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 |
---|---|
11883 | Are You a Daisy? |
11883 | What must I_ do_ to give the guests a good time? |
11883 | ANNOUNCEMENTS AND SHOWERS"How shall I announce my engagement?" |
11883 | And why make hard work of it when there are ways to entertain easily? |
11883 | For instance, he may say to the mock bridegroom,"Do you promise to obey this woman?" |
11883 | The following conundrum was also propounded: What is the longest word in the English language? |
11883 | They read:_ Do you like watermelon? |
11883 | This child asks each one in turn the question,"Are you a daisy?" |
43278 | ''At what time will it be ready?'' 43278 Always,"have I written? |
43278 | Are these your sentiments? 43278 Are you an author, madam?" |
43278 | Beef again? 43278 But what about the swells?" |
43278 | But, suppose my own supply of plums should not hold out, what am I to do? |
43278 | Do you care, sir,I inquired at the outset,"to undertake the dissemination of a bulky work on Political Economy?" |
43278 | How can the_ London Charivari_ possibly have anything to do with this most seductive of beverages? |
43278 | How do you manage to introduce such a delicious flavour into your salads? |
43278 | How is this? |
43278 | Ma, dear,once lisped a sweet little thing of six,"what doth God have for hith dinner?" |
43278 | My dear fellow,was the reply,"have you never heard of Mark_ Lemon_?" |
43278 | Shall I turn it out, sir? |
43278 | Tumarter, sir? 43278 What do you do-- what does the cook do, when the plums for her pudding run short? |
43278 | What would you like, sir? |
43278 | What''s in a name? |
43278 | What''s that? |
43278 | What? |
43278 | What? |
43278 | What? |
43278 | Who''s there? |
43278 | A simple enough recipe, surely? |
43278 | Add two quarts of water, boil for twenty minutes, strain through a-- where''s the brandy? |
43278 | And how can a man be cook and waiter at the same time? |
43278 | And what manner of man would add spice to that delight of old Ireland,"a jug o''punch?" |
43278 | And what sort of"baked meats"are usually served with desert? |
43278 | And why, unless directions to the contrary be given, is the modest whiting invariably placed, tail in mouth, on the frying pan? |
43278 | Author?" |
43278 | Both the last- named restoratives will be found valuable(?) |
43278 | Breathes there a man with soul so dead as not to appreciate the delights of Dingley Dell? |
43278 | But Mrs. Crupp said,''Do n''t say that; oysters was in, and why not them?'' |
43278 | But after all, as long as the beef be good, and can be carved without the aid of pick and spade, what does it matter? |
43278 | But can it possibly matter what the word means, when the mixture is smooth and savoury; and so deftly blended that no one flavour predominates? |
43278 | But how has it come about that the fairy"_ Ala_"has gained such headway in this island of ours? |
43278 | But how shall we alleviate the pangs? |
43278 | But the more fortunate citizens-- how do they"do themselves"at luncheon? |
43278 | But what does it matter? |
43278 | But what had this victory got to do with a salad dressing? |
43278 | But what of the wretched bachelor, as he enters his one sitting- room, in his humble lodging? |
43278 | CHAPTER XIX CUPS AND CORDIALS"Can any mortal mixture Breathe such divine, enchanting ravishment?" |
43278 | Can it be wondered at that this nation should have been brought to its knees by gallant little Japan? |
43278 | Do you really mean them?" |
43278 | Does this mean one of sherbet and seven of rum, or the converse? |
43278 | Eh? |
43278 | Full well do I remember him in the"How''s your poor feet?" |
43278 | Get a similar cape, or one of finer quality? |
43278 | Got any whitings?" |
43278 | Hae ye no''got guid beef, the noo?" |
43278 | How make that dreadful"day after"endurable enough to cause us to offer up thanks for being still allowed to live? |
43278 | How many cooks in this England of ours can cook rice properly? |
43278 | How many people, I wonder, are aware that_ Champagne and Guinness''Stout_ make one of the best combinations possible? |
43278 | If milk, butter, and cheese be not animal food I should like to know what is? |
43278 | In particular there was a butler in a blue coat and bright buttons"[ surely this was a footman?] |
43278 | Look at strawberries; and why ca n''t they stay in our midst all the year round, like the various members of the cabbage family? |
43278 | My friend, to"force the running,"ventured on the observation--"It''s a remarkably fine morning, sir, is it not?" |
43278 | Need his name be mentioned? |
43278 | Now then, With or without the jacket? |
43278 | Now what should be done to a host like that? |
43278 | On a silver dish bruise the livers and trails, squeeze over them the juice of four(?) |
43278 | On the whole, not a bad meal; but what would old Father Christmas have said thereto? |
43278 | Or why add any sort of mollusc? |
43278 | Orange- gin, gin- and- orange- gin, gin- and- sherry( O bile where is thy sting? |
43278 | Sherry and gin and bitters and other adventitious aids(?) |
43278 | Than a good bowl of_ Scotch Broth_, what could be more grateful, or less expensive? |
43278 | The cold chicken and ham which delighted our ancestors at the supper- table-- what has become of them? |
43278 | Then why not make your hot- pot with mussels instead of oysters? |
43278 | Then why with sauces rich alloy them?" |
43278 | There is, as Shakespeare told us, a tide in the affairs of man, so why should there not be in this particular affair? |
43278 | Thereupon, what did her dearest friend and( of course) most deadly rival do? |
43278 | Very sad is it not? |
43278 | Were I to ask What is_ A Peg_? |
43278 | What is TURMERIC? |
43278 | What is the origin of the word"MAYONNAISE"? |
43278 | What is, after all, the great secret of the popularity of_ Charles Dickens_ as a novelist? |
43278 | What was the connection of raw eggs and tarragon vinegar with Marshal Richelieu? |
43278 | What would my revered progenitor have remarked, had he been allowed to revisit the glimpses of the moon? |
43278 | What''s in them stone jars, young touch- and- go?" |
43278 | Why should it be only ebb tide during the few hours that the man is wrapped in the arms of a Bacchanalian Morpheus, either in bed or in custody? |
43278 | Will_ M''sieu_ partake of the_ chocolat_, or of the_ café- au- lait_, or of the tea?" |
43278 | Would I come and look at it?'' |
43278 | You do n''t know what a_ Mirepoix_ is? |
43278 | You know what is a mightier factor than both sword and pen? |
43278 | _ Entrées?_ Had any of the diners asked for an_ entrée_, his or her_ exit_ from the room would have been a somewhat rapid one. |
43278 | not after a dry chapter on liquids? |
43278 | who can cavil at such a feast? |
43278 | would I only come and look at the range? |
40463 | A Butterfly Carnival? 40463 AND what happened next?" |
40463 | And he is glad? |
40463 | And is that your cousin Hetty? |
40463 | But how can I miss school, mothah? |
40463 | But how will Santa Claus know it''s to be filled for them? |
40463 | But what will you do, little one? |
40463 | Ca n''t you go over to Elsie Somers''s with me, Joyce? |
40463 | Did the two little Knights of Kentucky ever meet Joyce again or find the Gate of the Giant Scissors? |
40463 | Did you evah see anything so queah in all yo''life? |
40463 | Did you tell her about Fairchance? |
40463 | Do n''t you know that this is about the proudest moment of my life? 40463 Do n''t you want to hear it?" |
40463 | Do they still love to play papah dolls and have tableaux in the barn? |
40463 | Do you remember the old house at Hartwell Hollow that has been vacant so long? |
40463 | Do you want me to tell you a story? |
40463 | Do you want to tell your mother good night? |
40463 | Does it mean that the little Christ- child counts it just the same-- my lending the stocking to Dot and Molly-- as if I had loaned it to him? |
40463 | Does your mother know that she tells you those silly things? |
40463 | Down in that spook cellar? |
40463 | For mercy sakes, Aunt Cindy, what are you making such a fuss for? |
40463 | Have you looked at the calendar to see what comes next week, Lloyd? |
40463 | How can I wait until Saturday? |
40463 | How can Molly keep such a thing in her room? 40463 How can you say such a thing?" |
40463 | How could you be so mean? 40463 How many miles to Barley- bright?" |
40463 | Is n''t it pitiful? 40463 Is n''t it sweet and still out here, godmother?" |
40463 | Mamma, do you s''pose it would do any good if I''d say them for her? |
40463 | Oh, Milly, what did you put that ribbon on my hair for? 40463 Oh, really, truly, Betty?" |
40463 | Oh, was he a_ really_ captain? |
40463 | Oh,_ what_ is your name? |
40463 | Say, Betty, did you know that she''s a_ witch_? 40463 Say, Betty, what are you going to do with Bob when you go away?" |
40463 | See, mothah, is n''t it a whoppah? |
40463 | Shall we have to wait long for the carriage? |
40463 | Shall we name the room for you, Miss Allison? |
40463 | Tell me what is the matter? |
40463 | Tusitala? 40463 Well, what was it?" |
40463 | What awful teeth it''s got, has n''t it? |
40463 | What do we always have the last Thursday in November? |
40463 | What do you all want me to bring you from Europe? |
40463 | What do you mean by abracadabra? |
40463 | What do you think? |
40463 | What for? |
40463 | What happened after the Little Colonel''s house party? |
40463 | What have we to do with that old quarrel? 40463 What is the trouble now, Lloyd?" |
40463 | What is there to do heah on rainy days? 40463 What''s to hinder fixing up a dummy man, and putting him down there?" |
40463 | What''s your gran''mammy doing now? |
40463 | What_ would_ Papa Jack say if he could see me now? |
40463 | Who is she? |
40463 | Who, for instance? |
40463 | Why did you call her that? |
40463 | Why, Davy, what''s the matter? |
40463 | Why? |
40463 | Will you print me one, too? |
40463 | Would n''t it be lovely if she should? 40463 Would n''t you love to see the picture that looks so much like Molly''s little lost sister?" |
40463 | You''ll write to me if they find out anything about Dot, wo n''t you? |
40463 | _ Three score and ten!_"Can I get there by candle- light? |
40463 | And you''ll go?" |
40463 | Another grazed his hat, but all he said as one hummed by was,''Oh, papa, did you see that? |
40463 | Anybody''s birthday?" |
40463 | Ca n''t we go home in the mawnin''?" |
40463 | Ca n''t you?" |
40463 | Can you catch a kiss? |
40463 | Did you ever see such handsome boys? |
40463 | Do n''t you remembah? |
40463 | Do you remember the old song? |
40463 | Do you s''pose she was evah like that? |
40463 | Do you see that enormous pile of leaves over there? |
40463 | Do you think boys appreciate it? |
40463 | Do you? |
40463 | Does n''t it make you hungry?" |
40463 | Have you time to listen?" |
40463 | His hands were behind his back, and as he came toward her he called out, in the pleasantest of voices,"Which will you take, Lloyd, right or left?" |
40463 | How many children are there?" |
40463 | I wondah how long they''ve been back in America?" |
40463 | Is she still crying in there, Betty?" |
40463 | It is like heaven, is n''t it?" |
40463 | It will take nearly a hundred, will it not, Allison?" |
40463 | Joyce looked over at Grace with a smile that seemed to say,"What did I tell you? |
40463 | Joyce, what would you have to say to them to make them go in search?" |
40463 | Long after she was tucked away in her little white bed she called out through the darkness,"Mamma, do you s''pose Dot knows how to say her prayers?" |
40463 | Now in the triangle put the word CAT and the letter E after it, and in the crescent the word PET and the letter L. Now what does the face say to you?" |
40463 | Oh, mothah, do you remembah the time that Kitty set all the clocks and watches in the house back a whole hour and made everybody late fo''church? |
40463 | Oh,_ would_ you mind going?" |
40463 | See? |
40463 | See?" |
40463 | There was silence for a moment, and Dot asked suddenly,"Will everything there be as lovely as it is here in the hospital?" |
40463 | This is what she heard her mother say:"Is that you, Mary?" |
40463 | Was n''t it funny?" |
40463 | What did Betty say is the date of that number?" |
40463 | What do you suppose makes me feel both ways at the same time?" |
40463 | What is it? |
40463 | What''s that?" |
40463 | Wo n''t it look shivery when all the Jack- o''-lanterns are lighted? |
40463 | Wo n''t she be fooled?" |
40463 | Would n''t it be grand? |
40463 | Would n''t she be mad if she knew what was in this letter? |
40463 | Would n''t_ you_ hate them and everything that helped keep them going?" |
40463 | Would you like to go?" |
40463 | You have n''t forgotten the Little Colonel, have you? |
40463 | [ Illustration:"''OH,_ WHAT_ IS YOUR NAME?''"] |
40463 | and would n''t Molly and the girls be glad?" |
40463 | asked Lloyd,"or Joyce''s finding Jules''s great- aunt Desirà ©, that time she went to the Little Sisters of the Poor?" |
40463 | they demand, and they send letters to the Valley by the score, asking"Did Betty go blind?" |
41632 | And is this all? |
41632 | Do you remember, my dear, that you are in the house of the best_ entrées_ in London? 41632 Ha, what is this that rises to my touch So like a cushion-- can it be a cabbage? |
41632 | My brains are surely turning? 41632 Pray, on what meat hath this our Cæsar fed?" |
41632 | What do_ divorcées_ do with their wedding presents? |
41632 | What is good taste but an instantaneous, ready appreciation of the fitness of things? |
41632 | What is so good as an egg salad for a hungry person? |
41632 | What is the matter, Jane? |
41632 | What is the matter,said Lord Seaforth;"has the Duke turned rusty?" |
41632 | What is thine age? |
41632 | Who hath created this indigest? |
41632 | ''I bet that it is the first time you ever made an omelet in a wood- cutter''s hut, is it not, my little lady?'' |
41632 | A little girl says,"I do n''t know which dress to put on my dolly, Mamma, which shall I?" |
41632 | A man always expects his wife to dress for him; why should he not dress for her? |
41632 | Ancient or modern? |
41632 | And do you ask why? |
41632 | And what could the modern English novelist do without it? |
41632 | Are there many opulent people who can say, The key to my house is wit and intellect, and character, without regard to party, caste or school? |
41632 | Are you going to feast the whole army of the Rhine? |
41632 | As true refinement comes from within, let him read the noble description of Thackeray:--"What is it to be a gentleman? |
41632 | As, for instance, the drawer gets the word"Africa"and the question"Have you an invitation to my wedding?" |
41632 | Broiled, devilled, stewed, cooked in a fashion called_ Bourdelaise_, it is the most delicious of dishes, and as a salad what can equal it? |
41632 | But are we as conscientious as the gentleman in"Punch"who rebuked the giddy girl who would talk to him at dinner? |
41632 | But if, after opening her doors, the hostess refuses the welcome, or treats her guests with various degrees of cordiality, why did she ask at all? |
41632 | But who can eat an orange well? |
41632 | Can we be a thorough- bred, or a thorough- fed, all by ourselves? |
41632 | Canst thou gulf a shoal Of herrings? |
41632 | Considering what has been expected of the American woman, has she not done rather well? |
41632 | Do we not make our dinners too long and too heavy? |
41632 | England is famed for its good fish, as why should it not be, with the ocean around it? |
41632 | First, whom shall we ask? |
41632 | For instance, if we compare a dinner in London with a dinner in New York, we must say, Whose dinner? |
41632 | For the roast, too, what plates so good as Doulton, real English, substantial_ faïence_? |
41632 | For what would Christmas be without the children? |
41632 | Has she not conquered her fate? |
41632 | Have we counted on that possible Utopia where men and women meet and talk, to contribute of their best thought to the entertaining? |
41632 | Have we many houses to which we are asked to a banquet of wit? |
41632 | Have we not the fee simple of terrapin and the exclusive excellence of shad? |
41632 | Have we not trout, salmon, the great fellows from the Great Lakes, and the exclusive ownership of the Spanish mackerel? |
41632 | His remark to his friend was,"James, you are a layman, why do n''t you say something?" |
41632 | How can the reformer make society more amusing and less dangerous? |
41632 | How did they do it? |
41632 | How does a wedding begin? |
41632 | How grapple with that important question,"How shall I give a dinner?" |
41632 | How long does a French_ chef_, at ten thousand dollars a year, stay? |
41632 | How long must a hostess wait for a tardy guest? |
41632 | How many good servants could he find; how long would they stay? |
41632 | How much will be enough and no more? |
41632 | How should he dare to speak against a cucumber salad? |
41632 | If our ancestors dined at nine, when did they lunch? |
41632 | If they choose to play at times when the male golfers are feeding or resting, no one can object; but at other times, must we say it? |
41632 | If they do badly, how can they help it? |
41632 | If this is what they ate, what then did they drink? |
41632 | If we compare New York with Paris, we must say, What Paris? |
41632 | In this connection, why not call in the transcendent attraction of music? |
41632 | Indeed, it is the custom abroad to ask,"what has he done, what can he do?" |
41632 | Is it a manufactured object? |
41632 | Is not this a list to make"the rash gazer wipe his eye"? |
41632 | It is impossible to do much with the art of entertaining without servants, and where shall we get them? |
41632 | It is not a bad"look- out,"is it? |
41632 | Judging from many specimens which we have seen, may we not claim that the American woman must be stamped with an especial distinction? |
41632 | Now what to drink? |
41632 | Of what other fortune can we say so much? |
41632 | One asks,"Where are their manners?" |
41632 | Or hast thou gorge and room To bolt fat porpoises and dolphins whole By dozens, e''en as oysters we consume? |
41632 | Ought a gentleman to be a loyal son, a true husband, and honest father? |
41632 | Ought his life to be decent, his bills to be paid, his tastes to be high and elegant? |
41632 | Raw, roasted, boiled, stewed, scalloped and baked in patties, what so savoury as the oyster? |
41632 | Shall we try? |
41632 | She has furnished them with food and wine, but can she amuse them? |
41632 | Supposing we tell her? |
41632 | Thackeray praises Chambertin in verse more than once:--"''Oui, oui, Monsieur,''''s the waiter''s answer;''Quel vin Monsieur desire- t- il?'' |
41632 | The old saying that it takes three generations to make a gentleman makes us ask, How many does it take to unmake one? |
41632 | The questioner begins: Is it animal, vegetable or mineral? |
41632 | Then try quibbles:"How can I get the wine out of a bottle if I have no corkscrew and must not break the glass or make a hole in it or the cork?" |
41632 | To relieve them, to bring them into communion with their next neighbour, with whom they have nothing in common, what shall one do? |
41632 | Was it on account of its weight? |
41632 | We still have the"Whisk,"but what has become of_ lansquenet_, quadrille basset, piquet, those pretty and courtly games? |
41632 | What dinner? |
41632 | What is its shape, size and colour? |
41632 | What is its use? |
41632 | What is the reason? |
41632 | What is thy diet? |
41632 | What is your favourite Christian name for a man? |
41632 | What is your favourite Christian name for a woman? |
41632 | What matter if it be only a few more beans than one''s neighbour? |
41632 | What shall we do with it? |
41632 | What should be done with the broken meats of a great household? |
41632 | What time did our forefathers lunch? |
41632 | What woman could refuse to make a pudding and any number of pies after that? |
41632 | What woman of fashion goes out of her way to find the man of letters who writes the striking editorials in a morning paper in New York? |
41632 | What wonder if in the first essay some chords are missed, some discords struck? |
41632 | What would Horace Walpole say, could he see the collections of some of our really poor people, not to mention those of our billionnaires? |
41632 | Where are the broils of our childhood? |
