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 |
---|---|
32353 | And you''ll sign an affidavit that you wrote this play, and it''s an original work? |
32353 | Are you kidding? |
32353 | But Hardy, what have you got when you get there? 32353 But you said he''d recover?" |
32353 | Ca n''t you visualize what it would be like to have even a short life- time of knowledge and experience laid out in sharp detail of recall? 32353 Can you absorb more of my work?" |
32353 | Congratulations and all that,I said,"but what about your work?" |
32353 | Did what? |
32353 | Done? 32353 Ever lose a sweetheart or have a loved one die?" |
32353 | Had n''t you better call the sanitarium? |
32353 | Have n''t my checks been reaching you? |
32353 | Have you really looked into Hillary''s past? |
32353 | How do you figure that? |
32353 | How old are you? |
32353 | I''m your agent, are n''t I? 32353 Light? |
32353 | Look, Mr. Crocker, you''re not just kidding about this contract, are you? 32353 Maybe he had a breakdown or something?" |
32353 | So what happened earlier than six months that''s so important? |
32353 | Suppose that to even think about such experiences you had to endure all the actual physical or emotional pain of the original incident? 32353 Taxes? |
32353 | This-- is-- your first work? |
32353 | This-- this fluff? 32353 What''s the percentage?" |
32353 | Wo n''t have to bother? |
32353 | Would you believe it? 32353 You mean that playwriting is just a hobby?" |
32353 | You raved to me about my last play, yet you do n''t see what I''m getting at? |
32353 | You-- are Hillary Hardy? |
32353 | A lucky hit? |
32353 | After all, what is creative writing but setting down little bits of yourself? |
32353 | After locking the doors and cancelling my morning appointments, I said,"Well, golden boy, what brings you to civilization?" |
32353 | And it''s only half paid for?" |
32353 | And why not? |
32353 | Are you forgetting that you bought a sanitarium?--some eight hundred grand worth? |
32353 | Besides, have you looked into what your taxes will be?" |
32353 | But after all, who could resist the accolade he had received? |
32353 | But what about the author? |
32353 | Could that be the essence of his successful first play? |
32353 | Dammit, where''s your characters?" |
32353 | Did his down- to- earth touch account for_ Updraft''s_ surprising audience appeal? |
32353 | Do n''t you realize that''s bad public relations?" |
32353 | Do you understand? |
32353 | I demanded,"What''s this business of locking yourself up in a looney- bin? |
32353 | I have a storehouse of--""Memorizing?" |
32353 | I presume he told you of his experiments to achieve total recall?" |
32353 | I still say, what''s the percentage?" |
32353 | Is it still working?" |
32353 | Is the play really okay?" |
32353 | Now that you''ve met me you want more time to check up, do n''t you?" |
32353 | Okay?" |
32353 | The crushing blow of the hammer? |
32353 | The heartache and tears of your loss? |
32353 | This pablum?" |
32353 | What about the total recall? |
32353 | What do you do? |
32353 | What do you propose?" |
32353 | What good does it do to keep pouring in information when most of us are forgetting old things almost as rapidly as we are learning new ones? |
32353 | What is this business?" |
32353 | What more can you gain?" |
32353 | Where are you?" |
32353 | Where do we start?" |
32353 | Where is it? |
32353 | Where''s Oscar''s play?" |
32353 | Where''s your conflict? |
32353 | Would such a tremendous ability necessarily be good? |
32353 | You sick or something?" |
32353 | Your problem? |
32353 | Your suspense? |
32353 | _ He relives it._""Yes, I get that,"I said,"but what''s so--""Did you ever hit your thumb with a hammer?" |
31374 | ''gad that''s great.--Pray, ma''am, give me leave to ask you one question-- Did you write to Mr Neville? |
31374 | --Pray, sir, do you know any thing about plays? |
31374 | But you wo n''t leave Bath, till you''ve seen my brother? |
31374 | But, hark ye, uncle,--is this the lady I''m to call my aunt? |
31374 | Have you got any drops? |
31374 | I shall not be out of call;--besides, if there''s any fear of a personal attack, may not I be as terrified as yourself? |
31374 | Is it possible? |
31374 | LETTY waiting.__ Lady._ Mr Vapid not come yet, Letty? |
31374 | Louisa, what am I to think? |
31374 | Mr Floriville, do n''t you know me? |
31374 | Now, Mr Vapid, tell us how you came in that closet? |
31374 | Pray, were you ever in Italy? |
31374 | The Mountaineers, 2s 6d Inkle and Yarico, 2s 6d Poor Gentleman, 2s 6d Who wants a Guinea? |
31374 | Then you acted for your own amusement, and nobody''s else: what was the play? |
31374 | What can have become of Willoughby? |
31374 | [_ As he is going,__ Enter LORD SCRATCH.__ Vapid._ Sir, your most devoted,----How d''ye do? |
31374 | [_ Aside._] Come, are you ready? |
31374 | [_ Aside.__ Lady._ I am told, sir, you have business for Lady Waitfor''t? |
31374 | [_ Aside.__ Louisa._ Mr Ennui, can you be in your senses? |
31374 | [_ Aside.__ Louisa._ So, you glory in your ignorance-- in your vices? |
31374 | [_ Bowing._]_ Mari._ I hope, sir, you caught no cold the other night? |
31374 | [_ Exit.__ Flor._ And now, my dear little angel, how can I assist you? |
31374 | [_ Exit.__ Mari._ Well, Mr Vapid, now let''s run away-- come-- why what are you thinking of? |
31374 | [_ Forces him into a Chair, and sits by him._]_ Lord._ Why,--what is all this? |
31374 | [_ Knocks.--PETER opens the Door, and lets in VAPID.__ Vapid._ Well, here it is;--where''s Neville? |
31374 | [_ Retires.__ Enter LADY WAITFOR''T and LOUISA COURTNEY.__ Louisa._ My dear Lady Waitfor''t, why do you loiter here? |
31374 | [_ They fight.--FLORIVILLE disarms WILLOUGHBY._]_ Flor._ What, vanquished, Tarquin? |
31374 | [_ They sit.__ Lady._ Yes, for your friend Ennui-- what do you think he has done? |
31374 | [_ Yawns aside.__ Louisa._ Astonishing!--Mr Ennui--_ Ennui._ Ma''am? |
31374 | [_ Yawns aside.__ Louisa._ So, you glory in your ignorance? |
31374 | _ Ennui._ Has he not a share of vanity in his composition? |
31374 | _ Ennui._ I''ve an idea, he''s incomprehensible.--In fact-- who have we here? |
31374 | _ Ennui._ I''ve an idea-- I''m very sorry-- in fact-- how can I please her? |
31374 | _ Ennui._ In fact-- Why fatal? |
31374 | _ Ennui._ In fact-- may we ask what they are? |
31374 | _ Ennui._ In fact-- why not sir? |
31374 | _ Enter ENNUI.__ Lady._ Mr Ennui, your most obedient-- we are going to the Parade-- have you seen your cousin Neville? |
31374 | _ Enter LADY WAITFOR''T.__ Lady._ Well, Mr Vapid, how does she do? |
31374 | _ Enter MARIANNE.__ Lady._ Answer me directly, how came that gentleman in this apartment? |
31374 | _ Enter NEVILLE.__ Nev._ Vapid, I am glad to see you-- any letter from my brother? |
31374 | _ Flor._ Ca n''t you guess? |
31374 | _ Flor._ For my brother? |
31374 | _ Flor._ No, ma''am, you wrong me-- but in Italy-- observe-- we always take these things coolly-- now, sir, will you explain? |
31374 | _ Flor._ Then I''ll go in search of him,--and if I do n''t reconcile you----Come, Mr Vapid, will you walk? |
31374 | _ Flor._ Then may I die, if I do n''t get out of your debt before I leave you-- where-- where shall I conduct you? |
31374 | _ Flor._ Then you did n''t come to meet lady Waitfor''t? |
31374 | _ Flor._ There, then, caitiff, take your sword, and, d''ye hear? |
31374 | _ Flor._ Well, Miss Courtney, I hope now your apprehensions are at an end? |
31374 | _ Flor._ What, Louisa? |
31374 | _ Flor._ Why so, Prince Prettiman? |
31374 | _ Flor._ Why swear, my lord? |
31374 | _ Flor._ Will you give any hopes of future consent? |
31374 | _ Flor._ You will not? |
31374 | _ Flor._ You wo n''t, old Pluto, wo n''t you? |
31374 | _ Flor._[_ Rising._] Shall she, my lord? |
31374 | _ Lady._ Confusion!--tell me, sir, immediately, what do you mean by this new insult? |
31374 | _ Lady._ Has she, sir?--What may that be? |
31374 | _ Lady._ Now, who is to blame? |
31374 | _ Lady._ Provoking!--Have I not told you a thousand times, never to break in upon me when I am alone? |
31374 | _ Lady._ Rather, sir, we should ask of you what happened in your travels? |
31374 | _ Lady._ Sir, do you mean to deride me? |
31374 | _ Lady._ Suppose I should,--what is that to you? |
31374 | _ Lady._ Tell me, Mr Neville, what have I done, that you dare insult me thus? |
31374 | _ Lady._ What? |
31374 | _ Lady._ Where is your brother, sir? |
31374 | _ Lady._ Who is a hypocrite, sir? |
31374 | _ Lady._ Yes, and I am convinced you were sent here by that traitor, Neville.--Speak, is he not your friend? |
31374 | _ Lady._ Yes, leave the room immediately-- what are you looking at? |
31374 | _ Lady._ You''re very much frightened, Mr Vapid;--I hope you do n''t suppose I have any design against you? |
31374 | _ Lady._[_ Rising._] Sir, do you know who you''re talking to?--do you know who I am? |
31374 | _ Letty._ How you talk!--I hope Miss Courtney has n''t taught you all this? |
31374 | _ Letty._ Pray, has she taught you why she never plays any tune but the one we heard just now? |
31374 | _ Letty._ Why, I thought they had quarrelled? |
31374 | _ Lord._ And you''re delighted because it''s an hour later? |
31374 | _ Lord._ Ask me a favour? |
31374 | _ Lord._ Delightful!--what, at your old tricks? |
31374 | _ Lord._ In love!--with who, sir? |
31374 | _ Lord._ My nephew? |
31374 | _ Lord._ So you''re happy, because you''re an hour nearer the other world?--tell me now,--do you wish to die? |
31374 | _ Lord._ What? |
31374 | _ Lord._ Where?--behind me? |
31374 | _ Lord._ Whose present is this? |
31374 | _ Lord._ Why, coxcomb? |
31374 | _ Lord._ Why, who should it be but the stage ruffian? |
31374 | _ Lord._[_ Rising._] Why, look ye, you impostor!--you-- didn''t you come here to pay your addresses to this lady? |
31374 | _ Louisa._ Do you then leave us, Mr Neville? |
31374 | _ Louisa._ If I remember, sir, truth was ever among the foremost of your virtues? |
31374 | _ Louisa._ Marianne, excuse me-- you''ll be safe from Lady Waitfor''t here-- indeed I''m very ill._ Mari._ Nay-- where are you going? |
31374 | _ Louisa._ Tell me, sir, immediately, how, and by whose appointment, you came here? |
31374 | _ Louisa._ What, not Miss Courtney? |
31374 | _ Louisa._ You hope!--Why does it concern you? |
31374 | _ Mari._ And would you have really run away with me, Mr Vapid? |
31374 | _ Mari._ But did you really love me, Mr Vapid? |
31374 | _ Mari._ Come, my dear, have n''t you almost finished? |
31374 | _ Mari._ Did n''t you? |
31374 | _ Mari._ Did you really love me, Mr Vapid? |
31374 | _ Mari._ Leave the room, aunt? |
31374 | _ Mari._ Mr Ennui, I hope you''ll forgive me, and Sir Harry Hustle, the fatigue we occasioned you? |
31374 | _ Mari._ No,--How should she, when she talks of nobody but herself? |
31374 | _ Mari._ Shall I? |
31374 | _ Mari._ Then why ca n''t she do as I have done, Letty? |
31374 | _ Mari._ What is it? |
31374 | _ Nev._ A good excuse for profligacy.--But tell me, Vapid, have you got any new characters since you came to Bath? |
31374 | _ Nev._ And you really pretend not to know the young Lady Waitfor''t? |
31374 | _ Nev._ No-- why do you ask? |
31374 | _ Nev._ Nor message? |
31374 | _ Nev._ Why, you wo n''t write him one, will you? |
31374 | _ Nev._ Without direction!--What can it mean? |
31374 | _ Peter._ What can I do, sir? |
31374 | _ Serv._ Sir? |
31374 | _ Serv._ Sir? |
31374 | _ Vapid._ And why not see him, ma''am? |
31374 | _ Vapid._ By no means, ma''am, give me leave--[_Both sit._] Who the devil have we here? |
31374 | _ Vapid._ Ca n''t tell? |
31374 | _ Vapid._ Charming!--What age do you reckon her? |
31374 | _ Vapid._ Did you? |
31374 | _ Vapid._ Farcical?--what, my epilogue, ma''am?--I hope you do n''t mean to reflect on that? |
31374 | _ Vapid._ Gone out? |
31374 | _ Vapid._ Hark ye, sir-- Is this young lady of yours very handsome? |
31374 | _ Vapid._ Hark ye,--we are alone-- I promise it shall go no further, and I''ll let you into a secret-- I know----_ Lady._ Well, what do you know? |
31374 | _ Vapid._ He prevailed on!--the manager you mean-- but what did you think of it? |
31374 | _ Vapid._ Is she? |
31374 | _ Vapid._ Is your young mistress, sir, very handsome? |
31374 | _ Vapid._ My last act, and I fear--_ Mari._ What do you fear? |
31374 | _ Vapid._ No, ma''am, I was much nearer a fever than a cold.--Pray, ma''am, what is your study? |
31374 | _ Vapid._ No,--How the devil should I? |
31374 | _ Vapid._ Seen Mr Neville!--What, does n''t he yet know you are in his lodgings? |
31374 | _ Vapid._ So am I-- and I think I''ll write no more for an ungrateful public-- you do n''t know any body that has a play coming out, do you? |
31374 | _ Vapid._ That letter!--what do you mean by that letter? |
31374 | _ Vapid._ There are very few-- are there any more of the same kind? |
31374 | _ Vapid._ To be sure they are,--but could you really consent to run away with a poet? |
31374 | _ Vapid._ Very fond of plays, I presume? |
31374 | _ Vapid._ What''s to be done!--why? |
31374 | _ Vapid._ What, you are confident of it? |
31374 | _ Vapid._ Wo n''t it? |
31374 | _ Vapid._ Yes, ma''am, she''s dying; where are the drops? |
31374 | _ Vapid._ You are unhappy then? |
31374 | _ Vapid._ You villain!--Do you ever go to a play?--did you ever sit in the gallery? |
31374 | _ Vapid._ Your pardon, ma''am, I was taking a note of the affair-- and yet I''m afraid----_ Lady._ What are you afraid of, sir? |
31374 | _ Vapid._''Faith, I should have no objection,--but would n''t it lower one''s dignity? |
31374 | _ Will._ It is indeed, Lady Waitfor''t-- but if this fails, may I still hope for your interest with Miss Courtney? |
31374 | _ Will._ Well-- but her fortune is entirely dependent on my Lord''s consent, and how is that to be obtained? |
31374 | am not I a peer, and do n''t I talk by prerogative?--and, if I may n''t talk ten times as much as another person, what''s the use of my peerage? |
31374 | an angel fly from a devil? |
31374 | and fond of the drama, I suppose? |
31374 | and was n''t I to bring you into parliament, for your quiet silent disposition? |
31374 | are you going to leave me, my lord? |
31374 | but have you seen Mr Neville? |
31374 | ca n''t you protect yourself for an instant? |
31374 | ca n''t you release me? |
31374 | do you call Mr Vapid nobody, then? |
31374 | how could he use me so cruelly? |
31374 | how have I deserved all this? |
31374 | is it possible? |
31374 | it''s my prerogative, and, by----tell me how you spent your time, sir? |
31374 | must you be all your life watch''d like a baby in leading- strings? |
31374 | my aunt, what''s to be done? |
31374 | my brother''s idol? |
31374 | my superior in every thing; how can I hope for your forgiveness? |
31374 | no ceremony, damme!--_ Louisa._ Heaven!--is this diffidence? |
31374 | no;--but genius ought to be encouraged, and as he''s a friend of yours,--what''s the name of the play? |
31374 | out of the way, Scratch!--out of the way, or I''ll do you a mischief-- I will, damme!--Zounds!--a''nt I at the top of the beau monde? |
31374 | speak out, sir, how came you in this apartment? |
31374 | the country gentleman who has lately come to his title? |
31374 | to attempt to gain my affections, and then address another? |
31374 | well, my lord, and pray who is the man I come to meet? |
31374 | what can I do? |
31374 | what have you to be frightened at? |
31374 | what is all this-- who are you? |
31374 | what will become of me? |
31374 | what will become of poor, poor Mr Poet? |
31374 | what, Floriville? |
31374 | where''s my brother? |
31374 | who have we here? |
31374 | why, who should you marry?--And pray, how came you here? |
31374 | would you put a live author in a china closet? |
31374 | you base man, have you got a young lady in your lodgings? |
28492 | About what? |
28492 | After all, what am I beside him? 28492 And the fat man with shifty gray eyes?" |
28492 | And the man who comes in on crutches? |
28492 | But do you suppose this is her real self? |
28492 | But how did you reach the stage? |
28492 | But there''s your own question-- what''s to be the end of it? 28492 By what magic can I lift myself out of this press to earn a living-- out of this common drudgery?" |
28492 | Can all that appear in the lines? |
28492 | Can it be possible that he is still in the city? |
28492 | Can it be that this play is to mark the returning tide of Helen''s popularity? |
28492 | Can this sad woman in gray, struggling with a cold audience and a group of dismayed actors, be the brilliant and beautiful Helen Merival? |
28492 | Can you come out? |
28492 | Dare I ask her to marry me? |
28492 | Did n''t she tell you? |
28492 | Did n''t you bring the play itself? |
28492 | Did you consider that as I change my rôles and plays I must also, to a large extent, change my audience? 28492 Do n''t I know that? |
28492 | Do you know what all this means to you and to me? 28492 Does she dream of marrying the man? |
28492 | Have I not always had the same selfish, desperate concentration? 28492 He will slate us, unless--""And the big man with the grizzled beard?" |
28492 | How about the second act? 28492 How can I appeal to these motes?" |
28492 | How do you do, Mr. Douglass? 28492 How is the house to- night?" |
28492 | How is the house? |
28492 | How many of these citizens are capable of understanding for a moment_ Enid''s Choice_? 28492 I hope you may, for am I not to share in all your gold and glory? |
28492 | I''ve heard the phrase,he answered;"it corresponds to the old- time''barn- storming,''does n''t it?" |
28492 | If we could only catch one in a hundred? |
28492 | Is Mr. Douglass right? 28492 Is it possible that what I call''my art''is debasing to their bright young souls?" |
28492 | Is n''t her gown exquisite? 28492 Is that true?" |
28492 | Is there any text? |
28492 | Is there anything more hopelessly''handsome''and shining than these chairs? 28492 It certainly is a beautiful world-- don''t you think so?" |
28492 | It proves what? 28492 Mother, may I let Mr. Douglass see how I looked then?" |
28492 | No; what was it? |
28492 | Now, what is the matter with the first act? |
28492 | Oh, is it? |
28492 | She ca n''t be all of her parts-- which one of them will I find as I enter her room? |
28492 | Then the man who looks like Lincoln? |
28492 | There is the man who resembles Shakespeare? |
28492 | To what does it lead? |
28492 | Very bad? |
28492 | Well? |
28492 | Well? |
28492 | What do his personal traits matter to me? |
28492 | What do these laughing, insatiate amusement- seekers care about any one''s duty? 28492 What do you intend to do-- give him another chance to insult you? |
28492 | What do you mean? |
28492 | What do you mean? |
28492 | What do you think of it? |
28492 | What does it matter whether she be true or false? 28492 What does she mean?" |
28492 | What does the public know of her real greatness? 28492 What has brought the change?" |
28492 | What is to follow? 28492 What kind of a national drama would that be which dealt entirely with French or Italian mediæval heroes?" |
28492 | What right had I to force my ferocious theories upon her? |
28492 | What right has Helen Merival to do a thing like this? 28492 What would she say? |
28492 | What''s the subject? |
28492 | Where? |
28492 | Who are talking? |
28492 | Why did n''t he face the music to- night? 28492 Why did n''t you incorporate that new ending of the act?" |
28492 | Why had he not shown himself? |
28492 | Why not? 28492 Why that?" |
28492 | Why to- morrow? 28492 You did n''t read the papers?" |
28492 | You mean I should not be playing such women? 28492 A great part, eh? |
28492 | Allinger?" |
28492 | Am I always a sweet and lovely companion? |
28492 | Am I one whom familiarity lessens in value?" |
28492 | Am I responsible?" |
28492 | Am I to be your vampire?" |
28492 | Am I to govern my life to suit Westervelt or the street? |
28492 | And do you think I could live anywhere without hope of seeing you? |
28492 | And is this the end of our good days?" |
28492 | And my costumes were something marvellous, were n''t they, mother? |
28492 | Author, that we are now actually begun upon your play?" |
28492 | But can you get Olquest?" |
28492 | But how about the man with the waxed mustache?" |
28492 | But tell me, what is the meaning of these notices? |
28492 | But_ is_ there not a subtle letting- down, a disintegration? |
28492 | Ca n''t we do something?" |
28492 | Can you breakfast with us to- morrow, at eleven- thirty? |
28492 | Can you design the scenes? |
28492 | Can you find an actor who can do my lad of''the poetic fancy''?" |
28492 | Dare I, a moody, selfish brute, touch the hem of her garment?" |
28492 | Did you make those changes in_ Sidney''s_ lines? |
28492 | Did you talk of me to them? |
28492 | Do n''t you see I''m staking my reputation on to- night? |
28492 | Do n''t you think so, Brown?" |
28492 | Do you imagine she''s in earnest? |
28492 | Do you know him?" |
28492 | Do you know what I did with it?" |
28492 | Do you mean politics? |
28492 | Do you see that bunch of papers?" |
28492 | Do you think they would? |
28492 | Do you want to see it?" |
28492 | Does he talk as well as you reported, or were you polishing him a little?" |
28492 | Does it do any good? |
28492 | Douglass heard Hugh ask, eagerly,"Is he here?" |
28492 | Eh, Hugh?" |
28492 | Has she done so? |
28492 | Have n''t you any sense? |
28492 | Have you a theme?" |
28492 | Have you been West? |
28492 | Have you no soul-- no sense of honor? |
28492 | Have you put_ The Morning_ on in place of_ Alessandra_?" |
28492 | Have you read it?" |
28492 | He is our direct opposite, is n''t he? |
28492 | He was a little surprised next morning when she asked,"Did you look into that manuscript?" |
28492 | Her face expressed daring, humor, triumph, but the hand lifted to the chin expressed a little apprehension as she replied:"Rewrote it? |
28492 | How could I? |
28492 | How could they have? |
28492 | How could they help it when you walk with him and eat with him and ride with him?" |
28492 | How was it that this woman of the blazoning bill- boards had already put more of passion into his heart than they of the pure and sheltered life? |
28492 | I ask myself now,''What would Helen have me do?'' |
28492 | I could no more live without the applause of the stage--""How about the children?" |
28492 | I do n''t believe I''ve told you what I called you before I met you-- have I?" |
28492 | I shall tell them?" |
28492 | I sincerely wish now that you had left us to our struggle; and yet we''ve had a good time, have n''t we?" |
28492 | If you stay we will be glad of any suggestion at any time-- won''t we, Hugh?" |
28492 | Is he right?" |
28492 | Is it as bad as it seems to me now?... |
28492 | Is it possible that the mysterious Helen Merival is my Helen? |
28492 | Is n''t he a dear?" |
28492 | Is n''t it fine this morning?" |
28492 | Is n''t it presumptuous of me to say,''My Helen''? |
28492 | Is n''t that fanciful enough? |
28492 | Is n''t your brain washed clear of all doubts? |
28492 | Is the fault in me? |
28492 | Is there any subject holding an interest common to them and to me which would not in a sense be degrading in me to dramatize for their pleasure?" |
28492 | It''s pretty, but is it drama?" |
28492 | May he not be right, after all?" |
28492 | Mother kept boarders in order that Hugh and I might go to school-- didn''t you, dear old muz?" |
28492 | Mr. Saunders, will you please give out the parts and call a rehearsal for to- morrow at ten o''clock sharp?" |
28492 | Now, the third act?" |
28492 | Now, what''s the meaning of it all?" |
28492 | Or, do you mean you''re tired of me?" |
28492 | Please let me manage this whole affair; will you?" |
28492 | Shall I send it to you?" |
28492 | She loved Douglass; but did she love him strongly enough to warrant her in saying so-- when he should ask her? |
28492 | Suppose it does fail? |
28492 | Then in a louder tone:"I was right, was I not, to send you away?" |
28492 | Was it worth while to be made ashamed and bitter? |
28492 | What did they say of me?" |
28492 | What does she mean? |
28492 | What does that argue?" |
28492 | What had happened? |
28492 | What had so swiftly weakened her hold on her admirers? |
28492 | What ideals has he? |
28492 | What is out in the second?" |
28492 | What is the use wearing yourself out playing a disastrous rôle while forced to rehearse a new one? |
28492 | What is to be done?" |
28492 | What possesses her? |
28492 | What should I do with that?" |
28492 | What will be the light in her eyes when she turns them upon me? |
28492 | What will the''Free Lance''do-- the one who accepts bribes and cares for his crippled daughter like an angel-- what will he do?" |
28492 | What would his good friend say to him now when he asked for a chance to earn his bread? |
28492 | What''s the sense of having him on the string every blessed afternoon? |
28492 | What_ were_ you doing?" |
28492 | Whence came that undertone like the moan of a weary wastrel tortured with dreams of idyllic innocence long lost? |
28492 | Where have you kept yourself? |
28492 | Who is going to pring a theatre- barty to see a sermon on the stage-- hay?" |
28492 | Who''s Edwin Baxter, anyhow?" |
28492 | Why be disenchanted? |
28492 | Why did her utterance, like her glorious face, always suggest some inner, darker meaning? |
28492 | Why did n''t you stay away, as you did before? |
28492 | Why do n''t you go away for a time? |
28492 | Why do n''t you let me read your part?" |
28492 | Why do n''t you settle out there and take up public life?" |
28492 | Why does she keep the sot?" |
28492 | Why should they think me so old?" |
28492 | Why, how can that be? |
28492 | Will she meet me alone-- haughty, weary with praise, or will she be surrounded by those who bow to her as to a queen?" |
28492 | Will you accept it? |
28492 | Will you come?" |
28492 | Will you read my play? |
28492 | Wo n''t you go? |
28492 | Would it be so with Helen Merival? |
28492 | Would n''t it pay to let the theatre go''dark''till the new thing is ready?... |
28492 | Yes, I can see that would be exciting business; but what''s all this about your engagement to some big actress?" |
28492 | You found we were right, eh?" |
28492 | You will wait, wo n''t you? |
28492 | _ Enid''s Choice_? |
7998 | ''Twas shameful, was it not? |
7998 | (_ Calling._) Who else for the boat? |
7998 | A boy? |
7998 | A funny sight, I own: but where''s the sense? |
7998 | A man? |
7998 | A slave, a mortal, act Alcmena''s son? |
7998 | A slave? |
7998 | Ah me, whence fall these evils on my head? |
7998 | Air, Zeus''s chamber, or the Foot of Time? |
7998 | Alas, poor witling, and ca n''t you see That for mighty thoughts and heroic aims, the words themselves must appropriate be? |
7998 | An ass, no doubt: what made him do it though? |
7998 | And blabbing them abroad? |
7998 | And do what? |
7998 | And do you dare look in my face, after that shameful deed? |
7998 | And fought? |
7998 | And how am I to cross? |
7998 | And how did you manage to make them so grand, exalted, and brave with your wonderful verse? |
7998 | And how do you make_ your_ prologues? |
7998 | And how has this disturbed our Aeschylus? |
7998 | And how, if I decide? |
7998 | And tell me this: of all the roads you know Which is the quickest way to get to Hades? |
7998 | And then? |
7998 | And this beside his murdered father''s grave Orestes speaks? |
7998 | And this to ME, thou chattery- babble- collector, Thou pauper- creating rags- and- patches- stitcher? |
7998 | And this? |
7998 | And to speak great Lycabettuses, pray, And massive blocks of Parnassian rocks, is_ that_ things honest and pure to say? |
7998 | And what do_ you_ propose? |
7998 | And what does Pluto now propose to do? |
7998 | And what of overhearing Your master''s secrets? |
7998 | And what say_ you?_ AESCH. |
7998 | And what wilt thou reply? |
7998 | And who are they? |
7998 | And who''s to be the judge? |
7998 | Any fault there? |
7998 | Ay, truly, never now a man Comes home, but he begins to scan; And to his household loudly cries,_ Why, where''s my pitcher? |
7998 | Aye, little brother? |
7998 | Before I''ve put them down? |
7998 | Bless the sprat, Who nibbled off the head of that? |
7998 | But Agathon, where is he? |
7998 | But Phaedras and Stheneboeas? |
7998 | But Sophocles, How came not he to claim the tragic chair? |
7998 | But have you not a shoal of little songsters, Tragedians by the myriad, who can chatter A furlong faster than Euripides? |
7998 | But tell me, did you see the parricides And perjured folk he mentioned? |
7998 | But were n''t_ you_ frightened at those dreadful threats And shoutings? |
7998 | But were there none to side with Aeschylus? |
7998 | But what of Xenocles? |
7998 | But where are you going really? |
7998 | But why these tears? |
7998 | CORP. Two drachmas for the job? |
7998 | Can any of you tell Where Pluto here may dwell, For we, sirs, are two strangers who were never here before? |
7998 | Caused by a woman? |
7998 | Claim it? |
7998 | Come now, that comical joke? |
7998 | Come then, if you''re so_ very_ brave a man, Will you be I, and take the hero''s club And lion''s skin, since you''re so monstrous plucky? |
7998 | Creative? |
7998 | Dancing- girls? |
7998 | Did n''t you hear it? |
7998 | Did n''t you? |
7998 | Did you observe? |
7998 | Do you mean below, to Hades? |
7998 | Does not the donkey bear the load you''re bearing? |
7998 | Does she love the bad? |
7998 | Done me? |
7998 | Done? |
7998 | Eh? |
7998 | Eh? |
7998 | For such an outrage was not death your due? |
7998 | From Marathon, or Where picked you up these cable- twister''s strains? |
7998 | Gentleman? |
7998 | Given the victor''s prize To Aeschylus; why not? |
7998 | Go whither? |
7998 | Go, hang yourselves; for what care I? |
7998 | Going to? |
7998 | Gone where? |
7998 | Hang it, what''s that? |
7998 | Has it a copper leg? |
7998 | Have you e''er felt a sudden lust for soup? |
7998 | Have you no heart? |
7998 | Hear him? |
7998 | Hemlock, do you mean? |
7998 | How about grumbling, when you have felt the stick, And scurry out of doors? |
7998 | How about prying? |
7998 | How came they thither? |
7998 | How can one save a city such as this, Whom neither frieze nor woollen tunic suits? |
7998 | How can you bear, when you are borne yourself? |
7998 | How can you test us fairly? |
7998 | How can you when you''re riding? |
7998 | How so? |
7998 | How so? |
7998 | How twice? |
7998 | How? |
7998 | How? |
7998 | I buy of_ him_? |
7998 | I? |
7998 | If I ca n''t find one? |
7998 | If go you must, there''s Sophocles-- he comes Before Euripides-- why not take_ him_? |
7998 | In truth to the Ravens? |
7998 | Is it Xanthias there? |
7998 | Is it bricks they are making? |
7998 | Is the thing clear, or must I speak again? |
7998 | Its name? |
7998 | Like it? |
7998 | Love it? |
7998 | May I not say I''m overburdened so That if none ease me, I must ease myself? |
7998 | Mercy o''me, what''s this? |
7998 | Mind it? |
7998 | Not hurt you, did I? |
7998 | Nothing else smart? |
7998 | Now is n''t it a shame the man should strike And he a thief besides? |
7998 | Now is not this too bad? |
7998 | Now really should a cock be brought into a tragic play? |
7998 | O drop that, ca n''t you? |
7998 | O, what''s it like? |
7998 | O, what''s up now? |
7998 | O, where? |
7998 | O, whither I? |
7998 | O, whither shall I flee? |
7998 | O, ye golden gods, Lies your heart THERE? |
