Questions

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

identifier question
21448And suppose, Mammy, I was to fall in with your little piccaniny, shall I bring him back to you?
21448But what has happened? 21448 But what is his name, Mammy?
21448Did my friend, the black sailor, escape?
21448Harry,he exclaimed, seizing my hand as I went to him with a cup of cooling drink,"I am not fit to die, can no one do any thing for me?
21448Is my father at home?
21448Mr Willis,I said,"do you remember me?
21448Oh, ask them if any of them have mothers from whom they have been long parted, would they not desire to see them again? 21448 Tell me,"I exclaimed suddenly,"what was your name before you were christened?"
21448Well, what do you think of it?
21448What are you about, Harry?
21448What makes Quako so frisky this morning?
21448What? 21448 Who is that?"
21448Yes, yes, Ambah was my mother''s name, and did she tell you that her husband''s name was Quamino, and their piccaniny was called Cheebo?
21448Den I say to the people, Do you believe dis?
21448How can we possibly send any goods on shore?"
21448What does dat mean?
21448What had become of all the servants?
21448What if I were to be brought to utter the same expression?
21448Where was poor Bob now?
21448Will they not have compassion on my poor friend?"
22944Are the rest coming?
22944Are you better, mother, to- day?
22944Are you not going?
22944Because he says,` Lord, be merciful to me a sinner''?
22944But I suppose a chap must not go and do what he likes after that?
22944But do you think if I was to try and please God and serve Him He would pardon me?
22944But where should we be if the brig does go down?
22944But will you let me read them to you?
22944But you do n''t mean to say that He hears such prayers as rough chaps like me and others aboard here could say?
22944Do you hear, boy?
22944Do you want a boy on board your ship, sir?
22944Does Simon Hixon read the Bible?
22944How came you to escape, my lad? 22944 How can that be?"
22944How long have you been on the mast? 22944 How so?"
22944I had n''t forgot the sheep,said Peter;"but, Betsy, may I see her?
22944I left my bundle down- stairs there, sir; shall I take it with me?
22944In that book you read?
22944Is Newcastle in a far- off country?
22944Is one of those ships there yours?
22944Is that your style of reading? 22944 Many more saved?"
22944Mother, shall I read to you?
22944Not know what duds mean, and you a sailor''s son, as you tell me? 22944 Shall I read more, mother?"
22944Then do you know how God says He alone will be merciful?
22944Then do you wish to remain on board?
22944Then how is a man ever to get to heaven?
22944What are you driving at, sir?
22944What does Abraham''s bosom mean?
22944What have you got to read? 22944 What, Gray?"
22944What, are you blind?
22944What, have you still got food? 22944 What, no father and mother?"
22944What, run away from home?
22944Where is the vessel going to?
22944Which of them do you like the best?
22944Who is Simon Hixon?
22944Who will go with me?
22944Why do you want to know, my lad?
22944Will any one pass a rope round my waist? 22944 Will the captain soon be able to get an observation to steer the right way?"
22944Would He hear my prayers now?
22944Would you like to hear some of it while you are at your work?
22944You Peter, my little boy?
22944You will let me read it to you sometimes, Owen?
22944You, I trust, acknowledge Him in all your ways?
22944After Peter had moistened the captain''s lips, and made his bed as comfortable as he could, he said,"Shall I read to you, sir?"
22944But how were you left behind?"
22944But what has become of Emery and Bill?"
22944Do you know her?
22944Have you been long out in these parts?"
22944Have you got any working duds with you?"
22944Hixon hailed in return,"Where are you?"
22944How can you have any books here?"
22944The latter, seeing this, cried out,"Shame, lads; would you desert the captain when he is unable to help himself?"
22944The mate might put his threat into execution, and what could he do to prevent it?
22944What is your name?"
22944What would they now have given to have trusted to that book, and obeyed its precepts?
22944What''s become of your shipmates?"
22944You do n''t expect to be idle?"
22944are you acting parson?"
22944exclaimed the latter,"are you a book- worm?
22944when I have told you that I would heave the book overboard if I found you reading it?"
22944where were those who had been wo nt to interrupt him?
15541''Did n''t see me, did you?'' 15541 A bird to give to Jill a--""Quill?"
15541After all, life to be beautiful and to reach rightly towards eternity should be helpful, and self- forgetful; do you not think so?
15541And his''dopted aunt?
15541Are n''t you glad you have us, and specially mother?
15541Are we going right away?
15541Are you afraid of a shower, Beth?
15541Are you sick?
15541Are you talking about the Home money?
15541Are you very old, mother?
15541But he is brave, is n''t he, grandmother?
15541But,said Elizabeth, climbing up into her mother''s lap,"is n''t doing things for poor children like Dick, better than that?"
15541Ca n''t we, mother?
15541Can you tell us''bout things, mother?
15541Come on now, do you know your verse?
15541Could you climb in through the window, s''pose?
15541Do n''t meddle and get into mischief, will you, deary?
15541Do n''t you like to play with him?
15541Do n''t you think you will then?
15541Do you feel well enough to help me make some apple pies?
15541Do you have to refuse many applicants?
15541Do you think God made a mistake when He sent us here?
15541Do you want us, Bobby?
15541Does keeping money make folks happy?
15541From Paradise?
15541Has you all seen anything of a low down black pickaninny which is los''?
15541Have n''t we saved this money, though?
15541How do you feel?
15541How do you know I''m going to leave you any, you young freebooter?
15541How do you know they do n''t?
15541How does middle night look, Nancy?
15541How many are there of you?
15541I do n''t think twelve o''clock at night looks stiller, do you, grandmother?
15541If God ca n''t make mistakes, why does He let it be so easy for folks to?
15541Is it Samuel Saul?
15541Is it ager, children, you''re askin''about?
15541Is it shaking ager?
15541Is the money more than grandmother''s gold dollar?
15541It is so; will you projus him?
15541It would n''t be fun to have all boy dolls, and you know it, sister, and besides was n''t Billy Boy the first doll we broke after Christmas? 15541 Lord Jimmy,"she said,"wilt thou marry Arabella and nobody else and be her quilt in time of trouble--?"
15541May I come in?
15541May I have some of the money you''re going to leave me, to give now, just as Ethelwyn and Beth did?
15541May we go away and think it over?
15541Mother, this is the nicest place, and I love the Stevenses; but why are they sad around the eyes, and dressed in black, like you? 15541 My name is Nan,"said the visitor as soon as she caught Elizabeth''s eye,"Who are you?
15541No, but why would they want to?
15541Now what comes?
15541O Johnny, how could you?
15541O is n''t everything about this just too cunning? 15541 O is n''t it sweet?"
15541O may I stay up?
15541O may we go up to the attic and dress up?
15541O that cunning baby I Where''d you get him?
15541O, mother, can this pretty sea do that? 15541 O, we do n''t care at all, do we, sister?"
15541O,''Vada, what has happened since we went away?
15541Oh is n''t our grandmother pretty though?
15541Oh, is n''t Judas mean- looking?
15541Pumpkin pies do n''t go out of style like clothes, do they, grandmother?
15541Should you think,Elizabeth paused to say, in a somewhat muffled voice, entirely owing to plum cake and not grief,"that one of us is married too?"
15541The pie, too?
15541There were two little girls who dressed exactly alike, and, as they were very near the same age, it was difficult to tell which was the--"Elder?
15541Was he a bawheady?
15541Was it not in''Bleak House''that that exceedingly unpleasant personage used to give away her children''s pocket money? 15541 Well Ethelwyn,"said Aunty Stevens, meeting her,"how was the picnic?"
15541Well, chicken,said grandmother,"how did you like the reception?"
15541Well, sir?
15541Well, we do n''t mind then, do we, sister?
15541Were you homesick for me?
15541What can I do?
15541What color is she?
15541What is a husband?
15541What is it?
15541What is n''t right, grandfather?
15541What is this?
15541What of?
15541What''s that?
15541What''s the matter, child?
15541What''s them?
15541What, sister?
15541When the children are thievish and given to bad language and lying, what do you do?
15541Where did he lose it? 15541 Where does he live?"
15541Where have you been, Bobby?
15541Where is she busted?
15541Who can go on the pony?
15541Who did it?
15541Why did you ask that question?
15541Why do n''t you tell mother?
15541Why, child, what do you know about funerals?
15541Why,Beth stopped to ask,"does it say Precious Julias when it''s''bout Mary Deemer, sister?"
15541Wiggly? 15541 Will it cost very much, Joe?"
15541Would my father enjoy preaching my funeral sermon, do you think?
15541Would you like that?
15541Would you sell him?
15541Yes, mother, I will, but what about the children--?
15541Yes, you are quite right, but what are you among so many?
15541Yes; why on earth do n''t you come?
15541You can stay awhile, ca n''t you, Bobby?
15541You can teach them to make pies like mine--"Yes, they can be taught to do all sorts of things about a house--"And Dick?
15541''I thought,''said one,''that maple sugar parties were very----''""''Pop''lar?
15541''What about?''
15541''Will you be good and not get lost?''
15541After the children told her what Bobby had said about his grandfather losing money, they asked anxiously,"Oh mother, did he lose anything of ours?"
15541And will the little lines come between your eyes?"
15541And would you mind telling me a thing or two, I have been thinking about lately?
15541Anyway I wish you would n''t talk in the middle of the wedding-- and give her clothes, and things to eat, eh?
15541Are n''t we having a good time, Aunty Stevens?"
15541Are n''t you mended up well, though?"
15541Are you a hundred, or eleven, or is that your size shoe?"
15541Ca n''t you ever get things right?
15541Did these used to be Miss Dorothy''s?"
15541Did you ever?"
15541Do n''t you think, dear Mrs. Stevens, that the whole trouble with the world is its selfishness?"
15541Has their father gone to Paradise too?"
15541Have You Seen Our Complete Catalogue?
15541He stopped beside a flowing--""Rill?"
15541I told him''bout my list, and he laughed, and gave it to me, and asked me if I did n''t know''bout letter boxes?
15541If your grandmother, my dear, should leave me out, till my hair soaked off-- say, sister,"she broke off suddenly to ask--"what keeps our hair on?"
15541Is this your house?
15541Peter''s?"
15541Pine trees grew near, and there below them and very near, was the great silvery blue sea, with the sunshine flashing on its tossing waves?
15541Rayburn?"
15541She kept right on till by and by She took a peek into the sky--""Oh, what did she see?"
15541Stevens?"
15541Then, too, there was a parrot on a pole, who greeted them with,"Well, well, well, what''s all this?
15541There are few people living here but fisher folk--""Christ''s people?"
15541They are poor and need help--""Are we rich people now, and can we buy things for them?"
15541Well, what do you s''pose,"leaning forward impressively--"becomes of the bodies the cannibals eat?"
15541Were there holes in his pockets?"
15541What did you think about them for?"
15541What is more delightful than a re- union of college girls after the summer vacation?
15541What made you, Bobby?"
15541What was it they were saying about a tide?"
15541What''s the good of keeping money?
15541What''s this thing you have in your side?"
15541When will she come home, mother?"
15541While they were away, Aunty Stevens said,"Is n''t that a pretty hard test?"
15541Will you come back to the porch, and sit in a Chippendale chair, and let me take your picture for the sale at the church?"
15541Will you have to work so hard, motherdy, here?
15541Would you mind giving up these things to help pay the hospital expenses, or to buy a wheel chair or some comfort for Dick?"
15541did he invite us?"
15630Am I not housed and fed like a princess at the present moment? 15630 And now you and your mother will come to us for a week or two, as you promised, wo n''t you?"
15630And what is a mile, sir? 15630 And who is the tenant?"
15630But how did you accomplish it?
15630But how, when I''m in the class- room three fourths of the day?
15630Ca n''t I go out and help Polly?
15630Ca n''t I wash the dishes?
15630Can you deny yourself for her, as she has for you? 15630 Can you settle all these details for your mother, and assume responsibilities?
15630Come over to dinner some night, wo n''t you, Edgar?
15630Could you call her out for a few minutes?
15630Do you mean that I am better looking?
15630Do you see, Polly?
15630Do?
15630Edgar is growing up so fast,she thought,"I shall soon be afraid to scold him or advise him, and"''What will poor Robin do then, poor thing?''
15630Good news? 15630 Has Tom Mills been here?"
15630Have you some good news, too? 15630 Home?
15630Hopeless? 15630 How did you hear it?"
15630How did you know it?
15630How does that remark conform with your late promises? 15630 How was it that the house was not insured?"
15630I beg your pardon, but can you tell me the way to Professor Salazar''s house? 15630 I know it''s hard work; but who cares whether a thing is hard or not, if one loves it?
15630I''ll just say''How do you do?'' 15630 If you think it is so''jolly,''"said Mrs. Oliver,"how would you like to come here and live with us awhile?"
15630Insult them? 15630 Is it Edgar again?"
15630Is it not, indeed? 15630 Is it true?"
15630It''s hopeless, is n''t it? 15630 Lost money?
15630May I come in?
15630May I help cook it?
15630Now, what can we do, Edgar? 15630 Oh, are you there too, Edgar?"
15630Oh, for a father to say''Steak, Polly dear?'' 15630 Polly, can you be really a woman?
15630Polly, shall I tell you the truth?
15630Shall you press yours, Miss Polly, and will it tell you a story, too, when you look at it?
15630So soon? 15630 So you know all about it, too?"
15630The fat old man who calls you sprightly?
15630Then make yourself at home in it,said Mrs. Oliver, while Polly joined in with,"Is n''t that a pretty fire in the grate?
15630Then why do you worry about me, good people? 15630 Very comfortable, dear, and very happy; as who would not be, with such a darling comfort of a daughter?
15630What can be worse than being poor?
15630What do you mean?
15630What if God wants you to wait first, little daughter?
15630What if the tenant should give up the house as soon as we are fairly settled in San Francisco?
15630What of that?