41632 | Where is it now? |
41632 | Where is our Lady Jersey, our Lady Palmerston, our Princess Belgioso? |
41632 | Who can endure the mingled misery of a hot room, an uncomfortable seat, a glare of gas, and a pianoforte solo? |
41632 | Who can help them? |
41632 | Who does not remember the ice in the pitcher of a morning, which must be broken before even faces were washed? |
41632 | Who ever heard of society running after Mr. John Gilbert, one of the most respectable men of his profession, as well as a consummate actor? |
41632 | Who in America would dare to give such a lunch? |
41632 | Who is not glad to find a four- leaved clover, to see the moon over his right shoulder, to have a black cat come to the house? |
41632 | Who is your favourite heroine? |
41632 | Who is your favourite king? |
41632 | Who is your favourite queen? |
41632 | Who shall pretend to describe its attractions? |
41632 | Who were these wretches? |
41632 | Who wishes to sit next to Mr. Many- Courses, when he has been kept waiting for his dinner? |
41632 | Who would not say that this would be the most amusing dinner in London? |
41632 | Whose trial? |
41632 | Why are not our women greater politicians? |
41632 | Why not a pound- and- a- quarter trout? |
41632 | Why''A cat has nine lives,''etc.?" |
41632 | Why''cat- o- nine- tails?'' |
41632 | Will they come? |
41632 | Wilt thou go with me? |
41632 | Yet in a large town, in a house shut up from our cold winter blasts, what can she do? |
41632 | _ Interlocutor._--"Is it something statesmen crave?" |
41632 | _ Interlocutor._--"Is it something that goes halt?" |
41632 | _ Interlocutor._--"Is it something tigers need?" |
41632 | _ Interlocutor._--"Is it something we all would like?" |
41632 | _ Interlocutor._--"Is it to shoot at duck?" |
41632 | _ Ma foi!_"answered he;"you saw that man just gone out? |
41632 | and"What Cheer?" |
41632 | rather than,"how much is he worth?" |
41632 | said the cook,''can I thus think of grilling? |
41632 | since the days of canning, who offers the delicious preserves of the past? |
36671 | A boy? |
36671 | A which? |
36671 | Ai n''t de Lees got a boardner? 36671 Ai n''t it de boardner?" |
36671 | Ai n''t it the truth? |
36671 | Ai n''t nobody daid? |
36671 | All right, but who can bring the hot ones in? 36671 An''all de yuthers ob you? |
36671 | Any other nominations? 36671 Are you addressing the chair?" |
36671 | Are you addressing the chair? |
36671 | Are you going to have the circus after dinner or before? |
36671 | Are you there, sweetheart? |
36671 | Aunt Milly, how did you learn how to throw so well? 36671 Aw, I say, Mr. Tucker, when you return to Richmond, will you be so kind as to do a little commission for me?" |
36671 | Barefooted, too? |
36671 | But do you know how? |
36671 | But has your grandfather tried to persuade him to let her come? |
36671 | But what can he do? |
36671 | But what will you do? 36671 But, Algernon, I can not scale the fearsome wall in shoes and hose; what must I do?" |
36671 | But, Mary, ought you try to climb down in your nighty? 36671 But, child, can you make a gumbo? |
36671 | Ca n''t she come up in the evening? 36671 Can you climb down the wall or shall I come up to you and carry you off in my flying machine?" |
36671 | Caroline Tucker, what did you sell that coffin to that young man for? |
36671 | Cook for''em? |
36671 | Did n''t I say so? 36671 Did n''t I tell you he would get Mr. Tuckerish? |
36671 | Did n''t de young miss say it war a free circus? |
36671 | Did she say that,--did she truly? 36671 Did you come down alone?" |
36671 | Did you ever try any of this glassware for baking? 36671 Do n''t you know I know why you were decent to the old fish? |
36671 | Do n''t you like him? |
36671 | Do n''t you like the theatre? |
36671 | Do n''t you think the girl is pretty, sitting next to Wink? |
36671 | Do she mean us? |
36671 | Do you care what she says? |
36671 | Do you ever make polenta? 36671 Do you know anyone who has seen it?" |
36671 | Do you know what I am thinking now? |
36671 | Do you really mean we ca n''t go without a chaperone? |
36671 | Do you think you can help me out with it? |
36671 | Do you want me to keep store for you? |
36671 | Do? 36671 Does Annie know?" |
36671 | Douglas Fairbanks? 36671 Dr. Allison, what are you going to do with Page this winter?" |
36671 | Have you had the doctor? |
36671 | Have you written about it? |
36671 | How about Aunt Milly? 36671 How about falling out of the swings or beating each other up with tennis rackets?" |
36671 | How about your shoes, Mary? |
36671 | How could they know me, so old and wrinkled and feeble? 36671 How did it happen?" |
36671 | How do you do, James? 36671 How do you do? |
36671 | How do you do? |
36671 | How do you know so much? |
36671 | How do you reckon Annie ever gets through the day if this one is a sample? 36671 How is Mrs. Reed, Father?" |
36671 | How will we live in New York? |
36671 | How''bout big meetin''? |
36671 | I do n''t know,said Dum in a teary voice,"but is n''t it sad?" |
36671 | I might prove myself unworthy of the trust imposed in me,--and then what? |
36671 | I wonder where the servants are? |
36671 | I''m going, though, and I am a perfect ogre of a chaperone, eh, Page? |
36671 | If they were n''t the same, where on earth could he have bought any like them? 36671 Ill? |
36671 | Is Annie Lady Anna then? |
36671 | Is Dee asleep? |
36671 | Is Shorty going to get into the movies, too? |
36671 | Is n''t it splendid out on the lawn? 36671 Is that so?" |
36671 | Lawsamussy, chil'', kin you do that? |
36671 | Me get out? 36671 Me? |
36671 | Me? 36671 Me?" |
36671 | Mr. President, what are we going to do with our daughters this coming winter? |
36671 | No, I fancy not, or why should he say I must bring my clothes? |
36671 | Now do n''t you want some of this cheese? 36671 Now is n''t that the limit?" |
36671 | Now is this what you had planned for breakfast, Miss Maria? 36671 Now must n''t the rolls be made down?" |
36671 | Now what can I do? |
36671 | Oh, ai n''t it great, ai n''t it great? |
36671 | Oh, is that so? 36671 Oh, so it is to be a flat, is it? |
36671 | Oh, then he has gone on a trip? |
36671 | Page, how can you? 36671 Page,"whispered Mary,"are you asleep?" |
36671 | Really? |
36671 | Sha n''t we let Mary Flannagan know our plans? 36671 Shall it be chocolates?" |
36671 | Shall we board or what? |
36671 | She-- she-- she was which? |
36671 | Sho''it''s free an''ai n''t we free, an''who gonter gainsay us? |
36671 | Tell me, has Ellen Miller''s baby come? |
36671 | That you, Dick Lee? 36671 The Old Homestead shocking?" |
36671 | The tobacco crop was pretty good, was n''t it? |
36671 | The wood is low and we ca n''t cook without wood, eh, Page? |
36671 | Well now, does n''t that sound nice? 36671 Well, then, why did you look so crestfallen when I put it up to you to leave the launch?" |
36671 | Well, what is the matter with Reginald Kent? |
36671 | Whar you git them aigs? |
36671 | What are you going to do with these duds? |
36671 | What boarder? |
36671 | What business is it of yours, I''d like to know? |
36671 | What did you hear? |
36671 | What do you think about it, Page? 36671 What do you think about it?" |
36671 | What for dinner, Miss Maria? |
36671 | What have I done to deserve so many dear friends? |
36671 | What have I done to make all of you so kind to me? |
36671 | What is it, Father? |
36671 | What makes you think he is such a flirt? |
36671 | What makes you think he was handsome? |
36671 | What next? |
36671 | What on earth can he want? 36671 What shall I sing?" |
36671 | What was the matter? 36671 What were the two things you saw, Miss Maria?" |
36671 | What would make you believe that it was not a ghost, Uncle Jasper? |
36671 | What''n if''n yer did? 36671 When is it to be?" |
36671 | When will you go? |
36671 | When? |
36671 | When? |
36671 | Where did you get to know him, child? 36671 Where do you think these monkeys should go to get these varied industries they are longing for, Tucker?" |
36671 | Where is Annie? |
36671 | Where is he, then? |
36671 | Where''s Annie? |
36671 | Which one, Mammy Susan? |
36671 | Who daid, Mr. Dick? 36671 Who daid? |
36671 | Who daid? 36671 Who has been telling you he does n''t like them?" |
36671 | Who is Douglas Fairbanks? |
36671 | Who on earth can it be? 36671 Why are you always different with me? |
36671 | Why do n''t you and Dum come in our room for to- night? |
36671 | Why do n''t you suggest it to her? 36671 Why do n''t you wait until morning?" |
36671 | Why, Aunt Milly, are you so ill as all that? |
36671 | Why? 36671 Will you mind if I look on?" |
36671 | Witness? 36671 Wo n''t you have to get passports and permits and things before you can go?" |
36671 | Would you really now? 36671 Yassir, a boy, an''jes''as peart as kin be, an''Miss Ellen----""Is she dead?" |
36671 | You do n''t say that that there Jasper an''them gals did n''t go do they wuck? |
36671 | You mean Uncle Isaac is dead? |
36671 | A sudden opening of the front door and who should come tearing out but Dum and Dee Tucker and Zebedee? |
36671 | And how about Sleepy and Harvie and Rags?" |
36671 | Are n''t all the popular magazines filled with stories of rural life?" |
36671 | Are n''t we glad, though, that Sleepy was along? |
36671 | Are you from Richmond?" |
36671 | As for accomplishments: what accomplishments could a dowdy little country girl have that she had not? |
36671 | Besides, is n''t Page along to chaperone?" |
36671 | But was it fair of me to take advantage of poor Zebedee''s tender heart? |
36671 | But you ai n''t thinkin''''bout sendin''me nowhar in one er them thar skifty boats, is you?" |
36671 | CHAPTER IX THE PERFORMANCE WHEN we got back to Maxton, whom should we find sitting on the bench by Miss Maria but Mr. Jeffry Tucker? |
36671 | Can you climb up a wall like a fly?" |
36671 | Can you read everybody''s mind?" |
36671 | Did I hear someone say you had little Page with you?" |
36671 | Did you hear anything?" |
36671 | Did you see her, too?" |
36671 | Do n''t you know that people who meet untimely deaths in the Dardanelles are always brave and handsome?" |
36671 | Do n''t you think so?" |
36671 | Do n''t you think we might get the old cook to hand us out a crust?" |
36671 | Do n''t you want to go too?" |
36671 | Do n''t you? |
36671 | Do you know she was that full er aigs that it war distressful?" |
36671 | Do you know, Page, I know it sounds silly, but I believe I love my father more and am closer to him since I know he can swear a little? |
36671 | Do you reckon we''ll see Jessie Wilcox in New York? |
36671 | Do you take me for a housemaid?" |
36671 | Do you think I am going back to the University? |
36671 | Do you think I''ll know them, James?" |
36671 | Do you think he will be disappointed to find me so old?" |
36671 | Does you want me to do it wif goose grease? |
36671 | Gee, what are we to do about it? |
36671 | Had I missed my vocation after all my dreams? |
36671 | Had she not held thousands thrilled and breathless while she made her perilous descent? |
36671 | Had she not scared the servants off and then wiled them back? |
36671 | Had they not seen the ghost with their own eyes, the ghost they had been hearing of ever since they were children? |
36671 | Harbie?" |
36671 | Harbie?" |
36671 | Harvie admired her very much, as who would not? |
36671 | Have you got them all dressed? |
36671 | Here''s a nice linen handkerchief; why do n''t you tie that over your nose?" |
36671 | How about it, Mary?" |
36671 | How could five of them get ill at once? |
36671 | How do you know what is the price of things?" |
36671 | How else could she have been clothed? |
36671 | How many were on the line when you cut in?" |
36671 | How you do it, honey?" |
36671 | I feel I''ve got the natur''To act in a the- a- ter, I''m just the kind of stuff to make a star profession- a- l- l.""Well, now ai n''t she cute?" |
36671 | I-- I----""You what?" |
36671 | Is his friendship worth having? |
36671 | Is n''t it fun for old Sir Arthur Ponsonby Pore to have won the love of the Lady Annie by swearing? |
36671 | Is n''t it great that Mary can go, too? |
36671 | Is n''t she lovely?" |
36671 | Is she in de baid?" |
36671 | Is there something I can show you?" |
36671 | Is yo''maw gwinter bile it or bake it?" |
36671 | It is:_ What can you do? |
36671 | It mus''be de boardner an''all er her folks is a- comin''down,''cause how come Mr. Dick hafter buy all them things otherwise? |
36671 | May I feel your pulse?" |
36671 | Now have n''t I put the cart before the horse? |
36671 | Now he knows I am almost gone and he would not tell me a lie about it for anything,--would you, James?" |
36671 | Now if''n the Lord Gawd warn''t a- tellin''Noah to git them animiles together for a show, what was it for? |
36671 | Now is n''t that so?" |
36671 | Now, did n''t you?" |
36671 | One thing Mr. Tucker insisted on was not spending money until you had it; but the minute you did have it, what was it meant for but to spend? |
36671 | Or maybe you''d like dat mixture er coal ile an''pneumonia? |
36671 | Please may I serve you?" |
36671 | Pore leave Annie here with us until the submarine warfare is over with?" |
36671 | Pore?" |
36671 | Pore?" |
36671 | President?" |
36671 | Says he,"Do n''t you see his eyes is sot?" |
36671 | The beds did look a little bumpy, but what difference did it make? |
36671 | The dust they swished off with the feather dusters settled quietly back on the things, but why not? |
36671 | The lunch baskets are ready, are they not?" |
36671 | There were letters down in my stateroom and I turned to go get them, when whom should I find at my side but George Massie? |
36671 | They are too young to stop school altogether, especially since they do n''t want to make dà © buts----""Who said we did n''t? |
36671 | Was I to stand still and see customers go over to the rival store? |
36671 | Was storekeeping not what I was cut out for? |
36671 | We can go on with them and establish them, eh, doctor?" |
36671 | What are we to do about it, Page Allison?" |
36671 | What are you girls crying for?" |
36671 | What boarding- house keeper has time to chaperone? |
36671 | What can I do for you?" |
36671 | What can he do? |
36671 | What did he know of styles and the way ginghams were being made up in the city? |
36671 | What did this mean? |
36671 | What does she mean by calling Wink a flirt?" |
36671 | What for?" |
36671 | What is the business of the day?" |
36671 | What is wonderful about it?" |
36671 | What news was she bringing? |
36671 | What on earth was that ridiculous girl selling to the young farmer? |
36671 | What on earth?" |
36671 | What shall I do? |
36671 | What shall I do?" |
36671 | What was he a- doin''in a cage of man- eatin''lions for if he warn''t in a circus? |
36671 | What was it for, I say?" |
36671 | What were her charges up to? |
36671 | What would Mammy Susan say? |
36671 | What you goin''to buy, Dick? |
36671 | When did you hear?" |
36671 | When?" |
36671 | Where did you come from?" |
36671 | Where''d you hear about them?" |
36671 | Who daid?" |
36671 | Who daid?" |
36671 | Who daid?" |
36671 | Who ever hearn tell of a gold chariot out of a circus p''rade? |
36671 | Who gonter do my wuck at home?" |
36671 | Who introduced you?" |
36671 | Who is he? |
36671 | Who taught you?" |
36671 | Who was the reason?" |
36671 | Why should a man whose brother had recently died in England feel a necessity of taking stock in a country store? |
36671 | Will he make one of the school teams? |
36671 | Will you come?" |
36671 | Will you forgive him if I do it?" |
36671 | Wo n''t it be great?" |
36671 | Wo n''t you take some cheers and set a while?" |
36671 | You have had an assistant, too, have you not?" |
36671 | You remember how you bundled me up in the soiled clothes ready to send me to the laundry? |
36671 | You remember, do you not, how I was so afraid my clothes would look poor and mean and out of style? |
36671 | You see this is the only one in stock and somebody might come for this this very night, and then where would you be if you needed it? |
36671 | You will go to boarding to suit Tucker and then get a flat to suit the daughters, eh, honey?" |
36671 | Zebedee says if we bawl over new bandages, what would we do over real wounds? |
36671 | _ Molly Brown''s Sophomore Days_ What is more delightful than a reunion of college girls after the summer vacation? |
28805 | ''If Rider Haggard had been Lew Wallace, what would''She''have been?'' |
28805 | A man? 28805 All ready, all?" |
28805 | An''waste Mrs. Calvert''s good money, whilst there''s a lot of idlers on her premises, eatin''her out of house and home? 28805 And leave the house wide open this way?" |
28805 | Are you going back there? |
28805 | Are you sorry you started the affair, Dolly Doodles? 28805 Are you sure she is n''t in her room?" |
28805 | But how can we? 28805 But how could her heart, the heart of any woman, remain hard against the sight of her orphan grandchildren?" |
28805 | But if those children are his grandchildren, what are they doing here? |
28805 | But the wool? 28805 But to miss the Fair? |
28805 | But where will you get chicken to fry? |
28805 | But who did solve the silly thing, first off? |
28805 | Can Alfy drive-- safe? |
28805 | Could Luna have stolen it, that foolish one? |
28805 | Cuanto? 28805 Dear Aunt Betty, will you do this for a man you do not like?" |
28805 | Dear Mr. Seth, you love my darling Aunt Betty, too, do n''t you, like everybody does? |
28805 | Did ever you see eyes so bright? 28805 Did he know Rose?" |
28805 | Did n''t she ride home with_ you_? |
28805 | Did n''t you? |
28805 | Did you get it back, lad? |
28805 | Do n''t you change it no more, then, Dorothy C.? |
28805 | Do n''t you know how much curiosity I have? 28805 Do you know the owner?" |
28805 | Do you mean it, Dorothy C.? |
28805 | Do you not? 28805 Do you suppose it blew out of the window and she picked it up?" |
28805 | Does he know? 28805 Dolly, shall you go to The Towers, to see that Montaigne girl?" |
28805 | Ever hear the story of General Lafayette and this creek, Melvin? |
28805 | Go? 28805 Have n''t I? |
28805 | Helena and Melvin? 28805 Helena home? |
28805 | How can it come right? 28805 How could you?" |
28805 | How do you know, Dorothy? |
28805 | How many did you use? |
28805 | How many girls now, Alfy? |
28805 | How? |
28805 | I wonder what it was he told him? |
28805 | I? 28805 Indeed? |
28805 | Is it something Dorothy may hear? |
28805 | Is n''t that Mr. Shelton''s horse? |
28805 | It was n''t your flesh, was it? |
28805 | It''s real purty in here, ai n''t it? 28805 Killing generally does mean death, Jim Barlow, but if you knew that splendid tree was bound to fall some day why did n''t you say so? |
28805 | Leah-- that''s Luna? 28805 Miss Greatorex? |
28805 | Next? |
28805 | Now which shall I fit first? |
28805 | Say, sonny, what made you tumble in the brook? 28805 So the farrier has been talking, eh? |
28805 | So you asked him for a lift down? |
28805 | That bunch? 28805 That man? |
28805 | Then you come from Rosado? |
28805 | They''ve found their own place you see; will it do? |
28805 | This morning, Aunt Betty, in all this rain? 28805 Tramps? |
28805 | Well, why do n''t you get a regular woodman to chop it up, then? |
28805 | Were n''t you scared? 28805 What all shall we cook? |
28805 | What are those men doing to the roof? |
28805 | What in the world do you want of a rope? |
28805 | What is it men and women all despise, Yet one and all so highly prize? 28805 What makes thee think he is unhappy?" |
28805 | What should I be afraid of? 28805 What''s up, boys?" |
28805 | What''s yours, twinsy? 28805 What''they,''Miss Molly?" |
28805 | What? 28805 Where do you come from?" |
28805 | Where''d they pick up two such little owls? 28805 Which one? |
28805 | Who is Luna? 28805 Who left that gate open? |
28805 | Who''s for church? |
28805 | Who''s she? 28805 Whose''Party''is this?" |
28805 | Why do you fancy anything''s amiss, lassie? |
28805 | Why do you leave yours, to sleep on the library couch, Ephraim? |
28805 | Why do you stop just there, Jim, in the most interesting part? 28805 Why not? |
28805 | Why, Aunt Betty, please? 28805 Why, Mr. Seth, what do you mean? |
28805 | Why, would anybody be afraid in a big tent like this? |
28805 | Why? 28805 With what, Dolly dear? |
28805 | With whom did you ride? |
28805 | Wo n''t the horses be afraid? 28805 Your horse?" |