7998 | Of what ills is he NOT the creator and cause? |
7998 | Pythangelus? |
7998 | So why not_ you_ be flogged as well as I? |
7998 | So? |
7998 | So? |
7998 | Struck me? |
7998 | Taenarum? |
7998 | Tell me when? |
7998 | The Muse herself ca n''t be a wanton? |
7998 | The cowardliest? |
7998 | The good and useful? |
7998 | Then does he mean that when his father fell By craft and violence at a woman''s hand, The god of craft was witnessing the deed? |
7998 | Then why did n''t I sneeze? |
7998 | Then you do n''t mind it? |
7998 | Then you''ll effect nothing for which you came? |
7998 | Theramenes? |
7998 | To what end? |
7998 | Torture him, how? |
7998 | Was it for Cleisthenes? |
7998 | Was n''t he pelted? |
7998 | Was then, I wonder, the tale I told of Phaedra''s passionate love untrue? |
7998 | Well, would you like a steep and swift descent? |
7998 | Well? |
7998 | What am I doing? |
7998 | What are they? |
7998 | What are you dreaming of? |
7998 | What do you say, Euripides, to that? |
7998 | What does it mean? |
7998 | What does she think herself about him? |
7998 | What for? |
7998 | What from? |
7998 | What have you there? |
7998 | What in the act of offering? |
7998 | What is my fault? |
7998 | What makes you stamp and fidget so? |
7998 | What means this hubbub And row? |
7998 | What on earth for? |
7998 | What then? |
7998 | What''s it all about? |
7998 | What''s shameful, if the audience think not so? |
7998 | What''s that you are saying? |
7998 | What''s the matter? |
7998 | What''s the next step? |
7998 | What''s the right way to knock? |
7998 | What, a new coinage of your own? |
7998 | What, do n''t I bear? |
7998 | What,_ I_ get up? |
7998 | What? |
7998 | What? |
7998 | What? |
7998 | What? |
7998 | What? |
7998 | Whatever''s that? |
7998 | Whence comes that phlattothrat? |
7998 | Where have I got one? |
7998 | Where must I wait? |
7998 | Where were you going? |
7998 | Where''s she that bangs and jangles Her castanets? |
7998 | Where? |
7998 | Where? |
7998 | Where? |
7998 | Which of them will you test? |
7998 | Which shall I tell you first? |
7998 | Which will you try? |
7998 | Who banged the door? |
7998 | Who but they would ever have thought of it? |
7998 | Who does now? |
7998 | Who gnawed these olives? |
7998 | Who is the god to blame for my destruction? |
7998 | Who knows if death be life, and life be death, And breath be mutton broth, and sleep a sheepskin? |
7998 | Who stole it? |
7998 | Who''s for Cerberia? |
7998 | Who''s for the Lethe''s plain? |
7998 | Who''s for the Rest from every pain and ill? |
7998 | Who''s there? |
7998 | Why not? |
7998 | Why"good gracious"? |
7998 | Why, how am_ I_ to pull? |
7998 | Why, how came that about? |
7998 | Why, what''s the matter? |
7998 | Will it come off? |
7998 | Would n''t I like to follow on, and try A little sport and dancing? |
7998 | Would n''t I? |
7998 | Wretch; would you leave me dead? |
7998 | XAN, Frightened? |
7998 | Yet wherefore need a lyre For songs like these? |
7998 | You are really game to go? |
7998 | You enemy of gods and men, what was_ your_ practice, pray? |
7998 | You hear him, Aeschylus: why do n''t you speak? |
7998 | You hear him? |
7998 | You heard him? |
7998 | You like that style? |
7998 | You love it, do you? |
7998 | You mean the rascals? |
7998 | You mine with a bottle of oil? |
7998 | You see this foot? |
7998 | You two? |
7998 | You understand? |
7998 | You''ll prove it? |
7998 | You? |
7998 | [ Is this_ your_ cleverness or Cephisophon''s? |
7998 | approachest thou not to the rescue?_ DIO. |
7998 | approachest thou not to the rescue?_ DIO. |
7998 | approachest thou not to the rescue?_ I will expound( for_ I know it_)_ the omen the chieftains encountered. |
7998 | approachest thou not to the rescue_? |
7998 | approachest thou not to the rescue_? |
7998 | clap your hand in mine, Kiss and be kissed: and prithee tell me this, Tell me by Zeus, our rascaldom''s own god, What''s all that noise within? |
7998 | does not Iophon live? |
7998 | how do you mean? |
7998 | how? |
7998 | or the Ravens? |
7998 | the Donkey- shearings? |
7998 | weigh out tragedy, like butcher''s meat? |
7998 | what are you doing? |
7998 | what have you done? |
7998 | what now? |
7998 | what? |
7998 | where''s Xanthias? |
7998 | which shall it be? |
7998 | why did n''t I fight at sea? |
7998 | you there, you deadman, are you willing To carry down our little traps to Hades? |
7998 | you''re not in earnest, just because I dressed you up, in fun, as Heracles? |
41328 | ''Did you offer your three prayers?'' 41328 ''S Iverson,"he began( he had n''t time to say Miss Iverson),"got''ny money?" |
41328 | ''S that? |
41328 | ''When did you leave your Order?'' 41328 ''Would you like to see our new chapel?'' |
41328 | ''You unpacked that great trunk,''she gasped,''this frightfully hot day? 41328 A good deal like being executed in the public square, is n''t it?" |
41328 | Ai n''t she jest wonderful? |
41328 | Ai n''t this a bit of all right? |
41328 | An''me wit''kids o''me own? 41328 And a glass of lemonade?" |
41328 | And you wo n''t think every man you meet is a beast, will you, Miss Iverson? |
41328 | Are n''t there homes for the friendless,I asked her,"where girls are taken in for a night when they have no money?" |
41328 | Are n''t you forgetting,I asked, gently,"that Miss Morris is really a woman of the world? |
41328 | Are you afraid of ghosts? |
41328 | Are you going to be at home to- night? |
41328 | Are_ you_ going along? |
41328 | Aw, say,she muttered,"what''s the use? |
41328 | Aw, what''s the use? |
41328 | Be early, wo n''t you? 41328 Business good? |
41328 | But why not come home and get it yourself? |
41328 | But why? |
41328 | But you wo n''t lose sight of her for one second, will you? |
41328 | But-- but was he able to ride-- with his wound? |
41328 | But_ can_ you? |
41328 | By Jove, the editor got her message, did n''t she? 41328 Ca n''t I ride somewhere and get some one?" |
41328 | Circumstantial? 41328 Classmates?" |
41328 | Did he invite them to dance? |
41328 | Did n''t I get it? |
41328 | Did she? |
41328 | Did you see any of the family? |
41328 | Do n''t you realize that the woman would have hysterics at this point? 41328 Do you imagine I do n''t understand?" |
41328 | Do you realize what has happened, Miss Iverson? |
41328 | Do you remember your first play, May-- the one we girls put on? |
41328 | Do you think I could have kept away? |
41328 | Do you think I''d lie to you? |
41328 | Do you think Mr. Drake really_ was_ teaching me a-- a terrible lesson? |
41328 | Do you think we could stay there and do it? |
41328 | Does n''t it? |
41328 | Ef yo''slep''well,she said, quietly,"mou''t be yer ready t''eat?" |
41328 | Even though you described me? |
41328 | Feel as if you were being boiled in oil, do n''t you? |
41328 | Feel as if you were being burned at the stake? 41328 For example?" |
41328 | For example? |
41328 | Forgive me-- but you''re hungry, are n''t you? |
41328 | Friends already, are n''t you? |
41328 | Girl or boy? |
41328 | Godfrey,I said,"do you imagine that I''m thinking of books and plays now? |
41328 | Good Heaven, Miss Iverson, did I frighten you? |
41328 | Got your story? |
41328 | Have n''t lost all interest in us, have you, now that you''ve been away from us a year and are writing plays? |
41328 | Have ye ivir seen her? 41328 Have you met them yet?" |
41328 | He does n''t exactly kill, burn, or pillage, does he? |
41328 | Heard any late news about Morris? |
41328 | How about her home? |
41328 | How did you come to give Miss Iverson that impression? |
41328 | How do you do? |
41328 | How_ can_ you be so calm? |
41328 | I suppose,she added,"we could n''t take her away_ to- night_? |
41328 | Is Yawkins annoying you? |
41328 | Is he suffering? |
41328 | Is it serious? |
41328 | Is n''t Mrs. Hatfield unique? 41328 Is n''t that long enough? |
41328 | Is that a new song you''ve learned that you''re singing for me? |
41328 | Is that you at last? 41328 Is that you, Crumley?" |
41328 | Is that you, May? |
41328 | Is there anything I can do? |
41328 | It''s a terrible thing to say, ai n''t it? |
41328 | It''s the eats first, ai n''t it? |
41328 | It''s you again, is it? |
41328 | It_ is_ a cozy domestic scene, is n''t it? |
41328 | Jove,breathed Gibson,"he gets it, somehow, does n''t he? |
41328 | Kiddin''me again, was n''t you? |
41328 | May I come in and rest for a few moments? |
41328 | May I quote that? |
41328 | Miss Iverson,he said, quietly,"what have you against Brook? |
41328 | Miss Iverson? |
41328 | Miss Watts,he said, quickly,"ca n''t we go right into your house and send this story to the_ Searchlight_ over your telephone? |
41328 | Mother did n''t get that letter? |
41328 | Mrs. Moran,I asked, quietly,"how many Tyrrell graves are there?" |
41328 | My dear,she said, then, very quietly,"wo n''t you trust me?" |
41328 | My story? |
41328 | News? |
41328 | Oh, Billy, what about him? |
41328 | Oh, Billy,I gulped,"how did he look?" |
41328 | Oh,was his greeting to me,"you''re the convent girl? |
41328 | Say, Iverson,she exclaimed, in a tone that must have reached the diners in the balcony,"what''s up? |
41328 | Say, Mollie, who''s your friend? |
41328 | Say, tell me--_did_ she, really? |
41328 | Say,she said at last,"you''re kidding ai n''t you? |
41328 | Say,she said, and her voice was rude and cross again--"say, kid, what''s the matter with you? |
41328 | Scared you, did n''t I? |
41328 | She ai n''t a married woman, is she? |
41328 | Stay here,she gasped,"when I got money to go somewhere else? |
41328 | Still on the job? 41328 Suffering, Miss?" |
41328 | Suppose the woman had confessed,he asked me, suddenly--"would you have given us the story?" |
41328 | Sure how could ye know? 41328 Take what little courage we have left?" |
41328 | Tell me, before we part--_how did you know_? |
41328 | That''s straight, is it? |
41328 | Then she did n''t confess? |
41328 | Then you were there all winter? |
41328 | They''re arfter each othe''? |
41328 | They''re shootin''? |
41328 | Think he''ll give you a letter to her? |
41328 | Thought you knew the way, Grace? |
41328 | To- night? 41328 Two more convent kids?" |
41328 | W''u''d ye think ut? |
41328 | Want to turn this play into a farce? |
41328 | Was that all? |
41328 | Well, young woman,he said,"what can I do for you?" |
41328 | What are you doing here all alone? 41328 What are you trying to do?" |
41328 | What d''you think of the case? |
41328 | What dashed place is this? |
41328 | What did he say? |
41328 | What did she say? |
41328 | What do you know about her family? |
41328 | What does all this talk mean, anyway? 41328 What else c''u''d the poor creature do?" |
41328 | What for? |
41328 | What for? |
41328 | What happened? |
41328 | What news? 41328 What o''clock?" |
41328 | What''ll you stand for? |
41328 | What''s the matter with your eyes? |
41328 | What''s the matter? |
41328 | What''s the use of talking like that, Hurd? |
41328 | What''s this mean? |
41328 | When? |
41328 | Where are we going? |
41328 | Which would you have done? |
41328 | Who''s wantin''me? |
41328 | Why are you packing? 41328 Why did n''t you let me in? |
41328 | Why do n''t you make a magazine story of it? |
41328 | Why, that gipsy is n''t a gipsy at all, is he? |
41328 | Why, you little dunce, you know you''ve_ got_ a story, do n''t you? |
41328 | Will ye be waitin''here till I come back? 41328 Will you ask her to wait, Miss Iverson?" |
41328 | Will you give me the key, please? 41328 Will you go on?" |
41328 | Will you tell me your name? |
41328 | Will yuh? |
41328 | Would n''t you like a sandwich? |
41328 | Wud ye be killin''th''poor woman wid anxiety? |
41328 | Yes? |
41328 | Yes? |
41328 | You ai n''t gettin''it, are you? |
41328 | You believe me, do n''t you? |
41328 | You got it all here, ai n''t you? |
41328 | You hope--? |
41328 | You know Davies, her lawyer, do n''t you? |
41328 | You mean,I exclaimed, in surprise,"that you''ve never left your ranch in twenty years?" |
41328 | You wo n''t mind if I finish this? |
41328 | You''ll go right to that address,I asked,"and rest?" |
41328 | You''re Miss Iverson, are n''t you? |
41328 | You''ve followed the trial, have n''t you? |
41328 | You''ve seen the_ Sentinel_,she asked,"with that story about you?" |
41328 | _ Ach_, Herr Morris,he cried, in a guttural German voice that simply dripped affection,"you remember dose kids? |
41328 | _ Is_ it fiction? |
41328 | _ The-- crisis-- is-- expected-- to- night._What difference did it make what happened on that stage? |
41328 | _ Where-- are-- you?_After a moment I heard an answering hail; an instant later the familiar bulk of Casey towered above me in the mist. |
41328 | _ Why?_ I thought you were going to be with us another week at least? |
41328 | _ Why?_ I thought you were going to be with us another week at least? |
41328 | ''How did you know?'' |
41328 | 12 IT WAS YOUNG"SHEP,"THE LAST OF THE MORANS 124"D''YE KNOW THE WOMAN?" |
41328 | Ai n''t her mother raisin''th''roof over her head somewhere this minute?" |
41328 | Also, would it be right to accept Mollie Merk''s hospitality when I did not approve of her? |
41328 | Am I speaking in my usual voice? |
41328 | And I was going to be a nun in three years, so who cared, anyway? |
41328 | And why did n''t that bell ring? |
41328 | And why? |
41328 | Are mother and Godfrey still in the dining- room? |
41328 | Are you ill?" |
41328 | At such times the newspapers fill their space with symposiums on"Can a Couple Live on Eight Dollars a Week?" |
41328 | But ca n''t you believe that Grace''s mother and brother may be wiser than she is?" |
41328 | But how do you happen to be here?" |
41328 | But if this was the beginning, what would be the end? |
41328 | But-- couldn''t we lead her home?" |
41328 | But_ does_ she know? |
41328 | By Jove, what_ is_ that fellow doing now?" |
41328 | Ca n''t ye understand that, even ef you ai n''t got a home an''a husband ye been neglectin''fer days, like I have? |
41328 | Can she walk, I wonder-- or will I carry her?" |
41328 | Can you send me word there-- several times?" |
41328 | D''ye know th''woman?" |
41328 | D''ye think I''m crazy? |
41328 | Did you get a dinner invitation from me yesterday? |
41328 | Did you throw us down on this story?" |
41328 | Dillon?" |
41328 | Do I give you the story, or do n''t I?" |
41328 | Do n''t you know it was all a trick?" |
41328 | Do n''t you remember? |
41328 | Do you know him? |
41328 | Do you recognize this youngster? |
41328 | Do you remember what General Sherman said about war? |
41328 | Do you remember what they said about Miss Carew-- that her play was so feminine she must have done it with crochet needles? |
41328 | Done anything?" |
41328 | Except-- was it possible that at last I was putting some one else before my father? |
41328 | Feel as if you were being butchered to make a Roman holiday, and all that kind of thing? |
41328 | Get me?" |
41328 | Godfrey would be out of danger, or Godfrey would be-- Why did n''t Gibson come? |
41328 | Good story, eh?" |
41328 | Goot idea,_ nicht wahr_?" |
41328 | Had I for one instant forgotten? |
41328 | Had it been very hot in her office? |
41328 | Had she had a hard day? |
41328 | Harland?" |
41328 | Has he said anything? |
41328 | Has n''t_ anny_ of yez set eyes on her before? |
41328 | Have I come at the wrong time?" |
41328 | Have I made myself clear?" |
41328 | Her letter, and that of Mrs. Appleton, went to Sister Irmingarde-- was it only a year ago that I had parted from her and the convent? |
41328 | Here-- what are you doing? |
41328 | How are the kids?" |
41328 | How could I go down and face that stricken old creature to whom life had just given this final turn of its relentless screw? |
41328 | How many times had he telephoned and written? |
41328 | I asked, tentatively--"that, and what you have told me about the books you are reading?" |
41328 | I suggested--"and her children? |
41328 | I''ve just heard that Mr. Morris is very ill. Can you tell me how he is?" |
41328 | Is anything wrong? |
41328 | Is n''t the letter safe till you get home?" |
41328 | Is that you, May? |
41328 | Is_ this_ your rehearsal?" |
41328 | Mears?" |
41328 | Mears?" |
41328 | Need I say who read the valedictory? |
41328 | No? |
41328 | Now do you understand?" |
41328 | Oh, Harriet, ca n''t you hear that?" |
41328 | Oh, whut''ll I do?" |
41328 | Or is she in some place so inconceivably remote that even the tears and prayers of her helpless old mother have never reached her? |
41328 | Ready for work? |
41328 | Ready? |
41328 | Say"--a wraith of his wide and boyish grin appeared--"what''s going on? |
41328 | See it?" |
41328 | See now?" |
41328 | See? |
41328 | See? |
41328 | See?" |
41328 | Shall I call for the author now, or wait till the end of the second act?" |
41328 | Shall I show her in?" |
41328 | She had had no special training; would the editor talk to her and give her any suggestions she could? |
41328 | She wanted work; how could she get it? |
41328 | Suppose some one caught me in the act? |
41328 | Sure ye''re not lost, are ye?" |
41328 | Was I shrieking, too? |
41328 | Was it Mrs. Morris, or the young girl in the wings? |
41328 | Was it doubt or pity, or both? |
41328 | Was it taking me to Bedlam? |
41328 | Was that an ice- cap on Godfrey''s head? |
41328 | Was the editor tired? |
41328 | What did it matter? |
41328 | What did these puppets know about love? |
41328 | What do you mean?" |
41328 | What do you mean?" |
41328 | What do you think of the woman now, after meeting her?" |
41328 | What else did she say? |
41328 | What had I known about it when I wrote so arrogantly? |
41328 | What more do you want? |
41328 | What must I think of myself? |
41328 | What was it we had arranged? |
41328 | What would Sister Irmingarde think of me if she knew? |
41328 | What would he think of me? |
41328 | What''ll you eat?" |
41328 | What''s been done to the wire?" |
41328 | Where do you live? |
41328 | Where is Mrs. Driscoll now?" |
41328 | Where is she now? |
41328 | Where''s that kiss I was to have? |
41328 | Where''s your mama?" |
41328 | Which is it-- indigestion or cold feet?" |
41328 | Whut''ll I do? |
41328 | Why did n''t you watch where you were going, Grace? |
41328 | Why do n''t you come to me with this rot, if you''re going to notice it, and not bother Miss Iverson? |
41328 | Why should n''t you run with the pack?" |
41328 | Why should you worry about it?'' |
41328 | Why, Mrs. Driscoll, how_ could_ you do such a thing?'' |
41328 | Will you do me a favor? |
41328 | Will you give her to us?" |
41328 | With all those furs and flannels? |
41328 | Wo n''t you come to me now?" |
41328 | Yet, what could be done? |
41328 | You know that, do n''t you?" |
41328 | You know where their seats are, do n''t you? |
41328 | You ran out to see her last week, did n''t you, Bassinger?" |
41328 | [ Illustration:"D''YE KNOW THE WOMAN?" |
41328 | and her husband?" |
41328 | or"Is Suicide a Sin?" |
20225 | A bet? |
20225 | A little dear, is n''t he? |
20225 | A play? |
20225 | Am I a man of genius? |
20225 | And are you to be there the whole time with him? |
20225 | And do you spend all your time writing Ibsen criticisms of Ibsen plays? |
20225 | And do you think I shall always be? |
20225 | And do you? |
20225 | And have you always lived there? |
20225 | And how do I know that I can do anything with Godolphin? |
20225 | And what are you going to do? |
20225 | And what is going to be our attitude in regard to it? |
20225 | And who thought of it? |
20225 | And you mean that there is this mystical kindness for Mr. Maxwell''s play in the prophecies that all read so much alike to me? |
20225 | And you think I could do Haxard? 20225 Another disappointment?" |
20225 | Are you alone? 20225 Are you sick?" |
20225 | Are_ you_ jealous of her? |
20225 | At the lunch? |
20225 | Attitude? 20225 Brice, did you decide that way to please me?" |
20225 | Brice,she appealed, after a moment,"do you think I had been saying anything to set him against her?" |
20225 | But do you think it would be quite right-- quite frank-- to let him take it without telling him? |
20225 | But the houses, were they so bad everywhere? |
20225 | But when? 20225 But who is he?" |
20225 | But whom could you get for such a Salome as that? |
20225 | By- the- way, are you still connected with the_ Abstract_? 20225 Can I come in a moment?" |
20225 | Could n''t you give the feeling of the people looking at it? |
20225 | Did I consider it? |
20225 | Did he ask you to do that? |
20225 | Did n''t he give you a card? |
20225 | Did n''t you know whether I had done so or not? 20225 Do n''t you see that the love- business is the play now? |
20225 | Do you like it? 20225 Do you mean,"the author asked,"that you-- or any manager-- would take it if that were done?" |
20225 | Do you really think I could do anything with it? |
20225 | Do you really think so? |
20225 | Do you think I will believe you? |
20225 | Do you think she is an actress? |
20225 | Do you think so? 20225 Do you think so?" |
20225 | Do you think that was what gave you bad houses in Chicago-- the double interest, or the weakened interest in Haxard? |
20225 | Do you think we deserve it? |
20225 | For squabbling so? 20225 Godolphin?" |
20225 | Going to work much longer, little man? |
20225 | Guess what? |
20225 | Had n''t you better give the thing a chance to go right? 20225 How could I prepare you? |
20225 | How did you get on with the love- business? |
20225 | How did_ I_ know you were suffering? |
20225 | How do I know? |
20225 | How do you do, Mrs. Maxwell? 20225 How much ought I to praise you?" |
20225 | How would it do to say that if I ever come to anything worth while, it''ll be because you made me? |
20225 | How, anything? |
20225 | How? |
20225 | I can go out for lunch, certainly,said Maxwell"Perhaps you would rather I stayed out for dinner, too?" |
20225 | I dare say he told you? |
20225 | I do n''t understand that it ends well? |
20225 | I have been thinking,she said,"whether you would like me to call on Mrs. Harley this evening with you?" |
20225 | I suppose you do n''t care to let me see what you''ve written to- day? |
20225 | I thought you wanted to devote yourself entirely to the drama? |
20225 | I''m hungry, are n''t you? |
20225 | If? |
20225 | In the old way? 20225 Is it entirely well now?" |
20225 | Is n''t lunch nearly ready? 20225 Is n''t that the way with the wives of you men of genius?" |
20225 | Is that a good thing? 20225 Is that the way you would do it, is that the way you would say it, if it were_ you_?" |
20225 | Is that what is worrying you? 20225 My wife? |
20225 | Not if it led up to the pathos and prettiness of their reconciliation in the end? 20225 Of course,"Louise answered, gayly; and now Mrs. Harley turned to Godolphin again:"_ Where_ were you?" |
20225 | Oh, did n''t he think it very silly? |
20225 | Oh, do they? |
20225 | Oh, do you think_ you_ are the only modest man? 20225 Or why you did n''t tell me before, if you meant to give your play to that creature?" |
20225 | Perhaps you meant to do it all along? |
20225 | Rather I would n''t say anything at all? |
20225 | Rather Ibsenish, is n''t it? |
20225 | Sha''n''t you be very anxious to see how they have imagined Salome and Atland? |
20225 | Shall I light the lamp for you, Brice? |
20225 | Should you care? |
20225 | Should you have any objection to my going home for a few days? |
20225 | Should you like me to come some time? |
20225 | So that you can show it to Godolphin? |
20225 | Suppose? 20225 That would be rather romantic, would n''t it?" |
20225 | The Coleman House? 20225 The lady?" |
20225 | The lover? |
20225 | The name has been used, has n''t it? |
20225 | Then what in the world does Godolphin mean? |
20225 | Then why did you pretend to like the way I had done it,Maxwell demanded, angrily,"if you think she will take the honors from him?" |
20225 | Then you are not the-- the-- star? |
20225 | Then, as it is, you do n''t want it? |
20225 | Then, why has he written to you about it? |
20225 | Was n''t Salome magnificent? |
20225 | Was n''t it strange? 20225 Was that why you said nothing?" |
20225 | Was there anything said about her? |
20225 | We_ do_ belong to each other utterly, do n''t we? 20225 Well, do n''t you see how wrong and wicked that was?" |
20225 | Well, is n''t there something in that? |
20225 | Well, then, sha''n''t you always say that I did something towards it? |
20225 | Well, what? |
20225 | Well,he said at last,"what shall I do about it?" |
20225 | Well,he said, at last,"he wo n''t expect you and Maxwell to take the road too with it?" |
20225 | Well? |
20225 | Well? |
20225 | Well? |
20225 | Well? |
20225 | Were the houses bad-- comparatively? |
20225 | Were there any letters for me? |
20225 | What are you going to do? |
20225 | What did you think he did? |
20225 | What did you want? |
20225 | What difference? |
20225 | What do you mean? |
20225 | What do you mean? |
20225 | What do you suppose it means? |
20225 | What does it mean? |
20225 | What does this mean, Brice? |
20225 | What for? |
20225 | What have you got? |
20225 | What is it, dear? |
20225 | What is the matter? |
20225 | What is the matter? |
20225 | What is the use of asking such a thing as that? 20225 What look?" |
20225 | What makes you think she''s a girl? |
20225 | What play is that? |
20225 | What should you consider the best news-- or not news exactly; the best thing-- in the world? |
20225 | What woman? |
20225 | What woman? |
20225 | What? 20225 What?" |
20225 | When does Maxwell expect to have his play done? |
20225 | Where are we? |
20225 | Where did you see her? |
20225 | Where is he stopping? |
20225 | Where''s Maxwell? |
20225 | Whether you could n''t use_ our_ affair in the play? |
20225 | Who in the world would have dreamed that there was any one who could write such a criticism,_ out there_? |
20225 | Who? 20225 Why are you so quiet, Brice? |
20225 | Why did n''t you take it, too? 20225 Why did n''t you tell me that they would like to get her?" |
20225 | Why do n''t you say these things to Godolphin? |
20225 | Why do you ask such a thing as that? |
20225 | Why do you have it in, then? |
20225 | Why do you let him? 20225 Why not say universe?" |
20225 | Why not sell him the piece outright, and wash your hands of it? |
20225 | Why not? |
20225 | Why should I suspect you of anything so base? |
20225 | Why, does_ your_ husband write_ plays_? |
20225 | Why, what makes it so hard? |
20225 | Why? |
20225 | Will you tell me what it means? |
20225 | Would it take such a very big one to hold me? 20225 Would n''t that be rather tawdry?" |
20225 | Would n''t that leave the spectator a little too inconsolable? 20225 Would you mind coming to the train with me on your way down town to- morrow?" |
20225 | Yes, is n''t it? 20225 Yes, is n''t it?" |
20225 | Yes? 20225 Yolande Havisham?" |
20225 | You are going to begin at once? |
20225 | You noticed that we have put on''Engaged?'' 20225 You think the interest of the love- business will detract from the interest of the homicide''s fate?" |
20225 | You understand, of course, Mr. Maxwell, that I should still like to have your play, if it could be made what I want? |
20225 | You would n''t like me to use that point, then? |
20225 | Your vow? 20225 _ Am_ I quite enough?" |
20225 | _ We?_repeated Maxwell. |
20225 | And is n''t it delightful that, as Godolphin says, it''s such a favorite with refined people?" |
20225 | And my family?" |
20225 | And now you see, do n''t you, that there is some use in squabbling, even?" |
20225 | And you have n''t done anything with the piece yet?" |
20225 | At last the manager said, abruptly,"You want me to read your play?" |
20225 | Besides, do you suppose Godolphin could get a theatre in Boston out of the order of his engagement there next spring?" |
20225 | But surely_ you_ must know what it was?" |
20225 | But what has he done?" |
20225 | But when he finished his letter, and was putting it into the envelope, she asked:"Did you tell Mr. Grayson that Godolphin had returned the play?" |
20225 | But why in Midland? |
20225 | But would it be true?" |
20225 | But you can understand, ca n''t you, just how I feel about Salome?" |
20225 | But you''ll join me in a cup of tea downstairs?" |
20225 | By the way,"he said to the actor,"have you thought over that point about changing Haxard''s crime, or the quality of it? |
20225 | By- the- way, why should n''t you lunch with me? |
20225 | Can I speak with you?" |
20225 | Come, why could n''t you try something of that kind? |
20225 | Could it be a woman?" |
20225 | Could n''t we work a sea- bathing scene into the''Second Chapter''? |
20225 | Did he ask you to lunch again?" |
20225 | Did n''t I tell you it would be the greatest success? |
20225 | Did n''t you feel that it was a mistake yourself?" |
20225 | Did n''t you see that papa was hinting at buying_ you_ a share in the_ Abstract_?" |
20225 | Did you ever hear anything like it? |
20225 | Did you feel that about it?" |
20225 | Did you feel that?" |
20225 | Do n''t you call that pretty business- like?" |
20225 | Do n''t you like to have me share it?" |
20225 | Do n''t you long to know how it goes in Chicago? |
20225 | Do n''t you see?" |
20225 | Do n''t you think so yourself?" |
20225 | Do n''t you think that would be a good name?" |
20225 | Do n''t you_ know_ whether you did?" |
20225 | Do you mind it so much?" |
20225 | Do you suppose they will?" |
20225 | Do you suppose you can?" |
20225 | Do you think you could have it ready by the end of July?" |
20225 | Do you want to change papers?" |
20225 | Do you want to know about it?" |
20225 | Does n''t Miss Havisham''s rendition grow upon you? |
20225 | Godolphin was standing while he said all this, and Maxwell now asked:"Wo n''t you sit down?" |
20225 | Grayson?" |
20225 | Harley?" |
20225 | Harley?" |
20225 | Has he given it up?" |
20225 | Has the play been a great success in Chicago?" |
20225 | Have n''t you written a play?" |
20225 | Have you got the play roughed out at all?" |
20225 | Have you seen Grayson lately?" |
20225 | He asked now,"What sort of chap is he, really?" |
20225 | He continued silent, and she went on:"Are you still thinking about our scrap this morning? |
20225 | He did not speak, and after a while she asked,"What are you thinking of?" |
20225 | He did not stop till he had asked, with the most winning and radiant smile,"And the play, what have you done with the play?" |
20225 | He has n''t been here yet?" |
20225 | He said nothing, and she continued:"You could n''t expect me to take any interest in it after this, could you? |
20225 | He was alone; he said her mother had gone to Boston for the day; and he asked:"Did you walk from the station? |
20225 | Here, shall I read it? |
20225 | How am I to give the love- business charm, and yet keep it in the background?" |
20225 | How can it matter to you who plays the part? |
20225 | How could you know it?" |
20225 | How did you find it out?" |
20225 | How did you find out about me?" |
20225 | How did you get me upstairs?" |
20225 | How in the world did you find out he was here?" |
20225 | How old did you say Haxard was?" |
20225 | How will that do, papa?" |
20225 | How would it do to have had the girl actually reject him? |
20225 | How? |
20225 | I think it had better not be an intentional murder; that would kill the audience''s sympathy with him from the start, do n''t you think? |
20225 | I wish--""What? |
