and so on, and be friendly----""Do you know what you''re saying, or the meanness of it?" |
45749 | If I told you I loved you still-- how could you believe me? |
45749 | If no evil consequences exist to be averted, why should we punish?" |
45749 | If you could love me, how much more must you love her?" |
45749 | If you leave us,--you, the leader we trusted,--where are we, where are we?" |
45749 | Ill treating that poor young man again?" |
45749 | Is anyone ill-- your little boy?" |
45749 | Is it sham with all of you? |
45749 | Is it, Tora?" |
45749 | Is n''t she lovely? |
45749 | Is she fond of him?" |
45749 | Is that what you do with yours?" |
45749 | Is there anything on?" |
45749 | It was Roberts, and-- what did he mean? |
45749 | It''s not much in your line, is it?" |
45749 | It''s so nice when people are good and pretty too, is n''t it? |
45749 | Jan, when is this sort of thing to end? |
45749 | Janet would understand why; of course she would, she must; and even if she did not, what was that to him? |
45749 | Janet, will you give us some music?" |
45749 | Lived there a man who could call his love for Janet a"fancy"? |
45749 | May I keep them?" |
45749 | May I look?" |
45749 | Mayor?" |
45749 | Mr. Hume, has he told you anything about his visit yesterday?" |
45749 | Not really?" |
45749 | Now would_ you_ ask Mrs. Maggs, or Mrs. Jenks, or Mrs. Capper, or any o''that lot, ma''am?" |
45749 | Now, Jan?" |
45749 | Now, had you?" |
45749 | Now, will he?" |
45749 | Now, wo n''t he come?'' |
45749 | O Dale, how can you leave her?" |
45749 | Oh, could she be in time? |
45749 | Oh, what shall I do?" |
45749 | Oh, you''re on the other side? |
45749 | Once Nellie had been conscious, had asked"Is he safe?" |
45749 | One did not expect to meet the tradesmen of the town; and what business had the Doctor there? |
45749 | Only----""Only what?" |
45749 | Or was he merely a weak fool? |
45749 | Rather rash, is n''t it?" |
45749 | Roberts?" |
45749 | Sally, where are you?" |
45749 | Shall I go?" |
45749 | Shall I like it?" |
45749 | Shall we go upstairs and ask Janet for a song?" |
45749 | Shall you come to the lake?" |
45749 | She murmured an excuse, and he went on:"Is the Doctor in? |
45749 | She sat in a low chair with her feet on a stool, and now, tilting the chair back, she fixed her eyes on Mr. Delane, and asked:"Are you shocked?" |
45749 | She sings, does n''t she? |
45749 | She takes rather severe measures, does n''t she?" |
45749 | Should not love be sudden too? |
45749 | Sir Harry returned his salute with a cheery"How are you?" |
45749 | So are you, are n''t you?" |
45749 | So you''re going to do it?" |
45749 | Tall or short?" |
45749 | That she did n''t save you?" |
45749 | The Colonel was delighted; was he at last escaping from the stifling prison of conventionality and breathing a freer air? |
45749 | The latter was just saying:"Have you looked at the verses at all, Miss Delane?" |
45749 | The young man was beyond question a force; was it outside of ingenuity to turn him in a better direction? |
45749 | Then he smiled good- humoredly and said:"Shall I prophesy unto you?" |
45749 | Then she added, in an outburst of impatience:"Why did you ever come to this miserable little place?" |
45749 | There does n''t seem much for a man to do here, does there?" |
45749 | There''s the old Mote Hall, and the Roman pavement and----Oh, but will he come here, papa-- to the Grange?" |
45749 | These were against religion and----""Well?" |
45749 | They had hardly started when he turned to her:"Why did you send back my verses?" |
45749 | Think you will be able?" |
45749 | This is-- but I expect you know these gentlemen?" |
45749 | Tora smiled for a minute; then she wiped her eyes again, and asked gravely:"Are you never serious?" |
45749 | True, it would have been a good revenge on the Doctor, and it would have pleased----"Shall you do the ode?" |
45749 | Was it possible that she and the Colonel had been hasty in stretching out the hand of welcome to Mrs. Hodge and her daughter? |
45749 | Was it possible that she meant to abide by her insane resolve to break off their engagement? |
45749 | We all open our eyes at him, do n''t we, Mr. Hume? |
45749 | Well, then, the hat will do-- as a week- day hat, I mean?" |
45749 | Well, you refuse to help me?" |
45749 | Were they only actors-- or amusing themselves? |
45749 | What a terrible facer for our celebrations, is n''t it?" |
45749 | What change do most workers get?" |
45749 | What did that matter? |
45749 | What did you get for yours?" |
45749 | What difference can it make whether I live in London or the country? |
45749 | What do you mean, sir?" |
45749 | What do you mean?" |
45749 | What do you mean?" |
45749 | What do you mean?" |
45749 | What do you want me to do?" |
45749 | What does Johnstone want with a window?" |
45749 | What does he want to make a row for?" |
45749 | What even would Nellie herself, for all her ready sympathies? |
45749 | What for?" |
45749 | What had he done? |
45749 | What have I to do with it?" |
45749 | What have you been doing?" |
45749 | What if Arthur were right? |
45749 | What if it were he? |
45749 | What is it?" |
45749 | What shall I do? |
45749 | What then?" |
45749 | What was that they said about a pistol? |
45749 | What will you have?" |
45749 | What would dear old Mother Hodge understand of all that? |
45749 | What''s that mad feller Roberts to you?" |
45749 | What''s the matter with him? |
45749 | What''s the matter, darling? |
45749 | What? |
45749 | When do you go?" |
45749 | Where is it to appear?" |
45749 | Where''s Nellie?" |
45749 | Where''s that paper?" |
45749 | Who could talk like that about Dale, if he were sane? |
45749 | Who was that girl? |
45749 | Why did I ever love him?" |
45749 | Why did people think there was any good in lies? |
45749 | Why did she ask after you the first moment she was conscious?" |
45749 | Why did she follow you? |
45749 | Why did she follow you? |
45749 | Why did she go out at all? |
45749 | Why did she risk her life? |
45749 | Why did you keep me in the dark? |
45749 | Why did you tempt me?" |
45749 | Why do n''t I wish to see her again? |
45749 | Why do n''t you give her a change?" |
45749 | Why not?" |
45749 | Why should n''t he?" |
45749 | Why should n''t you stay till Monday?" |
45749 | Why should n''t you take their present?" |
45749 | Why should n''t you write some verses to the young man?" |
45749 | Why should she give her life for you? |
45749 | Why should they care for Denborough''s approval? |
45749 | Why should you literary men bother with politics?" |
45749 | Why would n''t she come now? |
45749 | Why, it''s not Dale Bannister, is it?" |
45749 | Will you and Mrs. Delane come, Squire?" |
45749 | Will you let me help you?" |
45749 | Will you let me?" |
45749 | Will you?" |
45749 | With such rewards for bad play, who would play well? |
45749 | Wo n''t you come to our help?" |
45749 | Would n''t it be splendid?" |
45749 | Would she care for such an offer? |
45749 | You choose your friends, why may n''t he choose his? |
45749 | You do n''t mind being guessed, do you? |
45749 | You say he has gone away?" |
45749 | You want to marry her, do n''t you?" |
45749 | You would like to see him, Jan?" |
45749 | You''ll come too, Arthur?" |
45749 | You''ll come, Harry?" |
45749 | _ Ça va sans dire._ But how can Arthur help you?" |
45749 | did he?" |
45749 | does he, by Jove?" |
45749 | does he?" |
45749 | how could he? |
45749 | how may we Blame, whose fathers died and slew, to leave us free?" |
45749 | she does n''t look very happy, does she? |
45749 | what''s there to cry about?" |
45749 | what?" |
45749 | when?" |
45749 | who the deuce could make love in London?" |
45749 | why did she come between you and the shot? |
45749 | you whom we all admire so? |
45749 | you''re not going yet? |
57690 | A little? 57690 A promise?" |
57690 | Ah, Harry,he said,"can you not trust me?" |
57690 | All? 57690 Alone?" |
57690 | And Harry Vail is poor, you say? |
57690 | And Jim? |
57690 | And after him? |
57690 | And do you believe in this illness? |
57690 | And do you forgive me? |
57690 | And have you arranged another day like this for to- morrow? |
57690 | And have you been waiting for us since then, Uncle Francis? |
57690 | And how are you, my dearest boy? |
57690 | And may I ask who is going to do the murdering? |
57690 | And now,she concluded,"am I to promise or not?" |
57690 | And so people talk of it still, do they? 57690 And the house is all surrounded like an island? |
57690 | And then? |
57690 | And what about him? |
57690 | And what could he tell you? |
57690 | And what did Mr. Francis say? |
57690 | And who is Jim? |
57690 | And who put the cartridge in that gun? |
57690 | And why had he come? |
57690 | And will you go to the dance? |
57690 | And you really wish to know? |
57690 | And you, dear Harry,he asked, as they had seated themselves, after Mr. Francis had said grace,"what are your plans? |
57690 | And you-- don''t you want to go to sleep? 57690 Anxiety?" |
57690 | Any skeletons? |
57690 | Are you made of flesh and blood? |
57690 | Are you not well? |
57690 | Are you quite sure? 57690 Are you really beginning to believe in that nonsense, Harry?" |
57690 | Are you sure? |
57690 | Are you weighing your words? |
57690 | Armytage? |
57690 | Big, large, and open? |
57690 | But are n''t you frightened? |
57690 | But did n''t Kimber clean the gun afterward? |
57690 | But do you think that your now consenting to take it proves that I was wrong? 57690 But his people?" |
57690 | But how will Harry know, unless he knows of your coming? |
57690 | But is it not pure assumption that he is acting a part? |
57690 | But it missed him completely? |
57690 | But the legend; what does the legend mean? |
57690 | But what is it? 57690 But what is it?" |
57690 | But what shall I tell Jim? |
57690 | But why? |
57690 | But wo n''t it be rather rude to Lord Vail? |
57690 | But you wo n''t tell Harry to- night? |
57690 | But-- but are n''t you frightened? |
57690 | By the way, Geoff,he said,"supposing you looked out the name of a man whom you did not know, and had only once heard of, in a''Where is it?'' |
57690 | By the way, how did you get in? |
57690 | By the way, speaking of your friend Mr. Langham, I may tell Mr. Francis that he has left, if I think it wise? |
57690 | Ca n''t you hear what I say? |
57690 | Ca n''t you-- in case we are in time-- just ask his forgiveness for the wrong you did him? 57690 Can you explain the idiocy of your smile when you entered?" |
57690 | Can you tell me about it; the merest outline only? 57690 Can you think of any other motive?" |
57690 | Cobwebs-- what cobwebs? |
57690 | Cold partridge for any one but me? 57690 Come where-- how? |
57690 | Could n''t he see that the thing was tottery? |
57690 | Dear Miss Evie,he said,"will you allow a very old man to take a very great liberty? |
57690 | Dear Uncle Francis,he said,"what was his opinion of your health? |
57690 | Dear aunt, have you been very honourable lately? |
57690 | Dear boy, is it wise? |
57690 | Dear fellow, so near as that, so near as that, is it? |
57690 | Dear lad, have you had a very tedious day? |
57690 | Did Sanders tell you about the attack? |
57690 | Did he also think it was you? |
57690 | Did you have a nice walk? |
57690 | Did you think I should? |
57690 | Did you warn him? |
57690 | Do n''t you understand them? 57690 Do you know him?" |
57690 | Do you know what your words mean? |
57690 | Do you mean exactly what you say? |
57690 | Do you mean to say you believe in it all? |
57690 | Do you not see? |
57690 | Do you not think that you are putting an unfair pressure on me? |
57690 | Do you realize what that demands? |
57690 | Do you really want to hear it? 57690 Do you remember that evening when we went to find Dr. Godfrey, Geoff?" |
57690 | Do you think I am the sort of man to be thwarted by a faithless subordinate? |
57690 | Do you think I want to get rid of you? 57690 Do you think we ought to go back?" |
57690 | Does Mr. Francis know of either? |
57690 | Does a man in the jaws of death, I may say, play the flute? |
57690 | Does no one know it, except you and me? |
57690 | Does that seem to you reasonable? |
57690 | Evidence? 57690 Fancy- dress ball, I suppose?" |
57690 | Forgive you? 57690 Geoff, Geoff, would you leave me alone, alone in London, like Jessica''s first prayer? |
57690 | Geoff, I wonder if you and I will be as gay as that when we are over seventy years old? |
57690 | Geoff, have you got a headache? |
57690 | Geoff, shall we go for a swim? |
57690 | Geoffrey-- Jim-- what are you doing here? |
57690 | Geoffrey? |
57690 | Good luck for which? |
57690 | Got everything you want? |
57690 | Halloo; have you been opening the old summerhouse? |
57690 | Harry, why will you not tell me, and save my asking you all these questions? 57690 Has the Luck been singing its nursery rhymes?" |
57690 | Have I not told you? 57690 Have I then lost another friend in addition to Geoffrey?" |
57690 | Have a whisky and soda? |
57690 | Have you a private joy, Lord Vail? |
57690 | Have you bad news from Vail? |
57690 | Have you ever heard of a Dr. Godfrey, heart specialist, I take it, who lives at 32 Wimpole Street? |
57690 | Have you forgotten something? |
57690 | Have you quarrelled? |
57690 | Have you read the Home Secretary''s speech at Manchester? 57690 Have you the key of it?" |
57690 | He comes to- night? |
57690 | He has gone? 57690 He is not dead? |
57690 | He is your only relation, is he not? |
57690 | He was not touched? |
57690 | He was shooting in Scotland, was he not? |
57690 | How can that pewter pot break down a sluice, and put a cartridge in your gun, and make you go to the ice house instead of the summerhouse? |
57690 | How can you talk such utter nonsense? |
57690 | How did his face strike you? 57690 How did you know that?" |
57690 | How do you suppose they live, Aunt Violet? |
57690 | How is that? 57690 How long do you suppose we were waiting in the dark?" |
57690 | How old is he? |
57690 | How so? |
57690 | How strange? |
57690 | How two? |
57690 | How''s the Luck? |
57690 | I am; but what evidence have we? 57690 I can spare him pity.--How are you, Lady Oxted?" |
57690 | I have drunk obediently to the Luck, night after night, have I not, Harry? |
57690 | I have your leave? |
57690 | I know; is n''t it sad, and we have been married less than a year? 57690 I tried to make myself agreeable to him, but apparently I failed, for he simply yawned in my face, and said,''Where''s Harry?''" |
57690 | I wonder if it is rude to go away? |
57690 | I wonder whether you would care to hear some more family history? |
57690 | I''ll wake the helper.--I brought in the rifle, Mr. Geoffrey; you left it by the lake.--Shall I help bring in the plate, sir? |
57690 | I''m working all the morning, Geoff,said Harry;"what will you do with yourself? |
57690 | If so, are you prepared to die? |
57690 | In what other way has an awful fate dogged Harry? |
57690 | Including about going to bed and going to sleep, Evie? |
57690 | Is Geoff going to Oxted? |
57690 | Is Harry''s safety all? |
57690 | Is Mr. Francis there? |
57690 | Is Saul also among the prophets? |
57690 | Is Uncle Bob a cynic? |
57690 | Is he fond of him? |
57690 | Is he going to continue being with you, then? |
57690 | Is he out still? |
57690 | Is he well? |
57690 | Is it as exciting as the Luck? |
57690 | Is it dead, sir? |
57690 | Is it done? 57690 Is it not a pity to say a thing like that?" |
57690 | Is it possible by any means to get hold of this man Sanders? |
57690 | Is that a bribe? |
57690 | Is that all? |
57690 | Is that the end? |
57690 | Is that you, Jim? |
57690 | Is the man Colonial Secretary,he asked,"or is he the autocrat of all the Englands? |
57690 | Is the nursery rhyme nearly finished? |
57690 | Is there nothing I can do? |
57690 | Is this supposed to be bright and engaging conversation? |
57690 | Is your doctor a really first- rate man? 57690 It is I who go, you mean?" |
57690 | It is about him you would tell me? |
57690 | It is long after twelve, do you know? |
57690 | It is strange, is it not? |
57690 | Jim is the name of the groom? 57690 Just give me your arm, Uncle Francis, will you? |
57690 | Laugh? |
57690 | Look here, Geoff, are you playing the fool? |
57690 | Lord Vail-- who is he? |
57690 | May I tell your uncle this, Lord Vail? |
57690 | May I then use my discretion to tell him so, if I think it desirable? |
57690 | Mr. Geoffrey Langham? |
57690 | My Gawd, what''s that? |
57690 | My dear boy, what is the matter? |
57690 | My dear fellow,he cried,"I hope you are not hurt?" |
57690 | Not appreciate? |
57690 | Not the promise you made me? |
57690 | Now why''Poor Evie''? |
57690 | Now why,continued Lady Oxted, speaking rapidly,"should he wish to separate the two? |
57690 | Now, tell me the truth, like George Washington,said Harry,"were you listening?" |
57690 | O Geoffrey,he said,"can not you do what I asked? |
57690 | O Harry, what has happened? |
57690 | Of course, you will change your clothes at once, will you not? 57690 Oh, tea first,"he said, not meaning it;"one can change afterward.--Are you going now, Geoff? |
57690 | Oh, why do you do that? |
57690 | Old Francis? |
57690 | On the day of the gun- room affair-- well? |
57690 | On the way? |
57690 | Or has Uncle Bob been doubting your fine qualities? |
57690 | Our reporter has been visiting the scene of the dastardly attempt,he said;"something spicy for the evening papers, Geoff? |
57690 | Play the flute? |
57690 | Shades of the prison house begin to grow around the growing boy, do they? 57690 Shall I have to hold your hand?" |
57690 | Shall I send for the doctor? |
57690 | Shall I stop and keep you company in London? |
57690 | Shall I telegraph to them to meet it? |
57690 | Shall I? 57690 Shall we not go out?" |
57690 | She still thinks so about it? |
57690 | So am not I,he said.--"Well, Harry?" |
57690 | Tell me about it; what is it, Uncle Francis? |
57690 | Tell me,he said,"when did you determine to help Harry?" |
57690 | That all? |
57690 | That he has gone to London? |
57690 | That is all? |
57690 | That means I must n''t have any, does it? |
57690 | The beastly pot? 57690 The face? |
57690 | The old box hedge? |
57690 | Then her mother had not told her all? |
57690 | Then you think he knows of the secret passage? |
57690 | Think of what? |
57690 | This sort of thing has gone on before, then? |
57690 | This? 57690 To continue, have you ever heard of a Dr. G. Armytage, heart specialist, of 32 Wimpole Street?" |
57690 | To meet them? |
57690 | To whom? |
57690 | Very cold, is it not? |
57690 | Was that suggestion right? |
57690 | Was the water in the lake very high? |
57690 | We have to act immediately, you mean? |
57690 | Well? |
57690 | Well? |
57690 | Well? |
57690 | Well? |
57690 | What are you afraid of, then? |
57690 | What awful fate is it that dogs poor Harry? |
57690 | What can I add? 57690 What can I say or do? |
57690 | What can I say? |
57690 | What circumstances? |
57690 | What conclusion? |
57690 | What do you mean? 57690 What do you mean?" |
57690 | What do you say? 57690 What does it all mean?" |
57690 | What does one know of him? |
57690 | What else did you say? |
57690 | What had he done? 57690 What happened to it afterward? |
57690 | What happiness, Harry? |
57690 | What has that got to do with it? |
57690 | What have we done, Harry,he said,"that this should happen to us? |
57690 | What have you done with it? |
57690 | What have you got to tell me? |
57690 | What is he coming here for? |
57690 | What is it now, Evie? |
57690 | What is that great cup he is holding? |
57690 | What is that? |
57690 | What more, indeed, could there be? 57690 What on earth do you mean?" |
57690 | What sort of advice? |
57690 | What''s that about me? |
57690 | What''s the matter? |
57690 | What? |
57690 | When did Harry score? |
57690 | Where do the fire, and frost, and rain come in? |
57690 | Where have you been? |
57690 | Where is my uncle? 57690 Where is she?" |
57690 | Where shall I go? |
57690 | Where to? |
57690 | Where? |
57690 | Who are delighted? |
57690 | Who is it? |
57690 | Who talked of laughing? 57690 Who was that?" |
57690 | Why ca n''t the old brute speak? |
57690 | Why could n''t he have told me? 57690 Why did you do that?" |
57690 | Why not? |
57690 | Why not? |
57690 | Why? |
57690 | Why? |
57690 | Will Sanders sleep in his room to- night? |
57690 | Will you have the third adventure or not? 57690 Will you read that?" |
57690 | Will you show me my way? |
57690 | With the greatest pleasure,she said.--"Are you coming, too, Aunt Violet?" |
57690 | With the men? |
57690 | Wo n''t you come with me? |
57690 | Wo n''t you have it lit? |
57690 | Would it not be likely to reassure him to know you are here? |
57690 | Would you give me the key, Uncle Francis? 57690 Yes, but where?" |
57690 | Yes, his very simplicity has a certain charm, has it not? 57690 Yes, they are beautiful,"she said, and as they turned,"is Vail entirely full of doubles?" |
57690 | Yes, yes, so he would, so he would,said Mr. Francis;"and we used to have great games together, did we not, Harry? |
57690 | Yes-- Uncle Francis told me that,said Harry,"and who made him forget which was which of the two houses? |
57690 | Yes? |
57690 | Yes? |
57690 | Yesterday-- what of yesterday? |
57690 | You agree with me, then? |
57690 | You are absolutely determined? |
57690 | You are alluding to mine, apparently? |
57690 | You are going to Oxted for the Sunday, are you not? |
57690 | You are not going to do anything foolish, Harry? |
57690 | You are sure there is nothing more? 57690 You found--?" |
57690 | You have continued it? |
57690 | You knew what? |
57690 | You know the story? |
57690 | You know? 57690 You mean he looks wicked?" |
57690 | You mean the Luck? |
57690 | You really only called once? |
57690 | You see exactly what that will come to? |
57690 | You will be down soon? |
57690 | You will like to have people here, will you not, Uncle Francis? |
57690 | You''re not hurt? |
57690 | Your uncle? |
57690 | Your''Where is it?'' 57690 ''What are you going to do?'' 57690 A solution and a rescue he felt there must be, but in what direction did it lie? 57690 Accordingly, at dinner that night, in a pause in the conversation, Harry suddenly asked:Seen Dr. Godfrey again, Uncle Francis?" |
57690 | All well? |
57690 | An extraordinary delusion in so clear- headed a man, is it not? |
57690 | And Harry?" |
57690 | And after that lesson, should not the pupil give him credit for some motive, unguessable even as that had been, but equally thoughtful? |
57690 | And at that sight a sudden question asked itself in the girl''s mind: How could it possibly be Harry they had seen in the wood? |
57690 | And did you see the Luck when you were down last week?" |
57690 | And do you know the cause of it?" |
57690 | And for Jim?" |
57690 | And here is Harry; what has he got?" |
57690 | And how did Dr. Armytage come to be at Vail at all?" |
57690 | And how was it that it never occurred to Mr. Francis that the two figures they saw were Jim and his young woman? |
57690 | And if he heard it, what, to judge by Geoffrey''s previous knowledge of him, his only guide in this lonely hour, would be his manner of taking it? |
57690 | And now have I your pardon for doing what I have done?" |
57690 | And the Luck is there? |
57690 | And this passage comes out at the back of old Francis''s portrait? |
57690 | And what was that spouting column of yellowness and foam three hundred yards farther up, standing like a fountain in mid stream? |
57690 | And where is Geoffrey?" |
57690 | And where is he?" |
57690 | And who can say that each sense was not given us in order that we should cultivate it to the fullest?" |
57690 | And who cares which is the best? |
57690 | And will you like to take a tramp round the old place with me, as you suggested last night?" |
57690 | And yet, and yet, how can one believe it? |
57690 | And you feel, you really feel, all you said to me?" |
57690 | And you go home, do n''t you? |
57690 | And you have improved your advantage, dear Godfrey?" |