28805 | ''Now, who''ll take that to the mill?'' |
28805 | ''Twill be over in a minute, soon''s we get to the inside and have-- you-- got-- your ticket?" |
28805 | A blessing, Dorcas said? |
28805 | A child yourself?" |
28805 | Afterward, we might have a little dance in the barn-- May we, may we?" |
28805 | Ai n''t they beautiful? |
28805 | Ai n''t you ashamed of yourself, Alfy Babcock? |
28805 | And apropos of that subject: What''s the oldest, most unalterable book of etiquette we have?" |
28805 | And how came you with Oliver Sands? |
28805 | And if you do, what shall I say to them for you?" |
28805 | And there, Luna dear, poor Luna, you see we''re off at last and-- isn''t it just lovely?" |
28805 | And when the neighbors ask:''Whose children has thee found?'' |
28805 | And why? |
28805 | And-- is Leah here?" |
28805 | Anybody could spend a night here and take no hurt, could n''t she?" |
28805 | Anybody got a ribbon? |
28805 | Anybody got a rope?" |
28805 | Are n''t you the one who always plans the entertainments-- the social ones-- at your school, Brentnor Hall? |
28805 | Are n''t you?" |
28805 | Are tramps on this mountain? |
28805 | Are we never to hear the end of Oliver Sands? |
28805 | Are you down in the dumps, too? |
28805 | Are you in trouble? |
28805 | Are you really goin''to take that loony Luna to meeting?" |
28805 | As for you, Cousin Seth, what has so wearied you? |
28805 | At that''heavenly''place? |
28805 | Baby, which are you?" |
28805 | Baby, which are_ you_?" |
28805 | Beg pardon, girlie, I do n''t want to be cross, but how can I have a decent party if you do n''t help? |
28805 | Besides, her quick ear had caught that"Luna,"and she now impatiently demanded:"Howcome you''knows he''name, Miss Do''thy, an''nebah tole ole Dinah?" |
28805 | But the ten crisp notes she had so spread out in the sight of all-- where were they? |
28805 | But there was one more objector and that outspoken Alfy, who begged of Dorothy, in a sibilant whisper:"Do you mean it? |
28805 | But they had scarcely cleared the grounds when Molly Martin paused to ask:"Where''s Jane Potter?" |
28805 | But, alanna, what''d this big house be widout''em and their pranks?" |
28805 | But, why hesitate? |
28805 | But-- is there a little old woman here, no bigger than a child? |
28805 | By the way, where are they now?" |
28805 | Ca n''t help it, do n''t you know?" |
28805 | Can I have that? |
28805 | Can I help you?" |
28805 | Can I help?" |
28805 | Can thee afford to waste time like this?" |
28805 | Can you?" |
28805 | Cried she, with that characteristic toss of her brown curls:"Well, if everybody_ must_--what can I do to help? |
28805 | Did anybody ever happen to hear of the Sphinx?" |
28805 | Did n''t you feel as if some enemy were after you?" |
28805 | Did you ever see the beat? |
28805 | Did you have any supper?" |
28805 | Did you think I might be dead, then? |
28805 | Do n''t you know this is Sunday?" |
28805 | Do n''t you like the arrangement?" |
28805 | Do n''t you remember how ill they were from Molly''s supply? |
28805 | Do n''t you remember? |
28805 | Do n''t you think they''re lovely, Littlejohn?" |
28805 | Do you know how she makes jelly?" |
28805 | Do you want to keep me awake all night?" |
28805 | Does n''t it seem too bad to leave her out of this?" |
28805 | Does that mean you want to do so now?" |
28805 | Dolly squeezed herself after and stooped above her guest, anxiously asking:"Did that hurt you? |
28805 | Fact, I''d_ admire_, only if I put on my best dress to go callin''in the morning what''ll I have left to wear to the Party? |
28805 | Finally, a stable lad had suddenly propounded the inquiry:"What did you do with that money, anyway, Ephy? |
28805 | Finally, as he lapsed into a reverie she roused him, saying:"What is your errand, please?" |
28805 | Fo''de lan'', Missy, whe''-all''s yo''pride an''mannehs?" |
28805 | Has n''t he come, too?" |
28805 | Has she told you how the twins came here?" |
28805 | Have n''t you seen? |
28805 | Have you done that, then? |
28805 | Have you settled on the play? |
28805 | He was as anxious now to release her as she was to be set free, but his tormentors insisted:"Her name? |
28805 | He was not a superstitious man but he had dreamed of Deerhurst more than once of late and news from Deerhurst? |
28805 | Hear what the Master said? |
28805 | Here, boy, fetch them peanuts this way? |
28805 | Hey, honey? |
28805 | How about you, Littlejohn Smith?" |
28805 | How came she here? |
28805 | How can she do a thing like that?" |
28805 | How can we ever take them in that stage with us?" |
28805 | How come dat yeah-- dis-- What''s hit mean, li''l gal Do''thy?" |
28805 | How could it be like that, then?" |
28805 | How could we do otherwise? |
28805 | How dare you say such a thing?" |
28805 | How ever in this world? |
28805 | How it was mighty easy to start a panic but impossible to stop one, or nigh so? |
28805 | How much do telegrams cost?" |
28805 | How much for him?" |
28805 | How shall eight people be conveyed to that far- away church?" |
28805 | How should I? |
28805 | Hungry, say you? |
28805 | I love young people; and am I not quite a young person myself?" |
28805 | I meant to stay a bit longer out of business, but-- Mrs. Calvert, when''s the next train cityward, please?" |
28805 | I saw no other person anywhere about, did you?" |
28805 | I wonder if we ought to advertise her in the local newspaper? |
28805 | I wonder what?" |
28805 | If I should bring her back to it, would you let her go out of it sometimes, into the world where she belongs? |
28805 | If I would bring her back?" |
28805 | If he were human where could he go? |
28805 | In other words:"Did she send the money?" |
28805 | Indeed, when there came a knock on the outer door he started, and quickly demanded:"Well?" |
28805 | Inviting them south- siders that made such a lot of trouble when you lived''up- mounting''afore your folks leased their farm?" |
28805 | Is n''t it lovely to be a rich girl and just ask for as much money as you want and get it? |
28805 | Is she here? |
28805 | Is she lost again?" |
28805 | Is she safe?" |
28805 | Is telephoning cheaper? |
28805 | It''s better for them and we should n''t have been let anyway, and-- where''s Helena?" |
28805 | It''s getting real near breakfast time; and dear Aunt Betty, will you please send me another one hundred dollars by the return of the mail? |
28805 | James was listening now and inquired:"What you raking up old times for, Dorothy? |
28805 | Jolly Molly, and Jim to drive? |
28805 | Just as this was Dorothy''s and somebody else managed it; eh, lassie? |
28805 | May I keep them here? |
28805 | May I, please?" |
28805 | Meanwhile, what had this rainy day seen at Heartsease Farm? |
28805 | Molly M. How''d you look, rockin''along on that old mare? |
28805 | Monty is in a fix-- how shall we get him out?" |
28805 | Monty, will you ride to the village and send that telegram to Mabel Bruce?" |
28805 | Most of you know it by sight; eh?" |
28805 | Mouths so wide agape? |
28805 | Mrs. Calvert looked keenly into her darling''s eyes, and after a moment, answered:"I might be willing; but should you desert your guests? |
28805 | Next?" |
28805 | Next?" |
28805 | Nobody, of course, except Alfaretta, and the first thing that girl would be sure to ask would be:"Have you caught your hare?" |
28805 | Now, who''ll accept? |
28805 | Now-- see the pretty horses?" |
28805 | Oliver, does thee hear? |
28805 | Oliver,_ did thee know Rose?_"This was the"plain speech"with a vengeance! |
28805 | On yo''way dar, sah?" |
28805 | Or a little play in the big barn?" |
28805 | Or, do you think it would be kinder to wait and let her people hunt her up? |
28805 | Or-- was it Ananias? |
28805 | Ought you? |
28805 | Partings? |
28805 | Preferred to chop wood, did he? |
28805 | Problem: If a small school dictionary can work such havoc with a young maid''s brain will the Unabridged drive her to a lunatic asylum? |
28805 | Remember how she clung to those bits of gay rags Dinah found on her? |
28805 | Satisfactory all round?" |
28805 | Saturday would be a nice time to begin the Party, do n''t you all think?" |
28805 | See Sapphi-- Ruth, see them stairs? |
28805 | See? |
28805 | See? |
28805 | Sensible, but not too- sensitive, Alfaretta shook her head, and asked:"Do you know how to make a hare pie?" |
28805 | Shall I tell it?" |
28805 | She does n''t look like either-- is she sleep- walking? |
28805 | Six boys-- how many yet Alfy?" |
28805 | Snoring? |
28805 | So gently Dolly moved that he did not hear her, and she had gone around him to stand before his face ere he looked up and said:"Thee? |
28805 | So, as she bade him good- night she asked:"Is it anything I can help, dear Master?" |
28805 | Somebody breathing? |
28805 | Supposing somebody had stolen in and stolen them? |
28805 | Supposing that was why he was sleeping in the library? |
28805 | Tell me, quick, quick; and if you know her home?" |
28805 | That fellow? |
28805 | That is n''t dividing even; and if it''s such an awful long way had n''t we-- shouldn''t-- shan''t we be terrible late to dinner?" |
28805 | That plain old white linen? |
28805 | That''s what society is for, is what it means, is n''t it? |
28805 | The scene at Heartsease? |
28805 | Thee is the little girl that''s had such a story- paper kind of life, is n''t thee? |
28805 | Then I asked:''How much will you pay, Friend Oliver, toward the support of Hiram Bowen at St. Michael''s Hospital?'' |
28805 | Then he scratched his head and asked in a whisper:"Can you tell who she looks like? |
28805 | Then, course, you would n''t leave them just anywhere, out of doors, would you? |
28805 | Thence it was presently lifted, when Mrs. Calvert said:"Now the lost is found, I''d like to inquire what shall be done with it? |
28805 | There was a swift exchange of glances between him and the young hostess as she returned:"Shall I say?" |
28805 | This is exceedingly painful to hear, but to what does it tend?" |
28805 | Those grapes knew that you wanted them, that I wanted to get them for you, and see how they act? |
28805 | To see me? |
28805 | Until Mabel Bruce suddenly demanded:"Where''s their other clothes?" |
28805 | Well, Dorothy, what is it? |
28805 | Well, Mabel? |
28805 | Well, my dear?" |
28805 | Were n''t they horrid? |
28805 | What can that mean? |
28805 | What connection had this beauty with riddles, if you please?" |
28805 | What could have become of them? |
28805 | What do you know about her?" |
28805 | What does she want?" |
28805 | What has that poor, learned dear to do with it?" |
28805 | What have you horrid boys been doing out there in the barn so early, waking tired little girls out of their beauty- sleep?" |
28805 | What is it? |
28805 | What is it? |
28805 | What might not be done with a whole one hundred dollars? |
28805 | What next?" |
28805 | What say?" |
28805 | What shall it be? |
28805 | What was that sound? |
28805 | What will Mr. Winters say? |
28805 | What will you do?" |
28805 | What yo''s''posin''my Miss Betty gwine ter say when she heahs ob dis yeah cuttin''s up? |
28805 | What you goin''to make, yourself, Dorothy Calvert?" |
28805 | What''s the use of spoiling a splendid time? |
28805 | What''s your name, little boy? |
28805 | What-- what-- shall I do? |
28805 | What? |
28805 | Whatever is the matter? |
28805 | Where did you get all that, Dorothy Calvert?" |
28805 | Where is he?" |
28805 | Where is that Seth Winters?" |
28805 | Which kings possess not? |
28805 | Which one have you caught?" |
28805 | Which? |
28805 | Who betters me?" |
28805 | Who ever heard tell of a stove in a barn?" |
28805 | Who had taken them? |
28805 | Who is for that?" |
28805 | Who is he?" |
28805 | Who knows but that was the key to unlock her closed intelligence? |
28805 | Who wants to, anyway? |
28805 | Who''s your next boy?" |
28805 | Who, what can it mean?" |
28805 | Why all that?" |
28805 | Why do you stand like that, pointing out into the night as if you''d seen a ghost?" |
28805 | Why, Dolly darling, you-- what''s wrong, honey? |
28805 | Why, child, do you know whose money that was?" |
28805 | Why? |
28805 | Will you assign the characters and let us get to studying, so we can make a success of it to- night?" |
28805 | Will you forgive and wait?" |
28805 | With such a-- a good man; is n''t he?" |
28805 | Wo n''t you get that bronchitis again? |
28805 | Would n''t we better wait till morning?" |
28805 | Would the man never tell his errand? |
28805 | Would you let her come to visit me? |
28805 | Would you put your pride aside and-- do right? |
28805 | Would you take her to meeting with you as is her birthright? |
28805 | Yet, if there had been thievery there, would n''t he have kept awake, to watch? |
28805 | You awake at last? |
28805 | You seem so anxious to speak?" |
28805 | You? |
28805 | _ Dorothy''s House Party._] CHAPTER XI MORNING TALKS"Did anybody ever know such a succession of beautiful days?" |
28805 | _ I!_ On my way to a circus? |
28805 | and not Aunt Betty? |
28805 | and say, Dolly, which of all them pretty dresses are you goin''to put on? |
28805 | has anybody told him that I suspected him?" |
28805 | her name? |
28805 | is thee possessed?" |
28805 | must we? |
28805 | thee?" |
28805 | will he take the twins away?" |
28805 | with all you young folks in it? |
36007 | All in favor? |
36007 | All right? |
36007 | All theirs? 36007 All these''eats''that travel so well will be splendid to send for Christmas gifts to people at a distance, wo n''t they? |
36007 | And there may be letters to write,urged Roger,"and who''d do them?" |
36007 | Any one want the dimensions? |
36007 | Any superfluous hinges around the house, Dorothy? |
36007 | Anybody else got any ideas on this decoration need? |
36007 | Anything pretty? |
36007 | Are they as bad as that? |
36007 | Are you ready to vote? |
36007 | Are you ready? 36007 Are you ready? |
36007 | Are you sure he would n''t be afraid? |
36007 | Are you sure her name is Elisabeth? |
36007 | Are you sure they''ll keep? |
36007 | Are you sure they''ll knit for the children? |
36007 | Aunt Louise would n''t mind, would she? |
36007 | Big ones or little? |
36007 | Bless us, what''s that? |
36007 | But shall we need any to speak of? |
36007 | Ca n''t he study yet? |
36007 | Ca n''t we go right after school to- morrow and buy the yarn for them, Mother? |
36007 | Can we use our famous wrapper pattern? |
36007 | Can we weave now? |
36007 | Can you get the School Hall free? |
36007 | Can you people be here? |
36007 | Contrary minded? |
36007 | Could n''t we boys make some sort of rack divided into cubes or even knock together a set of plain shelves? 36007 Could you do that and take care of ours, too?" |
36007 | Della-- anything to say? |
36007 | Did I bust my leg? |
36007 | Did Miss Dawson say it would travel? |
36007 | Did Tom say anything about coming to see us? |
36007 | Did it disturb Fräulein? |
36007 | Did n''t he die at that very moment, Herr Doctor? |
36007 | Did she ask you? |
36007 | Did what disturb Fräulein? |
36007 | Did you bring a petticoat pattern, Margaret? |
36007 | Did you draw them or did you get the ones that are already printed on cloth? |
36007 | Did you see her to- day? |
36007 | Did you see the paper this morning? |
36007 | Disturb Fräulein? 36007 Do n''t you recognize Schuler?" |
36007 | Do n''t you remember the beauty box he made Margaret? |
36007 | Do n''t you remember we went outside the gate and picked flowers and decorated the stage? |
36007 | Do n''t you think Mademoiselle would have sent word to Fräulein if he had died? |
36007 | Do n''t you think so? 36007 Do n''t you wish we could see them open them?" |
36007 | Do we want to take things from outside of the Club? |
36007 | Do you notice that this stencil has been shellacked so the edges wo n''t roughen when I scrub? 36007 Do you remember the steps, Dorothy?" |
36007 | Do you see what an opportunity the different colored cambric gives? |
36007 | Do you think he really died? |
36007 | Do you think we could go to New York to see the_ Jason_ sail? |
36007 | Do you want to know what I think is the trouble with all of you? |
36007 | Does any one second the motion, that we work first for the Christmas Ship? |
36007 | Does n''t anybody else know how to make them? |
36007 | Does she speak of him? |
36007 | Dull edged? |
36007 | Fast color, eh? |
36007 | For the orphans? |
36007 | Has any one been to the Old Ladies''Home to gather up what they have there? |
36007 | Has any one come across anything that we can do here in Rosemont or in Glen Point or in New York? 36007 Has any one thought of anybody else we can benefit?" |
36007 | Has anybody any ideas? 36007 Has anybody any more ideas to get off her alleged mind this afternoon?" |
36007 | Has she heard from him since the war began? |
36007 | Have a thuck? |
36007 | Have any of you girls any ideas on the subject? |
36007 | Have n''t my lessons on scientific management soaked in better than that? |
36007 | Have n''t you seen the pictures of European peasant women and little girls with awfully full skirts? 36007 Have we got enough numbers on the program, Helen?" |
36007 | Have we got to vote over again? |
36007 | Have you heard Roger or Helen say anything about Fräulein lately? |
36007 | Have you put them together yet? |
36007 | He did n''t cut her off with a shilling, then? |
36007 | How about a chorus in costume? |
36007 | How about longer sleeves, Mother? |
36007 | How about sewing purses? 36007 How about you, Tom?" |
36007 | How are you? |
36007 | How can we boys apply that? |
36007 | How could we get a message to her? 36007 How did she happen to lose touch so completely with her family?" |
36007 | How did you make this thing, anyway? |
36007 | How do you carry your woof across? |
36007 | How do you fasten it? |
36007 | How do you hang it up? |
36007 | How do you make that? |
36007 | How do you make the handle? |
36007 | How do you make those? |
36007 | How do you put the top and the sole together? |
36007 | How do you sew them together? |
36007 | How does the lamp shade idea work out? |
36007 | How far is the leather work like the metal work? |
36007 | How in the world do you happen to be so up in manicure articles? |
36007 | How is Fräulein? |
36007 | How large is_''mighty_ small''? |
36007 | How would it do if we Club girls made just coats and wrappers and sacques from that pattern of Helen''s, and petticoats? 36007 How would it do to get together a lot of things for Christmas for the orphans? |
36007 | How? 36007 How?" |
36007 | I do? 36007 I suppose we can get the rolls by wholesale in assorted colors, ca n''t we?" |
36007 | I thaid''Ith Mith Fräulein at home?'' 36007 I wonder if she''d mind if we went to New York to see her start?" |
36007 | Is he an American German? |
36007 | Is it all right for you to tell us? |
36007 | Is it seconded? |
36007 | Is it? 36007 Is n''t she the right one to explain it?" |
36007 | Is that all? |
36007 | Is the motion seconded? |
36007 | Is there an interlining? |
36007 | Is there time before they come? |
36007 | Is this what James has been doing on Saturdays? |
36007 | It was pretty, was n''t it? |
36007 | It''s about time to build up the candle holder, is n''t it? |
36007 | It''s easy enough, is n''t it? 36007 It''s getting so dark and gloomy-- what do you say if you Ethels make some candy to enliven the afternoon?" |
36007 | May we venture to ask what some of them are? |
36007 | Not a total abstainer? |
36007 | Not to make monkeys swinging down the forests of Broadway, eh? |
36007 | Now what''s little Margaret going to teach us this afternoon? |
36007 | Now, then,queried Ethel Brown,"what next?" |
36007 | Of cotton cloth? 36007 Old clothes?" |
36007 | One? 36007 Only a scraping of shoes on the mat? |
36007 | Ought n''t we to have a secretary? |
36007 | Our parcels wo n''t be very visible among several millions, will they? |
36007 | Remember that Children''s Symphony we exhausted ourselves on for a month last winter, Della? |
36007 | She did? |
36007 | So far you''ve used your weaver--"What''s that? 36007 Story? |
36007 | The first question before us, then, is who will do this explanation act that Ethel Blue suggests? |
36007 | Then you line them and arrange the fastening and hinges just as you described for the string box? |
36007 | They were pretty though, were n''t they? |
36007 | This is the kind you''re going to make for the orphans, is n''t it? |
36007 | This weaving process makes the spokes stand out like wheel spokes, does n''t it? |