15630What''s the matter, pretty Poll?
15630Where is the debtors''prison?
15630Where was I?
15630Whom do you suppose? 15630 Why do you say''if,''Polly?
15630Yes, what have you done to it?
15630You observe my favorite yellow gown?
15630), and said,''I beg your pardon, but can you direct me to Professor Salazar''s house?''
15630Are you satisfied with your college life thus far?"
15630Bird?"
15630Bird?"
15630Bird?"
15630But how could you,_ you_, Edgar Noble, take that evil- eyed, fat- nosed, common Tony Selling for a friend?
15630But it looks like an apron, and how do I contrive to throw the public off the scent?
15630By the way, dear Mrs. Bird, you wo n''t let the nurses or mothers stand in the doorways?
15630By the way, the land did n''t burn up, I suppose, and that must be good for something, is n''t it?"
15630By the way,"with a sharp turn,"with what do you propose to open it?"
15630Can you hide your fears, if there should be cause for any, in your own heart?
15630Can you keep cheerful and sunny?
15630Can you put the little- girl days bravely behind you?"
15630Can you take her away, as if she were the child and you the mother, all at once?"
15630Did you know that you were my first boarders?
15630Do n''t you suppose I have eyes, Polly Oliver?
15630Do you know one of the sacred memories of my life?
15630Do you mean that you lost your pocket- book?"
15630Do you suppose all the milliners were called to their work by a consciousness of genius?
15630Do you think, Edgar, that you have reformed?"
15630Easter wo n''t be Easter without it; and lame Jenny leans out of her window every day as I come from school, and asks,''Is the lilac budding?''"
15630Even Mr. Greenwood-- you remember him, Margery?"
15630Has n''t Polly some relatives in the East?"
15630Have I not two hundred and fifty dollars in the bank, and am I not earning twenty- five dollars a month with absolute regularity?
15630Have you any instructions?
15630Have you forgotten that I am a country girl?"
15630How can one walk in the right path when there does n''t seem to be any brightness to go by?"
15630How can you hope to escape the universal lot?
15630How could you lose your money, I ask?
15630How did you leap to that subject?
15630How much is it?"
15630How much?
15630How old does she think I am, I wonder?
15630I should think I had; what else were you hurrahing about?
15630I suppose you despise me, Polly?"
15630I tell her I expect the girls to say, when I walk into the school- yard on Monday,"Who is this that cometh with dyed garments from Bozrah?"
15630I''m sure I do n''t know, but what difference does it make, anyway?"
15630Is Margery sowing hers?
15630Is it as convenient and pleasant for you to live on this side of the bay, and go back and forth?"
15630Is n''t it heavenly?"
15630Is n''t it lovely?
15630Is n''t it odd that I who most need the talents should have fewer than any one of our dear little group?
15630Is the Olivers''house insured?"
15630It seems true, does n''t it?"
15630Mamma is so much better, everybody is so kind, and do you know, I do n''t loathe the boarders half so much since we have rented them with the house?
15630Mr. Bird went out and telegraphed to Dr. George Edgerton;-- Is Oliver house burned?
15630My dear little girl, you were made for this sort of thing, did you know it?''"
15630Now we will have some pretty things, wo n''t we?
15630Now, John, what do you think?"
15630Now, how about millinery?
15630Now, pardon me, but how much ready money have you laid away?"
15630Now, what would become of her if she rose?
15630Now, will you do it, or shall I?
15630Of course, if it proves too great a tax upon you, or if I should have another attack of illness, it will be out of the question; but who knows?
15630Of what use to set Polly tasks to develop her bravery, when she was already brave?
15630Oh, Dr. George, how does one contrive to be good when one is not happy?
15630Oh, why are you so young, and so loaded with this world''s goods, that you will never need me for a boarder again?
15630Pray, what else do they do in that charming college set of yours?"
15630Shall we ever go again, all together, I wonder?
15630Shall you have a stage name?
15630She blushed as she said hastily,"Your mother has been a very good friend to us, Edgar; why should n''t we help you a little, just for once?
15630The question is, how will she do it without?"
15630Then how would hens do?
15630Try me once, Polly, just to humor me, wo n''t you?
15630We are so divided that it does n''t seem possible that we can ever have a complete reunion, does it?"
15630What are you doing in this vicinity?"
15630What can we do for her?
15630What can, what_ can_ we do?"
15630What do you suppose has happened?"
15630What do you think, Fairy Godmother?
15630What for, dear?"
15630What is a passing home or so?
15630What was the amount of insurance, if any?
15630What wonder that all the fellows, even"smirking Tony,"liked him and sought his company?
15630What''s the matter with you?
15630Where are you going, Ned?"
15630Who ever feels like telling a precious secret over a steam- heater?
15630Who ever hears of valedictorians twenty years after graduation?
15630Why do I attempt to advise such a capable little person?
15630Why is it so necessary that they should be sown?
15630Why not spend the winter with us, and do this lovely work, keeping up other studies if you are strong enough?
15630Will you mind?"
15630Will you promise?"
15630You load me with benefits, and how can I ever repay you?"
15630You remember the lines I read the other day:--"''Hast not thy share?
15630You see this pretty yellow and white striped lawn?
15630You will please see that I am left quite alone with the children, wo n''t you?"
15630You''re nothing but a student, and you are not in any business, are you?"
15630and then, in another,"Who told you?"
15630do you think, not just now, but some time in the distant centuries, I can have a string of gold beads?"
15630he continued,"or, to put it poetically,"Pray why are you loitering here, pretty maid?"
15630instead of my asking,''Steakorchop?''
15630you''d make a superb nurse, except"--"Except what, sir?"
20837About me?
20837Alice, what word do the three last letters of your last name spell if you begin at the end and spell backwards?
20837And what did you get, Peggy?
20837And you came out in all this rain about a cat?
20837And your mother does n''t mind the bother of four kittens?
20837Angel? 20837 Are all the parish to be there-- men as well as women?"
20837Are n''t you going to shake hands with me, Peggy?
20837Are you still awake?
20837But why are you telling me about it?
20837Ca n''t I go and get her back whenever she goes there?
20837Ca n''t I paint Colorado crimson, Uncle Joe?
20837Ca n''t Peggy come in and play games with us?
20837Ca n''t Peggy help us?
20837Ca n''t we come out in the kitchen and help you?
20837Can we bring her home to- day?
20837Can we choose whatever one we want?
20837Can you give a poor working- man a seat by the fire?
20837Can you say any of it?
20837Carols last night?
20837Could I take Lady Janet with me, grandmother?
20837Could n''t you? 20837 Dear Uncle Joe,"she said sweetly,"ca n''t you fix the game some way so I can live in New Hampshire and paint it pink?"
20837Delia?
20837Did it ever occur to you that it is of no importance whether you like the way things are or not?
20837Did you ever stop to think how they were to be fed? 20837 Did you get your feet wet?"
20837Did you have a nice journey?
20837Did you see her, Peggy? 20837 Do I look unhappy, mother?"
20837Do chickens cost a lot? 20837 Do n''t you see how different she is?
20837Do n''t you want any one else?
20837Do n''t you want to play you live in nice Alabama where they have such warm winters, and there are such lots of cunning little black children?
20837Do you know Diana?
20837Do you know, mother, how many children the doctor has, and whether they are boys or girls?
20837Do you like them so much, Peggy?
20837Do you like to climb trees?
20837Do you love her as much as you love mother?
20837Do you mean people are going to give her hens?
20837Do you mean to say she is going to let you keep them all?
20837Do you really see them, Peggy?
20837Do you really see things, Peggy?
20837Do you suppose anything clever enough to get out of prison would be fool enough to go back again?
20837Do you think those remarks were very kind?
20837Do you?
20837Does n''t your sister like to play dolls?
20837Dora?
20837Doris?
20837Has she come, mother?
20837Has she really?
20837Has she?
20837Has who come?
20837Have you been waiting for him all this time?
20837Have you only one brother?
20837Have you seen them?
20837Hens? 20837 How did it get out?"
20837How did you happen to know it?
20837How do you feel about living in Ohio or Oklahoma or Oregon?
20837How do you happen to know anything about Miss Betsy''s hens?
20837How many rows of string- beans do you want to start with, and how many butter- beans? 20837 How many yards are there in the piece?"
20837How much is the peanut straw hat?
20837How''s the canary?
20837How''s the cat?
20837I suppose you''ll have new things in?
20837I wonder when she is going home?
20837I''m sure mother will let me have an egg to give to Diana, wo n''t you, mother?
20837In March?
20837Is Mrs. Carter there?
20837Is calling on Miss Betsy your idea of coming straight home from the village?
20837Is n''t he a beauty?
20837Is she the only sister you''ve got?
20837Is that all?
20837Is your Aunt Betsy the same as Clara''s Aunt Betsy?
20837It begins with a D."Dorothy?
20837Mother, what do you think? 20837 My dear child, why should I put on my best gown just to call on a friend?"
20837My dear little girl--?
20837Not for two months?
20837Not for two weeks?
20837Oh, Peggy,said Diana''s plaintive voice,"it is so wet I have had to stay in all day; ca n''t you and Alice come and play with me?"
20837Oh, Uncle Joe, ca n''t we play the geography game?
20837Oh, dear, what will mother say?
20837Oh, have you brought me a present?
20837Oh, have you brought the kittens?
20837Oh, have you got our cat in that basket?
20837Oh, have you hens?
20837Oh, please, ca n''t we help to do the dishes?
20837Oh, why did n''t they come out and sing to us?
20837Only, are you sure your mother will be willing to let you keep hens?
20837Our dolls are people,Alice said,"are n''t they, Diana?"
20837Peggy, how could you be so careless?
20837Peggy, what have you been doing now?
20837Poetry? 20837 She would?
20837So you are going to take the cat back again?
20837So you like dolls?
20837So you''ve got a sister? 20837 Suppose, while I am making cookies and biscuit for the flesh- and- blood members of the family, you make small ones for the dolls?
20837Then why did n''t you?
20837They''ll all say,''What mischief has Peggy Owen been up to now?''
20837This is Tipsy, is n''t it?
20837Was n''t it nice of them, when I am the youngest in the family?
20837Well, Peggy, was it a good surprise party?
20837Well, children, what did you buy with your two dollars?
20837Well, what do you guess it is?
20837Well, what is it now?
20837Well,said Mrs. Owen,"if she is so anxious to live at the other house and they want to keep her, suppose we let them have her?
20837What are dresses for if you ca n''t climb trees in them?
20837What difference will it make whether your grandmother likes chickens? 20837 What do you mean?"
20837What do you see to- night, Peggy?
20837What do you see?
20837What have you got in your basket?
20837What is she saying?
20837What is the story that is so interesting?
20837What is their proper place?
20837What letter does it begin with?
20837What''s her name?
20837When will it come in, mother?
20837Which is the kitten that does n''t belong to anybody?
20837Who is Sol?
20837Who put that idea into your head, your mother?
20837Who says you ca n''t have Lady Jane?
20837Why should I know anything about your cat? 20837 Why should there be a hat with blue on it, just the color of my dresses, if it was n''t for me?"
20837Why, Clara, how do you do? 20837 Wo n''t you come in and see mother?"
20837Wo n''t you come in, you little dears?
20837Wo n''t you come in?
20837Wo n''t you stay for it?
20837Would n''t that be too bad?
20837Yes, is n''t it?
20837Yes, what is the trouble?
20837You darling, I am going to see your mother,she said;"shall I give her your love?
20837You do like us best, do n''t you, after all?
20837You do n''t expect I am going to swallow that yarn, Gilbert Lawson?
20837You do n''t like cats very well, do you, grandmother?
20837You do n''t mean to say you took money for doing a kindness?
20837You have n''t bought a canary- bird?
20837And are you planning to have peas and corn and tomatoes?"
20837But now the question is, will you children try to make your grandmother happy?"
20837But where can Uncle Joe live?
20837But who was the seventh feathered person walking out of the door?
20837Ca n''t you give me the message?"
20837Can you do it to- morrow?"
20837Can you think of anything you would like?"
20837Come up here-- why do n''t you come?"
20837Could n''t we begin with little chickens and let them grow into hens?"
20837Cox?"
20837Did my old woman leave the window open?
20837Did you ever stop to think what your grandmother has had to bear?"
20837Do n''t you like odd numbers best, Mr. Farrell?
20837Do n''t you remember,"she added, reproachfully,"how I wrote and told you we had a birthday surprise party of hens for mother?"
20837Do n''t you want to go home with me and get some lemonade and cake?"
20837Do n''t you wish you could sing like a canary- bird?"
20837Do you let her come into the parlor?"
20837Do you suppose she could have slipped out when Michael Farrell came in?"
20837Farrell?"
20837Have you seen anything of a gray pussy with dark gray stripes?"
20837Henrietta, do n''t you think you could give me just one egg for Thanksgiving?"
20837How many are you going to have?"
20837In Jersey with the New left off?"
20837Is n''t it a nice sign?"
20837Is she pretty?"
20837Leave Lady Janet?
20837Leave her beloved Rhode Island Reds, Peggy was thinking, just as Henrietta had hatched out twelve downy, fluffy balls?
20837Marthy, did n''t I tell you what would happen?"
20837Now she could get the hat, for it did not cost nearly five dollars; and there would be some money left to buy-- what should she buy?
20837Oh, dear, what did I do with my basket?"
20837Oh, dear, what will mother say?
20837Oh, what will mother say?
20837One of the schoolboys, who always loved to make a sensation, called out as he passed,"Did you know your canary- bird is lost?"
20837Owen?"
20837Peggy felt a little happier when Diana said, in a disappointed tone,"Is n''t Peggy going to sleep with us?"
20837Peggy, what mischief have you been in now?"
20837She wo n''t mind having them all alike, will you, Peggy?"
20837That is her name, is n''t it?"