57690 | And you intend to take me to London at the end of the week?" |
57690 | Anything extra for a secret door?" |
57690 | Apologize for it instantly; do you hear? |
57690 | Are our fears real? |
57690 | Are you a bear?" |
57690 | Are you ready? |
57690 | Are you shooting to- day, or skating? |
57690 | Armytage?" |
57690 | Armytage?" |
57690 | Aunt Violet, how could you want Lord Vail not to tell me the story of the Luck? |
57690 | But a man must die somehow; is it not so? |
57690 | But have n''t you ever had a shave of being shot? |
57690 | But how could a cartridge have been in the gun? |
57690 | But how long do you stop here?" |
57690 | But now tell me, is Harry all right?" |
57690 | But now that is all right; mother would not tell me, and you( knowing her wish, is it not so?) |
57690 | But supposing he is swiftly and secretly needed, how are we to get him into the house?" |
57690 | But thank you, thank you.--Luggage all in? |
57690 | But what could he do? |
57690 | But what could they do even together? |
57690 | But when, where? |
57690 | But where is the Luck?" |
57690 | But why and how is Geoff here, and Jim? |
57690 | But why, why not have told me, Uncle Francis? |
57690 | But will you do all you can or are told to do?" |
57690 | But will you then come to Vail, Lord Oxford? |
57690 | But, tell me, is Harry very angry with me? |
57690 | By rain, indeed, it had been, but where, taxing ingenuity to the utmost, did Mr. Francis come in? |
57690 | By the sluice, you say?" |
57690 | By the way, Geoffrey, where will you sleep?--You too, Jim? |
57690 | By the way, do you call him Harry yet?" |
57690 | By the way, had she ever seen Jim?" |
57690 | By the way, how do you and he get on together? |
57690 | By the way, what of Lady Oxted?" |
57690 | By the way, where is the spurious Geoff,--the old one, I mean?" |
57690 | By the way, which is which?" |
57690 | Can I have left the other cartridge in? |
57690 | Can you get into the stable so late?" |
57690 | Can you, however vaguely, account for this? |
57690 | Come, which is it to be?" |
57690 | Dear me, I wonder whether Bob looked as idiotic as that when we were engaged? |
57690 | Did anybody ever hear of such Luck?" |
57690 | Did anything else strike you in the picture? |
57690 | Did he know Harry as well as she-- he who had known him all his life, she who had known him a month, no more? |
57690 | Did he take it all as lightly as you seem to?" |
57690 | Did he think that the elements were in league with some occult power of magic and darkness that he possessed? |
57690 | Did his name begin with an A?" |
57690 | Did not that argue a loophole of encouraging amplitude? |
57690 | Did the two young people get on well together?" |
57690 | Did you call me more than once, Geoff?" |
57690 | Did you drive them?" |
57690 | Did you ever hear it spoken of?" |
57690 | Did you ever hear of the Harmsworth case-- the death of Harold Harmsworth?" |
57690 | Did you lock it?" |
57690 | Did you mean him to be refused? |
57690 | Diplomacy?" |
57690 | Do I not know him? |
57690 | Do either of them walk?" |
57690 | Do you acquit me? |
57690 | Do you follow?" |
57690 | Do you know, I am very sleepy?" |
57690 | Do you know, for instance, that Mr. Francis tried to persuade Miss Aylwin to overlook the fact that she had seen you walking with a dairymaid? |
57690 | Do you not see how absurd such an idea is? |
57690 | Do you promise never to tell me the name of that man?" |
57690 | Do you really mean it, Geoff? |
57690 | Do you remember saying to me once that little things like baths and tea were much more important than anything else?" |
57690 | Do you remember what you told me about Dr. Godfrey and Dr. Armytage? |
57690 | Do you remember, dear aunt, and you snored loud and long under the trees on the lawn all that blessed afternoon? |
57690 | Do you shoot, Uncle Francis?" |
57690 | Do you think I''ve been encouraging it too much? |
57690 | Do you think it is fine fun for me to tell you to go? |
57690 | Do you think it may be so?" |
57690 | Do you think it''s the Queen? |
57690 | Do you want to stay for the last act?" |
57690 | Do you want to tell me of some decision you have made, and wish me to agree with you, or is it possible that you have not yet made your decision? |
57690 | Does Dr. Godfrey live there?" |
57690 | Does he blame me, as he has every right to do, very severely?" |
57690 | Does it hurt you, Harry?" |
57690 | Does it please you?" |
57690 | Does that influence your conclusion?" |
57690 | Else how was it conceivable that she should not have said those two words,"Francis Vail"? |
57690 | Even if this was so, why should Harry at once wish to go to Lady Oxted? |
57690 | Evie did n''t mention him, and then we began talking-- well, we began talking about something else.--Poor old Geoff, how goes it? |
57690 | Fine hall, is it not? |
57690 | Fire and frost and rain, is n''t it? |
57690 | Francis?" |
57690 | Francis?" |
57690 | Francis?" |
57690 | Games, did I say? |
57690 | Geoffrey, what is that sinister man doing at Vail? |
57690 | Geoffrey?" |
57690 | Godfrey?" |
57690 | Had I better tell you everything?" |
57690 | Had he already forgotten that he had given you a direction that nearly sent you to your death? |
57690 | Had he been hoodwinked throughout? |
57690 | Had she not said to Harry,"Is Vail full of doubles?" |
57690 | Harry found the keys, and as he turned to leave the room--"The one on the left is the summerhouse?" |
57690 | Harry is liked by his servants, is he not? |
57690 | Has Godfrey given you any of his quelling looks, I wonder? |
57690 | Has he no relations?" |
57690 | Have there been no suspicious circumstances of any kind which might lead any one to think that these were not entirely accidents? |
57690 | Have they come back from their walk?" |
57690 | Have you the keys? |
57690 | He got two thousand pounds, you tell me, for his services in connection with the Harmsworth case: what will he not do for ten? |
57690 | He had thought Harry safe for the night, at any rate, but what could be safe from that mask of rage and hatred he had just seen? |
57690 | He had written, according to his own account, a letter to Geoffrey which should avoid this, but what did his letter really contain? |
57690 | He says-- let me see, where is it?" |
57690 | He was almost crying, said Kimber: do you remember how he wounded a hare last Christmas, and was out for an hour trying to recover it? |
57690 | He was satisfied?" |
57690 | He will not die?" |
57690 | His brain had told him that he did not mean to go to bed yet; had it not told him something more? |
57690 | His own happiness could not be purchased at the cost of suffering to that kindly old man; and who knew how much he might be suffering even now? |
57690 | How are you, my dear boy, this morning? |
57690 | How can I communicate with you?" |
57690 | How can it be your private joy?" |
57690 | How can you want it trimmed and cut?" |
57690 | How could it be possible? |
57690 | How could she, she asked herself, have been so distrustful, so malicious, so ready to blacken? |
57690 | How did Harry rank the urgency of indoor luxuries with regard to outdoor improvements? |
57690 | How did she know that? |
57690 | How did you get his address, you rascal?" |
57690 | How does it run? |
57690 | How does the nursery rhyme go? |
57690 | How is it I never heard of it?" |
57690 | How is that?" |
57690 | How would any girl in her position, who had an ash of what had once been loyalty, have acted? |
57690 | How, above all, was it possible to exist for a moment, if one had not the privilege of being violently in love? |
57690 | I ask you once again, Do you tell me to go?" |
57690 | I do that, do I?" |
57690 | I happened to look out the doctor''s address in his''Where is it?'' |
57690 | I hope you have not a chill, too? |
57690 | I wonder if a rather long and very private story about his affairs would interest you at all?" |
57690 | I wonder if he can swim?" |
57690 | If not, how had he got in, and how would he get out? |
57690 | Indeed, where could suspicion look in? |
57690 | Infirm of purpose? |
57690 | Is it a beautiful place? |
57690 | Is it not a shame to kill these beautiful and innocent things? |
57690 | Is it not horrible? |
57690 | Is it very trying? |
57690 | Is n''t it so? |
57690 | Is n''t that secret and heavenly? |
57690 | Is not that stupendous? |
57690 | Is not the new candle and the matches proof enough for you?" |
57690 | Is that Punch there? |
57690 | Is that bald enough?" |
57690 | Is that profane? |
57690 | Is that the case?" |
57690 | Is the person from whom you have heard the name the same as the person to whom the''Where is it?'' |
57690 | It is certain to you and me, I grant you, but still-- Did Harry say what this man he met driving to the station was like?" |
57690 | It is clear that Sanders has left the house: who else could have opened that door? |
57690 | It is curious.--Harry, does not this seem to you also to be curious?" |
57690 | It looks very much as if I was his accomplice, does it not? |
57690 | May I ask you if this is the case?" |
57690 | May I come up and see you?" |
57690 | May I, when we go back on Monday?" |
57690 | May we go in it?" |
57690 | Might not a man consider that it showed I was right?" |
57690 | Much, perhaps, was to gain by going, and the price? |
57690 | My dear boy, what have you been doing to yourself? |
57690 | No? |
57690 | Now do you see?" |
57690 | Now does a common motive seem to lie behind those two mistakes? |
57690 | Now were you alone when all these things happened, or was Dr. Armytage there? |
57690 | Now what are we to do?" |
57690 | Now why is that, I wonder? |
57690 | Now, do n''t you see I am waiting for the Luck itself? |
57690 | Now, how did Harry come here, and what has passed between you?" |
57690 | Now, how will you get to Vail? |
57690 | Now, is there not a groom in the stables very like Harry?" |
57690 | Now, what do you mean? |
57690 | Now, where is the plate, and where is Sanders?" |
57690 | O Geoffrey, is it because this awful Luck has cast a spell on us that we imagine Harry surrounded by these intimate and immediate perils? |
57690 | Of course, the name in the''Where is it?'' |
57690 | Oh, what shall I do?" |
57690 | Oh, who knows whether I believe in it or not? |
57690 | Only I could not help telling you some time, and why not now? |
57690 | Or are you afraid that either of them will think they have made a mistake? |
57690 | Or his ghost?" |
57690 | Or was the mistake yours? |
57690 | Perhaps they are clever?" |
57690 | Pray, if I may so far interfere in your concerns, what did you say to Geoffrey?" |
57690 | Probable, the most hardened matchmaker could not call it, but where was the celibate who would say it was impossible? |
57690 | Ring the bell as you pass, will you?" |
57690 | Shall I not send for the doctor?" |
57690 | Shall I order a whisky for you at the same time?" |
57690 | Shall I ring the bell? |
57690 | Shall I tell them to move your things there?" |
57690 | Shall we have a game of billiards, Geoff?" |
57690 | She, who knew him so well, had rightly accused herself of disloyalty to him, compared herself to Elsa, and him.... Did she then owe him loyalty? |
57690 | Should I maintain even a low average of industry? |
57690 | Six, eight months have passed since then; what have you suffered since at the hands of fire and frost and rain?" |
57690 | Sleeping is such hungry work, is it not, Lady Oxted? |
57690 | So Mr. Tresham is a Conservative?" |
57690 | So is his friend-- Mr. Langton, is it not? |
57690 | So neither of you will come?" |
57690 | So the gun went off?" |
57690 | So, tell me, what do you hope the Luck will bring you?" |
57690 | Strange, is it not? |
57690 | Supposing any one else-- Geoffrey Langham, for instance-- had chosen to walk in a wood with a dairymaid, would she have cared? |
57690 | Supposing it should n''t be? |
57690 | Supposing there came some great call on me for courage or resolution, should I respond to it? |
57690 | Suspicions-- what of? |
57690 | Tell me now, was I right in suggesting that?" |
57690 | Tell me what you mean; say straight out what you suspect?" |
57690 | Tell me, Geoff,"and he fidgeted with the door handle,"did you see Miss Aylwin?" |
57690 | That sounds a little crude, does it not? |
57690 | That was really Oxford we saw just now, was it? |
57690 | The cup?" |
57690 | The evidence of the doctors?" |
57690 | The great diamonds awoke, they winked and blazed, sunset and moon and evening star were reflected there, and who knows what authentic fires of hell? |
57690 | The mere death of Harry, merely the lust for blood? |
57690 | The place next us belonged to some people called Harmsworth-- What?" |
57690 | The yellow seal, is it not, Harry? |
57690 | Then in a whisper,"Tell me, did Sanders kill him?" |
57690 | Then in the afternoon we go to Oxted, do we not? |
57690 | Then said Harry, his face still buried:"As God sees you, Dr. Armytage, this is true?" |
57690 | Then the passage is to be a secret, eh, Geoff?" |
57690 | Then why did he wish to see Lady Oxted, but apparently not wish to see Miss Aylwin? |
57690 | This is he, is it not? |
57690 | This is very old, and it would be much too easily carried away-- eh, Uncle Francis?" |
57690 | This sort of thing had happened before.... What? |
57690 | This way and that was her mind divided: should she tell him all, should she tell him nothing? |
57690 | This, then, was the first point: Would Mr. Francis unlock the front door before morning, and would he leave the house that way? |
57690 | To go now to Harry''s room, what risk was there, what fear of eyes behind curtains; and once there, what sort of reception would he meet? |
57690 | Was he ashamed of his premonition?" |
57690 | Was he? |
57690 | Was he? |
57690 | Was it indeed the gems and the gold which had done this for him? |
57690 | Was it not better to tell you like this, making no confidence of it?" |
57690 | Was it not so, Harry?" |
57690 | Was it reasonable to suppose, then, that if a name alone produced so ill- starred a result, he could bear the sight of the girl? |
57690 | Was it the Luck which had given him these days of wonderful happiness, with so great and unspeakable a hope for the days to come? |
57690 | Was it very happy? |
57690 | Was she again skulking and suspecting, even after the lesson she had received? |
57690 | Was she now to believe the evidence of somebody else''s tongue? |
57690 | Was the doctor even now smiling to himself behind his paper at the facility of his victim? |
57690 | Was this the huge reward it granted him, for which he had paid but with a cold in the head, a burn on the hand, a sprain of the foot? |
57690 | Was your quarrel with Geoffrey connected in any way with these accidents?" |
57690 | Well, will you come?" |
57690 | Well, would n''t he as naturally feel aggrieved if I do n''t tell him?" |
57690 | Well?" |
57690 | What are they?" |
57690 | What are you saying?" |
57690 | What could possibly have happened? |
57690 | What defence was possible when the blow might fall at any moment from any unsuspected quarter? |
57690 | What did it mean? |
57690 | What dim figure, deadly and full of hate, hovered on the wing by him, ready to strike? |
57690 | What do you mean?" |
57690 | What does Miss Aylwin do?" |
57690 | What does Mr. Francis want with him?" |
57690 | What duty could be more obvious, more staring than to finish now, at once, with that ineffable old man? |
57690 | What else, what else?" |
57690 | What evidence?" |
57690 | What had the first been? |
57690 | What has happened since then?" |
57690 | What has happened? |
57690 | What has happened?" |
57690 | What has he come to tell us?" |
57690 | What have we done? |
57690 | What if all this was told you simply to blind you? |
57690 | What if he had killed him? |
57690 | What if some occult force lurked there? |
57690 | What if the imminence of his exposure had at last revealed to him his immeasurable enormity? |
57690 | What if, after all, Dr. Armytage had been playing with him, how completely and successfully, he writhed to think? |
57690 | What if, now, these more serious accidents were to be referred to the same agency? |
57690 | What is he like?" |
57690 | What is his name?" |
57690 | What is it all?" |
57690 | What is it, Geoffrey?" |
57690 | What is it?" |
57690 | What is the house like? |
57690 | What is the matter?" |
57690 | What is there for which I can forgive you, Lord Vail?" |
57690 | What prison house does the man mean, if you please? |
57690 | What reconstruction of facts would fit these factors? |
57690 | What shall we do? |
57690 | What then had happened, he asked himself? |
57690 | What then? |
57690 | What was his name? |
57690 | What was the meaning of the seeming friendliness in averting a final rupture between Harry and Geoffrey? |
57690 | What was this malignancy that haunted Harry, dogging his steps? |
57690 | What will you do? |
57690 | What''s the matter?" |
57690 | What, after all, if this series of events was due to the Luck? |
57690 | What, again, if remorse had at length touched Mr. Francis? |
57690 | What, then, looking at it thus, was his object? |
57690 | What, too, was that sinister doctor doing at Vail? |
57690 | Where are you?" |
57690 | Where does he live?" |
57690 | Where does it lead to?" |
57690 | Where else should it be if not there? |
57690 | Where is he? |
57690 | Where shall we go, Uncle Francis?" |
57690 | Where? |
57690 | Which is the room,_ the_ room?" |
57690 | Who ever heard of an old man, over seventy, trying to make his grand- nephew a celibate? |
57690 | Who in this case did them? |
57690 | Who is he, Aunt Violet, and why are n''t we as good as he? |
57690 | Who knew what he might not attempt next? |
57690 | Who told you?" |
57690 | Who told you?" |
57690 | Who was it said that Wordsworth only found in stones the sermons he had himself tucked under them, to prevent the wind blowing them away?" |
57690 | Who will be coming? |
57690 | Why does this give me pleasure? |
57690 | Why had he felt so certain on so slight a glance that it was Harry? |
57690 | Why is that, sir? |
57690 | Why not Mr. Francis also?" |
57690 | Why not?" |
57690 | Why should these things come to you in such damnable continuity? |
57690 | Why, dear?" |
57690 | Why, then, should they not marry?" |
57690 | Why, then, you may ask, should not Mr. Francis simply steal the Luck? |
57690 | Why?" |
57690 | Will you come and see it now?" |
57690 | Will you hear it, Harry? |
57690 | Will you take me somewhere in the morning, and will delightful people come to lunch? |
57690 | Yes, that sounds horrible, does it not? |
57690 | Yet were not the sins of the fathers visited on the children? |
57690 | Yet, supposing I had to work for my bread, should I do it cheerfully, do you think? |
57690 | You are sure, also, you have been exact throughout?" |
57690 | You could not have thought I should mind your having who you liked here?" |
57690 | You had much better tell the whole story for yourself, had n''t you?" |
57690 | You have everything?" |
57690 | You have plenty of blankets? |
57690 | You promise me that, Geoffrey?" |
57690 | You promise me this?" |
57690 | You remember seeing me this morning come back after I had started? |
57690 | You understand?" |
57690 | You will hardly remember that? |
57690 | You would like to look at it?" |
57690 | You would scarcely remember your grandfather, Harry?" |
57690 | You wounded a hare, do you not remember, close to the pheasant feed, and returned home after firing only one shot? |
57690 | You''ve never seen him?" |
57690 | Your mother is well?" |
57690 | asked Lady Oxted,"and if reasonable, can mortal mind invent a more awful piece of selfishness?" |
57690 | asked Lady Oxted,"which will interest the depressed influenza patient?" |
57690 | belonging to a friend, and found the name in inverted commas, what inference, if any, would you draw? |
57690 | belongs? |
57690 | do n''t you see?" |
57690 | he asked,"when you really have no warrant for it? |
57690 | he cried;"what has he done now?" |
57690 | he said, coming closer to Geoffrey and shaking off Harry''s hand;"what do you mean by what you have just said? |
57690 | he said,"and what in God''s name is happening? |
57690 | here''s Bob.--Bob, what can have made you come to the opera?" |
57690 | how can you be such an ass?" |
57690 | how could I do anything else?" |
57690 | if some unsleeping presence dwelt in those diamonds? |
57690 | in connection with my uncle, I suppose?" |
57690 | is Harry-- is his lordship safe?" |
57690 | is it done?" |
57690 | said Lady Oxted;"are they genuine?" |
57690 | she said;"but what have they done with the Duke of Wellington on his horse? |
57690 | this is your maid, is she not? |
57690 | what are we to do? |
57690 | what do you mean?" |
57690 | what do you say?" |
57690 | what is the matter?" |
57690 | whatever can she do with such an ugly mug?" |
57690 | who is doing the cruel thing? |
57690 | wo n''t this nightmare cease?" |
57690 | would it have stung her? |
583 | A fine horse, my friend,said the Count, addressing the groom with the most engaging familiarity of manner,"You are going to drive out?" |
583 | A good- tempered, freely- living man? 583 A reason connected with that subject which must not be mentioned between us yet?--which may never be mentioned to Laura at all?" |
583 | A rustling like silk? |
583 | Absolutely nothing? |
583 | Ah, indeed? 583 Aha? |
583 | All in white? |
583 | Am I disturbing you? |
583 | Am I to understand, Sir Percival, that your wife''s room is a prison, and that your housemaid is the gaoler who keeps it? |
583 | Am I? |
583 | And Lady Glyde? |
583 | And Mrs. Catherick? 583 And a hatchet, and a saw, and a bit of rope?" |
583 | And at the different inns? |
583 | And did Mrs. Catherick consent to your proposal? |
583 | And had she been long in her place? |
583 | And his name? |
583 | And she was strangely dressed, from head to foot, all in white? |
583 | And what did she say? |
583 | And where was it? |
583 | And why not,asked the Count,"when your meaning can be explained by anybody in two words? |
583 | And why were they going to London? 583 And yet so like?" |
583 | And you can ask for it without compromising yourself? |
583 | And you entirely failed to find out her name? |
583 | And you found your way to this place yesterday? |
583 | And you left the statement I wrote for you at the police station? |
583 | And you scraped away the sand, and dug a hollow place in it? |
583 | And you told them the news at Limmeridge House? |
583 | And your mother? |
583 | And your shining courageous Brown Molly for the long? |
583 | Another Young Person? |
583 | Any more? |
583 | Anybody dead? |
583 | Anybody ill? |
583 | Are there not other proofs that we might produce besides the proof of identity? |
583 | Are they related to each other? |
583 | Are you a man of rank and title yourself? |
583 | Are you all of the same opinion? |
583 | Are you at liberty to say how you found out my address? |
583 | Are you aware, sir,I said,"that you are talking of a nobleman?" |
583 | Are you calmer now? |
583 | Are you going back to the house, Miss Halcombe? |
583 | Are you going in? |
583 | Are you going to my uncle''s room? |
583 | Are you quite sure of those words referring to my mother? |
583 | Are you quite sure you do n''t recognise him? 583 Are you quite sure you have told me everything that passed? |
583 | Are you ready? |
583 | Are you really going to walk all the way to Knowlesbury and back? 583 Are you sure he is out of the country?" |
583 | Are you sure that your friend in London will receive you at such a late hour as this? |
583 | Are you yourself again? |
583 | Baxter? |
583 | Before you went away,he said,"did you, or did you not, tell the nurse that Miss Halcombe looked much stronger and better?" |
583 | Brought it with her? 583 But how has she lived through all these years?" |
583 | But is it not possible,I urged,"by dint of patience and exertion, to discover additional evidence? |