20225 | If he had, just what was the measure and the nature of his sin? |
20225 | If the spectator could be made to see that she was throwing herself away on him, after all?" |
20225 | If we had n''t been so eager to pin our faith to Godolphin--""How much better off should we have been? |
20225 | If you do n''t understand, after all that''s been said, what is the use of talking? |
20225 | Is anything the matter? |
20225 | Is it a large place?" |
20225 | Is n''t it glorious? |
20225 | Is n''t that pretty good, for two people that had nothing in the world yesterday? |
20225 | Is n''t this the piece Godolphin has been trying out West?" |
20225 | Louise laid hold of her in the drawing- room:"Who is he? |
20225 | Maxwell asked, with melancholy scorn,"But you do n''t happen to know any leading lady who is looking round for a battle- horse?" |
20225 | Maxwell still smiled, and Godolphin deferred to his wife:"But perhaps Mrs. Maxwell would object to the skirt- dance?" |
20225 | Maxwell was miserably silent, and she pursued:"May I ask whether you knew they were going to try to get her?" |
20225 | Maxwell?" |
20225 | Now he said,"Are n''t you rather unnecessarily complex?" |
20225 | Now, I want you to promise, dearest, that you''ll never mind me again, but lunch or dine, or breakfast, or sup whenever anybody asks you?" |
20225 | Now, you would n''t say there was anything in that to cry about, would you? |
20225 | Or is this a new one?" |
20225 | Perhaps you do n''t like me to be sincere with_ you_ about your play?" |
20225 | Ray?" |
20225 | Ray?" |
20225 | Shall I tell you what they call that? |
20225 | Shall you like collaborating with me?" |
20225 | She asked,"Do you think it would intensify the situation if he were not equal to her? |
20225 | She had to call to him,"Well?" |
20225 | She pulled away, and"Well?" |
20225 | She went on a good while to this effect, but when she had talked herself out, Maxwell had still said so little that she asked,"What is it, Brice?" |
20225 | She''s a great creation now, but is n''t she too great for Atland?" |
20225 | Should he always be able to bear and forbear, as he felt she would, with all her variableness and turning? |
20225 | Suppose I should ask you not to eat humble- pie before your father?" |
20225 | That I was not an intending dramatist?" |
20225 | Then he asked, with a look of latent significance:"Have you ever seen her?" |
20225 | Then if that wretch should see you?" |
20225 | Then she asked,"Did you expect anything like this from the way he parted with you yesterday?" |
20225 | Then she asked:"What in the world_ does_ he mean?" |
20225 | Then why not play Salome as strongly as possible, and trust to her strength to enhance Haxard''s effect, instead of weakening it?" |
20225 | Then you''re going to let him tamper with that beautiful work of yours?" |
20225 | Was he ever of the least use with the old one?" |
20225 | Was n''t it strange? |
20225 | We are all united on that point, I believe, Maxwell?" |
20225 | What crime would you prefer? |
20225 | What do you intend to do next?" |
20225 | What do you say_ now_, papa?" |
20225 | What do you think of that? |
20225 | What has become of his promise to play nothing else, I should like to know? |
20225 | What have we lost by it?" |
20225 | What is he?" |
20225 | What is it?" |
20225 | What is it?" |
20225 | What is the matter with you? |
20225 | What is there to do?" |
20225 | What is your vow?" |
20225 | What shall I tell them, Brice? |
20225 | What sort of lunch did you have?" |
20225 | What was it?" |
20225 | What would society journalism say to your holding my hand throughout the tender passages? |
20225 | When is it to be given here? |
20225 | Where did you see my husband''s play?" |
20225 | Where''s mamma? |
20225 | Where-- how?" |
20225 | Who has got the play now?" |
20225 | Who would ever know it? |
20225 | Why did I ever trust one of that race?" |
20225 | Why did n''t you come back in the carriage? |
20225 | Why did n''t you go?" |
20225 | Why do n''t you keep your play and offer it to a manager or some actor who will know how to do it?" |
20225 | Why do you care whether Miss Pettrell or Mrs. Harley does it?" |
20225 | Why do you have anything more to do with him? |
20225 | Why do you let him touch the new play? |
20225 | Why do you want to touch the thing again? |
20225 | Why have you taken it from him?" |
20225 | Why should n''t you believe I am telling you the truth?" |
20225 | Why should you make me eat it, too?" |
20225 | Will that do?" |
20225 | Will you drink anything, or smoke anything? |
20225 | Will you go out somewhere and get your lunch? |
20225 | Will you go straight down to the Coleman House, as soon as you''ve had your dinner, and tell that man he can have your play for that woman?" |
20225 | Will you?" |
20225 | Will you?" |
20225 | Will you?" |
20225 | Will you?" |
20225 | Will you?" |
20225 | Will you?" |
20225 | Will you?" |
20225 | Will you?" |
20225 | Will you?" |
20225 | With whom?" |
20225 | Wo n''t you come in?" |
20225 | Would you like me to swear it?" |
20225 | You acquit me of the poor taste of putting up a job?" |
20225 | You do n''t mind that, do you?" |
20225 | You do n''t want the love- business to double the tragedy, you want to have it relieved, do n''t you?" |
20225 | You saw what the critics said of it?" |
20225 | You still have faith in me?" |
20225 | You wo n''t mind my getting the charm all from you?" |
20225 | You wo n''t, will you?" |
20225 | _ Could n''t_ you do something like''Engaged?''" |
20225 | that''s rather pretty, is n''t it? |
46258 | ''Where''s the plot then?'' 46258 About me?" |
46258 | About me? |
46258 | Ah, how can I tell? |
46258 | Ah, my dear, do you think I have n''t known all along? |
46258 | Ah, was that it? |
46258 | All what? |
46258 | Am I to say that you do n''t wish to see him again? 46258 And about my portrait?" |
46258 | And am I right in supposing that you would expect whatever the usual commission happens to be? |
46258 | And do you intend also to disobey me with regard to neither seeing nor communicating with Mr. Lathom again? |
46258 | And has Joyce been sitting to you already? |
46258 | And has my presence made any difference to you? |
46258 | And have you copied much? |
46258 | And her questions? |
46258 | And if so will you take some lunch? |
46258 | And if''Easter Eggs''is put on, and fails, as your other play did,he observed,"shall I not be considerably out of pocket? |
46258 | And is there anything else you would like me to do for you? |
46258 | And that was why Mr. Wroughton did n''t want me down there last autumn? |
46258 | And the plates? 46258 And then, my dear?" |
46258 | And was it any of my flirts in Cairo? |
46258 | And were n''t you painting below Thorley Weir a week ago? 46258 And what am I to do with this foolish boy?" |
46258 | And what did you mean by that, my dear? |
46258 | And what is your part in this conspiracy? |
46258 | And when will you have finished your copying? |
46258 | And when? |
46258 | And will you get breakfast ready if I come now? |
46258 | And you have had a''heart- to- heart''talk with Egypt? |
46258 | And you sat there all by yourself, mum as a mouse, and ate up your tray? |
46258 | Are n''t you being Uriah- ish, as Mr. Armstrong says? |
46258 | Are we going up or down the river? |
46258 | Are you more than proud, satisfied? |
46258 | Are you proud? |
46258 | Are you sure it''s not a little-- well-- a little thick? |
46258 | Are you talking about the Reynolds? 46258 But how?" |
46258 | But is the latest addition qualitatively satisfactory? |
46258 | But what characters? |
46258 | But what have you bought all these papers for? |
46258 | But what of us? |
46258 | But why should my having breakfast matter to you? |
46258 | But wo n''t you leave him here? |
46258 | But you think some one has been telling damned lies about me? |
46258 | But your hat? |
46258 | By punching of his head? |
46258 | Ca n''t you manage to get up, as you did when I came in this morning? 46258 Can not we by any means persuade you to stay another night? |
46258 | Can you give me a few minutes of your time now? |
46258 | Could n''t I see you struggling to keep your heart above water, so to speak? 46258 Did he caution you against me?" |
46258 | Did you say £500? |
46258 | Did you tell them that? |
46258 | Did you-- did you mention your connection with me? |
46258 | Do I sound as if I was lying? 46258 Do not you men cease to think of us even before we are middle- aged?" |
46258 | Do you mean by that what you have just asked me? |
46258 | Do you mean that you have been actually in want of money to pay for food? 46258 Do you understand?" |
46258 | Eight hundred pounds advance, was it? 46258 Five thousand? |
46258 | Good Lord, my dear, do you mean that? |
46258 | Granny, darling,she said,"how many lumps of sugar?" |
46258 | Guess? 46258 Happened?" |
46258 | Have some now by itself? |
46258 | He has adopted you, too, for he came out when you came, did n''t he? |
46258 | How could your portrait show you think her a bore? |
46258 | How much did Ward give you for Philip Wroughton''s Reynolds? |
46258 | I began it from the picture,he said,"but may I finish it from you? |
46258 | I should be very glad to.... And perhaps soon, not just yet, but soon, you will come and see my work, if I ring you up? 46258 If so, shall I pay it, or your friend?" |
46258 | If you really believe Craddock is a swindler, how can you make jokes about it? 46258 Is it finished now?" |
46258 | Is it-- do you mean it''s a huge success, huge, you know? |
46258 | Is n''t it so distressing on a wet day? |
46258 | Is there a big tree on the lawn? 46258 It is a clever sketch, is n''t it?" |
46258 | Lady Crowborough? |
46258 | Lays it on thick, does n''t it? |
46258 | Leave it there,she said..."and then, where were we? |
46258 | Lor'', my dear, do you think I did n''t guess that? 46258 Lor'', my dear, what do you want with experience over that sort o''thing?" |
46258 | May n''t I give you and Miss Wroughton tea there some afternoon? 46258 My dear, what have you done?" |
46258 | No? 46258 Not ill, I hope?" |
46258 | Not really? |
46258 | Oh, Charles,she said,"have you come to me? |
46258 | Oh, Mr. Lathom,she said,"is it you? |
46258 | Oh, Mr. Wroughton does expect me? |
46258 | Oh, but they''re not gutless, do you think? 46258 Oh, but will you, can you?" |
46258 | Oh, do you paint? |
46258 | Oh, that? |
46258 | Only that? 46258 Or were you thinking of exhibiting it?" |
46258 | Painfully noble sentiment? |
46258 | Shall we come to the point? |
46258 | Shall we go? |
46258 | Shall we take our ride into the desert or go home? |
46258 | Shall we-- wouldn''t it be better if we got it over at once? 46258 Something up: something up, is there, Craddock?" |
46258 | Surely for my sake a little less than yours? |
46258 | That Craddock? |
46258 | That I suppose is your business? |
46258 | That is down- stream, is n''t it? |
46258 | Then I have shown that? |
46258 | Then would you like unpopularity? 46258 To her, do n''t you mean?" |
46258 | Well, then, when you leave your encampment here, will you please send it to me at this address? 46258 Well?" |
46258 | Well? |
46258 | What did you give? |
46258 | What do you mean to do, either of you? |
46258 | What do you want me to do, Charles? |
46258 | What had he bought? |
46258 | What has happened? |
46258 | What is your name? |
46258 | What on earth could have happened? 46258 What on earth do you think of me?" |
46258 | What would you like to do? |
46258 | What''ll you give me for my portrait, or do n''t you do business in these sacred halls? 46258 What? |
46258 | Where shall we sup to- night? |
46258 | Why did Craddock do it? |
46258 | Why did Mr. Craddock send father the cheque? |
46258 | Why how could I look him in the face, and have a moment''s ease with him, if I thought you had? |
46258 | Why not indeed? 46258 Why not?" |
46258 | Will you give me your permission to ask Miss Joyce if she will make me the happiest of men? |
46258 | Will you have it over your shoulders or on your knees? |
46258 | Will you tell me who this excellent authority is? |
46258 | Wo n''t he disturb you? |
46258 | Wounds? 46258 Yes, dear, but how did you know?" |
46258 | Yes, it was rot, was n''t it, Frank? |
46258 | Yes, yes: very clever, very sparkling,he said,"but hardly in my line, do you think? |
46258 | Yes: do you mind my asking you one thing? 46258 You are a painter of portraits, and what sitter will come up those stairs? |
46258 | You know my mother, do you not? 46258 You were saying?" |
46258 | You would n''t have liked that, would you? 46258 Your studio address? |
46258 | A commission to copy a Reynolds perhaps, other things perhaps, who knows? |
46258 | After all, what has happened? |
46258 | Ai n''t you frightened of burglars?" |
46258 | And an American, was it not? |
46258 | And are there usually some dogs about?" |
46258 | And are these chocolates for me, too? |
46258 | And are those sketches yours? |
46258 | And dear old Buz lay on the sofa and got worse and worse?" |
46258 | And did you come all the way back from your tent in the heat, Mr. Lathom, to go on painting this afternoon?" |
46258 | And do you suppose that I will do so any longer? |
46258 | And do you want quite all those cushions and wraps? |
46258 | And even then the Nile floods came up here did they? |
46258 | And how long really do you think your copy will take? |
46258 | And if you find there''s anything to be done, or talked about, well, ring me up, wo n''t you? |
46258 | And leit- motif: what''s a leit- motif? |
46258 | And now about what has happened to- day? |
46258 | And now if you want to hear the first act of the''Lane without a Turning,''we had better begin? |
46258 | And so you''ll go to him now, will you, and tell him what you know, and threaten that we''ll have the law on him as a common swindler? |
46258 | And what does it matter? |
46258 | And what will you do if the weather becomes odious?" |
46258 | And what''s wrong?" |
46258 | And when I''ve signed, or whatever I have to do, will you give me a cheque straight off? |
46258 | And who has been blackguarding you, I should like to know? |
46258 | And why does he wait there?" |
46258 | And will you take me out again in your punt after tea, as you did when I was here last? |
46258 | And you''ll let me know, wo n''t you?" |
46258 | And your tent does n''t let the rain in? |
46258 | And, Mr. Craddock, was n''t Charles-- the cook called him Charles-- wasn''t Charles painting rather nicely? |
46258 | Anything for the model? |
46258 | Apart from your work, have you been going about much?" |
46258 | Are their souls above remuneration, and do they only want topping high art?" |
46258 | Are we to see your father?" |
46258 | Are you a rival, do you think?" |
46258 | Are you going to paint all the morning, Charles?" |
46258 | Are you going to tell your father or is he?" |
46258 | Are you sure?" |
46258 | Besides, what could have occurred to change the friendliness of the family into this cold acidity? |
46258 | But do n''t you ever despise your pictures-- anyhow distrust them-- just because they are popular?" |
46258 | But does it by any chance seem to you remunerative twaddle?" |
46258 | But how does it all concern you? |
46258 | But it is like Miss Wroughton, is n''t it?" |
46258 | But somehow he felt as if he ought to have been more touched...."_ Ã � propos_ of Armstrong?" |
46258 | But where had she gone, where should he seek and find her? |
46258 | But where would you have been if he had n''t put on''Easter Eggs''for you? |
46258 | But who taught you drawing?" |
46258 | But why should I go slobbering over and blessing my father, who made life hell to me? |
46258 | But why should you care? |
46258 | But would you really do it for me?" |
46258 | Can you go to her house at three?" |
46258 | Charles is up on top, is n''t he, Craddock?" |
46258 | Charles, I never dreamed it would stick in your mind like this-- but what has that got to do with Craddock and his nimble option?" |
46258 | Come on, come on, what are you waiting for?" |
46258 | Could it be she who had passed that way already? |
46258 | Could she have been wrong about that, too? |
46258 | Craddock is about to marry the girl of the punt, and Charles will cut his throat, and----""Whose throat?" |
46258 | Craddock?" |
46258 | Did Mrs. Fortescue come to your studio? |
46258 | Did he kiss you, my dear?" |
46258 | Did n''t the same sort of affair happen again?" |
46258 | Did you ask her why she wanted to know?" |
46258 | Did you know people like that?" |
46258 | Did you lie like that when you lied about me to Philip Wroughton last autumn? |
46258 | Did you see?" |
46258 | Did you-- did you mean I could really guess them?" |
46258 | Do n''t you find it so? |
46258 | Do n''t you remember how pleased she was when she knew you were coming with us? |
46258 | Do tell me about it? |
46258 | Do you accept my offer or not? |
46258 | Do you not think that it was that, Joyce? |
46258 | Do you remember last June an American called Ward drawing a cheque at your desk at Thistleton''s? |
46258 | Do you see? |
46258 | Do you see? |
46258 | Do you suppose he would listen to you? |
46258 | Do you understand? |
46258 | Does n''t he owe me that as well? |
46258 | Does that show you? |
46258 | Does your poor mind take that in at all? |
46258 | Down stream or up? |
46258 | Eh, Joyce?" |
46258 | Eh?" |
46258 | Forgive you? |
46258 | Fortescue?" |
46258 | Had you not better wait till I read you some of it?" |
46258 | Has he got it for five thousand pounds?" |
46258 | Have a cup?" |
46258 | Have n''t I caught the vacant expression of her face quite beautifully? |
46258 | Have you seen him since you knew about it all?" |
46258 | Have you seen it? |
46258 | He stayed with you, did he not, when the weather broke?" |
46258 | He''s in rather a hole, is n''t he?" |
46258 | Heep?" |
46258 | Her own face, her own slim body and gesture, as he saw her, leaped at her from the sketch, and she thrilled to think,"Is that what he sees in me?" |
46258 | How can we make him do that?" |
46258 | How did you guess?" |
46258 | How much do you offer me for''Easter Eggs''and on what conditions?" |
46258 | How on earth does he do it? |
46258 | How was it done?" |
46258 | How''s that? |
46258 | How''s''Easter Eggs,''by the way?" |
46258 | I advanced you ten, did I not? |
46258 | I always rather wanted to confess that to you-- Penance?" |
46258 | I am late already: is there a taxi, do you think?" |
46258 | I believe he was sorry, and if people are sorry-- well, it''s all over, is n''t it?" |
46258 | I have heard from Mr. Lathom, asking when he can come down to see his picture framed and in its place-- I suppose any day will do, will it not? |
46258 | I read your article in the''Whitehall,''by the way; you did n''t spare the adjectives did you? |
46258 | I wonder why: what motive can he have had?... |
46258 | If that is so, may I ask you, as a favour which I should so much appreciate, that you do not take your things away from my studio just yet anyhow? |
46258 | In five minutes, then?" |
46258 | Is it a picture, or a potentate, or a ballerina? |
46258 | Is it late?" |
46258 | Is it that he means by throwing himself on my mercy? |
46258 | Is n''t it magic? |
46258 | Is n''t that it? |
46258 | Is n''t that it?" |
46258 | Is that all? |
46258 | Is that it?" |
46258 | Is that so?" |
46258 | It is done, is n''t it, mother?" |
46258 | It was as if Frank knew all that Charles had been so careful not to tell him... it was as if he said"Oh, he warned you against me, did he? |
46258 | It was not quite sunrise yet; should day, and another day lit by the dawn that from everlasting had moved the sun and the stars, dawn together? |
46258 | Lady Crowborough said she would, and I will ask her the same day, or if my mother came, would n''t it do? |
46258 | Lathom?" |
46258 | Lathom?" |
46258 | Let me see, this is the second go, is n''t it?" |
46258 | Let me see, was n''t there a girl? |
46258 | Lor, but it does seem likely, do n''t it? |
46258 | May I know, Charles?" |
46258 | Might that not open a new chapter in the history and records of the beautiful? |
46258 | More artistic, eh? |
46258 | Much more merciful, is n''t it, Mr. Lathom? |
46258 | Not quite well? |
46258 | Nothing I''ve done to worry you, I hope?" |
46258 | Now I hear you live in a tent, Mr. Lathom? |
46258 | Now do you think he fancies you at all? |
46258 | Now supposing I accept, and you choose to exercise your option on it, do you get that?" |
46258 | Now what about this Craddock? |
46258 | Now what have you got to talk to me about?" |
46258 | Now what other work have you got on hand? |
46258 | Now will you come up there to- morrow and show me what you call your bits of things? |
46258 | Now will you let me out of your options?'' |
46258 | Now, am I worse than Frank, more suspicious, more-- more awful?" |
46258 | Oh, Mr. Frank Armstrong, is it? |
46258 | Oh, Reggie, ca n''t you think of any explanation that is at all reasonable?" |
46258 | Oh, how is Buz to- day? |
46258 | Oh, is n''t it dreadful when animals are ill? |
46258 | Oh, is that Mr. Craddock? |
46258 | Or did you know that already?" |
46258 | Or have tasted the bag of the bee? |
46258 | Or shall we begin with the grand crash? |
46258 | Or the nard in the fire? |
46258 | Or was it over the indisposition of Buz that she was troubled? |
46258 | Or why does it worry you? |
46258 | Or why should I say it''s a kind, nice world just because I myself am not cold or hungry any longer? |
46258 | Or would it quietly dissolve and drain itself away? |
46258 | Or... or are you referring to what Lady Crowborough asked me? |
46258 | Remunerative or not?" |
46258 | Right or left? |
46258 | Shall I ask him to stay the night?" |
46258 | Shall I bring an action against you for it, or shall I merely topple you and the stool over onto the floor?" |
46258 | Shall I get it for you?" |
46258 | Shall we go into the next room? |
46258 | Shall we have tea in the tent?" |
46258 | She is not ill- looking, is she? |
46258 | Should Charles say anything, what was easier than to look into so petty a mistake and rectify it? |
46258 | Show me them the day after to- morrow, and shall we say ten in the morning? |
46258 | Some fine lady wants to be painted by you, but will she survive, or will her laces survive these stairs? |
46258 | Still, of what use is money except to secure health and enjoyment for others? |
46258 | Ten thousand for the picture, one hundred for the frame, do you think? |
46258 | That is so, is it not?" |
46258 | That''s practical, is n''t it?" |
46258 | That''s something, is n''t it?" |
46258 | Then, for he had a poor opinion of his brother''s business capacities,"How much?" |
46258 | There is no reason, I suppose, why you should see him and explain? |
46258 | There was a Van der Weyde, I think----""But Dutch pictures? |
46258 | There''s that damned telephone: see who it is, will you?" |
46258 | They do not wrong those who are indifferent to them: for where should be the motive of that? |
46258 | To what did she beckon him? |
46258 | Up in my room, do you remember? |
46258 | Was it? |
46258 | Was it? |
46258 | Was n''t it like that? |
46258 | Was not that clever and dramatic? |
46258 | Was that the amount? |
46258 | Was that why you did n''t take sugar?" |
46258 | Was there ever such a misconception? |
46258 | Was this fat white man to prove a fairy? |
46258 | Well, where would I have been if he had n''t bought that picture of Reggie, and come to look at my things? |
46258 | Were there fairies still by the Thames- side? |
46258 | What am I to do?" |
46258 | What can have happened?" |
46258 | What did Frank tirade about, Charles? |
46258 | What did the vet say yesterday?" |
46258 | What do I say, Mohammed, if I should want to stop?" |
46258 | What do you propose?" |
46258 | What do you say?" |
46258 | What do you think I can have done, Miss Joyce?" |
46258 | What do you want me to do? |
46258 | What does she say to it all?" |
46258 | What does that mean? |
46258 | What have you done with my second shawl?" |
46258 | What if-- if Ward gave Craddock a cheque for ten thousand pounds for the picture with a hundred for me for the copy? |
46258 | What is it I have got to do according to your plan? |
46258 | What letters are there for me?" |
46258 | What more do you want?" |
46258 | What then?'' |
46258 | What was it? |
46258 | What when the love- light of man and woman flashed back and forth between him and the exquisite girl down by the riverside? |
46258 | What would that hand be capable of when its power was fully matured? |
46258 | What would you expect his mother and his friend to say? |
46258 | What''s the matter?" |
46258 | What''s the matter?" |
46258 | Where is it? |
46258 | Where''s a tea- cloth?" |
46258 | Where''s my cup? |
46258 | Where''s the charcoal?" |
46258 | Who is it? |
46258 | Who of all men in the world now is going about saying perfectly fulsome things about me? |
46258 | Who wants holidays when he''s happy? |
46258 | Who was the unseen to whom she beckoned with that gracious gesture, yet a little imperious? |
46258 | Why did n''t you stop me? |
46258 | Why did n''t you?" |
46258 | Why did you not tell me? |
46258 | Why do n''t you send Joyce up to town for a month, and give the girl a chance? |
46258 | Why not? |
46258 | Why should I appear to cease to be so?" |
46258 | Why should I not? |
46258 | Why should n''t I''do''him? |
46258 | Why this unwonted good temper?" |
46258 | Will she sit on a chair like this for an hour together, and look at a torn blind? |
46258 | Will you deign to accept this humble token from your worshipper?''" |
46258 | Will you try again? |
46258 | Wo n''t you be up in town sometime before you go to Egypt, and wo n''t you come to lunch or tea? |
46258 | Wo n''t you do that as a sign of your forgiveness? |
46258 | Would they meet-- and his heart hammered in his throat-- in this pearly and sacred hour, when only the birds were awake? |
46258 | Would you be better pleased if the theatre was empty, and there was no advance booking?" |
46258 | Would you not be more prudent to close that window? |
46258 | Wroughton?" |
46258 | Yet how, why? |
46258 | You are working hard with your typewriter: is that clear? |
46258 | You mean that, do n''t you?" |
46258 | You studied with Bonnart, did you not?" |
46258 | You will be at work again, I suppose, to- morrow morning?" |
46258 | You''re a psychologist, are n''t you? |
46258 | he asked, his shyness entirely vanishing before this penetrating person Where was the point of being shy when a man understood like that? |
31471 | All ready? |
31471 | All right now? |
31471 | All right, old man? |
31471 | And he''s left you here alone, with no one around but this woman? |
31471 | And it will make things hard for you, otherwise, to have me know? |
31471 | And it''s all right, boy? |
31471 | And spoil my admirable disguise? 31471 And this from you?" |
31471 | And who might you be? |
31471 | And you will let me drop in this evening and take you to dinner? |
31471 | Are n''t you an American? |
31471 | Are you deliberately trying to be annoying? |
31471 | Are you dining with me? |
31471 | Are you going to leave it there? 31471 Are you making a song of it?" |
31471 | Are you really alone in the house? |
31471 | Are you the watchman? |
31471 | But you want to get''em_ on_, do n''t you? |
31471 | But, really, is n''t there some one? |
31471 | But-- Laurie--"Will-- you-- do-- it? |
31471 | But-- why? |
31471 | By what right do you act as the lady''s protector? |
31471 | Ca n''t stand it? |
31471 | Ca n''t you get on a shoe without imitating the recoil of a seventy- five centimeter gun? |
31471 | Ca n''t you imagine what that sort of thing would be? 31471 Ca n''t you understand?" |
31471 | Ca n''t you, by a supreme effort of the imagination, fancy that I lifted it off? |
31471 | Can you drive a Pierce Arrow? |
31471 | Can you find me some ragged trousers and an old coat and cap? 31471 Could you hear what else he said?" |
31471 | Dat young lady? |
31471 | Den she say,''Sam, who done lef''dat basket at my do''?'' 31471 Did n''t he say why he was going, or where?" |
31471 | Did n''t she speak at all? |
31471 | Did the kind gentleman under the three balls give you all that? |
31471 | Did the man himself drive it? |
31471 | Did you get it? |
31471 | Did you hear any noise during the night? |
31471 | Do I get my breakfast in peace, or do n''t I? |
31471 | Do n''t you want the money? |
31471 | Do you hear anything moving in the hall? |
31471 | Do you imagine that I''m going to desert Samuel in his hour of need? 31471 Do you imagine that we can get away now, in broad daylight?" |
31471 | Do you imagine you can prevent me? |
31471 | Do you like the looks of that? |
31471 | Do you mean to say that you''re not eating any of the stuff yourself? |
31471 | Do you mean,he asked crisply,"that that chap across the room is following you around?" |
31471 | Do you mind coming to my rooms? |
31471 | Do you suppose we could see her if we went out on the street? |
31471 | Do you think you could have them ready in five minutes? |
31471 | Do you want the creature to think we''re flying before him? |
31471 | Do you want to be killed? |
31471 | Do you want to be maimed or crippled, or-- or kidnapped? |
31471 | Does he live in the building? |
31471 | Get rid of it? |
31471 | Go, then, by all means, my young friend,he cried jovially,"but_ how_?" |
31471 | Going into the sick- room with your little hands full of flowers? |
31471 | Has she authorized you to act? |
31471 | Has the doctor been here to- day? |
31471 | Have I made myself quite clear? |
31471 | Have you a heavy coat? |
31471 | Have you got one handy? |
31471 | Have you led me to the wrong door? |
31471 | Have you the key to this? |
31471 | Hear that? |
31471 | Her? 31471 Hi, dere, Chimmie, where''s yer evenin''soot?" |
31471 | How about Laurie''s romance? |
31471 | How about that beautiful hymn I taught you at Bab''s wedding? |
31471 | How long have you been in America? |
31471 | How much did Shaw tell you? |
31471 | How? |
31471 | I suppose you will rest your mind by writing another play? |
31471 | I suppose,he suggested cheerfully,"that net you''ve said so much about is a political net?" |
31471 | I wonder why I ever leave here? |
31471 | If I agree to these terms of yours,she asked, between her teeth,"may I be sure that you will leave me in peace and that I shall not see you again?" |
31471 | If I moved, how long do you think it would take him to find me? |
31471 | In a way, but--"How long have you known her? 31471 In the meantime, will you try to forget it, for a little while? |
31471 | In your pocket? 31471 Including Herbert Ransome Shaw?" |
31471 | Is he by any chance your husband? |
31471 | Is he there? |
31471 | Is it spelled P- s- h- a- w? |
31471 | Is it you? |
31471 | Is it? |
31471 | Is she pretty? |
31471 | Is that one of our keepers, down there? |
31471 | Is that you? 31471 Is there any one else in the house?" |
31471 | Is there no one here but you and Miss Mayo? |
31471 | It is Miss Mayo, is n''t it? 31471 Laurie, if-- if-- I should send for you suddenly sometime-- you''d come and-- stand by?" |
31471 | Locked? |
31471 | Making a picture of yourself, are n''t you? |
31471 | May I ask what they were? |
31471 | May I come and take you to lunch to- morrow? |
31471 | May I? |
31471 | No blow- out? 31471 No?" |
31471 | Noticed anything odd about Bangs lately? |