36007 | Through Monsieur Millerand? |
36007 | To work for the war orphans of all countries? |
36007 | Too busy to be kind to the people near at hand, eh? |
36007 | Two pieces of leather rounded at the lower corners and stitched together at the sides and with a flap to shut in the contents? |
36007 | Was I disturbed? 36007 Was n''t it hard not to let the black run over the edges of the picture?" |
36007 | Well, what do you say to the plan? 36007 Were n''t you hurt?" |
36007 | Were you patient enough to make all the clothes to take off? |
36007 | Were you? |
36007 | What are some of the articles we can start in to make now that we know how? |
36007 | What are these? |
36007 | What are they good for? 36007 What are we going to do this week?" |
36007 | What are we going to do, anyway? |
36007 | What are you going to do, Madam President? |
36007 | What can we invalid pussies do to get well? |
36007 | What could you use for a sole? |
36007 | What did Dicky do? |
36007 | What did you say you did for? |
36007 | What did you stuff them with? |
36007 | What did your grandfather give us? |
36007 | What do you do when the warp is ready? |
36007 | What do you mean-- house? |
36007 | What do you say to boxes first? 36007 What does it mean?" |
36007 | What does the president think? |
36007 | What does this mean? |
36007 | What in the world? |
36007 | What is a Pullman apron? 36007 What is it? |
36007 | What is it? |
36007 | What is there for us to do for the kids there that the grown people do n''t do? |
36007 | What is this garment-- a wrapper? |
36007 | What kind of costume? |
36007 | What kind of stories? |
36007 | What movies? |
36007 | What next, Madam President? |
36007 | What next? |
36007 | What shape are the bags? |
36007 | What shape will it be? |
36007 | What should we do that would need a house? |
36007 | What was a haughty New Yorker doing on the Jersey side of the Hudson? |
36007 | What with, I should like to know? |
36007 | What''s Dorothy been up to this week? |
36007 | What''s Number 6? |
36007 | What''s she done? |
36007 | What''s that drip, Dorothy? |
36007 | What''s that? |
36007 | What''s the idea of two? |
36007 | What''s the matter with George Foster? 36007 What''s the matter with Tom''s original suggestion--''Is Schuler dead''?" |
36007 | What''s the matter with making baskets of braided crêpe paper? |
36007 | What''s the story about her? |
36007 | What''s your idea? 36007 What''s your name?" |
36007 | What? 36007 When Aunt Marion gets your new dancing school dresses could n''t you ask her to get cotton ones?" |
36007 | When did you say those church movies were? |
36007 | When is Tom coming out? |
36007 | Where did you get the dolls? |
36007 | Where did you get your pattern? |
36007 | Where do you expect to be sent, Mademoiselle? |
36007 | Where from? |
36007 | Where the long leaf pine grows,said Dorothy,"they use pine needles in the same way, only they wrap them around with thread--""Cotton thread?" |
36007 | Who cares to be safe? 36007 Who is''her''?" |
36007 | Who said you could have James''s vocabulary? |
36007 | Who''ll train them? |
36007 | Who''s going to play for the dances? |
36007 | Who? 36007 Why April?" |
36007 | Why ca n''t she and I do something at the beginning? 36007 Why ca n''t we ask everybody we come across for old clothes?" |
36007 | Why ca n''t we have a household campaign to prevent giving Mary unnecessary work and to avoid irritating each other? |
36007 | Why ca n''t you make all sorts of boxes? |
36007 | Why could n''t we use our stenciling designs? |
36007 | Why could n''t you make a whole book of my silhouettes? |
36007 | Why did n''t you? |
36007 | Why do n''t we have a meeting of the United Service Club on Saturday afternoon? |
36007 | Why do n''t we work for the Red Cross? |
36007 | Why do n''t you Ethels make both kinds? |
36007 | Why do n''t you ask her to- day? 36007 Why do n''t you go? |
36007 | Why not have them do a regular little play like''Flossy Fisher''s Funnies''that have been coming out in the_ Ladies''Home Journal_? |
36007 | Why not the peasant costumes of the countries in the war? |
36007 | Why not? 36007 Why not?" |
36007 | Why should you think them the very last to be interested? |
36007 | Why this frown, fair Coz? |
36007 | Why would n''t a heavy duck sole do? |
36007 | Will that be the right length? |
36007 | Would n''t Grandfather Emerson be a good one to do that? |
36007 | Would n''t Number 3 be a good spot to put in the Butterfly Dance? |
36007 | Would n''t another envelope arrangement of chintz lined with rubber cloth make a good washrag bag or sponge bag? |
36007 | Would n''t it be a good scheme to put the bundles we sha n''t have to alter at all, right into it? |
36007 | Would your mother let us have the receipt now so we could be practicing it to make some too? |
36007 | Yes, what have you three been planning to throw us in the shade? |
36007 | You and Margaret have heard us talk about our German teacher? |
36007 | You asked her? |
36007 | You do n''t care if I let her out, do you? 36007 You do n''t try to turn it inside out, do you?" |
36007 | You have seen everything? |
36007 | You have? |
36007 | You know that bright colored binding that dressmakers use on seams? 36007 You know those bachelor girls about seventy- five apiece, over on Church Street near Aunt Louise''s-- the Miss Clarks? |
36007 | You mean by making things out of cotton materials? |
36007 | You mean exercises at home? |
36007 | You mean us, too? |
36007 | You ought not to cut out your leather corners until they are dry, I suppose? |
36007 | You seem to have made a great mess on the floor over there by the window; did n''t you slice off some and put it in that cup? |
36007 | You think I''m taking too seriously a poor lesson that was n''t very bad, after all? 36007 You''ll all back me up, wo n''t you?" |
36007 | You''re not trying your eyes knitting in this imperfect light? |
36007 | Your French teacher? |
36007 | Your mother? |
36007 | Anything that will be an appropriate beginning for the United Service Club? |
36007 | Are you perfectly sure the things will keep?" |
36007 | Are you sure Mrs. Smith does n''t mind?" |
36007 | CHAPTER XIV JAMES''S AFTERNOON PARTY"NOW are you ready to take in all the difficulties of my art object?" |
36007 | Ca n''t we ornament them in some way?" |
36007 | Ca n''t we send a cable signed by the''Secretary of the United Service Club''?" |
36007 | Ca n''t we think up something cheaper?" |
36007 | Can you remember that?" |
36007 | Could n''t we anchor it on to this wall with a couple of hinges and then its two legs will be a good enough prop?" |
36007 | Could you find anything more graceful than that? |
36007 | D''ye think I brook Being worse treated than a Cook? |
36007 | Dicky, what have you been doing?" |
36007 | Did you people realize that time is growing short? |
36007 | Do n''t you think it would be great if we set the fashion of the dancing class?" |
36007 | Do n''t you think you''d have to be careful every instant in school to control yourself? |
36007 | Do you get it?" |
36007 | Do you realize that this is the week that we ought to cook?" |
36007 | Do you think some of them could be induced to come to the schoolhouse and make a tableau?" |
36007 | Do you think they''d be pretty enough?" |
36007 | Does n''t this sound good?" |
36007 | For the Santa Claus Ship?" |
36007 | Good looking, eh?" |
36007 | Has Della sent you the knitting rules from the Red Cross yet?" |
36007 | Has n''t your Service Club something that he can work on here?" |
36007 | Have you ever seen a sick cat? |
36007 | Have you ever tried it?" |
36007 | Have you put them through so they make a cross with the arms of even length? |
36007 | He was bent like a withered old man and spoke in a squeaky voice._]"You hope because you''re old and obese, To find in the furry civic robe ease?" |
36007 | How are we going to get it?" |
36007 | How can we make them''gaudy''?" |
36007 | How do you splice it?" |
36007 | How many of those sticks do I need?" |
36007 | How often are you going to meet?" |
36007 | How shall we word it?" |
36007 | I thaid,''Ith he dead?''" |
36007 | Insulted by a lazy ribald With idle pipe and vesture piebald? |
36007 | Is it true?" |
36007 | Is this tissue paper affair your pattern? |
36007 | Is your mistress at home?" |
36007 | It is good, is n''t it? |
36007 | It''s sometimes silk and sometimes silk and--""Cotton? |
36007 | Kindling?" |
36007 | Look, Helen, do you think it is?" |
36007 | My brother is a surgeon and I have a distant relative in the ministry--""What--_the_ Millerand?" |
36007 | Now, suppose I offer to take care of their furnace for them this winter? |
36007 | See how firm that is? |
36007 | See that pile?" |
36007 | See the point of this nail? |
36007 | See?" |
36007 | See?" |
36007 | See?" |
36007 | Shall we say this next Saturday?" |
36007 | So now Ethel Brown said to Ethel Blue,"Have we got all the materials we need for Vinegar Candy?" |
36007 | Suppose Father were fighting in Mexico and we had n''t heard from him for a month-- do you think you could throw off your anxiety for a minute? |
36007 | The one on the right?" |
36007 | The raffia?" |
36007 | Thumb tacks, Dorothy? |
36007 | We can ask the societies in our churches--""Why not in all the churches in town?" |
36007 | We could say''Is Schuler dead?'' |
36007 | What do you suppose he''s doing it for?" |
36007 | What have I done?" |
36007 | What have you got against them?" |
36007 | What kind of paint do you use?" |
36007 | What matter? |
36007 | What shall I do with it?" |
36007 | What story?" |
36007 | What''s in your mind?" |
36007 | What''s the matter, Ethel Brown?" |
36007 | What''s yours?" |
36007 | When is she going?" |
36007 | Where''s Mother? |
36007 | Where''s a board, Dorothy?" |
36007 | Who is it about? |
36007 | Who''s got any more ideas?" |
36007 | Who?" |
36007 | Why ca n''t we have a fair with some tables, and ice cream and cake for sale and an entertainment of some kind in the evening? |
36007 | Why ca n''t we have the minuet for Number 7?" |
36007 | Why do n''t we work for that? |
36007 | Why do n''t you cut out several garments at once and not have to go through all that spreading out and pinning down process every time? |
36007 | Why do we wait for somebody else to get up a bazar to sell Dicky''s weaving? |
36007 | Why should it disturb her? |
36007 | Will Margaret come with you?" |
36007 | Would n''t we? |
36007 | Would n''t we?" |
36007 | You can run the car-- why do n''t you offer to work half time-- afternoons after school, for half pay? |
36007 | You know those fasteners that stationers sell to keep papers together? |
36007 | You threaten us, fellow? |
36007 | [ Illustration: Dorothy''s Candlestick]"Did you see me bring in a short candle? |
36007 | [ Illustration: Photograph Frame-- front]"What keeps it from falling down and off?" |
36007 | [ Illustration: String Box made from a Mailing Tube]"How would you keep the cover from flopping up and down when you pulled the string?" |
36007 | [ Illustration:"Roger cut a slip ten inches long and four inches wide"][ Illustration: Corner for Blotter Pad]"Where''s this professor of leather?" |
36007 | _ Belgium!_ Oh, Mademoiselle,_ wo n''t_ you send us back a Belgian baby? |
36007 | _ Where_ is the Belgian baby?" |
42863 | "celebrating a great festival? |
42863 | a dunce? |
42863 | found on the grass? |
42863 | irritating? |
42863 | named for a bird? |
42863 | named for a month? |
42863 | used for bedding cattle? |
42863 | used for making ladies''dresses? |
42863 | used in sewing? |
42863 | How do I know so much, you ask? 42863 Novanglus"was the pen- name signed By what President of cultured mind? |
42863 | Somehow-- anyway I want to hear the old band play Sich tunes as''John Brown''s body,''and''Sweet Alice,''do n''t you know? 42863 is melancholy? |
42863 | should be respected for its age? 42863 ''K- kind sir, may I have M- Mary Jane?'' 42863 ( Abraham Lincoln) What is Li Hung Chang credited with being? 42863 ( Anchorage) What age is necessary to the clergyman? 42863 ( Astor) What is the chair- boy likely to do to the old lady he has to push on a hot day? 42863 ( Average) What is the age people are stuck on? 42863 ( Beecher) What does a ship do to a seasick man? 42863 ( Beverage) What is the most indigestible age? 42863 ( Bragg) What do the waves do to a vessel wrecked near shore? 42863 ( Buchanan) Tippecanoe? 42863 ( Coinage) What age is shared by the doctor and the thief? 42863 ( Connecticut) The Empire State? 42863 ( Connecticut) The Keystone State? 42863 ( Courage) What age is required on the high seas? 42863 ( Custer) What did Isaac watch while his father was forging a chain? 42863 ( Damage) At what age are vessels to ride safe? 42863 ( Delaware) The Bay State? 42863 ( Delaware) The Creole State? 42863 ( Dewey) What does Aguinaldo keep between himself and the Americans? 42863 ( Dolly Madison) What was Mrs. Lincoln''s name before marriage? 42863 ( Dotage) To what age do most women look forward with anxiety? 42863 ( Early) When Max O''Rell gets on a platform what does he do? 42863 ( Espionage) To what age will people arrive if they live long enough? 42863 ( Fillmore) In the settlement of disputes, do the European nations quarrel? 42863 ( Garfield) Northern Man with Southern Principles? 42863 ( Garrison) What did the Jews say when the mother of Samuel passed? 42863 ( General Lee) The towns taken by the British generally lacked the what? 42863 ( Homage) What age is slavery? 42863 ( Hostage) What age is most enjoyed at the morning meal? 42863 ( Illinois) The Lone Star State? 42863 ( Illinois) The Sucker State? 42863 ( Image) What age is not less or more? 42863 ( Indiana) The Nutmeg State? 42863 ( Iowa) The Green Mountain State? 42863 ( J. Q. Adams) Canal Boy? 42863 ( Jackson) Old Man Eloquent? 42863 ( Jackson) What early President besides Washington married a widow called Martha? 42863 ( Kentucky) The Blue Hen State? 42863 ( Kitchener) What do you do when you drive a slow horse? 42863 ( Lincoln) Hero of New Orleans? 42863 ( Lincoln) Rough and Ready? 42863 ( Longstreet) What does a Chinese lover say when he proposes? 42863 ( Louisa K. Johnson, of Maryland) What President had a troubled love affair and marriage? 42863 ( Louisiana) The Corn Cracker State? 42863 ( Maine) The Mother of States? 42863 ( Maine) The Prairie State? 42863 ( Maize[ maze]) What vegetables should see a great deal, and why? 42863 ( Mark Hanna) In Cairo purchases are made at a what? 42863 ( Marriage) What age has the soldier often to find? 42863 ( Mileage) What is the age now popular for charity? 42863 ( Miles) What happens when the wind blows in spiders''houses? 42863 ( Miss Mary Todd) Name three early Presidents who married widows? 42863 ( Monroe) Whom did John Q. Adams marry? 42863 ( Mr. Rhodes) What did the Emperor of China do when the Empress usurped the throne? 42863 ( Mucilage) What age is both profane and destructive? 42863 ( New York) The Diamond State? 42863 ( North Carolina) The Hawkeye State? 42863 ( Ohio) The Palmetto State? 42863 ( Parsonage) What age is one of communication? 42863 ( Pea[ p]) A boy, a letter, and a part of the body? 42863 ( Pennsylvania) The Buckeye State? 42863 ( Pillage) What age do we all wish for? 42863 ( Polk) When do you get up to see a sunrise? 42863 ( Postage) What age is most important to travelers by rail? 42863 ( Rockefeller) What did Uncle Sam do when he wanted to know whether England would let him mediate? 42863 ( Schley) The lane that has no turning is a what? 42863 ( South Carolina) The Pine Tree State? 42863 ( Speaker Reed) What does a waiter do after he has filled half of the glasses at a table? 42863 ( Texas) The Lumber State? 42863 ( Tomato[ Tom- a- toe]) Yielding water, and connections? 42863 ( Tonnage) What age are we forbidden to worship? 42863 ( Vermont) The Freestone State? 42863 ( Vermont) The Granite State? 42863 ( Virginia) The Mother of Presidents? 42863 ( Virginia) The Old Dominion? 42863 ( Virginia) The Old North State? 42863 ( W. H. Harrison) Honest Abe? 42863 ( Washington, Jefferson, and Madison) What early President married a New York girl? 42863 ( Webster) What did Buller unfortunately do? 42863 ( Wheeler) What is a novel military name for a cook? 42863 10. Who President again became Just four year after resigning the name? 42863 10. Who saidThe harvest is past, the summer is ended, and we are not saved"? |
42863 | 11. Who sang at the ceremony? |
42863 | 11. Who was the mother of Samuel? |
42863 | 12. Who commanded the gates of Jerusalem to be closed on the Sabbath? |
42863 | 14. Who, when his oath of office he took, Was known as"The Wizard of Kinderhook"? |
42863 | 15. Who waxed fat and kicked? |
42863 | 15. Who, after his inaugural vow, Turned round to kiss his mother''s brow? |
42863 | 17. Who in the Quaker City neat Their oaths of office did repeat? |
42863 | 20. Who only as President and Commander- in- Chief Has stood on the battle- field planning relief? |
42863 | 20. Who showed them the sights of Venice? |
42863 | 3_ Heroes and heroines-- in what books do they figure?_ KEY 1. |
42863 | 4. Who was called"a ready scribe in the law of Moses"? |
42863 | 5. Who in his New York home did take The oath which doth a President make? |
42863 | 6. Who to his inaugural hied His good and faithful horse astride? |
42863 | 6. Who was the author of the expression,"What hath God wrought?" |
42863 | 8. Who to his inaugural came disguised, For fear of mischief ill- advised? |
42863 | 8. Who was Moses''brother? |
42863 | 9. Who was wounded in Trenton town When Washington put the Hessians down? |
42863 | 9. Who went down into a pit on a snowy day and slew a lion? |
42863 | Again, the hostess may prepare a certain number of blank cards, with the heading on each one"Who and What?" |
42863 | Also pinned to the pie was this verse: When this pie is opened The birds begin to sing? |
42863 | Am I growing blind? |
42863 | And the sad tree when schoolmasters hold? |
42863 | And the tree like an Irish nurse? |
42863 | And the tree neither up nor down hill? |
42863 | And the tree that bears a curse? |
42863 | And the tree that forbids you to die? |
42863 | And the tree that guides ships to go forth? |
42863 | And the tree that is nearest the sea? |
42863 | And the tree that makes one sad? |
42863 | And the tree that will never stand still? |
42863 | And the tree that''s the warmest clad? |
42863 | And the tree we may use as a quill? |
42863 | And the tree where ships may be? |
42863 | And the tree whose wood faces the north? |
42863 | And what each must become ere he''s old? |
42863 | And what round itself doth entwine? |
42863 | At the wedding what Spanish girl was maid of honor? |
42863 | At what sort of party did they meet? |
42863 | At what time of day was it? |
42863 | BEAN SOCIABLE_ Have you ever"bean"to a"bean"sociable? |
42863 | Because March fourth on Sunday came, Who, for one day, deferred their claim? |
42863 | Below is the list of questions and answers used in the contest, which may be lengthened or shortened at will: Which cake did the society woman buy? |
42863 | By the death of Garfield? |
42863 | Ca n''t some one speak up and explain this mystery, or at least tell us what to do to celebrate Christmas?" |
42863 | Can you tell a harrowing tale? |
42863 | Could I bear to find a hairpin Sticking in my shaving- mug? |
42863 | Could I have my choice Havanas Bandied all about the place, Strewn around like cheap bananas, Looked upon as a disgrace? |
42863 | Could I see my bachelor treasures Sniffed at by a scornful dame? |
42863 | Decimal state? |
42863 | Decorate the room with mottoes, such as:"Is there no balm in Israel, is there no physician there?" |
42863 | Do you know your letters? |
42863 | During the administration of what President did the Louisiana purchase and Burr''s treason occur? |
42863 | During what administration did the annexation of Texas and the Mexican war take place? |
42863 | Each pupil before being assigned a seat was interrogated by the teacher somewhat as follows: In what state and country were you born? |
42863 | For actors? |
42863 | For athletes? |
42863 | For beggars? |
42863 | For chauffeurs? |
42863 | For crowds? |
42863 | For greedy people? |
42863 | For happy people? |
42863 | For home lovers? |
42863 | For hungry people? |
42863 | For hypocrites? |
42863 | For nations? |
42863 | For odd people? |
42863 | For office seekers? |
42863 | For reporters? |
42863 | For telegraph operators? |
42863 | For truthful people? |