583 | But surely I hear some horrid children in the garden-- my private garden-- below? |
583 | But when you DID move-- when you came out? |
583 | By the way,he said,"your clients in Cumberland have not heard anything more of the woman who wrote the anonymous letter, have they?" |
583 | By whom? |
583 | Came as a stranger to all of you? 583 Can I tell him that, when the engagement was made for me by my father, with my own consent? |
583 | Can you identify him, sir? |
583 | Can you remember what the writing was? 583 Can you talk to me without feeling frightened, and without forgetting that I am a friend?" |
583 | Come, Nina,he said,"we remember each other, do n''t we?" |
583 | Could I speak to you for a moment, miss? |
583 | Crisis? |
583 | Did Anne remain entirely under your care from that time? |
583 | Did Sir Percival live in your neighbourhood at that time? |
583 | Did Sir Percival say, yesterday, that Count Fosco was to meet me at the terminus in London? |
583 | Did he make his appearance in the village before Anne was born? |
583 | Did he mention his business? |
583 | Did he say anything when you had done? |
583 | Did he stay in the neighbourhood? |
583 | Did it, by any chance, occur to you when you came to this house that I was not the sort of man you could trifle with? |
583 | Did she accept the allowance? |
583 | Did she do so? |
583 | Did she see you? |
583 | Did she seem hurt by your silence? |
583 | Did the forlorn woman whom you met in the high- road seem young? |
583 | Did you ask me why Miss Fairlie was neither well nor happy this morning? |
583 | Did you ever hear the name of the gentleman to whom Varneck Hall belonged at that time? |
583 | Did you ever observe that Anne was like him? |
583 | Did you hear anybody calling after us? |
583 | Did you hear it go past your wall, along the passage? |
583 | Did you hear me? |
583 | Did you know Mrs. Catherick before Anne was born? |
583 | Did you mention names? 583 Did you not hear from the housekeeper that there was a report of Anne Catherick having been seen in this neighbourhood? |
583 | Did you not tell me your former master lived at Knowlesbury? |
583 | Did you remember her, Laura, when she told you her name? |
583 | Did you run out again? 583 Did you say that Mrs. Catherick lived anywhere in this neighbourhood?" |
583 | Did you see any one, or hear any one, in the plantation? |
583 | Did you see the lady? |
583 | Did you tell him? |
583 | Did you try to hide the letter? |
583 | Did you try to save the poor thing? |
583 | Do I look as if I was? |
583 | Do I look curious about it? |
583 | Do n''t you remember my telling you, when we last met, that I was going to Cumberland? 583 Do n''t you see that I want to come in?" |
583 | Do you ask why I come here to tell you of your daughter''s death? |
583 | Do you believe in dreams? |
583 | Do you fear failure yourself, Walter? |
583 | Do you happen to know,I said,"if Sir Percival Glyde is still in Paris?" |
583 | Do you hear that, Fosco? |
583 | Do you hear? |
583 | Do you know anything about those claims? |
583 | Do you know him, sir? |
583 | Do you know many people in London? |
583 | Do you know that man? |
583 | Do you know who this is, Walter? |
583 | Do you know whose dog it is? |
583 | Do you know,I asked,"whether Lady Glyde has come in from her walk or not?" |
583 | Do you leave to- day? |
583 | Do you live in London? |
583 | Do you mean courage enough to claim your release? |
583 | Do you mean to join us at dinner? |
583 | Do you mean to write to him again? |
583 | Do you mean, Sir Percival, that I am to dismiss the indoor servants under my charge without the usual month''s warning? |
583 | Do you mind my closing my eyes while you speak? 583 Do you really mean that?" |
583 | Do you remember driving a gentleman, in the month of July last, from Number Five Forest Road to the Waterloo Bridge station? |
583 | Do you see any carriage I can get? 583 Do you see anything improbable, or contradictory, in his explanation?" |
583 | Do you see nothing there? |
583 | Do you see nothing? 583 Do you still refuse to trust me?" |
583 | Do you still tell me to go? |
583 | Do you suppose that she had money of her own? |
583 | Do you suppose there are any secrets going on here? |
583 | Do you talk in that familiar manner of one of the landed gentry of England? 583 Do you think I would remain an instant in the company of any man whom I suspected of such baseness as that?" |
583 | Do you, indeed? |
583 | Does Anne Catherick refuse to see you? |
583 | Does Miss Fairlie know of that wish? |
583 | Does Mr. Fairlie know----? |
583 | Does Mrs. Todd know what particular passage in the newspaper affected her in that way? |
583 | Does he know anything about the keys? |
583 | Does he understand about registering the death? |
583 | Does it, my love? 583 Eleanor, my good wife, are you all ready upstairs? |
583 | Even a cough that he is troubled with is mentioned, if I remember right? |
583 | Forwards to our time or backwards away from us? |
583 | Gone? |
583 | Had you no father or mother to take care of you? |
583 | Had you no other motive? |
583 | Has Lady Glyde been in the room since? |
583 | Has Mr. Fairlie given you a satisfactory answer? |
583 | Has Mr. Gilmore been advising you? |
583 | Has anybody disturbed you? |
583 | Has anything happened? 583 Has the fever turned to infection?" |
583 | Have I deserved that you should write to me? |
583 | Have I suffered as you have suffered? 583 Have a bon- bon?" |
583 | Have they found him? |
583 | Have you and Lady Glyde been out this evening? |
583 | Have you and Mrs. Rubelle been made aware of the full extent of the mischief? |
583 | Have you any leisure time to spare,she asked,"before you begin to work in your own room?" |
583 | Have you any letter for the post, Miss Halcombe? |
583 | Have you been long back from Cumberland? |
583 | Have you been suffering much from the heat downstairs? |
583 | Have you been writing many letters, and receiving many letters lately? |
583 | Have you felt any apprehension that the misfortune of her loss might be followed by the misfortune of her death? |
583 | Have you forgotten the letter he wrote to her at the beginning of her illness? 583 Have you found no trace of her?" |
583 | Have you found what you wanted, sir? |
583 | Have you got your pickaxes handy? |
583 | Have you heard from him? |
583 | Have you just come in? |
583 | Have you no other security to borrow upon? |
583 | Have you said all you wanted to Laura? |
583 | Have you seen a woman pass this way? |
583 | Have you taken them? |
583 | Her master''s compliments, and would I be so obliging as to say what my business was? |
583 | How are we to get the answer in time? |
583 | How came the housekeeper to know it was Mrs. Catherick''s dog? |
583 | How came you to lose possession of the letter? |
583 | How can I say I do, after the proof he has offered me of the truth of it? 583 How can it be stronger?" |
583 | How can that possibly be? |
583 | How can you show it? |
583 | How could I? 583 How dare you frighten a poor helpless woman like that?" |
583 | How dare you talk to me in that way? 583 How did you come here?" |
583 | How did you find it out? 583 How did you get here?" |
583 | How do you come to remember that, when you have forgotten what she looked like? |
583 | How do you know that, Marian? |
583 | How do you know that? |
583 | How do you know that? |
583 | How do you know? |
583 | How does your speculation look now? |
583 | How far do you want to look back, sir? |
583 | How far is it to Knowlesbury from this place? |
583 | How long do you give me,he asked, putting his third question in a quieter tone,"before the clock strikes and the seal is broken?" |
583 | How long? |
583 | How should I know his secrets? |
583 | How should I know? 583 How should he have known, otherwise, that Mr. Merriman was Sir Percival''s solicitor?" |
583 | How was he to know that his niece was alive when he was told that she was dead? 583 How? |
583 | How? |
583 | I am afraid he has brought you bad news? |
583 | I am afraid the baronet, whose name you are unwilling to mention to me, has done you some grievous wrong? 583 I am afraid you have serious reason to complain of some man of rank and title?" |
583 | I am afraid, Countess, you are not quite so well as usual? |
583 | I am to understand, then, that you hold by the determination expressed in your letter? |
583 | I beg your pardon,I said,"but am I right in supposing that you are going to Blackwater Park?" |
583 | I hope it has secured me your entire confidence in what I have still to say? |
583 | I ought surely to know what I am signing, Sir Percival, before I write my name? |
583 | I suppose no whispers have ever been heard against his character? |
583 | I suppose we have really and truly done all we can? |
583 | I suppose you had your reasons, Mr. Hartright, for concealing that suspicion from me till this moment? |
583 | I suppose you have known Mrs. Catherick for some years? |
583 | I suppose you often saw Sir Percival when he was in your village? |
583 | I was alone with him, Marian-- his cruel hand was bruising my arm-- what could I do? |
583 | I wonder if the housekeeper knows? |
583 | If any doubts still trouble you,I said,"why not mention them to me at once? |
583 | If my signature pledges me to anything,she said,"surely I have some claim to know what that pledge is?" |
583 | If she leaves no children----"Which she is likely to do? |
583 | If the familiar little man treats my mother in that way, how will he treat ME? |
583 | If you do, why should you be surprised at her leaving you? 583 In our homely English phrase, Count Fosco, wo n''t they keep?" |
583 | In that case why not question the housekeeper? |
583 | In what degree? 583 Indeed, my lady?" |
583 | Is Anne found? 583 Is Mrs. Clements an old friend of yours? |
583 | Is Mrs. Michelson gone to bed yet? |
583 | Is he well and happy, and getting on in his profession? 583 Is her mother to be depended on?" |
583 | Is it absolutely necessary to refer to these unpleasant matters? |
583 | Is it absolutely necessary to speak of my marriage engagement? |
583 | Is it absolutely necessary,he asked"that this thing here, under your elbow, should be signed to- day?" |
583 | Is it at ME? 583 Is it consistent with your duty to me to stand there, casting suspicion on me to my face?" |
583 | Is it infectious? |
583 | Is it serious? |
583 | Is it? 583 Is it? |
583 | Is n''t it awful? |
583 | Is that considered a sufficiently secure place for the register? |
583 | Is that letter for me? |
583 | Is that the road to London? |
583 | Is the key in the door, Marian? 583 Is the mark on your arm still? |
583 | Is the turnpike man looking out? |
583 | Is there any doubt in your mind, NOW, Miss Halcombe? |
583 | Is your business connected with my journey? |
583 | It is of your own free will,I said, as the chaise drove through the lodge- gates,"that your ladyship goes to London?" |
583 | It would have broken my heart,she said simply,"if Anne had not been nicely buried-- but how do you know it, sir? |
583 | Knight, or Baronet? |
583 | Like? 583 Louis,"I said,"do you think he would go away if you gave him five shillings?" |
583 | Man? |
583 | Many men of rank and title? |
583 | Many--she came to a full stop, and looked me searchingly in the face--"many men of the rank of Baronet?" |
583 | May I ask in what direction? |
583 | May I inquire whether Mr. Gilmore is in England? |
583 | May I trust to your kindness to excuse me, Madame Fosco, if I venture to speak to you on an exceedingly painful subject? |
583 | May I trust you? |
583 | May I venture to inquire why you express that hope? |
583 | May she not give it in the future,he asked,"if the one object of her husband''s life is to deserve it?" |
583 | Mr. Hartright was employed at Limmeridge as a drawing- master, I believe? 583 Mr. Hartright,"she said,"will you come here for a minute? |
583 | Must I really hear them? |
583 | My act? |
583 | My angel,he went on, addressing his wife,"will your labours of packing up allow you time to make me some nice strong coffee? |
583 | My darling Walter,she said,"must we really account for our boldness in coming here? |
583 | My friend, what can I do? |
583 | Nine, to- morrow morning? 583 No more adventures, I suppose, this evening?" |
583 | No more discoveries, like your discovery of the wounded dog? |
583 | Nor where she has lived since? 583 North or south?" |
583 | Not Anne Catherick? |
583 | Not one of mine? |
583 | OLD Welmingham? 583 Oh yes-- how can it be otherwise? |
583 | Oh, sir,she said,"how do you know it? |
583 | On conditions? |
583 | On your heart and soul, Walter,he said,"is there no other way to get to that man but the chance- way through ME?" |
583 | One of mine? |
583 | Paid down? |
583 | Perhaps you remember the gentleman himself? 583 Perhaps you will not mind delivering it? |
583 | Put off? |
583 | Said? |
583 | Say it is in your hands-- what then? |
583 | Shall I close the window? |
583 | Shall I give this private difficulty of yours a name? 583 Shall I help you?" |
583 | Shall I play some of those little melodies of Mozart''s which you used to like so much? |
583 | Shall I? |
583 | She asked me in return, if I should not be afraid of a man who had shut me up in a mad- house, and who would shut me up again, if he could? 583 She saw nobody from the house then, except a certain Mr. Hartright, who accidentally met with her in the churchyard here?" |
583 | She stopped again, Marian, at that point----"And said no more? |
583 | She told you nothing about the place in which she took refuge after leaving Todd''s Corner? |
583 | Sir Percival Glyde? |
583 | So you know why I am leaving London? |
583 | Spoke to him? 583 Surely a book of such importance as this ought to be protected by a better lock, and kept carefully in an iron safe?" |
583 | Surely you followed her? |
583 | Surely you like this modest, trembling English twilight? |
583 | Surely you remember me? |
583 | Surely you tried to save it, Marian? |
583 | Surely you will acknowledge that your model pupil is found at last? 583 Surely, Laura, you asked what the fear was which she dwelt on so earnestly?" |
583 | Surely, Walter,she said,"you hardly know enough yet to give you any hope of claiming Mrs. Catherick''s confidence? |
583 | Surely,I said,"you do n''t mean to infer that when Sir Percival spoke to you yesterday he speculated on such a result as you have just mentioned?" |
583 | Suspicion? |
583 | Tell me plainly, Mrs. Michelson, did you think she looked fit to travel? |
583 | Tell me, Percival,he said,"have you had a pleasant drive? |
583 | Then what are you wasting your time for here? 583 Then young Mr. Wansborough is a lawyer, I suppose?" |
583 | Then, I ask you again, why did you come? |
583 | There''s a man says he does.--"Who?" |
583 | Was Mrs. Catherick living in service at Varneck Hall immediately before her marriage? |
583 | Was he particularly nervous this morning? 583 Was her husband able and willing to help her?" |
583 | Was it a man or a woman? |
583 | Was it a man or a woman? |
583 | Was she like her mother, then? |
583 | Was the Asylum far from where you met me? 583 Was the Count pointing out the house to him?" |
583 | Was your husband acquainted with them before that? |
583 | We might be tidier, might n''t we, sir? |
583 | Well, Mrs. Michelson,he said,"you have found it out at last, have you?" |
583 | Well, Percival,he said,"and in the case of Lady Glyde''s death, what do you get then?" |
583 | Well, but which will you have, to- day? 583 Well,"said Mr. Gilmore,"what have you found out?" |
583 | Well,said Sir Percival sharply,"what is it now?" |
583 | Were you and Mrs. Catherick neighbours? |
583 | What about? |
583 | What are you going away for? |
583 | What are you laughing about? |
583 | What are you thinking of, Laura? 583 What are you waiting there for?" |
583 | What became of Sir Percival? |
583 | What became of the rustling of the gown when you no longer heard it in the ante- room? |
583 | What can we do, Marian? 583 What change?" |
583 | What did I tell you? |
583 | What did he say when you gave it to him? |
583 | What did she look like? 583 What did you do with it when you found it in the sand?" |
583 | What do you expect from your wife? |
583 | What do you know of those events? |
583 | What do you mean, Laura, by''all''? 583 What do you propose if I leave it all to you?" |
583 | What do you say now? |
583 | What do you see there to laugh at? |
583 | What do you suspect? |
583 | What do you think of that for a woman with a lost character? 583 What does Lady Glyde''s maid want with me?" |
583 | What does it mean, Sir Percival? 583 What does it mean?" |
583 | What does your side say? |
583 | What events do you mean? |
583 | What harm does the light do? |
583 | What has frightened you? |
583 | What has happened? |
583 | What has he done to you? |
583 | What has led you to that conclusion? |
583 | What have I to do with your determination? |
583 | What have you actually got with your wife at the present moment? |
583 | What in the name of heaven has brought you here? |
583 | What is it I am to sign? |
583 | What is it you propose, then? |
583 | What is it, my dear? |
583 | What is it? |
583 | What is it? |
583 | What is it? |
583 | What is that opposite Mr. Hartright? 583 What is the matter, ma''am?" |
583 | What is the meaning of the house being deserted in this way? 583 What is the purport of all this?" |
583 | What is there in the packing- cases? |
583 | What is there to consider about? 583 What is your opinion of the fever?" |
583 | What is your solid English sense thinking of? 583 What is your view of the subject, Count?" |
583 | What keys? |
583 | What letters? |
583 | What made you think of coming to this place? |
583 | What makes you doubt me? |
583 | What makes you think it might have been AFTER? 583 What makes you think that?" |
583 | What misfortune? |
583 | What misunderstanding? |
583 | What on earth is the matter? |
583 | What other misfortune could there be? |
583 | What person? |
583 | What reason can there be on my side for withdrawing? |
583 | What reminded you of that, Laura? |
583 | What reservation may that be? |
583 | What shall I see in my dreams to- night? |
583 | What sort of woman, sir? |
583 | What the devil did Mrs. Catherick want at this house? |
583 | What the devil do you mean? |
583 | What then, Laura? |
583 | What woman? |
583 | What''s the matter now? |
583 | What''s the matter? |
583 | When Sir Percival first arrived in your neighbourhood,I said,"did you hear where he had come from last?" |
583 | When did the change happen? |
583 | When did you show yourself in the garden? |
583 | When shall you be back? |
583 | When the time comes? |
583 | When? |
583 | When? |
583 | Where are the keys? |
583 | Where are you going? |
583 | Where can you stay more properly in London than at the place your uncle himself chooses for you-- at your aunt''s house? 583 Where did you find your brooch?" |
583 | Where is Fanny? |
583 | Where is Miss Halcombe? |
583 | Where is he going to, Marian? |
583 | Where is he? |
583 | Where is he? |
583 | Where is it? |
583 | Where is the gentleman who tried to save him? |
583 | Where should I go if not here? |
583 | Where was the doctor? 583 Where?" |
583 | Where? |
583 | Where? |
583 | Which do you think? |
583 | Which man, my friend? |
583 | Which of the horses has he taken? |
583 | Which she is not in the least likely to do----"Yes? |
583 | Which way after that, sir? |
583 | Which way did it go? |
583 | Which way did she go? |
583 | Which way shall we go? |
583 | Who are you? |
583 | Who can Laura''s correspondent be? 583 Who cares for his causes of complaint? |
583 | Who could it have been? |
583 | Who do you think the gentleman was, then? |
583 | Who gave you leave? 583 Who is Fanny?" |
583 | Who is the brute you call Baxter? |
583 | Who is to do the cooking, Sir Percival, while you are still staying here? |
583 | Who sends the letter? |
583 | Who showed it to you? |
583 | Who told you so? |
583 | Who was the other man? 583 Who''s that?" |
583 | Who''s there? |
583 | Who''s there? |
583 | Who, for Heaven''s sake? |
583 | Whose dog was it? |
583 | Whose dog was it? |
583 | Whose suspicion can we excite, now that Sir Percival has left the house? 583 Whose then? |
583 | Whose? |
583 | Why are we to stop her, sir? 583 Why are you leaving my service?" |
583 | Why do n''t you come in and sit down? |
583 | Why do n''t you help me? |
583 | Why do you ask? |
583 | Why do you stand there? |
583 | Why do you want to see it? |
583 | Why does Marian go to Limmeridge and leave me here by myself? |
583 | Why does it encourage you? |
583 | Why not go, Percival, to the fountain- head of information at once? |
583 | Why not, I should like to know? |
583 | Why not? 583 Why not?" |
583 | Why should you write to Count Fosco? |
583 | Why the devil do you look at me in that way? |
583 | Why, Walter, what is the matter with you? |
583 | Why? 583 Why?" |
583 | Why? |
583 | Why? |
583 | Why? |
583 | Will you be good enough to say that I understand the letter, and that I am very much obliged? |
583 | Will you give me a letter saying those words, which I can show to my sweetheart when he asks how I got the money? |
583 | Will you promise? |
583 | Will you really? 583 Will you say that I consent to whatever arrangement he may think best? |
583 | Will you tell me his name? |
583 | Will your ladyship excuse me,I whispered,"if I suggest that we had better not wait here till Sir Percival comes back? |
583 | With a letter for any one? |
583 | With your opinion of the conduct of those two gentlemen,he said,"you do n''t expect help in that quarter, I presume? |
583 | Without having seen her, sir? |
583 | Without returning? 583 Wo n''t you take your old place?" |
583 | Would he really, Gilmore? |
583 | Would you like to come out with me in the meantime? |
583 | YOU do n''t think I ought to be back in the Asylum, do you? |
583 | Yes, sir? |
583 | Yes-- just now-- Sir Percival----"Did he come in? |
583 | Yes.--"Where?" |
583 | Yes? 583 You are afraid of Sir Percival Glyde?" |
583 | You are afraid? |
583 | You are aware,I said,"that your daughter has been lost?" |
583 | You are going downstairs, Marian? 583 You are living in the village, then?" |
583 | You are not afraid of him, are you? |
583 | You are not going away because you are tired of me? 583 You are not tired of me yet?" |
583 | You believe,she said,"in this secret that my husband is afraid of? |
583 | You ca n''t believe it, can you? |
583 | You come here on business, sir? |
583 | You come here possessed of information which may be true or may be false-- where did you get it? |
583 | You dear old Gilmore, how you do hate rank and family, do n''t you? 583 You do n''t mean an accident?" |
583 | You do n''t mind staying here till I can send you the proper person? |
583 | You do n''t suspect me of doing anything wrong, do you? 583 You do n''t think the worse of me because I have met with an accident?" |
583 | You expected to meet your master here? |
583 | You foolish boy,she said,"why do n''t you beg Mr. Dempster''s pardon, and hold your tongue about the ghost?" |
583 | You found, of course, that they had heard nothing? |
583 | You had a letter from him? |
583 | You have a letter for me, from Miss Halcombe? 583 You have a reason, Walter, for wishing her to know of her husband''s death besides the reason you have just mentioned?" |
583 | You have been out in the woods then, I suppose? |
583 | You have really written them, then? 583 You hear him?" |
583 | You heard what he said to me? |
583 | You hesitate? |
583 | You inquired at the railway? |
583 | You insist on my posting this letter, Sir Percival? |
583 | You know the character which is given to my countrymen by the English? 583 You know your correspondent?" |
583 | You know, Mrs. Clements, why Sir Percival Glyde shut her up? |
583 | You maintain your note on the clause, then, to the letter? |
583 | You mean both husband and wife? |
583 | You mean some other member of the family besides Miss Halcombe? |