31471 | Oh, Laurie, ca n''t you see? 31471 Oh, is it you?" |
31471 | Oh, vell,he said vaguely,"I guess ve meet all that if it comes, eh? |
31471 | Oh-- me? |
31471 | Perhaps, then, you will have a cigar, and sit down comfortably for our chat? |
31471 | Say, Bangs, if ve could put this vedding into a play, just like they done it here, ve could vake up Broadvay a little-- ain''t it? |
31471 | See that? |
31471 | Shall I drive? |
31471 | Shall we have this big bowl of roses in the center, or the four little bowls at the corners? |
31471 | Shaw? 31471 She admitted that?" |
31471 | She''s in the house, is n''t she? 31471 She''s there?" |
31471 | So soon? 31471 So what do you think of this as a climax for the play?" |
31471 | So you''re here, are you? |
31471 | Something pleasant been coming your way? |
31471 | Sonya? |
31471 | That I am not wholly American? |
31471 | That I am out of work? |
31471 | The one wid eyes what sticks out? |
31471 | The_ what?_she whispered, excitedly. |
31471 | Then there''s no mad rush about leaving? |
31471 | Then what is it? |
31471 | Then what_ are_ you going to do? |
31471 | Then why does n''t he? |
31471 | Then you brought the basket, or sent it? |
31471 | Then, for the time being, you''re really safe? |
31471 | Then, in God''s name, why are we wasting time here? |
31471 | To take you to luncheon, then, at one? |
31471 | Vell, ve keep an eye on him, do n''t ve? |
31471 | Vell,Epstein''s voice took on the guttural notes of his temperamental moments,"do n''t that mean nothin''to you?" |
31471 | Vell,he demanded,"what about Laurie? |
31471 | Was any one else here? |
31471 | Was it a limousine, a closed car? |
31471 | We ai n''t? |
31471 | Well, Princess,he said at last, still trying to speak lightly,"this is n''t much of a donjon tower, is it?" |
31471 | Well,the smile asked,"what do you think of it all, now that you are here? |
31471 | Well? |
31471 | Well? |
31471 | Were you asleep? |
31471 | Were you here last night? |
31471 | Were your elevator boys in on the secret? |
31471 | What answer? |
31471 | What are you going to do? |
31471 | What are you going to do? |
31471 | What did he look like? |
31471 | What did he say? |
31471 | What did he want? |
31471 | What do you mean by it? 31471 What do you mean by that?" |
31471 | What do you mean by that? |
31471 | What do you mean? |
31471 | What do you mean? |
31471 | What do your friends call you? |
31471 | What does he expect to gain by that performance? |
31471 | What does that mean? |
31471 | What happened? |
31471 | What happened? |
31471 | What has he to gain by telephoning? 31471 What have we got?" |
31471 | What makes you think he would n''t? |
31471 | What next? |
31471 | What the devil is she talking about? |
31471 | What the devil''s the matter with you, Bangs? |
31471 | What you been doin''to yerself? |
31471 | What''s he after? |
31471 | What''s her name? |
31471 | What''s her particular variety of trouble? |
31471 | What''s his name? |
31471 | What''s the answer? |
31471 | What''s the idea? |
31471 | What''s this? |
31471 | What, then? |
31471 | When is he coming back? |
31471 | When one is within an hour or two of the next world,she asked indifferently,"why should one tell anybody anything?" |
31471 | Where can we go? |
31471 | Where does she come from, and what does she do? |
31471 | Where does that lead? |
31471 | Where is he? |
31471 | Where is it? |
31471 | Where is she? 31471 Where was you all the time?" |
31471 | Where''s the hag? |
31471 | Where? 31471 Where?" |
31471 | Which shoe blew out? |
31471 | Which way did they go? |
31471 | Who''ll look after the garage? 31471 Why did n''t you tell me this before?" |
31471 | Why not? 31471 Why not?" |
31471 | Why should we think she has gone? |
31471 | Why? |
31471 | Why? |
31471 | Why? |
31471 | Will it help you any to have me understand? 31471 Will you do something for me?" |
31471 | Will you give me your hat, or any old hat you''ve got around the place, for this? |
31471 | Will you put on a''spare,''please, and take a look at the other shoes? |
31471 | With all this? |
31471 | Would n''t I? 31471 Would you like a little exercise?" |
31471 | Would you mind confiding these plans to me? |
31471 | Yes? 31471 Yes?" |
31471 | Yes? |
31471 | Yes? |
31471 | Yes? |
31471 | You can see him now, ca n''t you? |
31471 | You come down the steep hill up there, did n''t you? |
31471 | You don''t''ink she gone? |
31471 | You have five minutes to spare? 31471 You have it, after all?" |
31471 | You mean they''ve locked you in? |
31471 | You mean-- you mean,he stuttered at last,"that-- that-- this-- was-- all-- a-- hoax?" |
31471 | You mean--Laurie was staring at him incredulously--"you mean you do n''t intend to let me leave here?" |
31471 | You will be the chief sufferer by it? |
31471 | You wo n''t tell me? |
31471 | You''re not a crowned head or an escaped princess or anything of that kind, are you? |
31471 | You''re sure of it? |
31471 | You''re-- all right, are n''t you? 31471 You-- mean-- it''s-- true?" |
31471 | You? |
31471 | Your brain- work stops abruptly sometimes, does n''t it? |
31471 | ''Ave you hobserved that?" |
31471 | *****"What has happened? |
31471 | A painter, he reflected, would go mad over the picture she made; and why not? |
31471 | Ai n''t I right?" |
31471 | Ai n''t you order it?'' |
31471 | All this was Shaw''s work, and as he realized it Laurie''s expression changed so suddenly that the girl cried out:"What is it? |
31471 | An''why did n''t she say somethin''about how generous Miss Devon was to caddies in the matter of skates and boxing- gloves and clothes? |
31471 | And this fellow, Herbert Ransome Shaw-- where the devil did he come in? |
31471 | And was he giving up too much for a dollar? |
31471 | And what are you trying to do?" |
31471 | And what would it be? |
31471 | And why did n''t she say what a prince Laurie Devon was, instead of all dat stale stuff what everybody knew? |
31471 | And why did she know approximately where she was to be taken? |
31471 | And why, oh, why,_ why_, was Doris seemingly numb to its danger, yet anxious for his help? |
31471 | And yet-- and yet-- how the deuce could one let the thing drop like that? |
31471 | And you expected me, did n''t you?" |
31471 | Are n''t you willing to realize that there are real troubles in the world, terrible troubles, that the bravest go down under?" |
31471 | Are you off?" |
31471 | Are you on?" |
31471 | Because she was indifferent to any fate that befell him? |
31471 | But from what room did the window open, and how much of the upper hall would they have to traverse before reaching it? |
31471 | But how can I help you when I''m working in the dark?" |
31471 | But how? |
31471 | But if they interfere when we''re getting started, surely you''ll let me rock them to sleep, wo n''t you?" |
31471 | But is the cure permanent, do you think? |
31471 | But just where is it I''m going?" |
31471 | But were they really contrasts? |
31471 | But what could he do? |
31471 | But what did it matter what the fellow thought? |
31471 | But what was that to a bride with thirty or forty millions? |
31471 | But why had n''t he seen the door? |
31471 | But why the dickens should Shaw have a secretary? |
31471 | But--""How about that hat?" |
31471 | CHAPTER XIX"WHAT ABOUT LAURIE?" |
31471 | Ca n''t you forgive me?" |
31471 | Can we put her into this inner room?" |
31471 | Could he pile up the furniture and so reach the door in the ceiling? |
31471 | Did I not?" |
31471 | Did he want her to help him? |
31471 | Did she want the truth, or did n''t she? |
31471 | Do n''t you remember?" |
31471 | Do you know what it is?" |
31471 | Do you understand? |
31471 | Do you understand?" |
31471 | Does n''t it mean anything at all to you?" |
31471 | Eh? |
31471 | Er-- how soon do we start?" |
31471 | For you did n''t expect to find_ me_ here, seemingly so much at home; did you?" |
31471 | Gimme a cup o''cawfee, will yuh?" |
31471 | Great, is n''t it?" |
31471 | Had she happened to notice a dark limousine go by an hour or so before, say around half- past eight or nine o''clock? |
31471 | Have you ever heard of him?" |
31471 | Have you got your chloroform cone?" |
31471 | He made no reply to this, and she said urgently,"Did n''t you? |
31471 | He was beginning to realize that he had tried his partners sorely in the month that had passed since his return to town; and all for what? |
31471 | He''s all right, ai n''t he?" |
31471 | His hands, groping in the darkness, came in contact with a brick floor; or was it the tiling around the fireplace? |
31471 | How could I, after he has been so wonderful all this year? |
31471 | How could he handle a situation like this? |
31471 | How do you like my climax, anyhow? |
31471 | How soon can you have them here?" |
31471 | How the dickens did you happen to start this frame- up, anyhow?" |
31471 | How was he to find the right one? |
31471 | How well do you know her?" |
31471 | I suppose he takes a few hours off now and then, during the twenty- four; does n''t he?" |
31471 | I wonder who has that studio?" |
31471 | If I go now, may I come back for breakfast?" |
31471 | If the dame in front was goin''to talk about Miss Devon, why did n''t she tell somethin''worth while? |
31471 | In the face of this, how could he still trust? |
31471 | Is that agreed?" |
31471 | Is that clear?" |
31471 | Is that clear?" |
31471 | Is that it?" |
31471 | Is there a good roomy closet on this floor? |
31471 | Is there any reason why we should n''t eat?" |
31471 | It is because of them that I-- you understand?" |
31471 | Just like that?" |
31471 | Knock at the girl''s door, pretend that it was a blunder, and trust to inspiration to discover in the brief encounter if anything was wrong? |
31471 | Laurie drew a bill from his pocket"How soon can you leave the elevator?" |
31471 | Laurie,"--for a moment or two she was almost serious--"why do n''t you fall in love?" |
31471 | May they come here?" |
31471 | Mrs. Ordway said,''Well, why do n''t you give him an adventure?'' |
31471 | Now, are you going to put up a fight against four, or will you go quietly?" |
31471 | Obviously, he could not present himself to Doris in the sketchy ensemble he presented now; or could he? |
31471 | Oh, Laurie, what has happened?" |
31471 | Oh, you mean that girl?" |
31471 | On the other hand, what could he do in broad daylight? |
31471 | On the other hand, why should n''t he? |
31471 | Or because she was numbed by her own misery? |
31471 | Or could it? |
31471 | Or put money in an envelop and push it under her door? |
31471 | Or was it? |
31471 | Or would it? |
31471 | Ordway?" |
31471 | People usually pack, do n''t they?" |
31471 | Shall I look?" |
31471 | Should he take it, or should n''t he? |
31471 | So I say,''You gwine away, Miss Mayo?'' |
31471 | Still a bit confusing, is n''t it? |
31471 | Suppose Sonya sounded Louise about cabling for Warren? |
31471 | Then-- then-- what did I hear?" |
31471 | Think you could help her any?" |
31471 | To get up in the morning and wonder if this is the day I''ll see him under my window? |
31471 | To go to bed at night and ask myself if he is lurking in the shadows below, or across the street, or perhaps outside my very door? |
31471 | Understand?" |
31471 | Understand?" |
31471 | Understand?" |
31471 | Upstairs?" |
31471 | Vell, vot trouble? |
31471 | Vot is it?" |
31471 | Vot you done?" |
31471 | Vot''s it mean? |
31471 | Was he? |
31471 | Was it occupied now? |
31471 | What about it? |
31471 | What am I doing?" |
31471 | What are you doing here?" |
31471 | What color of check- book do you prefer?" |
31471 | What did all this mean? |
31471 | What did the lady say?" |
31471 | What do you mean?" |
31471 | What do you suppose becomes of them all?" |
31471 | What does she mean?" |
31471 | What had happened? |
31471 | What happened?" |
31471 | What might be happening even now? |
31471 | What might happen to her? |
31471 | What might not Doris be undergoing, even now? |
31471 | What power have you got over Miss Mayo? |
31471 | What room does that mean?" |
31471 | What to do? |
31471 | What was Doris''s photograph doing in this man''s room? |
31471 | What was happening to Doris? |
31471 | What''s her name?" |
31471 | What''s the matter?" |
31471 | What''s the rest?" |
31471 | What_ was_ Shaw''s game? |
31471 | When did Shaw leave?" |
31471 | When?" |
31471 | Where''s a bath- room?" |
31471 | Where''s the coat?" |
31471 | Where? |
31471 | Who gave you the right?" |
31471 | Who owned the big house back there in the cedar grove, on the bluff overlooking the Sound? |
31471 | Whose bright little idea was this, in the first place?" |
31471 | Why could n''t the fellow wait till they could go at it together? |
31471 | Why delay? |
31471 | Why did n''t Laurie come? |
31471 | Why do n''t you smoke?" |
31471 | Why do n''t you take me on alone? |
31471 | Why had n''t she uttered that word? |
31471 | Why had she stood thus? |
31471 | Why is it? |
31471 | Why should it? |
31471 | Why was he so smugly sure of it? |
31471 | Why? |
31471 | Why? |
31471 | Why? |
31471 | Why? |
31471 | Will five be convenient?" |
31471 | Will it straighten out the trouble you''re in?" |
31471 | Will you do that?" |
31471 | Will you do that?" |
31471 | Will you tell me at once why you brought me here, and what you wish to say?" |
31471 | Would Mr. Bangs come up now? |
31471 | Would you like my head on a charger, or anything like that?" |
31471 | Yet on what pretext could she linger? |
31471 | You ai n''t got no hard feelings about this?" |
31471 | You do n''t smoke? |
31471 | You see that, do n''t you? |
31471 | You want to get out of here, do n''t you?" |
31471 | You''ll remember that? |
31471 | [ Illustration:"What you been doin''to yerself?" |
31471 | _ What had she heard?_ Insistently the question repeated itself in her mind. |
31471 | _ What had she heard?_"I put on a''spare,''anyway,"Burke was saying. |
31471 | he demanded,"vot''s it all about? |
31471 | he said,"What did you tell me that for? |
31471 | she whispered 116"What you been doin''to yerself?" |
31471 | she whispered]"Are you really afraid of that chap?" |
31471 | what about these clo''es?" |
11303 | ''And Ford; what did you think of Ford''s Macbeth?'' |
11303 | ''And I never succeeded in writing my play?'' |
11303 | ''And does n''t a human being ever forgive?'' |
11303 | ''And he has left Ashwood to Mr. Price, is not that his name?'' |
11303 | ''And it was in this room that you dreamed all those dreams?'' |
11303 | ''And live here with you, I and Julia?'' |
11303 | ''And she is really the girl you intended to play Lady Hayward?'' |
11303 | ''And she refused?'' |
11303 | ''And supposing it were so, what would be your advice? |
11303 | ''And then?'' |
11303 | ''And what do you think of it? |
11303 | ''And what has become of this actress?'' |
11303 | ''And what part has he cast you for-- the young girl?'' |
11303 | ''And what will you say?'' |
11303 | ''And when did he make this new will?'' |
11303 | ''And why not, Emily?'' |
11303 | ''And why not? |
11303 | ''And why, may I ask?'' |
11303 | ''And why? |
11303 | ''And would you have him married?'' |
11303 | ''And you agree with him that I ought to go away?'' |
11303 | ''And you will come and stay with us in London? |
11303 | ''Are n''t you coming down to dinner, Emily? |
11303 | ''Are n''t you getting on this morning?'' |
11303 | ''Are you going to write about it?'' |
11303 | ''Are you quite sure?'' |
11303 | ''Are you really serious?'' |
11303 | ''Are you sure?'' |
11303 | ''But did you not hear him say at dinner that he was re- writing as he rehearsed? |
11303 | ''But do n''t you think her very handsome?'' |
11303 | ''But do you think that my refusal to marry him had anything to do with his death?'' |
11303 | ''But if he does n''t?'' |
11303 | ''But what do you propose?'' |
11303 | ''But what has she done?'' |
11303 | ''But when can I have the manuscript?'' |
11303 | ''But why? |
11303 | ''But you are not offended?'' |
11303 | ''But you will let her have the part of Lady Hayward?'' |
11303 | ''But, dearest Emily, who are"they"? |
11303 | ''But,''she said, her voice trembling,''you would not have committed suicide?'' |
11303 | ''Dandy is mine; they ca n''t take him from me, can they? |
11303 | ''Dearest Julia, you do love me, do n''t you? |
11303 | ''Did it escape? |
11303 | ''Did she ask you?'' |
11303 | ''Did you like the piece?'' |
11303 | ''Did you never break your resolutions?'' |
11303 | ''Do n''t speak like that.... Where will you go?'' |
11303 | ''Do n''t yer know?'' |
11303 | ''Do n''t you think it will run, then?'' |
11303 | ''Do we?'' |
11303 | ''Do you care for flowers?'' |
11303 | ''Do you dislike children so much, then, Emily?'' |
11303 | ''Do you like tall women?'' |
11303 | ''Do you not think I was right? |
11303 | ''Do you think he''ll ever produce it?'' |
11303 | ''Ford appeared quite satisfied then?'' |
11303 | ''Have you any proposal to make regarding her? |
11303 | ''Have you any reason for thinking that Mr. Price will do so?'' |
11303 | ''Have you been asleep?'' |
11303 | ''Have you been dreaming again?'' |
11303 | ''Have you seen the evening papers--_The Telephone_, for instance?'' |
11303 | ''Have you spoken to her on the subject?'' |
11303 | ''He knows where I am going, and is afraid I shall forget him-- aren''t you, dear old Don? |
11303 | ''How can I convince you of the injustice of your suspicions?'' |
11303 | ''How can you ask me? |
11303 | ''How could I have been so stupid? |
11303 | ''How did the piece go to- night?'' |
11303 | ''How do you know that he is coming to turn you out of Ashwood? |
11303 | ''How is this to end?'' |
11303 | ''How should I know what you know or do n''t know? |
11303 | ''How was that?'' |
11303 | ''How''s the booking?'' |
11303 | ''I can not,''she said,''and I will not, and I do not understand how you can ask me-- you who are so loyal, how can you ask me to be disloyal?'' |
11303 | ''I did hate him, did n''t I? |
11303 | ''I shall be very glad.... Do you think it wo n''t bore you?'' |
11303 | ''I suppose you have told him that I am looking thin and ill.... Men like tall, big, healthy women like you-- don''t they?'' |
11303 | ''I wish it? |
11303 | ''I wonder if he''d give me the picture of the windmill?'' |
11303 | ''I wonder what a restaurant is like; ladies dine at restaurants, do n''t they?'' |
11303 | ''I''m not dreaming, am I?'' |
11303 | ''I''m sorry,''said Mrs. Bentley,''for disturbing you, but I should like to know what fish you would like for your dinner-- soles, turbot, or whiting? |
11303 | ''If I tell you what I want, you wo n''t refuse me, will you?'' |
11303 | ''If you think this is so, had she not better leave?'' |
11303 | ''In her case, it is a necessity; but do you think she takes it?'' |
11303 | ''Is he dead?'' |
11303 | ''Is he married?'' |
11303 | ''Is he not a dear?'' |
11303 | ''Is he? |
11303 | ''Is it possible,''said Mr. Grandly,''that Mr. Burnett seriously contemplated marriage with Miss Watson?'' |
11303 | ''Is that all? |
11303 | ''Is that really true? |
11303 | ''Julia, do not say you never will?'' |
11303 | ''My dear Emily, how can you say such things? |
11303 | ''My dear Emily, how can you think of such a thing? |
11303 | ''No, you do n''t know, dear-- do you? |
11303 | ''No,''he said, taking her hands,''we are good friends-- are we not? |
11303 | ''No; I have not.... Why do you come to torment me? |
11303 | ''Not after the third?'' |
11303 | ''Not come back at all? |
11303 | ''Now, is that your idea of the scene?'' |
11303 | ''Now? |
11303 | ''Oh yes; five shillings, was n''t it?'' |
11303 | ''Oh, Julia, Julia, do you think he forgave me? |
11303 | ''Oh, my dear Emily, how can you ask such a question? |
11303 | ''Oh, what does he say? |
11303 | ''Oh, you are my only friend; you will not leave me now.... We shall always love one another, shall we not? |
11303 | ''Oh,''she said,''why do you say these things? |
11303 | ''Only pretty well? |
11303 | ''Perfectly, so far as I''m concerned; and you, Emily?'' |
11303 | ''S''pose yer know the picture?'' |
11303 | ''Shall I come with you?'' |
11303 | ''Shall I light a candle?'' |
11303 | ''Shall I send you up some soup?'' |
11303 | ''Shall we be happy? |
11303 | ''Then why do you persist? |
11303 | ''Then will you wait a moment? |
11303 | ''Then, why do n''t you do a Hubert Price in a book? |
11303 | ''Then,''she said, with a sweet and natural smile,''I''ll write to you.... We have been excellent friends-- comrades-- have we not?'' |
11303 | ''There''s no harm in that, is there? |
11303 | ''Try again? |
11303 | ''Was she acting in the piece we saw to- night?'' |
11303 | ''We know nothing for certain,''he answered; and then he said,''You and Mrs. Bentley have lived a long time together?'' |
11303 | ''Well then, may I run and tell Julia?'' |
11303 | ''Well, then,''ave a chop?'' |
11303 | ''Were you ever in love?'' |
11303 | ''Were you very fond of her?'' |
11303 | ''What are you doing? |
11303 | ''What can we do? |
11303 | ''What did you dream?'' |
11303 | ''What do you mean, Emily?'' |
11303 | ''What do you mean? |
11303 | ''What do you mean?'' |
11303 | ''What do you think of his work?'' |
11303 | ''What do you think of turbot?'' |
11303 | ''What furnishing?'' |
11303 | ''What has become of him?'' |
11303 | ''What has she done?'' |
11303 | ''What is this?'' |
11303 | ''What kind of man?'' |
11303 | ''What? |
11303 | ''Where have you been all this time?'' |
11303 | ''Where have you been hiding yourself?... |
11303 | ''Where would he find any one to play and sing to him in the evenings as you can?'' |
11303 | ''Who is she?'' |
11303 | ''Why do I go away? |
11303 | ''Why do n''t you answer me?'' |
11303 | ''Why do you hope so?'' |
11303 | ''Why not? |
11303 | ''Why not? |
11303 | ''Why not? |
11303 | ''Why should you go? |
11303 | ''Why should you not marry her?'' |
11303 | ''Why should you not take me out?... |
11303 | ''Why should you tell me these falsehoods? |
11303 | ''Will you go and ask him?'' |
11303 | ''Will you read me the play?'' |
11303 | ''With a young man hanging over her whispering in her ear?'' |
11303 | ''Wo n''t you sit down?'' |
11303 | ''Yes, dear, I promise you that, and you will promise me to try to like your cousin?'' |
11303 | ''Yes, of course-- that is to say, if----''''Why"if"?'' |
11303 | ''Yes; why not?'' |
11303 | ''You are not going to remain in the dark? |
11303 | ''You are not in earnest? |
11303 | ''You are not serious?'' |
11303 | ''You hardly expect me to believe that, do you?'' |
11303 | ''You know what the cause of it is, I suppose?'' |
11303 | ''You know when the husband meets the wife he has divorced?'' |
11303 | ''You saw her to- night?'' |
11303 | ''You say that he passed away quietly; he did not seem to suffer at all?'' |
11303 | ''You surely do n''t believe what you are saying is true? |
11303 | ''You were very poor once?'' |
11303 | ''You will do all you can to help us? |
11303 | ''You would n''t do that, would you?'' |
11303 | ''You''re rather dusty; where have you been? |
11303 | ''Your conception is clear enough; why do n''t you write the book?'' |
11303 | ''Your play,_ Divorce_, is now running at the Queen''s Theatre?'' |
11303 | A zig- zag fugitive thought passed: why did the fly- man speak of taking them to the station? |
11303 | Above all, was he incapable of finishing_ The Gipsy_ as he intended? |
11303 | Although only distantly related, you are cousins, after all-- are you not?'' |
11303 | Am I not right?'' |
11303 | And had she not loved Hubert?--no one would ever know how much; she did not know herself,--and had he not lied to her? |
11303 | And that delicate little creature in the box next to her-- that pale diaphanous face?'' |
11303 | Any harm in that?'' |
11303 | Are you asleep?'' |
11303 | Are you fond of animals?'' |
11303 | Are you going into the garden?'' |
11303 | Are you not the very woman whose influence, whose guidance, is necessary, so that I should succeed? |
11303 | Are you sure it will not bore you? |
11303 | As he was about to cross into Oxford Street, he heard some one accost him,--''Oh, Mr. Price, is that you?'' |
11303 | At last she said, and with the querulous perversity of the sick---''But even if I wished to go abroad, with whom could I go?'' |
11303 | At last she said, breaking the silence abruptly--''Is he very angry? |
11303 | At last she said,''I suppose you do n''t think so?'' |
11303 | At that moment Emily said--''May I not come too?'' |
11303 | At the end of a long silence Emily said--''Do you think clever men like clever women?'' |
11303 | At the end of a long silence Hubert said--''What are you thinking of, dearest?'' |
11303 | At the end of a long silence he said,--''Did you hear anything about the last night''s?'' |
11303 | At the end of a long silence, Hubert said,''Will you not come up- stairs, and let me read you the first act?'' |
11303 | At the end of about ten minutes the actor said,--''Well, this is a bad business; they are terribly down on us-- aren''t they? |
11303 | Because the public is too stupid?'' |
11303 | Burnett has divided his fortune, leaving Ashwood to Mr. Price, and all his invested money to Emily?'' |
11303 | Burnett?'' |
11303 | But do yer think''e''d''ave been allowed? |
11303 | But do you regret?'' |
11303 | But do you see the woman in the stage- box? |
11303 | But do you think the swans belong to them or to us? |
11303 | But does she want you to leave?'' |
11303 | But how? |
11303 | But of what use thinking of what was not to be? |
11303 | But seeing that she showed no signs of moving, she said,''Are n''t you coming down to dinner, Emily?'' |
11303 | But that presence was forbidden him-- that presence that seemed so necessary; and for what reason? |
11303 | But though Emily''s eyes seemed to know all, they seemed to say,''What matter? |
11303 | But why do you always take her part against me? |
11303 | But why do you say such things? |
11303 | But why think of the play at all? |
11303 | But would it be right for me to pay you visits in London?'' |
11303 | But you wo n''t tell any one? |
11303 | Ca n''t you understand that things may go wrong without it being any one''s fault in particular?'' |
11303 | Can not you see their black eyes turned towards the bridge?'' |
11303 | Change of air and scene?'' |
11303 | Did he say I would soon recover? |
11303 | Did he say that I was very bad? |
11303 | Did n''t you, Julia?'' |
11303 | Did those who believed in the old formulas imagine that the new formula would be discovered straight away, without failures preliminary? |
11303 | Did you never hear of Dolly Dayrell?'' |
11303 | Dinner will be ready in a few minutes; or, if you like, I will dine up- stairs; and you and Mr. Price----''''But is he coming down to dinner? |
11303 | Do I not love you? |
11303 | Do n''t you know that Ford has decided to revive_ Divorce_?'' |
11303 | Do n''t you know what I mean?'' |
11303 | Do n''t you remember how I met Hubert next morning on the lawn? |
11303 | Do n''t you think so?'' |
11303 | Do yer think the perlice would''ave stood it? |
11303 | Do yer think the public would''ave stood him doing masterpieces on the pavement? |
11303 | Do you believe in dreams?'' |
11303 | Do you know anything about Mr. Price? |
11303 | Do you know of any secret grief-- any love affair? |
11303 | Do you know this part of the country?'' |
11303 | Do you mind?'' |
11303 | Do you not know what it is to be loyal?'' |
11303 | Do you not see how ill she is looking? |
11303 | Do you not think she is very handsome?'' |
11303 | Do you think I am blind? |
11303 | Do you think he will come down to dinner?'' |
11303 | Do you think it will succeed this time?'' |
11303 | Do you think she would have left the room just now if she could have helped it?'' |
11303 | Do you think that I do n''t suffer? |
11303 | Do you think that I''m not wretched?'' |
11303 | Do you think they will?'' |
11303 | Do you think you can spare it?'' |
11303 | Do you think you ever will?'' |
11303 | Does Black say anything about giving her a letter?'' |
11303 | Does every one who writes plays take so much trouble?'' |
11303 | Does n''t the world seem very wonderful to you? |
11303 | Eggs and bacon?'' |
11303 | Emily raised her eyes and looked shyly at Hubert; and then, as if doubtful of herself, she said,''Do you like her? |
11303 | Every evening he listened for Rose''s footstep on the stairs.--How did the piece go?--Was there a better house? |
11303 | Got the chuck?'' |
11303 | Had he not seen them? |
11303 | Had the critic in_ The Modern Review_ told him the truth? |
11303 | Had they destroyed it? |
11303 | Had we better send for the doctor?'' |
11303 | Has he answered yours?'' |
11303 | Has he gone to his study? |
11303 | Has she been complaining about me to you? |
11303 | Have I not convinced you that you were wrong?'' |
11303 | Have you been very happy?'' |
11303 | Have you not noticed how she follows us? |
11303 | Have you noticed how poorly she is looking?'' |
11303 | He must reduce his expenditure; but how? |
11303 | He opened the conservatory door, ran across the lawn round to the front door, and came back with-- what do you think? |
11303 | He says I look it; but what''s the good of looking it when you do n''t feel it? |
11303 | His uncle? |
11303 | How can I? |
11303 | How did you leave her?'' |
11303 | How do we know that they do not suffer?'' |
11303 | How have I repaid her? |
11303 | How shall we get through our evenings?'' |
11303 | How was it that he knew where they wanted to go? |
11303 | How would he get to America? |
11303 | How would the landing look without it? |
11303 | Hubert looked up quickly, hoping Mrs. Bentley would not answer, but before he could make a sign she said--''What do you mean, Emily? |
11303 | Hubert said,"Will you come with me? |
11303 | Hubert said--''What do you think, Doctor? |
11303 | I could hardly speak.... You remember?'' |
11303 | I do n''t know how much they cost, but I''ve five shillings; can you get one for that?'' |
11303 | I do n''t think I ever saw any one act before like that-- did you?'' |
11303 | I do n''t think a man would say that if he did n''t like you, do you?'' |
11303 | I do n''t think she ever really touched the part-- do you?'' |
11303 | I hope she is n''t ill? |
11303 | I hope-- I may trust that you will remain with her?'' |
11303 | I know a great deal more than I can explain....''''But tell me, Emily, what is it you suspect? |
11303 | I know she wanted to come; but----''''But what?'' |
11303 | I love the picture of the windmill on the first landing----''''Then why not have it? |
11303 | I married when I was very young; before I had even begun to think about life I found---- But why distress these hours with painful memories?'' |
11303 | I never told you what my dreams were, but you remember how I woke up with a cry, and you asked me what was the matter?'' |
11303 | I said, Why paint? |
11303 | I says to myself, Why not go in for lovely woman? |
11303 | I shall prescribe a tonic, but----''''But what, doctor?'' |
11303 | I should miss it dreadfully when I came here-- for I daresay you will ask us to visit you occasionally, when you are lonely, wo n''t you?'' |
11303 | I was wrong; yes, I would have married him if I had known.... You do n''t believe me?'' |
11303 | I wonder how you can think of such a thing, Mr. Grandly? |
11303 | I wonder where he is now?'' |
11303 | I wonder which of us will succeed first?'' |
11303 | I''ll either carry my play through completely, realise my ideal, or----''''Remain for ever unsatisfied?'' |