20837Then, as she noticed the confusion on Peggy''s face, she said,"Did you let her out?"
20837There, mother, is that any better?"
20837What color are the kittens?"
20837What does Mrs. Farrell''s name begin with-- can she go to Minnesota with you?"
20837What have you got in yours?"
20837What is this smell?
20837What is your mother''s name?"
20837What made you think her name was Matilda Ann?"
20837When she reached the house her mother said,"What have you been doing, Peggy?
20837Where did the seventh come from?
20837Who had brought the seventh?
20837Who was she to stand out against these two?
20837Whose birthday is it, Peggy?
20837Will you be my grandchild and come and keep house for me?"
20837Would you give me up if I kept going back to the Carters''?"
20837Would you let me stay?"
20837Yours or your mother''s?"
62301''Coon, indeed?
62301''Coon? 62301 A cook, do you say?
62301And you have n''t seen nor heard anything of Quorum since?
62301Are n''t there crocodiles, too, in Florida?
62301Are they yours?
62301Are you certain of that?
62301Are you hurt, old man?
62301Are you sure this is where we left them?
62301But did you ever hear of such a thing, mother? 62301 But how did you know the canoes were out at the light, Worth?"
62301But if he had caught and bitten you?
62301But if he should take it into his head to attack us?
62301But what shall we do with our deer?
62301But, Sumner, there are n''t any wild beasts or snakes on this key, are there?
62301But, Sumner,said Mrs. Rankin, gravely,"I hope your unhappiness does not arise from jealousy of another''s prosperity?"
62301Ca n''t we even shoot my gobbler if we meet him?
62301Camp?
62301Can you tell me, sir, what has become of a boy named Worth Manton and an old colored man whom I left here the day before yesterday?
62301Could n''t we somehow make a fire with a gun? 62301 Did n''t I, really?"
62301Do you see it?
62301Do you suppose any other two fellows ever had such queer times on a canoe trip as we are having?
62301Do you think they can be sharks?
62301Do you, Quorum, know anything about the canoes that we came here in?
62301Do?
62301Does n''t that altar look as though the mound had been used as a place for offering sacrifices?
62301Fishing for what?
62301Hanker fur the''Glades? 62301 Have you noticed how full the air is of smoke?"
62301He die ob he own sef, an''ebberybody know hit, an''dey hain''t er huntin''ole Quor''m any mo''? 62301 How dared you give us such a fright?
62301How do you know?
62301How does that plan strike you, boys?
62301How many rattles has this fellow?
62301How yo go, den?
62301How?
62301Hunting you? 62301 I suppose you would have stolen it if you had found it?"
62301I wonder if it can be a volcano?
62301I wonder what will become of him?
62301It was a snake, was n''t it?
62301Just where does the sloop lie?
62301Look here,said Sumner, sternly, to the negro, after his excitement had somewhat subsided,"did n''t you try to steal one of our guns last night?"
62301May I introduce myself as Mr. Tracy Manton, of New York?
62301Not in them tickly li''l''cooners?
62301Oh, I would, would I? 62301 Oh, Sumner, what shall we do?"
62301Oh, sir,exclaimed Worth, as the stranger landed,"have you seen anything of Sumner Rankin?
62301Oh, we will, will we?
62301Suppose he had upset us?
62301Suppose they had struck an artery, what would you do?
62301The bucket?
62301Them Injuns has got tobacco, then?
62301Then do n''t you think we ought to be getting back towards the river?
62301Then why not come with us through the''Glades?
62301Then you did get a deer, sir, after all?
62301Then you will go with us?
62301They were Indians, then?
62301Was it a hippopotamus, do you think?
62301Was it a waterquake?
62301Was it a whale, do you think?
62301Well, then, what would you do if you were bitten?
62301What could it have been?
62301What do you propose to do?
62301What do you say, Sumner?
62301What for?
62301What has become of your gun?
62301What is it?
62301What is it?
62301What made that fellow go for us if he is n''t a fighter?
62301What would our mothers say if they could see us now, and know the fix we are in?
62301What would you have done if you had met it without a gun in your hand?
62301What yo''say?
62301Where are you bound?
62301Where are you going to find it?
62301Where did you get hold of that idea?
62301Where is your vessel?
62301Where was Quorum?
62301Where were the boats?
62301Who could have done this thing, and why was it done?
62301Who he b''long to, den?
62301Why did n''t you fire?
62301Why did n''t you fire?
62301Why for yo''a- huntin''de ole man, den?
62301Why had he fired those shots?
62301Why, my dear boy,exclaimed his mother, standing beside him and smoothing his tumbled brown curls with her cool hands,"what is the matter?
62301Will you step in and look at them?
62301Would n''t it be fine?
62301Yo''call''em notorious, eh?
62301Yo''say I hain''t hit nowheres, Marse Summer?
62301You are certain that you are right, Sumner?
62301You believe it will be safe to trust them, then?
62301You do n''t mean to say that you are navigating the ocean in that cockle- shell?
62301You do n''t mean, sir, that you propose to go into camp while the whole country is simply swarming with savage Indians?
62301You do n''t reckin they''ll hanker arter wisitin''the''Glades agin in a hurry, then?
62301You surely do n''t mean that they are good to eat?
62301You''ve got some matches, have n''t you?
62301Your gun has n''t disappeared, has it?
62301A good one?"
62301AND WHERE DID THEY COME FROM?
62301AND WHERE DID THEY COME FROM?
62301After all we have gone through with together, and after all the anxiety we have had on account of each other?
62301After laying the sofkee spoon down, he turned to the Indian who had already spoken to him, and said:"Why fo''yo''call me Quor''m?
62301And again turning to the subject under consideration, he asked,"Would you be willing to help us cut out some for our canoes after your models?"
62301And how did you get there?
62301And how did you know that we were here?"
62301And why should they?
62301As Worth became aware of Sumner''s presence, he turned with a white, frightened face, exclaiming:"Oh, Sumner, what shall I do?
62301At the same time Sumner was saying to Worth,"I wonder who that fellow is?
62301Besides, did the way ahead of them present any greater difficulties than that they had so recently traversed?
62301Bring a boat over here, ca n''t ye?"
62301But how did you happen to leave Quorum?
62301But what has become of your own boat?"
62301But what information was he gaining concerning the Everglades, their resources, and present population?
62301But what is it that smells so good?"
62301But you will be careful, and not run into any more such dreadful perils, wo n''t you, dear?"
62301But, Quorum, what on earth are you throwing all that iron into the fire for?
62301By- the- way, Quorum, were our canoes here when you landed?"
62301Ca n''t I enlist you in Uncle Sam''s service for a week or so?"
62301Ca n''t we get away somehow-- can''t we?
62301Ca n''t we take the canoes now and sail over there?"
62301Can it be that you are the person they are seeking?"
62301Could he ever reach it through those tumultuous seas?
62301Could he obtain any more?
62301Could they hope to reach Key West in them?
62301Could this be she?
62301Did you ever see anything so absurd as Quorum?
62301Did you hear that?"
62301Do n''t you want to invite me to dine with you?"
62301Do you think it is absolutely necessary?"
62301Even if this first attack had only been intended for a scare, would a second prove equally harmless?
62301For answer the Indian only said,"Tobac, you got um, Quor''m?"
62301Had not Rust Norris given the Indians false information concerning the objects of the expedition, and roused them to anger against it?
62301Had there ever been one half so good before?
62301Have you an extra paddle with you?"
62301Have you got one?"
62301Have you had plenty to eat since you came here?"
62301How did he get back?
62301How did you get here, and what became of the raft?
62301How do you happen to be at anchor here, and what were you whistling for?"
62301How do you think that would go?"
62301How much longer would his strength hold out?
62301How on earth do you remember it all?"
62301I can not remember seeing a bullet strike the water or anywhere else; can you?"
62301I mean of a boy on a raft?"
62301I think you said he was a good one, Sumner?"
62301I wonder how hungry we''ll get before we make up our minds to eat raw duck?
62301Is n''t it the top of the flood now?"
62301It has been a decidedly unique and remarkable one, though-- has it not?
62301It seems that we all want something that we have n''t got, and are n''t likely to get in this world, does n''t it?
62301It will be a queer experience to tell about when you get back to New York, wo n''t it?"
62301Let me take her a few minutes, will yer?"
62301Now I wonder if he does n''t know something about our canoes?"
62301Now do you suppose we can persuade your old darkey to go along as cook?
62301Oh, what shall I do?"
62301Supposing his raft should strand on the reef, what chance was there of its holding together until daylight, or even for a few minutes?
62301The note of a steam- whistle?
62301The only unanswered questions are, Whom do they belong to, and how did they get here?"
62301Then I sat up and called out,''Who''s there?''
62301This time he was heard, and an answering hail came from the deck high above him,"Who is it, and where are you?"
62301Tobac?
62301Very well; could he lose it in a better cause?
62301WHOSE ARE THEY?
62301WHOSE ARE THEY?
62301Was there ever such a chance to do the very thing he most longed to do offered a boy before?
62301Wha''yo''mean by playin''sich tricks on him, an''on de white mans wha''trabblin''in he comp''ny?"
62301Wha''yo''say dere''bout niggahs, yo''sailorman?"
62301What can have become of him?
62301What can possibly have become of our canoes, anyway?"
62301What can they want with us, I wonder?
62301What could Worth and Quorum be about?
62301What could they do with their frail boats, even if they should return to the open waters of the Gulf?
62301What did you say their names were?"
62301What do you mean by frightening us so?
62301What do you say?
62301What put such an idea into your head?"
62301What schooner is that?"
62301What shall I do?
62301What sort of a cook?
62301What was she doing there, apparently at anchor?
62301What was that?
62301What would his father have done under similar circumstances?
62301Where are your Indian friends?"
62301Where do you suppose they can have gone to, sir?"
62301Where had he been?
62301Where have you been?"
62301Where were the boats?
62301Where_ are_ the canoes and the cruisers?"
62301Which way were they to fly?
62301Who else occupied that country, or who else would have done such a thing?
62301Why did n''t I think of it before?
62301Why fo''yo''treat a''spectable colored gen''l''man dish yer way, anyhow?
62301Why had he not been content to stay with them, and await patiently the relief that must come to them sooner or later?
62301Why yo''no gib one plug ob terbakker fur dat''possum, eh?
62301Why?
62301Will you come over after a while, or shall I go aboard the sloop?
62301Will you do it?"
62301Would n''t you, mother dear?"
62301Yo''like''possum when he roasted, Marse Summer?"
62301You are certain that this is the last of the ebb?"
62301You hongry?
62301and what was he doing when you left him?"
62301and where had he come from?
62301asked the negro, doubtfully;"an''not eben hurted?"
62301exclaimed Worth, in a grieved tone,"are n''t you ever going to care particularly for me, because we have never been enemies?"
62301he said, when she had answered his question in the affirmative;"and my nephew, Master Worth Manton?
21228Ai n''t I?
21228Ai n''t you coming?
21228All here?
21228An''I s''pose,stroking Tib on the head,"they do n''t mind Tib neither?"
21228An''what do you think you''ve got by it?
21228And had n''t you got nothing in the house?
21228And how did you do with your ducks this season, Mrs Greenways, ma''am?
21228And how does the name strike you, Mr Snell?
21228And that''s your own will, is it, Lilac?
21228And what did you see at Lenham?
21228And what''s Lilac White going to do?
21228And what''s Lilac settled to do about going?
21228And what''s your opinion, ma''am?
21228And what''s_ your_ place in the programme, Miss Greenways?
21228And who taught her all she knows?
21228And you''ve thought it well over, and you wo n''t want to be altering it again?
21228Are common things bad things?
21228Are they?
21228Because for why? 21228 But Peter would n''t sell her, I suppose?"
21228But that ai n''t all,continued Lilac;"just as I was turning to go he calls after me,` What''s yer name?''
21228Butter-- eh?
21228Common things-- eh?
21228Did they play at your wedding?
21228Did you think it''ud please her, now?
21228Different?
21228Do n''t you want to be?
21228Do they now?
21228Do those silly things think it makes''em look like ladies to cut their hair so and dress themselves up fine? 21228 Does it?"
21228Does she want me, please?
21228Has she ever told you not?
21228Have you packed your clothes?
21228Heard the news?
21228How are you goin''to get there, then?
21228How did she get well?
21228How was the artist gentleman getting along with Lilac''s picture? 21228 How''ll we get over there?"
21228How''s your mother?
21228How_ is_ Jem?
21228I s''pose it''s summat like a fair, is n''t it?
21228I s''pose they''re used to see you sitting here?
21228I''m here; what is it?
21228Is Mother here, ma''am?
21228Is it the cows now, that you''ve got new, or is it the dairymaid?
21228Is it_ certain sure_ you''ll sell her?
21228It do_ seem_ as how it would fit her,she said;"but that''s not a Christian name, is it, ma''am?"
21228Lilac ai n''t said nothing to either of you, I s''pose?
21228My I sha n''t we cut a dash? 21228 None of_ our_ people, I_ hope_?"
21228Now then, missie,he said at length,"that''s the lot, ai n''t it?"
21228Now you feel better, do n''t you?
21228Oh, Agnetta, do you really think they''ll like it?
21228Oh, Agnetta,_ could_ I?
21228Oh, what''s that?
21228Oh, what, Agnetta?
21228P''r''aps, then,she said,"''twarn''t you neither who sent Mother''s cactus down to the farm?"
21228Re''lly, now?
21228So you''ve got through? 21228 This is a nice, pretty corner to sit in,"she said;"but do n''t the bees terrify you?"
21228Was that when you used to play the clar''net in church, Uncle?
21228Well, Lilac,said Mrs Leigh kindly,"what is it?"
21228Well, and what d''ye think of Buckle''s offer for the colt?
21228Well, that makes a difference, do n''t it now?
21228Well, then, who_ does_?