583 | You mean,said Marian,"the discovery that Laura did not leave Blackwater Park till after the date of her death on the doctor''s certificate?" |
583 | You positively refuse, then, to give me your signature? |
583 | You posted the letter to Mrs. Vesey with your own hands? |
583 | You provoking old Gilmore, what can you possibly mean by calling him a man? 583 You remember her name?" |
583 | You remember me? |
583 | You remember what he said? |
583 | You said, I think, that she denied belonging to this place? |
583 | You seem to be on the point of taking a journey? |
583 | You still persist in your lowering treatment of this case of fever? |
583 | You tried to make her go on? |
583 | You very best of good old friends,said Mr. Fairlie, leaning back lazily before he could look at me,"are you QUITE well? |
583 | You went to Carlisle, of course, when you heard that? |
583 | You were there yesterday evening, I hear, and you found visitors at the house? |
583 | You will sign nothing, Laura, without first looking at it? |
583 | You wo n''t answer me? 583 You wo n''t trust me?" |
583 | Young enough to be two- or three- and- twenty? |
583 | Your daughter''s death----"What did she die of? |
583 | Your flesh? 583 Your sisters told you the news at Todd''s Corner, I suppose?" |
583 | ''Are you thankful enough to do me one little kindness?'' |
583 | ''Ay, but is he a stranger to her?'' |
583 | ''Did you hear me following you in the wood? |
583 | ''Did you see me at the lake last night?'' |
583 | ''Does he think she stole them?'' |
583 | ''How do I know?'' |
583 | ''Ill?'' |
583 | ''Is your name on your boxes, ma''am?'' |
583 | ''Letters?'' |
583 | ''Not know you were married?'' |
583 | ''Respectable?'' |
583 | ''SHALL I undo the harm?'' |
583 | ''Stop, stop,''says Papa;''is he a foreigner, or an Englishman?'' |
583 | ''Surely you draw yourself?'' |
583 | ''Was it very long ago? |
583 | ''What IS it you have to tell me?'' |
583 | ''What do you want? |
583 | ''What was it I said just now?'' |
583 | ''Why is n''t the register''( meaning this register here, under my hand)--''why is n''t it kept in an iron safe?'' |
583 | ''Will you alter your mind, and tell me the rest? |
583 | ''Would you build such a tomb for ME, Percival?'' |
583 | ''You knew my mother?'' |
583 | ''You understand?'' |
583 | ( Am I responsible for any of these vulgar fluctuations, which begin with unhappiness and end with tea?) |
583 | ( I do n''t keep the inn-- why mention it to ME?) |
583 | ( he used to say)''how do I know that the register in this vestry may not be stolen or destroyed? |
583 | --"Did he do it on purpose?" |
583 | --"Don''t anybody else know who it is?" |
583 | --"Is he dreadful to look at?" |
583 | --"Is his face burnt?" |
583 | --"Not about the face, though?" |
583 | --"What did he want in there?" |
583 | --"Which door?" |
583 | --"Who was he? |
583 | 21st.--Have the anxieties of this anxious time shaken me a little, at last? |
583 | A cutlet?" |
583 | A nice tart for dinner? |
583 | A stranger to Mrs. Catherick as well as to the rest of the neighbours?" |
583 | A stranger?" |
583 | A thousand pardons, Mr. Hartright; servants are such asses, are they not? |
583 | A wretched place this, is n''t it, sir? |
583 | All going to the lake, eh? |
583 | Allow me my Italian humour-- do I not come of the illustrious nation which invented the exhibition of Punch? |
583 | Am I a friend to be treasured in the best corner of your heart, or am I not? |
583 | Am I expected to say anything more? |
583 | Am I famous? |
583 | Am I trifling, here, with the necessities of my task? |
583 | Am I worth those loans of money which you so delicately reminded me of a little while since? |
583 | And between these entries, at the bottom of the page? |
583 | And could he, in that case, be reckoned on as likely to accept the last resource? |
583 | And has your pretty shining Brown Molly come back at all tired?" |
583 | And have you put my hand- bell quite within my reach? |
583 | And murder will out( another moral epigram), will it? |
583 | And what do you think was the something? |
583 | And what does the best of them give us in return? |
583 | And what of the rest?" |
583 | And what was it like?" |
583 | And why are their faces so sadly unfinished, especially about the corners of the eyelids? |
583 | And yet, in his unhappy position, how can I expect him or wish him to remain at home? |
583 | And you really can manage the drawings? |
583 | And you really like the room?" |
583 | And you told him all that Anne Catherick had said to you-- all that you told me?" |
583 | And you, my angel,"he continued, turning to his wife, who had not uttered a word yet,"do you think so too?" |
583 | And-- what next? |
583 | And-- what next? |
583 | Any one you knew?" |
583 | Anybody ill?" |
583 | Are her own interests concerned in keeping it, as well as yours?" |
583 | Are we, I wonder, quite such genuine boys and girls now as our seniors were in their time? |
583 | Are you as fond of me, Walter as you used to be, now I am so pale and thin, and so slow in learning to draw?" |
583 | Are you aware, when I present this illustrious baby to your notice, in whose presence you stand? |
583 | Are you beginning to doubt whether Sir Percival Glyde may not in the end be more than a match for me?" |
583 | Are you insensible to the virtue of Lady Glyde?" |
583 | Are you strong enough? |
583 | Are you sure you have not? |
583 | Are you sure you wo n''t drop it? |
583 | Are you thinking a little too seriously, Marian, of the risk I may run in returning to Hampshire? |
583 | Are you to break your heart to set his mind at ease? |
583 | Are you wondering what you will have for breakfast? |
583 | As far as the boat- house?" |
583 | As your wife, surely it is her interest to keep it?" |
583 | At my age there is no harm in confessing so much as that, is there? |
583 | Boiled chicken, is it not? |
583 | Books tell us that such unearthly creatures have existed-- but what does our own experience say in answer to books? |
583 | But are you really determined to go to Welmingham?" |
583 | But could you contrive to speak in a lower key? |
583 | But how is the proof to be obtained?" |
583 | But if anything happens----""What can happen?" |
583 | But surely there were beams still left in the dismantled cottages near the church? |
583 | But what did you hear about her second attack of faintness yesterday evening?" |
583 | But what other way is possible, now that the time is drawing so near? |
583 | But what rules the mind? |
583 | But what was the mystery to be concealed? |
583 | But where was the register to be found? |
583 | But why do Young Persons in service all perspire at the hands? |
583 | But, my dear Miss Halcombe, my dear Lady Glyde, do you really believe that crimes cause their own detection? |
583 | CAN you undertake them?" |
583 | Can I even remember when the chilled, cramped feeling left me, and the throbbing heat came in its place? |
583 | Can I get a fly, or a carriage of any kind? |
583 | Can I lock it on the inside?" |
583 | Can the business of the signature be put off till to- morrow-- Yes or No?" |
583 | Can there be better testimony in his favour, Mr. Gilmore, than the testimony of the woman''s mother?" |
583 | Can you call to mind driving a foreigner last summer-- a tall gentleman and remarkably fat?" |
583 | Can you look at Miss Halcombe and not see that she has the foresight and the resolution of a man? |
583 | Can you reconcile yourself to our quiet, regular life? |
583 | Can your friend produce testimonials-- letters that speak to his character?'' |
583 | Cast myself on the mercy of my runaway idiot of a husband who had raised the scandal against me? |
583 | Clements?" |
583 | Clements?" |
583 | Clements?" |
583 | Could I look at my failure from no truer point of view than this? |
583 | Could Mrs. Catherick''s assertion, that she was the victim of a dreadful mistake, by any possibility be true? |
583 | Could it really be her mother? |
583 | Could she have told her husband already that she had overheard Laura reviling him, in my company, as a"spy?" |
583 | Could the third person who was fast approaching us, at such a time and under such circumstances, be Miss Fairlie? |
583 | Countess, may I trouble you also? |
583 | Crimes cause their own detection, do they? |
583 | Curious, is it not? |
583 | Did Anne Catherick see Miss Fairlie?" |
583 | Did I thank you at the time? |
583 | Did I think he looked as if he wanted teasing? |
583 | Did he come to the house?" |
583 | Did he know where we lived? |
583 | Did no chance reference escape her as to the place in which she is living at the present time?" |
583 | Did no suspicion, excited by my own knowledge of Anne Catherick''s resemblance to her, cross my mind, when her face was first revealed to me? |
583 | Did she ever suspect whose child the little girl brought to her at Limmeridge might be? |
583 | Did she know that I lived in London? |
583 | Did she stay for any length of time?" |
583 | Did she talk much on that subject?" |
583 | Did she tell you to come here?" |
583 | Did the housekeeper know?" |
583 | Did we forget and did they forget his immortal friend and countryman, Rossini? |
583 | Did we think he looked as if he wanted hurrying into his grave? |
583 | Did you find the friend?" |
583 | Did you inquire particularly about the gossip which was going on in the room when she turned faint?" |
583 | Did you see anything particular in my face when you left me? |
583 | Did you see her at the lake?" |
583 | Did you tell them that Sir Percival Glyde was expected on Monday?" |
583 | Do YOU think it safe, Mr. Hartright? |
583 | Do her shoes creak?" |
583 | Do lawyers make your flesh creep? |
583 | Do n''t anybody know him?" |
583 | Do n''t you see how the case stands? |
583 | Do n''t you see me holding the tablettes? |
583 | Do n''t you think he may have gone away to look for her?" |
583 | Do n''t you think so yourself, sir?" |
583 | Do tell me-- what do you think of the drawings? |
583 | Do the servants recognise her? |
583 | Do you agree to that, Marian, so far?" |
583 | Do you guess what I am thinking about?" |
583 | Do you happen to know if she is dangerously mad, Miss Halcombe?" |
583 | Do you hear?" |
583 | Do you know that name?" |
583 | Do you know the farm? |
583 | Do you know where I am going to?" |
583 | Do you know, sir-- do you know for truth-- that it has pleased God to take her?" |
583 | Do you like coins? |
583 | Do you like etchings? |
583 | Do you mean Count Fosco?" |
583 | Do you mind putting this tray of coins back in the cabinet, and giving me the next one to it? |
583 | Do you mind ringing for Louis to carry the portfolio to your own room?" |
583 | Do you mind touching the bell? |
583 | Do you see any objection to accompanying me to the farmhouse to- morrow?" |
583 | Do you suppose I want to hold them? |
583 | Do you think I shall meet your mother in heaven? |
583 | Do you think Mr. Dawson is wrong? |
583 | Do you think you can repeat it to me?" |
583 | Do you understand now how I hated him? |
583 | Do you want to make any more objections? |
583 | Do you?" |
583 | Does Miss Halcombe assert her supposed sister''s identity to the owner of the Asylum, and take legal means for rescuing her? |
583 | Does flesh mean conscience in English? |
583 | Does he treat her kindly? |
583 | Does it penetrate your heart, as it penetrates mine?" |
583 | Does my poor portrait of her, my fond, patient labour of long and happy days, show me these things? |
583 | Does she know it from you?" |
583 | Does she live here? |
583 | Does she stand better with her trades- people than I do with mine? |
583 | Does she wear white now, as she used when she was a girl?" |
583 | Eight or nine-- which was it? |
583 | Eighteen hundred and what?" |
583 | Even if it was so, how could he have examined the letters when they had gone straight from my hand to the bosom of the girl''s dress? |
583 | Even so fat an old man as Fosco is surely better than no escort at all? |
583 | Every word that was said?" |
583 | Fairlie?" |
583 | Father? |
583 | Gilmore?" |
583 | Gilmore?" |
583 | Gilmore?" |
583 | Good shooting? |
583 | Had I heard Moses in Egypt? |
583 | Had I really left, little more than an hour since, the quiet, decent, conventionally domestic atmosphere of my mother''s cottage? |
583 | Had Sir Percival, by any chance, courted the suspicion that was wrong for the sake of diverting from himself some other suspicion that was right? |
583 | Had he followed me to the inn? |
583 | Had he lunched, and if so, upon what? |
583 | Had he, too, been out before dinner, and been late in getting back? |
583 | Had she been traced and captured by the men in the chaise? |
583 | Had she seen me go out? |
583 | Had the forlorn creature come to any harm? |
583 | Had we any right to let our selfish affection accept the devotion of all that generous life? |
583 | Had we really got rid of him? |
583 | Hartright?" |
583 | Hartright?" |
583 | Hartright?" |
583 | Hartright?" |
583 | Hartright?" |
583 | Has Mrs. Michelson been taking to her bed in the daytime?" |
583 | Has all your experience shown you nothing of my character yet? |
583 | Has any one disturbed you?" |
583 | Has he recovered himself-- and forgotten me?" |
583 | Has she always lived within her income? |
583 | Has she got a better Bible on her table than I have got on mine? |
583 | Has she had any news of her daughter?" |
583 | Has she written again?" |
583 | Has that new heresy of the highest medical authorities ever reached your ears-- Yes or No?" |
583 | Has the day for the marriage been fixed in our absence? |
583 | Have Hartright''s perfectly intelligible prejudices infected me without my suspecting their influence? |
583 | Have I been sitting here asleep? |
583 | Have I convinced your obstinacy? |
583 | Have I done right, Walter? |
583 | Have I dreamt of the right man? |
583 | Have I ever been wrong? |
583 | Have I justified your trust in me?" |
583 | Have I not carefully avoided exposing myself to the odium of committing unnecessary crime? |
583 | Have I satisfied your curiosity? |
583 | Have you any suspicions?" |
583 | Have you been patient so far? |
583 | Have you come here to tell me she is dead?" |
583 | Have you forgotten that your dog- cart is waiting at the door? |
583 | Have you forgotten the conversation that I heard between Sir Percival and the lawyer as they were crossing the hall?" |
583 | Have you got the blind up? |
583 | Have you heard from your client yet?" |
583 | Have you heard from yours?" |
583 | Have you known her a long time?" |
583 | Have you not been complaining of your health, and have you not been longing for what you call a smack of the country breeze? |
583 | Have you nothing more to tell me?" |
583 | Have you questions to address to me? |
583 | Have you remembered it? |
583 | Have you seen your studio? |
583 | Have you, or have you not, lost my place? |
583 | Have you?" |
583 | He only whispered once more,"Where is he?" |
583 | Here''s where he''s been shot, ai n''t it? |
583 | Honesty lives in at the end of his career? |
583 | How am I to describe him? |
583 | How can I describe her? |
583 | How can I pay my debt? |
583 | How can I separate her from my own sensations, and from all that has happened in the later time? |
583 | How can he know me when I do n''t know him?" |
583 | How can we make it more like home still? |
583 | How can you expect four women to dine together alone every day, and not quarrel? |
583 | How do I know who else may see her, who else may speak to her? |
583 | How do they know? |
583 | How do you come to know anything about my daughter?" |
583 | How do you know she is dead?" |
583 | How does your speculation look now?" |
583 | How had I come to hear of the copy? |
583 | How is Miss Halcombe?" |
583 | How many days have I still to wait? |
583 | How many doses of good advice have I given you in my time? |
583 | How much longer do you mean to keep me here? |
583 | How much share have the attractions of Nature ever had in the pleasurable or painful interests and emotions of ourselves or our friends? |
583 | I am a bad man, Lady Glyde, am I not? |
583 | I am afraid my letter must have seriously alarmed you?" |
583 | I am sure you will be kind enough to understand that before I go any farther?" |
583 | I am talking to a Practical British man-- ha? |
583 | I ask myself, I ask my servant, Louis, fifty times a day-- what have I done? |
583 | I count from to- morrow----""Why from to- morrow?" |
583 | I have asked whether Henry the Eighth was an amiable character? |
583 | I have no right to detain you any longer from your delightful pursuit-- have I? |
583 | I have told her this is merely a formal document-- and what more can she want? |
583 | I hope you are not unjust enough to let that infamous letter influence you?" |
583 | I interposed sharply,"have you nothing to say when my sister has said so much? |
583 | I made no reply-- how could I, when I was crying behind my veil? |
583 | I meant his wife and the person--""And the person who caused the scandal?" |
583 | I must tell you this, that, and the other about Sir Percival and myself, must I? |
583 | I never did such a thing in my life-- how am I to begin now? |
583 | I said,''Are you afraid still? |
583 | I said,''Who''s there?'' |
583 | I suppose I shall hear next that you can actually tell me whose ghost it was?" |
583 | I suppose nothing more could be done, sir, than was done?" |
583 | I suppose nothing was said or done to frighten her? |
583 | I suppose the clergyman who officiated here in the year eighteen hundred and three is no longer alive?" |
583 | I suppose we must come to it sooner or later-- and why not sooner?" |
583 | I thought to myself, as I put out the candle;"the woman in white? |
583 | I took the wrong path-- I came back in despair, and here I am, arrived( may I say it?) |
583 | I trace these lines, self- distrustfully, with the shadows of after- events darkening the very paper I write on; and still I say, what could I do? |
583 | I will only venture to hope that you have not thought it of sufficient importance to be mentioned to the Count?" |
583 | I wonder how Blackwater Park will look in the daytime? |
583 | I wonder if I shall like him? |
583 | I wonder if he will ever come to England? |
583 | I wonder whether I am afraid too? |
583 | IS it a chance at all?" |
583 | If Anne Catherick had not died when she did, what should I have done? |
583 | If I could get speech of him that night, if I could show him that I, too knew of the mortal peril in which he stood, what result would follow? |
583 | If I have a scruple about signing my name to an engagement of which I know nothing, why should you visit it on me so severely? |
583 | If I knocked anything down, if I made the least noise, who could say what the consequences might be? |
583 | If I lie down now, how do I know that I may have the sense and the strength to rise again? |
583 | If he was a lost man, what would become of our pecuniary interests? |
583 | If it does n''t concern you, you need n''t be curious about it, need you?" |
583 | If not----""What do you mean by''if not''?" |
583 | If she had not been well enough to be moved do you think we should any of us have risked letting her go? |
583 | If strange things happen to you on this journey-- if you and Sir Percival meet----""What makes you think we shall meet?" |
583 | If that was the case, why should she be anxious to have her visit at Blackwater Park kept a secret from him? |
583 | If the discovery of this makes me uneasy, what would it make HER? |
583 | If the object of my signing was, as we suppose, to obtain money for Sir Percival that he urgently wanted, how can the matter be put off?" |
583 | If we broke open the door, might we save him? |
583 | If we had been rich enough to find legal help, what would have been the result? |
583 | In a sense which might explain her motive in writing the anonymous letter? |
583 | In that case, who was the likeliest person to possess the power of compelling her to remain at Welmingham? |
583 | In the few cases that get into the newspapers, are there not instances of slain bodies found, and no murderers ever discovered? |
583 | In the name of Heaven, what have I said or done to make you think me the messenger of death?" |
583 | In what sense was she using that word? |
583 | Is Miss Fairlie well and happy? |
583 | Is a man in my state of nervous wretchedness capable of writing narratives? |
583 | Is four golden guineas a week nothing? |
583 | Is he a member of one of the Water- Colour Societies?" |
583 | Is he famous? |
583 | Is he going to fatigue that nice, shining, pretty horse by taking him very far to- day?" |
583 | Is he so very much better in this way than the people whom he condemns in their way? |
583 | Is he staggered for one instant in his belief of his niece''s death? |
583 | Is he the cause of your being out here at this strange time of night?" |
583 | Is it Laura''s reluctance to become his wife that has set me against him? |
583 | Is it accepted-- Yes, or No?" |
583 | Is it an indiscretion on my part to ask if you have decided yet on a course of proceeding?" |
583 | Is it hanging about HIS mind too? |
583 | Is it his face that has recommended him? |
583 | Is it my fault that your skeleton has peeped out at me? |
583 | Is it necessary to say that she expressed her sense of embarrassment by shutting up her mouth and breathing through her nose? |
583 | Is it necessary to say what my first impression was when I looked at my visitor''s card? |
583 | Is it not so? |
583 | Is it safe on the chair? |
583 | Is it so serious as that?" |
583 | Is it the indirect result of my apprehensions for Laura''s future? |
583 | Is it to be in my hands or not?" |
583 | Is it too late? |
583 | Is it wise to proceed to these extremities, before you have really exhausted all safer and simpler means of attaining your object? |
583 | Is language adequate to describe it? |
583 | Is she happier now than she was when I parted with her on the wedding- day? |
583 | Is she kept in the neighbourhood to assert her own identity, and to stand the test of further proceedings? |
583 | Is that all?" |
583 | Is that it?" |
583 | Is that pretty drawing your doing?" |
583 | Is that sacred? |
583 | Is that your meaning? |
583 | Is the nurse there? |
583 | Is there a civilised human being who does not feel for us? |
583 | Is there anything else to settle? |
583 | Is there anything else? |
583 | Is there anything wrong in that? |
583 | Is there no doubt in your mind that the person who confined her in the Asylum was Sir Percival Glyde?" |
583 | Is there no possibility of communicating with him earlier? |
583 | Is there nothing more that comes to you from your wife?" |
583 | Is this because I like him, or because I am afraid of him? |
583 | Is this clear to you as crystal? |
583 | Is this the sad end to all that sad story? |
583 | Is your mother alive? |
583 | It began abruptly, without any preliminary form of address, as follows--"Do you believe in dreams? |
583 | It is checkmate for me this time, Miss Halcombe-- ha?" |
583 | It is not earlier, I suppose? |
583 | It looks just the place for a murder, does n''t it?" |
583 | It seems to me to be not only the letter of a woman, but of a woman whose mind must be----""Deranged?" |
583 | It was very kind, was it not? |
583 | Kind words, were they not? |
583 | Kyrle?" |
583 | Kyrle?" |
583 | Lady Glyde-- Miss Halcombe-- Eleanor, my good wife-- which of you will indulge me with a game at dominoes?" |
583 | Lakes? |
583 | Laura, will you come into the library? |
583 | Let me see-- what o''clock is it now?" |
583 | Let us say I am curious-- do you ask me, as your old friend, to respect your secret, and to leave it, once for all, in your own keeping?" |
583 | Married? |
583 | May I beg to know exactly what the object is to which I am indebted for the honour of your visit?" |
583 | May I come as early as nine o''clock?" |
583 | May I come to you to- morrow? |
583 | May I hear it?" |
583 | May I hope that they will be considerately and generously forgiven?" |