11303 | I''ve seen it go better; but----''''Did you get a call?'' |
11303 | If she did not say it, can you tell me how it got about?'' |
11303 | Is he very angry?'' |
11303 | Is it true?'' |
11303 | Is not the prospect a lovely one?'' |
11303 | Is she dead? |
11303 | Is she seriously ill?'' |
11303 | Is that-- that is not all you are going to ask me for?'' |
11303 | Is this it?'' |
11303 | It had failed, and failed twice; but did that prove anything? |
11303 | It is curious that I should dream of him last night, and that you should receive that letter this morning, is n''t it?'' |
11303 | It was hardly possible that the piece could survive such notices; and if it did not? |
11303 | It would be said everywhere that I had you sent away.... You promise me not to leave?'' |
11303 | Let me light a night- light?'' |
11303 | Oh, Julia, does n''t it seem impossible? |
11303 | One ca n''t explain oneself in a scene here and there.... What are you thinking of?'' |
11303 | Reading the look of pain that had come into her eyes, he said,''You will not refuse me? |
11303 | Shall I go and fetch your hat and jacket?'' |
11303 | Shall I go and tell him that you wo n''t come down because you think he is angry with you?'' |
11303 | Shall I light your candles?'' |
11303 | Shall I open the door?'' |
11303 | She had forgotten her latch- key, and he said,''Will you allow me to let you in?'' |
11303 | She killed herself-- is that it?'' |
11303 | She would hold to her and fight for her with all her strength, but would she not fall vanquished in the fight; and then, and then? |
11303 | She would like to have this bookcase, and might she not take the wardrobe from her own room? |
11303 | Should he keep it all for himself and his art? |
11303 | Should he open it? |
11303 | Should he tell his landlady the truth? |
11303 | Should she pile falsehood on falsehood? |
11303 | Should you like to sleep a little longer, or shall I bring you up some breakfast?'' |
11303 | So I said,"Oh, what ever shall we do? |
11303 | So the piece did n''t go very well to- night?'' |
11303 | Splendid fire-- is it not?'' |
11303 | Strange, was it not strange?... |
11303 | Suddenly she said--''I wonder what Hubert is doing in London? |
11303 | Suppose he took, that very night, an overdose of chloral? |
11303 | Supposing, supposing that were to happen? |
11303 | That old, dilapidated print?'' |
11303 | That proposal of marriage; could she ever forget it? |
11303 | That second act?'' |
11303 | That''s right, ai n''t it? |
11303 | That''s true, ai n''t it?'' |
11303 | The room was grey with dawn, and you said:"Emily dear, what have you been dreaming, to cry out like that?" |
11303 | The suggestion filled Hubert''s heart with rushing pain, and he answered--''Why should we return? |
11303 | Their eyes met; and, divining each other''s thought, each felt ashamed, and Julia said--''Oh, what am I saying? |
11303 | Then Emily went on:''You wo n''t tell any one I told you? |
11303 | Then a look of yielding passed into her eyes, and she said--''Well, what is it?'' |
11303 | Then in a lighter tone:''I want you to give me a lot of things-- oh, not a great many, nothing very valuable, but----''''But what, Emily?... |
11303 | Then we can go on just the same; but if you married her, I----''''I what?'' |
11303 | Then why do people say you are going to marry her?'' |
11303 | Then why should I remain? |
11303 | There was nothing in his mind but''Will the piece succeed? |
11303 | They lingered on the landing, and Hubert said,''Wo n''t you come in for a moment?'' |
11303 | They would n''t gallop their horses like that unless they were being pursued.... Can I have the picture?'' |
11303 | To whom should he give it? |
11303 | Turning suddenly, he said--''But tell me, Emily, how are you feeling? |
11303 | VI''What will ye''ave to eat? |
11303 | Was he incapable of earning a living? |
11303 | Was it the fault of circumstances that he had not been able to finish that play? |
11303 | Well, what were we talking about? |
11303 | What are you going to do?'' |
11303 | What can happen?'' |
11303 | What did he think of divorce? |
11303 | What did his failure to write that play condemn him to? |
11303 | What did it matter even if he never wrote it? |
11303 | What did it matter? |
11303 | What did it mean, what meaning had it in the great, wide world? |
11303 | What do you accuse me of?'' |
11303 | What do you mean? |
11303 | What do you think?'' |
11303 | What do you think?'' |
11303 | What does Fate know of our little rights and wrongs-- or care? |
11303 | What induced such a change in her? |
11303 | What is he? |
11303 | What is her reason for wanting to go?'' |
11303 | What is it? |
11303 | What part of the town be yer going to-- the railway station?'' |
11303 | What shall I do if it fails?'' |
11303 | What should I do-- what should we do? |
11303 | What should he do with it? |
11303 | What should she do, what should she do, and with that motherless girl dependent on her for food and clothes and shelter? |
11303 | What stops you now? |
11303 | What was I a- saying of? |
11303 | What was it-- drink? |
11303 | What would you advise us to do?'' |
11303 | What you have to say to me is about her?'' |
11303 | What? |
11303 | When did you ever know me to tell a falsehood?'' |
11303 | When shall we go to London?'' |
11303 | Where does he live?'' |
11303 | Where was Mrs. Bentley? |
11303 | Which do I like the better? |
11303 | Who would have thought it of you?'' |
11303 | Why did she not understand? |
11303 | Why do n''t ye laugh?'' |
11303 | Why do such things happen to me? |
11303 | Why do you refuse to take the only step that may lead us out of this difficulty?'' |
11303 | Why do you tempt me to do a dishonourable action?'' |
11303 | Why not let things go on just as they are?'' |
11303 | Why not spare himself the pain? |
11303 | Why not write at once and engage the theatre? |
11303 | Why should he? |
11303 | Why should she hate you?'' |
11303 | Why should she love him? |
11303 | Why should you go away?'' |
11303 | Why will you not believe me?'' |
11303 | Will it suit you to come into the drawing- room with me?'' |
11303 | Will she forgive him? |
11303 | Will you go and fetch her, Mrs. Bentley? |
11303 | Will you promise me?'' |
11303 | Wo n''t you come in for a few minutes?... |
11303 | Would nothing happen? |
11303 | Would these people never give their attention to the stage? |
11303 | Yer do n''t follow me?'' |
11303 | You agree with me-- do you not?'' |
11303 | You are sure you do n''t want them, do you?'' |
11303 | You are surely not in earnest?'' |
11303 | You can not think that I would deceive you, Emily? |
11303 | You do n''t really intend me to go back to Emily and tell her?... |
11303 | You do not want to vex him, do you?'' |
11303 | You have not noticed that we hardly speak now?'' |
11303 | You imagine these things.... Do you suppose that Mr. Grandly would send him down here if he did not know what his intentions were?'' |
11303 | You promise me?'' |
11303 | You remember how I ran to you? |
11303 | You remember how we listened for his footstep in the passage, as he went up to bed, and how I clung to you? |
11303 | You remember that first evening? |
11303 | You think, I suppose, I did not see you showing him a ring? |
11303 | You think, I suppose, that I''m in love with Hubert? |
11303 | You will not refuse it?'' |
11303 | You will not refuse, Julia?'' |
11303 | You will stop here-- you will be my wife?'' |
11303 | You wo n''t tell Mrs. Bentley? |
11303 | You would n''t like to miss a walk with your mistress, would you, dear?'' |
11303 | You would not care to go so far?'' |
11303 | You, too, want to send me away?'' |
11303 | is it killed?'' |
11303 | or was it that the slight vein of genius that had been in him once had been exhausted? |
11303 | she said, looking at him reproachfully,''how can you?'' |
11303 | what have you been doing?'' |
11303 | why did you persuade me-- why-- why-- why?'' |
38610 | ''What is a man If his chief good and market of his time Be but to sleep and feed? 38610 A man?" |
38610 | Afraid of what? |
38610 | After making such a fizzle to- day? 38610 Ah, Brandon,"he said to the officer,"another one?" |
38610 | All? |
38610 | Am I so famous as that? |
38610 | An insane person? |
38610 | An''did he hev ther gall to write to ye? |
38610 | An''got drownded? |
38610 | And I suppose you think this is my hoodoo? |
38610 | And all that money is yourn? |
38610 | And did not find another? |
38610 | And he is in Denver? |
38610 | And these are the witnesses? |
38610 | And where is the lady who makes the charge? |
38610 | And yeou faound it? |
38610 | And you refused? |
38610 | Are you certain? |
38610 | Are you sick? |
38610 | Are you sure there was n''t any money in it when you examined it? |
38610 | Are you sure? |
38610 | At what? |
38610 | Be yeou goin''to hit where ye''re lookin''? |
38610 | Blanche,he whispered, huskily,"can you forgive your old dad for treating you as he has? |
38610 | But Mr. Folansbee''s goin''to take keer of this comp''ny, ai n''t he? 38610 But do n''t you have any papers, any letters, anything to tell you the things you wish to know?" |
38610 | But what''s the matter? 38610 But why should she be on this train?" |
38610 | But you were not at the hotel last night? |
38610 | By that I presume you mean he is a bucker? |
38610 | Can you get your business here done to- day? |
38610 | Did he come down from there? 38610 Did he know them?" |
38610 | Did ye git ther critter? |
38610 | Did you mistake this person for the veiled woman I meant? |
38610 | Did you say you were at liberty? |
38610 | Disappeared-- gone? 38610 Do n''t let who get away?" |
38610 | Do they keep you shut up in that room? |
38610 | Do ye? |
38610 | Do you actually refuse? |
38610 | Do you call him your friend? |
38610 | Do you mean that I am insane? |
38610 | Do you mean this? |
38610 | Do you own him? |
38610 | Do you remember me? |
38610 | Do you think I would not know him anywhere-- under any circumstances? 38610 Do you think I would take that man for a woman with a perfect figure, such as you described? |
38610 | Does he snore loudly? |
38610 | Driver,he cried,"did n''t you take a person on in woman''s clothes at the station and let one off in man''s clothes just now?" |
38610 | Find her? |
38610 | For what? |
38610 | For what? |
38610 | Good for that? 38610 Got two thousand dollars?" |
38610 | Haow did it happen? |
38610 | Haow much''ll yeou hev arter yeou divide? |
38610 | Has he ever been ridden? |
38610 | Has he fallen heir to a fortune? |
38610 | Hate them, Hodge? |
38610 | Have n''t you any way of getting hold of money? |
38610 | Have you been able to raise enough to take us all back to Denver, Frank? |
38610 | Have you? |
38610 | Hawse or kaow? |
38610 | He has n''t come? |
38610 | He was trying to throw you over? |
38610 | Her heart? |
38610 | Hev ye gotter hit him real hard? 38610 How can you be?" |
38610 | How did it happen? 38610 How do you know, Havener?" |
38610 | How do you know? |
38610 | How do you like the looks of it? |
38610 | How do you mean? |
38610 | How have I acted to make you fancy me demented? |
38610 | How is that? |
38610 | How long ago? |
38610 | How much have you raised? |
38610 | How much time have you now? |
38610 | How was she dressed? 38610 How?" |
38610 | How? |
38610 | How? |
38610 | How? |
38610 | I did? |
38610 | I presume you are thinking of getting back to New York? |
38610 | I presume you will pay Lloyd Fowler two weeks salary? |
38610 | I suppose you must have one that has some reference to college? |
38610 | I thought you were on the road with your show? |
38610 | I wonder how he takes it? |
38610 | If this woman follows you, what will you do? |
38610 | Is it possible she is one of those foolish women who fall in love with actors? |
38610 | Is it possible you have read that paper you hold in your hand? |
38610 | Is it possible? |
38610 | Is n''t this rather late for a call? 38610 Is that so?" |
38610 | Is that so? |
38610 | Is the old fellow bound out to you? |
38610 | Is this the best saddle horse you have? |
38610 | Is this true? |
38610 | Is this yere your tenderfoot what yer told us ye was goin''ter learn a lesson, Hough? |
38610 | It''s all right to say let him go, but what are you going to do without him? 38610 Jumped?" |
38610 | Kin you ride? |
38610 | Know whom? |
38610 | Look here, young man,he cried,"I''d like to know where you ever learned to ride bucking bronchos?" |
38610 | Madam,he said,"what have I ever done to you that you should attempt to injure me in this manner?" |
38610 | Madam,said Frank, hurriedly,"are you demented? |
38610 | May we come in? |
38610 | Me? |
38610 | Merry,he said, at last, beginning to tremble all over,"are you sure this is good? |
38610 | Monotonous? 38610 News?" |
38610 | Now, can you produce the receipt given you for that treasure? |
38610 | Now, what''s the matter with you? |
38610 | Of whom-- Havener? |
38610 | Oh, there are? |
38610 | Perhaps you know him? |
38610 | Shall not? |
38610 | She? |
38610 | Sick? |
38610 | Singing? |
38610 | Sir? |
38610 | Skipped? |
38610 | So yeou could git yeour share of the boodle? |
38610 | So you are Mr. Frank Merriwell? |
38610 | So you are going to turn me down because I made that talk? 38610 So you refuse me an engagement, do you, Merriwell?" |
38610 | Somebody else? |
38610 | Surely you are not in earnest, Merriwell? |
38610 | That? |
38610 | That? |
38610 | Then I trust you will permit me to remain, and see that you do not meet with any misfortune? |
38610 | Then he got erway? |
38610 | Then it is a female? |
38610 | Then it was Fowler with him? |
38610 | Then some of the others have a new engagement? |
38610 | Then what is crawling over you? 38610 Then why do n''t you let the show business alone and go back to college on that?" |
38610 | Then you contemplate returning to college? |
38610 | Then you have been arrested in Denver before? 38610 Then you have found Prof. Fillmore''s relatives?" |
38610 | Then you saw-- you knew it was a man? |
38610 | Then your backer is all right? 38610 They? |
38610 | Think I could n''t follow Bill Dover and his spotted nigh hawse? |
38610 | Use? 38610 Waal, he did n''t sign his name Hayward Grace, so it seems he ai n''t her husband; do n''t it, Frank?" |
38610 | Waal, whut in time''s sake is goin''on here, I''d like ter know? |
38610 | Was I? 38610 Was it a spook?" |
38610 | Was n''t? |
38610 | Well, I presume you will give me a chance when you take the play out again? |
38610 | Well, I wonder what that means? |
38610 | Well, how in the world did you happen to get such a foolish notion into your head? |
38610 | Well, what are you going to do about it? |
38610 | Well, what do you think of him? |
38610 | Well, what shall we do? |
38610 | Well, where is Merriwell? |
38610 | Well,he said,"did you find her?" |
38610 | Well? |
38610 | Wh-- a-- at? |
38610 | What about him? |
38610 | What ailed her? |
38610 | What ailed her? |
38610 | What ails him? |
38610 | What ails you? |
38610 | What are those fellows doing to that poor man? |
38610 | What are you doing with a play? 38610 What are you doing? |
38610 | What are you going to do without a backer? |
38610 | What are you talking about? |
38610 | What can I do for you? |
38610 | What can we do? |
38610 | What did she do? |
38610 | What did you mean by that, Frank? |
38610 | What did you see? |
38610 | What do yeou think of that? |
38610 | What do you make of it? |
38610 | What do you make of it? |
38610 | What do you mean? |
38610 | What do you take me for? 38610 What do you think about it now?" |
38610 | What do you want? |
38610 | What has happened? |
38610 | What have we struck? |
38610 | What is his name? |
38610 | What is it? |
38610 | What is it? |
38610 | What is the charge? |
38610 | What is the matter with your eyes? |
38610 | What is the matter? |
38610 | What is the matter? |
38610 | What is the use to take it differently? |
38610 | What makes you think so? |
38610 | What makes you think so? |
38610 | What sort of a part is it? |
38610 | What was he doing out here? |
38610 | What was the matter? |
38610 | What was the name before? |
38610 | What woman? |
38610 | What''s happened? |
38610 | What''s that? |
38610 | What''s that? |
38610 | What''s the matter with me? |
38610 | What''s the matter with your face? 38610 What''s the matter, Bart?" |
38610 | What''s the matter? |
38610 | What''s the matter? |
38610 | What''s the matter? |
38610 | What''s the use to remember unpleasant things? |
38610 | What''s the use? 38610 What''s this for?" |
38610 | What''s this mean? 38610 What''s this?" |
38610 | What''s this? |
38610 | What-- what is it? |
38610 | What? |
38610 | What? |
38610 | What? |
38610 | What? |
38610 | What? |
38610 | When are you coming East? 38610 When?" |
38610 | When? |
38610 | Where are they? |
38610 | Where are you going? |
38610 | Where did you stay last night? |
38610 | Where is Cassie? |
38610 | Where is all the money coming from? |
38610 | Where is our energetic young manager? |
38610 | Where is the lady, Brandon? |
38610 | Where is the lady? |
38610 | Where is the masher? |
38610 | Where''s the rest of them? |
38610 | Where? |
38610 | Where? |
38610 | Where? |
38610 | Where? |
38610 | Which ones? |
38610 | Who are you? |
38610 | Who can answer that? 38610 Who knows anything about this affair?" |
38610 | Who knows her? |
38610 | Who knows? 38610 Who says so?" |
38610 | Who was the lady? |
38610 | Who was the woman? |
38610 | Who''s Mrs. Hayward Grace? |
38610 | Who''s that? |
38610 | Who? |
38610 | Who? |
38610 | Who? |
38610 | Whut be yeou goin''to do abaout it? |
38610 | Whut happened to um? |
38610 | Whut in thunder do yeou s''pose she''s up to? |
38610 | Whut is it? |
38610 | Whut''s up? |
38610 | Whut? 38610 Whut? |
38610 | Why are you not dressed in the garments of your sex? |
38610 | Why confined there? |
38610 | Why did n''t you put a bit in his mouth? 38610 Why did she go out there?" |
38610 | Why do you wish me to, speak again? |
38610 | Why in the name of everything peculiar does n''t he get into gear and do something-- if he''s going to do anything at all? |
38610 | Why in the world did you let her in? |
38610 | Why not? |
38610 | Why not? |
38610 | Why not? |
38610 | Why not? |
38610 | Why should that make you think so? |
38610 | Why would n''t it be a purty good thing fer ther young chaps all ter take a drink? |
38610 | Why, who is this fellow that seeks to create a disturbance? |
38610 | Why? |
38610 | Will you come to the station? |
38610 | Will you kindly tell me what occurred on the street? |
38610 | Will you listen to his base falsehoods? |
38610 | Will you sit down? |
38610 | Wo n''t? |
38610 | Wonder what made her laugh like that? |
38610 | Would you keep a lady standing on the street? |
38610 | Wouldst offer me such a part? 38610 You always were a practical joker,"he growled;"but do n''t you think it''s about time to let up? |
38610 | You are very kind,she fluttered;"but where is the officer? |
38610 | You confess that? |
38610 | You do n''t mean to say you will keep him after what has happened? |
38610 | You do n''t suppose anything has happened to detain him, do you? |
38610 | You do? |
38610 | You give your word to that? |
38610 | You have? |
38610 | You know it is a drama of college life-- life at Yale? |
38610 | You know me? |
38610 | You-- you''ve what? |
38610 | You? |
38610 | You? |
38610 | Young man,he said,"dost know what thou hast done? |
38610 | Your money? |
38610 | Your play? |
38610 | 231?" |
38610 | Acknowledge that I failed in this undertaking? |
38610 | Ai n''t this a fine day? |
38610 | Ai n''t yeou glad yeou''re livin''?'' |
38610 | And did he climb back up this swaying, loosely dangling rope?" |
38610 | And why did he come here?" |
38610 | And you are accused of insulting a lady?" |
38610 | Are n''t you getting tired of the West? |
38610 | Are you sure there is no crooked business behind it?" |
38610 | But what about the veiled man who was disguised as a woman? |
38610 | But what happened to detain you?" |
38610 | But where is this purse you snatched from her?" |
38610 | But where was the fellow? |
38610 | But where was the woman? |
38610 | Ca n''t you find time to write to us and let us know? |
38610 | Ca n''t you see? |
38610 | Carson?" |
38610 | Carson?" |
38610 | Could it be Hodge had been mistaken? |
38610 | Could it be that Burns, the old actor, whom he had befriended, had sought his life? |
38610 | Do n''t yeou s''pose he might hit back?" |
38610 | Do people usually ride with hackamores out here?" |
38610 | Do you suppose the Wall Street magnates could have become millionaires if they had permitted their conscience to worry them over little points?" |
38610 | Dost think I-- I who have played_ Hamlet_,_ Brutus_,_ Lear_ and_ Othello_--would stoop so low? |
38610 | F.''Now, I wonder what one of my enemies can be fitted to those initials?" |
38610 | Had Merry gone mad? |
38610 | Had his misfortune turned his brain? |
38610 | Had she moved to escape observation? |
38610 | Haow''s that?" |
38610 | Have I interrupted you?" |
38610 | Have n''t I had enough troubles?" |
38610 | Have you ever met him? |
38610 | Have you lost your senses?" |
38610 | He could not see Havener, but heard his voice, and eagerly asked:"Did ye ketch the dratted critter?" |
38610 | He had failed? |
38610 | He''s goin''to take it back to Denver?" |
38610 | He''s standing by you?" |
38610 | How can you do better?" |
38610 | How did he escape? |
38610 | How do you know it was her?" |
38610 | How had anything gained admittance? |
38610 | How had he entered? |
38610 | How long will it take to get your play in shape again?" |
38610 | How many of the craowd saw what happened''tween yeou an''the woman?" |
38610 | How now, fellow?''" |
38610 | How?" |
38610 | I suppose you have a plan of it?" |
38610 | I suppose you will get rid of him in a hurry now?" |
38610 | I suppose you''ll be thinking of rewarding the ladies and gentlemen who called here a short time ago and attempted to bulldoze you?" |
38610 | If not for robbery, what then? |
38610 | Is it possible there are two William Shakespeare Burns in the city of Denver?" |
38610 | Is she alone?" |
38610 | Merriwell?" |
38610 | Merriwell?" |
38610 | Merriwell?" |
38610 | Merriwell?" |
38610 | Merriwell?" |
38610 | Naow whut do yeou think of that? |
38610 | Naow, what du yeou think of that? |
38610 | Next the bobbing man was questioned:"Did you witness the assault on the lady, sir?" |
38610 | Now, is this more of your joking, Merriwell? |
38610 | Placing it on his head, he thrust his right hand into the bosom of his coat, struck a pose, and cried:"''Are yet two Romans living such as these? |
38610 | Shall we put you down for a song?" |
38610 | The policeman came up and forced his way through the crowd, demanding:"What does this mean? |
38610 | The sergeant turned sharply on the little man, to whom he fired the question:"Did you witness this assault on the unknown lady, sir?" |
38610 | Then be yeou goin''to keep right on with the play?" |
38610 | Then he jumped up, almost shouting:"Why, man alive, do n''t you understand that we are charged with murder-- with murder?" |
38610 | Then the sergeant came at the gallant man with the same question:"Did you witness the assault on the lady, sir?" |
38610 | There were excited faces at the glass in the door, and a trainman came out, demanding:"What is all this? |
38610 | To go back to Yale, was it not?" |
38610 | Use? |
38610 | Was he in Denver? |
38610 | Was he in his hour of need to receive this immense sum of money? |
38610 | Was it in the piece, or in the way it had been played? |
38610 | Was it possible that he was not dreaming? |
38610 | Was it some good spirit that hovered near to protect him? |
38610 | Was the masked man waiting for him in the darkness of the alcove? |
38610 | Was the woman aware that she was being watched? |
38610 | Was there anything in those letters you did not like?" |
38610 | Well, I apologized, did n''t I?" |
38610 | Well, now, sir, what do you think of that?" |
38610 | Well, say, why ca n''t you come out to my ranch and do the work?" |
38610 | What are you made of, anyway?" |
38610 | What do you take us for-- a lot of chumps? |
38610 | What do you think? |
38610 | What do you want, anyway? |
38610 | What do you wish me to say?" |
38610 | What does it mean?" |
38610 | What in the name of creation do you suppose I meant?" |
38610 | What in the world do you fancy is the matter with my eyes?" |
38610 | What is happening here?" |
38610 | What is the meaning of this?" |
38610 | What was it they had expected? |
38610 | What was it? |
38610 | What was that? |
38610 | What was the matter? |
38610 | What was there in that room? |
38610 | What were you working for? |
38610 | What''re yer givin''us, anyway?" |
38610 | What''s the matter?" |
38610 | When Merry finished, Bart exclaimed:"How did the woman look?" |
38610 | Where is she?" |
38610 | Where was Scudder? |
38610 | Where was the fault? |
38610 | Who is going to ride them to- night?" |
38610 | Who is she?" |
38610 | Who was Old Eli?" |
38610 | Who''s this that''s comin''here to spoil our fun?" |
38610 | Who?" |
38610 | Why are you out here? |
38610 | Why ca n''t you make a visit to Yale before vacation time? |
38610 | Why did n''t those old duffers use English, and save us poor devils no end of grinding? |
38610 | Why did n''t you draw one on''The First Sand Bank of Denver''? |
38610 | Why did she try such a trick on the street?" |
38610 | Why do you suppose Latin and Greek were invented? |
38610 | Why had the man sought the bed? |
38610 | Why should I not? |
38610 | Why should n''t I call him my friend? |
38610 | Why should that unfortunate old fellow wish to harm me, who has been his friend?" |
38610 | Why was the man veiled and disguised thus?" |
38610 | Why? |
38610 | Will you give it to me?" |
38610 | Will you have a drink with me?" |
38610 | Will you not lift your veil and permit me to see your face, so that I may know who has brought me into this unpleasant position?" |
38610 | Wo n''t my boy at Yale be surprised when I write him you''ve been visiting me? |
38610 | Would I? |
38610 | Would you have me do that?" |
38610 | Wouldst do me a favor? |
38610 | Wut was her little game?" |
38610 | You are talking about putting your play out again, but how will you do it?" |
38610 | You do not fancy for an instant that Burns was the man, do you?" |
38610 | Your very valuable(?) |
38610 | but how can I thus lower myself?" |
38610 | do n''t you think you can arrange it so you can come East this summer? |
38610 | he exclaimed;"is it you?" |
38610 | wot cher doin''?" |
58436 | A kind of a root, like cassava, is n''t it? |
58436 | Agatha,said Roger,"will you come to Belfast with me? |
58436 | And how about sleeping sickness? |
58436 | And in the long box? |
58436 | And that stopped it? |
58436 | And they cause the disease? |
58436 | And we are stranded in the heart of the wilderness? |
58436 | And we''re to lose all these stores; about a hundred pounds''worth of stores? |
58436 | And what is the tsetse bite like? |
58436 | And you have been studying all this on the spot? 58436 And you think dirt and sentiment the bad things? |
58436 | Are n''t you? 58436 Are the rains very unhealthy?" |
58436 | Are there many of you out there, doing this? |
58436 | Are you Mr. Naldrett, sir? |
58436 | Are you a Celt? |
58436 | Are you a doctor, then, may I ask? |
58436 | Are you interested in that kind of thing? |
58436 | Are you much alone? |
58436 | Are you quite better now? |
58436 | Are you thinking of going out again to Africa to examine sleeping sickness? |
58436 | At Great Harley? 58436 Been at it? |
58436 | But suppose you have a relapse yourself, Lionel? 58436 But there is no doubt that wild game, like wildebeests, koodoos, hyenas, and quaggas, are immune?" |
58436 | But what do you mean by vital? |
58436 | But where are you going? |
58436 | But why do they live near water? |
58436 | But, forgive my speaking like this,he said;"is there a cure, then?" |
58436 | Ca n''t you answer me? |
58436 | Ca n''t you go to sleep again, Lionel? |
58436 | Ca n''t you sleep? |
58436 | Can I help you? |
58436 | Can you give me a cigarette? |
58436 | Can you sleep? |
58436 | Could Agatha be sure that she is dead? 58436 Could I go round to speak to her?" |
58436 | Could I light a lamp or candle? |
58436 | Could n''t you have come and told me before this? |
58436 | Cured, sir? |
58436 | DEAR MR. NALDRETT( it ran),If you would like to see my relics, will you come round next Thursday to my rooms between 4 and 5? |
58436 | Did he get you? |
58436 | Did you inject the seven with the dead culture first? |
58436 | Did you see Great Zimbabwe? |
58436 | Did you see it? |
58436 | Did you want to be a soldier? 58436 Do you know who that is?" |
58436 | Do you think she would see me? |
58436 | Do you think that the fraud of the atoxyl was done in London? 58436 Does anybody know anything about flies? |
58436 | Does clearing the jungle do any good? |
58436 | Does n''t he, Miss Lenning? 58436 Does n''t it make your blood boil?" |
58436 | Does that mean that you are cured? |
58436 | Dying? 58436 Excuse me,"he said;"but who is the poet in the middle there?" |
58436 | Gone? |
58436 | Got it? 58436 Had she been here before?" |
58436 | Has it been tried? |
58436 | Have n''t you seen them? |
58436 | Have not you? |
58436 | Have the natives any cure? |
58436 | Have you a match? |
58436 | Have you any idea what stores were brought up the hill last night? |
58436 | Have you been bleeding the monkeys? 58436 Have you got a nurse?" |
58436 | Have you got any? 58436 Have you had an interesting sitting?" |
58436 | Have you had it? |
58436 | Have you not heard, sir? |
58436 | Have you seen my wife anywhere? |
58436 | Have you slept? |
58436 | Have you? |
58436 | Heard what? |
58436 | How about the practice of your art? |
58436 | How are you now, Lionel? |
58436 | How are you, Lionel? |
58436 | How are you, Mary? 58436 How are you?" |
58436 | How d''you do? |
58436 | How did the play go? |
58436 | How did the play go? |
58436 | How do they get their knowledge? 58436 How do you know that you are cured? |
58436 | How do you know this? |
58436 | How do you stand heat? 58436 How does the new treatment suit you, Lionel? |
58436 | How is Kitty? |
58436 | How long are they in that condition? |
58436 | How the devil am I to rest when you wo n''t keep the gang quiet? |
58436 | Hullo, old man,said one;"what do you think of it?" |
58436 | I do n''t think you''ve met him, have you? 58436 I suppose the next thing you''ll want me to believe is that I''ve still got sleeping sickness? |
58436 | I suppose there was a good deal of fuss directly this case occurred? |
58436 | I wonder what good life is to her? |
58436 | I? |
58436 | Is Leslie here? |
58436 | Is Miss Fawcett in? |
58436 | Is it in a house or a flat? |
58436 | Is she here? |
58436 | Is that a lion roaring? |
58436 | Is that all the milk ye''ve brought, Kitty O''Hara? |
58436 | Is the boat all right, do you think? 58436 Is the tsetse immune?" |
58436 | Is the tsetse migrating, then, or can the thing be conveyed by contagion? |
58436 | Is there any trace of how they got it? 58436 Is there anything which I can do, Agatha? |
58436 | It was---- Do you mean---- Which play do you mean? |
58436 | It''s hypodermic, is n''t it? |
58436 | Merrylegs,he cried,"what is the smoke there?" |
