Questions

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

identifier question
13137Do you think it would be any use to go over to Cottage Grove avenue and look around?
13137Let him go to bed and lie awake night after night for a few weeks, what will be the result?
13137Paris, May 7.--Can a ghost write poetry?
13137What supports it?
13137Why?
44085CHAPTER II: FATIGUE AND REST What causes sleep?
44085CHAPTER VIII: WISH FULFILMENT An evening paper published recently a cartoon showing a kiddie in bed who asks his mother:"What makes me dream?"
44085How could we understand sleep unless we understood the phenomena which take place in sleep: dreams?
44085If dreams"come from the stomach"why should distressed minds seek refuge in them?
44085If they are purely psychic phenomena, what relief can they afford to our dissatisfied body?
44085The answer: brain anaemia, is unsatisfactory for we may ask in turn: what causes brain anaemia?
44085The first question she asked on arising,''Where is mama?''
44085This must be constantly borne in mind when we attempt to answer the question: Where do dreams come from?
44085What causes us to withdraw partly our attention from our environment?
44085What does he say of his awakening?
44085What then induces sleep?
44085Wherein, then, does sleep differ from waking life?
44085Why is it then, that many people suffer from insomnia?
44085Why should she wish to see it wrecked?
20842You ask me what it is that I do when I dream? 20842 As for the dream, have you really any need that I should explain it? 20842 But, first, is it true that there is nothing there? 20842 But, then, what is the essential difference between perceiving and dreaming? 20842 Does she really sleep in regard to her child? 20842 From the multitudes which are called, which will be chosen? 20842 How does this happen? 20842 I mean, is there not presented a certain sense material to our eyes, to our ears, to our touch, etc., during sleep as well as during waking? 20842 What are the psychological characteristics of the sleeping state? 20842 What is sleep? 20842 What is the difference, I repeat? 20842 What is the form that will imprint its decision upon the indecision of this material? 20842 What is the rôle of memory in an animal? 20842 What is there astonishing about that? 20842 When you read a book, when you look through your newspaper, do you suppose that all the printed letters really come into your consciousness? 20842 Whence comes all this phantasmagoria? 20842 Who will choose? 20842 Will this alone suffice? 51668 Did the lamp posts have hair on them, Miss Teresa?
51668Did you have things like live rats in your stomach to digest for you? 51668 Girl, the girl who said it rained dirty green all the time, what''s your name?"
51668Mr. Swicegood, how could you forget? 51668 Teresa, doll, how could a dream upset you so much?"
51668What did she say?
51668What did you mean it rained dirty green all the time? 51668 What is the lamp- post jag, Bascomb?"
51668And have they ever found out what caused them?"
51668And what was odd about ordering a quarter of a pound of butter?
51668But the lamp- post jag?
51668Did people think he was a glutton because he had four orders of sausage?
51668How could my mother look like a wart- hog and still look like my mother?
51668How did you know?
51668Swicegood?"
51668Were n''t they horrible dreams?
51668What law says a man should have all of his eggs fixed alike?
51668What was the matter with people who called four pancakes a tall stack?
51668Which was the real world?
856After that? 856 And what after that?"
856Did you ever see a child anything like that in this world before?
856Eh?
856Is n''t it a wonderful baby? 856 What do you think of it?"
856What on earth will uncle say to this engagement?
856What would you buy after that-- after you had bought up all the rum and tobacco there was in the world-- what would you buy then?
856Why do n''t you write like Shakespeare?
856Why do n''t you write plays like Shakespeare''s?
856Why will people waste their time writing unoriginal music, when they might be sweeping crossings?
856But where-- where,"he added, musing,"did you get that last idea but two from?
856Have we not often been told so?
856It is n''t a bit of your own, is it?"
856Look how useful it has been to the artists and writers-- saved the poor fellows from wasting their time?
856Who on earth gave you that notion?
856Why do n''t you copy Shakespeare?"
856Why do n''t you go and do something useful?"
856Why do n''t you joke like Shakespeare?"
856Why do these poor men waste their time, painting pictures, when they might be so much more satisfactorily employed on ladders painting houses?"
856Why should n''t we have some of its benefits?"
856or,"Why ca n''t you write like Henry Summers?
856what are you wasting your time with rubbish for?
32859And if I do n''t tell you?
32859Are you sure?
32859Well?
32859What for?
32859What''s this?
32859What-- what use,went on Twenty- three,"is all this-- work being put to-- that we do-- along the machine lines-- every day?
32859Where''re you going?
32859Where_ are_ the pictures?
32859You accept this? 32859 All this because that was the way it had been for as long as the hundreds and the thousands of years that history had been recorded? 32859 All this to keep something outside that was supposed to be destructive because once it had been so five thousand years ago or ten or fifty? 32859 All this to keep them busy? 32859 And at other times did a ball of fire flame up there, giving light and heat and life? 32859 And if there was this life and light up there,_ why_ the great dome over the city? 32859 And the Superfathers- plus? 32859 And the marks on the dials and meters? 32859 And they do n''t.... Are you using the standard cards every other night?
32859And yet?
32859Barely longer?
32859By a fraction?
32859For the sake of the Superfathers maybe?
32859For the sake of the ones, like himself maybe who worked and built?
32859For the sake of them, so they would n''t become dangerous maybe and tear the great wall down and rush out into whatever was beyond?
32859I suppose your wife is-- concerned?"
32859I''m sure you''re aware of all this?"
32859It''s a concentration pattern which should be dense enough to make you dream of being, well-- perhaps even President, eh?"
32859Larger?
32859No depression?
32859No threat of suicide?...
32859What was this?
32859Where was the little man?
32859Who could know if they''d never been beyond?
32859Why else?
32859Why not go to the space out there and the depth and freedom?
32859Why not let it pour down into the city and warm all the people?
32859Why this great shell that closed them away?
32859Your case has much to do with it.... Where''d you get the new cards?"
32859_ Why_ the factories and machine lines replacing it section after section, generation after generation?
51773And what exactly do you mean by that?
51773Are you sitting in a room?
51773Are you using oxylatohydrobenzoic- pheophenophino?
51773Ca n''t you see?
51773Did you say something, Harry?
51773Dr. Doogle, do you know what you are doing?
51773Ever have foreign bodies materialize into your time- space?
51773Have n''t we met somewhere?
51773How about you?
51773How did I die?
51773I suppose you have no information on the fourth octave of ultra- uranium elements?
51773I suppose you took up flight engineering at high school?
51773Like it?
51773Me?
51773Mr. Harry K. Jones, the physicist?
51773Really?
51773So you did fail that final pharmacology exam, eh? 51773 That you, Chief?
51773Three pills last thing at night?
51773Well, why not, if you feel that way? 51773 Well?"
51773What are they?
51773What old papers?
51773You never married?
51773But while I''m here, I suppose you have n''t any advanced works on post- operative hyperspace relapse?
51773Do any of you know anything about the octaves of elements beyond uranium?"
51773Does anyone here know anything about post- operative hyperspace relapse?"
51773Have you found the solution?"
51773He says he''s me.... Who are you, anyway?...
51773How did the ham get into your waking world?"
51773How do you know eggs do n''t dream?
51773How in the name of heaven am I going to stay awake?
51773I wonder which time-- well, how many physicists are there here, or physical chemists, or astronomers, or even general scientists?"
51773Is that clear?"
51773Is your name Harry Jones?"
51773It''s not as if I''m really there, is it?"
51773Jones?"
51773Now what exactly is the trouble?
51773Now, how do I get hold of the me that solved this hyperspace relapse business?"
51773Or did n''t that matter?
51773Perhaps I did n''t make that clear yesterday.... Good heavens, where did you get all of these me from?
51773Tell me, do you take drugs, tranquilizers, by any chance?
51773Then I can throw out all these old papers?"
51773What are you, a physicist?
51773Who the galactic hellix are you, eh?"
51773You wo n''t come busting up the ward again, will you?"
51773You, sir, in the armchair-- yes, you in the tight pants-- how about you?"
15489And you do not wish her to conceive a child?
15489But what occurrence has given rise to this dream?
15489Do you happen to know upon what charge you were arrested?
15489How did the salmon mentioned in the dream occur to you?
15489Infanticide? 15489 The woman is married?"
15489Then you do not practice normal coitus?
15489[ 4]And under what circumstances did you dream; what happened on the evening before?"
15489( 2) What is the motive or the motives which have made such transformation exigent?
15489( A grown- up woman?)
15489A frequent, not very intelligible, symbol for the same is a nail- file( on account of the rubbing and scraping?).
15489After I had told her of this childish belief, she at once confirmed it with an anecdote in which the boy asks the girl:"Was it cut off?"
15489And how about the value of the dream for a knowledge of the future?
15489But can one wish for anything pleasanter after a disagreeable incident than that the exact contrary should have occurred, just as the dream has it?
15489But should n''t it be the_ other way round_?"
15489But to what opposition or to what diversity do we refer this"whence"?
15489But what is the meaning of this hysterical identification?
15489But what is the relation of the foreconscious day remnants to the dream?