583 | May I inquire why?" |
583 | May I make a suggestion, at once the simplest and the most profound? |
583 | May I say, at parting, that it is the dear object of MY hopes too?" |
583 | Merriman?" |
583 | Michelson?" |
583 | Miss Halcombe has promised to trust me-- will you promise too?" |
583 | Must we give up all idea of making any further inquiries, and wait to place the thing in Mr. Gilmore''s hands to- morrow?" |
583 | My cockatoo, my canaries, and my little mice-- who will cherish them when their good Papa is gone?" |
583 | My mistress says to him,"Is it heart- disease?" |
583 | My tone surprises you-- ha? |
583 | Need I say more? |
583 | Nine, surely? |
583 | Nor what her illness had been?" |
583 | Not Sir Percival?" |
583 | Not like London-- is it, sir? |
583 | Now he is in Hampshire, is he going to drive away a long distance, on Anne''s account again, to question Mrs. Catherick at Welmingham? |
583 | Now, about the pecuniary arrangements between us-- do tell me-- are they satisfactory?" |
583 | Of what nature could it be? |
583 | Old?" |
583 | On a calm revision of all the circumstances-- Is my conduct worthy of any serious blame? |
583 | On the other hand, if the second case supposed were the true one, what had been the flaw in her reputation? |
583 | On the other hand, in such a miserable world as this, was it possible to over- estimate the value of peace and quietness? |
583 | On which side did you lose sight of her?" |
583 | Once for all, will you sign or will you not?" |
583 | Once more, Lady Glyde, and for the last time, will you sign or will you not?" |
583 | Or had he followed the Count home from the Opera? |
583 | Or, assuming it to be false, could the conclusion which associated Sir Percival with her guilt have been founded in some inconceivable error? |
583 | Ought we to appeal to the practical test of her handwriting? |
583 | Perhaps I had fastened it insufficiently? |
583 | Perhaps I read her letters wrongly in the past, and am now reading her face wrongly in the present? |
583 | Perhaps he has been made the victim of some political persecution? |
583 | Perhaps he is in correspondence with his government? |
583 | Perhaps there might have been some defect in the adhesive gum? |
583 | Perhaps you have not forgotten either what I said when I consented to our engagement? |
583 | Perhaps you were in some degree prepared to hear this? |
583 | Pesca is long- winded to- night?''" |
583 | Secondly, if the share I took in the matter was such as to merit the expression of her gratitude towards myself? |
583 | Shall I ascertain, at once, if the girl is downstairs?" |
583 | Shall I follow their example? |
583 | Shall I give it to him to- morrow? |
583 | Shall I order for you, shall I market for you, Mrs. Cook? |
583 | Shall Mr. Hartright give you some chicken? |
583 | Shall we drop the subject? |
583 | Shall we ring for Louis again?" |
583 | Shall we shake hands? |
583 | She could not say from memory( who, in similar cases, ever can?) |
583 | She had carefully put the two letters into her bosom( what have I to do with her bosom? |
583 | She looked anxiously up and down the road; shifted her bag again from one hand to the other; repeated the words,"Will you promise?" |
583 | She paused-- twisted the cloth in her hands, backwards and forwards, and whispered to herself,"What is it he said?" |
583 | She suddenly bent forward into the boat- house, and said,''Ca n''t you guess why?'' |
583 | She''s just mad enough to be shut up, and just sane enough to ruin me when she''s at large-- if you understand that?" |
583 | Sir Percival Glyde''s name is not mentioned, I know-- but does that description at all resemble him?" |
583 | Sir Percival wrote back by the next post, and proposed( in accordance with his own views and wishes from the first?) |
583 | Sleepy, did I say? |
583 | Steal after me and touch me? |
583 | Suppose I begin with myself, so as to get done with that part of the subject as soon as possible? |
583 | Suppose he had lived, would that change of circumstance have altered the result? |
583 | Suppose she only wanted to see me and to speak to me, for the sake of old remembrances? |
583 | Suppose the figure should follow us?" |
583 | Suppose you have a little of both? |
583 | Suppose, Marian, it should only exist after all in Anne Catherick''s fancy? |
583 | Supposing you were to make a will when you come of age, who would you like the money to go to?" |
583 | Surely I am not expected to repeat my niece''s maid''s explanation of her tears, interpreted in the English of my Swiss valet? |
583 | Surely Mr. Gilmore, ignorant as he is of Laura''s secret, was not to blame for feeling surprised that she should repent of her marriage engagement? |
583 | Surely it was before the sun rose? |
583 | Surely it would be a cruel candour to tell Laura this, without a pressing and a positive necessity for it? |
583 | Surely my chance meeting with him on the moor has disclosed another favourable trait in his character? |
583 | Surely nothing can be wrong that I do for Mrs. Fairlie''s sake?" |
583 | Surely our delightful Raffaello''s conception is infinitely preferable?" |
583 | Surely she never remained in the village among the people who knew of her disgrace?" |
583 | Surely the plain inference that follows needs no pointing out? |
583 | Surely you have not forgotten that?" |
583 | Surely you would not be here if you were afraid now?'' |
583 | Surely, with that note in your hand, your mind is at ease too?" |
583 | Take her in, Mrs. Rubelle( you have got your key? |
583 | Tears or perspiration? |
583 | Tell me plainly, have you any reason to distrust Sir Percival Glyde?" |
583 | Tell me, can I do this?" |
583 | Tell me, in plain words, do you want my help?" |
583 | The best men are not consistent in good-- why should the worst men be consistent in evil? |
583 | The breaking up of the family? |
583 | The gentleman''s business? |
583 | The hiding of a crime, or the detection of a crime, what is it? |
583 | The money dribbled in a little at first-- but what CAN you expect out of London? |
583 | The obstinate folly of his story is beyond all belief; and you might lead him into ignorantly----""Ignorantly what?" |
583 | The only consideration which made him hesitate, at the last moment----""Yes?" |
583 | The only question I asked myself was-- Had he found her? |
583 | The son( who can blame him?) |
583 | Then he clasped his hand fast round my arm, and whispered to me,''What did Anne Catherick say to you yesterday? |
583 | Then he stopped again, and said,''Will you take a second chance, if I give it to you? |
583 | Then why not make it?" |
583 | Then why not relieve me of the tablettes without being told? |
583 | Then why tease him? |
583 | Then why the devil do n''t you go?" |
583 | Then will you be so very kind as to look into the garden and make quite sure?" |
583 | Then, why hurry him?" |
583 | There are dogs about the house, and shall I leave my forlorn white children at the mercies of the dogs? |
583 | There are two places of that name, then, in Hampshire?" |
583 | There is only one thing I do n''t like about them, and do n''t like about Mrs. Clements----""What is it?" |
583 | There was a third person watching us in the plantation yesterday, and that third person---""Are you sure it was the Count?" |
583 | There, looking at me from the doorway, stood a woman, whose face I never remembered to have seen before--""How was she dressed?" |
583 | There, on the opposite side of the way, I saw the Count, with a man talking to him----""Did he notice you at the window?" |
583 | These two circumstances are surely sufficient to have suggested to the boy himself the answer which has so naturally shocked you?" |
583 | To be repaired?" |
583 | To whom could I apply to know something more of the man''s history and of the man himself than I knew now? |
583 | To whom was it to be addressed? |
583 | Very strange, was it not? |
583 | Vesey?" |
583 | Want of exercise, I suppose? |
583 | Was I Walter Hartright? |
583 | Was I right in attributing this sudden change of place to some threatened annoyance on the part of Count Fosco?" |
583 | Was he in the Forest Road by accident? |
583 | Was he very yellow when he came in, or had he turned very yellow in the last minute or two? |
583 | Was it a bustle of footsteps below stairs? |
583 | Was it at this point that I began to suspect he was going to bore me? |
583 | Was it her shoes, her stays, or her bones? |
583 | Was it likely that a young woman of twenty- one would die before a man of forty five, and die without children? |
583 | Was it my fault that she had lost her place?) |
583 | Was it nine struck, or eight? |
583 | Was it not our duty, our best expression of gratitude, to forget ourselves, and to think only of HER? |
583 | Was it possible that appearances in this case had pointed one way while the truth lay all the while unsuspected in another direction? |
583 | Was it the sort of funeral she might have had if she had really been my own child?" |
583 | Was she young or old?" |
583 | Was the housekeeper the only person who saw her?" |
583 | Was the light that I had been looking for so long glimmering on me-- far off, as yet-- in the good woman''s recollections of Anne''s early life? |
583 | Was the view that I had seen, while listening to those words, the view that I saw now, standing on the hill- top by myself? |
583 | Was there no excuse for me? |
583 | Was this the well- known, uneventful road, where holiday people strolled on Sundays? |
583 | Was this third person, supposed to have been secretly present at the interview, a reality, or the creature of Anne Catherick''s excited fancy? |
583 | We have made as many friendly sacrifices, on both sides, as men could, but we have had our secrets from each other, of course-- haven''t we?" |
583 | We quite understand each other-- don''t we? |
583 | Well, Practical, will that do for you?" |
583 | Well,"she continued, turning to the boy,"and whose ghost was it?" |
583 | Were that woman and I to meet once more? |
583 | What I want to know is this: ought I at once to take such steps as I can to discover the writer of the letter? |
583 | What am I to tell you about Mr. Fairlie? |
583 | What answer could I make? |
583 | What answer could I make? |
583 | What are we( I ask) but puppets in a show- box? |
583 | What are you laughing about?" |
583 | What are you making there? |
583 | What can I recall of her during the past six months, before I close my journal for the night? |
583 | What can this mean? |
583 | What could I do? |
583 | What could be his purpose here? |
583 | What did it mean? |
583 | What did she say?" |
583 | What did she tell you about your husband?" |
583 | What did the Count say of me?" |
583 | What did this mean? |
583 | What did you say the place was called?" |
583 | What do I want with a cook if I do n''t mean to give any dinner- parties?" |
583 | What do you demand?" |
583 | What do you mean? |
583 | What do you mean?" |
583 | What do you think of the programme? |
583 | What do you think, Fosco? |
583 | What does he do when he dies? |
583 | What does it all mean? |
583 | What does she do with those consequences? |
583 | What does this mean? |
583 | What else had I to look to for consolation? |
583 | What else was I to do? |
583 | What else was I to do? |
583 | What evidence have you to support the declaration on your side that the person who died and was buried was not Lady Glyde? |
583 | What excuse can she possibly have for changing her mind about a man whom she had virtually accepted for her husband more than two years ago?" |
583 | What fresh directions, in the terrible uncertainty of my position, could I now issue? |
583 | What further service was required of me by any one? |
583 | What had I done? |
583 | What had become of her now? |
583 | What had been the nature of the crime? |
583 | What had happened? |
583 | What has he said or done to justify you?" |
583 | What has produced this singular fancy? |
583 | What has really happened?" |
583 | What has she done?" |
583 | What have I done? |
583 | What have I observed in Sir Percival, since his return, to improve my opinion of him? |
583 | What have women to do with business? |
583 | What have you to set against them? |
583 | What help was there in those lines? |
583 | What hour is the clock to strike?" |
583 | What if I call it-- Anne Catherick?" |
583 | What if their truth could be proved before the fatal words of consent were spoken, and the marriage- settlement was drawn? |
583 | What if those wild accusations rested on a foundation of truth? |
583 | What if we got one, and used it as a battering- ram against the door? |
583 | What interest have you in me, or in her? |
583 | What is it that makes me unable to blame them, or to ridicule them in HIM? |
583 | What is she like?" |
583 | What is the inevitable consequence? |
583 | What is the least you will take?" |
583 | What is the secret of Madame Fosco''s unhesitating devotion of herself to the fulfilment of my boldest wishes, to the furtherance of my deepest plans? |
583 | What is the trifling mortification of my pride compared to the dreadful sacrifice of your happiness?" |
583 | What is your own private notion of a virtuous man, my pret- pret- pretty? |
583 | What keys do you mean?" |
583 | What next of the one person who holds the foremost place in my heart? |
583 | What objection can she urge against him after that? |
583 | What of the Count? |
583 | What progress had I made towards discovering the suspected stain on the reputation of Sir Percival''s mother? |
583 | What reason? |
583 | What remains before the agent comes?" |
583 | What right had I to decide, in my poor mortal ignorance of the future, that this man, too, must escape with impunity because he escaped ME? |
583 | What right have I to decide?" |
583 | What shall we do? |
583 | What sort of a man is this uncle? |
583 | What style?" |
583 | What subtle wickedness had the Count planned and executed in my absence? |
583 | What suggestions of any mystery unexplained had arisen out of my visit to the vestry? |
583 | What the deuce should I know about it? |
583 | What was I saying? |
583 | What was I to do next? |
583 | What was I to do? |
583 | What was Moses in Egypt but a sublime oratorio, which was acted on the stage instead of being coldly sung in a concert- room? |
583 | What was the gentleman like? |
583 | What was the overture to Guillaume Tell but a symphony under another name? |
583 | What will the Count say?" |
583 | What would Walter Hartright have said in this emergency? |
583 | What''s the news there now, if you please?" |
583 | When I am out of your service, I hope I know my own place well enough not to speak of matters which do n''t concern me--""When do you want to go?" |
583 | When I am totally prostrated( did I mention that I was totally prostrated by Marian''s letter?) |
583 | When did she come? |
583 | When do you mean to sit down?" |
583 | When do you want to go?" |
583 | When the bills are due, is there really and truly no earthly way of paying them but by the help of your wife?" |
583 | When the patient has been released in this doubtful manner, and is taken to Mr. Fairlie, does he recognise her? |
583 | When? |
583 | Where are your eyes? |
583 | Where did I leave off? |
583 | Where did she bring it with her?" |
583 | Where did you find it, Miss Halcombe?" |
583 | Where did you first see her?" |
583 | Where did you get this?" |
583 | Where had she been, and what had she been doing in that interval? |
583 | Where had she stopped the cab? |
583 | Where is Lady Glyde?" |
583 | Where is Laura?" |
583 | Where is the danger of your position at the present moment?" |
583 | Where is the modern Rembrandt who could depict our midnight procession? |
583 | Where is the woman who has ever really torn from her heart the image that has been once fixed in it by a true love? |
583 | Where is your smelling- bottle? |
583 | Whether Mr. Murderer and Mrs. Murderess Manning were not both unusually stout people? |
583 | Whether Pope Alexander the Sixth was a good man? |
583 | Which of them is it?" |
583 | Which year did you say, sir? |
583 | Who can have taken them?" |
583 | Who can have told you?" |
583 | Who can read the letter she hid in the sand, and not see that my wife is in possession of the Secret, deny it as she may?" |
583 | Who could I find capable of travelling to London by the train she travelled by, and of privately seeing her home? |
583 | Who could it have been? |
583 | Who do you think helped Anne Catherick to get the start, when the people from the mad- house were after her? |
583 | Who do you think saw her again in Cumberland? |
583 | Who else is left to you? |
583 | Who gets the first of a woman''s heart? |
583 | Who had begun the cleansing of the marble, and who had left it unfinished? |
583 | Who had done that wrong? |
583 | Who is the English poet who has won the most universal sympathy-- who makes the easiest of all subjects for pathetic writing and pathetic painting? |
583 | Who knows? |
583 | Who was the Count expected to find in the course of his studious morning rambles at Blackwater Park? |
583 | Who wrote them?" |
583 | Why alarm me as well as himself? |
583 | Why ca n''t I make other people as careful as I am myself? |
583 | Why did I only do harm, when I wanted and meant to do good? |
583 | Why did I only have courage enough to write you that letter? |
583 | Why do I confess my curiosity? |
583 | Why do I sit here still? |
583 | Why do I weary my hot eyes and my burning head by writing more? |
583 | Why do you point him out?" |
583 | Why do you suspect me of doing wrong?" |
583 | Why have they all got fat noses and hard cheeks? |
583 | Why have we no variety in our breed of Young Persons? |
583 | Why is n''t it kept in an iron safe? |
583 | Why is there nothing I can do? |
583 | Why lay her on my shoulders? |
583 | Why not call to me? |
583 | Why not end it there and then? |
583 | Why not lie down and rest myself, and try to quench the fever that consumes me, in sleep? |
583 | Why not to- day?" |
583 | Why not? |
583 | Why object, Gilmore, to a portfolio stand?" |
583 | Why should I prolong the hard trial of saying farewell by one unnecessary minute? |
583 | Why should I? |
583 | Why should I? |
583 | Why this outburst? |
583 | Why this withering eloquence? |
583 | Why transfer them to ME? |
583 | Why was this easiest, simplest work of self- culture always too much for me? |
583 | Why-- I ask everybody-- why worry ME? |
583 | Why? |
583 | Will it do?" |
583 | Will she forgive me if I do?'' |
583 | Will that do as well? |
583 | Will the marriage take place soon? |
583 | Will you excuse my obstinacy if I still venture to press it?" |
583 | Will you keep my secret, and help me in this? |
583 | Will you let me alter the light in your room?" |
583 | Will you meet her in the garden at Limmeridge House?" |
583 | Will you pardon me, and spare me, Sir Percival, if I acknowledge that it is not so any longer?" |
583 | Will you promise?" |
583 | Will you rest and lunch downstairs? |
583 | Will you see her to- morrow at the farm? |
583 | Will you take my arm? |
583 | Will you think better of it, and tell me the rest?'' |
583 | Will you think better of it, and try your teeth in my fat neck? |
583 | Will you try to forgive me, Percival, as heartily as I forgive YOU?" |
583 | Wo n''t you fill your glass again? |
583 | Wo n''t you tell it? |
583 | Would I listen to this, and this, and this, and say if anything more sublimely sacred and grand had ever been composed by mortal man?" |
583 | Would it not be far easier, and far less dangerous, to insist on a confession from her, than to force it from Sir Percival?" |
583 | Would other men have remembered that in my place? |
583 | Would success in both those cases do more than supply an excellent foundation for a trial in a court of law? |
583 | Would you like it all to go to Miss Halcombe?" |
583 | Would you mind taking great pains not to let the doors bang, and not to drop the portfolio? |
583 | Would you trust her in other things?" |
583 | Yes, indeed? |
583 | Yes? |
583 | Yes? |
583 | Yes? |
583 | Yes? |
583 | Yes?" |
583 | Yes?" |
583 | You all know where that is? |
583 | You are aware that he had me watched before I left England, and that he probably knows me by sight, although I do n''t know him?" |
583 | You are only wanted to do what Miss Halcombe has done for you---""Marian?" |
583 | You draw and paint, I hear, Mr. Hartright? |
583 | You have got your hat on-- suppose we go and dream away the afternoon in the grounds?" |
583 | You have heard me, you have heard Miss Halcombe, speak of Mrs. Vesey? |
583 | You have heard, Walter, of the political societies that are hidden in every great city on the continent of Europe? |
583 | You have kept Laura, mercifully kept her, in ignorance of her husband''s death----""Oh, Walter, surely it must be long yet before we tell her of it?" |
583 | You have made your inquiries?" |
583 | You have no money at the bankers?" |
583 | You have thought so yourself, dear lady, have you not? |
583 | You heard him say that he was a lost man if the secret of Anne Catherick was known?" |
583 | You heard him tell the Count that he believed his wife knew enough to ruin him? |
583 | You know the old Elizabethan bedrooms? |
583 | You know whose interests I represent in coming here?" |
583 | You naughty boy, when did you see the ghost?" |
583 | You quite understand about that little matter of business being safe in my hands? |
583 | You saw me send the gardener on to the house, with a letter addressed, in a strange handwriting, to Miss Fairlie?" |
583 | You seem to know Mrs. Catherick, Miss Halcombe?" |
583 | You told her so, did you not?" |
583 | You understand now, Mr. Hartright, why I speak of waiting to take legal advice until to- morrow? |
583 | You understand? |
583 | You want something of me?" |
583 | You were a little boy, I suppose, in the year twenty- seven? |
583 | You were not talking of anything very terrible, were you?" |
583 | You will let me know as soon as the arrangement is complete? |
583 | You will pardon an invalid? |
583 | You''re from London, I suppose, sir? |
583 | am I going to be ill? |
583 | am I looking forward to the happier time which my narrative has not yet reached? |
583 | compliments and soft speeches? |
583 | did you call after her?" |
583 | do you care about your wife?" |
583 | have I ever seen you before?'' |
583 | he asked,"or were you just going out?" |
583 | he cried passionately,"do you know me no better than that? |
583 | he said,"why, I should like to know?" |
583 | he went on;"now pray tell me-- what does your side say?" |
583 | how can I help you, Walter, when I do n''t know the man?" |
583 | how many minutes more before I hear the carriage wheels and run downstairs to find myself in Laura''s arms? |
583 | is that sublime?" |
583 | my face speaks the truth, then? |
583 | or are you surprised at my careless way of talking? |
583 | or do you mean to be restless, and secretly thirst for change and adventure, in the humdrum atmosphere of Limmeridge House?" |
583 | or ought I to wait, and apply to Mr. Fairlie''s legal adviser to- morrow? |
583 | or shall I give you some cutlet?" |
583 | or the unknown inhabitants of this Cumberland mansion?" |
583 | or was he only suffering from the heat a little more severely than usual? |
583 | said the Count,"does he indeed? |
583 | said the cheerful clerk;"but when you''re in a lost corner of a place like this, what are you to do? |
583 | says Papa, in a great surprise,''who talked of bank- note? |
583 | she whispered,"we may own we love each other now?" |
583 | was it through anybody in the town? |
583 | we all come to it, sooner or later, do n''t we, sir?" |
583 | what am I to do with them? |
583 | what do you mean?" |
583 | what is there extraordinary in that? |
583 | what shall I do? |
583 | what was I saying?'' |
583 | where is the faultless human creature who can persevere in a good resolution, without sometimes failing and falling back? |