21228Well,said Bella, looking calmly at her,"I s''pose you''re to be Queen, ai n''t you?"
21228What did she say?
21228What did you hear then?
21228What is it? 21228 What made him change his mind?"
21228What name may you be alludin''to, ma''am?
21228What on earth''s got that child? 21228 What''s that?"
21228What''s the child talking on?
21228What''s the good of selling her? 21228 What''s the use of Bella and Agnetta, I should like to know?"
21228What''s this?
21228What''s to prevent''em walking?
21228Whatever ails you, child?
21228Whatever can he want to do it for? 21228 Whatever do you mean, Lilac White?"
21228Whatever made you do it?
21228Whatever shall we do if Benson wo n''t take the butter?
21228Whatever''d Charlie say? 21228 Whatever''s the matter?"
21228Where am I to sit, Ben?
21228Where did you get it?
21228Where did you get such a beautiful lot of it?
21228Where were they to go?
21228Where''s Lilac?
21228Where''s Molly?
21228Where''s your kindlin''s?
21228Who gave her a home when she wanted one, and fed and kep''her? 21228 Who is it, then?
21228Who is the honest man? 21228 Who''ll sing or play something?"
21228Who''s goin''to be Queen this year, I wonder?
21228Who? 21228 Whoever in all the world could it a been then?"
21228Why ca n''t it be ready when I come in?
21228Why does it belong to him,asked Lilac,"more than the other cows?"
21228Why ever did he make off like that?
21228Why ever did n''t you name that afore, Mr Dimbleby?
21228Why ever did you let''em go on so silly about the brownie?
21228Why ever do n''t they sting yer?
21228Why ever not? 21228 Why, Dan''l, my man,"she exclaimed,"what is it?"
21228Why, I do n''t suppose she knew it, did she?
21228Why, how could he go to say such a thing? 21228 Why, there''s no reason you should n''t have it cut more stylish, is there, now there''s no one to mind?"
21228Why, whoever is it, then?
21228Why, you would n''t for sure wish her to grow up homely, would you now, Mr Snell?
21228Why, you''re the little girl who was Queen? 21228 Whyever not?"
21228You could n''t bide a little?
21228You did n''t ask no one to get it?
21228You do n''t mean to tell me you_ like work_?
21228You know he''s lodging at the` Three Bells?'' 21228 You wo n''t let on to the missus as how you did it?"
21228You would n''t do it, not if you were n''t obliged? 21228 You''ll come alonger me and sleep, wo n''t you, dearie?"
21228You''ll come and see me down yonder, wo n''t you, Uncle Joshua?
21228You''re not going down there, surely?
21228You''re sure you have n''t forgotten, Uncle Joshua?
21228You''re_ quite_ sure it''ll make me look better?
21228You''ve got to be so sober and old- fashioned like,continued Agnetta,"that I s''pose you would n''t care to go even if you could, would you?
21228_ Did_ she, now?
21228_ Is_ there?
21228Ai n''t ye, Tib?"
21228And so you did n''t have yer picter done after all?"
21228And what made Agnetta and all of''em cut their hair that way?"
21228And yet on a sunshiny day after rain the folks passing''ll say,` Whatever is it as smells so beautiful?''
21228And yet-- her mother-- was it worth while to risk vexing her?
21228And you wo n''t ever let on to missus or any of''em?"
21228Are you goin''to hide from everyone now you''ve got a fringe?
21228As Lilac brought the water she said indignantly:"Where''s Mr Wishing then?
21228At last, however, as he handed his cup to his wife to be refilled, he asked:"Who made the butter this week?"
21228Because for why?
21228Beginning with these, who could tell to what other evils a fringe might lead?
21228But in spite of all this he could stand like a gaby and let folks make a laughing- stock of him?
21228But she must do the best she could now, and she said at once:"Had n''t I best send someone for the doctor first, ma''am?"
21228But surely he must have seen her, and if so why had he locked her in?
21228But then, could she leave the farm?
21228But wherever did they get such a sight of''em?"
21228But why should you and Agnetta and the rest copy''em?
21228But,"anxiously,"you do n''t think she looks weakly, do you, ma''am?"
21228Could it be got in time?
21228Could it be possible that Peter put any faith in such nonsensical tales?
21228Could it really be the cactus?
21228Did Peter mind?
21228Do n''t she look a deal better with her hair cut so, Peter?"
21228Do you hear?"
21228Do you think as how it looks_ very_ bad, Uncle?"
21228Finding her voice as she arrived at the last conclusion, she asked coldly:"What made yer do it?"
21228Folks shook their heads when it was mentioned, and said:"What could you expect?"
21228For one thing: Would it be fine?
21228For why?
21228Guess who to?"
21228Had she overslept herself?
21228Have you been here long?"
21228He wiped his mouth with the red handkerchief, looked straight at Lilac, and suddenly spoke:"And how''s the picture going forrard then?"
21228Her heart beat fast, her lips were as though fastened together, how could she possibly sing?
21228How could she bear to live here always?
21228How should he frame it?
21228How would Mother receive them?
21228How''d he look?"
21228How''d they look in a ploughed field or a muddy lane?
21228I expect she knows some little thing-- don''t you?"
21228I''ve always been foolish over her since she was ill.""But if Uncle sells the colt I s''pose you wo n''t sell her, will you?"
21228Is it to be off or on?"
21228It was easy for the doctor to talk, but what would become of things?
21228It was late when I got back, and I remembered I had n''t locked the stable door, and I went across the yard to do it--""Well?"
21228Lilac has some opportunities-- will she or wo n''t she take them up?
21228Lilies, Roses, and even Violets were not unknown in Danecross, but who had ever heard of Lilac?
21228Might she venture to take it with her?
21228Molly hesitated; she had as usual a hundred other things to do and would be thankful for the help, but was such a bit of a thing to be trusted?
21228Mr Buckle presently dashed by them in a smart gig, and called out,"How''s yourself, Peter?"
21228Must she go?
21228Peter no doubt had brought the plant down from the cottage, but who had told him to do it?
21228She was sorry, only what had made Lilac cry just now when she had been quite calm hitherto?
21228Should it be something ornamental-- a gilt clock, or a mirror with a plush frame for the drawing- room?
21228Should she give it up?
21228Should she stay where she was till the morning?
21228Should she venture to knock at the door?
21228So then he says very impatient,` Do n''t you understand?
21228Suppose it should fail?
21228That''s only fair and right, is n''t it?"
21228The question was-- who?
21228The rent owing and the failing crops were such a very old story that she had ceased to heed it much, but what would happen if the butter was not sold?
21228There was the little garden and the sweet- peas she had sown, just showing green above the earth: would she never see them bloom?
21228There''s little White Lilac, as we used to call her,--you find her a handy sort of lass, do n''t you?"
21228They take summat off your hands, I s''pose?
21228Through these Lilac passed with always the same question:"Have you seen Mother?"
21228To go or stay?
21228To whom could she trust whilst she was helpless?
21228WHO WILL BE QUEEN?
21228Was it for the better?
21228Was it the brownie as sent''em, do you think?"
21228Was this her reward for all her patience and hard work?
21228What ails her?"
21228What could have happened?
21228What could have kept her away?
21228What could it be they admired in Lilac?
21228What could she do at once, she wondered, that would please her mother?
21228What could she need beyond a roof over her head, food to eat, and clothes to wear?
21228What do you say to that, Peter?"
21228What does Molly care how the butter turns out?"
21228What had Mr Benson said about it?
21228What is it,"she continued, looking round the room,"that smells so delicious?
21228What shall I do?"
21228What should she do, if the child, with the consent of her uncle and encouraged by Mrs Leigh, were to choose to leave the farm?
21228What was it that lighted the room with such a glory?
21228What will he do with the picture afterwards?"
21228What will she wear?"
21228What would be best?
21228What would her aunt say then?
21228What would they do, she went on to think, if she left the butter to Bella and Agnetta to manage between them?
21228What''d you say?"
21228When''s she got to decide?"
21228Which of''em does it?"
21228Who was there now to understand?
21228Who would be chosen?
21228Who would look after Molly?
21228Who would see that the butter was ready and fit for market?
21228Who would see to the dairy?
21228Who would take her place?
21228Who''s ill?"
21228Who?"
21228Whose fault was it?
21228Whose fault was it?
21228Why did n''t the brownie hinder that?"
21228Why ever should they want to go swarmin''now in that contrairy way?"
21228Why had he come?
21228Why had she not made more of Lilac?
21228Why had she put off going home?
21228Why should n''t Lilac go?
21228Why should you work for nothing here and get no thanks?
21228Would Mrs Leigh find out whether her friends would like her to take such a situation?
21228Would a fringe really improve her?
21228Would he sell None- so- pretty?
21228Would it be fine?
21228You did n''t?
21228You heard, I s''pose, what Mrs White up and said to her once?
21228You remember about the brownie, and me saying the farm was pleasanter and that?
21228You''d like an outing as well as any of''em-- wouldn''t you, my maid?"
21228` And what do you think of callin''her?''
21228ai n''t it hot?"
21228and Mother was angry?"
21228and when it was finished he fingered his cheek thoughtfully, and said:"And so he would n''t paint you-- eh?
21228he added with a testy glance at the dusty pane in front of him,"what ails the window this morning?
21228he said,"you want a tune, do you?
21228put in Agnetta,"whatever can he want to paint_ you_ for?"
21228says she;` whyever do you give your girls such fine names?
45774''Had he no mark upon him?'' 45774 ''How did''ee get theer?''
45774''Is any other of you so grand as this?'' 45774 ''Where, where?''
45774''Who be you?'' 45774 ''You do n''t need mark of mouth, Sambo, I suppose?''
45774Albatrosses to wit? 45774 All alone, mother?"
45774And in_ that_ state? 45774 And you can forgive me?"
45774Answer to their names?
45774Are the guns loaded?
45774Are we not having rather a bad voyage, Wills? 45774 Are you alone?"
45774But does the English Government allow this?
45774But eggs?
45774But the doctor knew what he was doing, and when the place was well scrubbed,''What do''ee call_ that_?'' 45774 But what have we to give of that sort, Osborn?"
45774Can it be Ralph?
45774Child,--brave child? 45774 Could you not open some of that ginger which uncle brought home?
45774Did you ever see a spirit, Osborn?
45774Did you ever see the Flying Dutchman in these latitudes, Wills?
45774Do n''t Burmese babies get teeth?
45774Do n''t you think of these things when a storm comes while you are at sea?
45774Do they not make you nervous?
45774Do you anticipate such a thing?
45774Do you consider that there is any danger of our meeting it in the jungle?
45774Do you mean the cargo?
45774Do you really believe that? 45774 Do you really mean to tell me that you saw that yourself?"
45774Do you think there is anything in what the grandfather says, Kirke?
45774Do you think you can?
45774Even you? 45774 From the fire?
45774Has it any teeth yet?
45774Have you seen my three- foot rule? 45774 He is old, then?"
45774How I wish we could find anything which would rid us of these beastly things?
45774How far are we from land?
45774How is your patient, wifey?
45774How now, Rogers?
45774How would you like to be served so?
45774I suppose,said Denham,"that if we do not disturb him, either in eating or sleeping, he would take no notice of us?
45774I? 45774 If anything goes wrong with me,"resumed Kirke, after a few moments,"you will send word to my father, wo n''t you, Denham?
45774Is he a gentleman''s son, then?
45774Is he like me, too?
45774Is he safe?
45774Is it to warn them of our approach that they let our wheels make such a creaking? 45774 Is it usual for a gentleman to send his son to sea in the merchant service?"
45774Is it, Wills?
45774Is the boy safe?
45774Is there an English doctor there?
45774Is this plan of use, uncle? 45774 Is_ his_ hair like the jungle bushes?"
45774It was for ever,''Where is the old cabinet that did stand here?'' 45774 Now, Rogers,"said Mr. Gilchrist,"why waste time?
45774Only_ hope_, miss?
45774Shall we touch at the Cape? 45774 That is it, is it?"
45774The boy?
45774There is a lot of what they call tiger- grass here, zur,said Wills;"will it be safe when we know that there is one of those gentry near at hand?"
45774Uncle Sam? 45774 Upon_ me_, mother?
45774Was anyone hurt?
45774Was he not very sorry to hear about father?
45774We shall be pleased to do so, Mah----?
45774What are the Englishmen like, girl?
45774What are you about? 45774 What are you funking there for?
45774What are you in for?
45774What are you swabbing the deck for?
45774What beast''s footmarks are those?
45774What colour?
45774What could that have to do with it, Wills? 45774 What did the fellow tie that bunch of plantains up to the front of the gharrie for?"
45774What did you think about while you stood there all that time?
45774What do you mean?
45774What ground is there for supposing such a thing?
45774What have you there?
45774What is all the excitement about?
45774What is it, mother?
45774What is it, my dear?
45774What is it, sir?
45774What is that untidy ayah of yours about, to leave your things scattered on the ground like this?
45774What is that?
45774What should I do without you, love?
45774What sort of creature is that?
45774What''s the use?
45774Where are all the others?
45774Where are the dacoits''heads?
45774Where is Miss Sunshine?
45774Where is that hose?
45774Where is the boy?
45774Where was that?
45774Where''s Agnes? 45774 Where''s Maria?"
45774Who volunteers?
45774Who?
45774Why are you not doing your own work, Kirke? 45774 Why should we destroy our houses?"
45774Why, man, what good would that be so far to sea? 45774 Why, my good fellow, what can be going to happen now?"
45774Will the royal selfs lords be good enough to join the feast?
45774Will you not make for Diamond Island, sir?
45774Would you like me to pray with you for his safety?
45774Yes, madam?
45774You Cornishmen are always superstitious, are n''t you?
45774You are sure?
45774You do n''t think that she will faint too, do you?
45774Zur?
45774_ You_ fierce and passionate?
45774''Cockroaches on my shirt?
45774''Is there anything wrong about me?''