58436 | Mr. Naldrett,said the journalist,"are you going to write any more tragedies like_ The Roman Matron_?" |
58436 | Mrs. Pollock''s compliments, sir, and will you please come round at once? |
58436 | Nor that other stuff, the dye, trypanroth? |
58436 | Oh, so that was what the rod was for? 58436 Oh, that? |
58436 | Rather a crowd, eh? |
58436 | Really, John? |
58436 | Roger,said Leslie,"did you see her in town, before this happened?" |
58436 | Selina,he cried down to the basement,"when did this letter come? |
58436 | Shall I go to Ireland to- night? |
58436 | Shall I open it? |
58436 | She is rich, I think you said? 58436 Sleeping sickness?" |
58436 | So that''s the new drama, is it? |
58436 | Surely not much? 58436 Tell me,"said Roger,"is blood necessary to the tsetse?" |
58436 | The boat? 58436 The motor- car and golf, for instance?" |
58436 | The play? |
58436 | The tsetse is useless, I suppose? |
58436 | Then could not some preparation be made from the blood of the wild game? 58436 Then you may get it?" |
58436 | They did n''t seem to like it, did they? 58436 They''re always near water, are n''t they?" |
58436 | This atoxyl, you say, is to be kept? 58436 Was I delirious?" |
58436 | Was Miss Agatha with her? |
58436 | Was she... Is she lying here? |
58436 | Was the microscope not brought up? |
58436 | We do n''t even know what the''immunising principle''may be; so how can we extract it? |
58436 | We may not have any at all? |
58436 | Well, what is wanted? |
58436 | What are they like? |
58436 | What are we stopping for? |
58436 | What are you afraid of? |
58436 | What are you going to do with the flat in town? |
58436 | What are you going to do? |
58436 | What are you two discussing? 58436 What are your plans?" |
58436 | What do the tsetses live upon? 58436 What do you know of sleeping sickness, Leslie?" |
58436 | What do you make of these marks? |
58436 | What do you think? 58436 What does he say?" |
58436 | What happened to the curtain? |
58436 | What have you been playing at with those Weissner serum pans? |
58436 | What is it, Pollock? 58436 What is it? |
58436 | What is n''t? |
58436 | What is the percentage of deaths? |
58436 | What is this? |
58436 | What is your idea? |
58436 | What is your line? |
58436 | What kind of life do you wish to live? |
58436 | What medical research do you do? 58436 What sort of man was he?" |
58436 | What was her name? |
58436 | What was she like? 58436 What was wrong with the third act? |
58436 | What were they? |
58436 | What''s a quaker? |
58436 | What''s the matter? |
58436 | What''s the matter? |
58436 | What''s the matter? |
58436 | What? |
58436 | When did the age of polish begin? |
58436 | When did they go? |
58436 | Where can they be? |
58436 | Where''s Merrylegs? |
58436 | Where''s her hot- water bottle? |
58436 | Who are the others? |
58436 | Who is there? |
58436 | Who knows what they wo n''t do? |
58436 | Who was that? |
58436 | Why cain''t they give it a rest? 58436 Why do n''t you write a play or a novel about us?" |
58436 | Why have n''t they brought our tea? |
58436 | Why should n''t I be? 58436 Why? |
58436 | Will ye go by Torneymoney? |
58436 | Will you come, doctor? |
58436 | Will you come? |
58436 | Will you have Russian, or American, or Turkish? |
58436 | Will you let me in? |
58436 | Will you smoke? |
58436 | Will you tell me about it? 58436 With atoxyl?" |
58436 | Would you go alone? |
58436 | Would you mind? 58436 Yes?" |
58436 | You did not see her? |
58436 | You mean that life is a kind of curve? |
58436 | You mean we may be-- What do you mean? |
58436 | You remember we stopped off a day at that place Kwasi Bembo, where we hired Merrylegs? 58436 You think he would be a good one to save?" |
58436 | You were in love with her? |
58436 | You will be taking girls of from thirteen to sixteen? |
58436 | You will let me know if you ever want to give it up? |
58436 | You will remember that? |
58436 | You''ll go on writing? |
58436 | You''ve been to Portobe, have n''t you? 58436 A turmoil of quotations seethed and died down in him,And is old Double dead?" |
58436 | And even if the case comes on in a law court, who can prove it? |
58436 | And for which of my ideas do you care two straws, for which would you sacrifice one least vanity, for which would you outrage one convention? |
58436 | And how was he to go hunting with an equipment of sterile pots and pipes on his back?" |
58436 | And how was he to live during that month, how guide himself? |
58436 | And now that our water of life is ready for use, comes the great question: Which of all these sleepers is to live? |
58436 | And now we are both cured?" |
58436 | And she came in and found him in the grate? |
58436 | And then, how about scientific training? |
58436 | And to what would he set forth? |
58436 | And what is a quarter''s rent to anybody?" |
58436 | And what ships? |
58436 | And what would happen to England when something upset London, and scattered its constituent poisons broadcast? |
58436 | And when? |
58436 | And where was what had made her so wonderful? |
58436 | And why should there not be some means of exterminating them? |
58436 | And why should they be so fond of certain kinds of jungle? |
58436 | And will you wait a minute while I give myself a last dose?" |
58436 | Are they a good lot?" |
58436 | Are you better?" |
58436 | Are you fond of pictures? |
58436 | Are you interested in sleeping sickness?" |
58436 | Are you morbid? |
58436 | Are you quite well?" |
58436 | Are you really serious, though?" |
58436 | Awfully well the old fellow looks, does n''t he? |
58436 | Besides, what does it matter what they say? |
58436 | But did you look at the blood microscopically?" |
58436 | But do many of them think it home? |
58436 | But how could he leave Lionel in this state, and how was he to get Lionel out of this state? |
58436 | But how could he leave Pollock in this state? |
58436 | But taking writers generally throughout the world, what does the literary mind contribute to the world''s thought now? |
58436 | But where else can you meet interestin''people?" |
58436 | But wo n''t you consider Clapham, and Balham, and Tooting? |
58436 | But would you, do most men, realise it as life realises it? |
58436 | But, if she had chosen that route, why should she have closed the flat so early? |
58436 | But-- Would you say that she is an excitable woman, given to these attacks?" |
58436 | Ca n''t you feel me hurrying to you? |
58436 | Can you point to any one writer, anywhere in the world, whose thoughts about the world are really worth reading?" |
58436 | Can you see him?" |
58436 | Criticism? |
58436 | Did he write it? |
58436 | Did no one tell you, sir?" |
58436 | Did you choose her?" |
58436 | Did you ever go on along the cliff from there to a place where you have to climb over a very difficult barbed- wire fence just under an ash- tree? |
58436 | Did you examine the blood?" |
58436 | Do n''t you find writing awfully interesting?" |
58436 | Do n''t you remember?" |
58436 | Do they just sleep away like that?" |
58436 | Do they know?" |
58436 | Do you feel better?" |
58436 | Do you find that occupation has much influence on the capacity to resist shock?" |
58436 | Do you know his work at all? |
58436 | Do you know much about astronomy?" |
58436 | Do you like lemon or milk in your tea? |
58436 | Do you mind all my questions?" |
58436 | Does it seem to you to be worth the waste?" |
58436 | Dr. Heseltine moved the port to Lionel, with,"I suppose you''re not allowed this?" |
58436 | Eh? |
58436 | Eh? |
58436 | Eh? |
58436 | Eh? |
58436 | Eh? |
58436 | Fever plays the devil with one, does n''t it?" |
58436 | For suppose the trypanosomes recurred in him, as they might, in this hot climate? |
58436 | Get the men ashore, ca n''t you? |
58436 | Go on in, will you? |
58436 | Has your Agency sent you that many? |
58436 | Have you come across any drugs?" |
58436 | Have you ever thought of what marriage means? |
58436 | Have you ever tried to write? |
58436 | Have you seen his article?" |
58436 | Have you sent for a doctor?" |
58436 | Have you thought of that at all?" |
58436 | Have you written prose at all?" |
58436 | Have you? |
58436 | Have you? |
58436 | He could spare that; but how about money? |
58436 | Her spirit might be out in the night, he thought, as in time his would be; but what could assail that devotion? |
58436 | Here we are at the Masquers; shall we sup here, or at the Petits Soupers?" |
58436 | Heseltine?" |
58436 | How are you?" |
58436 | How could he pass that night? |
58436 | How could she be dead? |
58436 | How do they know that a man can not easily drive them from between his shoulders? |
58436 | How do you like the acting? |
58436 | How does that go on?" |
58436 | How else could it have been posted in London with Greek stamps upon it? |
58436 | How is it spread?" |
58436 | How was he to cross four hundred miles of tropical country to the nearest settlement of whites? |
58436 | How will you please them with tragedies? |
58436 | I do n''t know whether you ever feel that what is happening to you is part of a great game divinely ordained?" |
58436 | I mean just before you come to a nunnery ruin, where there is a little waterfall?" |
58436 | I suppose that''s our last box of chemicals?" |
58436 | I suppose the police sniggered and looked away?" |
58436 | I suppose you''ve never done this kind of thing before? |
58436 | I suppose your play''ll be produced again later?" |
58436 | I think you wrote it, did n''t you? |
58436 | I wonder how soon you could make yourself useful?" |
58436 | II What, do we nod? |
58436 | IX Where be these cannibals, these varlets? |
58436 | If I''ve had sleeping sickness, how comes it that I''m here, talking to you? |
58436 | If the tsetse is immune, why could not an anti- toxin be prepared from the tsetse? |
58436 | Is his big picture finished? |
58436 | Is it caused by game, by slave- raiders, or by ivory- hunters? |
58436 | Is it mere inherited instinct? |
58436 | Is it really bad?" |
58436 | Is n''t that a drug case?" |
58436 | Is n''t that the stuff? |
58436 | Is that so?" |
58436 | Is that the lid for the microscope?" |
58436 | Is the bottle anywhere on the path, or near it?" |
58436 | Is your mother living?" |
58436 | It does n''t matter much, though, where it was done, does it?" |
58436 | It has made my eyes red, you see? |
58436 | It is n''t so bad here, is it?" |
58436 | It''s a painter gentleman, I think you said it was?" |
58436 | John was with the pale young Spaniard, doing what? |
58436 | Jolly interesting if it is, do n''t you think? |
58436 | Lemon? |
58436 | Letters to write?" |
58436 | Like the pre- Raphaelites were; but put them beside our English dramatists; where are they?" |
58436 | Naldrett?" |
58436 | Naldrett?" |
58436 | Naldrett?" |
58436 | New York THE MACMILLAN COMPANY 1916 TO MY WIFE MULTITUDE AND SOLITUDE I What play do they play? |
58436 | No headache, I hope? |
58436 | Now, who has really observed the tsetse''s habits? |
58436 | Or had the whole unreal evening been a dream? |
58436 | Or were they all dead, and was this heaven or hell? |
58436 | Oshima? |
58436 | See? |
58436 | Shall we choose a woman?" |
58436 | She lives in Ireland?" |
58436 | She''s not infected as it happens; but would you, if she were?" |
58436 | Shiga? |
58436 | Shima? |
58436 | So O''Donnell wrote that?" |
58436 | So the frame came down and stunned him? |
58436 | So you''ve been in the tropics, too?" |
58436 | Suppose Lionel developed sleeping sickness and died, as the people in the village were dying, before they could win to civilisation? |
58436 | Surely Morris and Henslow would n''t do a thing like that?" |
58436 | Surely he had taken it back with him to"Portobe"? |
58436 | Surely one could extract the immunising principle from the immune creature, and use that as a serum?" |
58436 | Talking about sleeping sickness?" |
58436 | Templeton?" |
58436 | That seems absurd to you?" |
58436 | The Japanese bacteriologist, what was his name? |
58436 | The box was empty, do n''t you think?" |
58436 | The lady answered with the hope that nothing would happen to them, for what would poor Eddie do? |
58436 | The problem now was, had she left London for Ireland or for the Continent? |
58436 | The question"Shall I be in time?" |
58436 | These fellows are like animals, are n''t they, in the way they leave their sick?" |
58436 | To whom could he go for money? |
58436 | Was it Mrs. Ford? |
58436 | Was it safe, there in the broad? |
58436 | Was there any yellow fever there, when you were there?" |
58436 | Was there fever?" |
58436 | We had better stop here, eh? |
58436 | Were you ever a soldier, Heseltine?" |
58436 | What are they like? |
58436 | What are we to do for laboratory animals? |
58436 | What are you going to do?" |
58436 | What are your plans? |
58436 | What can you do with the disease? |
58436 | What could he do meanwhile? |
58436 | What could he do? |
58436 | What did she want to say about sleeping sickness? |
58436 | What do you mean by that third act? |
58436 | What do you say to that nice- looking boy, whom we spun some time ago for itch? |
58436 | What do you think, Lionel?" |
58436 | What do you think? |
58436 | What else was he to try? |
58436 | What had become of him? |
58436 | What had happened then? |
58436 | What had he done with it after that? |
58436 | What had life to give him, if, as was very unlikely, he should win back to life? |
58436 | What have you been doing?" |
58436 | What if poetry were a mere antique survival, a pretty toy, which attracted the fine mind, and held it in dalliance? |
58436 | What if that mild sickness should confer a subsequent immunity on the inflicted individual? |
58436 | What if the bite of the infected tsetse should set up a mild form of nagana in them from which they recover? |
58436 | What if the young of the wild game should not be immune? |
58436 | What if this fawn should be suffering from a mild attack of the disease? |
58436 | What is cassava?" |
58436 | What is four thousand to a theatre manager? |
58436 | What is it which interests you so much in sleeping sickness? |
58436 | What is it which keeps them near the water, even when( for all that we know) the air- breathing fish are no longer burrowed in the mud? |
58436 | What is it?" |
58436 | What is it?" |
58436 | What is manioc?" |
58436 | What is the English people coming to? |
58436 | What makes people swell up?" |
58436 | What people? |
58436 | What so? |
58436 | What so? |
58436 | What the devil did they send that for? |
58436 | What then? |
58436 | What use were sidelights, when a fog might make a headlight as red as blood? |
58436 | What was he to do? |
58436 | What was he to do? |
58436 | What was mysterious about the sleeping sickness? |
58436 | What was the danger? |
58436 | What was the life? |
58436 | What were you thinking of to let them out?" |
58436 | What would become of a woman left alone here? |
58436 | What would he do then? |
58436 | What would you minister upon the sudden? |
58436 | What''s in the case there?" |
58436 | What''s inside this one?" |
58436 | What''s the good of making people gloomy? |
58436 | When did it happen?" |
58436 | When did she come?" |
58436 | When had he last seen it? |
58436 | Where are you going?" |
58436 | Where are you?" |
58436 | Where could he have thrown it?" |
58436 | Where could it have been done? |
58436 | Where did I put it?" |
58436 | Where was the spirit who had used her as a lodging? |
58436 | Where were the bearers? |
58436 | Where would there be a cab? |
58436 | Where''s the spade?" |
58436 | Where, then, could he be? |
58436 | Which is Miss Hanlon''s room?" |
58436 | Which of his friends lived on the way to Euston? |
58436 | Which of these is to live? |
58436 | Who are they, when all is said?" |
58436 | Who could have done it? |
58436 | Who is to be the other? |
58436 | Who lives between Westminster and Euston? |
58436 | Who was not?" |
58436 | Who would have money to lend upon the instant? |
58436 | Who would have thought of their taking drugs? |
58436 | Why are you so down on the natural?" |
58436 | Why could they not be quiet? |
58436 | Why did n''t I see that Africa is getting civilised? |
58436 | Why did she not come in, as of old, with her smiling daintiness, and with her hands in great gardening gauntlets clasping tulips for the jars? |
58436 | Why did you leave it?" |
58436 | Why not to us? |
58436 | Why? |
58436 | Will I wet the tea, sir?" |
58436 | Will it bore you to come in to talk to us?" |
58436 | Will you come to my rooms for a game of chess? |
58436 | Will you come?" |
58436 | Will you go back? |
58436 | Will you please tell me if you have any particular ideas about tragedy?" |
58436 | Will you shew me what you have written?" |
58436 | Will you tell me what made you take to it?" |
58436 | Will you?" |
58436 | With a fever like that, Lionel might die, and if Lionel died, what then? |
58436 | Wo n''t you read them to me?" |
58436 | Would he leave a message? |
58436 | Would he take a seat?" |
58436 | Would it bore you to tell me?" |
58436 | Would you cure her? |
58436 | You are Mr. Naldrett, are n''t you? |
58436 | You can only inject atoxyl into a man, and pump trypanosomes out of him? |
58436 | You had that cottage at the very end of the loaning, just above the sea? |
58436 | You hear, Roger? |
58436 | You know Wentworth''s work?" |
58436 | You know how savage a cleg is? |
58436 | You know, of course, that they are spread by the tsetse fly? |
58436 | You like lemon, do you? |
58436 | You may say what you like about these Scandinavian people, and Hauptmann, and what''s the name of the French feller, who wrote the book about wasps? |
58436 | You remember the screw we put in at Malakoto? |
58436 | You see? |
58436 | You see? |
58436 | You?" |
37788 | ''Tis a description of a lady of the court? |
37788 | ''Tis not yours, then? 37788 A bargain?" |
37788 | A desperate villain? 37788 A handsome youth, perchance?" |
37788 | A message, grandmother? |
37788 | A message? 37788 A stranger? |
37788 | Ah, me,said she, in mock desolation,"why should one go nowadays to Shottery? |
37788 | Ah, sweetheart,said she( but with a kind of sudden sob in her throat),"have you come to see me?" |
37788 | Ah, there, now, will they not be won by her gentleness? |
37788 | Ah, think you so? |
37788 | Alas, good father, why did you aid me in my folly, and suffer me to grow up so ignorant? |
37788 | Alone, then? |
37788 | Am I to have no care of myself, then, that am your surety, and have their threats from hour to hour? |
37788 | And Cicely-- shall we all go? |
37788 | And Daniel Hutt? |
37788 | And I? |
37788 | And Master Jonson, good Prue-- that they call Ben Jonson-- what of him? |
37788 | And Willie here; have you no word for him, that he is come to see how you do? |
37788 | And can you undo it? |
37788 | And for what more serious purposes, good gossip? 37788 And guess you now what they mean to do for you when the milder weather comes? |
37788 | And her thanks to whom? |
37788 | And his vagabond crew-- have they all made their fortunes? |
37788 | And how comes it that you seek him out here alone? |
37788 | And how does your brother, Prudence? |
37788 | And how fares he at the school? |
37788 | And how is it with your business, in good sooth? |
37788 | And how should I come to know? |
37788 | And how? 37788 And if it were to be known you had gone out to meet this conjurer, Judith, what would your mother and sister say?--and your father?" |
37788 | And if that were all, why should he fear to bring the letter to your father? |
37788 | And is it enough, think you? |
37788 | And my chariot,she said, brightly--"may not I see my chariot?" |
37788 | And my thanks to you, sweet Mistress Judith,said he--"how can I express them?" |
37788 | And on the Wednesday, what was there at Bidford, then, that you must needs be gone when my mother sent to you? |
37788 | And sees he not some likeness to the Queen Hermione? 37788 And shall I tell her of this that you have contrived for her?" |
37788 | And that is all you can say of this man, Judith,said he, with some severity in his tone--"with this man that you have been thus familiar with?" |
37788 | And that, good sir? |
37788 | And the wickedness of it? |
37788 | And what a spite it is that I can do nothing? 37788 And what is the tale, Cousin Willie?" |
37788 | And what said he of our English roses? |
37788 | And what said he, sweet Prue-- what said my father? |
37788 | And what said he? |
37788 | And what say you, Prudence? |
37788 | And what says he? 37788 And what think you yourself, good sir? |
37788 | And when think you of going? |
37788 | And wherefore not, good Prue? 37788 And who can wonder? |
37788 | And who is it, then, that should speak of idle tales and the believing of them? |
37788 | And why not, Judith? 37788 And why should not I, father, seeing that they bring you so great honor?" |
37788 | And will you not go and get some sleep now, Prudence? |
37788 | And you will go and see him again, Judith? |
37788 | And you would not, silly one? |
37788 | And you, sir? |
37788 | And you? |
37788 | And your merchandise-- pray you, who is so kind as to look after that when you are engaged in those pastimes? |
37788 | And''tis you, sweet mouse, that come to me with such a prayer? 37788 Anger him? |
37788 | Art thou so far in the good dame''s graces, and yet would have me go to London and marry her? |
37788 | At Bidford? |
37788 | Ay, and be this thy thanks, then, to him that rode all the way to London town to bring thy father to thee? |
37788 | Ay, and with whom? |
37788 | Back to your room? 37788 Be you so busy with your tavern catches and your merry- makings that you have no thought of that?" |
37788 | Bess,said Judith, on the way,"heardst thou aught of a white figure?" |
37788 | Bless the boy!--would you have her to be like me? |
37788 | Broken? |
37788 | But Tom Quiney, Judith-- what shall I say? |
37788 | But he is kind to her and good? |
37788 | But how am I to thank you for such a favor? |
37788 | But how came the parson to interfere? |
37788 | But how can you believe me in anything, since you know how I have deceived you? |
37788 | But how on a desert island? 37788 But if I wish you to stay-- for a little while?" |
37788 | But is there naught else I can do for you? 37788 But now, instead of crossing hands, I think it far the prettier way that they should hold their hands up together-- so: shall we try it, sweetheart?" |
37788 | But of whom do you speak, Judith? |
37788 | But one more meeting, sweet Mistress Judith,he pleaded,"on a fairer day than this-- you will grant as much?" |
37788 | But the passage, good Prue-- what was''t he read? 37788 But what do you mean, Judith?" |
37788 | But what is it that troubles you, Judith? |
37788 | But what is it, Judith? 37788 But what now, sir? |
37788 | But who and what is this man, Judith? |
37788 | But why must you go? |
37788 | But why should it be thus? |
37788 | But why should you give yourself so many cares, good father? |
37788 | But why such bravery, Judith? |
37788 | But with doubt, with hesitation, without perfect confidence-- how could one take such a step? |
37788 | But would he take her away? |
37788 | But you gave him thanks for the offer, then? |
37788 | But you will stay, dear Judith, will you not? |
37788 | But you, sweetheart, what said he to you? |
37788 | But your father and he are great friends, Judith, as I am told; why should you speak against him? |
37788 | But, Judith,said he,"who are they you speak of, that are discontented, and would go away and leave the country?" |
37788 | But, dear heart, were you not bewitched by it? 37788 But, father, know you why he would have me become his wife?" |
37788 | But,said Judith, timidly,"methought you said you were going out with these same desperate men?" |
37788 | By what right? 37788 By what, Cousin Judith?" |
37788 | Can a maid forget her ornament, or the bride her attire? 37788 Can nothing be done and finished but with the breaking of heads? |
37788 | Can you doubt it? |
37788 | Can you take it down? |
37788 | Can you wonder at it? |
37788 | Come; shall we go? |
37788 | Content that thou shouldst bide with us? 37788 Content?" |
37788 | Could you get that for me, good sir? |
37788 | Dear Judith, but why are you crying? |
37788 | Dear Judith, tell me true,her friend said, almost piteously,"do you suspect him of having played the wizard to cheat you and entrap you?" |
37788 | Dear Mistress Judith,she said,"can I do aught for you? |
37788 | Dear mouse, are you so timorous? 37788 Dear mouse, is that your skill at guessing? |
37788 | Dear mouse,said she, quickly,"what is it hath happened to Tom Quiney?" |
37788 | Dearie, dearie, thy hair will grow again as fair as ever-- ay, and who ever had prettier? |
37788 | Did Dame Hathaway speak harshly to you? |
37788 | Did ever any one see such a poor, weak, white hand as that? 37788 Did he name the ship after you, cousin?" |
37788 | Did you not anger him, Judith, that he is going away from his home and his friends? |
37788 | Did you not ask whether your father was well affected toward the Papists? 37788 Did you not see it, Judith?" |
37788 | Didst thou find any such speeches in the_ Sententià ¦ Pueriles_? |
37788 | Do I hurt you, Judith? |
37788 | Do they, now? |
37788 | Do you doubt my word, Judith? |
37788 | Do you forget, then, that I am the daughter of a player?--and this his granddaughter? |
37788 | Do you give it your time? 37788 Do you know what she said to her grandmother, Prudence, when she fell a crying? |
37788 | Do you think the Don would brook such invasion of his domain? 37788 Does he imagine, think you,"said Judith,"that we shall all be here awaiting him at the end of twenty years, and as we are now? |
37788 | Does your conscience tell you that you give sufficient thanks for what God in His great mercy has vouchsafed to you? 37788 Eyes: must they be black, or gray, or brown, or blue? |
37788 | For whom do you wish me to bring you such a token? |
37788 | Friends? |
37788 | God''s mercy, wench, have you come to your senses at last?--be you seeking a husband?--would you win one of them? 37788 Goes your goodness so far, sweet Mistress Judith? |
37788 | Good father,said she,"will you do this errand for me at Warwick?" |
37788 | Grandmother, grandmother, why do you not keep the parson away from me? 37788 Grandmother,"said she, in a low voice,"think you''twas really he that took away with him my father''s play?" |
37788 | Grandmother,said she, regarding her thin, wasted hand,"is my face like that?" |
37788 | Grandmother,she said,"will you promise me this-- to keep Quiney away? |
37788 | Harm? |
37788 | Has my father expressed any such wish? |
37788 | Hast become playwright? 37788 Have you faith in such charms, Mistress Judith?" |
37788 | Have you seen any one? 37788 Have you seen her-- have you spoken with her?" |
37788 | He eats no King''s bread? |
37788 | He eats the bread of the Church, that has been despoiled of its possessions again and again by the Crown and the lords; and why should he go forth? 37788 He is a clever musician, that merry imp, is he not?" |
37788 | He is doing all that for me? |
37788 | Heaven bless us,said the other, laughing,"may not a man come to see his own daughter without asking leave of the neighbors?" |
37788 | Heaven''s blessings on us all, good Prue, was there ever poor maiden played such a scurril trick? |
37788 | His own daughter, perchance? |
37788 | Honor, said you? |
37788 | How can I tell you, Judith? |
37788 | How does your business? |
37788 | How know you that I sought him out? |
37788 | How know you that? |
37788 | How now, good cousin? |
37788 | How now, little Cicely? |
37788 | How now? |
37788 | How so, sir? |
37788 | How so? |
37788 | How stands my father with the King and his religion? 37788 How, then, dear mouse?" |
37788 | How, then? 37788 How, then? |
37788 | I beseech your pardon, lady,said he, in a most respectful voice,"but know you one in this town of the name of Master Shakespeare?" |
37788 | I heard thee declare that Ben Jonson had no words to say how fair she was: would you better his description and overmaster him? 37788 I hope you are not going away from the country?" |
37788 | I know you like not hearing of serious things, Judith,said he( while she wondered whither he had sent the two little girls: perhaps into the church? |
37788 | I must be angry; I must fret and fume, and use hot language, and play the tragedy part? 37788 I pray you, sir, what is it now?" |
37788 | I pray you, what is it, sir? 37788 I speak against him?" |
37788 | I, sir? |
37788 | I? |
37788 | I? |
37788 | I? |
37788 | I? |
37788 | I? |
37788 | I? |
37788 | If I were to go to the fair with you,said she, and not unkindly,"methinks the people would stare, would they not? |
37788 | If you wish it, Cousin Judith,said he: what would he not do that she wished? |
37788 | If your mother were to know, Judith----"To know what, sweetheart? 37788 In Heaven''s name, man,"said Judith''s father, laughing,"what would you? |
37788 | In Heaven''s name, what brought you here? |
37788 | In a measure-- somewhat; but still I am forced to take heed--"Perchance you have still the letter to my father? |
37788 | In good sooth, am I all mistaken? |
37788 | In what is he dishonest, then? |
37788 | In what manner, gentle sir? |
37788 | In what, good sir? |
37788 | Indeed, sir; and to what end? |
37788 | Intercede? 37788 Is Mistress Prudence within, little Margery?" |
37788 | Is any one ill? 37788 Is he one of your father''s friends, Judith?" |
37788 | Is it a bargain, Jack? |
37788 | Is it fair, dear Judith? |
37788 | Is it honest to conform in public, and revile in private? 37788 Is it right that you should take the bit of rosemary sent you by one lover, and use it as a charm to bring another?" |
37788 | Is it that you are writing now, father? |
37788 | Is it to the farm that you return when you have been to London? |
37788 | Is it true, Judith? |
37788 | Is my father gone to Warwick? |
37788 | Is that all? |
37788 | Is that so? |
37788 | Is this your last word, Judith? |
37788 | Is''t not a beautiful story? 37788 Is''t not a pretty cap, good gossip?" |
37788 | Is''t not like a meteor, grandmother, shooting across the sky? |
37788 | Is''t possible that I could get it? |
37788 | It can not be that you know of such a one? 37788 Judith, is your head so bad? |
37788 | Judith, who is that man? |
37788 | Judith, why would you run into such danger? |
37788 | Judith,he said, suddenly,"surely you will not remain over at Shottery to- morrow, with all the merriment of the fair going on in the town? |
37788 | Judith,said he,"why are you crying?" |
37788 | Judith,said she,"shall I tell you what I heard your father say of you last night? |
37788 | Know you not, Judith? 37788 Know you the road to Bidford, sweet lady?" |
37788 | Left them behind for good, say you, wench? |
37788 | Like me, Judith? |
37788 | May I, then, Judith? 37788 May not I be spared that? |
37788 | Mean you to show this also to the young gentleman that is at Bidford? |
37788 | Mercy on us, then,she cried,"are you champion for the town-- or perchance for all of Warwickshire? |
37788 | Methought you came away from the cottage,said she,"because of the claims of your business; and now you would walk all the way back again?" |
37788 | More vanities? |
37788 | Mother,Susan said again, and rather breathlessly,"do you not think, in such a pass, we might beg Master Blaise to give us of his advice? |
37788 | Must she be altogether like me? |