583 | where was Mr. Dawson when Marian went away?" |
583 | who told you?" |
583 | who will dress her for dinner to- day? |
583 | without saying more last words?" |
583 | you saw it yesterday evening, in the twilight? |
583 | you think I shall poison you?" |
583 | you will never lower yourself by making a confession to him?" |
583 | you''re strong on your legs, too-- and what a blessing that is, is n''t it? |
1260 | -shire? 1260 A crippled man, twenty years older than you, whom you will have to wait on?" |
1260 | A person to be trusted? |
1260 | A poor blind man, whom you will have to lead about by the hand? |
1260 | A strange wish, Mrs. Reed; why do you hate her so? |
1260 | A stranger!--no; who can it be? 1260 A thoroughly educated man?" |
1260 | Adele may accompany us, may she not, sir? |
1260 | Adele,I inquired,"with whom did you live when you were in that pretty clean town you spoke of?" |
1260 | Ah!--what did it do? |
1260 | Aire? 1260 Alone, Jane?" |
1260 | Am I a liar in your eyes? |
1260 | Am I about to do it? 1260 Am I cruel in my love?" |
1260 | Am I hideous, Jane? |
1260 | Am I wanted? |
1260 | An island thousands of miles off, where they make wine-- the butler did tell me--"Madeira? |
1260 | And I must cross it with silver, I suppose? |
1260 | And Mason? |
1260 | And Miss Ingram: what sort of a voice had she? |
1260 | And Rosamond Oliver? |
1260 | And afterwards? |
1260 | And are the family well at the house, Robert? |
1260 | And better? |
1260 | And did she inform you what I went to do? |
1260 | And did you ever hear that my father was an avaricious, grasping man? |
1260 | And do you like that monotonous theme? |
1260 | And dressed? |
1260 | And have you a pale blue dress on? |
1260 | And his sisters also? |
1260 | And his sisters are called Diana and Mary Rivers? |
1260 | And how do people perform that ceremony of parting, Jane? 1260 And how does his mother bear it?" |
1260 | And how far is it? |
1260 | And how were they? |
1260 | And if they laid you under a ban for adhering to me? |
1260 | And it has made you look pale-- were you afraid when I left you alone with Mason? |
1260 | And it was last Monday night, somewhere near midnight? |
1260 | And made a good choice of an attendant for you in Alice Wood? |
1260 | And may I not paint one like it for you? |
1260 | And now tell me who is the lady whom Mr. Brocklehurst called your benefactress? |
1260 | And now you recall your promise, and will not go to India at all, I presume? |
1260 | And now? |
1260 | And old Madam Reed, or the Misses, her daughters, will be solicited by you to seek a place, I suppose? |
1260 | And shall I see you again, Helen, when I die? |
1260 | And should you like to fall into that pit, and to be burning there for ever? |
1260 | And so you''re glad to leave me? |
1260 | And the Psalms? 1260 And the carriage?" |
1260 | And the pain in your chest? |
1260 | And the sago? |
1260 | And the school, Miss Eyre? 1260 And these dreams weigh on your spirits now, Jane, when I am close to you? |
1260 | And they will go in three days now? |
1260 | And this beautiful and accomplished lady, she is not yet married? |
1260 | And this is Jane Eyre? 1260 And this lady?" |
1260 | And was that the head and front of his offending? |
1260 | And what are the other teachers called? |
1260 | And what business have you here? |
1260 | And what did he say? 1260 And what did you do meantime?" |
1260 | And what do the women do? |
1260 | And what does he say about her? |
1260 | And what does_ your_ heart say? |
1260 | And what for,''no, thank you?'' 1260 And what good can you do her? |
1260 | And what good does it do you? |
1260 | And what have you to do with her? 1260 And what is he?" |
1260 | And what is hell? 1260 And what right would that ruin have to bid a budding woodbine cover its decay with freshness?" |
1260 | And what then? |
1260 | And what was she like? |
1260 | And what will you do, Janet, while I am bargaining for so many tons of flesh and such an assortment of black eyes? |
1260 | And when Miss Temple teaches you, do your thoughts wander then? |
1260 | And when did you find time to do them? 1260 And when will you commence the exercise of your function?" |
1260 | And where do you live? 1260 And where is the speaker? |
1260 | And who goes with you? 1260 And who talks of error now? |
1260 | And why do they call it Institution? 1260 And will you consent to dispense with a great many conventional forms and phrases, without thinking that the omission arises from insolence?" |
1260 | And wo n''t you be sorry to leave poor Bessie? |
1260 | And would be sorry to part with them? |
1260 | And you came from--? |
1260 | And you can work on muslin and canvas? |
1260 | And you do n''t live at Gateshead? |
1260 | And you do not lie dead in some ditch under some stream? 1260 And you felt self- satisfied with the result of your ardent labours?" |
1260 | And you need help, do you not? |
1260 | And you see the candles? |
1260 | And you stayed there eight years: you are now, then, eighteen? |
1260 | And you will stay with me? |
1260 | And you would thrust on me a wife? |
1260 | And your home? |
1260 | And your previous dreams, were they real too? 1260 Any ill news?" |
1260 | Are all your arrangements complete? |
1260 | Are there any letters for J.E.? |
1260 | Are there ladies at the Leas? |
1260 | Are they foreigners? |
1260 | Are we not? 1260 Are you an orphan?" |
1260 | Are you apprehensive of the new sphere you are about to enter?--of the new life into which you are passing? |
1260 | Are you book- learned? |
1260 | Are you going somewhere, Helen? 1260 Are you happy here?" |
1260 | Are you in earnest? 1260 Are you not very thankful to have such a fine place to live at?" |
1260 | Are you up? |
1260 | Are you warm, darling? |
1260 | Are you well? |
1260 | As you do, Bessie? |
1260 | At all events you_ will_ come back: you will not be induced under any pretext to take up a permanent residence with her? |
1260 | Barbara,said she,"can you not bring a little more bread and butter? |
1260 | Because you are sorry to leave it? |
1260 | Besides,said Miss Abbot,"God will punish her: He might strike her dead in the midst of her tantrums, and then where would she go? |
1260 | Bessie, what is the matter with me? 1260 Brother? |
1260 | But Miss Temple is the best-- isn''t she? |
1260 | But Reed left children?--you must have cousins? 1260 But are your relatives so very poor? |
1260 | But before me: if I, indeed, in any respect come up to your difficult standard? |
1260 | But do you never single one from the rest-- or it may be, two? |
1260 | But has he no peculiarities? 1260 But his brain? |
1260 | But is he fit to move, sir? |
1260 | But my powers-- where are they for this undertaking? 1260 But not with you?" |
1260 | But perhaps your accommodations-- your cottage-- your furniture-- have disappointed your expectations? 1260 But that teacher, Miss Scatcherd, is so cruel to you?" |
1260 | But they wrote to him? |
1260 | But under such circumstances, what could one do? |
1260 | But well carried out, eh? 1260 But what has mademoiselle to do with it? |
1260 | But what have I to do with millions? 1260 But what, then,"said he,"do you expect me to do for you?" |
1260 | But where are you going to, Helen? 1260 But why are you come?" |
1260 | But will it hurt me?--is it inflammatory? |
1260 | But you comprehend me? |
1260 | But you feel solitude an oppression? 1260 But you heard an odd laugh? |
1260 | But you''ve never been to a boarding- school? |
1260 | Can I do anything? |
1260 | Can it be you, Jane? |
1260 | Can there be life here? |
1260 | Can we send for any one you know? |
1260 | Can you see me? |
1260 | Can you tell me where I could get employment of any kind? |
1260 | Can you tell me where he is? |
1260 | Can you understand her when she runs on so fast? |
1260 | Cold? 1260 Come where there is some freshness, for a few moments,"he said;"that house is a mere dungeon: do n''t you feel it so?" |
1260 | Could you decide now? |
1260 | Cruel? 1260 Curse you? |
1260 | Dead? |
1260 | Did I like his voice? |
1260 | Did I not say you neglected essential points to pursue trifles? |
1260 | Did Mr. Oliver employ women? |
1260 | Did Rivers spend much time with the ladies of his family? |
1260 | Did he study much? |
1260 | Did he teach you nothing? |
1260 | Did he teach you? |
1260 | Did no one go to Thornfield Hall, then? 1260 Did she know of any place in the neighbourhood where a servant was wanted?" |
1260 | Did she not, then, adopt you of her own accord? |
1260 | Did she say that to me? 1260 Did she send you here, Bessie?" |
1260 | Did the horse fall in Hay Lane? |
1260 | Did you ask to learn? |
1260 | Did you expect a present, Miss Eyre? 1260 Did you find your scholars as attentive as you expected?" |
1260 | Did you hear it? |
1260 | Did you hear that loud laugh? 1260 Did you like him, Jane?" |
1260 | Did you not know he was called Rochester? |
1260 | Did you say that tall lady was called Miss Temple? |
1260 | Did you see her face? |
1260 | Did you speak these words aloud? |
1260 | Did you speak, my own? |
1260 | Did you take any cold that night you half drowned me? |
1260 | Did you? 1260 Did you? |
1260 | Did you? |
1260 | Do n''t you feel hungry, Adele? |
1260 | Do n''t you think Gateshead Hall a very beautiful house? |
1260 | Do the servants sleep in these rooms? |
1260 | Do we pay no money? 1260 Do you come a long way from here?" |
1260 | Do you consider you have got your reward for a season of exertion? |
1260 | Do you doubt me, Jane? |
1260 | Do you expect him back to- night? |
1260 | Do you feel as if you should sleep, Miss? |
1260 | Do you feel ill, sir? |
1260 | Do you forgive me, Jane? |
1260 | Do you know, Jane, I have your little pearl necklace at this moment fastened round my bronze scrag under my cravat? 1260 Do you know,"said she,"that, of the three characters, I liked you in the last best? |
1260 | Do you like him? 1260 Do you like the teachers?" |
1260 | Do you like this sunrise, Jane? 1260 Do you like your house?" |
1260 | Do you mean to say,he asked,"that you are completely isolated from every connection?" |
1260 | Do you read your Bible? |
1260 | Do you say your prayers night and morning? |
1260 | Do you suppose I eat like an ogre or a ghoul, that you dread being the companion of my repast? |
1260 | Do you think I can stay to become nothing to you? 1260 Do you think you shall like Morton?" |
1260 | Do you want her? |
1260 | Do you, sir, feel calm and happy? |
1260 | Do you, sir? |
1260 | Does he live here? |
1260 | Does he? |
1260 | Does n''t she know? |
1260 | Does not Sophie sleep with Adele in the nursery? |
1260 | Does not the consciousness of having done some real good in your day and generation give pleasure? |
1260 | Does that person want you? |
1260 | Est- ce que je ne puis pas prendrie une seule de ces fleurs magnifiques, mademoiselle? 1260 Est- ce que ma robe va bien?" |
1260 | Everybody, Jane? 1260 Fairfax--""Well what is it?" |
1260 | Farewell, Miss Eyre, for the present; is that all? |
1260 | For how long, Jane? 1260 For whom, sir?" |
1260 | From England and from Thornfield: and--"Well? |
1260 | Generally thought? 1260 Georgiana is handsome, I suppose, Bessie?" |
1260 | Great God!--what delusion has come over me? 1260 Had I done these pictures? |
1260 | Had you ever experience of such a character, sir? 1260 Happen ye''ve been a dressmaker?" |
1260 | Has anything happened here? 1260 Has anything happened?" |
1260 | Has it other furniture of the same kind within? |
1260 | Has she mentioned me lately? |
1260 | Have I furnished it nicely? |
1260 | Have you a pocket- comb about you, sir? |
1260 | Have you a sponge in your room? |
1260 | Have you any salts-- volatile salts? |
1260 | Have you any sort of conveyance? |
1260 | Have you been long here? |
1260 | Have you cried your grief away? |
1260 | Have you found your first day''s work harder than you expected? |
1260 | Have you heard from Diana and Mary lately? |
1260 | Have you lived with the family long? |
1260 | Have you read much? |
1260 | Have you seen much society? |
1260 | Have you told master that you heard a laugh? |
1260 | He is not resident, then? |
1260 | He rode Mesrour( the black horse), did he not, when he went out? 1260 He wished to teach you?" |
1260 | He would approve of your plans, Jane? 1260 He would discover many things in you he could not have expected to find? |
1260 | His manners, I think, you said are not to your taste?--priggish and parsonic? |
1260 | His_ elder_ brother? |
1260 | Hope of what, sir? |
1260 | How are you now, Jane? |
1260 | How are you to- night, Helen? 1260 How are you? |
1260 | How can I do that? 1260 How can she bear it so quietly-- so firmly?" |
1260 | How can they pity me after what Mr. Brocklehurst has said? |
1260 | How can you keep in good health? 1260 How could she tell where I had got the handkerchief?" |
1260 | How dare I, Mrs. Reed? 1260 How dare you affirm that, Jane Eyre?" |
1260 | How do you do, my dear? 1260 How do you do?" |
1260 | How do you know? |
1260 | How do you know?--how can you guess all this, sir? |
1260 | How do you like Thornfield? |
1260 | How far is Thornfield Hall from here? |
1260 | How is Helen Burns? |
1260 | How long did you reside with him and his sisters after the cousinship was discovered? |
1260 | How long is he going to stand with his back against that door? |
1260 | How long shall we be before we get there? |
1260 | How long will you stay? |
1260 | How much am I worth? |
1260 | How was your memory when you were eighteen, sir? |
1260 | How, sir? |
1260 | How? 1260 How? |
1260 | I always said you would surpass them in learning: and can you draw? |
1260 | I am willing to amuse you, if I can, sir-- quite willing; but I can not introduce a topic, because how do I know what will interest you? 1260 I am: so are you-- what then?" |
1260 | I can make nothing of such a hand as that; almost without lines: besides, what is in a palm? 1260 I could bend her with my finger and thumb: and what good would it do if I bent, if I uptore, if I crushed her? |
1260 | I have refused to marry him--"And have consequently displeased him? |
1260 | I mean,--What next? 1260 I might say it to almost any one: but would it be true of almost any one?" |
1260 | I never have dined with you, sir: and I see no reason why I should now: till--"Till what? 1260 I should be obliged to take time, sir, before I could give you an answer worthy of your acceptance: a present has many faces to it, has it not? |
1260 | I should think you ought to be at home yourself,said he,"if you have a home in this neighbourhood: where do you come from?" |
1260 | I wish,continued the good lady,"you would ask her a question or two about her parents: I wonder if she remembers them?" |
1260 | I!--rich? |
1260 | If I could do that, simpleton, where would the danger be? 1260 If all these people came in a body and spat at me, what would you do, Jane?" |
1260 | If they are really qualified for the task, will not their own hearts be the first to inform them of it? |
1260 | If you had such, would you like to go to them? |
1260 | In the name of all the elves in Christendom, is that Jane Eyre? |
1260 | In truth?--in the flesh? 1260 In what shape?" |
1260 | In what way is he peculiar? |
1260 | Is John getting the carriage ready? |
1260 | Is Miss Eyre there? |
1260 | Is Miss Temple as severe to you as Miss Scatcherd? |
1260 | Is Mr. Rochester an exacting, fastidious sort of man? |
1260 | Is Mr. Rochester living at Thornfield Hall now? |
1260 | Is all the soot washed from my face? |
1260 | Is he a good man? |
1260 | Is he an able man, then? |
1260 | Is he dead? |
1260 | Is he in England? |
1260 | Is it Jane? 1260 Is it all over?" |
1260 | Is it because you have the prospect of a journey before you, Jane? 1260 Is it her Mr. Bates has been to see?" |
1260 | Is it necessary to change my frock? |
1260 | Is it really for love he is going to marry you? |
1260 | Is it still''Rasselas''? |
1260 | Is it unwelcome news? |
1260 | Is it, sir? 1260 Is it, then, a bonfire just kindled?" |
1260 | Is she going by herself? |
1260 | Is she ill, or only famished? |
1260 | Is she original? 1260 Is that a dream?" |
1260 | Is that a portrait of some one you know? |
1260 | Is that all? 1260 Is that what he rang for?" |
1260 | Is that your mistress, nurse? |
1260 | Is the danger you apprehended last night gone by now, sir? |
1260 | Is the luggage brought down? |
1260 | Is there a flood? |
1260 | Is there a little girl called Jane Eyre here? |
1260 | Is there a place in this neighbourhood called Thornfield? |
1260 | Is there anything else you wish for, Jane? 1260 Is there immediate danger?" |
1260 | Is there only one? |
1260 | Is there ony country where they talk i''that way? |
1260 | Is this Jane Eyre? |
1260 | Is this portrait like? |
1260 | It is a large sum-- don''t you think there is a mistake? |
1260 | It is you-- is it, Jane? 1260 Jane"( bending towards and embracing me),"do you mean it now?" |
1260 | Jane, Jane,said he, stopping before me,"you are quite pale with your vigils: do n''t you curse me for disturbing your rest?" |
1260 | Jane, are you ready? |
1260 | Jane, do you hear that nightingale singing in the wood? 1260 Jane, what are you doing?" |
1260 | Jane, will you have a flower? |
1260 | Jane, you are under a mistake: what is the matter with you? 1260 Jane, you understand what I want of you? |
1260 | Journey!--Is Mr. Rochester gone anywhere? 1260 Just one word, Jane: were there only ladies in the house where you have been?" |
1260 | Just tell me this,said I,"and since you know so much, you surely can tell it me-- what of Mr. Rochester? |
1260 | Ladies,said he, turning to his family,"Miss Temple, teachers, and children, you all see this girl?" |
1260 | Leave England? 1260 Mary,"I said,"how are you?" |
1260 | Matter of business? 1260 May I go up and speak to her?" |
1260 | May I speak to your mistresses? |
1260 | Miss Eyre, are you ill? |
1260 | Miss Eyre, have you ever lived in a town? |
1260 | Miss Fairfax? 1260 Miss Jane, take off your pinafore; what are you doing there? |
1260 | Mr. Rochester, I thought you were not fond of children? |
1260 | Mr. Rochester? 1260 Mrs. Fairfax, I suppose?" |
1260 | Mrs. Fairfax? 1260 Mrs. Poole,"said she, addressing Grace,"the servants''dinner will soon be ready: will you come down?" |
1260 | Mrs. Reed? 1260 Must I leave Thornfield?" |
1260 | Must I move on, sir? |
1260 | Must we part in this way, St. John? 1260 My aunt, consequently?" |
1260 | My dear boys, what are you thinking about? |
1260 | My first aim will be to_ clean down_( do you comprehend the full force of the expression?) 1260 My uncle John was your uncle John? |
1260 | Never will, says the vision? 1260 No, Jane,"he returned:"what necessity is there to dwell on the Past, when the Present is so much surer-- the Future so much brighter?" |
1260 | No, that will do: but after your mama went to the Holy Virgin, as you say, with whom did you live then? |
1260 | No? 1260 None belonging to your father?" |
1260 | Nor any traditions of one? 1260 Nor ever had, I suppose: do you remember them?" |
1260 | Not even if they were kind to you? |
1260 | Not the voyage, but the distance: and then the sea is a barrier--"From what, Jane? |
1260 | Not, I hope, in thought? 1260 Nothing to you? |
1260 | Now and then? |
1260 | Now, Jane, why do n''t you say''Well, sir?'' 1260 Now, ma''am, am I a fool?" |
1260 | Now, my good fellow, how are you? |
1260 | Now, sir, proceed; what did you do when you found she was mad? |
1260 | Of an evening? |
1260 | Of my final re- transformation from India- rubber back to flesh? |
1260 | Oh, it is rich to see and hear her? |
1260 | On to the leads; will you come and see the view from thence? |
1260 | Once more, how do you know? 1260 Once more, why this refusal?" |
1260 | Only you? |
1260 | Perhaps it may be got over-- explained away? |
1260 | Perhaps you may-- who knows? 1260 Perhaps you would rather not sit any longer on my knee, Miss Eyre?" |
1260 | Possibly: yet why should I, if I can get sweet, fresh pleasure? 1260 Qu''avez- vous, mademoiselle?" |
1260 | Reed of Gateshead? 1260 Rivers taught you Hindostanee?" |
1260 | Say,''What do you want, Master Reed?'' |
1260 | Shall I have the pleasure of seeing Miss Fairfax to- night? |
1260 | Shall I travel?--and with you, sir? |
1260 | Shall I, Miss Temple? |
1260 | Shall I? |
1260 | Shall you come down to the drawing- room after dinner? |
1260 | She was greatly admired, of course? |
1260 | She will want to warm herself: what will she do for a fire? |
1260 | She''s a rare one, is she not, Jane? |
1260 | Shortly? |
1260 | Sir, have you finished supper? |
1260 | Sir? |
1260 | Sir? |
1260 | Sir? |
1260 | Sir? |
1260 | So I think: you have no ghost, then? |
1260 | So he went? |
1260 | So much? |
1260 | Soon, sir? |
1260 | St. John made you schoolmistress of Morton before he knew you were his cousin? |
1260 | St. John, who is it? |
1260 | Strange hardships, I imagine-- poor, emaciated, pallid wanderer? |
1260 | Stubborn? |
1260 | Surely, colonel,cried Lady Ingram,"you would not encourage such a low impostor? |
1260 | That head I see now on your shoulders? |
1260 | That village a few miles off? 1260 The fall did not make you ill; what did, then?" |
1260 | The name, then, of that gentleman, is Mr. St. John Rivers? |
1260 | Their father is dead? |
1260 | Then Mr. Rochester was at home when the fire broke out? |
1260 | Then this house does not belong to that tall lady who wears a watch, and who said we were to have some bread and cheese? |
1260 | Then why do they call us charity- children? |
1260 | Then why does he follow you so with his eyes, and get you so frequently alone with him, and keep you so continually at his side? 1260 Then you and I must bid good- bye for a little while?" |
1260 | Then you are married, Bessie? |
1260 | Then you are not in the habit of bolting your door every night before you get into bed? |
1260 | Then you condemn me to live wretched and to die accursed? |
1260 | Then you have been both? |
1260 | Then you have some secret hope to buoy you up and please you with whispers of the future? |
1260 | Then you must prove it by evincing a good appetite; will you fill the teapot while I knit off this needle? |
1260 | Then you snatch love and innocence from me? 1260 Then you will not yield?" |
1260 | Then you_ are_ going to be married, sir? |
1260 | Then, what induced you to take charge of such a little doll as that? |
1260 | Then, you could dare censure for my sake? |
1260 | There has not been any change made about your own arrangements? 1260 They do n''t look grave and mysterious, as if they had heard something strange?" |
1260 | They have no mother? |
1260 | This St. John, then, is your cousin? |
1260 | This is you, Mary, is it not? |
1260 | This will be your luggage, I suppose? |
1260 | This, then, was his father''s residence? |
1260 | Thornfield? 1260 To Miss Temple? |
1260 | To a distance? |
1260 | To comfort me? |
1260 | To get her out of my bride''s way, who might otherwise walk over her rather too emphatically? 1260 To me? |
1260 | Truly, Jane? |
1260 | Try to get hold of my horse''s bridle and lead him to me: you are not afraid? |
1260 | Twenty thousand pounds? |
1260 | Was anybody stirring below when you went down, Jane? |
1260 | Was it known how it originated? |
1260 | Was it your mama who taught you that piece? |
1260 | Was it your suggestion? |
1260 | Was that Grace Poole? 1260 Was the clergyman in?" |
1260 | Was there any lady of the house? |
1260 | Well, Blanche? |
1260 | Well, Helen? |
1260 | Well, Jane Eyre, and are you a good child? |
1260 | Well, Jane, do you know me? |
1260 | Well, Jane? |
1260 | Well, John( leaning out),"any news?" |
1260 | Well, and how do they all get on? 1260 Well, and you want your fortune told?" |
1260 | Well, but, leaving his land out of the question, do you like him? 1260 Well, for sure case, I knawn''t how they can understand t''one t''other: and if either o''ye went there, ye could tell what they said, I guess?" |
1260 | Well, is he? |