45774''It is a pretty face, is it not?''
45774''It is sad, Miss Denham, is it not?
45774''What did''ee do it with?''
45774''What has become of the gamekeeper''s boy, Jack?''
45774A few more murmurs, then all was still again; but, was he mistaken?
45774A fowl to roast?
45774And Ralph?"
45774And how did Denham arrive there, and in such a condition?
45774And must we be deafened by those ugly square bells tied to the buffaloes''throats?"
45774And what must he do now?
45774And who else?
45774Any vegetables?"
45774Are they pretty?"
45774Are we safe here?"
45774Brudenel?"
45774Burmese?
45774But what was this?
45774But why had he not returned?
45774But would He pardon?--could He pardon?
45774But would it ever go home?
45774But, after that, what?
45774CHAPTER IV THE RAFT What were the occupants of the boats to do?
45774Ca n''t you smell the stinking stuff on the breeze?
45774Can I alter it and put it right?"
45774Can not we oil them, or something, to stop it?
45774Can not we send word to Rangoon?"
45774Can not you get help from any neighbours strong enough to protect you?
45774Can_ you_ feed me, clothe me, save me, take me to my friends, do_ anything_ for me?"
45774Come, then, if God so made the grass of the field, shall He not much more care for you, oh ye of little faith?"
45774Could he tie them together by means of the cord- like lianas which bound the jungle so closely together into impenetrable masses?
45774Could it have been expected?
45774Could no scout be sent to any British police- station, to tell them of our need and beg assistance?
45774Could you not take baby for an hour?
45774Did he bear a charmed life?
45774Did he inherit it in his blood?
45774Did that mean that they were gone?
45774Did this mean that their last hour had arrived?
45774Did we slave and labour for our beautiful jewels simply to give them to the thief?
45774Did you do it?"
45774Did you ever hear it, Wills?"
45774Do n''t you know when a man has made up his mind?"
45774Do ships always have so much bad weather as we are meeting with?"
45774Do ye want chee- e- eps?"
45774Do you always keep them there?''
45774Do you believe in warnings and presentiments?"
45774Do you really think it would be good for mother?"
45774Do you understand me?"
45774Do you_ always_ have them upon your own person, my friend?''
45774Drowned?
45774Fled before God''s judgment- seat, to be for ever witnesses against him?
45774For how many days would it avail to keep life in them were they not picked up?
45774Gilchrist?"
45774Gilchrist?"
45774Had Ralph fallen a victim to these creatures?
45774Had any of them been trampled under foot by that mad elephant, or devoured by the tigers?
45774Had five guns really been able to kill six men?
45774Had he been injured?
45774Had he been the victim of other perils, and had the dacoit only found the watch in the jungle and appropriated it?
45774Had he trod upon a snake?
45774Had it taken that worst of all forms-- secret drinking?
45774Had poor Denham escaped the tiger, been spared from the fire, to fall a prey at last to a fellow- man?
45774Had some other poisonous reptile or insect attacked him?
45774Had that telegram anything to do with it?"
45774Had the madness broken out in his son?
45774Had the uncertain light deceived him?
45774Has anything been heard of the boat, sir?"
45774Have we weapons at hand?
45774Have you been hiding there all this time, while we others have been fighting for you?"
45774Have you no pleasanter or really beautiful things about which to tell us?"
45774He believed his last moment was come, when-- what sound met his ear?
45774He knew that he must regain the main stream of the Salween River, up the eastern bank of which his party had come; but where was the Salween?
45774He knew what his sister had suffered from her husband''s conduct; was the same thing to begin all over again in the person of her son?
45774He must sit there till he died; what else remained for him to do?
45774Hour passed after hour in this manner, but yet surely it could not be daylight already?
45774How can I believe you again?"
45774How can you ask me, Agnes?"
45774How can you talk so?
45774How can you tell for what your Master wants you?
45774How could he meet it?
45774How long do you reckon it will be before the harvest will be ready?"
45774How old are you now?"
45774How shall you know whether it is the man- eater if we should be so unlucky as to fall across it?"
45774How then could he proceed?
45774How were you saved?"
45774How?"
45774I believe,"continued she, with a smile,"that I am expressing myself badly, like an ignorant girl, but perhaps you understand what I mean?"
45774If folks lend, spend, and give, do not other folks receive?"
45774If his crop fails, why should another man have more than he wants?
45774If this is the end of my short life, am I fit to go before Thee on Thy judgment throne, and confidently crave for mercy?
45774If we''nothing say to him, he''ll nothing say to me,''eh?"
45774Is it necessary to give my answer now, this evening, or may I sleep upon it?"
45774Is it possible?"
45774Is there no English station within reach?
45774It could never be the gallop of horses''feet-- many horses, tearing madly along the forest path?
45774It was like the reflection, upon the sky, of a mighty fire,--but where was the fire?
45774It was not like the dawn, it was not in the right place,--but what could it be?
45774Just then the doctor came in, and''What are you saying?''
45774Kershaw?"
45774Kershaw?"
45774Kershaw?''
45774Kirke had received no lessons, gained no experience, what could he do?
45774Men?
45774Mr. Gilchrist-- Wills-- Osborn-- why did none of them come?
45774Now, there, do n''t you see something come out from behind it?"
45774Old enough to be of some use and good, are you not?"
45774Shall I talk to her and find out all about it?"
45774Shall we see the Table Mountain, sir, do you think?"
45774Some of them remembered now that the discharge of a gun had been heard afterwards up this defile; but why had the boy not returned?
45774Sudden inspiration seized upon Osborn,"Does he sing like this?"
45774That would be a very bitter pill to him,--must it be swallowed?
45774The clear whistle of some night- bird was heard and answered from a neighbouring thicket,"Did you do it?
45774The night was very dark,--was it the looming storm or the furnace beneath them which made the air so oppressive and close?
45774The plants seemed to point yet more directly to the stranger being identical with Denham, but who could"Yamie"be?
45774The stream was narrow; his raft must be no wider than necessary,--but what ought its length to be?
45774Then a lull came,--were they out of the line of the cyclone?
45774This girl says that there are young Englishmen in the village, is it possible that one could be our dear Ralph?
45774Was it any good to pray?--did God hear him?
45774Was it of any use to wait, to search further for Ralph?
45774Was it only a dream, or a dream- like fancy then, or did he really hear the faint ripple of flowing water?
45774Was it so?
45774Was it wise to wait longer before embarking in them?
45774Was that dear brave boy lying scorched and blackened by the jungle flame, or torn limb from limb by the tiger?
45774Was that smiling face cold and set in death already?
45774Was the absence of the mother from her cubs due to the destruction of the poor young fellow?
45774Was the fellow even venturing to bring it in for the reward, and could he have told more of the gallant lad''s fate?
45774Was there a God of love and mercy at all, when he was beaten back at every point like this, however bravely he tried to bear up against misfortune?
45774Were they never to see God''s light of day again, or look once more over the fair expanse of sea and sky?
45774Were they to be drowned in this awful darkness, like rats in a hole?
45774Were those pleasant eyes closed for ever, those jocund lips pale and grim?
45774What can he have in that handkerchief?"
45774What could he be doing?
45774What could this mean except one thing?
45774What did it mean?
45774What did this mean?
45774What did you say they are called, my dear?"
45774What had become of him?
45774What had become of the boy?
45774What had happened to him?
45774What had he done with his stronger mind, his superior talents?
45774What had they expected that they snapped so eagerly at the pail?
45774What have I done so wicked as to merit this?
45774What have you done to yourself?
45774What is here?"
45774What is this terrible figure advancing?
45774What other family has she, Rogers?"
45774What shall I bring?
45774What was it?
45774What was that red glow upon the sky to the eastward?
45774What was that something glittering brightly between the trees?
45774What were they devouring?
45774What were they doing?
45774What were those parti- coloured figures at the foot of the tree where his garments hung?
45774What would be the end of it all?
45774What would become of them?
45774What''s the fellow doing?"
45774When did the_ Pelican_ come in, mother?
45774Where are the little ones?
45774Where have you been?
45774Where is the girl?
45774Where should a European go if he did escape?
45774Where was he now?
45774Where was he now?
45774Where was he?
45774Where were they?
45774Where?
45774Where?''
45774Who could say now?
45774Who do you mean, paya?"
45774Why did they not come to seek him?
45774Why should that bring bad luck?"
45774Will they be content with one sledge full if they are down upon us, Poh Pyin?
45774Will you do it for me, Wills?"
45774Will you not take my part?"
45774Wo n''t they?"
45774Would God answer his supplications?
45774Would any such exist after so fierce a flame had swept over it?
45774Would it be necessary to give himself up to English justice, and to permit the law to take its way with him for his attempt to lose the raft?
45774Would the tardy day never begin to break?
45774Would they send him back to the Andamans, to herd with those half- savage convicts, mutineers from Delhi, the scum of Rangoon?
45774Would they shoot him, or hang him, or flog him?
45774Would you like to come up for a bit and see the waves for yourself now?"
45774Would you mind stepping as far as the shops, and bringing in something which we could get ready in time?"
45774You do n''t want to fatten them, do ye?"
45774You do not want to shoot one, do you, and share the fate of the Ancient Mariner?"
45774You may reckon upon me; but what can I do?"
45774You may see them by the dozen off shore, but how do you propose to make one here?"
45774You will keep him safe, wo n''t you, and bring him back unhurt?"
45774_ Not dacoits?_ But what else could they be?
45774_ Not dacoits?_ But what else could they be?
45774are you a convict?"
45774called out the sailor in Cornish accents,"whither so fast?"
45774cried he,"was it Sunshine, the little maid whom we missed?"
45774cried she, in pretty dismay,"what can be done?
45774did his eyes, unaccustomed to judge of objects in the darkness, deceive him, or were they farther from the boat than before?
45774he cried aloud,"have I deserved this?
45774how overcome it?
45774that''s it, is it?"
45774the boy apprentice?"
10340''Cad''my? 10340 ''S your name Peter?"
10340A corn day? 10340 A party?"
10340A sheep''s- head?
10340A what, my son?
10340A wrecking- station?
10340About what?
10340Academy? 10340 Ai n''t they older and bigger than you?"
10340Ai n''t we pretty near where you said we were to try for some fish?
10340All ready?
10340And gloves?
10340And the other, in your lap?
10340Any more weddings coming, right away?
10340Any t''ing in de pockets?
10340Any thing serious?
10340Are the rest churches?
10340Are there any nice fellows around here? 10340 Are you asking about a house?
10340Are you sure this is the place?
10340Bad? 10340 Bait?
10340Bass? 10340 Bigger''n Ham''s?"
10340Boys,exclaimed Frank,"how about our boxing lessons?"
10340Boys,he said,"do you know we''re out of sight of land?"
10340Boys,said Dab, with a sort of loving look at the contents of that box,"do you suppose we can eat those fellows?"
10340Brains? 10340 Burgin,"remarked the tall man,"wot ef we do n''t find any thin'', arter all this sailin''and rowin''and scullin''?
10340But do n''t you think they''ll try? 10340 But how can I get to the house?"
10340But where can he stay?
10340But will you please tell us when we are to be examined?
10340But wo n''t dese t''ings be warm?
10340But wot''s dat''bout de corn- shellin''?
10340But, Annie, I hope you have not offended--"Offended, mother?
10340But, Annie, what did they do? 10340 But, Ford,"asked Annie,"did you find a house?--a good one?"
10340But, my dear, do n''t you see? 10340 By the new system?"
10340Ca n''t he talk now?
10340Ca n''t we go back through the inlet in the bar?
10340Ca n''t we take a cruise in her?
10340Can any thing be done, mother?
10340Can we do it?
10340Can you tell me where Mr. Foster lives?
10340Cap''n Dab, did yo''set this yer boat to trap somebody?
10340Come over here to buy goods?
10340Could n''t I fish?
10340Could she have thought me ill- bred or impertinent?
10340Could you? 10340 Crabs?
10340Dab, do you s''pose as nice a pond as that has n''t any thing in it but pumpkin- seeds?
10340Dab,said Ford,"ca n''t you see it?"
10340Dabney,exclaimed his mother, when he came in to breakfast,"did I not tell you to put on your other suit?"
10340Dabney,said Mrs. Kinzer,"what does this mean?"
10340Dabney,she said,"was the storm very severe here last night and yesterday?"
10340Dabney? 10340 Dat so?"
10340Defending that colored boy? 10340 Dick,"said Dabney,"was you ever married?"
10340Dick,said Ford,"where''s your lemon?
10340Dick,she said at once,"are we to fish to- day?"
10340Did I say''em all right, Cap''n Dab?
10340Did dey? 10340 Did they run far, Dab?"
10340Did ye though? 10340 Did you ever see any thing just like this?"
10340Did you ever see anybody''s hair as smooth as that?
10340Did you hear him squeal?
10340Dis room?
10340Disturbance? 10340 Do it?
10340Do it? 10340 Do n''t know where they are?"
10340Do n''t we turn off somewhere along here?
10340Do n''t you know? 10340 Do they always follow that rule?"
10340Do you know what a fuss they made over you, when you were gone? 10340 Do you know, Miranda, I shall hardly be easy about that till I see what she''s done with it?
10340Do you leave me out entirely?
10340Do you mean me?
10340Do you mean to say we''ve been stealing?
10340Do you mean you''re to go right on now, with us?
10340Do you mean your new baby? 10340 Do you s''pose old Peter''d befriend a man that did what he did?
10340Do you suppose I shall have to appear in court, and give my testimony as a witness?
10340Do you think the ponies are safe for them to drive, just now?
10340Do you think we starve him?
10340Do you, indeed?
10340Do, mother? 10340 Does he look badly?"
10340Does she know the clerk of the weather?
10340Does she?
10340Down the Jersey coast? 10340 Dwarf?
10340Eat de shells? 10340 Eat?"
10340Father run away, did he?