42863 | For unhappy people? |
42863 | For wild beasts? |
42863 | For wise people? |
42863 | Hall? |
42863 | How do we dislike to grow? |
42863 | How far can you count? |
42863 | How long will Samuel Lover? |
42863 | How many readers will be able to credit the following to the proper sources? |
42863 | How old was Methuselah when he died? |
42863 | I am content"? |
42863 | I wonder what Tabby the---- to now? |
42863 | If I ask you to accept me, And my lonely life to bless, Will you? |
42863 | If a young man would win what should he do? |
42863 | If a young man would win, what must he do? |
42863 | In Northeast Italy what grand affair did they attend? |
42863 | It ca n''t be that any of you children have been so naughty that he thinks we do n''t deserve a visit from him, can it? |
42863 | It is very mysterious; I never heard of the like before-- no, never----"Well, what are we going to do about it, anyway? |
42863 | Meat, what are you doing in the oven? |
42863 | More than once I''ve been moved to propound the fond query,''Wo n''t you tell me you love me, my beautiful dearie?'' |
42863 | Not a state for the untidy? |
42863 | Now tell me what was a poor maiden to do, Who could n''t, to save her, make choice''tween the two? |
42863 | Number nine speaks as follows:"Could I give up all the pleasures That a single man may claim? |
42863 | Oh, shall I call thee bird, Or but a wandering voice? |
42863 | Or a pair of high- heeled slippers Lying on my Persian rug? |
42863 | PRESIDENTIAL QUESTIONS What President had a son who became President? |
42863 | SPINNING PARTY"Will you walk into my parlor?" |
42863 | STATE NICKNAMES Which is the Hoosier State? |
42863 | So if you wear a number 10 You owe us 20, see? |
42863 | State of astonishment? |
42863 | State of exclamation? |
42863 | State to cure the sick? |
42863 | That half- given to doctors when ill? |
42863 | The Bryan man? |
42863 | The artist? |
42863 | The best state in time of flood? |
42863 | The candidate for office? |
42863 | The champion? |
42863 | The dairyman? |
42863 | The farmer? |
42863 | The father of states? |
42863 | The following were the questions: 1. Who were the bride and groom? |
42863 | The fond mamma for her daughter? |
42863 | The gossip? |
42863 | The grocer? |
42863 | The hostess then asked"What was the heroine called?" |
42863 | The initials of what President''s name Stand for a phrase which made his fame? |
42863 | The jockey? |
42863 | The list of nicknames is as follows: Rail- splitter of the West? |
42863 | The maiden aunt? |
42863 | The mean man? |
42863 | The milliner? |
42863 | The minister? |
42863 | The most Asiatic? |
42863 | The most egotistical? |
42863 | The most maidenly? |
42863 | The most unhealthy state? |
42863 | The most useful in haying time? |
42863 | The name of what flower did Johnny''s mother use when she told him to rise? |
42863 | The name of what flower is used every day in a slang expression? |
42863 | The name of what flower means comfort? |
42863 | The politician? |
42863 | The pretty girls? |
42863 | The schoolgirl? |
42863 | The sculptor? |
42863 | The shoemaker? |
42863 | The small boys? |
42863 | The story progressed thus: What was the hero''s name? |
42863 | The tramp? |
42863 | The tree that we offer to friends when we meet? |
42863 | The young man for his sweetheart? |
42863 | They can answer questions in a little, fine voice, or say,"How do you do?" |
42863 | This is the list that the questioner reads, omitting, of course, the answers: Why did England so often lose her way in South Africa? |
42863 | Under what President was the War of 1812 begun? |
42863 | WHICH IS YOUR AGE What is the best age for a girl or boy? |
42863 | Was I to be caught in the snare of a curl, And dangle through life in a dizzy whirl? |
42863 | What Miss can destroy the peace of home, school and nation? |
42863 | What Miss causes her mother sorrow? |
42863 | What Miss causes in turn amusements and quarrels? |
42863 | What Miss gives unreliable information? |
42863 | What Miss is distinguished as uncivil and ill- bred? |
42863 | What Miss is distrustful of human nature? |
42863 | What Miss is not always honest? |
42863 | What Miss is provoking and a blunderer? |
42863 | What Miss is responsible for gross errors? |
42863 | What Miss is unhappy? |
42863 | What Miss is untruthful? |
42863 | What Miss meets with ill- luck and delay? |
42863 | What Miss proves an uncertain correspondent? |
42863 | What Miss should the traveler shun? |
42863 | What Miss undervalues her opportunities? |
42863 | What Miss wastes times and money? |
42863 | What President fought the last battle of the War of 1812? |
42863 | What President outlined a famous foreign policy? |
42863 | What President served but thirty days Ere death dissolved his term of praise? |
42863 | What President, renowned for spleen, Joined the Continentals when fourteen? |
42863 | What President, son of a President, Was known as"The Old Man Eloquent"? |
42863 | What Presidents served as generals in the Mexican war? |
42863 | What Vice- President became President by the death of Taylor? |
42863 | What ailed Harriet Beecher Stowe? |
42863 | What ant hires his home? |
42863 | What ant is a beggar? |
42863 | What ant is an officer? |
42863 | What ant is angry? |
42863 | What ant is joyful? |
42863 | What ant is learned? |
42863 | What ant is obstinate? |
42863 | What ant is prayerful? |
42863 | What ant is proud? |
42863 | What ant is successful? |
42863 | What ant is trustworthy? |
42863 | What ant is well- informed? |
42863 | What ant is youngest? |
42863 | What ant lives in a house? |
42863 | What ant points out things? |
42863 | What ant sees things? |
42863 | What ant tells things? |
42863 | What berry is red when it''s green? |
42863 | What by cockneys is turned into wine? |
42863 | What city is for few people? |
42863 | What city was saved from famine by lepers? |
42863 | What did Charles Dudley Warner? |
42863 | What did Eugene Fitch Ware? |
42863 | What did Julia McNair Wright? |
42863 | What did he say? |
42863 | What did he then bid her? |
42863 | What did she say? |
42863 | What did the band play when he came home? |
42863 | What did the band play? |
42863 | What did the soldier say when he bade his sweetheart good- bye? |
42863 | What dies only with life? |
42863 | What dies only with life? |
42863 | What does Anthony Hope? |
42863 | What does a maid''s heart crave? |
42863 | What does a maiden''s heart crave? |
42863 | What does an angry person often raise? |
42863 | What does an angry person often raise? |
42863 | What does the---- to? |
42863 | What field flower is something to eat and a dish we drink from? |
42863 | What first lady of the land fled from Washington to escape the British? |
42863 | What flower did Alice Cary? |
42863 | What flower is most popular in April? |
42863 | What four Germans were the ushers? |
42863 | What gentleman of dark complexion rescued them? |
42863 | What gives John Howard Payne? |
42863 | What happens when John Kendrick Bangs? |
42863 | What historical people entertained them in France? |
42863 | What hotel in New York city bears the name of a flower? |
42863 | What is James Warden Owen? |
42863 | What is a good receipt for hoe cake? |
42863 | What is a hoe used for? |
42863 | What is a suitable adjective for the national library building? |
42863 | What is it William Macy? |
42863 | What is the favorite nut in Ohio? |
42863 | What is the mason''s favorite nut? |
42863 | What is the matter with my eyes? |
42863 | What is the oldest ant? |
42863 | What is the ruling ant? |
42863 | What is the saddest flower? |
42863 | What is the tree That makes each townsman flee? |
42863 | What is the true mission of a harrow? |
42863 | What is the wandering ant? |
42863 | What mythological personage presided over the music? |
42863 | What noted Swiss was best man? |
42863 | What noted bells were rung in honor of the wedding? |
42863 | What noted person from Japan was present? |
42863 | What nut can not the farmer go to town without? |
42863 | What nut grows nearest the sea? |
42863 | What nut grows on the Amazon? |
42863 | What nut grows the lowest? |
42863 | What nut is good for naughty boys? |
42863 | What nut is like a Chinaman''s eyes? |
42863 | What nut is like a good Jersey cow? |
42863 | What nut is like a naughty boy when sister has a beau? |
42863 | What nut is like an oft told tale? |
42863 | What nut is the color of a pretty girl''s eyes? |
42863 | What ship did they take for their wedding trip? |
42863 | What should all literary people do? |
42863 | What should all literary people do? |
42863 | What strange thing is this? |
42863 | What three Presidents were assassinated? |
42863 | What two Presidents died the same day? |
42863 | What two ladies( friends of Donizetti''s) were bridesmaids? |
42863 | What virtue sustained them in captivity? |
42863 | What was he called? |
42863 | What was she called? |
42863 | What was the bride called-- from the circumstances of her wedding? |
42863 | What was their motto? |
42863 | What will turn John Locke? |
42863 | What would this umbrella bring If we changed to hippetty- hop And our hostess called out''stop''?" |
42863 | What would we consider the person who answers correctly all these questions? |
42863 | What would we prefer to be? |
42863 | What''s the tree that in death will benight you? |
42863 | When death first made vacant a President''s chair, What Vice- President succeeded there? |
42863 | When did Mary Mapes Dodge? |
42863 | When did Thomas Buchanan Read? |
42863 | When did he propose? |
42863 | When is Marian Evans Cross? |
42863 | When on the voyage who captured them? |
42863 | When we leave here we go to our what? |
42863 | When we leave here we go to seek our what? |
42863 | Where did Henry Cabot Lodge? |
42863 | Where did he go? |
42863 | Where did he spend that night? |
42863 | Where did they always remain? |
42863 | Where did they make their home? |
42863 | Where did they meet? |
42863 | Where there is no such word as fail? |
42863 | Where was he born? |
42863 | Where was she born? |
42863 | Where were they married? |
42863 | Which Chief Magistrate was styled"The American Fabius"of the wild? |
42863 | Which President, most grave and wary, Was called"Old Public Functionary"? |
42863 | Which is the most religious state? |
42863 | Who built the ark? |
42863 | Who furnished the music? |
42863 | Who furnished the wedding feast? |
42863 | Who was the fifteenth President of the United States? |
42863 | Who was the first man? |
42863 | Who were the bridesmaids? |
42863 | Whose flock was Moses tending when he saw the burning bush? |
42863 | Whose phaeton, made from ship of state, Conveyed him to inaugural fête? |
42863 | Whose three daughters were the fairest in all the land? |
42863 | Why did Helen Hunt Jackson? |
42863 | Why is George Canning? |
42863 | Why is Sarah Grand? |
42863 | Why was Rider Haggard? |
42863 | Will you? |
42863 | Will you?" |
42863 | With how many men did Gideon conquer the Midianites? |
42863 | Would I want my meditations Broken up by cries of fright At a mouse or daddy- long- legs, Or some other fearful sight? |
42863 | [_ Rubbing his eyes again._]"Do you see any? |
42863 | supply? |
43025 | ''Damper?'' |
43025 | ''Woltor''or''Stoltor''? |
43025 | --Miracle? |
43025 | A flirtation? |
43025 | A story? |
43025 | A--''quitter''? |
43025 | Allan John,she asked,"do you suppose that you will ever marry again?" |
43025 | Am I a-- King,he began to intone,"that I should call my own, this--?" |
43025 | Amusing to talk to? |
43025 | An oblivion? |
43025 | And for Ann Woltor? |
43025 | And how did you get on with Allan John? |
43025 | And just what did Dr. Brawne-- tell_ you_? |
43025 | And just what part,drawled my Husband,"is this New Zealand paragon, Miss Stoltor, to play in our Rainy Week?" |
43025 | And the permanent wave? |
43025 | And to Dr. Brawne, too? 43025 And where are you going to be in May?" |
43025 | And would I please tell her-- how to spell''oceanic''? |
43025 | And you''d have thought somehow that the picture would be funny, would n''t you? 43025 And you, Mrs. Delville, of course?" |
43025 | Animals? |
43025 | Ann Woltor-- crying? |
43025 | Ann-- what? |
43025 | Any recent calamity? 43025 Are you willing that Allan John should go to the cave to- day?" |
43025 | At the big table in the upper hall? 43025 Bene-- benedictine?" |
43025 | Bungalow? |
43025 | But however in the world did you happen to have the whistle under your pillow? |
43025 | But really, George,he himself hastened to cut in,"if you could come to us the second week in May----""May?" |
43025 | But what I really called up to say,I hastened to confide,"is that she fainted this afternoon, and----""Yes?" |
43025 | But where in the world should we find a really ingenuous Ingà © nue? |
43025 | But will Mrs. Brenswick go? |
43025 | But, May Girl? |
43025 | By the way, where is Mr. Rollins this morning? |
43025 | Coach me up a bit? |
43025 | Crape-- on-- my-- sleeve? |
43025 | Cry one day and laugh another, is it? |
43025 | Did Ann Woltor come back? |
43025 | Did you think I was talking just weather with your husband all that first harrowing day and evening? 43025 Do I hear my name bandied by festive voices?" |
43025 | Do n''t you think that-- p''raps-- somebody ought to go and find him? |
43025 | Do n''t you think you''re just a bit behind the times in your interpretation of the phrase''artistic temperament''? |
43025 | Do what? |
43025 | Do you feel that way about him? 43025 Do you really want to go?" |
43025 | Do you think it will clear to- day? |
43025 | Doctor Brawne? 43025 Does he kiss my hand?" |
43025 | Dr.--Dr. Brawne will, of course, make you a very distinguished husband,I stammered,"but are you sure you love him?" |
43025 | Eh? 43025 Eh? |
43025 | Eh? 43025 Eh?" |
43025 | Everything else all right? |
43025 | Excuse me,he floundered,"but I have to catch a train--_please_ may I have my book?" |
43025 | Fifteen years ago? |
43025 | For Heaven''s sake,called my own husband through the half open doorway,"what''s all this pow- wow about?" |
43025 | Here? |
43025 | How did you break your tooth? |
43025 | How do we know young Kennilworth''s got a future? |
43025 | How do you know that this Ann Woltor has got a past? |
43025 | How do you know? |
43025 | How do you- people know but what I_ am_ a burglar? |
43025 | How-- how old is this-- this Woltor person? |
43025 | I-- I was in some sort of a-- a crowd? |
43025 | I? |
43025 | I? |
43025 | If it was n''t for Miss Davies here-- what would you be doing to- day? |
43025 | If it''s conducted, oh, very-- very-- very properly? |
43025 | In all this storm f Why, what if the May Girl had refused to-- to----? |
43025 | In-- bronze? |
43025 | Invited whom? |
43025 | Is it a front tooth? |
43025 | Is it your own? |
43025 | Is it? |
43025 | Is it? |
43025 | Is n''t it the limit? 43025 Is she still there?" |
43025 | Is that the stuff that smells the way stars would taste if you ate them raw? |
43025 | Is this Mrs. Jack Delville? |
43025 | Is-- everybody-- in the world going to die? |
43025 | It does n''t quite make sense when you say it out loud, does it? |
43025 | Jack,I asked quite abruptly,"Who is Ann Woltor?" |
43025 | Just how----? |
43025 | Kennilworth? |
43025 | Kittens? |
43025 | M- marked? |
43025 | Mad? |
43025 | My last bottle--? |
43025 | My name? |
43025 | Mysterious? |
43025 | N- o? |
43025 | Never-- left the place? |
43025 | Night- lunch carts? |
43025 | No- o? |
43025 | Not on the one engagement day of his life? 43025 Not-- going?" |
43025 | Now that makes how many of us? |
43025 | Now, Miss Davies,he insisted,"more than anything else in the world to- day what would you like to do?" |
43025 | Now, how do you know but what_ we_ are burglars? 43025 Oh, is this where you bad people are?" |
43025 | Oh, is this where you live? |
43025 | Oh, it is n''t Good Night, dear, is it? |
43025 | Oh, just wait till you see him in bronze? |
43025 | Oh, lovely-- what is it about? |
43025 | Oh, not May? |
43025 | Oh, not than''anything''? |
43025 | Oh, not to- day-- surely? |
43025 | Oh, you really mean kittens? 43025 On w- what?" |
43025 | Only three? |
43025 | Or----? |
43025 | Peeved is it because he thought Miss Davies----? |
43025 | Perhaps to- morrow-- if it is n''t too far-- and we ever could find it again----"But why such haste about the''Toy Village''? |
43025 | Pleasant? |
43025 | Rollins?--Rollins? |
43025 | Romance? |
43025 | Round and round the country? |
43025 | Round-- what? |
43025 | Saw what? |
43025 | Second week? 43025 Sew?" |
43025 | Shall I-- shall I call the others? |
43025 | Suppose it had been true? |
43025 | The most delicate part of the cast? 43025 The ocean?" |
43025 | The road-- doesn''t go any farther? |
43025 | The six- thirty train? 43025 The''Main Battery,''"puzzled the Bridegroom,"being----?" |
43025 | Then I really may consider us-- formally engaged? |
43025 | Then you really would like to go? |
43025 | There''s no other stopping place you mean-- just a little bit farther along? 43025 This village of yours,"he frowned,"I-- I hope it''s going to have good government?" |
43025 | Three generations of plowing, is n''t it, to raise one artist? 43025 Tired?" |
43025 | To the what? |
43025 | To whom? |
43025 | To whom? |
43025 | To- day, I mean? 43025 To- morrow?" |
43025 | To- night? |
43025 | To-- do-- the same-- for you? |
43025 | Turkish? |
43025 | Unfathomable? 43025 Up- stairs, you mean, do n''t you?" |
43025 | W- w- what? |
43025 | W-- What? |
43025 | Wardrobe mistress? |
43025 | Was it there-- yesterday? |
43025 | Was n''t Allan John even listening? |
43025 | Well, I certainly am rattled? |
43025 | Well-- it_ was_ in the mind of God, was n''t it? |
43025 | What do you know of the natural male''instinct''? |
43025 | What else have I got? |
43025 | What if I have to die some day?--And_ this_ day was wasted in rain? |
43025 | What is it? |
43025 | What is the matter with everybody? |
43025 | What seems to be the matter? |
43025 | What shall we do,fretted my Husband,"if this perfection lasts?" |
43025 | What the deuce do you expect Keets to get out of it? |
43025 | What the deuce is the matter with everybody? |
43025 | What was that? |
43025 | What''s Doctor Brawne to you? |
43025 | What''s the grouch? |
43025 | What''s your Pom''s name? 43025 What, do n''t you want to hear the story?" |
43025 | What? |
43025 | What? |
43025 | What? |
43025 | Whatever in the world were you thinking of? |
43025 | When did you get back? |
43025 | When she tried to bolt so? 43025 Where did you get the suit?" |
43025 | Where do you suppose he''s gone to? |
43025 | Where is Allan John? |
43025 | Where? |
43025 | Who did that? |
43025 | Who said Paul? |
43025 | Who said''Stoltor''? |
43025 | Who started this conversation, anyway? |
43025 | Who would n''t? |
43025 | Who''s she? |
43025 | Who?--the car? |
43025 | Why did n''t you speak to my Husband? |
43025 | Why not the dresses? 43025 Why, what''s the matter with trying Allan John?" |
43025 | Why, where in Creation were you? |
43025 | Why, you did n''t suppose for a minute, did you,persisted young Kennilworth tormentingly,"that there was any special fun about being engaged? |
43025 | Why-- do you ask-- that? |
43025 | Why? |
43025 | Without anybody noticing? |
43025 | Women do care so much, do n''t they? |
43025 | Wondering what? |
43025 | Worrying? |
43025 | Yes, but Ferry? |
43025 | Yes, but the discovery? |
43025 | Yes, but why? |
43025 | Yes, was n''t it? |
43025 | Yes, wo n''t it be interesting,whispered the Bride to George Keets,"to see what Mr. Kennilworth will really do? |
43025 | Yes, would n''t it be interesting,glowed Ann Woltor quite unexpectedly,"if he''d made her something really wonderful? |
43025 | Yes? 43025 Yes?" |
43025 | Yes? |
43025 | Yes? |
43025 | Yet there''s something about it that worries you? |
43025 | You concede no personal reticence in the world? |
43025 | You do n''t think for a moment that anybody would be rash enough to try and make the trip in the big dory? |
43025 | You like this Ann Woltor, do n''t you? |
43025 | You really believe then--he quickened,"that there is''honor among thieves''?" |
43025 | You-- told-- Dr. Brawne that-- I fainted? |
43025 | You? 43025 You?" |
43025 | You? |
43025 | Your book? |
43025 | Your mother is-- not living? |
43025 | Your own discovery?--Just when? |
43025 | Your-- book? 43025 _ Bronze_?" |
43025 | _ Pleasant_? |
43025 | _ What_? |
43025 | _ What_? |