15489But why does she need an unfulfilled wish?
15489But you know that only a mother can commit this crime upon her newly born child?"
15489For example, who would suspect a sexual wish in the following dream until the interpretation had been worked out?
15489Goethe:"And if he has no backside, how can the nobleman sit?"
15489Have not the unconscious feelings revealed by the dream the value of real forces in the psychic life?
15489How do you reconcile that with your theory?
15489I asked the dreamer this, and she answered without hesitation:"Has n''t the treatment made me as though I were born again?"
15489I only ask for time in which to arrange my affairs._ Can you possibly suppose this is a wish of mine to be arrested?"
15489Now of what did this lean friend speak?
15489Now tell me, what does this mean?
15489Now the dream reversed this wished- for solution; was not this in the flattest contradiction to my theory of wish- fulfillment in the dream?
15489Now what can be the meaning of the patient''s wishing to be born at her summer resort?
15489Or does the dream mean that I wish Charles to be dead rather than Otto, whom I like so much better?"
15489She also asked my patient:"When are you going to invite us again?
15489Should we take lightly the ethical significance of the suppressed wishes which, as they now create dreams, may some day create other things?
15489What does that mean?
15489What have we now to advance concerning this latter psychic process?
15489What justifies our assertion that the dream removes the disturbance of sleep?
15489What part now remains in our description of the once all- powerful and all- overshadowing consciousness?
15489What provoked the dream in the example which we have analyzed?
15489Whence came the one florin fifty kreuzers?
15489Where does she get the words which she puts into my mouth?
15489Why does this crime, which is peculiar to females, occur to you?"
15489You know me: am I really bad enough to wish my sister to lose the only child she has left?
15489_"She wants to pay something; her daughter takes three florins sixty- five kreuzers out of her purse; but she says:''What are you doing?
15489to come to expression, thus again making possible the hallucinatory regression?
12621''I will do so,''said Glam;''but is there any trouble at your place?'' 12621 ''What is that?''
12621''What work are you best fitted for?'' 12621 ''Will you look after_ my_ sheep?''
12621And what do the people do?
12621Anybody see anything?
12621Bad moral character?
12621But she could surely have got him to keep them outside, however doggy he was?
12621Did a lady pass part of Sunday night in the church?
12621Did they shine in the dark? 12621 Did you act on it?"
12621Did you ever read Dr. Gregory''s Letters on Animal Magnetism?
12621Did you know Manning, the Pakeha Maori, the fellow who wrote Old New Zealand?
12621Have the natives the custom of walking through fire?
12621Have you then forgotten our promise to each other, pledged in early life? 12621 How did you enjoy yourselves?"
12621How on earth did you know?
12621In what country?
12621No, what about him?
12621Tell me,I said,"Lord Tyrone, why and wherefore are you here at this time of the night?"
12621The cove that invented Gregory''s Mixture?
12621The duchess said,''What earl?'' 12621 Then have they any spiritualistic games, like the Burmans and Maories?
12621Think of your breakfast- table,he said;"is your mental picture of it as clearly illuminated and as complete as your actual view of the scene?"
12621Well, what happened next?
12621What about?
12621What on earth are you talking about? 12621 ''I am little able to give that,''said Skafti;''but what is the matter?''
12621''But what was it?''
12621''Curious is n''t it?
12621( who is it?
12621), adding in English,"Hullo, what the devil do you want here?"
12621After I had finished seeing him, we went into the drawing- room, where the duchess was, and the duke said,''Oh, Cooper, how is the earl?''
12621And I said,"In the name of God, what do you demand of me now?"
12621And I spoke to it saying,"In the name of God and Jesus Christ, what are you that troubles me?"
12621But you say Bolter did n''t see the dogs?"
12621He answered:''Do you think I am come to amuse you, you--- idiot?''
12621Hysterical Disease?
12621I asked again,"What is the reason you trouble me?"
12621I asked,"Was there any more guilty of that action but you?"
12621I said,"How shall I get these bones?"
12621I was so surprised that I called out,''Who''s here?''"
12621In that time she heard the bridge clock strike two, and a while after said,''In the name of the Father, Son and Holy Ghost, what art thou?''
12621In the course of dinner he asked a propos de bottes:--"Have you heard of the ghost in Blake Street?"
12621Is there a nervous malady of which the symptoms are domestic arson, and amateur leger- de- main?
12621It had not yet come in; and Sir Tristram asked:''Why are you so particularly eager about letters to- day?''
12621Lilly Wynyard said that the person pointed out was a Mr. Eyre( Hay?
12621Little wonder though I am thoughtful--_ Always at the time when I go to bed The stones and the clods will arise-- How could a saint get sleep there_?
12621Lord Nugent--"What made you think your husband''s ribs were broken?"
12621Mr. Barter, knowing that there was no place they could go to but his own house, cried"Quon hai?"
12621Mrs. Claughton said:"Am I dreaming, or is it true?"
12621Mrs. Claughton went back to her room, where her eldest child asked:--"''Who is the lady in white?''
12621On the night on which he last made his presence felt, he went on the roof of the house and cried,"Are you asleep, Donald Ban?"
12621One can only answer:"How do you define a ghost?"
12621Probably the Rontgen rays are implicated therein, eh?''"
12621Questions were asked of the agencies, and to the interrogation,"Are you a devil?"
12621She became annoyed, and sitting up called out,"Marie, what are you about?"
12621The author has frequently been asked, both publicly and privately:"Do you believe in ghosts?"
12621The next evidence is ten years after date, the statements taken down by Jack Wesley in 1726( 1720?).
12621The words, however, were hardly out of her mouth when the bocan answered her with,"Did n''t you get enough of him before, you grey tether?"
12621Then Mr. Towse said''in ye Name of God, what art thou then?''
12621Then who_ did_ tell?
12621When I narrated the story which follows to an eminent moral philosopher, he remarked, at a given point,"Oh, the ghost_ spoke_, did she?"
12621While passing, Sir J. Sherbrooke exclaimed,''God bless my soul, who''s that?''
12621Who could disobey a ghost?
12621Why, we may ask, were the old ghost stories so different from the new?
12621Would anybody say:"There are no seismic disturbances near Blunderstone House, for I passed a night there, and none occurred"?
12621{ 158b} How did Inverawe get leave to wear the Highland dress?
12621{ 69b} Hence arises the old question,"How are we to account for the clothes of ghosts?"
39549And did your papa soon come home? 39549 And how is my other little girl to- day?
39549And may we buy something for tea at Miss Fryer''s on our way home?
39549And now are we going to Cranston''s?
39549And what about accomplishments?
39549And where are we?
39549And you wo n''t tell Emma?
39549Are n''t you thankful they''re coming home to- morrow?
39549Are you less unhappy than when you first came to school?
39549Are you very tired, my dear?
39549Ca n''t you tell me, my dear, what you are unhappy about?
39549Can they be all together for me to unpack myself?
39549Can you knit?
39549Can you tell it me? 39549 Come from?"
39549Dear, dear, you do n''t mean to say you have been all this afternoon writing that letter? 39549 Did Miss Aspinall send you here?"
39549Did you mind?
39549Did you not hear the allusion to her death? 39549 Did you see that little girl with the rosy cheeks, mamma?
39549Do you mean to defy me?
39549Do you mind going home?
39549Do you not see Miss Ledbury?
39549French poetry,I gasped,"oh, Haddie, how can you remind me of it?"
39549Geraldine what?
39549Have you no work, my dear?
39549How do you do, my dear?
39549How much may we spend?
39549How old are you?
39549I mean, are you sorry to go?
39549I say,she went on again,"what_ is_ your name?
39549Is Mrs. Cranston your aunt?
39549Is that why you are living here?
39549Is-- can I see cook?
39549It was me you were talking about, was n''t it?
39549Mamma, dear,I half said, half whispered,"what is it?"
39549Mamma,I repeated,"may I say something?
39549Mamma,I said suddenly,"if she is a nice little girl like what her mamma was, might n''t I have her to come and see me and play with me?
39549May she stay with me a little?
39549Must I go back to school?
39549Of course not-- don''t you believe my word? 39549 Oh, is Myra going away?"
39549One of the lions?
39549She''s nine years old, he said she was-- didn''t he, mamma?
39549The what?
39549Then what do you mean? 39549 Then why are you a boarder?"
39549Then why have you come to school?
39549This is my little daughter-- you have seen her before, I suppose?
39549Was n''t it kind of Miss Fryer, mamma?
39549Was she good to you,asked my new friend,"or was she very strict?"
39549We do n''t mind if you are ever so long,I said;"do we, Haddie?"
39549We may stop at Miss Fryer''s, may n''t we, mamma?
39549We''re going right over the sea-- did you know?--isn''t it splendid? 39549 Well, well,"he began, looking at me with a rather odd smile,"and how is the little runaway?
39549What are you doing, Gerry?
39549What are you doing?
39549What are you saying about me?
39549What are you saying?
39549What do you mean? 39549 What is my little girl sure about?"
39549What is this place, Haddie? 39549 What more have you?"