1260 | Well, it was hard: but what can a body do? 1260 Well, nurse, how is she?" |
1260 | Well, sir? |
1260 | Well, then, with Miss Temple you are good? |
1260 | Well, what did he want? |
1260 | Well, who am I? |
1260 | Well, who is it? |
1260 | Well, you have been crying, Miss Jane Eyre; can you tell me what about? 1260 Well,"I asked impatiently,"is not Mrs. Reed a hard- hearted, bad woman?" |
1260 | Well,resumed Mr. Rochester,"if you disown parents, you must have some sort of kinsfolk: uncles and aunts?" |
1260 | Well,said Mr. Rochester, gazing inquiringly into my eyes,"how is my Janet now?" |
1260 | Well,said he,"what are you musing about? |
1260 | Well? |
1260 | Well? |
1260 | Well? |
1260 | Were any other lives lost? |
1260 | Were you happy when you painted these pictures? |
1260 | What about, sir? |
1260 | What about? 1260 What about?" |
1260 | What account can you give of yourself? |
1260 | What affectation of diffidence was this at first? |
1260 | What age were you when you went to Lowood? |
1260 | What alienates him from the house? 1260 What are they doing, Jane?" |
1260 | What are they, madam? |
1260 | What awful event has taken place? |
1260 | What can possess him to come home in that style? |
1260 | What can you do? 1260 What can you mean? |
1260 | What character did I act? 1260 What did I do, Jane? |
1260 | What did she say, sister? |
1260 | What did you say, Miss? |
1260 | What did you say, my dear? 1260 What did you think? |
1260 | What do I want? 1260 What do you anticipate of me?" |
1260 | What do you mean, Jane? 1260 What do you mean?" |
1260 | What do you mean? |
1260 | What do you want? |
1260 | What do you want? |
1260 | What does Bessie care for me? 1260 What does Bessie say I have done?" |
1260 | What does He say? |
1260 | What does he look like? |
1260 | What does she want? |
1260 | What does this signify? |
1260 | What dog is this? |
1260 | What for, Jane? |
1260 | What for? 1260 What foreign country was he going to, Bessie?" |
1260 | What have you been doing during my absence? |
1260 | What have you done with me, witch, sorceress? 1260 What have you heard? |
1260 | What is all this? |
1260 | What is it about? |
1260 | What is it, Adele? |
1260 | What is it? 1260 What is she like?" |
1260 | What is the employment you had in view, Mr. Rivers? 1260 What is the matter?" |
1260 | What is the matter? |
1260 | What is the matter? |
1260 | What is the nature of the impediment? |
1260 | What is your business here at this hour? |
1260 | What is your name besides Burns? |
1260 | What makes you say he does not love you, Jane? |
1260 | What more have you to say? |
1260 | What must I say? |
1260 | What must you do to avoid it? |
1260 | What now? 1260 What of that? |
1260 | What other things? 1260 What power?" |
1260 | What should I see besides Aunt Reed in the apartment?--a man or a woman? |
1260 | What sick lady?--where does she live? |
1260 | What tale do you like best to hear? |
1260 | What the devil have you seen, then? |
1260 | What then, Die? |
1260 | What then? 1260 What then?" |
1260 | What to do?--where to go? |
1260 | What was the chief trade in this place? 1260 What were you doing behind the curtain?" |
1260 | What would Uncle Reed say to you, if he were alive? |
1260 | What would you do, Adele? 1260 What!--How is this?" |
1260 | What? 1260 What?" |
1260 | What? |
1260 | What? |
1260 | Whatever can not ye keep yourself for, then? |
1260 | When do you take supper? |
1260 | When do you wish to go? |
1260 | When is his tea- time? |
1260 | When will he come? 1260 Where are you going? |
1260 | Where are you going? |
1260 | Where are you? |
1260 | Where did you get your copies? |
1260 | Where did you last reside? |
1260 | Where did you pick her up? |
1260 | Where do you see the necessity? |
1260 | Where do your brothers and sisters live? |
1260 | Where does she live, Hannah? |
1260 | Where is God? 1260 Where is he? |
1260 | Where is he? |
1260 | Where is he? |
1260 | Where is that region? 1260 Where the devil is Rochester?" |
1260 | Where, Jane? 1260 Where? |
1260 | Who are you? |
1260 | Who are you? |
1260 | Who calls me aunt? 1260 Who could want me?" |
1260 | Who have you been with, Jane? |
1260 | Who is he? |
1260 | Who is that? |
1260 | Who is this? 1260 Who is with him?" |
1260 | Who or what speaks? |
1260 | Who recommended you to come here? |
1260 | Who subscribes? |
1260 | Who talks of cadeaux? |
1260 | Who the deuce have you been with? |
1260 | Who was Naomi Brocklehurst? |
1260 | Who was with you when you revived? |
1260 | Who would not be the Rizzio of so divine a Mary? |
1260 | Who-- I? |
1260 | Whose house is it? |
1260 | Whose, then? |
1260 | Why are you come here, Jane? 1260 Why are you silent, Jane?" |
1260 | Why can she not influence him more, when she is privileged to draw so near to him? |
1260 | Why did I never hear of this? |
1260 | Why did he wish it? 1260 Why did you not come and speak to me in the room?" |
1260 | Why do n''t you come when you are called? |
1260 | Why do n''t you consult my art? |
1260 | Why do n''t you turn pale? |
1260 | Why not, sir? 1260 Why not?" |
1260 | Why should he shun it? |
1260 | Why, I suppose you have a governess for her: I saw a person with her just now-- is she gone? 1260 Why, Jane, what would you have? |
1260 | Why, Jane? 1260 Why,"thought I,"does she not explain that she could neither clean her nails nor wash her face, as the water was frozen?" |
1260 | Why? 1260 Why? |
1260 | Why? |
1260 | Why? |
1260 | Why? |
1260 | Why? |
1260 | Why? |
1260 | Why?--am I a monster? |
1260 | Will Grace Poole live here still, sir? |
1260 | Will it please you to dine with me to- day? |
1260 | Will no one come? |
1260 | Will these people remain long, do you think? |
1260 | Will you ever go back? |
1260 | Will you give me that? |
1260 | Will you hand Mr. Rochester''s cup? |
1260 | Will you have a little more water, sir? 1260 Will you play?" |
1260 | Will you take my arm, sir? |
1260 | Will you walk this way, ma''am? |
1260 | With pleasure? 1260 With whom?" |
1260 | Would I be quiet and talk rationally? |
1260 | Would I forgive him for the selfish idea, and prove my pardon by a reconciling kiss? |
1260 | Would he be in soon? |
1260 | Would it comfort, or would it wound you to have a similar painting? 1260 Would she take my gloves?" |
1260 | Would you like to drink, or could you eat anything? |
1260 | Would you like to go to school? |
1260 | Yes, and she just used to say it in this way:''Qu''avez vous donc? 1260 Yes-- yes; but where is Mr. Briggs? |
1260 | Yes: is it news to you? |
1260 | Yes; I wish to know whether you have heard of any service I can offer myself to undertake? |
1260 | Yes; what then? |
1260 | Yes? |
1260 | Yet are you not capricious, sir? |
1260 | Yet how, on this dark and doleful evening, could you so suddenly rise on my lone hearth? 1260 You are a strange child, Miss Jane,"she said, as she looked down at me;"a little roving, solitary thing: and you are going to school, I suppose?" |
1260 | You are altogether a human being, Jane? 1260 You are going, Jane?" |
1260 | You are leaving me? |
1260 | You are not in earnest? |
1260 | You are not, perhaps, aware that I am your namesake?--that I was christened St. John Eyre Rivers? |
1260 | You are quite a stranger to me-- where is Bessie? |
1260 | You are sure, then, Helen, that there is such a place as heaven, and that our souls can get to it when we die? |
1260 | You blushed, and now you are white, Jane: what is that for? |
1260 | You did not think of opening your door and looking out into the gallery? |
1260 | You do n''t know the gentlemen here? 1260 You do n''t turn sick at the sight of blood?" |
1260 | You examine me, Miss Eyre,said he:"do you think me handsome?" |
1260 | You had a little cottage near the school, you say: did he ever come there to see you? |
1260 | You have as good as informed me, sir, that you are going shortly to be married? |
1260 | You have been resident in my house three months? |
1260 | You have never been married? 1260 You have no faith in me?" |
1260 | You have not an umbrella that I can use as a stick? |
1260 | You have seen love: have you not?--and, looking forward, you have seen him married, and beheld his bride happy? |
1260 | You have spoken of him often: do you like him? |
1260 | You have-- have you? |
1260 | You know I am a scoundrel, Jane? |
1260 | You know Thornfield Hall, of course? |
1260 | You know what you undertake, then? |
1260 | You live just below-- do you mean at that house with the battlements? |
1260 | You must have become in some degree attached to the house,--you, who have an eye for natural beauties, and a good deal of the organ of Adhesiveness? |
1260 | You must wish to leave Lowood? |
1260 | You never felt jealousy, did you, Miss Eyre? 1260 You said he was alive?" |
1260 | You said your name was Jane Elliott? |
1260 | You saw her, you say, Mrs. Fairfax: what was she like? |
1260 | You say he never mentioned us? |
1260 | You say you have faults, Helen: what are they? 1260 You see now how the case stands-- do you not?" |
1260 | You speak of friends, Jane? |
1260 | You three, then, are my cousins; half our blood on each side flows from the same source? |
1260 | You touch me, sir,--you hold me, and fast enough: I am not cold like a corpse, nor vacant like air, am I? |
1260 | You will not come? 1260 You would like a hero of the road then?" |
1260 | You would often see him? 1260 You''ll have some meat?" |
1260 | You''ve brought your luggage with you, have n''t you, my dear? |
1260 | Your real name you will not give? |
1260 | _ Cui bono_? 1260 _ Does_ she like me?" |
1260 | _ I should kill you_--_I am killing you_? 1260 _ Who_ is it? |
1260 | _ You_,I said,"a favourite with Mr. Rochester? |
1260 | ''Where are you?'' |
1260 | ''You like Thornfield?'' |
1260 | ( apostrophising Adele),"who perched you up in the window to give false intelligence?" |
1260 | --"Are there robbers?" |
1260 | --"Is it fire?" |
1260 | --"What has happened?" |
1260 | --"Where shall we run?" |
1260 | --"Who is hurt?" |
1260 | A rich woman?" |
1260 | Adele heard him, and asked if she was to go to school"sans mademoiselle?" |
1260 | Adele, as you say, must go to school; and you, of course, must march straight to-- the devil?" |
1260 | After a considerable pause, I said--"And Miss Oliver? |
1260 | After a pause she said,"I dunnut understand that: you''ve like no house, nor no brass, I guess?" |
1260 | Again and again he said,"Are you happy, Jane?" |
1260 | All said I was wicked, and perhaps I might be so; what thought had I been but just conceiving of starving myself to death? |
1260 | Am I a servant?" |
1260 | Am I ill?" |
1260 | Am I leaving you without a tear-- without a kiss-- without a word?" |
1260 | Am I right, Baroness Ingram, of Ingram Park?" |
1260 | Am I severed from you by insuperable obstacles? |
1260 | An old woman opened: I asked was this the parsonage? |
1260 | And Mademoiselle-- what is your name?" |
1260 | And did I now think Miss Ingram such a choice as Mr. Rochester would be likely to make? |
1260 | And her clothes, they will wear out: how can she get new ones?" |
1260 | And how is Bessie? |
1260 | And how will the interval between leaving England for India, and India for the grave, be filled? |
1260 | And if I did-- what then? |
1260 | And is it that makes you so miserable? |
1260 | And now what did you learn at Lowood? |
1260 | And so you were waiting for your people when you sat on that stile?" |
1260 | And this man I bent over-- this commonplace, quiet stranger-- how had he become involved in the web of horror? |
1260 | And was Mr. Rochester now ugly in my eyes? |
1260 | And what ailed the chestnut tree? |
1260 | And what did she do? |
1260 | And what did you detect, if not gratitude?" |
1260 | And what meaning is that in their solemn depth? |
1260 | And what opiate for his severe sufferings-- what object for his strong passions-- had he sought there? |
1260 | And when you go to India, will you leave me so, without a kinder word than you have yet spoken?" |
1260 | And where is Mr. Rochester? |
1260 | And where, meantime, was Helen Burns? |
1260 | And who taught you to paint wind? |
1260 | And why can not I reconcile myself to the prospect of death? |
1260 | And why had I these aspirations and these regrets? |
1260 | And why has she, or any other, curled hair? |
1260 | And why weep for this? |
1260 | And why, now, was he so tame under the violence or treachery done him? |
1260 | And yet where was the Jane Eyre of yesterday?--where was her life?--where were her prospects? |
1260 | And you are not a pining outcast amongst strangers?" |
1260 | And you will marry him, Jane, wo n''t you? |
1260 | Approaching the hearth, he asked,"If I was at last satisfied with housemaid''s work?" |
1260 | Are her disappointment and sorrow of no interest to you?" |
1260 | Are they working people?" |
1260 | Are you Jane Eyre?" |
1260 | Are you afraid now in daylight?" |
1260 | Are you an independent woman? |
1260 | Are you anything akin to me, do you think, Jane?" |
1260 | Are you coming from Millcote, and on foot? |
1260 | Are you fond of it?" |
1260 | Are you fond of presents?" |
1260 | Are you going home?" |
1260 | Are you hurt? |
1260 | Are you satisfied, Jane? |
1260 | Are you well?" |
1260 | As soon as Mary came down I heard the question:"Is Miss Eyre here?" |
1260 | As we passed Mrs. Reed''s bedroom, she said,"Will you go in and bid Missis good- bye?" |
1260 | Bessie said she was sure you would not refuse: but I suppose you will have to ask leave before you can get off?" |
1260 | Bring me a candle will you Leah?" |
1260 | But I am not a fool-- go--""Where must I go, sir?" |
1260 | But before I go on, tell me what you mean by your''Well, sir?'' |
1260 | But to the point if you please, sir-- Miss Ingram?" |
1260 | But what do_ you_ think?" |
1260 | But what had befallen the night? |
1260 | But what had you to ask, thing,--out with it?" |
1260 | But what is so headstrong as youth? |
1260 | But what of the resemblance? |
1260 | But what then? |
1260 | But what was that to her, or to any one but myself? |
1260 | But, as I was saying: sitting in that window- seat, do you think of nothing but your future school? |
1260 | By- the- bye, how have you got on with your new pupil this morning?" |
1260 | Ca n''t she manage to walk at her age? |
1260 | Can I bear the consciousness that every endearment he bestows is a sacrifice made on principle? |
1260 | Can I not get so much of my own will? |
1260 | Can you listen to me?" |
1260 | Can you play on the piano?" |
1260 | Can you play?" |
1260 | Can you see? |
1260 | Can you tell me some of them?" |
1260 | Can you tell me that?" |
1260 | Can you tell when there is a good fire?" |
1260 | Come here, Miss Jane: your name is Jane, is it not?" |
1260 | Contempt fell cool on Mr. Rochester-- his passion died as if a blight had shrivelled it up: he only asked--"What have_ you_ to say?" |
1260 | Criticise me: does my forehead not please you?" |
1260 | Diana took the word--"Do you mean,"she asked,"that we have now given you what aid you require? |
1260 | Did I break through one of your rings, that you spread that damned ice on the causeway?" |
1260 | Did I dream still? |
1260 | Did I forbid myself to think of him in any other light than as a paymaster? |
1260 | Did I know French and German? |
1260 | Did I say, a few days since, that I had nothing to do with him but to receive my salary at his hands? |
1260 | Did I wake or sleep? |
1260 | Did he give his name?" |
1260 | Did it not seem to you in the least wrong to live in that way, first with one mistress and then another? |
1260 | Did no one hear him move?" |
1260 | Did she think, Janet, you had given the world for love, and considered it well lost?" |
1260 | Did you ever love such an one?" |
1260 | Did you find poison, or a dagger, that you look so mournful now?" |
1260 | Did you hear her, Eliza and Georgiana? |
1260 | Did you not, my lady- mother?" |
1260 | Did you sit at them long each day?" |
1260 | Did you think nothing of Miss Ingram''s feelings, sir?" |
1260 | Do n''t you feel hungry?" |
1260 | Do n''t you hear to what soft whispers the wind has fallen? |
1260 | Do n''t you think so, Jane?" |
1260 | Do n''t you think so?" |
1260 | Do they keep us for nothing?" |
1260 | Do you accept my solution of the mystery?" |
1260 | Do you believe him? |
1260 | Do you hear that?" |
1260 | Do you hear, Jane?" |
1260 | Do you know him?" |
1260 | Do you know where the wicked go after death?" |
1260 | Do you know?" |
1260 | Do you never laugh, Miss Eyre? |
1260 | Do you not see it, Jane? |
1260 | Do you really wish the bairn to go? |
1260 | Do you remember what you said of Celine Varens?--of the diamonds, the cashmeres you gave her? |
1260 | Do you sincerely wish me to be your wife?" |
1260 | Do you think God will be satisfied with half an oblation? |
1260 | Do you think I am a Jew- usurer, seeking good investment in land? |
1260 | Do you think I am an automaton?--a machine without feelings? |
1260 | Do you think Miss Ingram will not suffer from your dishonest coquetry? |
1260 | Do you think Mr. Rochester will send for us by- and- bye, after dinner?" |
1260 | Do you think, because I am poor, obscure, plain, and little, I am soulless and heartless? |
1260 | Do you truly love me? |
1260 | Do you understand?" |
1260 | Do you wonder that I avow this to you? |
1260 | Does it exist?" |
1260 | Does that mean a respectable well- conducted man of fifty? |
1260 | Fairfax?" |
1260 | Fairfax?" |
1260 | Fairfax?" |
1260 | For a few minutes, while you smooth your hair-- which is somewhat dishevelled; and bathe your face-- which looks feverish?" |
1260 | Genius banished? |
1260 | Georgiana added to her"How d''ye do?" |
1260 | Go on: what fault do you find with me, pray? |
1260 | Had I been dreaming? |
1260 | Had I forgotten her? |
1260 | Had I nothing about me I could offer in exchange for one of these rolls? |
1260 | Had an accident happened? |
1260 | Had life been wrecked as well as property? |
1260 | Hannah, is that milk? |
1260 | Has a girl of fourteen a heart large enough, vigorous enough, to hold the swelling spring of pure, full, fervid eloquence? |
1260 | Have I not described a pleasant site for a dwelling, when I speak of it as bosomed in hill and wood, and rising from the verge of a stream? |
1260 | Have I not found her friendless, and cold, and comfortless? |
1260 | Have we anything else to stay for?" |
1260 | Have you accepted him?" |
1260 | Have you any pain?" |
1260 | Have you coughed much to- day?" |
1260 | Have you ever heard anything from your father''s kinsfolk, the Eyres?" |
1260 | Have you no present interest in any of the company who occupy the sofas and chairs before you? |
1260 | Have you no sense to devise a system which will make you independent of all efforts, and all wills, but your own? |
1260 | Have you plotted to drown me?" |
1260 | Have you seen something?" |
1260 | Have you washed your hands and face this morning?" |
1260 | Having considered me at leisure, he said--"What made you ill yesterday?" |
1260 | He checked himself in his exultation to demand,"But is there anything the matter, Janet, that you come to meet me at such an hour? |
1260 | He had almost as much as declared his conviction of her criminality last night: what mysterious cause withheld him from accusing her? |
1260 | He is alone this evening, and not very well: will you return with me and visit him?" |
1260 | He is rich, is he not?" |
1260 | He means to marry you?" |
1260 | He means well: but you shrug your shoulders to hear him talk?" |
1260 | He passed, and I went on; a few steps, and I turned: a sliding sound and an exclamation of"What the deuce is to do now?" |
1260 | He paused for an answer: and what was I to say? |
1260 | He said something in praise of your eyes, did he? |
1260 | He sees nothing attractive in me; not even youth-- only a few useful mental points.--Then I must leave you, sir, to go to him?" |
1260 | He vanished, but reappeared instantly--"Is your name Eyre, Miss?" |
1260 | He wanted you to marry him?" |
1260 | He was fond and proud of me-- it is what no man besides will ever be.--But where am I wandering, and what am I saying, and above all, feeling? |
1260 | He wishes you to go to India?" |
1260 | He would visit the school sometimes?" |
1260 | His efforts were so vigorous, I thought he could not be much hurt; but I asked him the question--"Are you injured, sir?" |
1260 | How and where is he? |
1260 | How are you, dear aunt?" |
1260 | How can I, a man not yet thirty, take out with me to India a girl of nineteen, unless she be married to me? |
1260 | How can it be that Jane is with me, and says she loves me? |
1260 | How can we be for ever together-- sometimes in solitudes, sometimes amidst savage tribes-- and unwed?" |
1260 | How could she serve me? |
1260 | How could you make them look so clear, and yet not at all brilliant? |
1260 | How dare I? |
1260 | How dare I? |
1260 | How dared you? |
1260 | How did you proceed? |
1260 | How do people do to get a new place? |
1260 | How do you feel?--Is she a real fortune- teller?" |
1260 | How do you know her?" |
1260 | How far are we on our road now, I wonder?" |
1260 | How is he my master? |
1260 | How is the money to be had?" |
1260 | How is this? |
1260 | How long were you there?" |
1260 | How many minutes, for instance, had I devoted to studying the arrangement of this very room?--By- the- bye, could I tell him where such a book was?" |
1260 | How much have you in the world, Jane?" |
1260 | How much of the fall of the avalanche is in their anger? |
1260 | How often am I to say the same thing? |
1260 | How should we feel? |
1260 | How will she manage to please him when they are married? |
1260 | How would a white or a pink cloud answer for a gown, do you think? |
1260 | How?" |
1260 | I again demand, what have you to say?" |
1260 | I ask again, is there anything the matter?" |
1260 | I asked was it a mere nervous impression-- a delusion? |
1260 | I asked,''Sophie, what are you doing?'' |
1260 | I can never submit to do that-- yet how are we to get on? |
1260 | I do n''t care for the fairy: you said it was mademoiselle you would take to the moon?" |
1260 | I do n''t know whether they were entirely of your doing; probably a master aided you?" |
1260 | I expected no one; is he gone?" |
1260 | I fear I can not do otherwise: for who will receive me? |
1260 | I had expected his arrival before tea; now it was dark: what could keep him? |
1260 | I had made no noise: he had not eyes behind-- could his shadow feel? |
1260 | I have heard of day- dreams-- is she in a day- dream now? |
1260 | I have proved you in that time by sundry tests: and what have I seen and elicited? |
1260 | I have surely not been dreaming, have I? |
1260 | I have your permission to retire now, I suppose?" |
1260 | I hope you like them?" |
1260 | I knew Mrs. Reed had not spoken for days: was she reviving? |
1260 | I know I am: but how did you find it out?" |
1260 | I may then depend upon this child being received as a pupil at Lowood, and there being trained in conformity to her position and prospects?" |
1260 | I might have said,"Where is it?" |
1260 | I never had a home, I never had brothers or sisters; I must and will have them now: you are not reluctant to admit me and own me, are you?" |
1260 | I perceive those pictures were done by one hand: was that hand yours?" |
1260 | I resumed--"Your mother was my father''s sister?" |
1260 | I said, in a low voice: then, looking at her fixedly--"Did Mr. Rochester wake nobody? |
1260 | I said,"Who is there?" |
1260 | I said:"is it impossible that Mr. Rochester should have a sincere affection for me?" |
1260 | I say, why do you assign Adele to me for a companion?" |
1260 | I stood, a wretched child enough, whispering to myself over and over again,"What shall I do?--what shall I do?" |
1260 | I stopped and said--"Will you give me a piece of bread? |
1260 | I suppose I have all my limbs and all my features like any other man?" |
1260 | I suppose I should now entertain none but fatherly feelings for you: do you think so? |