43025 | An elopement, you mean?" |
43025 | And a mystery at a houseparty? |
43025 | And acting half scared to death? |
43025 | And all over the rocks? |
43025 | And from Bishop''s Wife to Bishop''s Wife? |
43025 | And out on the beach? |
43025 | And the fishes? |
43025 | And then afterward-- when I saw that she really could n''t stop----""Crying?" |
43025 | And two breakfasts in succession? |
43025 | And were they open mornings? |
43025 | And when the officer arrived, he said,''I hate like the dickens to run this gentleman in, but if there''s nobody to look after him--?'' |
43025 | Any special threat of impending illness?" |
43025 | Are n''t you ever coming?" |
43025 | Are you sure-- are you quite sure, I mean, that he has n''t been sitting round with wet feet all the evening? |
43025 | At ten o''clock in the morning? |
43025 | Brawne-- tall?" |
43025 | Brawne?" |
43025 | Brawne?" |
43025 | Breakfast? |
43025 | But I?" |
43025 | But a brand new Ingà © nue--? |
43025 | But a mock engagement?" |
43025 | But a question of the May Girl herself? |
43025 | But after all it was those extraordinarily human shoulders of his that were really doing the carrying? |
43025 | But can you reproduce liquids with solids? |
43025 | But if you do n''t mind things being a bit old- timey,--this ring of my great uncle Aberner''s-- if we tie it on-- perhaps?" |
43025 | But men? |
43025 | But to be with one''s Lover and have the day prove dull? |
43025 | But unswallowed? |
43025 | But what page is long enough to record the wishes of Eighteen? |
43025 | But where_ is_ he?" |
43025 | But wherever in the world are you? |
43025 | But whether that drama be farce or fury--? |
43025 | But why in the world should she want to bolt?" |
43025 | Ca n''t anybody see-- anything?" |
43025 | Ca n''t you see I want to work? |
43025 | Ca n''t you see that you''ve started the whole thing entirely wrong?" |
43025 | Clap one''s hands? |
43025 | Clothes? |
43025 | Could you come then, do you think? |
43025 | Could you put the ocean into bronze, I mean?" |
43025 | Cross- Patch? |
43025 | Delville?" |
43025 | Did anybody mind if he_ tore_ it? |
43025 | Did n''t you?" |
43025 | Did you call this rain? |
43025 | Do n''t you remember the awful search we had last year and even then----?" |
43025 | Do n''t you remember? |
43025 | Do you think he had enough supper?" |
43025 | Even if you started all right with a nice molten wave? |
43025 | Fat or thin? |
43025 | Gurgled? |
43025 | Had n''t she been up since six? |
43025 | Have I got a-- broken tooth?" |
43025 | Have n''t got''em? |
43025 | How about the second week in May? |
43025 | How did we stand it? |
43025 | How did you get there?" |
43025 | How do you explain it? |
43025 | How----? |
43025 | I explained,"How would you get there? |
43025 | I thought the surf would smash us, but----""But what was the''argument''?" |
43025 | If God in the terrible uncertainty of Him should force even one dull day into the miracle of their life together----? |
43025 | In the bungalow? |
43025 | In the car? |
43025 | Is-- is it going to clear up?" |
43025 | It rained last year, did n''t it? |
43025 | It seemed best to you, without consultation, without argument, to act so suddenly in the matter, and so-- so all alone?" |
43025 | It''s the first time, is n''t it?" |
43025 | Jolly? |
43025 | No advice? |
43025 | No conference on literature,--music,--painting? |
43025 | No dully congenial convocation of in- bred relatives? |
43025 | No lazy, purring, reunion of old friends this_ Rainy Week_ of ours, you understand? |
43025 | No suggestions, you observe? |
43025 | No symposium of embroidery stitches? |
43025 | Nor of billiard shots? |
43025 | Nose- Gay? |
43025 | Not both of you, I mean?" |
43025 | Not_ really_?" |
43025 | Not_ really_?" |
43025 | Now up- stairs-- all day yesterday-- wouldn''t it----?" |
43025 | Oh, surely-- surely,"she coaxed,"even if it is a work- room, there could n''t be any real sin in just prying a little?" |
43025 | On a holiday?" |
43025 | One, on one side of the table-- and one-- the other? |
43025 | One-- two-- three-- four-- five-- six-- Seven--"he repeated as though to be perfectly sure,"_ seven_? |
43025 | Or Paul Brenswick''s candle thrust into a copperas- tinted knot of water- logged cedar? |
43025 | Or bolt from the room? |
43025 | Or should one cry? |
43025 | Or----?" |
43025 | Our betrothal?" |
43025 | Poor Rollins-- when he''s having such a thrill?" |
43025 | Rain? |
43025 | Should one laugh? |
43025 | Skip- a- bout? |
43025 | Something that would last, I mean, after the game was over? |
43025 | Spat like venom from Bishop to Bishop? |
43025 | Swinging back to the breakfast- room I heard the clock strike ten-- only ten? |
43025 | The flash of a blue- bird? |
43025 | The impeccable Mr. George Keets there at your right,--no more, no less, than exactly what he looks,--an almost perfect replica of a stage''Raffles''?" |
43025 | The most difficult? |
43025 | The most hazardous? |
43025 | The problem of the horizon sense? |
43025 | The-- engagement?" |
43025 | This Dr. Brawne of yours?--Is he old or young? |
43025 | This is the end,--the last house,--the----?" |
43025 | This whole house a Den of Thieves? |
43025 | Was it because she knew that you knew Hal Ferry? |
43025 | Way, way out to the farthest point? |
43025 | Were there any Movie Palaces near? |
43025 | What about drainage? |
43025 | What about the horizon sense?" |
43025 | What about the-- last wave? |
43025 | What bride''s are not? |
43025 | What had Ann Woltor left there the day before that made her specially anxious to get there first? |
43025 | What is it? |
43025 | What''s that?" |
43025 | What''s that?" |
43025 | What_ were_ you doing?" |
43025 | Where you were working yesterday? |
43025 | Whether he who came to_ star_ remains to_ supe_? |
43025 | Which is it-- really?" |
43025 | Who can say? |
43025 | Who was there left for your elbow to nudge? |
43025 | Who yet shall prove the hero? |
43025 | Who''s speaking?" |
43025 | Who--? |
43025 | Why did he think that Ann Woltor would be the one to get there first? |
43025 | Why there''s Jerry and Paul and Richard and-- and----""Yes, but your father and mother?" |
43025 | Why-- Why, what the----?" |
43025 | Will I ever forget the fragrance of this week-- while Time lasts?" |
43025 | With a Bridegroom who after all was still more or less of a strange Bridegroom? |
43025 | With the aid of one or two Hare''s Ears which I''m almost sure I''ve seen in the specimen cabinet----""''Hare''s Ears''?" |
43025 | You did n''t think for a moment, I mean, that you were really going to have any sort of good time to- day? |
43025 | You''ll write to her immediately, wo n''t you?" |
43025 | _ What_?" |
43025 | he said,"is our whole dramatic endeavor going to be wrecked by the monotony of everybody being''twenty- five''?" |
25857 | ''M-- what kind of a letter? |
25857 | A little shy of men; are n''t we, Adèle? |
25857 | A little touched? |
25857 | Ai n''t that handy, now? 25857 Alone?" |
25857 | And Mona Galbraith? |
25857 | And a colander and a tack hammer and a bar of soap? |
25857 | And any men? |
25857 | And are they always obeyed? |
25857 | And did you like it? |
25857 | And do unusual people adore you? |
25857 | And does the Fräulein, her nurse, always take a nap at the same time? |
25857 | And how well shall I have to know you,he went on,"before I can say it to you properly?" |
25857 | And is the same lady still in charge of it? |
25857 | And is this the way they do things now? 25857 And what about the pretty speeches I''m to make to you?" |
25857 | And what about_ my_ wants? |
25857 | And when are you coming East again? |
25857 | And where do we put our presents? |
25857 | And you''re not enjoying this dance with me? |
25857 | And you''re not enjoying yourself now? |
25857 | And, now that we know the truth about each other, you''ll come, wo n''t you? |
25857 | And, oh, I say, Mrs. Kenerley, if it is n''t too much trouble, may n''t we have a box of matches, and two black pins, and a bit of paper? |
25857 | Anon is n''t a very long time, is it? |
25857 | Anything left for me? |
25857 | Are n''t you one yourself? |
25857 | Are you going to say crazy things to me? |
25857 | Are you going? |
25857 | Are you implying that Mr. Van Reypen is not capable of giving me love, as well as the other advantages you enumerate? |
25857 | Are you in mood for a gossip, Patty? |
25857 | Are you sure of that, my girl? |
25857 | Are you, really? |
25857 | Been through the kitchens? |
25857 | Bill Farnsworth? |
25857 | But I made you do it, did n''t I? 25857 But are n''t we going to have a president and treasurer, and things like that?" |
25857 | But are n''t you afraid,Mr. Fairfield asked,"that such unaccustomed luxuries will make those people discontented with their own conditions?" |
25857 | But do n''t you ever hear from him? |
25857 | But how can I come, if I do n''t know who you are? 25857 But how do you know where they''ve gone?" |
25857 | But the shop girls are always busy; how can we take them motoring? |
25857 | But what did you do last night? |
25857 | But where have you been? 25857 But why ca n''t we break the roads?" |
25857 | But why do we go there? |
25857 | But why do_ we_ go for them? 25857 But why does it hang from the ceiling? |
25857 | But you have dogs? |
25857 | By what right have you followed us, Miss Fairfield? |
25857 | Ca n''t you go home to dinner with Patty, Mona? 25857 Can you stay, Little Billee?" |
25857 | Chub, you did n''t see a stray letter of mine this morning, did you? |
25857 | Come where? 25857 Could you find me a glass of milk, Philip?" |
25857 | Daisy said that, did she? |
25857 | Daisy, what did you do it for? |
25857 | Did Lear wear flowers? 25857 Did he see us?" |
25857 | Did n''t she ask you if she might bring him to- night? |
25857 | Did you ever see anything like it? |
25857 | Did you ever see such a beautiful day? 25857 Did you get Adèle?" |
25857 | Did you get a good rest, Patty? |
25857 | Did you have a party last night? |
25857 | Did you have grippe? |
25857 | Did you like it? |
25857 | Did you, really? 25857 Did you? |
25857 | Do all your sister''s guests do that? |
25857 | Do n''t they? 25857 Do n''t you like it, Mona, to live in a big hotel like this, and yet have your own rooms, like a home all to yourself?" |
25857 | Do n''t you want something off it? |
25857 | Do you accept it? |
25857 | Do you call this room neat? |
25857 | Do you have holiday Saturday afternoon? |
25857 | Do you hear from Bill Farnsworth often? |
25857 | Do you know what the Real Thing is? |
25857 | Do you like it? |
25857 | Do you really want to know, Patty? 25857 Do you say that because it''s what everybody says,--or because you''re lazy?" |
25857 | Do you think so? |
25857 | Do you want to be an old maid? |
25857 | Do you? |
25857 | Do_ you_ know where she is? |
25857 | Everything all right? |
25857 | For Christmas presents? 25857 For goodness''sake, Patty, why did n''t he send you more? |
25857 | For life? |
25857 | Forget it? 25857 Give it up? |
25857 | Glad rags, do you mean? |
25857 | Good gracious, Christine, what_ do_ you mean? |
25857 | Good gracious, Mona, what kind of English is that? 25857 Goodness me, Philip, did I really say that? |
25857 | Goodness, is it supper time? 25857 H''m; and you thought you''d take a volume of the Britannica back with you, to read yourself to sleep?" |
25857 | Had quite a buzz, did n''t yer? |
25857 | Have I told you,said Patty,"what we''re going to do next Saturday afternoon? |
25857 | Have you a telephone? |
25857 | Have you been successful in your undertakings? |
25857 | Have you been telling_ him_ about our club? |
25857 | Have you opened all your letters, Patty? |
25857 | How about gloves? |
25857 | How about it, Patty? |
25857 | How could you stand in that breakneck position? |
25857 | How could you take that breakneck fall? |
25857 | How d''y''do, Patty? |
25857 | How did you find it out? |
25857 | How do wild horses keep people away? 25857 How do you know these things, Patty? |
25857 | How do you like those, baby May? |
25857 | How do you think of all these things? |
25857 | How long are you staying here? |
25857 | How''s Daisy? |
25857 | How_ could_ you carry all those things downstairs? |
25857 | I just reckon, young man, that you ai n''t one mite sorry that you lost your way and had this little outing with your young lady? |
25857 | I said, did you ever make a lemon pig? |
25857 | I say, Miss Bo- Peep, you''re clever, are n''t you? |
25857 | I say, Miss Fairfield, do you know what I think? 25857 I say, Patty, are you cut up about this? |
25857 | I say, Patty,he began when they were whirling about the floor,"who is that stuff Mona has trailing after her?" |
25857 | I suppose you belong to the real old New England Winthrops? |
25857 | I wear it that way in tableaux and things, so what''s the difference? |
25857 | If she had n''t what? |
25857 | Is Jenny here? |
25857 | Is department B in the same place? |
25857 | Is it far? |
25857 | Is n''t Elise going? |
25857 | Is n''t it lovely? |
25857 | Is n''t it wonderful, Philip? |
25857 | Is n''t she a perfect dear? |
25857 | Is that big one coming to the wedding? |
25857 | Is there going to be an extra, Jim,--I mean Chief Mudjokivis, or whatever your Indian name is? |
25857 | Is your idea faster than their car, Little Billee? |
25857 | Is youse up against it again? |
25857 | It''s awfully nice to have friends, Mr. Everson, but sometimes they''re a great care; are n''t they? |
25857 | It''s well planned, is n''t it? |
25857 | It_ is_ surprising, is n''t it? |
25857 | Jenny who? |
25857 | Jim? |
25857 | Like it? 25857 Luncheon where?" |
25857 | Mad at me? |
25857 | May I have a dance, Miss Fairfield? |
25857 | May I have three, Patty? |
25857 | May n''t I tell you? |
25857 | Meaning me? |
25857 | More what? 25857 Mrs. Greene, I fear you wo n''t be warm enough, though your jacket_ is_ thick, is n''t it? |
25857 | No, I do n''t mean that, dear, but,----well, Patty, wo n''t you wait? |
25857 | No? |
25857 | Not one? |
25857 | Not sorry that our friendship is n''t spoiled? |
25857 | Now we have selected our guests, what shall we do with them? 25857 Now, Miss Fairfield, what''s it all about?" |
25857 | Now, Patty, about the tree; would you have bayberry candles on it, or only the electric lights? |
25857 | Now, Roger, what''s the use of acting like that? 25857 Now, are we all ready?" |
25857 | Now, whichever seeker finds whichever hider, they''ll go in pairs to the ball, do n''t you see? 25857 Now,"said Mona, as she rose from the table,"I''m going to give you each a bunch of these carnations----""To take home?" |
25857 | Oh, Patty, do you think I''d have the ghost of a chance? |
25857 | Oh, can we really take them off now? |
25857 | Oh, do you sing, Miss Fairfield? |
25857 | Oh, is that it? 25857 Oh, sing more, wo n''t you? |
25857 | Oh, who,_ indeed_? |
25857 | Oh, you do n''t know each other, do you? |
25857 | Oh,said Patty, turning to Mr. Collins, delightedly,"was it really you? |
25857 | On the lake? |
25857 | Or overshoes? 25857 Patty dear, does n''t this all remind you of the day Nan was married?" |
25857 | Patty, you rogue, how_ can_ you speak like that? 25857 Plenty of hills; but I do n''t believe there''s a sled about the place-- is there, Jim?" |
25857 | Really, Patty? 25857 Really? |
25857 | Same as ever? |
25857 | Saw a mouse? |
25857 | Shall I tell you why? |
25857 | Shall we take my little car? |
25857 | Shall you feel like dancing after all this gaiety, Patty? |
25857 | So she wo n''t raise a finger, wo n''t she? 25857 Some other time, Mr. Collins, after dinner, maybe, will you teach me just a little about it?" |
25857 | Something useful? |
25857 | Sorry for what? |
25857 | Swing- shelf? |
25857 | That was a great show, was n''t it? |
25857 | The Gainsborough picture? |
25857 | The people? |
25857 | Then, Patty, may n''t_ I_ hope? |
25857 | Then, you did n''t care for him especially, Patty? |
25857 | This is Mrs. Greene, is n''t it? |
25857 | To go to Hatton''s Corners? 25857 Under the mistletoe?" |
25857 | Want to be pioneer? |
25857 | Was I_ ever_ late? |
25857 | Was it like mine? 25857 Well, here''s a bargain, then,--if I find something nice for you to eat, will you like me a whole lot?" |
25857 | Well, it means like a butterfly, hovering from one flower to another----"Oh, you think you''re like unto a flower? |
25857 | Well, then, where is it? |
25857 | Well, this is n''t much of a time or place, is it? 25857 Well, what are you going to do about it?" |
25857 | Well, what is it? |
25857 | Well, what_ did_ I miss? |
25857 | Well, who_ was_ there? 25857 Well, you do n''t love anybody yet, do you?" |
25857 | What about her, Roger? 25857 What are you going to do about it?" |
25857 | What are you looking at? |
25857 | What are you two hob- nobbing about? |
25857 | What boys? 25857 What can I do for you?" |
25857 | What can we do with them all? |
25857 | What did I miss? |
25857 | What did you come down for, anyhow? |
25857 | What do you mean, Jim, by that big blue letter? 25857 What do you mean, Jim?" |
25857 | What do you say to a nice, dignified game of hide and seek? |
25857 | What for? 25857 What have you to do?" |
25857 | What is it? |
25857 | What is this fur, Miss Galbraith? |
25857 | What makes you think I know anything about it? |
25857 | What makes you think you missed anything? |
25857 | What two? |
25857 | What''s he doing? |
25857 | What''s that? |
25857 | What''s the matter, Lady Fair? |
25857 | What''s the matter, Patty? |
25857 | What, for instance? |
25857 | What_ can_ I do with so many suitors? |
25857 | What_ is_ his standing, then? |
25857 | What_ is_ the matter with you, Patty? |
25857 | Where did you get it, Bill? |
25857 | Where did you get this double- rigged thing? |
25857 | Where do I come in? |
25857 | Where is Christine Farley? |
25857 | Where is it, Daisy? |
25857 | Where would you like to go, Celeste? |
25857 | Where''s Patty? |
25857 | Who are on the stairs? |
25857 | Who else has been bothering you? |
25857 | Who introduced them, anyhow? |
25857 | Who is he? |
25857 | Who is it? |
25857 | Who is your next partner, Patty? |
25857 | Who sent that last big box, Patty? |
25857 | Who was it from? |
25857 | Who was there? 25857 Who''s for a snow frolic? |
25857 | Who, where, what, when? |
25857 | Who? |
25857 | Why did n''t you catch it, Patty? |
25857 | Why did n''t you let us all in on this game? |
25857 | Why did you want to know all about him? |
25857 | Why do I have to throw it, anyway? |
25857 | Why do we go? |
25857 | Why is it,Mr. Hepworth was saying,"that you young people prefer the stairs to the nice, comfortable seats at little tables in the dining- room?" |
25857 | Why must we be so careful? |
25857 | Why not, Adèle? |
25857 | Why not, and what are we going to do? |
25857 | Why not? |
25857 | Why, Christine, what is the matter, dear? |
25857 | Why, is this place a castle? |
25857 | Why, she is n''t here, is she? 25857 Why, yes, of course; how could it be otherwise? |
25857 | Why? |
25857 | Will it be done? |
25857 | Will they be speeding? |
25857 | Will you come down again later, if you''re hungry? |
25857 | Wo n''t you have some? |
25857 | Wo n''t you repeat it for me, please? 25857 Would you rather dance with King Lear?" |
25857 | Would your answer have been different if you had? |
25857 | Yes, dear; what is it? 25857 Yes, does n''t he? |
25857 | Yes, of course; do you have to go to the train with them, Ken? |
25857 | Yes;_ what_ about them? 25857 You do n''t like her, do you, Patty?" |
25857 | You do n''t want work again, do you? |
25857 | You give me your permission, do you? 25857 You know him? |
25857 | You know the rest of the story, after the Prince kissed the Sleeping Beauty? |
25857 | You think so? |
25857 | You''re glad? |
25857 | You''ve known her a long time, have n''t you? |
25857 | _ Will_ they be speeding? 25857 ''Afar in the desert I love to ride''--what comes next, Patty? |
25857 | ''Wherefore art thou Romeo?'' |
25857 | A pin from Elise''s pin cushion,--or some powder from her puff- box? |
25857 | A sermon, or just a bit of oratory?" |
25857 | And I''ve got to do it myself, have I? |
25857 | And are those the only ones you saved to read by yourself, young lady?" |
25857 | And how about that big blue one,--what have you done with that?" |
25857 | And now for my errand; will you go out to supper with me?" |
25857 | And now, that''s everything you want, is n''t it?" |