37788 | Must you go, good sir? |
37788 | My business must shift for itself on such a day as this; think you''tis nothing for me to speak with you again, Judith, after so long a time? |
37788 | My father wrote thus? |
37788 | My father? |
37788 | My good name? |
37788 | My height? |
37788 | My husband? |
37788 | My lover, say you? 37788 My mother, it may be----""And if your father were to approve also?" |
37788 | My parents? |
37788 | My parson friend? |
37788 | Nay, but if I can see him, why may not others? 37788 Nay, how would that do, sweetheart?" |
37788 | Nay, is it so? |
37788 | Nay, now, have not I the Don? |
37788 | Nay, sir,said she, demurely,"would you have me name names? |
37788 | Nay, what makes you think that? 37788 Nay, why should you concern yourself, sweet mouse?" |
37788 | No, truly? 37788 Not altogether? |
37788 | Not the visions that haunt a certain magic island? |
37788 | Not to Master Jonson? |
37788 | Nothing? 37788 Oberon?" |
37788 | Oh, Susan,she said, in a way that startled them,"what is this?" |
37788 | Oh, no, sir? |
37788 | Oh, yes, as we all know,said he, courteously;"but there will be a difference----""A difference?" |
37788 | Or a land of greater freedom? 37788 Or a pansy, then?" |
37788 | Or is there one with a prouder story? |
37788 | Or may you return? 37788 Perchance you can tell me the English of it, good sir?" |
37788 | Perchance you never heard, sweetheart, of the answer that she made to the Spanish ambassador? |
37788 | Persuade her? |
37788 | Prince Florizel? |
37788 | Profaning, say you, sweet mouse? 37788 Prudence?" |
37788 | Reasons? |
37788 | Right well I know that-- for who should know better than I? |
37788 | Rumor? |
37788 | Sad, sweetheart? 37788 Said he that of the King?" |
37788 | Said she all that? |
37788 | Saw you ever the young man? |
37788 | Say you so? |
37788 | Shall I be a soldier, then, Cousin Judith? |
37788 | Shall I draw thee home? 37788 Shall I read them to you, Judith?" |
37788 | Shall I tell thee why, sweetheart? 37788 Shall we go and see what the gentleman would have of us? |
37788 | Shall we go down and see Julius? |
37788 | She is still going on well? |
37788 | Since I am so fortunate,said he,"may I beg you to direct me how I shall find the house when I get to the town? |
37788 | Since I came? |
37788 | So, good parson,said he( but he clinched his fists together so that he should not give way),"art thou satisfied with thy handiwork?" |
37788 | Surely, surely, after what you have told me: why not, Judith? |
37788 | Surely,said he, regarding her;"but what is it, then?" |
37788 | Sweetheart Willie,Judith called,"what have you there? |
37788 | Sweetheart Willie,said she, putting her hand softly on the boy''s shoulder, as he walked beside her,"I think you said you loved me?" |
37788 | Sweetheart, be these your manners? |
37788 | Tell me, Prue,said she,"may we venture to take some more of the play, or must I wait till I have put back the other sheets?" |
37788 | That-- that there be those-- who scorn the player''s daughter-- and would favor the parson''s wife? |
37788 | The Judith? |
37788 | The garden be far past its best now,said she,"but there be marigolds and Michaelmas daisies----""Could you get me a bit of rosemary, grandmother?" |
37788 | The hour that is passing seems all in all to you; and who can wonder at it? |
37788 | The paint? 37788 Then he comes to save my good name?" |
37788 | Then it is yes, Judith? |
37788 | Then let naught come of it, and what harm is done? |
37788 | Then will my gallant, my pride o''the world, my lord and master, forthwith spring out of the solid ground? 37788 Then your eyes are opened, Judith?" |
37788 | There hath been none other? |
37788 | There is one within that may not like the noise of strangers-- though he be no stranger to you, as he says----"What, grandmother? |
37788 | There now, lass,said he,"knowest thou that Quiney and I have ridden all the way from London to see thee? |
37788 | There would be nothing ghostly about him then? |
37788 | There would you be in your proper place; is''t not so? 37788 They talked? |
37788 | Think you that Prudence, for one, will be careless as to your leaving the country? |
37788 | Think you we should heed any tavern scurrility? 37788 Thou?" |
37788 | Tis in this wise now: would my father take it in a measure to repay him for the ill that I have done? 37788 To one you know nothing of? |
37788 | Truly? 37788 Twenty years?" |
37788 | WESTERN WIND, WHEN WILL YOU BLOW? |
37788 | Was not that the very stranger the wizard said you would meet?--the very hour, the very place? 37788 Was there not a great to- do on the river when the citizens gave their welcome to the Prince?" |
37788 | Was''t not worth the trouble, sweetheart? |
37788 | Well done, sweetheart? 37788 Well, Maggie, lass,"said he, going into the stall, and patting her neck, and stroking down her knees,"what sayst thou? |
37788 | Well, good sir, and how liked you the company? |
37788 | Well, grandmother,said Judith, gayly,"have you no grumbling? |
37788 | Well, is''t not the pleasantest time of the day in this hot weather? |
37788 | Well, lass, how goes it with thee? |
37788 | Well, now, master constable, what would you? |
37788 | Well, sir? |
37788 | Well, well, well,said Judith, coming with more practical eyes to the present moment,"are you finished, sweet mouse, and will you come away? |
37788 | Well, wench,he said, when he had finished with the man,"what would you?" |
37788 | Well, wench,said he, and he took her by the shoulders,"what brings you here?" |
37788 | Well,he said,"why should I strive to push my fortunes there more than here? |
37788 | Well? |
37788 | Wench, what would you? |
37788 | What concern have I with Parson Blaise? 37788 What does he say?" |
37788 | What happened? 37788 What have I done, then? |
37788 | What have I done? |
37788 | What is it that you should fret about? 37788 What is it?" |
37788 | What is that? 37788 What is there to keep me in it?" |
37788 | What is this now that I hear of you? |
37788 | What is''t he says? 37788 What is''t that troubles you, Judith?" |
37788 | What know you of the city ladies and their painting? |
37788 | What makes thee think so? |
37788 | What mean you, Judith? |
37788 | What mean you, Prudence? |
37788 | What mean you? |
37788 | What mean you? |
37788 | What of that, zur? |
37788 | What of your own fortune? 37788 What other companion would she have, then? |
37788 | What part, then, but to read a few words and hold your peace? |
37788 | What profit those idle tears, child, that are but a luxury and a sinful indulgence? |
37788 | What said he of me? |
37788 | What said he, wench, what said he? |
37788 | What said he? |
37788 | What said you? 37788 What say you, Cousin Willie?" |
37788 | What say you, father? |
37788 | What say you, grandmother? 37788 What say you?" |
37788 | What the devil brings you here? |
37788 | What the devil brings you into Warwickshire? |
37788 | What then, sweetheart? |
37788 | What then? |
37788 | What would you have me do? 37788 What would you have me to be, Cousin Judith?" |
37788 | What would you, father? |
37788 | What''s that, wench? |
37788 | What''s the use of your going hunting without a hunting song? 37788 What''s this, Jack?" |
37788 | What''s this? |
37788 | What, Bess? |
37788 | What, then, good cousin? |
37788 | What, then, what is this?--what mean you by it, Cousin Willie? |
37788 | What, then? |
37788 | What, then? |
37788 | What, then? |
37788 | What, what, good Matthew? |
37788 | What? 37788 What?" |
37788 | When do you return to London? |
37788 | When go we back to Stratford, Judith? |
37788 | Where bought you those roses? |
37788 | Where go you to spend the evening, if I may make so bold? |
37788 | Where is she? |
37788 | Wherefore not, then? 37788 Wherein lies the wickedness of such a reading, sweet mouse?" |
37788 | Whither away, wench-- whither? |
37788 | Who is that man? 37788 Who, then?" |
37788 | Who-- told-- you-- this? |
37788 | Whose, then? |
37788 | Whose? 37788 Why ca n''t we be friends?" |
37788 | Why ca n''t''ee tell his worship, Jeremy? |
37788 | Why should I trouble you with news of one whose good or evil fortune can not concern you? |
37788 | Why should an honest man fear the daylight? |
37788 | Why should you concern yourself? |
37788 | Why should you link yourself with such men as these? |
37788 | Why should you not sit you on the stile there, and take time to master the letter, while I gather some wild flowers for my father? 37788 Why should you take such heed about a walk through the fields to Shottery?" |
37788 | Why should you? |
37788 | Why will you harden your heart so? |
37788 | Why, I would stake my life that is what her father would do? |
37788 | Why, dear mouse, why? |
37788 | Why, how now? 37788 Why, lass,"said he,"what is a journey to London? |
37788 | Why, now, all this talking over my poor affairs? |
37788 | Why, now, look there, was ever anything so fortunate? 37788 Why, now, should such things happen only in Bohemia?" |
37788 | Why, then, does he miscall the King, and eat the King''s bread? |
37788 | Why, then-- to make you cry, silly one? |
37788 | Why, what ails the land? |
37788 | Why, what comparison? 37788 Why, what is there to keep any of us in it?" |
37788 | Why, what is to do? |
37788 | Why, what should he say? 37788 Why, what''s this?" |
37788 | Why, who can tell what any man is? |
37788 | Why, you know, Judith; with whom but yourself? 37788 Why,"said he at length, and almost to himself--"why should I go away at all? |
37788 | Why? 37788 Why?" |
37788 | Will he forget you? 37788 Will they not suspect and discover the truth? |
37788 | Will you go in and speak with him? |
37788 | Will you not come into the house? |
37788 | Will you not go on to the house? 37788 Wilt thou not sit down and rest thee?" |
37788 | Would you have me break in upon him at such a busy season, when even you yourself are careful to refrain? 37788 Would you have me place such Popish emblems alongside such a book as that that Dr. Hall gave me? |
37788 | Would you leave me without my champion? 37788 Would you mar all the good opinion that Judith hath of you? |
37788 | Would you remain within- doors until your hair be grown? 37788 Yes-- but what remains? |
37788 | Yes; but why for your sake, cousin? |
37788 | You are going away forthwith? |
37788 | You are going over to Shottery, Prudence? |
37788 | You do not grudge it, Judith? |
37788 | You do not think that-- that-- there is fear-- that I should look at her now? |
37788 | You have it in your mind to leave the country? |
37788 | You have not put them back? |
37788 | You have seen him again, then-- this morning? |
37788 | You imp, you inch, you elfin queen, you!--would you go a- hunting, then? |
37788 | You saw him? 37788 You say I welcome evil stories about you? |
37788 | You think so, sir? |
37788 | You will come with me, good Prue? 37788 You will not take it ill, dear Judith?" |
37788 | You will, then? |
37788 | You would not fail me, sir, in leaving it at the cottage? |
37788 | You would not take that? 37788 You?" |
37788 | Your father comes home to- morrow, Mistress Judith? |
37788 | Your own pleasure? 37788 ''Handsome Jack, they call him, is''t not so?'' 37788 ''One of the maids?'' 37788 ''Tis a right good worshipful gentleman,''she saith, meaning yourself, sweet Mahster Shaksper;''and will a not give us a share?'' |
37788 | ''Tis an honorable offer, as I say; and you-- were you not meant for a parson''s wife, sweetheart?" |
37788 | ''Tis true that a man may learn by his own experience; but what if he hath a son that be growing up a bigger fool than himself? |
37788 | ''Tis well for you that can do so much for your friend: what can I do but hang about the lanes? |
37788 | ''Twas a merry evening, in good sooth, sweetheart?" |
37788 | ''Twas about the little wench that has come to live at the Vicarage-- what''s her name?--Minnie, or Winnie?" |
37788 | ''Twas the same, was it not? |
37788 | ''Twould have been unseemly in a stranger, would it not? |
37788 | ''Well, which one of the maids? |
37788 | ''What?'' |
37788 | ''What?'' |
37788 | ''Where be your friend Master Orridge, now?'' |
37788 | ( said we) who can once frame His sorrowful heart to sing The praises of our loving God Thus under a strange king? |
37788 | --have I shown you that, sweetheart?" |
37788 | --is the cap also too much of the fashion of a farm wench? |
37788 | A gilded prison- house and slavery; but what would the fools think of that if they saw me with a good fat purse at the tavern?" |
37788 | A merry world? |
37788 | A murder on this fair morning? |
37788 | A trick to entrap her? |
37788 | Ah, they all would welcome you, be sure; and a parson''s wife-- a parson''s wife, Prudence-- would not that be your proper place? |
37788 | And I have not heard that he has written to any other of the poets of our day----""No, sir?" |
37788 | And a scrap of rosemary, now, what is it? |
37788 | And are you alone in the house, Prudence? |
37788 | And as for companions? |
37788 | And as for her, Prudence--''twould be welcome, say you?" |
37788 | And as for the maiden herself-- go you by her wishes?" |
37788 | And at what point was he now? |
37788 | And bethink you, was''t not a happy chance that I wore my new velvet cap this morning?" |
37788 | And could she not be as resolute as the daughter of the Gileadite? |
37788 | And do I hurry you, good Prue? |
37788 | And ever the wench is the fairest of her kind, and a queen? |
37788 | And have you not enough left to comfort you? |
37788 | And he said that I was your nearest friend; and would I speak for him? |
37788 | And he-- supposing that he were the young prince-- what would he think of such a one? |
37788 | And her father-- did he ever speak of his family when he was in London? |
37788 | And how get back your good name, that is being bandied about the town as the heroine of a foolish jest? |
37788 | And how is she to be anything but uneasy should she chance to see him again? |
37788 | And how is she to punish herself? |
37788 | And how stands he with the King? |
37788 | And if I come to warn thee-- as is the office of a true friend and an old companion-- why shouldst thou sit there with a sulky face, man? |
37788 | And if she were to slip away so-- escaping from them, as it were-- without a word of recognition? |
37788 | And if these two were one and the same man? |
37788 | And if this young man were himself the wizard? |
37788 | And if you would sell yourself to work in slavery in the Indies, think you they would buy a poor, weak, trembling creature? |
37788 | And in the street it was"Good- morrow to you, Master Jelleyman; the rain will do good, will it not?" |
37788 | And instead of neat- handed maids, rude serving- men, tapsters, drawers, and so forth? |
37788 | And married, is he? |
37788 | And meanwhile what had been happening in another part of the garden? |
37788 | And now have you got them all together? |
37788 | And now there is this farther bond in this secret commerce-- think you that all this can remain unknown? |
37788 | And now to bring him to the maiden that hath never seen a sweetheart-- that comes next, good Prue? |
37788 | And now when there is this chance-- do, dear Prudence, go within and lie down for a while----""Oh, how could I?" |
37788 | And now, Prue?" |
37788 | And now, good Prue, sweet Prue, do you know what you must manage? |
37788 | And of gentle manners, said you? |
37788 | And shall I tell you, now, how you must woo and win such a one?" |
37788 | And she added, eagerly:"But have you the book? |
37788 | And she would have her wear the lace cuffs, too, that Quiney had brought her from Warwick-- did not she owe it to him to do service for the gift? |
37788 | And so are you there, among the unruly imps, you young Prince Mamillius? |
37788 | And so he had the cruelty to ask you-- you-- to bring this message?" |
37788 | And so she forced herself to say, with an odd kind of smile,"I pray you, sir, may I remain with you for a space-- if Bess and I trouble you not?" |
37788 | And supposing that this last was the case, ought she to be indignant? |
37788 | And that message that she had left for him with Prudence-- was it a kind of farewell? |
37788 | And the Queen, how does she take it, think you?--how is she moved to act in such a pass? |
37788 | And the napery, now: it was not always of the cleanest? |
37788 | And the other-- would he brook high words? |
37788 | And the use of it? |
37788 | And then he asked:"How comes it that none of your friends or your family know aught of this stranger?" |
37788 | And then she added:"Well, sir, are you satisfied? |
37788 | And then she added:"You were at Wilmecote on Tuesday?" |
37788 | And then she instantly added:"I pray you, sir, did not you say that I was to decide for myself?" |
37788 | And then she said, faintly,"Why are you come back to Stratford, father?" |
37788 | And then she said, regarding him,"Would you like to see Judith-- for a moment? |
37788 | And then, as Judith was thus considering, this was what she heard, in Prudence''s gentle voice:"''_ Miranda._ Do you love me? |
37788 | And there were bold paraphrases and inductions, too:"What hast thou now to do in the way of Egypt, to drink the waters of Nilus? |
37788 | And think you she would be niggard with Handsome Jack? |
37788 | And think you that such blindness and wilfulness bring no penalty? |
37788 | And think you that the parson would overlord it?" |
37788 | And think you the buxom widow would consent, were one to make bold and ask her? |
37788 | And think you what he came to next, Judith?" |
37788 | And this his last day in the neighborhood? |
37788 | And this security-- think you it had not to be fought for?--think you it was not worth the fighting for? |
37788 | And to what end? |
37788 | And to what ends? |
37788 | And was there any trencher business-- and wine? |
37788 | And was there good cooking at the tavern-- Portugal dishes and the like? |
37788 | And were it not better that he should remain here, so that the stillness dwelling around the place should not be broken even by his breathing? |
37788 | And what book is it,"she continued, with a smile,"that you have for companion, seeing that there be no she shepherd for you to converse withal?" |
37788 | And what did he say? |
37788 | And what ghost husband do you speak of?" |
37788 | And what give they their watch- dog? |
37788 | And what help hath the poor man? |
37788 | And what more? |
37788 | And what said he? |
37788 | And what said you-- that he outshone them all?--that it was the general consent?" |
37788 | And what said you? |
37788 | And what saidst thou, wench? |
37788 | And what say you? |
37788 | And what says the prince? |
37788 | And what was she to say to little Willie Hart that would prevent his carrying back the tale to the school and the town? |
37788 | And what would I not do in that way-- ay, or in any way-- if I could hope for a certain prize to be won at the end of it all?" |
37788 | And where is there another mother that hath bred such a race of sons? |
37788 | And whom do they not suspect? |
37788 | And why Julius Shawe''s friends only? |
37788 | And why should she be driven into a corner prematurely? |
37788 | And why should you wish to have less than the respect of all your neighbors, all and sundry, whatever be their views? |
37788 | And why?--to what end, if this bewildering possibility were to be regarded for an instant? |
37788 | And will you do that for me, too, sweet Prue? |
37788 | And will you have no word of welcome for him? |
37788 | And would not his very footfall on the path disturb her? |
37788 | And would not that do, grandmother? |
37788 | And yet how can I even do that? |
37788 | And yet you keep it overshort-- yes,''tis overshort-- would you have them think you a boy?" |
37788 | And you also-- why should you not seek his aid and counsel?" |
37788 | And you have no regard, then, for your good name?" |
37788 | And you will tell her, then, if I may not? |
37788 | And you would blear your eyes with books, silly wench? |
37788 | And you? |
37788 | And you?" |
37788 | And, indeed, poor Susan was sorely displeased, insomuch that I said,''But the spear in the coat of arms, father-- how came we by that?'' |
37788 | Are all these to be thrown away?--to wither and perish as the years go by? |
37788 | Are we all so busy, then, that we may not pass a few minutes in amusement? |
37788 | Are you afraid to go forth and meet the pirate Dansekar? |
37788 | Are you going forever to be a baby? |
37788 | Are you ready to begin?" |
37788 | Are you so quick to put away the idle gossip they bring you about me? |
37788 | As an idle frolic of youth? |
37788 | Ashamed? |
37788 | At one moment it was: Why, say you so? |
37788 | At one moment she was saying to herself:"Why, now, have I no spaniel- gentle with me to keep me company?" |
37788 | At the story of how the sweet Miranda came to grow up in exile? |
37788 | At what time of the day?" |
37788 | Ay, and forsake the merry nights at the Cranes and the Silver Hind? |
37788 | Ay, and hath she that on her mind now? |
37788 | Ay, and knowest thou how the new disease, as they call it, shows itself at the beginning? |
37788 | Ay, and the riding to London, and the bringing of thy father, and all-- is''t not worth a word of thanks? |
37788 | Ay, and what said he? |
37788 | Ay, ay, that was it now-- I remember Susan singing it--"''Western wind, when will you blow? |
37788 | Besides, was it fair? |
37788 | Body o''me, do they think they can live on nettles and grass, like Nebuchadnezzar?" |
37788 | But I shall have a marriage- portion, Susan, shall I not? |
37788 | But by- and- by she said, in a way that was like the ghost of Judith''s voice of old,"Grandmother-- I can scarce hold up my hand-- will you help me? |
37788 | But can you marvel if I would have you for your own sake avoid any farther meetings with this stranger? |
37788 | But if I were to obtain his approval, would that influence you?" |
37788 | But if he were really in distress? |
37788 | But in the future? |
37788 | But no matter, Jack-- come, hast naught to offer one to drink? |
37788 | But perchance he would not care to have it, would he, think you?" |
37788 | But perchance your protector is jealous? |
37788 | But perhaps,"he added, directing toward her a curious timid look of inquiry,"it were as well that I did not deliver it?" |
37788 | But see you any harm in him? |
37788 | But she was startled, and she said, quickly,"What do you say, good wizard? |
37788 | But surely we ought to be prepared; and what preparation, think you, is sufficient for so great and awful a change? |
37788 | But tell me, if my father were to speak openly, which of the parties would he most affect? |
37788 | But was not this nigh shore? |
37788 | But was she to be again balked by goodman Matthew? |
37788 | But what is the dreadful secret?" |
37788 | But what say you, father? |
37788 | But what then? |
37788 | But what would you with the little maid''s work, that you would take it out of her hands?" |
37788 | But why should I do so?" |
37788 | But why should he trouble his head about either her or the parson? |
37788 | But why should my mother and Susan seek to know aught of him? |
37788 | But why should that alarm you, good Prue? |
37788 | But why should that frighten thee? |
37788 | But why should you not give it to them yourself, Judith?" |
37788 | But why? |
37788 | But would he understand? |
37788 | But you would not have had me ask the young man as to his occupation and standing, good sir? |
37788 | But''fore Heaven, now, Jack,"said he, interrupting himself, and sending an appealing look round the room,"have you naught to drink in the house? |
37788 | Call you that the thought of a loyal son and one that is grateful? |
37788 | Came you ever to my lodging and found such scurvy entertainment?" |
37788 | Can I do nothing for you?" |
37788 | Can Master Blaise tell me how I may restore to my father this that he hath lost? |
37788 | Can you assure me of it? |
37788 | Can you read me the riddle?" |
37788 | Can you read me this riddle, sweet Prue? |
37788 | Can you show it to me? |
37788 | Come, mouse, shall we go? |
37788 | Corn? |
37788 | Could I dare venture on questions, he being all unknown to any of us?" |
37788 | Could any one be such a hypocrite? |
37788 | Could he not perceive that too, and understand? |
37788 | Could nothing be done? |
37788 | Could nothing be done? |
37788 | Could that be Judith that was going away from them so-- she that all of them had known so dearly? |
37788 | Could you not pluck up a little of the spirit that the pretty Rosalind showed-- do you remember?--when she was teasing Orlando in the forest? |
37788 | Could you remember that, good father? |
37788 | Did I ever treat thee so in Fetter Lane?" |
37788 | Did I leave it on the window- shelf?" |
37788 | Did I not say that mischief would come of planting the charm in the church- yard, and shaming a sacred place with such heathenish magic? |
37788 | Did a gentleman of his tall inches seek help from such a mite as thou?" |
37788 | Did any of the young lords go with them? |
37788 | Did ever mortal hear him speak so fair before? |
37788 | Did he grumble? |
37788 | Did he look like one that would play such a trick; that would name himself as her future husband; that would cozen her into meeting him? |
37788 | Did he say his men were ill content to start at such a time? |
37788 | Did her father say that he wished her chidden? |
37788 | Did it not run so? |
37788 | Did not your brother offer him a pipe of Trinidado?" |
37788 | Did they in London know that he had such a goodly house, and rich lands, and horses? |
37788 | Did they know he had belongings? |
37788 | Did you ask the doctor, Prudence? |
37788 | Did you never hear it called''kiss me at the gate?'' |
37788 | Did you not thank him prettily for the little spaniel?" |
37788 | Didst ever hear of such a gallymawfrey of dolphins and whales, and prince''s barges, and the roaring of cannon, and fire- works? |
37788 | Dined already, sayst thou? |
37788 | Do I make too bold, sweet lady? |
37788 | Do I speak for myself alone? |
37788 | Do you expect to find the ghost of Gamaliel Ratsey walking on the Evesham road? |
37788 | Do you follow the story? |
37788 | Do you know the dog, Prudence? |
37788 | Do you not owe it to us? |
37788 | Do you not tremble, like Faustus in the cell? |
37788 | Do you perceive, now, sweet mouse, that it was a safe prophecy, seeing that he had appointed himself to be the very one who should meet her?" |
37788 | Do you think I have dressed you up as a grown woman to see you crawl like a baby? |
37788 | Do you understand me, Judith?" |
37788 | Does not the mystery make you impatient, or restless, or sad-- so that you would fain have the years go by quick, and get to the end? |
37788 | Doubtless they had chairs set for them on the stage? |
37788 | Fascination? |
37788 | First supposing this conjecture to be false, how is she to atone to the young gentleman? |
37788 | For an instant a flush of color overspread Judith''s face, and she said, with a sort of embarrassed laugh:"Well, and if it were so, sweet mouse? |
37788 | For now it was, Oh, mistress mine, where are you roaming? |
37788 | For some time they walked in silence; then, as soon as the stranger was out of ear- shot, the lad looked up and said,"Who is that, Judith?" |
37788 | For the repeating of idle tales about our neighbors? |
37788 | Get you to your needle; be your mother''s napery all so well mended that you can spend the whole day in idleness?" |
37788 | Go beyond seas? |
37788 | Good sir, will you step into the garden?" |
37788 | Grandmother can you think it possible? |
37788 | Had Joan no clearer message to give you?" |
37788 | Had he aught special to say to you, dear mouse?" |
37788 | Had he been riding home from Ludington? |
37788 | Had he not betaken himself elsewhere-- and that with her right good- will? |
37788 | Had he not declared that he only wanted time to prove his innocence? |
37788 | Had her father expressed any desire for such ornamentation? |
37788 | Had she not begged and prayed him to give Prudence the little spaniel- gentle? |
37788 | Had she not wronged him, then, in imagining even for a moment that he had played a trick upon her in order to make her acquaintance? |
37788 | Had they not abundance? |
37788 | Handsome was he, Prudence? |
37788 | Harm? |
37788 | Has Matthew gardener driven you out even from his recollection? |
37788 | Hath he not enough of gear gathered round him, eh? |
37788 | Hath he not enough of gear?" |
37788 | Hath he not yet had time to learn our English speech?" |
37788 | Hath not our good King a powerful insight into the doings of witches and wizards and the like? |
37788 | Have I not told you? |
37788 | Have they no suspicion?" |
37788 | Have you been overthrown at last-- by a country wench? |
37788 | Have you caught sight of me yet, sweetheart blue- eyes? |
37788 | Have you no desire to meet your brother, Prudence-- to be the first of all to welcome him home? |
37788 | Have you no gratitude for the answering of your mother''s prayers?" |
37788 | Have you not heard? |
37788 | Have you not sweethearts a plenty?" |
37788 | Have you seen one of the desperate men that were concerned with Catesby?" |
37788 | Have you suspicion of him? |
37788 | He and I never did agree;''twas ever something wrong on one side or the other; and wherefore should not he look around for a gentler companion? |
37788 | He bears himself like a prince? |
37788 | He drank in those lessons in patriotism: what was it he would not do for his cousin Judith? |
37788 | He hath one book now-- how is it called?--''tis a marvellous heap of old stories-- the Jests----""Not the_ Gesta Romanorum_?" |
37788 | He is a minister; is there harm that he should wish to see the services reformed? |
37788 | He is at his post; would you have him desert it, or else keep silent? |
37788 | He knew it; he was sure of it; had there ever been a healthier, a happier wench-- or one with such gallant spirits and cheerfulness? |
37788 | He laughed, and said:"My work? |
37788 | He likes not strangers?" |
37788 | He said:"May I walk back to the town with you, Judith?" |
37788 | He thanked you right heartily, did he not?" |
37788 | He will speak his mind; it were ill done of him else?" |
37788 | He would match such a pageant right royally, is''t not so?" |
37788 | Heard you ever of her sweetheart?" |
37788 | Heard you never of the Scotch knight, Sir Patrick Spens?--that the Scotch King would send away to Norroway at an evil time of the year? |
37788 | Heard you not of the vision that came to the young girl at Chipping Camden last Monday?" |
37788 | Heaven save us, was it not well done? |
37788 | Heaven''s mercy, did ever any hear the like? |
37788 | Her good name might go-- she cared little for that now-- but was there no means of making up to her father the actual money he had lost? |
37788 | Her usual frank sympathy conquered: besides, was not this unhappy young man the friend of her father''s friend? |
37788 | Hieronymo!_ You follow me, sweet lady?" |
37788 | His face seemed haggard and anxious-- nay, his very manner was changed; where was the elaborate courtesy with which he had been wo nt to approach her? |
37788 | How began the quarrel?" |
37788 | How came he there? |
37788 | How came he to be intrusted with the task of abusing her and crushing the too proud spirit? |