39549What''s the matter?
39549What''s your name?
39549When did you come?
39549Where are the lions, Haddie?
39549Where can all my other things be?
39549Where did they take you to in the night?
39549Where do you come from?
39549Why did he say my''poor''daughter?
39549Why did n''t I know when he came?
39549Why do n''t you speak? 39549 Why do you say that?"
39549Why do you stare so? 39549 Why, Haddie,"I said,"do you mind so much?
39549Would you just tell me one thing, mamma,I went on;"it is n''t anything that you''re really unhappy about, is it?"
39549Yes,I said in the same tone,"but you did give them my message, Myra?"
39549Yes_ who_, if you please? 39549 You have not been writing too much, dearie, I hope?"
39549You remember me, dear?
39549You will write to me, Miss Geraldine?
39549You''ll not tell Emma, then? 39549 = Rhyme? 39549 And are you going to stay to dinner every day, or only when it rains, like Lizzie Burt?
39549And where was your mamma?"
39549And who brought me in here, and why did n''t I know when I was put in this bed?"
39549Are you going to sleep or are you crying?
39549Ca n''t you give me your message-- Miss?"
39549Can you climb up on to my back?"
39549Could I not content myself with writing about my own affairs-- my lessons, the books I was reading, and so on?
39549Could n''t we have jolly games of hide- and- seek, Sis?
39549Did n''t Miss Lardner say what''s your name?
39549Do you mean there''s been letters or news about father and mamma that I do n''t know about?"
39549Do you think I''ll have to go back to- morrow?"
39549Do you think she will play among the furniture-- where the lions are?"
39549Do you think, Myra, that when I''m back at school your grandmamma will sometimes ask me to come to see you?"
39549Do you too think that I tell stories?"
39549Do your hands want washing?
39549Haddie?
39549Has she had anything to eat?"
39549Have you seen her lately?"
39549He knows you quite well, and you know him, do n''t you?
39549How could I tell at the end of three days if I should like them or not?
39549How could a lion turn into an elephant?
39549How is your throat now, dear?"
39549How very old- world it would seem to the children of to- day-- I wonder if any of you know it?
39549I had meant to go to Mrs. Selwood''s, or at least to get her address and write to her-- but where was I now?--what should I do?
39549I have seen Miss Ledbury this morning already, and----""Was she dreadfully angry?"
39549I wonder if any of my readers can guess what this delightful news was?
39549Is it fairyland or-- or-- heaven?"
39549Is this your garden, mamma, and may we stay with you always now?
39549Is this your house, Miss Fenmore, and how do you know about the lions?
39549It reminded me of something-- what was it?
39549Let me see-- how old is the little girl now-- seven, eight?"
39549Lion gone?
39549May I?"
39549May n''t I read aloud to you?
39549My dear child, why did you not come to me, instead of wandering all about Great Mexington streets in the dark and the rain?
39549Oh, Myra, is n''t it beautiful?"
39549Oh, Myra, what_ shall_ I do when I have to go back to school?
39549Shall we walk on, my little girl, I think you must be tired, and let Haddie invest in cakes and run after us?"
39549Should I ever be admitted to share their fun?
39549That was the case about these very verses, was it not, Miss Aspinall?"
39549Then I stopped short and asked myself again"what should I do?"
39549Unhealthy?
39549Was n''t it good of the lions to bring us?
39549Well, as you say, brother, we have been expecting her for a good while, have we not?"
39549What did it all mean?
39549What do you know about it?"
39549What had I done till now-- had I had a governess?
39549What had I said that could be called rude?
39549What was the use of telling mamma that I did not like Miss Aspinall, and that I could not bear Miss Broom?
39549What was the use of waiting here?
39549What_ I_ think you''re so silly for is_ minding_--why need you care what that old Broom says?
39549What_ could_ it be?
39549What_ should_ I do?
39549When had my dream begun, or was I still dreaming?
39549Where had I been?
39549Where was I?
39549Who was Lizzie Burt?
39549Whom could I ask?
39549Why did n''t you say so?"
39549Will Haddie come too?"
39549Would it please mamma, or would it make school- life any happier for me to take up such prejudices?
39549Yes, Miss----?"
39549You promise?"
39549[ Illustration:"MY POOR LITTLE GIRL, WHAT_ IS_ THE MATTER?"]
39549_ Does n''t_ she look nice?"
39549_ To face page_ 71"LITTLE GIRLS MUST NOT CONTRADICT, AND MUST NOT BE RUDE"82"MY POOR LITTLE GIRL, WHAT_ IS_ THE MATTER?"
30974... if you would come and play Rabbits with us?
30974A practical one?
30974Almost a ruin, is n''t it?
30974And are you--_dead_?
30974And how did you get on all this time?
30974And its rhyme?
30974And now, please, what comes next?
30974And the first jump?
30974And then----?
30974And they can never escape?
30974And we shall escape together?
30974And well educated?
30974And what else?
30974And what happens in the ether, please?
30974And where to?
30974And who is he?
30974And why, pray, should I not understand?
30974And you never told me all this time?
30974Anyhow, we shall escape together when the chance comes, sha n''t we?
30974Are you ready?
30974Atone,he asked,"what does''_ atone_''mean?"
30974Bad Things?
30974But do you remember_ me_?
30974But how are_ you_ going to escape?
30974But how did you get in?
30974But if I miss----?
30974But the stars,he went on,"have they got things they send out too-- forces, I mean, like the trees?
30974But why ca n''t we escape at once?
30974But, now tell me,she added, in a more serious voice,"have you had any pain yet?"
30974Come now, little man,he said more gently,"what''s the matter, eh?"
30974Come, children, do n''t you hear me? 30974 Do you_ really_ think so, father?"
30974Does he know we''re going?
30974Does n''t it belong to your father, then?
30974Escape from what?
30974Hard- headed?
30974Have you_ all_ lost your tongues?
30974Have_ you_ got any circulation?
30974How can I be so old and so ignorant? 30974 How could it be?"
30974How could you?
30974How do you know?
30974How in the world did you get out?
30974How long have I been uncon----?
30974How old am I_ really_?
30974Hunting what?
30974I can get thinner though, ca n''t I?
30974I mean, has_ your_ heart stopped beating?
30974I mean, if we escape and I get back into my body,he whispered,"will you get back into yours too?"
30974I never saw you before, did I? 30974 I sha n''t touch the ground then?"
30974Is he such a fright?
30974Is it_ very_ difficult to use them?
30974Is that the person who brought me in here this morning at such a frightful pace?
30974Is the mystery so_ very_ great?
30974James, why did n''t you come and play with your brothers and sisters just now?
30974James,said the Colonel in a serious tone,"do n''t you know that you are getting too old now for that sort of thing?
30974Jimbo, dear, where have you been? 30974 No one actually eats or drinks here----""But I''m solid,"he said,"am I not?"
30974None at all-- anywhere?
30974None_ there_?
30974Oh, then I''m dead, am I?
30974On me?
30974So we can start----?
30974Then are you dead, too?
30974Then is the body younger than the soul?
30974Then the moment you call I''m to start?
30974Then what''s_ your_ name?
30974Then you are beginning to love me a little, are n''t you?
30974Then you ca n''t have it pulled down?
30974Then you do n''t remember me at all?
30974Watching?
30974Well, Nixie, child, what do you want now?
30974What is its history, and who used to live in it?
30974What is the matter? 30974 What new nonsense is this now?"
30974What will come to- night?
30974What will happen, though, if I do n''t find you?
30974What''s that? 30974 What''s the matter, child?"
30974What''s the matter, darling child?
30974When can we try?
30974Where am I, mother?
30974Where''s Jimbo?
30974Where''s he been all night, then?
30974Where-- what-- making pictures?
30974Where?
30974Who am I? 30974 Who are you, please, and how_ did_ you get in?"
30974Who told you there were bad things in the Empty House?
30974Who''s watching?
30974Why are you all so mysterious about it?
30974Why did n''t he come and play too?
30974Why drips the rain so cold?
30974Why hangs the moon so red?
30974Why not for sleeping?
30974Why not?
30974Why not?
30974Why? 30974 Wo n''t you come to me?"
30974You mean Things that could hurt?
30974You must wait till you hear me calling----"But sha''n''t we start together?
30974You''re not a trick of His, like the voices, I mean?
30974You''ve quite forgotten?
30974After a moment he added,"Am I an old man?
30974Am I-- going off somewhere-- where you ca n''t follow?
30974And a third called with a distant laughter from behind a star--"Why sings the wind so shrill?"
30974And what''s been done to you?"
30974Are you one of them?"
30974But the body is no older than itself-- of course, how could it be?"
30974But was he being carried?
30974But what in the world was this?
30974But why, oh, why did they keep shouting these horrid snatches of the song through the sky?
30974Can you remember anything?"
30974Could it be some animal like a horse after all?
30974Dare you fly out alone Through the shadows that wave, When the course is unknown And there''s no one to save?
30974Do they send out something that makes us feel sad, or happy, or strong, or weak?"
30974Have n''t I been born yet, or something funny like that?"