25857 | And now, which of you is going to take me to supper?" |
25857 | And what better fortune could I ask than to be allowed to obey your decree?" |
25857 | And what did I miss? |
25857 | And what''s the next line?" |
25857 | And where has Miss Mona gone?" |
25857 | And you do n''t know me, do you?" |
25857 | And, anyway, what does capricious mean?" |
25857 | Are n''t they a stunning couple?" |
25857 | Are n''t they, Philip?" |
25857 | Are there no servants to send?" |
25857 | Are they still finding each other?" |
25857 | Are we going to have any dressing up to- night? |
25857 | Are you game to get up and go for an early morning skate, just with me, and not let anybody else know?" |
25857 | Are you good for that much walk?" |
25857 | Are you, Little Billee?" |
25857 | Big Bill Farnsworth all right? |
25857 | But how can I stop that? |
25857 | But how will you get home from the station?" |
25857 | But how would you like to have Mrs. Allen, Nan''s mother, come and stay with you?" |
25857 | But how_ can_ I tell who I''m going to love when I get old enough to love anybody?" |
25857 | But must we go back there, or is there a shorter cut?" |
25857 | But some day I hope to be less hurried, and then----""And then?" |
25857 | But suppose they wo n''t come?" |
25857 | But that Rosy,--you know, that redhead boy, Miss Fairfield?" |
25857 | But with a desperate attempt to bluff it out, he exclaimed,"What do you mean?" |
25857 | But you might have met a,--a burglar or something?" |
25857 | But, I say, Philip, where are we? |
25857 | By the way, Mrs. Kenerley; baby always takes an afternoon nap, does n''t she?" |
25857 | By the way, Patty, speaking of the West at large, what made you tell a naughty story this morning?" |
25857 | By the way, young man, what is your name?" |
25857 | Ca n''t we go home? |
25857 | Ca n''t you and I rig up in something, just for fun?" |
25857 | Ca n''t you understand that?" |
25857 | Can I help about yours?" |
25857 | Can some one take me over, Adèle, or must I walk?" |
25857 | Can we announce it to- night?" |
25857 | Christine, do you_ mean_ it? |
25857 | Could anything be more delightfuller?" |
25857 | Did Mr. Myers send you?" |
25857 | Did n''t Roger go home?" |
25857 | Did n''t anybody expect him?" |
25857 | Did n''t you get one?" |
25857 | Did you find so much?" |
25857 | Did you get leave of absence, too?" |
25857 | Did you save it for me?" |
25857 | Did you think_ I_ wanted him? |
25857 | Did you want to see Big Bill, specially?" |
25857 | Did you?" |
25857 | Do help me, wo n''t you? |
25857 | Do n''t all girls have nice compliments, and flattery kind of speeches from the young men they know?" |
25857 | Do n''t now; will you, Chubsy?" |
25857 | Do n''t you know King Lear became a little troubled in his head, and adorned himself with a garland?" |
25857 | Do n''t you know how the Indian jugglers make you see flowers growing, when there are n''t any flowers there? |
25857 | Do n''t you know that if you want people to love you and admire you, you must be sunshiny and pleasant?" |
25857 | Do n''t you know that your father asked me to try to persuade you to drop that Lansing man?" |
25857 | Do n''t you love me a least little bit?" |
25857 | Do n''t you remember that little club we used to have at school,--the Merry Grigs?" |
25857 | Do n''t you suppose we''ll find out about him? |
25857 | Do n''t you?" |
25857 | Do n''t you_ know_ what I''m asking of you?" |
25857 | Do we want to do that? |
25857 | Do you enjoy it?" |
25857 | Do you know anything about it?" |
25857 | Do you know where it is? |
25857 | Do you like it?" |
25857 | Do you mean to give material things,--like presents or money?" |
25857 | Do you remember?" |
25857 | Do you suppose I care what she''s going to wear away? |
25857 | Do you suppose they had a party last night in all that blizzard?" |
25857 | Do you suppose they''ll stay mad all day?" |
25857 | Do you think it''s just to judge a man by what other people say about him?" |
25857 | Do you think they''ve made up?" |
25857 | Do you want it now, Patty?" |
25857 | Do you want me to come there?" |
25857 | Does she come down to breakfast usually?" |
25857 | Dost hanker after prison fare? |
25857 | Farnsworth?" |
25857 | Fay?" |
25857 | First of all, who are you?" |
25857 | For a few rounds they danced in silence, and then Philip said, in a perfunctory way:"You''re enjoying this party?" |
25857 | Furs is worn a lot this year, ai n''t they? |
25857 | Greene?" |
25857 | Ha, maiden, dost desire the dungeon for thine? |
25857 | Has any one any preference which way we shall go?" |
25857 | Have you a hill anywhere near? |
25857 | Have you lived here long?" |
25857 | Have you noticed the Zenobia, Queen of Palmyra? |
25857 | Have you really lost one?" |
25857 | Have you the confetti all ready, Patty?" |
25857 | He wears''silver buckles on his knee,''do n''t you know?" |
25857 | Hello, Adèle, is that_ your_ terrible fate?" |
25857 | Hepworth?" |
25857 | Hepworth?" |
25857 | Her response was answered by a tearful, wailing voice, that said,"Oh, Miss Patty, oh,_ ca n''t_ you come here at once? |
25857 | How about eight o''clock? |
25857 | How could I possibly know?" |
25857 | How did you sleep, after your late supper?" |
25857 | How do you make it?" |
25857 | However, since you''re determined to dance, will you honour me with the first one to- night?" |
25857 | I do n''t like that man a bit better than you do, but do you suppose I''m going to show it by being unkind and mean to Mona? |
25857 | I mean crazy, demented, loony,--what was the old King, anyway?" |
25857 | I s''pose you wo n''t come down every morning?" |
25857 | I say, Mrs. Kenerley, may n''t we have a lemon?" |
25857 | I say, Patty, my Princess Patty,_ do_ be engaged to me, wo n''t you?" |
25857 | I say, which way do we turn here?" |
25857 | I suppose you''ll go as Jack and Jill?" |
25857 | If I stop teasing you now, will you give me an answer when I come back at New Year''s? |
25857 | If you find each other, all right, but if you find anybody else, that''s your fate,--see?" |
25857 | If you''re not back here in fifteen minutes, the whole crowd of you, I''ll-- I''ll----""Well, what will you do?" |
25857 | In the first place, Nan, it was a howling, screaming success, was n''t it?" |
25857 | Is he mad at you?" |
25857 | Is he, Adèle?" |
25857 | Is it grand to be a manicure?" |
25857 | Is n''t it gorgeous, Nan, to be invited to such heaps of things?" |
25857 | Is n''t she good to you?" |
25857 | Is n''t she stunning?" |
25857 | Is n''t she the haughty lady? |
25857 | Is only half of this dance mine?" |
25857 | It wo n''t interfere with your guests, will it, Adèle?" |
25857 | It''s an awfully pretty combination, and these little green and gilt tags are lovely, do n''t you think?" |
25857 | It''s no secret society, is it?" |
25857 | Kenerley?" |
25857 | Kenerley?" |
25857 | Lansing?" |
25857 | Lansing?" |
25857 | Lansing?" |
25857 | Look in your heart, and see if there is n''t a little love for me?" |
25857 | May I have one of those?" |
25857 | May I take it back, and then say it to you again after I do know you better?" |
25857 | May I tell? |
25857 | May I?" |
25857 | May n''t I hope?" |
25857 | May n''t I set the table?" |
25857 | Me?" |
25857 | Mona greeted her cordially:"How do you do, Anna?" |
25857 | Mona is looking beautiful this afternoon, is n''t she?" |
25857 | Mona looked up at this, and said, eagerly,"Not father?" |
25857 | Mona, is not his going away as he did, enough proof of his guilt?" |
25857 | Mr. Van Reypen, wo n''t you dance it with me?" |
25857 | Mrs. Fairfield, may n''t I take Patty to get a cup of tea or an ice, and you stay here and''come out''until she returns?" |
25857 | Must n''t I_ ever_ tell anything nice that_ anybody_ says to me?" |
25857 | My little Lemmy pig?" |
25857 | Nan, ca n''t I bang it into your head that this affair is for pleasure, not profit? |
25857 | Now, can the rest of you think of anybody like that?" |
25857 | Now, do promise me to see less of him, wo n''t you? |
25857 | Now, for instance, how would it be if we gave a lovely motor ride to some poor shop girl, or somebody that never gets into a motor?" |
25857 | Now, how''s this for a plan? |
25857 | Now, look here, wo n''t you give me a fair show? |
25857 | Now, see here, Princess, do you mean to go to this masquerade ball with me? |
25857 | Now, what shall I say to Mr. William Farnsworth by way of thanks for his truly beautiful pink roses? |
25857 | Now, who is the lucky man who is to take you out to dinner? |
25857 | Now, who would have thought it? |
25857 | Now, you know, they take these things off pretty soon, and then----""And then may I ask you again, Patty, and will you listen to me and answer me?" |
25857 | Of course, you''re going to Elise''s dance on Tuesday night?" |
25857 | Oh, Patty, were n''t you frightened to prowl around like that, late at night?" |
25857 | Oh, girls, is n''t it awful_ never_ to have any fun? |
25857 | Oh, how do you do it? |
25857 | Oh, how do you do, Mr. Galbraith? |
25857 | Oh, look at that stunning big man,--who is he?" |
25857 | Oh, say, Philip, take me over to the hall, will you?" |
25857 | Patty, are you in love with Van Reypen?" |
25857 | Patty, do you think she really cares for that Lansing man?" |
25857 | Patty, what do you think? |
25857 | Patty,--I_ must_ ask you,--are you engaged to Van Reypen?" |
25857 | Patty,_ do_ care for me a_ little_ bit, wo n''t you?" |
25857 | Romeo and Juliet, or Jack and Jill?" |
25857 | Say, Clementine, do n''t you think it would be nice to have men members in our club?" |
25857 | Say, Miss Fairfield, I''ve only got a black mohair to wear,--will that do?" |
25857 | Say, a motor ride and a cup of tea afterward in some pretty tea room?" |
25857 | Say, girls, do you want to see the baby before she''s put to bed?" |
25857 | Say, how about this? |
25857 | See? |
25857 | Shall I bring up your costume when I return next week, Patty?" |
25857 | Shall we have a turn at this two- step?" |
25857 | Shall we trail''em?" |
25857 | She was rounder, rosier, plumper, and jollier than the first, and she cried out, heartily:"Jog along? |
25857 | Simple but tasty, is n''t it?" |
25857 | So you will, wo n''t you?" |
25857 | The correct Miller could not suppress a slight smile as he said,"Where I took you once before, Miss Patty?" |
25857 | Then a tap at the window was heard, and a farmer''s gruff voice shouted:"Have you my pig in there? |
25857 | Wait, what about motors? |
25857 | Want to telephone to your people again?" |
25857 | Was n''t that fair?" |
25857 | Well, now, mademoiselle, your finger is raised,--is our quarrel all patched up?" |
25857 | Well, why did n''t you send for me?" |
25857 | Well, will you go to the opera with us?" |
25857 | What about matinées?" |
25857 | What are you doing this afternoon?" |
25857 | What are you going to do?" |
25857 | What are you going to wear, Mona?" |
25857 | What can we be? |
25857 | What did you think it was? |
25857 | What do lilies of the valley mean,--especially with orchids in the middle of the bunch?" |
25857 | What do you say, Patty?" |
25857 | What do you think of little pins,--silver gilt, or enamel?" |
25857 | What do you think?" |
25857 | What else can you tell us?" |
25857 | What have you stolen? |
25857 | What is that, might I ask?" |
25857 | What is the matter?" |
25857 | What may I do for thee in return?" |
25857 | What shall I say, Nan, something like this? |
25857 | What shall we wear?" |
25857 | What then?" |
25857 | What was it?" |
25857 | What will you have?" |
25857 | What would I want with your card, or Daisy''s either? |
25857 | What''s he doing here?" |
25857 | What''s he writing to you for? |
25857 | What''s the use of''coming out,''if I have got to go right in again, and write all those notes? |
25857 | What_ do_ you think? |
25857 | When will that be?" |
25857 | Where are you? |
25857 | Where are you?" |
25857 | Where can that little rascal be? |
25857 | Where shall we put them?" |
25857 | Where''d you come from?" |
25857 | Where''s a sled?" |
25857 | Where? |
25857 | Wherever_ did_ you pick up that freak, Mona?" |
25857 | Who are you?" |
25857 | Who else?" |
25857 | Who is there left to find?" |
25857 | Who sent it?" |
25857 | Who wrote it?" |
25857 | Who''ll be It?" |
25857 | Why did you like him, Christine?" |
25857 | Why do snow- men always have to have those two things?" |
25857 | Why, Patty, what do you mean? |
25857 | Why, Roger, you''re worth a dozen Lansings, and if you want to marry Mona, why do n''t you tell her so?" |
25857 | Why, what is Hal Ferris doing?" |
25857 | Will somebody with a sweet voice kindly recite the words?" |
25857 | Will you dance now?" |
25857 | Will you dance?" |
25857 | Will you give me an answer then?" |
25857 | Will you tell me how to reach Hatton''s Corners?" |
25857 | Will you?" |
25857 | Wo n''t you teach me?" |
25857 | Wo n''t you two come in and take a bite o''dinner, and get warm before you go on?" |
25857 | Wo n''t you write me your thanks,--Apple Blossom?" |
25857 | Would you give_ your_ luncheon guests gloves as souvenirs?" |
25857 | You and Mona are all right, are n''t you, Roger?" |
25857 | You did n''t, did you?" |
25857 | You do n''t know him, do you? |
25857 | You do n''t s''pose I want it to be spoiled, do you?" |
25857 | You do n''t want to know more than that, do you?" |
25857 | You fellows have been all over the house, I suppose?" |
25857 | You like him, do n''t you, Patty?" |
25857 | You like it, do n''t you, Jenny?" |
25857 | You like them?" |
25857 | You want to talk to me,_ do n''t_ you?" |
25857 | You''re seriously fond of Mona, are n''t you, Roger?" |
25857 | _ Was_ that a proposal?" |
25857 | _ Why_ ca n''t people let me alone?" |
25857 | _ what_ do I mean? |
25857 | and oh, Nan, what_ do_ you think? |
25857 | and what_ is_ a scrap? |
25857 | are you sure to come out right, that way? |
25857 | asked Daisy,"and Mr. Van Reypen? |
25857 | asked Mona;"or do you like the Park and the River drive?" |
25857 | cried Farnsworth, his blue eyes lighting up with sudden joy;"do you mean that?" |
25857 | he said, smiling,"with all these heavy velvet draperies bothering us, or shall I go and shed this robe, and just be plain Bill?" |
25857 | if you tease me like this, how do you suppose I''m ever going to tear myself away to catch that midnight train to Boston?" |
25857 | or knitted wash- cloths? |
25857 | said Mona, gaily, and going to the piano, she began to play"Alice, where art thou?" |
25857 | said Patty, interested--"what is a swing- shelf?" |
25857 | said Patty, looking puzzled;"at one of our houses?" |
25857 | the party?" |
5893 | ''Course I wo n''t if you do n''t want me to, only what DO you s''pose DID become of it? |
5893 | A loss? |
5893 | A nice Polly? |
5893 | A young man? |
5893 | ARE we? |
5893 | Ah, my dears, how do you do? |
5893 | Almost, are n''t you? 5893 And do you like old Egyptian things, too? |
5893 | And us two also? |
5893 | And was the party grand? |
5893 | And was the window open? |
5893 | And when will you be ready to tell? |
5893 | And who looks after you now? 5893 And who would look after the girls?" |
5893 | And you found another charmer? |
5893 | And you were n''t here when he got out of his cage? |
5893 | And you''ll forgive me, Alicia, for misjudging you? |
5893 | And you''re sure he never leaves his cage? |
5893 | And you, Dotty,he said,"how did it strike you?" |
5893 | Any kin of Muriel''s? |
5893 | Are n''t you going home on Wednesday? |
5893 | Are they all bad? |
5893 | Are they? |
5893 | Are you a specimen I can use in my collection? 5893 Are you accusing Dolly of stealing that thing?" |
5893 | Are you going anyway, Dots? |
5893 | Are you going to buy out the whole shop, Alicia? |
5893 | Are you sure you removed it from your frock, Miss Fayre? |
5893 | Berwick? 5893 But WHY are we here?" |
5893 | But do n''t you get lots of notes from-- from your audiences? |
5893 | But do you? |
5893 | But what did she say? |
5893 | But what do you mean? |
5893 | But what does your cousin mean by bringing a lot of money? 5893 But what for?" |
5893 | But why did he ask for you? |
5893 | But why did n''t they? |
5893 | But wo n''t you go with us anywhere? |
5893 | But you must come to these things we''re asking you for, wo n''t you? |
5893 | But you told me about the joke Mr. Forbes played on you about the B. C. image, why might n''t one of you have taken this to tease him? 5893 But, DO you?" |
5893 | But, Mr. Forbes,and the secretary spoke earnestly,"would these young ladies toss a valuable gem away carelessly? |
5893 | But, sir, do you want to get back your gem, or not? 5893 By us?" |
5893 | Ca n''t you bring yourself to permit that loss? 5893 Can I be of help?" |
5893 | Can he fly as far as to go up to that window two stories higher than this? 5893 Can he fly?" |
5893 | Can what? 5893 Can you dance?" |
5893 | Could I go up to the room where the bird is? |
5893 | Could any one have come in at the window? |
5893 | Day after to- morrow? 5893 Did it ever occur to any of you,"he began,"that I invited you here for something beside a mere desire to give you young people some pleasure?" |
5893 | Did you ever see such a perfectly horrid, hateful, contemptible old thing as that Fenn person? |
5893 | Did you start out with that idea? |
5893 | Did you-- where did you find it? |
5893 | Do n''t you ever lose your temper? |
5893 | Do n''t you have good things to eat at that nice school? |
5893 | Do you MEAN it? 5893 Do you mean Uncle Jeff ordered that we should receive Mr. Coriell alone?" |
5893 | Do you really want to go on the stage? 5893 Do you?" |
5893 | Does your collection keep you so busy? |
5893 | Dolly Fayre? 5893 Dotty, I''ll get mad at you, if you just sit there saying,''But do you?'' |
5893 | Early for a city party,insisted Alicia,"but it was an elaborate affair, after all, and what do you s''pose, Uncle Jeff? |
5893 | Either it''s just lost, or else Mr. Fenn stole it,--or else--"Or else what? |
5893 | Even if we are not doing it on the sly? 5893 Fenn? |
5893 | Fly? 5893 Good time, girlies?" |
5893 | Good- looking chap? |
5893 | Goodness, Alicia,exclaimed Bernice,"do you think Uncle Jeff wo n''t give us enough to eat?" |
5893 | Goodness, Dolly, ca n''t you decide a thing like that for yourself? 5893 Goodness, child, what do you mean? |
5893 | H''m,he said,"this is Bernice; how do you do, my dear? |
5893 | Have you enjoyed it all, so far, Alicia? |
5893 | Have you told Bernice? |
5893 | Have you? 5893 He tried his best to fasten it on Dolly--""Fasten the earring on?" |
5893 | How are you going to make fudge with nothing but chocolate? |
5893 | How did you ask her? 5893 How do YOU know?" |
5893 | How do you know? |
5893 | How do you like my room? |
5893 | How is it different? |
5893 | How old are you? |
5893 | How shall I address him? |
5893 | How''s your parrot? |
5893 | Hullo, girlies,he said,"what''s up? |
5893 | I do n''t wonder the old Egyptians loved this creature and carved their scarabs in its likeness, do you? |
5893 | I hate to keep a diary, and what would be the use? 5893 I say, Doll, is THAT your best frock?" |
5893 | I suppose not,said Ted, but Dolly said,"Let us see it, anyway, ca n''t you? |
5893 | I suppose we''ll obey her? |
5893 | I think I ought to tell Mr. Forbes, do n''t you? |
5893 | If you know anything at all, tell us, wo n''t you? |
5893 | Is Alicia here? |
5893 | Is Dolly always so goody- goody? |
5893 | Is it to be very grand? 5893 Is it-- is it all right?" |
5893 | Is it? 5893 Is it? |
5893 | Is n''t he queer? 5893 Is n''t it funny you should have been saying to- day that perhaps you might live in New York?" |
5893 | Is n''t it too late? |
5893 | Is n''t that Dolly all over? |
5893 | Is n''t the ice fine to- day? 5893 Is she a dragon?" |
5893 | Is she so very busy? |
5893 | Is that a real stunt, Dolly? |
5893 | Is that the way Miss Marie Desmond learned? |
5893 | Is your brother''s wife living? |
5893 | It sounds most mysterious,laughed Dolly,"ca n''t we guess what it''s all about?" |
5893 | It''s bad enough to put up with that old Fenn''s hateful talk, but now Dolly''s gone queer, and you say Alicia has,--what ARE we to do? |
5893 | It''s lovely,said Dolly, looking about at the pretty furnishings;"it''s in a sort of back extension, is n''t it?" |
5893 | Just because of his craze for antiques? |
5893 | Kleptomaniac? |
5893 | Legerdemain? |
5893 | Like the one we went to to- day? |
5893 | Look here, old Professor Wiseacre, what dynasty does this junk belong to? |