10340Father,said Ford,"may I say just what I was thinking?"
10340Find out what?
10340Fish? 10340 Fit him?"
10340Ford''s coming, is he? 10340 Ford, did you know Dick Lee was real bright?"
10340Ford,he said slowly,"has she missed a day yet?"
10340Fuz and Joe civil to Dab Kinzer?
10340Fuz,said Joe,"do you hear that?
10340Give a poor feller suthin''?
10340Glorianna,said Bill doubtfully,"do you s''pose Dick did all dat writin''his own self?"
10340Glorianna? 10340 Go ashore in my boat?"
10340Going for your examination? 10340 Going somewhere else, eh?
10340Going to quit?
10340Going? 10340 Got what?"
10340Guess so,said Dab:"is that you, Ford?"
10340Ham,said Dab,"are you going right back again?"
10340Has you done got all de crabs?
10340Have you any idea, father, how Ford could get to the city?
10340Have you known Dabney long?
10340He did not hurt you?
10340He might have guessed at Dick,thought Ford;"but how did he know me?"
10340House to let?
10340How are the sail- boats?
10340How d''you get past it?
10340How do I know you, my dear? 10340 How do I know''em?
10340How does I like dis room? 10340 How much, then?"
10340How''ll I get to the city?
10340How''s that?
10340How''s that?
10340How''s that?
10340How''s that?
10340How?
10340Hullo, Dick, what you got in your basket?
10340Hungry? 10340 Hurt, dear?
10340Hurt, mother? 10340 I could learn to tell all of them that wear uniforms, myself,"said Dabney;"but how do you know the others?"
10340I half made her a promise--"That we''d board there?"
10340I say, Dick, how''ll I scoop you in?
10340I say, Ford,sung out Joe from the rear,"is n''t it getting pretty near time for us to think of getting something to eat?"
10340I say,said Ford,"are there men there all the while?
10340I?
10340In French? 10340 In State prison?"
10340In his hair?
10340Is dar really any fun in lyin'', do you s''pose, Dab?
10340Is every thing out of the locker, Dab?
10340Is he a fisherman too?
10340Is he?
10340Is it gold, or only silver gilt?
10340Is that a light- house, away over there?
10340Is that there your jug? 10340 Is that you?
10340Is you goin''fo''de inlet?
10340Is your name Dabney Kinzer?
10340Joe,said Fuz snappishly,"ca n''t you take a joke?
10340Joe,said the boy on the left, to his brother across the table,"ai n''t you glad she''s gone?"
10340Joe,whispered Fuz, a little while after they got on board the yacht,"are we to be gone a week?"
10340Joking? 10340 Know what?"
10340Light?
10340Might fly?
10340Miranda?
10340Miss Kinzer,said Dick''s mother,"jes''wo n''t you show me how to make dat puddin''?
10340Miss Kinzer,she said,"has you seen my Dick, dis week?"
10340Mother, did you hear him call me''Annie''?
10340Mother, may I stand on my head a while?
10340Mother, will you send me out a broom and a rope, while Ham and I set up the ladder?
10340Mother,said Dabney, as they drove along,"you would n''t let''em have Ham''s house, would you?"
10340Mother,said Pamela,"could n''t you get Dab to give Dick Lee the slang, along with the old clothes?"
10340My faults? 10340 My wedding suit?"
10340My young friends?
10340Never heard of it? 10340 No fighting, I hope?"
10340No use? 10340 No, I suppose not; but how many meals a day does he get?"
10340No: I did n''t say it was, did I?
10340No; but do n''t they go and come?
10340Nor his father?
10340Now, boys, what shall we have?
10340On the cars?
10340Only a dime, miss?
10340Only one? 10340 Or a meal?"
10340Or little girls, either? 10340 Or to get something to eat?"
10340Oysters?
10340Putting up ladders? 10340 Queer?
10340Quick? 10340 Ran ashore?"
10340Richard,said Ford,"are you going?"
10340Ringing?
10340Sell them? 10340 Shall I scoop him?"
10340Shall we eat first, or open it?
10340Sleep? 10340 Sleep?"
10340Sleight- of- hand? 10340 So am I,"returned Fuz; and he added in a whisper,"Is n''t there any way for us to get into that cabin?"
10340So he''s in them, is he? 10340 So it is,"remarked Ford, a little gloomily;"but how on earth will we ever get ashore again?
10340Speak up, Joe, Fuz, what''s your weakness?
10340Surprise?
10340Take your pay in clams?
10340That''s it, is it?
10340That''s the bay, out yonder?
10340That''s the gimlet- eyed lawyer from New Yark?
10340That''s where he lives, is it?
10340That? 10340 That?
10340That?
10340The cabin?
10340The child, was it sick?
10340The jug? 10340 The ones you saw on the green, fighting?"
10340The pig? 10340 The same one?"
10340The tramp?
10340The whole party?
10340There, Dabney, that''ll do,said his mother;"but how''ll you spend Saturday?"
10340They''d use up the boat in one day, and all the fish in the next,said Dab to Frank;"but where''d you learn to do what you did for Fuz and Joe?"
10340Think of what?
10340To Dabney?
10340To us?
10340Understand what?
10340Vegetables? 10340 Vegetables?"
10340Vit,said the tailor:"vill zay vit?
10340Walking over New York with Dick Lee, just as if he was one of us?
10340Want some of these?
10340Was it Dabney?
10340Was she ever shipwrecked?
10340Well, is n''t it bigger?
10340Well, no, not just like it--"In India, or in China, or in London, or in Africa?"
10340Well, what of it? 10340 Well, what of it?"
10340Were there any vessels wrecked?
10340What about Dab?
10340What are they for,--bait?
10340What boys and Annie?
10340What can there be in that other box?
10340What can we do, then?
10340What can you do with two of them?
10340What do you mean?
10340What do you think of it, Joe?
10340What for, Dabney?
10340What for?
10340What for?
10340What is it, my dear boy?
10340What of it? 10340 What of that?"
10340What on earth shall we do with them all?
10340What then?
10340What was?
10340What you got, Midnight?
10340What''ll we catch, Dab?
10340What''ll you do, then?
10340What''s become of Jenny?
10340What''s it made so tight for?
10340What''s that?
10340What''s that?
10340What''s that?
10340What''s that?
10340What''s that?
10340What''s wonderful about it?
10340What''s your name?
10340What, me? 10340 What, on Saturday?
10340What?
10340What_ do_ you mean?
10340When do you look for them?
10340Where are Joe and Foster, Maria?
10340Where can it come from, I''d like to know? 10340 Where does he live?"
10340Where''d he get his name?
10340Where''d you catch''em?
10340Where''s that? 10340 Where?
10340Whittling? 10340 Why ca n''t I go with you?"
10340Why could n''t I?
10340Why do n''t he go?
10340Why not try here?
10340Why not, Annie? 10340 Why not?
10340Why not?
10340Why not?
10340Why, Glorianna, do you think he''s studying too hard?
10340Why, Miranda, do you think Dab is a baby yet?
10340Why, do n''t you see? 10340 Why, where''s that crab?
10340Why? 10340 Why?
10340Why?
10340Will I go? 10340 Will de fish bite?"
10340Will he? 10340 Will it be sure to get there in good time?"
10340Will they come?
10340Will you show me how, when we get back?
10340With me?
10340Wo n''t they be ashamed to meet your sister?
10340Wood?
10340Worms? 10340 Wot for''d an ole woman like me want to put on any sech fool finery?
10340Wot''ll my mudder say, w''en she gits de news? 10340 Wot''s dis yer, Mrs. Kinzer,''bout sendin''away my Dick to a furrin''Cad''my?
10340Would it?
10340Would n''t rob ye,--but you''ve got a- plenty-- that pickerel? 10340 Would you, Dick?"
10340Wrong? 10340 Yes, sir, an''dis is Cap''n Dab-- I mean, this is my friend Mr. Dabney Kinzer, of Long Island,--de bes''--""How do you do, Mr. Kinzer?
10340You can box?
10340You here, my dear? 10340 You mean my boat?
10340You will,--will you?
10340You''re going? 10340 You, father?"
10340You? 10340 Your cousins, Annie?"
10340--"Where''d you learn how to fish?"
10340A boy of fifteen assailing a full- grown ruffian?
10340A fine- looking fish, are they not?
10340About him?
10340Ai n''t he my own blessed boy?
10340Ai n''t you wet?"
10340Annie, have you looked at the crabs?
10340Any like me?"
10340Any ob youah business?"
10340Any of''em fast?"
10340Apian?
10340Are there many wrecks on this coast?"
10340Are they the right thing?"
10340Are you and your friends ready?"
10340Are your folks going to burn any more of their barns this year?"
10340As Ford told him afterwards:"Feel it?
10340As for"Glorianna,"when her son came running in with his errand, she exclaimed,--"Dem lobsters?
10340At all events, she put out her hand, with a cordial smile, saying,--"Miss Foster, is it not?
10340At that moment Dabney was saying to Annie Foster,--"Whom do you guess I''ve seen to- day?"
10340Before they had time to ask him a question, he exclaimed,--"I say, Cap''n Dab, is you goin''to church dis mornin''?"
10340Boys, if she puts any more work on him, what''ll we do?"
10340Brandegee''s.--Dab, had n''t we better kindle a fire before we go?
10340But do n''t you think three meals a day is rather short allowance for a boy like Dab?"
10340But do please explain Where am I?
10340But the broom?
10340But what are you casting loose for?"
10340But what did Ham Morris mean by saying that I was to go to boarding- school?
10340But what''ll Ham say?"
10340But will he ever get fat?"
10340But wot''ll we do wid de old boat?"
10340But, Dab, what do you mean to do about it?"
10340By the way, did n''t I see what looked like a disturbance down here among the boys, just now?"
10340Ca n''t Miranda and I have some supper?
10340Can you cook?"
10340Can you get in under the deck, there, forward?
10340Can you read, Jenny?"
10340Can you spare Dick?"
10340Can you steer?
10340Can you tell me how to get there?"
10340Could either of you fellows eat any thing?"
10340Could it be that Ford meant a good deal more than he was saying?
10340Could we get ready and go to- morrow?"
10340Dab, shall I tell''em we''ve got some fish?"
10340Dick?
10340Did any of them get hurt?"
10340Did it leak?
10340Did n''t he say something about seed- fish?
10340Did n''t you ever go on a chowder- party, and do your own cooking?"
10340Did n''t you tell me she came through all alone?"
10340Did she scream?
10340Did those others have any luck?"
10340Did you light it before you started, Dabney?"
10340Did you say they were good men?"
10340Did you see how wonderfully strong he is in his arms?
10340Do n''t I know his hand- writin''?
10340Do n''t you learn well enough, over at the school?"
10340Do n''t you remember those breakers?
10340Do n''t you see?"
10340Do you know, it''s about the nicest thing I''ve heard since I got here?"
10340Do you mean they wo n''t be home to- night?"
10340Do you mean you''re going away somewhere?"
10340Do you mean you''ve been out at sea?"
10340Do you mean, about what we were to do with our fish?"
10340Do you s''pose I''m going to let myself be beaten in such a matter by a mere country- boy like Dabney Kinzer?"
10340Do you start for Grantley with the other boys, tomorrow?"
10340Do you think so?
10340For my boy?
10340Ford seemed wonderfully at home and at ease; and Dick found voice enough to say, half aloud,--"Ai n''t I glad he''s got de rudder, dis time?
10340Ford, how long did you say it was since they''d eaten any thing?"
10340Forgot your label?"
10340Frank Harley was the last to be shaken hands with, and so had time to think,--"Afraid of him?
10340Frank could even hear one person say to another out there in the mist,"Ai n''t it a big thing, Ford, that you know French?
10340French, were they?
10340Going?
10340Got your books out?"
10340Had they no pilot on board?
10340Hart?"
10340Has mother made any mince- pies yet?
10340Have you not spent a great deal of time on those four?"
10340He gave old Peter a capital chance to turn upon him morosely with,--"Look a- yer, my chap, is this''ere your boat?"
10340Hooks and lines?"
10340How could he have made such a mistake?"
10340How could she help it?
10340How could they have guessed where we''d gone?
10340How do you know what''ll become of him?
10340How is it you are here so soon?
10340How many crabs can one man eat?"
10340How much do you s''pose a young lady like Miss Foster cares about small boys?"
10340How was Annie Foster to guess that he had gotten himself up so unusually on her account?
10340How were they to get them on board?
10340How''d you like to be wrecked?"
10340How''s he goin''to git clo''es?
10340How?"
10340I say, Frank, do you know any thing he did n''t make you tell him?"
10340I say, did you know it was nearly half full?
10340I''d like to know if we need be afraid of any thing Joe and Fuz Hart could go through?"
10340I''m happy to see you.--Almira?
10340If we did, who''d handle the boat?"
10340If you reelly want that there grapn''I, wot''ll you gimme?"
10340In fact, just after tea that evening, his father asked him,--"What book is that you are reading, Ford?"
10340In that pond?"
10340Indeed?
10340Is Dick here to- night?"
10340Is dar any fish to ketch?"
10340Is dat you, Dick?
10340Is dis young colored gen''l- man of youah party?
10340Is he not remarkable?"
10340Is it him as took the Kinzer house?"
10340Is n''t he''most nigh nuff spiled a''ready?"
10340Is n''t it yours?"
10340Is n''t she sweet?"
10340Is n''t that a red light, through the fog, yonder?"
10340Is supper ready?"
10340Is that boat of yours balky?"
10340Is that you?
10340Is that you?
10340Is the bay deep?"
10340Is there any thing the matter with him?"
10340Is you?"
10340Jenny, do you know what''s the latest fashion in lobsters?"
10340Joe?--Fuz?--why ca n''t you come along with us after you''ve checked your trunks?
10340Just as he came to the north fence, however, he was hailed by a clear, wide- awake voice,--"Dab Kinzer, is that you?"