30974Have n''t you seen them yet?
30974He glanced at his sisters, gaining so much support from their enigmatical faces that he added, for their especial benefit,"How could she?"
30974How can I remember you?
30974How could the moon dwindle so suddenly to the size of a mere lamp flame?
30974How could the whole expanse of the heavens shrink in an instant to the limits of a little, cramped room?
30974How do you know that there''s anything inside?
30974How in the world had the children got in and out?
30974How in the world it got in was the principal thought in his mind, and after that: what in the world was it?
30974Is this the only way I can save you-- by losing you?"
30974Oh, when would the governess call to him?
30974Oh, why did not the governess come for him?
30974Or was it the voices of children all singing together very low?
30974She took another long look round the room, and then, in a still lower whisper, bent over him, and asked:"Have you any pain?"
30974Tell me, are they getting ready for you at last, and am I to lose you after all?
30974Then the white face came close over the pillow, and a voice full of tenderness whispered,"My darling boy, do n''t you know me?
30974Was he actually out of his body, and was his name really Jimbo?
30974Was he, perhaps, over a range of high mountains, and was this the sound of the tumbling torrents?
30974Was it going to sit there for ever watching him?
30974Was it the wind he heard?
30974Was that a voice borne on the wings of some lost wind?
30974We can fly in the ether----""Where''s that?"
30974We can, because----""Is that why it was good for me to get lighter and thinner?"
30974Were all these things really true that she told him?
30974Were not the words associated with something in his past that had been unpleasant?
30974Were these things real or were they not?
30974What for?"
30974What in the world d''ye mean, I wonder?"
30974What in the world did it all mean?
30974What''s he doing?"
30974What''s that funny name you call me?"
30974When would he be able to dash through the open window and join her in the sky?
30974Where had he come from?
30974Where have you gone to?
30974Where in the world had he spent the other years of his life, the forgotten years?
30974Who was he?
30974Why all this about the moon?
30974Why is it?"
30974Why should his heart beat so tumultuously all at once?
30974Why was it a cruel moon, and why should it attract and persuade and entice him?
30974Why was there no voice in the sky?
30974Would he be able to keep up the start he had?
30974Would it chase him?
30974Would it run like a man or like an animal, on four legs or on two?
30974Would this awful creature hunt him all night long into the daylight, or would he be forced back into the Empty House in sheer exhaustion?
30974You are giving up everything to save me, are n''t you?
30974You will save me, wo n''t you?"
30974he added, looking up bravely into the black visage,"because the doors are both locked on the outside, and I could n''t get out?"
30974he asked,"or nearly dead?"
30974he cried half aloud to himself upon the bed,"why are n''t you here to- night?
43936Am I really wonderful?
43936And are n''t you?
43936And back to Kansas?
43936And now,said Dorothy,"how am I to get back to Kansas?"
43936And she let you go again?
43936And what became of them?
43936And why is that?
43936Are n''t they beautiful?
43936Are there any other lions in this forest?
43936Are there many of these mice which call you Queen and are willing to obey you?
43936Are you a Munchkin?
43936Are you going?
43936Are you not a great Wizard?
43936Are you not going to make them your slaves?
43936Are you sure that Oz will see you?
43936But could n''t you be mended?
43936But how about my courage?
43936But how about the voice?
43936But is it a kind heart?
43936But is n''t everything here green?
43936But suppose we can not?
43936But this is terrible,said the Tin Woodman;"how shall I ever get my heart?"
43936Ca n''t you get down?
43936Ca n''t you give me brains?
43936Can you tell us where the Emerald City is?
43936Certainly,answered the Scarecrow;"how do you do?"
43936Did n''t you know water would be the end of me?
43936Did you groan?
43936Did you speak?
43936Do n''t you suppose we could rescue them?
43936Do you not see us?
43936Do you think Oz could give me courage?
43936Do you think,he asked,"If I go to the Emerald City with you, that the great Oz would give me some brains?"
43936Does he never go out?
43936Does n''t anyone else know you''re a humbug?
43936Glinda is a good Witch, is n''t she?
43936Have you any?
43936Have you brains?
43936How about my heart?
43936How can I cross the desert?
43936How can I get there?
43936How can I get to her castle?
43936How can I help being a humbug,he said,"when all these people make me do things that everybody knows ca n''t be done?
43936How do you feel now?
43936How do you feel?
43936How far is it to the Castle of Glinda?
43936How far is it to the Emerald City?
43936How long will it be,the child asked of the Tin Woodman,"before we are out of the forest?"
43936How shall we cross the river?
43936How shall we get down?
43936How was it that you appeared to me as a great Head?
43936How, then, are we to find her?
43936How?
43936How?
43936I never killed anything, willingly,she sobbed;"and even if I wanted to, how could I kill the Wicked Witch?
43936I''m pretty well, thank you,replied Dorothy, politely;"how do you do?"
43936If I put an end to your enemy will you bow down to me and obey me as King of the Forest?
43936Is he a good man?
43936Is he made of tin, or stuffed?
43936Is he stuffed?
43936Is he tame?
43936Is n''t it a beauty?
43936Is the Wicked Witch really destroyed?
43936Is there anything we can do,it asked,"to repay you for saving the life of our Queen?"
43936Is there no one who can help me?
43936Of course not,answered Dorothy;"how should I?"
43936Or I my brains?
43936Or I my courage?
43936Really?
43936This is strange,exclaimed Dorothy;"what shall we do?"
43936To be sure they could,cried the Scarecrow;"why did n''t we think of that before?"
43936Well, then, what can be done?
43936What are the Kalidahs?
43936What are your commands?
43936What can I do for you, my child?
43936What can I do for you?
43936What can we do to save him?
43936What can we do, then?
43936What did you say?
43936What do you wish?
43936What is he like?
43936What is it?
43936What is it?
43936What is that?
43936What is that?
43936What is your trouble?
43936What makes you a coward?
43936What must I do?
43936What promise?
43936What shall we do now?
43936What shall we do now?
43936What shall we do now?
43936What shall we do?
43936What shall we do?
43936What was that?
43936When shall we start?
43936Where did you get the mark upon your forehead?
43936Where is Kansas?
43936Where is he?
43936Where is the Emerald City?
43936Where is this City?
43936Where is this great spider of yours now?
43936Which road leads to the Wicked Witch of the West?
43936Who are the Munchkins?
43936Who are the Wizards?
43936Who are you, and where are you going?
43936Who are you, and why do you seek me?
43936Who are you?
43936Who are you?
43936Who is Aunt Em?
43936Who is Glinda?
43936Who melted her?
43936Who will go first?
43936Why are those needles and pins sticking out of your head?
43936Why did n''t you walk around the hole?
43936Why do n''t you run and jump?
43936Why do you have to obey the charm of the Golden Cap?
43936Why do you want water?
43936Why do you wish to see Oz?
43936Why not?
43936Why should I do this for you?
43936Why should I do this for you?
43936Why should I do this?
43936Why should I give you courage?
43936Why, do n''t you know?
43936Why?
43936Why?
43936Will you take me to her?
43936Wo n''t they hurt me?
43936Wo n''t you go with me?
43936Wo n''t you tell me a story, while we are resting?
43936A woman opened it just far enough to look out, and said,"What do you want, child, and why is that great Lion with you?"
43936Among them was the Queen herself, who asked, in her squeaky little voice,"What can I do for my friends?"
43936As Dorothy entered they looked at her curiously, and one of them whispered,"Are you really going to look upon the face of Oz the Terrible?"
43936At this the Queen of the Mice stuck her head out from a clump of grass and asked, in a timid voice,"Are you sure he will not bite us?"
43936But how can I help it?"
43936But tell me, is it a civilized country?"
43936But what do you want?"
43936But what shall we do?"
43936But, comrades, what shall we do now?"
43936Can you help me find my way?"
43936Dorothy at once ran back to the cottage and found the oil- can, and then she returned and asked, anxiously,"Where are your joints?"
43936Dorothy then gave her the Golden Cap, and the Witch said to the Scarecrow,"What will you do when Dorothy has left us?"
43936Finally he said:"Why not call the Winged Monkeys, and asked them to carry you over the desert?"
43936How can she do so?"
43936How did you get me out?"
43936How did you happen to be here?"
43936How did you manage to escape the great Wildcat?"
43936If you, who are Great and Terrible, can not kill her yourself, how do you expect me to do it?"
43936Is the other one stuffed, also?"
43936Shall we go there?"
43936She had such a frightened little voice that Dorothy stopped and said,"Why not?"
43936The King bowed low before Dorothy, and asked,"What is your command?"
43936The Tin Woodman, raising his axe, rushed toward the little man and cried out,[ Illustration]"Who are you?"
43936Then Oz asked,"What do you wish me to do?"
43936Then he said:"Do you suppose Oz could give me a heart?"
43936Then said the voice:"Where did you get the silver shoes?"
43936Then she noticed Dorothy''s Golden Cap, and said,"Why do n''t you use the charm of the Cap, and call the Winged Monkeys to you?