37788 | How came he to be preaching his discipline and chastisement? |
37788 | How came he to have a play of your father''s in his possession?" |
37788 | How came you by this paper? |
37788 | How could I ever make that good with the work of my own hands? |
37788 | How could our ordinary life be possible if we knew what was going on in the other world? |
37788 | How could the children laugh so? |
37788 | How have you offended him?" |
37788 | How is one to know? |
37788 | How late sat they? |
37788 | How like you it? |
37788 | How many would think of employing their time so? |
37788 | How ought she to regard such conduct? |
37788 | How shall I purge them away? |
37788 | How should she demean herself? |
37788 | How should she find such a one?" |
37788 | How should you? |
37788 | How went it now?--"''Western wind, when will you blow?'' |
37788 | How would your pride bear it if I told you that he had cozened you with some foolish semblance of a wizard?" |
37788 | I do beseech you( Chiefly that I may set it in my prayers), What is your name? |
37788 | I know''tis the fashion to compare them----""To compare my father and Master Jonson?" |
37788 | I marvel now what she will say?" |
37788 | I pray you, what ails this town of Stratford, that you are not content?" |
37788 | If he looks down and sees them, may it not make him sad sometimes-- to be so far away from us? |
37788 | If one were to meet him in the lane that crosses to Shottery-- and to bid him to the feast-- what then?" |
37788 | If that were the appointed one, what then?" |
37788 | If there be no power in the charm, if I go to Shottery for my morning walk and find no one in the lane, who is harmed? |
37788 | If they had come to accuse her, what had she to answer? |
37788 | If you be maid or no? |
37788 | If you had thoughts of him then, when as yet he had not spoken, why not now, when he would have you be his wife? |
37788 | If you refuse to be guided by me in great matters, how could I expect you to be guided in small?" |
37788 | In the cottage? |
37788 | In truth,''twill be something new at our merry- meetings----""Ay, and what have you to say of your business, good Master Quiney?" |
37788 | In what have I offended? |
37788 | In what way? |
37788 | In winning Judith over to be his wife, by any means whatever, was he not adding one more to the number of the Lord''s people? |
37788 | Indeed''tis true what her grandmother told you, and who should know better than I, who was always with her? |
37788 | Indeed, good mouse, you would have me more anxious about such things; but why should one add to one''s difficulties? |
37788 | Indeed, this unseemly mirth was continued to within a yard or two of the church door-- perhaps it was meant for her to hear? |
37788 | Is he a man now, so that we should see him as some one different? |
37788 | Is it about the King? |
37788 | Is it anything worse than the children playing tick round the grave- stones; or even, when no one is looking, having a game of King- by- your- leave?" |
37788 | Is it not simple, cousin? |
37788 | Is it so?" |
37788 | Is it such a wonder that one should meet a stranger on the Bidford road? |
37788 | Is it true? |
37788 | Is not that a fair life to lead after death: to be in all men''s thoughts always as a happy bride, on such a still night as this is now? |
37788 | Is not that a gentle speech? |
37788 | Is not this pretty, good Prudence?" |
37788 | Is she not a sweet and obedient maiden, and he a right noble and gentle father? |
37788 | Is she not coming to say good- by to my father?" |
37788 | Is she not content-- ay, and right well pleased withal?" |
37788 | Is she striving to win her a husband at last?'' |
37788 | Is there another in Stratford that has such a general kindness? |
37788 | Is there another plot?--another treason against the King?--and you would harbor one connected with such a wicked, godless, and bloodthirsty plan?" |
37788 | Is there aught wonderful in one of Julius''s friends coming to see him in the evening? |
37788 | Is there nothing that I can fetch him from Harwich? |
37788 | Is this all?" |
37788 | Is this your honesty, your singleness of heart, sweet Puritan? |
37788 | Is your father one likely to call aloud and have the man taken, if that be all that is against him? |
37788 | Is your skill so great that you can prove to me that your prophecy is aught but idle guessing? |
37788 | Is''t not a rare morning? |
37788 | Is''t not enough to chill the marrow in your bones? |
37788 | Is''t not painted? |
37788 | Is''t not so?" |
37788 | Is''t possible that one would dare so much for so poor a prize? |
37788 | Is''t possible, think you, Prue, there might come such another handsome stranger to our sheep- shearing that is now at hand?" |
37788 | Is''t too much of a trouble?" |
37788 | It is the common report that the others of the Town Council hold him in great regard, and will have him become alderman ere long; is it not so?" |
37788 | Judith, what manner of man have you been in company with?" |
37788 | Keep up thy heart, lass; thou wert ever a brave one-- ay, what was there ever that could daunt thee? |
37788 | Know you by these tokens what has happened? |
37788 | Know you not the name of it?" |
37788 | Know you not, then, whence comes our name? |
37788 | Know you what is in store for us? |
37788 | Let me see, now-- what is the name of it?--the one that is danced to the tune of''The Merchant''s Daughter went over the Field?'' |
37788 | Let others meddle who choose;''tis none of your affairs: do you hear me, child? |
37788 | Live on in a hole like this? |
37788 | Look around-- is''t not a fair enough country?" |
37788 | Look at so thin a hand-- are you content to remain so?" |
37788 | Look you how well the ruff becomes you; and what sin is in it? |
37788 | Mark you that, sweetheart?--is''t not a land worth fighting for? |
37788 | Marry,''tis an excellent name; and if I take you at your word, little sweetheart?" |
37788 | May I accompany you on your homeward way for a space, if you are returning to the town? |
37788 | May I attend you?" |
37788 | May I go home without farther threats?" |
37788 | May I read them to you Mistress Judith?" |
37788 | May I see her? |
37788 | May not I enter? |
37788 | Mercy on us!--how many would you have slaughtered? |
37788 | Mercy on us, were you not civil to him? |
37788 | Mercy on us, what is the meaning of it all?" |
37788 | Might it not prove an argument more powerful than any he had hitherto tried? |
37788 | Might not the good dame begin to regard her as but a useless encumbrance? |
37788 | More talk of chastenings? |
37788 | Must I call the landlady-- or the farmer''s wife-- myself, and beg for a cup of something on so hot a day? |
37788 | Must I teach you manners?" |
37788 | Must I use charms? |
37788 | Must that ever crown the work? |
37788 | Must you take to the plough, and grow turnips? |
37788 | My father''s writing is too much of the common kind, is it not, good sir?--''tis more for the''prentices, one might say, and such as these?" |
37788 | My father, too: when I go to him-- nay, but it is many a day since I tried-- he would look at me and say,''What is in your brain now? |
37788 | Naught that I can bring for you-- against her getting well again?" |
37788 | Nay, I mind me, when Susan was remonstrating with my father about such things, and bidding him have some regard for the family name--''What?'' |
37788 | Nay, I pray your pardon, good Prue: to the story, if it please you-- and is there aught of the little Mamillius forthcoming?" |
37788 | Nay, I take it he will soon explain to us why he was so harsh with the young prince-- perchance to try his constancy?" |
37788 | Nay, I think that when all is done, good may spring out of the present troubles----""What is it?" |
37788 | Nay, but if she come well out of this deep sleep, who knows? |
37788 | Nay, but is''t possible, Susan? |
37788 | Nay, but, sweetheart, why should you be sorrowful?" |
37788 | Nay, canst thou not see, Jack? |
37788 | Nay, do not think that I am come to reproach you; but will it not be ever thus so long as you will be ruled by none, but must always go your own way? |
37788 | Nay, how can I hide from myself, dear friend, that you have plans and wishes-- perchance suspicions-- with regard to me? |
37788 | Nay, how could he be Satan, Prue, and be admitted to the King''s court? |
37788 | Nay, she was certain he must have talked to his friends and familiars of little Bess Hall, for how could he help that? |
37788 | Nay, the King himself, of what religion is he at heart, think you?" |
37788 | Nay, this very complication that had arisen, might he not use it to his own advantage? |
37788 | Nay, what was''t you asked of me the other day?" |
37788 | Nay, when was there time for that? |
37788 | Nay, why had he so unexpectedly broken the scornful silence with which he had recently treated herself? |
37788 | Nay, why should he be on the way to the house with it, and thereafter stop short and change his mind? |
37788 | No doubt the young gentleman regarded Judith with an undisguised wish to be friendly with her, and say pretty things; but was that to be wondered at? |
37788 | No jest? |
37788 | No jest? |
37788 | No one that I have seen as yet, say you? |
37788 | No? |
37788 | Nor did he spare himself and his own calling:"The priests said not, Where is the Lord? |
37788 | Not any one that I know? |
37788 | Now tell me your fancy, sweetheart; what shall her height be?" |
37788 | Now, Madame Vanity, what say you to that? |
37788 | Now, in good sooth, Judith, may not I come for you? |
37788 | Now, you wise one, can you guess what has happened? |
37788 | Of what avail might that be? |
37788 | Oh, Susan, what has the girl done?" |
37788 | Oh, where is your offering? |
37788 | Or a darker snare still-- with what ultimate aims she could not divine? |
37788 | Or does your friendship go so far?" |
37788 | Or from Bidford? |
37788 | Or have you other news that comes more nearly home?" |
37788 | Or how make reparation to those associates of your father who suffer with him? |
37788 | Or is he so sure of his own life? |
37788 | Or is he still our little Hamnet, just as we used to know him?" |
37788 | Or listening to Ariel''s song? |
37788 | Or perchance( she asked, with an inquiring look from the beautiful, clear eyes) it was rather poor? |
37788 | Or the device of one tired of the loneliness of living at the farm, and determined at all hazards to secure companionship? |
37788 | Or the spending of the afternoon in sleep, as is the custom with many? |
37788 | Or think you we should forget our good Queen Bess, that I warrant me had as much spirit as they, and was as much a man as any of them?" |
37788 | Or to read it at the Silver Hind as of thy writing? |
37788 | Or watching the prince approach this new wonder of the magic island? |
37788 | Or what say you to my petticoat-- does not the color offend you? |
37788 | Or what would her husband say to be so treated? |
37788 | Or will it be a refreshment for you after the fatigues of the day? |
37788 | Or will there be moonlight? |
37788 | Ought she to so openly confess that she would fain have him to be her companion? |
37788 | Our peace is great; our prosperity comfortable; our God most sweet and kind; and shall we not offer? |
37788 | Out upon the Mermaid!--have we not poets of our own?" |
37788 | Perchance you would like to hear something of Master Jonson, and how he does? |
37788 | Perchance''tis too much of the human kind for such purposes?" |
37788 | Perchance''twas good enough for simple Warwickshire folk; but the London wits might consider it of the vulgar kind? |
37788 | Perchance, now, you would extend your favor once more, and let me have the letter home with me, so that I might spell it out in school- boy fashion?" |
37788 | Perhaps she would have had him carry the tale to London? |
37788 | Pray you, get some other to go to the fair with you-- you have many friends, as I know, in the town----""Oh, do you think''tis the fair I care about?" |
37788 | Prudence knew what led me to lend him my father''s play; and where was the harm of it? |
37788 | Rest? |
37788 | Saw you not those strange things before your very eyes?" |
37788 | Serious? |
37788 | Shall I beg for your forgiveness beforehand?" |
37788 | Shall I ever attain to the pleasing of you, think you, good grandmother?" |
37788 | Shall I tell you what I saw on my own part?" |
37788 | Shall I tell you, sweet mouse? |
37788 | Shall that be my penance, good mouse?" |
37788 | She knew that he would laugh at her; but did he quite know what going away from them meant? |
37788 | She took it up and regarded it, humming the while: O say, my Joan, say, my Joan, will not that do? |
37788 | She would never forgive it, dear mouse, would she, even as a lover''s stratagem?" |
37788 | Should I have to tell him my name? |
37788 | Should she go to him and reproach him with his treachery? |
37788 | Should she resent his boldness in hazarding such a stroke to win her? |
37788 | So now how to secure her? |
37788 | So you will not wear the girdle? |
37788 | Such a one as I? |
37788 | Surely all of this preachment is not in praise of the fair damsel''s eyebrows?" |
37788 | Surely he must remember the poor injured Queen, and see that this is her daughter? |
37788 | Surely there was no need to repeat that? |
37788 | Susan, would it make good the loss? |
37788 | Tell me, Prudence, has he grown up to be of my age? |
37788 | Tell me, Susan-- I shall have a marriage- portion, shall I not?--and how much, think you? |
37788 | That mischievous, idle little wench-- heard you the crash, sweetheart? |
37788 | That were a spite, I take it, for both of you!--nay, would not the wench be angry to be so used? |
37788 | That you walked with me as far as the church and back again? |
37788 | The Doctor being from home, who else is there?" |
37788 | The Rowington copyhold also? |
37788 | The flowers, Willie-- did you leave them on the bench outside?" |
37788 | The girdle, too; think you my mother would have worn it had there been aught of evil in a simple piece of leather and embroidery?" |
37788 | The harm, good Prue-- the harm of it? |
37788 | The like mercies and goodness remain to us at this day: are we either freed from the duty or left without means to perform it? |
37788 | The price of wheat, goodman Dickon?--how fatten your pigs?--will the fine weather last, think you? |
37788 | The public is sweet, the private is sweet, and forget you to offer? |
37788 | Then says Prospero:''Hast thou, spirit, Performed to point the tempest that I bade thee? |
37788 | Then says she aloud to them all:''My lords, is this the man the Spaniards would have me give over to them?'' |
37788 | Then the second point: supposing the conjecture to be true, ought she to be very indignant? |
37788 | Then you yourself-- do you not need rest? |
37788 | Then, on the other hand, should the charm work, should there be some one there, what evil if I regard him as I pass from the other side of the way? |
37788 | There be no such thing: do not I know the tokens? |
37788 | There is no Ariel to work such a charm for me, else do you think I could ever bring myself to leave so enchanting a neighborhood?" |
37788 | There is no one below?" |
37788 | There may be another such gathering as that at Dunchurch; and would you be in correspondence with a plotter and murderer? |
37788 | There was silence for some time; then Judith said, wistfully,"What flowers are in the garden now, grandmother?" |
37788 | There would be no Miranda waiting for him, after all?" |
37788 | They must remain on the island-- the two happy lovers-- with Ariel to wait on them: surely my father will so make it?" |
37788 | Think of it now; do you know that Quiney is gone to see your father?" |
37788 | Think you he would take them, Susan-- think you he would take them?" |
37788 | Think you that I have pleasure in being the bearer of evil tidings?" |
37788 | Think you that the loss is so great to him? |
37788 | Think you that this is all? |
37788 | Think you that your father hath any sympathy with these? |
37788 | This time, you say,''tis serious-- ay, but how many times before hast thou said the same? |
37788 | This would be an answer, would it not?" |
37788 | Thy father-- heardst thou not what he said a moment ago-- that he could not bear to be without thee? |
37788 | To Mistress Hathaway''s, said you? |
37788 | To what end? |
37788 | To whom must I confess? |
37788 | Truly I would not that either Julius or any of his acquaintance knew of my fingering in such a matter: what would they say, Judith? |
37788 | Truly they must reward him that keeps such guard, and will do battle for them all?" |
37788 | Vanity is it, then? |
37788 | Was he not saving her from her own undisciplined and wayward impulses, and from all the mischief that might arise from these? |
37788 | Was he pleased? |
37788 | Was it meant to be conveyed to Judith? |
37788 | Was it not his duty?--to say what he thought of all this romance that he had been allowed to see; and to thank her; and say farewell? |
37788 | Was it not tending in the very direction she had herself desired? |
37788 | Was it possible that he had come over Bardon Hill, and from that height espied the two down by the river? |
37788 | Was it too submissive that she should offer to carry the logs? |
37788 | Was not the claret to his liking? |
37788 | Was that like a ghost? |
37788 | Was there any one that her father singled out for especial favor? |
37788 | Was there ever so kind a heart? |
37788 | Was there ever( she asked herself) such hardihood, such audacity and impertinence? |
37788 | Was''t not a royal gift? |
37788 | We live in quiet times now, do we not, good Prue? |
37788 | We rise again and go to our labor, and a dog is not heard to move his tongue among us: owe we no offering? |
37788 | Weather? |
37788 | Well, doubtless, she may not heed that----""Why should she heed, Judith?" |
37788 | Well, now, her hair-- what color of hair shall she have?" |
37788 | Well, the ruff becomes you right fairly: and-- and those roses in your cheeks, good Prue-- why, what is the matter? |
37788 | Well----""You have never heard of him since, Judith?" |
37788 | Were it not a good jest, now, to lay it before some learned critic and ask his worship''s opinion? |
37788 | Were it not well done? |
37788 | Were not that a simple thing-- and cheerful for her? |
37788 | Were not that well done? |
37788 | Were you not taken away thither? |
37788 | What answer will you have for Master Walter?" |
37788 | What are the very words?" |
37788 | What business had he to interfere with her affairs, and to drive her on to such foolish enterprises? |
37788 | What can one believe? |
37788 | What cared he for this man that any thought of him should occupy him at such a moment? |
37788 | What did you do? |
37788 | What do you want? |
37788 | What drives him to such a thing? |
37788 | What else was there? |
37788 | What else would you? |
37788 | What excuse can she offer? |
37788 | What eyes do you like, now?" |
37788 | What harm can there be in receiving such with a cheerful welcome, and having a pretty house- mistress, and all things neat and comfortable? |
37788 | What has she to do but look after the garden, and scold the maid, and fetch milk for the cat? |
37788 | What hath he to gain more among the players and dicers and tavern brawlers and that idle crew? |
37788 | What have I done?" |
37788 | What if I were to break with that accursed London altogether, and go off and fight my way in another country, as many a better man hath done? |
37788 | What if it were true? |
37788 | What if she had consented, or even half consented, or said that in the future I might come back with some small modicum of hope? |
37788 | What is the matter? |
37788 | What is this that is on my head?" |
37788 | What is your wish?" |
37788 | What is''t you mean? |
37788 | What know you of London, man? |
37788 | What know you of such things? |
37788 | What know you of that, wench?" |
37788 | What matters the surplice, the cross in baptism, and the other relics of popery, if conformity will keep the larder full? |
37788 | What means he by that, good sir, think you? |
37788 | What message have you, grandmother, for my father? |
37788 | What more? |
37788 | What must your mother say in reply? |
37788 | What needs one more? |
37788 | What now? |
37788 | What of that? |
37788 | What ought she to do? |
37788 | What penance must I do for letting such cruel thoughts stray into my brain? |
37788 | What right had he to challenge her to show that she was not afraid? |
37788 | What said you? |
37788 | What say they then, Prue? |
37788 | What say you, Madam Pride?'' |
37788 | What say you, dear Prue? |
37788 | What say you, good Prue: could worthy Master Jonson invent you a scene like that?" |
37788 | What sudden pang was it that went through his heart? |
37788 | What surety have you of that? |
37788 | What then, good mouse? |
37788 | What then? |
37788 | What think you of the cap, good Prue? |
37788 | What think you, Prudence? |
37788 | What thinks he of her?" |
37788 | What to do I can not tell; for surely, if she remain so, and take no comfort, she will fall ill.""Ay, and if that be so who is to blame?" |
37788 | What use is in''t, sweet Prue, when all the magic and enticement is gone from it? |
37788 | What wantest thou with rosemary?" |
37788 | What was it her father had said? |
37788 | What was it in the paper? |
37788 | What was it, then, that he was to do for England-- that Judith should approve in the after- years? |
37788 | What was''t he said? |
37788 | What would the goodman do? |
37788 | What would you? |
37788 | What would you?" |
37788 | What, man, are you still fretting that I would not leave you behind in London?" |
37788 | What, must I make apology to my own daughter? |
37788 | What, not satisfied yet? |
37788 | What, now?" |
37788 | What, then, Judith? |
37788 | What, then, had so suddenly driven him to the conclusion that England was no longer a land fit to live in? |
37788 | What, then? |
37788 | What-- on his own child? |
37788 | What? |
37788 | What? |
37788 | What?--must I speak? |
37788 | What?--wouldst thou become a jest and byword for every tavern table between the Temple and the Tower? |
37788 | When I came along here this morning I should have been right glad even to have had a she shepherd say''Good Morrow''to me----""A what, good sir?" |
37788 | When I see him again I must make him amends for my evil thinking: do not I owe him as much, good gossip?" |
37788 | When one was freer to act? |
37788 | When they went to the tavern in the evening, what place had her father at the board? |
37788 | When you go choosing your sweetheart, would you pick out one that had as large hands as these?" |
37788 | Where be your manners, Gentleman Jack?" |
37788 | Where got you such a face, madam?" |
37788 | Where is Judith? |
37788 | Where is there a fairer country? |
37788 | Where shall I see him, and when? |
37788 | Where was the handle carved? |
37788 | Which of her father''s friends were most constant attendants at the theatre? |
37788 | Which of them all should she regret the most? |
37788 | Which of them all would this solitary creature-- left alone in Stratford, in an empty town-- most crave for, and feel the want of? |
37788 | Which one, then? |
37788 | Who is he, that you come here to seek him, and alone?" |
37788 | Who is to go to Judith?" |
37788 | Who was so firm, so constant, that this coil Would not infect his reason? |
37788 | Who was''t, Frank?" |
37788 | Whose?" |
37788 | Why be made to confess that her brain could not save her? |
37788 | Why had not he departed at once? |
37788 | Why had not he left the play earlier? |
37788 | Why is so diligent a pastor not in charge of his own flock?" |
37788 | Why should I go?" |
37788 | Why should he address her, and have no word for Judith? |
37788 | Why should he be afraid to bring the letter from your father''s friend? |
37788 | Why should not he have a few hours''time to study this fragment withal? |
37788 | Why should she not? |
37788 | Why should she repine at any sacrifice demanded of her to atone for her own wrong- doing? |
37788 | Why should you go away with those desperate and broken men? |
37788 | Why should you hold aloof from them? |
37788 | Why should you not give this little spaniel to one that has no such companion-- I mean to Prudence Shaw?" |
37788 | Why this intrusion at such a time?" |
37788 | Why, I tell thee I can not have the garden left so empty; wouldst have me with none to talk with but goodman Matthew? |
37788 | Why, in Heaven''s mercy, was I so fractious? |
37788 | Why, look at the day!--would you have me say farewell to you on such a day of gloom and cloud? |
37788 | Why, she asked herself, should she take umbrage at the somewhat too open neglect that had just been shown her? |
37788 | Why, what should make you tumble down? |
37788 | Why, will not such a message cheer her?" |
37788 | Why, with all his professions of secrecy, should he be standing in the open highway, carelessly talking? |
37788 | Will he do that for me-- as a kindness to me? |
37788 | Will he not compel all things to her happiness-- he that can raise storms, and that has messengers to fly round the world for him?" |
37788 | Will he speak, think you, or pass as a ghost? |
37788 | Will it please you wait for me in the garden, then? |
37788 | Will it so, gracious lady?" |
37788 | Will not my father praise thee, lass; and what more wouldst thou have for all thy pains?" |
37788 | Will she not understand? |
37788 | Will you accept him from me? |
37788 | Will you go further? |
37788 | Will you not ask me to sit? |
37788 | Will you not meet him with a glad face? |
37788 | Will you read it to me? |
37788 | Will you say what you think of it?" |
37788 | Will you sit down? |
37788 | Will you take him Judith?" |
37788 | Will you take it, Prudence? |
37788 | Will you to it again? |
37788 | Would I tell her the wolves were waiting to rend you should you be heard of anywhere within London city? |
37788 | Would I tell her thou wert called''Gentleman Jack?'' |
37788 | Would all taken together make good the loss? |
37788 | Would he be willing to upset these in order to please a girlish fancy? |
37788 | Would he have any other supplant her in his dreams and visions of what was to be? |
37788 | Would he help her over her embarrassment? |
37788 | Would he join her in this scheme of restitution? |
37788 | Would he not judge her to be right gentle, and timid, and yet womanly withal, and frank in her confiding? |
37788 | Would he pardon her bluntness? |
37788 | Would he take it, think you? |
37788 | Would he understand her motives? |
37788 | Would it make up the loss, Susan, or a part of it? |
37788 | Would it not puzzle them, Frank? |
37788 | Would not Dame Margery weep with joy? |
37788 | Would not the booksellers give us the price of a couple of nags for it if we were pressed so far?" |
37788 | Would you desire to see him, if he were to pay us a visit?" |
37788 | Would you do me such a favor and honor?" |
37788 | Would you have him frequent ale- houses, and fight with drawers and tapsters? |
37788 | Would you have me think-- as Prudence would fain believe-- that there is witchcraft about him?" |
37788 | Would you have the little thing killed? |
37788 | Would you let your hair grow free as it is now, and let the sunlight play with it, were I to bring thee a fairy cap all besprinkled with gold?" |
37788 | Would you not rather believe it? |
37788 | Wouldst have me live ever in Stratford, good lass?" |
37788 | Wouldst like a jaunt that would carry thee many a mile away from Stratford town? |
37788 | Wouldst thou have me let thee lie there, and perchance go from bad to worse, and not send for them-- ay, and for Susan''s husband, if need were? |
37788 | Wouldst thou spoil the prettiest eyes in Warwickshire? |
37788 | You are quitting the neighborhood?" |
37788 | You do not drive me away in scorn; you have no reproaches? |
37788 | You have met with some stranger that is unknown to your own people? |
37788 | You have parted with these sheets-- that are so valuable?" |
37788 | You think he would disturb the peace of the land, and give us over again to the priests and their idol- worship? |
37788 | You will do as much for my sake, sweetheart?" |
37788 | You will not forget the knife, and the message on the blade?" |
37788 | You will not let him come into the room, good grandmother, should he ever come over to the cottage?" |
37788 | You will tell her, will you not? |
37788 | You would be so anxious to excuse( and who would not, in your place?) |
37788 | You would have my father come away from London and live always in Warwickshire? |
37788 | You would have sent me on some fool''s errand, would you?" |
37788 | You would not begrudge so much, sweetheart? |
37788 | Your parents, too: will you not consider their wishes before saying a final nay?" |
37788 | _ Ferdinand._ Wherefore weep you? |
37788 | _ Miranda._ My husband, then? |
37788 | _ Miranda._ What is''t? |
37788 | _ Prospero._ But are they, Ariel, safe? |
37788 | _ The Magic Island, by Master Benjamin Jonson._ What would the wits say?" |
37788 | a spirit? |
37788 | am I perfection, then?" |
37788 | and are all these for me?" |
37788 | and ask her if she sees him standing before her?" |
37788 | and perchance mine already? |
37788 | and think you he would allow Satan in person to come into the very Banqueting- hall to see a masque?" |
37788 | and, again,"Good- morrow, Neighbor Pike; do you know that my father is come home?" |
37788 | are you jealous of her too?" |
37788 | art come down, wench?" |
37788 | ay, or from London, for that matter? |
37788 | did he ask any of you to bid the parson go to her with his upbraidings? |
37788 | exclaimed her friend, in tones of raillery,"you would have deceived me? |
37788 | fair Mistress Judith?" |
37788 | for what can I do with the little beast? |
37788 | good Mistress Hathaway?" |
37788 | he exclaimed, in dismay,"will she not know him? |
37788 | he says,''that saucy wench? |
37788 | how to charm her away from any clownish sweetheart she may chance to have? |
37788 | now when you see him come riding in from Shottery, will not the town stare? |
37788 | or have I gone amiss the other way, and become too like a city dame? |
37788 | or what makest thou in the way of Asshur, to drink the waters of the river?" |
37788 | said Prudence, eagerly;"you will have naught more to do with such a desperate villain?" |
37788 | said she--"where am I to see the wraith, the ghost, the phantom husband that is to own me?" |
37788 | she cried,"was there ever such a fool as this old King? |
37788 | she said to herself,"what does he here of a Sunday morning? |
37788 | she would say to herself;"Why did God give him such a foolish head that he must needs come fancying me?" |
37788 | they that have scarce a rag to their backs will crowd at the mops and fairs, and spend their money-- on what? |
37788 | what know they of the weather, the town- bred rogues, that lie and cheat to get at the poor country folks''money? |
37788 | what said you, sweetheart? |
37788 | where is there such another country to be proud of? |
37788 | which of all the maidens will his lordship choose for wife? |
37788 | why should that trouble you if it harm not me?" |
37788 | with whom?" |
37788 | would he himself have been so quick and eager to chasten her proud spirit? |
37788 | would you not be happy so?" |