10340Just at that moment, back there by the north fence, Ford Foster exclaimed,--"What''s that smell?"
10340Just then his father broke in, almost impatiently, with,--"Well, Ford, my boy, have you done your errand?
10340Kinzer?"
10340Known what was coming?
10340Look here, Dab, where''d you get your training?"
10340Lose his appetite in less than two weeks?
10340Miranda, is there any reason why Dab ca n''t have the south- west room, up stairs, with the bay- window?"
10340Mrs. Foster herself remarked to her husband, who had now arrived,--"Do you see that?
10340Myers''?"
10340Myers?"
10340Myers?"
10340Not that he spent much time or wasted any great pains in searching for him; and he muttered to himself, as he gave it up,--"Gone, has he?
10340Now, mother Kinzer, do you really mean Dab is to go?"
10340Odd, was it not?
10340Oh!--and the bass tew?
10340One string for the minister?"
10340Or what else could she have done, under the circumstances?
10340Practising?
10340Put dat back, now, will you?"
10340Right on the shore of the bay?
10340Shall you sail right straight home?"
10340Sleep?
10340Somebody told ye, did they?
10340Somewhat depressed, and extended laterally?"
10340That was encouraging; but Ford at once remarked,--"Pumpkin- seeds?
10340The coming darkness?
10340The neighbors were becoming more than a little interested, and even excited about the matter; but what was there to be done?
10340The same farmer, in response to anxious questioning by Dab, informed him,--"Fish?
10340The very day I need him most?
10340The"guest- chamber"had to be provided as well, or what would become of the good old Long Island notions of hospitality?
10340There he comes,--see him?"
10340There was nothing like anger, or even disapproval, on Dr. Brandegee''s face when he walked away; but he was muttering,--"Know how to box, do they?
10340Thought?
10340Two plans in one head, and so young a head as that?
10340Well, Gus, do they look as if they could pay their bill before they go?"
10340Whar''d ye come from?"
10340Whar''s de nutmegs?"
10340Whar?"
10340What about?"
10340What academy?"
10340What are we to do now?"
10340What are you following us for?"
10340What are you going to do next week?"
10340What bait have ye got?"
10340What did they do?"
10340What do you say, Frank?"
10340What do you say?
10340What else can we do?
10340What for?"
10340What had the collection of his rights as a"tramp"to do with questions of gratitude and revenge?
10340What have you done with them?"
10340What made you bring your box along?"
10340What on earth''s he there for?"
10340What''s that for?"
10340What''s up?"
10340What''s yours?"
10340Where are all the rest, I''d like to know?"
10340Where are you going with all that boy?"
10340Where is he now?
10340Where is it?"
10340Where''s Ham?"
10340Where''s yours?"
10340Where?"
10340Where?"
10340Who was it?"
10340Who would have dreamed of so dirty a vagabond"taking to the water"?
10340Who would have expected as much from a raw, green country boy?"
10340Who''s goin''to run err''nds an''do de choahs?
10340Whom for?"
10340Why did n''t I let Ford do it?"
10340Why did n''t you say so before?"
10340Why not make them a present?"
10340Why not?
10340Why not?"
10340Why should n''t Dick go?"
10340Why, Dab, do you see that?
10340Why?"
10340Why?"
10340Why?"
10340Will you go?"
10340Will you tell me when to come?"
10340Wo n''t you walk in?"
10340Wonder if he''d get enough to eat, if we sent him up yonder?
10340Wot am I to do, yer all alone, arter he''s gone?
10340Wot good''ll it do''i m?"
10340Wot''d I do in a place whar all de res''was w''ite?"
10340Wot''s de use ob bringin''up a boy an''den hab him go trapesin''off to de''Cad''my?
10340Wot''s he got to do wid de''Cad''my, anyhow?
10340Would he ever, ever, grow too big for such a suit of clothes as that?
10340Would it do any hurt to leave it here?"
10340Would you like to be blown through them, and not see where you were going?"
10340You ai n''t foolin''me, is yer?"
10340You do n''t mean to say he was quick enough to dodge away?"
10340You do n''t mean to scoop''em up in that landing- net, do you?"
10340You do n''t s''pose I''d go for crabs with a rod, do you?
10340You here?
10340You is n''t a- jokin'', is you, Dab Kinzer?"
10340You''re going to Albany, to my uncle Joe Hart''s, ai n''t you?"
10340You''re''tendin''school at the''cadummy, ai n''t ye?"
10340and how do you know me?"
10340and what did you say?"
10340and you mean to be Crusoe number two?
10340but, Annie, what did your aunt say?"
10340but, mother, what can we do?
10340do you think they are in any danger?"
10340exclaimed Dick, with a peal of very musical laughter,"is I married?
10340exclaimed Mrs. Foster,"are you sure none of them were injured?"
10340he exclaimed, when his mother finished her brief but comprehensive statement:"Ham and Miranda to give a party for us boys?
10340how could you?"
10340me, steal?"
10340or shall I have to see about it myself?
10340said Annie,"is Ford safe?"
10340said Ford, in some astonishment;"ai n''t you going to New York at all?"
10340see him run?
10340she said despondingly,"what shall we do?"
10340the one you found on the bar?"
10340the stranger asked,"Down South?
10340what for?"
53345A father?
53345Ai n''t you ashamed of yourself, now?
53345Ai n''t you ashamed to carry such a lean wallet as that there?
53345And did n''t he come back?
53345And how is your mother to- day?
53345And how much will it be?
53345And now, where are you going to take me?
53345And what do you do?
53345And will you play with me?
53345And you do n''t have anything to do?
53345And you will come to see me some time, auntie?
53345And you will insist on having your own way ever after?
53345And you will take me to Europe?
53345And you would desert me for a richer suitor?
53345And you''ll try to get rich, for my sake?
53345Any of our old friends?
53345Anything gone wrong?
53345Anything more?
53345Are the drawers locked?
53345Are the vests all right?
53345Are we in New York?
53345Are we most there?
53345Are you an only child, or have you brothers and sisters?
53345Are you at it again?
53345Are you at leisure for an hour or two?
53345Are you careful of money?
53345Are you carrying me to where you live, Dan?
53345Are you engaged for the galop?
53345Are you engaged to look after this room? 53345 Are you engaged, Miss Rogers?"
53345Are you her friend?
53345Are you in urgent need of two dollars, my boy?
53345Are you not afraid I shall never pay you, sir?
53345Are you on the square?
53345Are you running errands?
53345Are you sure it was my child?
53345Are you sure of it?
53345Are you sure of this?
53345Are you the janitor?
53345Are you willing to resign in his favor?
53345Are_ you_ to be invited?
53345Bill, I suppose, is your husband?
53345But does her aunt know that we live in such a poor place?
53345But how shall I know where to go, Nancy?
53345But you wo n''t be guided by them?
53345But you''ve got the money, Dan?
53345But, mother, suppose I should fall sick? 53345 But, sir, you do n''t mean all this for me?"
53345Ca n''t I?
53345Ca n''t you play something else?
53345Ca n''t you send her a message not to expect you? 53345 Can I go to bed?"
53345Can he have had anything to do with the abduction of Althea?
53345Can it be Hartley?
53345Can we move in to- day?
53345Can you give this lady a room?
53345Can you help me as far as that with my luggage?
53345Can you hold your tongue?
53345Can you open a safe?
53345Can you sing, my boy?
53345Can you tell me anything about her?
53345Can you tell me what sort of a looking man it was that took her away?
53345Come along, will you?
53345Could n''t he, though? 53345 Did he give his name?"
53345Did he say whether his family was well?
53345Did he succeed?
53345Did he?
53345Did n''t I fool the ould woman good?
53345Did n''t I tell you he was impudent?
53345Did n''t he tell you we were coming to- night?
53345Did n''t he turn out the poor Donovans on a cold day last winter? 53345 Did n''t you call me a young feller?"
53345Did n''t you know it was disgraceful to be poor?
53345Did n''t you see that it was bad?
53345Did n''t you, now? 53345 Did she tell you so?"
53345Did the old lady leave it all away from you, then? 53345 Did they let you over the ferry free, then?"
53345Did we have the right combination?
53345Did you find out where he went?
53345Did you follow her?
53345Did you hear him doing it?
53345Did you hear the little girl say anything?
53345Did you lock the door when you came away, mother?
53345Did you make these vests yourself?
53345Did you see Althea carried away?
53345Did you see anything of a little girl?
53345Did you speak to him, Dan?
53345Did you speak to me, Garibaldi?
53345Did you succeed well in your sales to- day, Dan?
53345Do I? 53345 Do n''t you care to sell this suit?"
53345Do n''t you feel well, Dan? 53345 Do n''t_ you_ know where she lives?"
53345Do they suit you, Dan?
53345Do you come here to threaten me, John Hartley?
53345Do you doubt that?
53345Do you know him, sir?
53345Do you know that boy?
53345Do you know that this boy whom you have engaged is a common newsboy?
53345Do you know the number?
53345Do you know the wharf of the Cunard steamers?
53345Do you know what you remind me of?
53345Do you know where it is?
53345Do you know where she lives?
53345Do you know where she went?
53345Do you know why I take you into my employ?
53345Do you like Dan?
53345Do you mean to insult me, madam?
53345Do you mean to insult me?
53345Do you mean to say that you bought that suit and paid for it?
53345Do you often fall behind when rent day comes, Dan?
53345Do you really mean so?
53345Do you really mean to give me five dollars, sir?
53345Do you remember her?
53345Do you remember your mother, Althea?
53345Do you see that, now?
53345Do you suspect any one, sir?
53345Do you think the fellow knew the piece was bad?
53345Do you think you would like to be going with me?
53345Do you think your mother would enjoy the society of a little girl?
53345Do you want a job, my man?
53345Do you want something in our line to- day?
53345Do you want to make some money, Johnny?
53345Do you wish to remain in your place,she asked,"or would you like to obtain a better education first?"
53345Does he beat you?
53345Does he treat?
53345Does it?
53345Does the ability to dance make a gentleman, Dan?
53345Does your anxiety to see Althea arise from parental affection?
53345Does your mother live there?
53345Even if old Gripp pays for the vests?
53345Excuse me, Tom, but do you think such expressions suitable for such an occasion as this?
53345For whom has she been working?
53345For yourself?
53345Gentlemen, will you take notice of this? 53345 Gold?"
53345Has Althea been stopping there, Dan?
53345Has Donovan betrayed me?
53345Has he found it out?
53345Has he?
53345Has she got any money?
53345Has she got money?
53345Has your mother any experience?
53345Have n''t you been run over, then?
53345Have n''t you sold as many bouquets as usual?
53345Have you a mother living?
53345Have you a papa?
53345Have you any coats and vests that will fit this young gentleman?
53345Have you any directions to give me, sir, as to how to go to work?
53345Have you any idea what became of the defaulter?
53345Have you any jewelry about you?
53345Have you any more to tell?
53345Have you been extravagant and run up bills, Dan?
53345Have you been here long?
53345Have you been in New York for a week past?
53345Have you been lonely, mother?
53345Have you been lucky in stocks?
53345Have you ever heard of this book- keeper since?
53345Have you found out what you want to know?
53345Have you got the money?
53345Have you had any supper?
53345Have you matches with you?
53345Have you seen anything of Mike?
53345He is the book- keeper, is he not?
53345How are you, Grab?
53345How are you, Terence?
53345How can I help it, Dan? 53345 How can I thank you for your kindness, sir?"
53345How can they afford to pay ten cents for riding?
53345How can you be spared from your business?
53345How did it happen, Mike, that you took the Jersey Ferry to Brooklyn?
53345How did it happen? 53345 How did mamma get hurt?"
53345How did she look? 53345 How did they suspect?"
53345How did you find it out, then?
53345How did you find out?
53345How did you get shut up there?
53345How did you happen to be coming across the ferry?
53345How do the girls know how he dances?
53345How do you account for it? 53345 How do you like it?"
53345How happened you to be there?
53345How in the duse does Dan Mordaunt know that girl?
53345How is that?
53345How is your health? 53345 How long ago did this happen?"
53345How long did you stay?
53345How many bouquets had you sold?
53345How many papers have you sold to- day, my boy?
53345How many vests are there?
53345How much did you earn as a newsboy?
53345How much do you want for your rooms?
53345How much is it?
53345How much now did he pay for vest- making?
53345How much?
53345How old are you?
53345How old is Dan?
53345How old is the crathur?
53345How so? 53345 How was he dressed?"
53345How will you have it?
53345How?
53345How?
53345I need n''t ask if you have a good mother?
53345I say, Bill,said Mike, suddenly,"how much did your wife hear of our plans last night?"
53345I suppose Mr. Rogers wishes you to supply him with an evening paper?
53345I suppose you are poor?
53345I thought you did n''t care for music, Virginia?
53345I wonder where he''s going?
53345I wonder whether Shorty would n''t lend it to me?
53345If Dan should prove unsatisfactory, would you try my nephew?
53345Is Mike in?
53345Is Miss Conway at home?
53345Is Miss Conway at home?
53345Is Mr. Rogers in?
53345Is he-- badly hurt?
53345Is it Mr. Talbot you mean?
53345Is it far away?
53345Is it far off?
53345Is it for making vests?
53345Is it gone, Dan?
53345Is it probable that the man who carried away Althea would give the right direction so that it could be overheard by a third party? 53345 Is it you, Bill?"
53345Is it you, Dan?
53345Is it, indeed? 53345 Is it?"
53345Is mamma very much hurt?
53345Is n''t it?
53345Is n''t the work done and delivered?
53345Is she in England?
53345Is she in London?
53345Is she much hurt?
53345Is she nice?
53345Is she your mamma?
53345Is she your vife?
53345Is that a bargain?
53345Is that so?
53345Is there anything more for me to do?
53345Is there money in it?
53345Is this the way he looked?