43936Then the Witch looked at the big, shaggy Lion and asked,"When Dorothy has returned to her own home, what will become of you?"
43936There was another Munchkin with him, and the first thing I heard was the farmer saying,"''How do you like those ears?''
43936They looked again in every part of the room, and then, seeing no one, Dorothy asked,"Where are you?"
43936They seemed greatly surprised to see so strange a company, and while the woman was busy laying the table the man asked,"Where are you all going?"
43936Turning to the Tin Woodman, she asked:"What will become of you when Dorothy leaves this country?"
43936What could the little woman possibly mean by calling her a sorceress, and saying she had killed the wicked Witch of the East?
43936What do you command?"
43936What do you mean by coming here and frightening my cow?"
43936What ever shall we do?"
43936What is that little animal you are so tender of?"
43936When he saw Dorothy and her companions the man asked,"What do you wish in the Emerald City?"
43936When they reached the castle Dorothy said to the Winkies,"Are any of your people tinsmiths?"
43936When, at last, he came back, Dorothy asked,"Have you seen Oz?"
43936Who are you, and why do you seek me?"
43936Who are you, and why do you seek me?"
43936Who are you, and why do you seek me?"
43936Why do you seek me?"
43936Wo n''t you let me carry you back to Kansas and stand you on Aunt Em''s mantle- shelf?
43936[ Illustration] The little old woman took the slate from her nose, and, having read the words on it, asked,"Is your name Dorothy, my dear?"
43936[ Illustration]"But who was she?"
43936[ Illustration]"What is it?"
43936[ Illustration]"Why do you wish to see the terrible Oz?"
43936are you back again?"
43936asked Dorothy;"the Munchkin farmer who made you?"
43936asked the Scarecrow, when he had stretched himself and yawned,"and where are you going?"
43936cried Dorothy;"are you a real witch?"
43936exclaimed the girl;"are you going with me?"
43936he enquired;"and who is Oz?"
43936said the girl, anxiously;"what will protect him?"
43936said the princess;"ca n''t you see these are strangers, and should be treated with respect?"
43936she cried, folding the little girl in her arms and covering her face with kisses;"where in the world did you come from?"
48593Am I that Story?
48593And are you Mother Goose?
48593And did she tell you all about the Queerbodies''house and the golden jars?
48593And did you really see that enchanted Prince with your very own eyes?
48593And did you see anything of the big doll that beats you with flails?
48593And did you stop there?
48593And he would do whatever you bade him?
48593And is it still there?
48593And now what will you have as a reward?
48593And the story grandmother forgot-- oh,_ do_ you suppose I could find that story?
48593And what was it?
48593And who lives in the little furry house with the chimneys like pointed ears?
48593And you passed the dragon?
48593And you''ll bring me back word?
48593Are you real, or are you only a dream?
48593Are you really that Fatima?
48593But could n''t you let me see it? 48593 But how about the rhyme?"
48593But how did you happen to come here?
48593But is this magic gold so hard to find? 48593 But what would become of Aladdin and his castle and everything if I did?"
48593But where are they? 48593 But why not?
48593But wo n''t he follow us?
48593But, brother, how can we do that?
48593Ca n''t you unlock it?
48593Ca n''t you use something else?
48593Can everybody that comes here make puzzles like those?
48593Can you hear any sound?
48593Could n''t I go there to find it?
48593Could n''t we go round?
48593Dear Fairy Tale, where are you?
48593Did you come to look for me?
48593Did you ever see a Queerbodies''puzzle when it was finished?
48593Did you say that if you held that lamp and rubbed it a genie would come?
48593Did you want to see me?
48593Do n''t you remember the story begins with a castle where the princess lives?
48593Do you have puzzles like that at home?
48593Do you indeed dare to weave your spells against the queen?
48593Do you mean,said Ellen,"that if you had anything to begin with you could_ really_ make something to ride on?"
48593Do you suppose that is one of the Queerbodies?
48593Do you think we can get there before him?
48593Do you want to go and see mistress?
48593Do you? 48593 Give me a ride?"
48593Has Middling finished his roast beef?
48593Hast thou any further commands?
48593Have n''t you anything in your pocket to begin on?
48593Have you dolls?
48593He frightens me,Ellen whispered back,"but what can I do?"
48593How do you come to be leading it about the country? 48593 How is that?"
48593How would you do it?
48593How?
48593I do n''t suppose your gander could carry double?
48593I suppose you know my story? 48593 I wonder if I were to blow upon the horn the huntsman gave me whether some one would hear and answer?"
48593I wonder if they thought I had come here to steal the lamp?
48593If I were to get a castle for you could you finish the story?
48593Is it not just as I told you? 48593 Is not this the magic gold?"
48593Is that the story?
48593Is there no light before us yet?
48593May I come in?
48593May my gander come in too?
48593Me go?
48593Mistress, did I not beat them well?
48593Mistress, do you see light before us?
48593Mistress,said the gander,"Where is the key that the lady Fatima gave you?
48593Now, what have you been doing?
48593Oh, what''s that?
48593Shall I return it to the castle?
48593Sister Anne, Sister Anne, do you still hear nothing?
48593So then you cooked some porridge?
48593Stringing stars?
48593Then what are you going to do?
48593Then what shall we do?
48593Then what_ am_ I to do?
48593Then what_ are_ we to do?
48593Was that you blowing a horn?
48593We are safe now, but we ca n''t stay here; and how are we to get away without his catching us?
48593Well, is n''t that it there?
48593Well, the great thing now is how are you to get out?
48593What are some of the other tricks he plays?
48593What are some of the things they do?
48593What are you listening to? 48593 What became of it?"
48593What can I do, mother?
48593What did you forget?
48593What did you suppose would live in Mother Goose''s house?
48593What do you mean by coming and disturbing me here in my cave?
48593What in the world''s the matter now?
48593What is a scarecrow?
48593What is it, Jack?
48593What is it, Sister? 48593 What is it, mother?"
48593What is that?
48593What is that?
48593What is this task they have set you?
48593What mischief shall we begin with?
48593What shall I do with the lamp?
48593What story is he in?
48593What was it about?
48593What was that?
48593What was the trick?
48593What wouldst thou have?
48593What''s its name?
48593What''s that?
48593What''s the matter, you poor little pig?
48593What''s this?
48593What_ do_ you mean?
48593Where are we now?
48593Where are you going this pleasant day?
48593Where do you live?
48593Where do you live?
48593Where''s our good dinner of soup and meat?
48593Who are these whom you have dared to bring hither?
48593Who are you, and what do you want here?
48593Who are you?
48593Who caught it?
48593Who is it?
48593Who is there?
48593Who is there?
48593Who is this?
48593Who live in all these other houses?
48593Who lives in the house beyond that?
48593Who lives there?
48593Who was Snowdrop?
48593Why are you here?
48593Why did n''t you say so before? 48593 Why did n''t you see it before?"
48593Why do n''t you make a scarecrow to frighten them away? 48593 Why do n''t you take me up on your wings and fly out of the window?"
48593Why do you say that?
48593Why, granny, do n''t you know the little bear''s voice was so thin and shrill it woke little Silverhair right up? 48593 Why, is that a forgotten story?"
48593Why, one time when our raspberries were ripe old Shave- head came here--"Who''s Shave- head?
48593Why, what is it made of?
48593Why, what is this?
48593Why? 48593 Will you have the golden harp?
48593Wilt thou now have the castle, the treasures, the slaves and horsemen that I promised thee?
48593Would you like to look inside?
48593Wouldst thou not wish to keep it?
48593Yes, but where could you get a castle, you little girl?
48593You are a real child, are n''t you? 48593 You have escaped me this time, but I have as much time to spend as you, and how will it be when you have to come out again?"
48593You naughty little pig, why did n''t you come home?
48593_ Aladdin!_ Do you mean the Aladdin who has the wonderful lamp?
48593After Ellen had looked at them she asked,"Did the goat paint them that way?"
48593Again the same voice within called,"Sister Anne, Sister Anne, do you hear nothing now?"
48593And then you have to come all that long way to get here again?"
48593And what do you want to set about, now that you are here?"
48593And where wilt thou have it?"
48593Are they good to eat?"
48593As the little pig hurried in through the door, Ellen asked of the other,"Is this your house?"
48593But did you come across the desert?"
48593But do you want to make it over?"
48593But hast thou no further wishes?"
48593But how about this lad?
48593But how did you find your way to the door, in the first place?"
48593But how will you get me down?"
48593But the father always wanted to be sure his goat had had enough, so he would go out himself and say,''Goat have you had enough to- day?''
48593But what did your forgotten story look like?
48593But what was all that we saw?
48593But would n''t you like to see it closer?
48593Ca n''t you remember?
48593Can you tell me anything about it?"
48593Did he come on the gander too?"
48593Did they think they could scare us with that?
48593Do n''t you think I look like the pictures?"
48593Do n''t you think he would let me look at it?"
48593Do n''t you?"
48593Do you know whether they''re cross giants or not?"
48593Do you see all these doorways?"
48593Do you think they''ll hurt us?