5893 | May I beg of you, Alicia,he said, sternly,"to cease raving over that man? |
5893 | May I take it? |
5893 | May n''t we see your collection? |
5893 | May we have further enlightenment? |
5893 | May we look out of your window? |
5893 | Might n''t you have left it hooked into your lace, Dolly, and it''s there still? 5893 Musical?" |
5893 | No,said Dotty, her black eyes dancing with the excitement of the scene;"what do you guess?" |
5893 | No; but could n''t you board somewhere in New York? |
5893 | None of us would take it wrongly, I''m sure-- but--"Well, but what? |
5893 | Nothing, Dot, only do n''t talk about that gold thing, will you? 5893 Now you girls come to- night, wo n''t you? |
5893 | Now, I''ll send tea in at quarter past four, is that your idea? |
5893 | Now, what do we wear this evening? |
5893 | Now, which am I? |
5893 | Of course, it must be somewhere,--look here, Dollyrinda, you do n''t know anything about it, do you? 5893 Oh, Alicia,"cried Bernice,"what do you mean?" |
5893 | Oh, Dollyrinda,she whispered as they stood in the hall,"do you s''pose your mother''ll EVER say yes?" |
5893 | Oh, Mrs. Berry, wo n''t you be present? |
5893 | Oh, Uncle Forbes, you did n''t think I took it, did you? |
5893 | Oh, do you have a secretary? |
5893 | Oh, is that it? 5893 Oh, may n''t we chum with you?" |
5893 | Oh, that''s it, is it? |
5893 | Oh, when shall I ever get these lovely things again? 5893 Oh,--well,--she DID ask you, did n''t she? |
5893 | Oho, you have n''t, have n''t you? |
5893 | Please, dear, sweet Dollyrinda, what DID the lady say? |
5893 | Really? 5893 Sad at thoughts of going home?" |
5893 | Shall I shut the window, Uncle Jeff? |
5893 | So you''re going on the stage, are you? |
5893 | Some milk, please,said Alicia,"and sugar, and butter,--""All the things for fudge, miss?" |
5893 | Such as what? |
5893 | Sunday, was it? |
5893 | Take me there, will you? 5893 Tell us something about the old caretaker next door, wo n''t you?" |
5893 | Tell you what? |
5893 | Tennis, do n''t you? |
5893 | That ISN''T very likely, is it? |
5893 | That never was a live cat, was it? |
5893 | That you, Joe? |
5893 | That you, McPherson? |
5893 | That''s so,agreed Alicia,"but how can she flout him so? |
5893 | The blue voile for me,replied Dolly,"and-- er-- what is your name?" |
5893 | Their figures are much like ours, are n''t they? |
5893 | Then how can Marly be with him? 5893 Then why is n''t it there now?" |
5893 | They can-- but will they? |
5893 | This jewellery? |
5893 | This, let us say? |
5893 | This? |
5893 | To Berwick, miss? |
5893 | To the Metropolitan? |
5893 | Took your fancy, did he? |
5893 | Uncle Forbes, ca n''t we talk with you alone? |
5893 | Want to sit down and rest a bit? |
5893 | Was n''t that because he was made up as a young character in the play? |
5893 | We have n''t ordered yet,--what do you girls want? |
5893 | Well, Alicia sure is a wonder, is n''t she? 5893 Well, Alicia, how did you like your handsome, fascinating, young man?" |
5893 | Well, look here,and Mr. Forbes''eyes twinkled"I ask you two, Dotty and Dolly, which of my two nieces is a greater favourite?" |
5893 | Well, my dears,and he looked from one to another,"have you had a pleasant day?" |
5893 | Well, well, Jim, hobnobbing with young people, are you? |
5893 | Well, what of that? 5893 Well, what shall I do?" |
5893 | Well, you ARE ready for the fray, are n''t you? |
5893 | Well? |
5893 | Were you surprised at our asking for this? |
5893 | What IS going on? |
5893 | What about school? |
5893 | What ails Uncle? |
5893 | What are notions? |
5893 | What are you going to buy? |
5893 | What are you going to wear, Dots? |
5893 | What are you two confabbing about? |
5893 | What are you, my dear? |
5893 | What can it be, Uncle? |
5893 | What did you hang up so soon for? 5893 What do YOU think of the idea?" |
5893 | What do you do in vacation time? |
5893 | What do you mean by that speech Dotty? |
5893 | What do you mean by that? |
5893 | What do you mean, you little minx? |
5893 | What do you mean? |
5893 | What does she mean by a secret reason for your going? |
5893 | What for? |
5893 | What have you lost? |
5893 | What is it, Alicia? |
5893 | What is it, Dolly? |
5893 | What is it, Uncle? 5893 What is it, dearie?" |
5893 | What is it? 5893 What is it?" |
5893 | What is the oldest thing you have, Uncle? |
5893 | What is? 5893 What kind of a bird is he?" |
5893 | What makes you think we''re deceiving him? |
5893 | What then? |
5893 | What time shall we come? |
5893 | What you want? |
5893 | What''s Mrs. Berry like? |
5893 | What''s he like? |
5893 | What''s on for this morning? |
5893 | What''s the matter, Dollums? |
5893 | What''s the use? |
5893 | What, sir? 5893 Whatamatter, Dollums?" |
5893 | Whatever did you ask us for? |
5893 | When did she go? 5893 When is it to be, to- morrow?" |
5893 | When is this visit to be made? |
5893 | Where CAN it be? |
5893 | Where are you going? 5893 Where did you put it then?" |
5893 | Where you been? |
5893 | Where,--on the table? |
5893 | Where? |
5893 | Which frocks shall I leave out for dinner? |
5893 | Which one of you do they like the best? |
5893 | Who had it last? |
5893 | Who is the unsatisfactory neighbour? |
5893 | Who lives next door? |
5893 | Who told you? |
5893 | Who would n''t? 5893 Who, then?" |
5893 | Who? 5893 Whose performance? |
5893 | Whose plan is this? |
5893 | Why did n''t you hand it back to me? |
5893 | Why do n''t they all go one way? |
5893 | Why do you call me Eddie? |
5893 | Why do you keep such a bird? |
5893 | Why do you say Dolly is suspected? |
5893 | Why not? |
5893 | Why not? |
5893 | Why not? |
5893 | Why, how can we tell that, right before them both? |
5893 | Why, uncle,cried Alicia,"wo n''t we see you at all in the daytime?" |
5893 | Why, you''ve practically said so to us, Uncle Jeff,laughed Alicia;"are you going to tell us your reason?" |
5893 | Why? |
5893 | Will Uncle Jeff come down, do you think? |
5893 | Will we, do you s''pose? |
5893 | Will you see about the tickets, Mrs. Berry? 5893 Wo n''t you go with us, Mrs. Berry,"asked Dolly,"to help pick them out? |
5893 | Yes to what? |
5893 | Yes, I''d love it, but how could I go there? 5893 Yes, Uncle Jeff,"responded Alicia;"will you stay and see our young man?" |
5893 | Yes, but who first thought of it? |
5893 | Yes, he would; why would n''t he? |
5893 | Yes, here are old Egyptian trinkets,--aren''t they, Uncle Forbes? |
5893 | Yes, what DO you mean, Dolly? |
5893 | Yes; what table? |
5893 | You like birds? |
5893 | You stick to your taste for simpler parties? |
5893 | ''Member?" |
5893 | A jewel, you say?" |
5893 | And are you grand and elegant, too?" |
5893 | And did you EVER see anything so crazy as Uncle Jeff? |
5893 | And does he ever go out of this house?" |
5893 | And now, Bernice and Alicia, have n''t you any young friends in town you''d like to invite to see you here? |
5893 | And now, tell me, did you like the play?" |
5893 | And these patent leather pumps, I daresay?" |
5893 | And what are your plans for the morning? |
5893 | And what''s the use of her doing anything I can do for myself? |
5893 | And which one are you going to choose?" |
5893 | And you, Bernice? |
5893 | And, by the way, how''d you girls like to have a party, a real one?" |
5893 | And, girls, wo n''t we have the great times having Alicia come to Berwick to see us all?" |
5893 | And, say, are your own wardrobes full?" |
5893 | Are n''t they beautiful?" |
5893 | Are n''t you, Dollums?" |
5893 | Are you a fashionable butterfly? |
5893 | Are you all his nieces?" |
5893 | Are you all sisters? |
5893 | Are you glad?" |
5893 | Are you going to be grand, also?" |
5893 | Are you going to change your dress for luncheon?" |
5893 | Are you going to the dance to- night? |
5893 | Are you making fun of my antiques? |
5893 | Are you sure you''re willing?" |
5893 | Are you sure, Edith, you are willing? |
5893 | Are you thinking somebody could spring across, take the jewel and spring back again?" |
5893 | Are you two quarrelling? |
5893 | Autographs? |
5893 | Berry?" |
5893 | Berry?" |
5893 | Berry?" |
5893 | Berry?" |
5893 | Berry?" |
5893 | Berry?" |
5893 | Berry?" |
5893 | But I do n''t know as we can go about much; I believe Mr. Forbes is quite an old man, and who will take us about?" |
5893 | But I foresee these poky evenings right along, do n''t you? |
5893 | But WHAT was that accident, and WHERE is the jewel?" |
5893 | But how?" |
5893 | But in that case, what did he do with it? |
5893 | But is n''t it time we all went to bed?" |
5893 | But we''ve enough to remember and think over for a long time, have n''t we?" |
5893 | But who looks after you?" |
5893 | But why should we? |
5893 | But, Dolly, DO you? |
5893 | But, where, ladies and gentlemen, WHERE I ask you, can I put it? |
5893 | By telephone?" |
5893 | C.?" |
5893 | CHAPTER IV A MERRY QUARTETTE"Ready for dinner, girls?" |
5893 | CHAPTER XVI WAS IT ALICIA? |
5893 | Ca n''t we sit here? |
5893 | Ca n''t we, Uncle Jeff?" |
5893 | Can I, do you think?" |
5893 | Can it be either of my two nieces who has done this wrong? |
5893 | Can it be either of their two young friends? |
5893 | Can we do just as we like? |
5893 | Can we go to the art galleries and the shops alone?" |
5893 | Can you all skate? |
5893 | Can you come to- morrow or Friday? |
5893 | Come, two D''s, what do you say?" |
5893 | Coriell?" |
5893 | Could n''t this window have been open Sunday, when Polly got out of his cage?" |
5893 | Could she be referring to her intended elopement with Marly Turner? |
5893 | Could we go to an evening performance?" |
5893 | Did n''t you?" |
5893 | Did one of you just borrow it? |
5893 | Did she REALLY say that?" |
5893 | Did she hold up her hands in horror?" |
5893 | Did you bring your skates? |
5893 | Did you make up the joke?" |
5893 | Did you or did you NOT read that letter that''s in the pocket of my coat?" |
5893 | Did you, Alicia?" |
5893 | Did you?" |
5893 | Do n''t think that you can go in there and say''May we?'' |
5893 | Do n''t you think it would be nice if he should come, with Mrs. Berry''s permission?" |
5893 | Do n''t you think so, Perkins?" |
5893 | Do they teach you manners and general society instruction?" |
5893 | Do you know why he has asked us? |
5893 | Do you mean it? |
5893 | Do you s''pose I could have one single bit of fun going to places without you? |
5893 | Do you think me flippant?" |
5893 | Do you want ME to tell him?" |
5893 | Do you want the car?" |
5893 | Doll is n''t a prig,--is she, Bernice?" |
5893 | Dolly began to think of school happenings; had she cut up any mischievous pranks or inadvertently done anything wrong? |
5893 | Dolly realised that he had been about to say,"Did you decide to own up?" |
5893 | Dotty, did you say you had some other suspicion? |
5893 | Eh?" |
5893 | Else why did he want not only Alicia and me but two of our friends to come for this visit? |
5893 | Engaged?" |
5893 | Expecting a party? |
5893 | For a walk?" |
5893 | Forbes?" |
5893 | Forbes?" |
5893 | Forbes?" |
5893 | Forgotten me, have you? |
5893 | Funny, is n''t it, how you like one person better''n anybody else?" |
5893 | Have you any friends in New York, any of you?" |
5893 | Have you seen it?" |
5893 | Honest Injun?" |
5893 | Hosmer? |
5893 | How about that, Dolly?" |
5893 | How about you, Dot?" |
5893 | How can I find the thing, and clear you from suspicion if you have secrets from me?" |
5893 | How can I think otherwise? |
5893 | How did he get in? |
5893 | How do you do?" |
5893 | How should I know anything about it?" |
5893 | How''s that?" |
5893 | How''s that?" |
5893 | How''s your wife, Jim? |
5893 | I beg of you, my dear nieces,--my dear young friends,--I beseech you, tell me the truth, wo n''t you?" |
5893 | I do n''t want to think so, but what alternative have I? |
5893 | I just simply love the waffles here, do n''t you?" |
5893 | I may go, may n''t I, Mrs. Berry? |
5893 | I s''pose you can cut up larks in the country that you could n''t here?" |
5893 | I say, Bernice,"she suddenly broke off,"why was he so curious about the way we live at home, and who brings us up?" |
5893 | I say, Sam, do n''t you want these four angel children at your party?" |
5893 | I say, ca n''t us fellows come to see you girls? |
5893 | I say, may n''t we take you girls to the supper room? |
5893 | I suppose it will be proper to dress up a good deal?" |
5893 | I suppose you''ll room with your cousin, Bernice, and these other two girls together?" |
5893 | I told you I had my chafing- dish; do n''t you girls feel fudgy?" |
5893 | I''ll bet a pig these two stammering, blushing young misses are the far- famed Dolly and Dotty, but which is which?" |
5893 | If you all agree?" |
5893 | Invite parties, and all that?" |
5893 | Is Alicia Steele that sort of a girl?" |
5893 | Is he honest or-- or gives to thievery?" |
5893 | Is it correct for us to go about alone, in your big motor, with your chauffeur? |
5893 | Is n''t Alicia?" |
5893 | Is n''t Mr. Turner acting?" |
5893 | Is that it?" |
5893 | It is n''t a boarding school, is it?" |
5893 | It''s lots of work, is n''t it, to get them all properly catalogued and labelled?" |
5893 | Join us in a cup of tea, wo n''t you?" |
5893 | Knapp? |
5893 | Let me see,--how about silk sweaters? |
5893 | Marly Turner? |
5893 | May I?" |
5893 | May we?" |
5893 | Mrs. Berry, what do you think became of the earring?" |
5893 | Muriel all right?" |
5893 | No? |
5893 | None of us would think of such a thing, would we, girls?" |
5893 | Not invited? |
5893 | Now which is Miss Forbes?" |
5893 | Now, Bernice, what do you choose?" |
5893 | Now, do we dress for to- night''s party before dinner or after?" |
5893 | Now, do you come to this fudge party or do you go to bed?" |
5893 | Now, what matinee do you want to go to? |
5893 | Now, what play?" |
5893 | Now, will you go and ask her? |
5893 | Of course we did n''t expect you''d be dressed like the Lascar, or-- or-- made up,--isn''t that what you call it? |
5893 | Oh, Bernice, can we go somewhere in a taxicab while we''re there?" |
5893 | Oh, Dot, would n''t it have been awful if we had gone home with that doubt hanging over us?" |
5893 | Oh, WON''T your mother let you?" |
5893 | Oh, girls, is n''t he the grandest man? |
5893 | Or do n''t you eat?" |
5893 | Or tickets for a box? |
5893 | Or would you rather have a box party at the theatre?" |
5893 | Our very bestest?" |
5893 | Polly want a cracker?" |
5893 | Presently two boys drifted toward our quartette, and one of them said,"What''ll be the show, do you know?" |
5893 | Really?" |
5893 | S''pose I go home with you after the show; may I?" |
5893 | See here, have you all proper frocks to wear? |
5893 | See? |
5893 | See?" |
5893 | Shall I go alone, or take you three chatterboxes along?" |
5893 | Shall I return for the tray, miss?" |
5893 | Shall I tell you which is which, or let you guess?" |
5893 | She is your chum, is n''t she? |
5893 | She paid no attention to Fenn''s talk; she stared at Mrs. Berry, saying,"Has she really gone?" |
5893 | She went to that very table?" |
5893 | Should she go to Mr. Forbes and tell him where the jewel was,--or, should she not? |
5893 | Small town?" |
5893 | So I''m grand and elegant, am I? |
5893 | So you enjoyed it, did you? |
5893 | Surely no intruder came up by way of the stairs; I ca n''t believe any one came in by the window, and what other way is there?" |
5893 | That''s a party dress, is n''t it?" |
5893 | The Fair Dolly?" |
5893 | The girls stared at him blankly, and at last, Bernice said,"Which one?" |
5893 | The question is, may Dolly go?" |
5893 | The question is, what will your parents say?" |
5893 | There, WHO''S a good ambassador?" |
5893 | To study it as a curio or anything like that?" |
5893 | Turner?" |
5893 | Was n''t Sunday that warm, pleasant day? |
5893 | Was nobody in the room?" |
5893 | Was this found in a tomb?" |
5893 | We ca n''t go anywhere alone, can we?" |
5893 | Well, my dears, are you interested to know my choice?" |
5893 | Well, then, do I understand, that you accept my invitation to live with me?" |
5893 | Well, what did you think of it, Dolly?" |
5893 | Well, what shall I wear?" |
5893 | Were you hit so hard?" |
5893 | What IS the matter?" |
5893 | What about clothes, Mumsie?" |
5893 | What are we going to do?" |
5893 | What can I think but that you have it yet? |
5893 | What could such a gathering mean? |
5893 | What do you like best, next to skating?" |
5893 | What do you mean?" |
5893 | What do you mean?" |
5893 | What do you mean?" |
5893 | What do you suppose, Bernice, he asked us here for, anyway?" |
5893 | What do you want? |
5893 | What do your mothers let you do at home? |
5893 | What else could bring Mr. Forbes to the Roses''on what was very evidently an important errand? |
5893 | What frocks, ladies? |
5893 | What has got into you, Dollyrinda? |
5893 | What is it?" |
5893 | What is the matter?" |
5893 | What put you on the track in the first place?" |
5893 | What shall I do first, Mr. Brown, to prepare for the light opera stage?" |
5893 | What shall us talk about?" |
5893 | What shall we talk about?" |
5893 | What time?" |
5893 | What would you like, Bernice?" |
5893 | What would your mother care?" |
5893 | What''s a joke?" |
5893 | What''s the matter with you, Dolly, why ca n''t you tell me what you know? |
5893 | What''s the matter?" |
5893 | What? |
5893 | When do we go?" |
5893 | When will you be back, Miss Fayre?" |
5893 | When? |
5893 | When?" |
5893 | When?" |
5893 | Where are your checks? |
5893 | Where could the jewel be? |
5893 | Where did you lay the earring when you took it from your dress?" |
5893 | Where do you want to go now?" |
5893 | Where? |
5893 | Where?" |
5893 | Which one has the accumulating tendency?" |
5893 | Which one of you wanted to talk to me? |
5893 | Who are the boys? |
5893 | Who got permission to invite your old Coriell man to tea? |
5893 | Who took her?" |
5893 | Who took the earring first, when Mr. Forbes handed it out from the case?" |
5893 | Who''s stage struck?" |
5893 | Whose parrot is it? |
5893 | Why did he ask those things over and over?" |
5893 | Why did he do it, anyway?" |
5893 | Why did n''t you let US talk to him? |
5893 | Why did n''t_ I_ think of that? |
5893 | Why did you bring so much?" |
5893 | Why not? |
5893 | Why should I ask Mrs. Berry for what YOU want?" |
5893 | Why would n''t they fit in?" |
5893 | Why, Mr. Turner is an actor, is n''t he?" |
5893 | Why, we will have all we can do to see the shops and the sights-- I suppose we can go around sight- seeing?" |
5893 | Why, where can it be?" |
5893 | Will you all come up to the museum and hunt? |
5893 | Will you be good little girls, and not finger the exhibits, except such as I say you may?" |
5893 | Will you come to see me at my uncle''s house, Mr. Jefferson Forbes? |
5893 | Will you tell me if I can?" |
5893 | With an old- fashioned bow, he took a seat near them, and asked,"Did you receive certain important documents?" |
5893 | Would it be all right?" |
5893 | Would she elope from the party, or return home first? |
5893 | Yes? |
5893 | You do my share of the clearing up, wo n''t you, Dot?" |
5893 | You do that, will you?" |
5893 | You say he can fly, but would he be likely to fly UP?" |
5893 | Your father''s sister, is n''t it?" |
5893 | and Bernice looked exasperated;"are you going to tell us all about it or not?" |
5893 | and Joe started;"of fine work, but all broken and bent?" |
5893 | and she hooked the trinket into the lace at her throat,"is n''t it becoming?" |
5893 | cried Alicia, hope rising in her breast that this was not the great actor after all,"are n''t you Bayne Coriell?" |
5893 | cried Alicia,"are you sure that''s just what he said?" |
5893 | cried Dolly, her face turning white,"do you suppose any thing''s wrong at home? |
5893 | cried Dotty;"who thought of a parrot? |
5893 | do you know anything, ANYTHING at all, about the earring?" |
5893 | exclaimed Bernice;"may n''t we have a window open, uncle?" |
5893 | exclaimed Bernice;"why do you like to hear people talk fast?" |
5893 | exclaimed her mother, when she saw her,"Where''s my baby? |
5893 | grumbled Alicia;"why not for me?" |
5893 | is that so? |
5893 | laughed the old man,"Now, Dolly, see if you can beat that?" |
5893 | said Ted;"I say, Dolly, take me to speak to Mrs. Berry, wo n''t you?" |
5893 | spoke up Alicia;"who, please?" |
5893 | the parrot?" |
5893 | what,--oh, vouchsafe to deign to tell us, WHAT did she say?" |