1260 | I suppose you are an orphan: are not either your father or your mother dead?" |
1260 | I suppose, then, your heart has been weeping blood?" |
1260 | I told you I would send Adele to school; and what do I want with a child for a companion, and not my own child,--a French dancer''s bastard? |
1260 | I was going back to Thornfield: but how long was I to stay there? |
1260 | I was the first who spoke--"Helen, why do you stay with a girl whom everybody believes to be a liar?" |
1260 | I whispered softly,"are you awake?" |
1260 | I will spare you the trouble of much talking; I will answer for you-- Because I have a wife already, you would reply.--I guess rightly?" |
1260 | I wish he loved you-- does he, Jane?" |
1260 | I wish this present hour would never end: who knows with what fate the next may come charged?" |
1260 | I wished to rise; but what could I put on? |
1260 | I wonder what she has gone through?" |
1260 | I''ll furnish my own wardrobe out of that money, and you shall give me nothing but--""Well, but what?" |
1260 | If at my individual convenience I might break them, what would be their worth? |
1260 | If so, whose? |
1260 | If the reality were required, what should we do? |
1260 | If you were mad, do you think I should hate you?" |
1260 | In leaving England, I should leave a loved but empty land-- Mr. Rochester is not there; and if he were, what is, what can that ever be to me? |
1260 | In turning a leaf she happened to look up, and I said to her directly--"Is your book interesting?" |
1260 | In what land? |
1260 | In what way could it possibly be the interest of the inhabitants of that dwelling to serve me? |
1260 | Is Thornfield Hall a ruin? |
1260 | Is he generally liked?" |
1260 | Is he liked for himself?" |
1260 | Is he well?" |
1260 | Is it better to drive a fellow- creature to despair than to transgress a mere human law, no man being injured by the breach? |
1260 | Is it in any way different from other schools?" |
1260 | Is it known that Mr. Rochester is to be married?" |
1260 | Is it not an odd tale?" |
1260 | Is it not, by its noble cares and sublime results, the one best calculated to fill the void left by uptorn affections and demolished hopes? |
1260 | Is it only a voice? |
1260 | Is it the thoughts of going to London that takes away your appetite?" |
1260 | Is not the thing feasible? |
1260 | Is she piquant? |
1260 | Is she up? |
1260 | Is such really the state of matters between you and Rivers?" |
1260 | Is that wrong, Jane?" |
1260 | Is the nurse here? |
1260 | Is the satirist of"Vanity Fair"admired in high places? |
1260 | Is there a fire in the library?" |
1260 | Is there anything wrong?" |
1260 | Is there not love in my heart, and constancy in my resolves? |
1260 | Is there not one face you study? |
1260 | Is this my mustard- seed? |
1260 | Is this my pale, little elf? |
1260 | Is this the first time you have left your parents to come to school, my little girl?" |
1260 | Is this true? |
1260 | It is much too far away: and were it within a yard of me, what would it avail? |
1260 | It must now be shut up, I suppose?" |
1260 | It rains fast, Hannah: will you have the goodness to look at the fire in the parlour?" |
1260 | It was only my station, and the rank of my wife, that you valued? |
1260 | It was short, and thus conceived:--"Madam,--Will you have the goodness to send me the address of my niece, Jane Eyre, and to tell me how she is? |
1260 | J''ai dit qu''oui: car c''est vrai, n''est- ce pas, mademoiselle?" |
1260 | Jane suits me: do I suit her?" |
1260 | Jane, did you ever hear or know that I was not the eldest son of my house: that I had once a brother older than I?" |
1260 | Jane, when will you watch with me again?" |
1260 | Jane, will you marry me?" |
1260 | Jane, will you marry me?" |
1260 | Jane, you do n''t like my narrative; you look almost sick-- shall I defer the rest to another day?" |
1260 | John?" |
1260 | John?" |
1260 | John?" |
1260 | Leah had been saying something I had not caught, and the charwoman remarked--"She gets good wages, I guess?" |
1260 | Like whom? |
1260 | Little girl, a memory without blot or contamination must be an exquisite treasure-- an inexhaustible source of pure refreshment: is it not?" |
1260 | Looking up as I drew near--"You have a question to ask of me?" |
1260 | Mary, are you?" |
1260 | Mr. Rochester, do you second my motion?" |
1260 | Mrs. Fairfax has said something, perhaps? |
1260 | Mrs. Fairfax surprised me by looking out of the window with a sad countenance, and saying gravely--"Miss Eyre, will you come to breakfast?" |
1260 | Must I relinquish that? |
1260 | My deep love, my wild woe, my frantic prayer, are all nothing to you?" |
1260 | My first impulse was to rise and fasten the bolt; my next, again to cry out,"Who is there?" |
1260 | My foundation laid on earth for a mansion in heaven? |
1260 | My great work? |
1260 | My living Jane?" |
1260 | My own?" |
1260 | No; what the deuce would you call her for? |
1260 | Nothing bitter-- nothing poignant? |
1260 | Nothing of course to speak of-- twenty thousand pounds, I think they say-- but what is that?" |
1260 | Nothing to cut a feeling or sting a passion? |
1260 | Now shall I dance for you?" |
1260 | Now which of you most resembles Bothwell?" |
1260 | Now, can you tell me whether it is actually true that Mr. Rochester has asked you to marry him? |
1260 | Now, sir, tell me who and what that woman was?" |
1260 | Of what use could Hindostanee be to you?" |
1260 | Oh, I wish he would cease tormenting me with letters for money? |
1260 | Oh, are you aware, Mr. Rochester, that a stranger has arrived here since you left this morning?" |
1260 | Or was the vault under the chancel of Gateshead Church an inviting bourne? |
1260 | Or what does it mean?" |
1260 | Or who, that ever was truly called, believed himself worthy of the summons? |
1260 | Perhaps now you will ask how much you are worth?" |
1260 | Poetry destroyed? |
1260 | Poor stupid dupe!--Could not even self- interest make you wiser? |
1260 | Presently he addressed me--"Your name, little girl?" |
1260 | Reader, do you know, as I do, what terror those cold people can put into the ice of their questions? |
1260 | Red hair, ma''am, curled-- curled all over?" |
1260 | Reed?" |
1260 | Reed?" |
1260 | Reed?" |
1260 | Richard, how is it with you?" |
1260 | Rivers?" |
1260 | Rochester?" |
1260 | Rochester?" |
1260 | Rochester?" |
1260 | Rochester?" |
1260 | Rochester?" |
1260 | Rochester?" |
1260 | Rosamond a missionary''s wife? |
1260 | Rosamond a sufferer, a labourer, a female apostle? |
1260 | Shall I be an outcast again this night? |
1260 | Shall I let you hear me sing now?" |
1260 | Shall I tell you of what it reminded me?" |
1260 | She considered me attentively for a minute or two, then further added--"She had better be put to bed soon; she looks tired: are you tired?" |
1260 | She seemed to be tired of my questions: and, indeed, what claim had I to importune her? |
1260 | She turned as I drew near, and looked at me haughtily: her eyes seemed to demand,"What can the creeping creature want now?" |
1260 | She was never cross with us; was she, Louisa?" |
1260 | Signior Eduardo, are you in voice to- night?" |
1260 | Sisters? |
1260 | So you''ll do no more than say Farewell, Jane?" |
1260 | Soon I asked her"if there were any dressmaker or plain- workwoman in the village?" |
1260 | Surely it will never, on the contrary, be suffered to degenerate from man to fiend? |
1260 | Surely, in that case, I should not be so mad as to run to him? |
1260 | Tell me everything about them, Bessie: but sit down first; and, Bobby, come and sit on my knee, will you?" |
1260 | Tell me now, fairy as you are-- can''t you give me a charm, or a philter, or something of that sort, to make me a handsome man?" |
1260 | That certainly was a crime: and was I fit to die? |
1260 | That is probably rather soft? |
1260 | That sky with its high and light clouds which are sure to melt away as the day waxes warm-- this placid and balmly atmosphere?" |
1260 | That will be your married look, sir, I suppose?" |
1260 | The grim blackness of the stones told by what fate the Hall had fallen-- by conflagration: but how kindled? |
1260 | The hills beyond Marsh Glen sent the answer faintly back--"Where are you?" |
1260 | The noble bust, the sloping shoulders, the graceful neck, the dark eyes and black ringlets were all there;--but her face? |
1260 | The question followed,"Where was I to go?" |
1260 | Then addressing Mason, he inquired gently,"Are you aware, sir, whether or not this gentleman''s wife is still living?" |
1260 | Then she is not your daughter?" |
1260 | Then:"Which room did you put her into? |
1260 | Theodore, do you remember those merry days?" |
1260 | There are many others who have no friends, who must look about for themselves and be their own helpers; and what is their resource?" |
1260 | There are ten; is it not plenty?" |
1260 | There, I had a friend''s face under my gaze; and what did it signify that those young ladies turned their backs on me? |
1260 | These words cut me: yet what could I do or I say? |
1260 | This is a gentle delineation, is it not, reader? |
1260 | This is what I have to ask,--Why did you take such pains to make me believe you wished to marry Miss Ingram?" |
1260 | This is you, who have been as slippery as an eel this last month, and as thorny as a briar- rose? |
1260 | This little sunny- faced girl with the dimpled cheek and rosy lips; the satin- smooth hazel hair, and the radiant hazel eyes?" |
1260 | This world is pleasant-- it would be dreary to be called from it, and to have to go who knows where?" |
1260 | To Ireland?" |
1260 | To be privileged to put my arms round what I value-- to press my lips to what I love-- to repose on what I trust: is that to make a sacrifice? |
1260 | To be sure, what I begged was employment; but whose business was it to provide me with employment? |
1260 | To her hurried"Is it really you, miss, come at this late hour to this lonely place?" |
1260 | To what end?" |
1260 | Turning to me, as she took some loaves from the oven, she asked bluntly--"Did you ever go a- begging afore you came here?" |
1260 | Under what auspices? |
1260 | Varens entered?" |
1260 | Was I very gleeful, settled, content, during the hours I passed in yonder bare, humble schoolroom this morning and afternoon? |
1260 | Was he so very fond of his brother as to be still inconsolable for his loss?" |
1260 | Was it dry? |
1260 | Was it suspected that this lunatic, Mrs. Rochester, had any hand in it?" |
1260 | Was it, I asked myself, a ray from the moon penetrating some aperture in the blind? |
1260 | We have been good friends, Jane; have we not?" |
1260 | Well then, on that mercenary ground, will you agree to let me hector a little?" |
1260 | Were the inmates retired to rest? |
1260 | Were we not four? |
1260 | Were you jealous, Jane?" |
1260 | What aim, what purpose, what ambition in life have you now?" |
1260 | What are you going to do with these gooseberries?" |
1260 | What are you going to do?" |
1260 | What bride? |
1260 | What business had I to approach the white door or touch the glittering knocker? |
1260 | What came of such an event?" |
1260 | What can she do? |
1260 | What can they do for you? |
1260 | What could my darling do, I asked, left destitute and penniless? |
1260 | What did St. John Rivers think of this earthly angel? |
1260 | What did he mean by such a pagan idea? |
1260 | What did most of the people do?" |
1260 | What did they do with her at Lowood? |
1260 | What do I sacrifice? |
1260 | What do I want with half your estate? |
1260 | What do you fear?--that I shall not prove a good husband?" |
1260 | What do you mean by it?" |
1260 | What do you mean, Jane?" |
1260 | What do you say to that? |
1260 | What do you see amiss in me?" |
1260 | What do you see?" |
1260 | What does it mean? |
1260 | What does that grave smile signify?" |
1260 | What does that inexplicable, that uncanny turn of countenance mean?" |
1260 | What had occurred since, calculated to change his and my relative positions? |
1260 | What happy combination of the planets presided over her birth, I wonder?) |
1260 | What is God?" |
1260 | What is Lowood Institution?" |
1260 | What is he doing? |
1260 | What is the matter? |
1260 | What is the matter?" |
1260 | What is there to explain? |
1260 | What is to be done? |
1260 | What is your reason for saying so?" |
1260 | What loss, besides mortar and marble and wood- work had followed upon it? |
1260 | What love has she for me? |
1260 | What love have I for Miss Ingram? |
1260 | What made him seek this quarter of the house at an untimely season, when he should have been asleep in bed? |
1260 | What made you think of ambition? |
1260 | What makes you so venturesome and hardy?" |
1260 | What of him? |
1260 | What shall I do, Jane? |
1260 | What shall I do?" |
1260 | What shall I tell her?" |
1260 | What so blind as inexperience? |
1260 | What story belonged to this disaster? |
1260 | What strength had I to dart retaliation at my antagonist? |
1260 | What sudden eagerness is this you evince? |
1260 | What sweet madness has seized me?" |
1260 | What the deuce have you done with yourself this last month?" |
1260 | What then is left? |
1260 | What then? |
1260 | What then? |
1260 | What was I to do? |
1260 | What was I? |
1260 | What was the matter? |
1260 | What was their beauty to me in a few weeks? |
1260 | What will you do with your accomplishments? |
1260 | What, in short, is his character?" |
1260 | What, with the largest portion of your mind-- sentiments-- tastes?" |
1260 | What? |
1260 | When is the pause after that sentence ever broken by reply? |
1260 | When will he come?" |
1260 | When you are at Madagascar, or at the Cape, or in India, would it be a consolation to have that memento in your possession? |
1260 | Where are your friends?" |
1260 | Where did I go? |
1260 | Where did you go?" |
1260 | Where did you leave your furred cloak? |
1260 | Where did you see Latmos? |
1260 | Where do you come from?" |
1260 | Where does he now live?" |
1260 | Where to go? |
1260 | Where turn for a companion and for some hope?" |
1260 | Where was I? |
1260 | Where was his daring stride now? |
1260 | Where? |
1260 | While I looked, I thought myself happy, and was surprised to find myself ere long weeping-- and why? |
1260 | While the rain descends so, must I lay my head on the cold, drenched ground? |
1260 | Whither will that spirit-- now struggling to quit its material tenement-- flit when at length released?" |
1260 | Who are your parents?" |
1260 | Who blames me? |
1260 | Who can tell what a dark, dreary, hopeless life I have dragged on for months past? |
1260 | Who has his letters?" |
1260 | Who in the world cares for_ you_? |
1260 | Who introduced this innovation? |
1260 | Who is ambitious? |
1260 | Who is fit for it? |
1260 | Who is in the room besides you? |
1260 | Who is it like?" |
1260 | Who is it?" |
1260 | Who is this?" |
1260 | Who may she be that sends for people to see her that distance?" |
1260 | Who speaks?" |
1260 | Who wants them? |
1260 | Who were they? |
1260 | Who would be hurt by my once more tasting the life his glance can give me? |
1260 | Who would think that the Evil One had already found a servant and agent in her? |
1260 | Why are you so very shy, and so very sombre?" |
1260 | Why could I never please? |
1260 | Why did I not spend these sweet days of liberty with her? |
1260 | Why did he so quietly submit to the concealment Mr. Rochester enforced? |
1260 | Why did they send me so far and so lonely, Up where the moors spread and grey rocks are piled? |
1260 | Why did you shake your head? |
1260 | Why do I struggle to retain a valueless life? |
1260 | Why do n''t you tremble?" |
1260 | Why do you remain pertinaciously perched on my knee, when I have given you notice to quit?" |
1260 | Why do you smile, Jane? |
1260 | Why do you tremble so violently? |
1260 | Why had he enjoined me, too, to secrecy? |
1260 | Why have I alluded to this man? |
1260 | Why should I, when both he and I were happier near than apart? |
1260 | Why was I always suffering, always browbeaten, always accused, for ever condemned? |
1260 | Why was it useless to try to win any one''s favour? |
1260 | Why, then, should we ever sink overwhelmed with distress, when life is so soon over, and death is so certain an entrance to happiness-- to glory?" |
1260 | Why? |
1260 | Why_ did_ Mr. Rochester enforce this concealment? |
1260 | Will He accept a mutilated sacrifice? |
1260 | Will I not guard, and cherish, and solace her? |
1260 | Will he leave it again soon? |
1260 | Will it annoy you if she is left behind?" |
1260 | Will it keep you in England, induce you to marry Miss Oliver, and settle down like an ordinary mortal?" |
1260 | Will she not depart as suddenly as she came? |
1260 | Will you be mine? |
1260 | Will you be this mistress?" |
1260 | Will you ever forgive me?" |
1260 | Will you let me have another cup?" |
1260 | Will you promise to sit up with me to bear me company? |
1260 | Will you rest yourself here an hour, Miss, and then I will go up with you?" |
1260 | Will you?" |
1260 | With whom will Blanche Ingram pair? |
1260 | Wo n''t I tell mama? |
1260 | Wo n''t she feel forsaken and deserted?" |
1260 | Would I do him this favour? |
1260 | Would I sketch a portrait of her, to show to papa?" |
1260 | Would it not be strange, Die, to be chained for life to a man who regarded one but as a useful tool?" |
1260 | Would not a life devoted to the task of regenerating your race be well spent?" |
1260 | Would not such another ruin you?" |
1260 | Would she laugh? |
1260 | Would she take it as a joke? |
1260 | Would you go with them?" |
1260 | Would you like to drink some water?" |
1260 | Would you like to see her?" |
1260 | Would you not be happier if you tried to forget her severity, together with the passionate emotions it excited? |
1260 | Yes, but we are not to conform to nature; I wish these girls to be the children of Grace: and why that abundance? |
1260 | Yes: does that leave hope for me?" |
1260 | You adhere to that resolution?" |
1260 | You are a spinster?" |
1260 | You are afraid of ghosts?" |
1260 | You are certain of that? |
1260 | You are certain of that?" |
1260 | You are come back to me then?" |
1260 | You are married to Bessie?" |
1260 | You are my little friend, are you not?" |
1260 | You are not gone: not vanished? |
1260 | You are still bent on going?" |
1260 | You call her a strange being yourself: from all you know, you have reason so to call her-- what did she do to me? |
1260 | You consider my arms filled and my embraces appropriated?" |
1260 | You do n''t hesitate to take a place at my side, do you? |
1260 | You do not love him then, Jane?" |
1260 | You fling me back on lust for a passion-- vice for an occupation?" |
1260 | You go to- morrow, then?" |
1260 | You have heard that laugh before, I should think, or something like it?" |
1260 | You have not exchanged a syllable with one of them? |
1260 | You have not quite forgotten little Adele, have you, reader? |
1260 | You have seen my daughters?" |
1260 | You know I was proud of my strength: but what is it now, when I must give it over to foreign guidance, as a child does its weakness? |
1260 | You look quite red, as if you had been about some mischief: what were you opening the window for?" |
1260 | You never shall go: you have not consented, have you, Jane?" |
1260 | You own the name and renounce the_ alias_?" |
1260 | You should not be roving about now; it looks very ill.""But where shall I go if you drive me away? |
1260 | You start-- did you hear a noise? |
1260 | You think me an unfeeling, loose- principled rake: do n''t you?" |
1260 | You wandered out of the fold to seek your shepherd, did you, Jane?" |
1260 | You were from home last night?" |
1260 | You will not be my comforter, my rescuer? |
1260 | You will not be summoned to leave England sooner than you expected?" |
1260 | You will not exclude me from your confidence if you admit me to your heart?" |
1260 | You will stipulate, I see, for peculiar terms-- what will they be?" |
1260 | You would, perhaps, think me rude if I inquired in return whether you are a philanthropist?" |
1260 | You''re not turning your head to look after more moths, are you? |
1260 | You, Diana, and Mary are his sister''s children, as I am his brother''s child?" |
1260 | You? |
1260 | Your name is Jane Eyre?" |
1260 | _ Speak_ I must: I had been trodden on severely, and_ must_ turn: but how? |
1260 | _ What_ is it? |
1260 | _ What_ is it? |
1260 | _ You_ gifted with the power of pleasing him? |
1260 | _ You_ of importance to him in any way? |
1260 | and Pilot was with him:--what has he done with the animals?" |
1260 | and by what authority?" |
1260 | and can bear to have my morsel of bread snatched from my lips, and my drop of living water dashed from my cup? |
1260 | and how is your charge to- day?" |
1260 | and is Mrs. Fairfax with him?" |
1260 | and is she possessed with a devil?" |
1260 | and that we may dismiss you to the moor and the rainy night?" |
1260 | and what are you doing now? |
1260 | and what do you wish to know now?" |
1260 | and what sort of an effect will the bequest have on you? |
1260 | and who did it?" |
1260 | and why had the Fury flown at him? |
1260 | but how could she divine the morbid suffering to which I was a prey? |
1260 | cried she, bounding forwards;"et mes souliers? |
1260 | did he not leave England?" |
1260 | do you not go to India?" |
1260 | do you think you can live with me, and see me daily, and yet, if you still love me, be always cold and distant?" |
1260 | et mes bas? |
1260 | for you have neither relatives nor acquaintances whom you need fear to offend by living with me?" |
1260 | he exclaimed,"are you quitting me already, and in that way?" |
1260 | he said, in such an accent of bitter sadness it thrilled along every nerve I had;"you do n''t love me, then? |
1260 | he said;"there is a heavy shower coming on: had you not better go in?" |
1260 | how do you do? |
1260 | if all you doubt is my sincerity, I am easy: you see the justice of the case?" |
1260 | interposed Mr. Rochester:"but what did you find in the veil besides its embroidery? |
1260 | is there more? |
1260 | my vocation? |
1260 | no legends or ghost stories?" |
1260 | not a word of reproach? |
1260 | of the breaking up of the frozen sea in their displeasure? |
1260 | one figure whose movements you follow with at least curiosity?" |
1260 | or is there no one in the room but you?" |
1260 | or was I so worthless as to have grown tired of her pure society? |
1260 | or who will be injured by what you do?" |
1260 | or would the sight of it bring recollections calculated to enervate and distress?" |
1260 | or you have overheard the servants talk?--your sensitive self- respect has been wounded?" |
1260 | out already?" |
1260 | she asked, in a voice and with a smile I half recognised;"you''ve not quite forgotten me, I think, Miss Jane?" |
1260 | they might have demanded;"what stupid regardlessness now?" |
1260 | to get more knocks?" |
1260 | what could she do with them?" |
1260 | what do you mean? |
1260 | what is it?" |
1260 | what is it?" |
1260 | what to Mason? |
1260 | what?" |
1260 | where are you? |
1260 | where meantime was the hapless owner of this wreck? |
1260 | who knows what may happen?" |
1260 | why should I? |
1260 | will you hear reason?" |
1260 | you are my paid subordinate, are you? |
1260 | you ca n''t be silly enough to wish to leave such a splendid place?" |
1260 | you wo n''t kiss the husband of Bertha Mason? |
1260 | you_ will_ go?" |
1260 | { And have you a pale blue dress on? |
1260 | { How dare I, Mrs. Reed? |
1260 | { It removed my veil from its gaunt head, rent it in two parts, and flinging both on the floor, trampled on them: p272.jpg}"Afterwards?" |
1260 | { The next minute she lay smashed on the pavement: p413.jpg}"Dead?" |
1260 | { You are altogether a human being, Jane? |
1260 | {"What is it and who did it?" |
1260 | {"Will you give me that?" |