48593Every time before the boy brought the goat home he would ask,''Goat, have you had enough?''
48593Have I sent three sons packing from their father''s house and frightened a bear from his cave to be ordered out of my house at last by some pigs?"
48593Have you ever seen a bird after a little butterfly?
48593How do you suppose there could be rhymes unless there was something to make them about?"
48593How long is it since it was forgotten,--this story that you want?"
48593How_ can_ I destroy it?"
48593I guess I''ve been forgotten, have n''t I?
48593I meant are they pleasant, merry people?"
48593I punished him well for it, but what good did that do?
48593I suppose you''ve heard of Bluebeard, have n''t you?"
48593If you live near here would you mind taking care of him and seeing that he gets food and water?"
48593Is it your goat?"
48593Is that your gander?
48593Now you do n''t happen to have such a thing about you as a twig or a chip of wood?"
48593Only, how would you get there?
48593Or what?"
48593Or will you have a bag of golden money?
48593Presently she asked,"How many brothers have you?"
48593Queer looking house is n''t it?"
48593Shall I tell you the story?"
48593Suddenly a voice beside her said,"Why do you weep so bitterly, Princess?"
48593The slaves now rose from the ground with a relieved look,"And you are really not a magician?"
48593Then she asked,"Where do you live?"
48593Then,"Are you,--are you the forgotten Story I came to find?"
48593There Ellen knocked and a rough voice within asked,"Who is that knocking at my door?"
48593There was a moment''s silence, and then a voice within called,"Sister Anne, Sister Anne, did you hear anything?"
48593What are you doing here, child?"
48593What are you going to do with it?"
48593What did he do?"
48593What for?"
48593What was it, little Clara?
48593What was it?
48593What was it?
48593When she had reached that point she would stop and say,"Ah, what was it that came next?
48593Where did you come from, and where are you going?
48593Where did you get it?"
48593Who is there?"
48593Why did they shut the door?"
48593Will you let me see it?"
48593You wo n''t go away and leave me here alone again, will you?"
48593You''ll stay made up now, wo n''t you?"
48593[ Illustration]"Was that a parade that just went away?"
48593_ Chapter Eight__ Bluebeard''s House_"Mistress, do you see that gray mist before us?"
48593_ Do_ you suppose it''s there?"
48593he said to Ellen, looking at the pig with pride,"how is that for a riding- horse?"
39833''After all,''said Kathie,''third- class is n''t so bad, is it, Neville?
39833''And may we go to see Farmer Davis, aunty?''
39833''And the little girl-- your friend who has written to you-- is she not the same one you were speaking of the other day?''
39833''And you wo n''t forget about the pillows, miss?''
39833''And you''ll be the young lady and gentleman from Ty- gwyn?
39833''And,''Neville went on,''about writing to Aunt Clotilda?
39833''Are n''t you coming out, Kathie?''
39833''Are we near Frewern Bay now?''
39833''Are we, oh, are we there?''
39833''Are you--?
39833''Aunty, even though the house is n''t going to be yours any more, or ours, you''ll show us all the things in it, wo n''t you?''
39833''Aunty,''said Kathie, as Miss Clotilda was preparing to follow him,''may n''t I get up now?
39833''Best and every- day silver all together?''
39833''But are you sure she is an old maid?''
39833''But seriously, Phil, what do you mean?
39833''But they are not unkind to you at school, dear?''
39833''But why is it?
39833''But, Kathie,''said the little girl plaintively,''you wo n''t forget, will you?
39833''But, Martha,''said Clotilda again,''_ can_ I have them with me even for the holidays?
39833''Can this be little Kathie?
39833''Can we really?''
39833''Did she say so?''
39833''Do very long walks generally have that desirable effect?''
39833''Do you really think we are going to be poor always, Neville?''
39833''Do you really think, Neville,''she said,--''do you really and truly think aunty is going to ask her?''
39833''Do you see her?''
39833''Do you suppose she''ll give us porridge three times a day?
39833''Do you think she would perhaps, really?''
39833''Do you think there''s no chance of the will ever being found-- or the paper telling where it is?
39833''Do you think there''s no chance of the will ever being found?''
39833''Have you been very tidy, Kathie, without me?''
39833''Have you had a nice walk, and any adventures?''
39833''How should she know?''
39833''I say, Phil, it wo n''t be very cheerful if she''s going to go on groaning all the time over departed grandeur, will it?
39833''I think we''d better have our dinner now, Kathie, do n''t you?
39833''Is he dead?''
39833''Is it?''
39833''Is n''t_ this_ sea different to the beach at Bognor, Philippa?''
39833''Is that bran?''
39833''Is the lady not come?
39833''Is there nothing underneath, aunty?''
39833''It did n''t seem so far a way from Hafod to Ty- gwyn yesterday as in the carrier''s cart, did it, sir?''
39833''It does n''t seem to belong to it, and yet it looks grander than if it was in the middle of a town; does n''t it, Neville?''
39833''It was kind of Mr. Fanshaw to let me come, was n''t it?
39833''It would be too disappointing if they decided they did not care to come now that we have settled all so nicely, would it not, Martha?''
39833''Kathie, has n''t aunty any more to be made over?''
39833''Kathie,''--for by this time Kathie''s anxiety had drawn her out into the rain too,--''you hear?''
39833''Kathie,''said Neville, partly to change the conversation,''what''s become of our visit to Dol- bach?
39833''Like dried rose- leaves?''
39833''May we go to Dol- bach to- morrow?''
39833''Neville,''she said,''you''re quite sure there are n''t any smugglers now?''
39833''Not the kind of child to be discontented with plain ways-- our having only one servant, and so on, you know?''
39833''Oh, Neville,''she exclaimed,''what is the matter?
39833''Oh, do you live there?''
39833''Oh, miss,''Martha would remonstrate,''how could you ever think so?
39833''Old Farmer Davis''s?''
39833''She is a simple- minded child, is she not?''
39833''She writes as if she would have sent a couple of powdered footmen for us, does n''t she?''
39833''Stay; is there nothing I can put on the seat to make it softer?
39833''Sure, miss?
39833''The little girl who cries so?''
39833''Then do you think it''s no use looking anywhere?''
39833''Then the old part is very old indeed, I suppose?''
39833''Then_ did_ you speak of it to your brother, Kathie?
39833''Those things in the cupboard?''
39833''To please me?''
39833''To the sea?''
39833''Two, my dear?''
39833''Well?''
39833''Were the caves nice?''
39833''What are those queer- looking square things of different colours in there, aunty?''
39833''What are you going to sleep about Philippa?''
39833''What do you mean?''
39833''What do you say that for?''
39833''What does she mean by asking you at the end not to forget your promise?''
39833''What is it?
39833''What shall we do?''
39833''What was it you were going to say to me just when that cab came up, this morning?''
39833''What would they have done to us?''
39833''What''s the matter?''
39833''What, my dear?''
39833''What?''
39833''Where are the caves, Neville?
39833''Where are we?''
39833''Which way shall we go?''
39833''Which would you rather have, dear children?''
39833''Who is Farmer Davis?''
39833''Who was that on the stairs?''
39833''Who would have thought it?''
39833''Who''s there?
39833''Why are you in such a fuss about it, Phil?''
39833''Why do you dislike them?''
39833''Why do you say that?''
39833''Why, are you not ready, either?''
39833''Why, who do you know that''s old maids?''
39833''Will you fetch me a big spoon, Kathie?
39833''Would you like to rest a bit?''
39833''You are sure, then, John Parry, quite sure, you have not dropped or left it at the wrong house, or anything like that?''
39833''You do n''t really mean that, do you?
39833''You do n''t think now, as she could have had any reason for changing at the last?
39833''You do n''t want to see your old woman in the cottage near the creek, do you, Kathie?
39833''You''re going to play lawn- tennis, are n''t you, Kathie?''
39833''Your aunty''s not showed them to you?
39833''Your papa and mamma are n''t coming home?''
39833''_ Do n''t_ you think you could?
39833''to think it over''--''Yes; that''s sensible of her, is n''t it?''
39833123''WHERE ARE THE CAVES, NEVILLE?''
39833135 WHAT_ WAS_ THE MATTER?
39833And do you think you could give Phil some?
39833And so you''re Master David''s boy, to be sure, and missy there?''
39833And the things to eat here are so delicious; are n''t they, Neville?
39833And when are you going to fill the cushions with the new bran for us, Neville?
39833And when the inquiry came down the kitchen passage--''Well, Martha?''
39833And where is little Kathleen?
39833And would you believe, miss, where they was found?
39833And you and master here,''he went on,''you''ll be going to Ty- gwyn-- to Miss Powys''s?
39833And you''d have to get some stuff to scent it-- that one was scented, did n''t you notice?
39833Are there no smugglers now, Neville?
39833Are they really here?''
39833Are you sure it''s safe for you, Neville?''
39833Aunty,''she went on,''may we go there to- morrow?
39833Besides, what else_ could_ it be?
39833But how shall I get through the next two or three days till we can hear if she is coming?
39833But we could always have nice rests, could n''t we?
39833But what then?
39833But what was your promise?''
39833Ca n''t you write to her, Kathie?
39833Can you make out the writing?
39833Can you manage with the things you have till your trunk comes this evening?''
39833Come now, are you ready?
39833Could n''t we write to some shop in London?''
39833Did you ever see anything so neat?
39833Did you know, Neville?''
39833Do n''t I do it splendidly?
39833Do n''t we seem far away from London and from everywhere?
39833Do n''t you smell that nice old- fashioned sort of scent, Phil?
39833Do n''t you think so too?''
39833Do n''t you think the best thing would be for Neville and me to go a very long walk to calm me down?''
39833Do n''t you think, perhaps, you should tell her about the results of searching the pillows?''
39833Do you know I''ve been more than six years at school without ever having what_ I_ call a holiday till now?
39833Do you know we have taken down and shaken every book in the library?
39833Do you like the feeling?
39833Do you think it best to say nothing to her till we hear from her uncle, and to leave it to him to tell her?''
39833Do you think, Kathie, I could possibly make a pincushion like that to send to mamma for her birthday?
39833Do you want one too?''
39833Had Mr. Wynne- Carr suddenly changed his mind, and turned her out of the house?
39833Had she fallen ill?
39833Have you done any work, Kathie?
39833Have you swallowed a needle?''
39833Have you washed your hands?
39833How can I have made such a mistake?''
39833How could I find the will, or even look for it?
39833How could you know, a little girl like you?
39833I am quite sure your dear papa and mamma''--''Did you ever see such a lot of"dears"as she sticks in?
39833I suppose you do n''t want me to leave you the letter?''
39833I thought it best to write to the uncle, as her grandmother is so ill. You can give me the exact address, I suppose, and the uncle''s name?''
39833I wish I''--''What is the matter, Kathie?
39833I wonder if they''ve hunted through Mrs. Wynne''s desk and blotting books, and places like that?''
39833I wonder what house it is?
39833I wonder what she has got to say, and what she has written such a long letter about?''
39833I wonder what she will do?
39833If it''s as fine as it is to- day, might n''t we take our dinner with us, like the other day?
39833If the old lady-- old Mrs. Wynne-- had only looked at the paper before she put it in the envelope, there would n''t have been any, would there?''
39833Is it that the will''s found?''
39833Is n''t it a beautiful place, Kathleen?
39833Is n''t it_ horrid_, Philippa?''
39833Is there no one to meet you?''
39833It''ll be a little lesson to you to be more careful about such things; will it not, dear?''
39833It''ll be all right; but bless me,''--''_pless_ me,''she really said with her funny Welsh accent,--''how ever has there been such a mistake?''
39833It''s worst for aunty-- isn''t she sweet, Phil?
39833Kathie, if he was really a very good, nice man, do n''t you think he''d give it all back to your father?''
39833Let me see-- shall it be haunted?''
39833May I tell you what she says?''
39833May n''t she come to- morrow?
39833No?
39833Now just see here, Phil; should we turn in the inside lining or tack it down_ outside_?''
39833Now, what shall I show you first, children?
39833Oh, Kathie,_ do n''t_ you like her?''
39833Oh, do n''t you wish dreadfully it was going to be our home?''
39833Only there''s one difficulty-- where are you to get the boxes?
39833Or supposing you sit right down among the sacks?
39833Phil, why do n''t you look happy?
39833She was a clever lady too-- you''ll have seen the chairs she worked-- wasn''t it chairs?''
39833She-- I told her about the will, aunty-- you do n''t mind?
39833So may I write and tell her?
39833So what could be the matter?
39833Supposing we go now, Neville, on our way home?''
39833Supposing you go up to that little cottage-- there''s quite a nice old woman living there-- while I go on to the caves?
39833Tell me, dear, what can I do to make up for teasing you?''
39833The Captain''s a right sort of a young man by all accounts-- he ca n''t have done anything to displease the old lady?''
39833The china, perhaps, would please you the most?''
39833The paper that should have been in the envelope?''
39833We''ll just take a peep into my room on the way down-- isn''t it a jolly room, the very next door to yours, do you see?
39833Were you only teasing me when you said you had n''t?''
39833What are you so grave about?''
39833What can we give them to eat, Martha?''
39833What could it be?
39833What might they not find when they got to Ty- gwyn?
39833What room would Phil have?''
39833What was to be done?
39833What''s made them change so?''
39833What_ have_ you been doing?
39833What_ was_ the matter?
39833When do old maids begin?''
39833Wo n''t Miss Fraser be disappointed not to have to scold?''
39833Would n''t it, Neville?
39833Would you let us see them?
39833You like going long walks, do n''t you, dear?''
39833You would rather make them all by yourselves, would you not?''
39833You''re not going to write to Philippa to- day, are you?
39833[ Illustration: WHAT_ WAS_ THE MATTER?]
39833[ Illustration:''WHERE ARE THE CAVES, NEVILLE?'']
39833[ Illustration]''Did your brother bring you any letters, Kathie?''
39833_ Is n''t_ it funny?
39833_ might_ we have two of them?
39833and how kind and sweet your aunt is, and how good of you all to have me; and oh, Kathie, have you hunted well for the will?''
39833how could I find it when that stupid Miss Clotilda and all the lawyers and people have n''t been able to find it?
39833she went on,''do just tell me it is n''t that your mamma''s ill, is it?
39833what am I saying?
5651''Lora: you are happy now?
5651''The temptation of a bribe?
5651A poodle dog,cried I eagerly,"with his coat unclipped,--a rough brown dog?"
5651About this? 5651 Adelais, O Adelais,"he cried in his despair,"Why will you refuse me always?
5651Adelais,said he, presently,"you do not love me?"
5651Ah? 5651 And Antoine?"
5651And does she wish it too?
5651And the luck has not turned yet in Saint- Cyr''s case, I suppose?
5651And the mule?
5651And where does Noemi Bergeron live?
5651And who is your generous benefactor?
5651And will you always keep silence?
5651And you and he are engaged to be married, is it not so?
5651And you can tell me nothing about her now,--you know no more than that?
5651And you go alone?
5651And you-- have you business in Bale?
5651Both of us?
5651But it can not cost you much to live, Noemi?
5651But may I, without danger of seeming too inquisitive, ask you one question more?
5651Dead?
5651Dear friend, why should you leave us? 5651 Did no one ever tell you anything about its history,"I asked,"or were you never asked any questions about it until now?"
5651Do I look as if I were traveling for pleasure''s sake?
5651Do n''t you know, Miss?
5651Do n''t you know?
5651Do you, then,I asked,"desire the whole world to abandon the use of fire in preparing food and drink?"
5651Father,he asked, tremulously,"shall I not see that good Gluck again and tell the monks how he saved me, and how Fritz and Bruno brought you here?"
5651Have you any idea,said I, at last,"whether there''s any story connected with that place where I slept last night?
5651Have you told''Tista anything?
5651Hein?
5651How can that be?
5651How many?
5651How old do you suppose the patient to be?
5651I am to tell her this--asked Herr Ritter, recovering himself with a prodigious effort"from you?"
5651I sold half a metre of it about three weeks ago,said she slowly,"to Noemi Bergeron; you know her, perhaps?
5651If I tell you at all, boy,said the wine- merchant,"I shall tell you the truth; can you hold your peace like a man of discretion?"
5651If this be so,said I,"why did you build your house in the midst of this forest, and why are there no shutters to the windows?
5651Indeed?
5651Innocent-- she innocent? 5651 Is it a good road from here to--?"
5651Lace- making does not pay well, then?
5651My dear Frau''Lora, who thinks of such things twice? 5651 My little old gentleman dead?
5651No more?
5651So,said I, taking a chair beside her,"you are going to earn your living again by making lace?"
5651The fruit- seller''s child? 5651 The same price, then, Herr?
5651Then after yet another ten years had passed, they sent a third time, asking,''What dost thou claim to be, Gotama?'' 5651 Then, Maurice, you do n''t care to see her once more before you sail?
5651They,I interpolated,--"is the wife, then, also ill?"
5651This, then,asked''Lora, gently,"is why you gave up the world, that you might be alone?"
5651Tista, how is your mother today?
5651Was it a love story, Eugene?
5651What are trumps?
5651What did she say? 5651 What have I done, monsieur?"
5651What person is that?
5651What''s that to you?
5651What,--Antoine?
5651When are we to be shot?
5651Where am I?
5651Who are they?
5651Who is that?
5651Why,said they,"do you suffer your subjects to die for your daughter''s sake?
5651Will ye just step in now and take somethin''? 5651 Will you tell me, madame,"said I with my most agreeable air,"whether you recollect having sold any of that tinsel ribbon lately, and to whom?"
5651Willum, do n''t ye think as the gentleman might be put to sleep in the room up at the House, where George slept last time he was here to see us? 5651 Wo n''t you have one of them, Herr Ritter?"
5651Yes; Signora,he answered, mildly,"I bring you this letter; may I beg you will read it now, before I go?
5651You know the girl,she squeaked, eyeing me greedily,--"will you pay her rent?
5651You lave no regrets, then, Herr Ritter?
5651You say you slept last night in Steepside mansion?
5651You turned her out?
5651You will have no companions to join you?
5651-------------"How can you have the answer before I have written it?"
56517 for a moment?
5651And I awoke, repeating to myself the question,"How could one woman become three?"
5651And I heard them say one to another,"Brother, what hast thou in thy casket?"
5651And as for the lesser considerations of our daily being, what are they?
5651And the Carpenter answered,"How then shall the Temple of the Lord be builded?
5651And the other asked him,"What buildest thou, brother?"
5651And this open country under the eastern night,--is it not the same in which they were"abiding,"to whom that Birth was first angelically announced?
5651And was the wedding- day fixed?
5651And why do they write backwards?
5651And, shall I tell you what else I am thinking about, Herr Ritter?
5651Are not their very creeds pretexts for slaughter and persecution and fraud?
5651Are we not of three Ages, and is the temple yet perfected?"
5651Are you mad, or a fool, that you do not know every one can see from without into your lighted rooms?"
5651Art thou not of Solomon, and he of Christ?
5651Before I accept your kindness, will you permit me to tell you the nature of the journey I am making?
5651Birth lights, or funeral pyre?
5651But I may go and thank her myself; I may go and thank her?"
5651But he who sat next the last speaker answered,"Truth also is partial; for where is he among us who shall be able to see as God sees?"
5651But she made answer very sadly and slowly:--"Stephen, ought the living and the dead to we d with one another?
5651But supposing Adelais loved you, and my father and-- and-- everybody else you know, wished her to be your wife, how would you feel towards her then?
5651But tell me, Cameron, for you know I must needs divine something from all this; your sister loves my boy Maurice?"
5651But then, if not?
5651But what is that strange singing I hear beneath your cloak?"
5651But what noise is that yonder?"
5651But you are a strange old darling, are n''t you, Herr Ritter?"
5651But, Adelais, is there nothing more than this that troubles you?
5651But, pardon me, are you a stranger in this city, sir?"
5651Ca n''t you come over here and play for me?"
5651Can you tell me anything of your lodger, Noemi Bergeron?"
5651Can you tell?
5651Could I make them any wiser, purer, gentler, truer than they are?
5651Could I teach them to be honest in their dealings with each other, compassionate, considerate, liberal?
5651Could any one be angry with her?
5651Could it have been upon the page before I turned it?
5651Do n''t you see my heart is breaking for love of you?
5651Do n''t you think him like a baby, monsieur?"
5651Do they not support even their holiest truths, their sincerest beliefs, by organised systems of deceit and chicanery?
5651Do you think me a child to be fooled by such a tale?"
5651Does monsieur know me, then?"
5651Does not this suffice?--is not the end great enough to justify the means?"
5651For him I can not refuse the money; can I, Herr?
5651For of what value to man is the Mind without the Soul?
5651Gleams from the altar- lamps seven?
5651Have you been there this evening?"
5651Have you found it sweet, Frau''Lora?
5651Have you not heard the story of my lion?"
5651Have you not lost a brown poodle with a ribbon like this round his throat?"
5651Have you not often spoken before of dying, and yet have lived on?
5651How can I get money-- and get it quickly-- for her sake and for the child''s?''
5651How can that be?"
5651How could I tell him that he interested me so much as to make me long to know the romance which, I felt convinced, attached to his expedition?
5651How could a myth give me this living bird?"
5651How could he tell her that Maurice had already found himself a rich handsome wife in India?
5651How shall we understand this word` perfection''?"
5651I repeated,"Noemi dead?"
5651I suppose you will be married soon now, wo n''t you?"
5651If they have not heard the prophets, nor even the divine teacher of Nazareth, shall I be able to do them any good?
5651In the mangled corpses and entrails of these victims our augurs find the knowledges we seek,""And what knowledges are they?"
5651Is it the breaking of day?
5651Is it the glare of a fire?
5651Is it your wish then that these two should marry?"
5651Is n''t it good of him?
5651Is this the bitter end of all, and must I lose my darling so?
5651May you tell me, as we sit here together?
5651O why should you die now and break my heart outright?"
5651Or did he sink into the reeling swirl of the foaming waters, and die more mercifully in their steel- dark depths?
5651Or shall I never leave purgatory, but burn, and burn, and burn there always uncleansed?
5651Presently I ventured another question:"You go on business, perhaps-- not on pleasure?"
5651Shall I ever go to paradise-- to paradise where the saints are?
5651Shall I tell it to you, Lizzie?
5651She must have known he was married, for why else did he not marry her?
5651She paused at the door and added shyly,"You will really come tomorrow morning?"
5651She put her hand into his, and fixing the clear light of her brown eyes full upon him:"Why,"she said, hurriedly,"do you ask me this?
5651Shortly after the dream began, my partner addressed me, saying,"Do you play by luck or by skill?"
5651Should I go to bed?
5651Should I, too, be sucked in and absorbed, and perhaps C. after me, knowing nothing of my fate?
5651Signs of the Times Eyes of the dawning in heaven?
5651Silence?
5651Slept well last night, sir?"
5651Sparks from the opening of hell?
5651Stephen, Stephen, do n''t you see that I am dying?"
5651That is so, is it not, monsieur,--is it not?"
5651That she is poor, in want, widowed, and almost dying?"
5651The boy''Tista surely came with the morning, and learned at last, even though too late, who had been his unknown friend?"
5651The idea flashed on me that he would certainly turn, and then-- what could happen?
5651The world?
5651Then they said,"Where is that country of which you speak, and who is this wonderful Princess?"
5651This empty picture had, moreover, an odd metallic coloring which fascinated me; and saying to myself"Is there really any painting on it?"
5651To what end do you plod there every day,--you who are wifeless and childless, and have no need of money for yourself?
5651Was I doomed?
5651Was he speared on those terrible shafts of rock below, or was his life dashed out in horrible crimson splashes against the cliffside?
5651Was it the shock of an emotion coming unexpected and intense after all those dreary weeks of futile watchfulness?
5651Was it the strong love in St. Aubyn''s cry that broke through the spell of disease and thrilled his child''s dulled nerves into life?
5651Was this sarcastic?
5651Well, Herr Ritter, I daresay you think my story a very long one, do n''t you?
5651What can you gain by shooting an old man such as he?"
5651What do you think of it now, Herr Ritter?
5651What if indeed I have been dreaming; what if this, after all, should be the real world, and the other a mere fantasy?"
5651What is Adelais Cameron to me, when all my world is here?"
5651What is the matter?"
5651What is this Inn, I wondered, all the rooms of which are haunted, and in which the Christ can not be born?
5651What more could she want?
5651What say you to taking me along with you?
5651What wonder that Philip had been deceived into believing her false?
5651What, have you lost him too, then, as well as Bambin?"
5651What, then, did the father do?
5651Where is he among us who could attain to such a state?
5651Where then is this guide?
5651Who are They?"
5651Who could have anticipated or suspected this cheerful welcome, these entertaining literati, these innocent- looking frescoes?
5651Who could have foreseen so deadly a horror in such a guise?
5651Who shall say?
5651Why did not the Gods decree my death before I brought thee into the world?"
5651Why doom us to perish daily by the poisonous breath of the dragon?"
5651Why must those always die who are needed most, while such as I live on from year to year?
5651Why should the Soul be respected where nothing else is spared?
5651Why should you have taken him out before the eyes of the cat?"
5651Why will you do these things?"
5651Will they let me in there?--will they suffer my soul among them?
5651Will you come back with me, for I think she has something particular to say to you?"
5651Will you have them?"
5651Will you marry Pauline this autumn and take her with you to the south?''
5651Will you not wait for it?"
5651Will you suffer the-- the fault of ten years ago to bear weight upon your sisterly kindness,--your human compassion and sympathy, now?"
5651Ye look tired like, this morning; didna get much rest p''raps?
5651You chose to be silent?"
5651You do n''t want to say goodbye?"
5651You have been to the town again?"
5651You remember, Lizzie, what a wonderfully bright and beautiful sunset it was this evening?
5651You will not refuse me the last request I shall make you, Phil?
5651You wish to speak to me?"
5651` And the child?''
5651` Do you believe I would have done what I did for mere coin?"
5651` What ails you, foolish old woman?
5651a message?"
5651and I do n''t think she would mind my asking her this, though we did part in anger; do you?
5651but ought I to take it, Herr?"
5651can he be-- do you think-- can he be an Angel in disguise?
5651cried he, his whole manner changing in a moment from easy indifference to earnest interest:"what, you will part with this after all?
5651he groaned in his unutterable despair;"is there no hope, no redemption, no retrieving of the past?
5651how am I to send the answer?
5651no?
5651said the gentleman, looking up from his book;"what is that?"
5651she cried; and her voice was half choked with contending anger and despair,"I am his wife; and what then is she?
5651she said,"what have you done?
5651she sent me a note?
5651was her retort, as she paused in her meal and stared at me;"do you want to buy the rest of it?"
5651what has happened?
5651where are you?"
5651you have been?