53345Is this your final answer?
53345Is your aunt rich?
53345Is your mother living?
53345Is your name Dan?
53345Is your wife at home, Hugh?
53345It is a little better than selling papers in front of the Astor House, is n''t it, Dan?
53345It is some time since we met, is it not? 53345 Joseph,"said he,"have we any vests ready for making?"
53345Look here, boy,said the landlord, savagely,"do you know what I am tempted to do?"
53345Look here, old man, who engineered this thing?
53345Look here,said he;"come over to the next table, will you?"
53345Margaret,she said, coldly,"will you show this gentleman out?"
53345May I beg to apologize for constraining you to cross the Atlantic?
53345May I give a part of it to my mother?
53345May I go out into the street?
53345May I go with you, mamma?
53345May I see the child, madam?
53345May I see them?
53345Mrs. Donovan,( by this time she was on her feet, looking on in a dazed sort of way),"is not this our little Katy?"
53345Must I stay here all the time?
53345No, she has n''t, or how could she send for you?
53345No, what is it?
53345Of course,she said;"is n''t that right?"
53345Of whom are you speaking, Julia?
53345Oh, Dan, how could you?
53345Oh, have you?
53345Probably she resembles her father?
53345Probably you live in a poor place?
53345Shall I buy any evening papers?
53345Shall I do up the clothes?
53345Shall I give you a five- dollar bill, or small bills?
53345Shall I put them up?
53345Shall I sing''Viva Garibaldi?''
53345Shall I take it back to the bank, sir?
53345Shall I tell my aunt?
53345Shall we go down?
53345Shall we go now, madam?
53345Shure, Hugh, who is it you''re bringin''here?
53345So she went away in a carriage, Nancy?
53345So that''s your game, my young chicken, is it?
53345So you gave him forty- five cents in good money, Fanny?
53345So you would rob your daughter, John Hartley?
53345Son of Lawrence Mordaunt?
53345Suppose I decline to let you have it?
53345Suppose that the conditions are fulfilled, Virginia?
53345Suppose this is impossible?
53345Tell me one thing, Virginia-- you love me, do n''t you?
53345That''s a lively city, is n''t it, sir?
53345Then how are you going to take Terence Quinn to the theater to- night?
53345Then how can she stay even one night in this poor place?
53345Then may I have the honor?
53345Then she did n''t like Gripp?
53345Then she will be my mother?
53345Then what''s the matter? 53345 Then why did n''t you say so?"
53345Then why do you remain? 53345 Then will you give me the pleasure?"
53345Then you feel authorized to accept the charge in your mother''s name?
53345Then you had n''t seen him before?
53345Then you have less money than when you began?
53345Then you know all about him?
53345Then, sir, can you stay away from the store to- day?
53345This is your gratitude for my trouble, is it?
53345To draw money?
53345To- night?
53345Very tall or very short?
53345Virginia, are you ready to fulfill your promise?
53345Was it a man who came to your rooms this evening?
53345Was it all the money your mother had?
53345Was it he? 53345 Was it much, Dan?"
53345Was that all?
53345We will make the grand tour?
53345Well, Dan, do you think Mr. Gripp is prepared to receive us?
53345Well, Dan, what besides?
53345Well, Dan, what is it?
53345Well, boy, what do you want?
53345Well, boy, what is it?
53345Well, have you any news?
53345Well, have you heard anything of your sister?
53345Well, how do you like our place of business, Dan?
53345Well, what is it, Samuel?
53345Well, what would you do?
53345Well,he asked,"have you any news?"
53345Well,said the gentleman, smiling,"how do you like it?"
53345Well,she said,"have you any news to tell me?"
53345Were they all_ Telegrams_?
53345Were you ever on a Cunard steamer?
53345What are to be the consequences?
53345What are we going to do now?
53345What are you doin''?
53345What are you doin''down there?
53345What are you doing for a living?
53345What are you doing here, Hartley?
53345What are you giving us?
53345What are you going to do about it?
53345What are you going to do?
53345What are you thinking of, mother? 53345 What boy do you mean?"
53345What brings you out this afternoon?
53345What brings you over here?
53345What brings you to Brooklyn?
53345What brings_ you_ over here, Mike?
53345What business is it of yours?
53345What can be his object?
53345What can they have to do with each other?
53345What can we do, Dan? 53345 What did you do before you sold papers?"
53345What did you remark?
53345What did you say?
53345What did you think of him?
53345What difference does it make to you? 53345 What do you call living respectably?"
53345What do you mane?
53345What do you mean, boy, by your impudence?
53345What do you mean?
53345What do you mean?
53345What do you mean?
53345What do you mean?
53345What do you mean?
53345What do you take me for, mother? 53345 What do you think of that chap that''s puttin''us up to it?"
53345What do you want to do with it?
53345What does he do?
53345What does it all mean, Dan?
53345What does she do?
53345What else?
53345What for, mamma?
53345What for?
53345What for?
53345What for?
53345What for?
53345What has happened to Althea? 53345 What has happened?"
53345What has he done with the other?
53345What has put that into your head, Dan?
53345What have you got to do with it?
53345What if I did?
53345What is his name?
53345What is it now?
53345What is it yer want?
53345What is it you want, sir?
53345What is it, Dan?
53345What is it? 53345 What is it?
53345What is it?
53345What is that to you?
53345What is that?
53345What is that?
53345What is that?
53345What is the matter, mother? 53345 What is the price of these articles, young man?"
53345What is your name, my boy?
53345What is your name?
53345What is your name?
53345What made you so long?
53345What made your husband treat you so badly?
53345What man and what woman?
53345What part of Italy do you come from?
53345What promise?
53345What sort of a place is it?
53345What time is it, boy?
53345What was the man''s appearance, sir? 53345 What will I show you, sir?"
53345What will be the end?
53345What will you charge?
53345What you wants?
53345What''ll you give, sir?
53345What''ll you have, Johnny?
53345What''s he been doin'', is it? 53345 What''s her name?"
53345What''s it all about now, Donovan?
53345What''s that, Dan?
53345What''s that?
53345What''s the lad been doin''?
53345What''s the matter with you?
53345What''s the matter, Fanny?
53345What''s the use of callin''in the police?
53345What''s up, Donovan?
53345What''s wanted?
53345What''s your game?
53345What''s your name?
53345What, right before your face?
53345What? 53345 When did Mike Rafferty tell you this cock- and- bull story, mother?"
53345When did you change your name to Bancroft?
53345When did you see her last?
53345When did you take it?
53345When do you want her to come to us?
53345Where am I?
53345Where am I?
53345Where are you going, sir?
53345Where are you going?
53345Where can mother prepare our meals? 53345 Where could the fellow have learned to dance?"
53345Where did he get the money?
53345Where did he go?
53345Where did you borrow those clothes?
53345Where did you borrow yours?
53345Where did you get that bouquet, Sanderson?
53345Where did you get them, Dan?
53345Where did you meet him, papa?
53345Where do you generally stand?
53345Where do you want to go, my darling?
53345Where have you been all these years?
53345Where is he?
53345Where is it?
53345Where is mamma?
53345Where is the child?
53345Where is your father?
53345Where is your house?
53345Where is your mother?
53345Where is your own mamma?
53345Where will I find you?
53345Where''s the dollar?
53345Where''s the impudence?
53345Where''s the meat, I say?
53345Where''s your ticker?
53345Where, then?
53345Where?
53345Where?
53345Which way did he go?
53345Whining, are you?
53345Who are you?
53345Who are you?
53345Who else lives with you?
53345Who from?
53345Who is Shorty, my son?
53345Who is the girl?
53345Who is this, Dan?
53345Who put him up to it?
53345Who said you were to part with the child?
53345Who to?
53345Who told you this?
53345Who would have thought that a stranger would lend me so large a sum? 53345 Why am I?"
53345Why did she go away?
53345Why did you think so?
53345Why do n''t you carry money, like a gentleman?
53345Why do n''t you know him now?
53345Why do you ask?
53345Why does n''t Dan pay him?
53345Why not?
53345Why not?
53345Why not?
53345Why not?
53345Why not?
53345Why not?
53345Why not?
53345Why should I not?
53345Why should I?
53345Why should n''t he notice my boy?
53345Why should n''t he?
53345Why should you not, John Hartley? 53345 Why will you require impossibilities of me?
53345Why, mother, what''s the matter?
53345Why, not, auntie?
53345Why, what''s up, partner?
53345Why? 53345 Why?"
53345Why?
53345Will I do, Giovanni?
53345Will I get the money, or Hugh?
53345Will he be in soon?
53345Will he place it in the safe?
53345Will it seem strange to receive fifty dollars a month for Althea''s board?
53345Will she take care of me?
53345Will that make you feel bad, Dan?
53345Will the lady go up now?
53345Will you be my brother?
53345Will you be my mother?
53345Will you be permanent?
53345Will you go with me, mother?
53345Will you have yer musique?
53345Will you let me go to New York and see Mamma Mordaunt?
53345Will you look at the little room?
53345Will you marry me to- morrow evening?
53345Will you pay me to- night as a favor?
53345Will you pull the strap opposite the Fifth Avenue Hotel?
53345Will you shwar it?
53345Will you tell her I should like to speak with her?
53345Will your mother be glad to see me?
53345Wo n''t it interfere with you?
53345Wo n''t you come in?
53345Wo n''t you give him a trial?
53345Wo n''t you lend me, thin?
53345Would you rather sell papers or take employment with me?
53345Ye ca n''t, ca n''t ye? 53345 You are Daniel Mordaunt?"
53345You are in the employ of Barton& Rogers, are you not?
53345You are? 53345 You consent, then, to my plans?"
53345You do n''t mean to say she boards there?
53345You do n''t mean to say that you are going down into the parlor?
53345You do n''t think Mike would take it do you, Dan?
53345You do n''t want us to give''em away?
53345You mean you will look elsewhere?
53345You refuse, then, to tell me what you have done with my child?
53345You sell papers in front of the Astor House, do n''t you?
53345You will like to live with Dan, my dear?
53345You will treat him respectfully, wo n''t you, Dan?
53345You wo n''t fight with him, Dan?
53345You would n''t remember the driver?
53345You''ll take me away, wo n''t you, Dan? 53345 Your mother is n''t dead, is she?"
53345Ai n''t you ashamed to lie here in a hape before them gintlemen?"
53345Althea, do you mind stopping here just one night?
53345And what kind of trick has he played on your good mother?"
53345Any important news this afternoon?"
53345Are we most there?"
53345Are you a great eater, Althea?"
53345Are you going to live with us, Dan?"
53345Are you sick?"
53345Are you sure he is a newsboy?"
53345Are you too fine a gentleman to be seen with the likes of me?"
53345But how can I take measures to guard against loss?"
53345But must he abandon the pursuit?
53345But where is yours, Dan?"
53345But wo n''t you be doing more than your share?
53345Buy one, sir?"
53345By the way, mother, you''ve got enough money on hand to pay the rent to- morrow, have n''t you?"
53345By the way, what wages do we pay you?"
53345By whom?"
53345Ca n''t you give me a quarter to buy me some dinner?"
53345Can she sleep here?"
53345Can you call here at three o''clock this afternoon?"
53345Can you give her any work?"
53345Can you lend me two dollars till I am able to pay it?"
53345Can you, without betraying to him that he is watched, find out some information for me on these points?"
53345Carver?
53345Could you lend me five dollars?"
53345Did he see me?
53345Did you know my father?"
53345Did you observe Mr. Talbot, my book- keeper?"
53345Did you want him?"
53345Do I need to answer the question?
53345Do n''t you know everything?"
53345Do you board here?"
53345Do you doubt my word?"
53345Do you earn much money?"
53345Do you go up to Harlem every day?"
53345Do you know him?"
53345Do you know whether there''s any woman in the case?"
53345Do you know, sir, it is a week since you took me to any place of amusement?
53345Do you mean to insult me?"
53345Do you mean to starve me?"
53345Do you often take supper at the Fifth Avenue Hotel?"
53345Do you see her?"
53345Do you suppose Tom Carver would notice me, now that I am a poor newsboy?"
53345Do you think I''d speak to a fellow that does n''t want to know me?"
53345Do you think your mother would be willing to take charge of her?
53345Do you understand?"
53345Do you want a lodging?"
53345Do you want to know what I''d do if a woman raised her hand against me?"
53345Do you want to prevent the robbery, or to catch the men in the act?"
53345Do you, mother?"
53345Does n''t he dance charmingly?"
53345Does the book- keeper suspect that he is watched?"
53345Does this little girl know where you live?"
53345Donovan?"
53345Got the jaundice?"
53345Grab, if we pay you next week?"
53345Grant?"
53345Gripp?"
53345Had she a mother living?
53345Hartley?"
53345Has Gripp discharged her?"
53345Has any one been teasing you?"
53345Has business been duller than usual during the last month?"
53345Has he any good clothes?"
53345Have you a padrone?"
53345Have you a pocket- book?"
53345Have you any more to say?"
53345Have you anything to do for the next two hours?"
53345Have you come to take me away?"
53345He approached Dan, and observed, in a friendly way:"Are you in search of your little sister?"
53345He used to sit next you in school, did n''t he?"
53345How can I be a brick?
53345How could you raise so large a sum?
53345How dare you address me in such a way, you young tramp?"
53345How did he look?"
53345How did you find her, Dan?"
53345How happened it that your father failed?"
53345How long have you dealt in papers?"
53345How long is it?
53345How many vests are there?"
53345How much did that cigar cost?"
53345How much did you make?"
53345How much do you require, gentlemen?"
53345How much does he pay you for taking care of the girl?"
53345How much does she give you?"
53345How old was she?"
53345How rich must I be?"
53345How should he do it?
53345How?"
53345I hope you and your mother have not suffered?"
53345I wo n''t charge you no rint, and that''s an object in these hard times-- eh, Barney?"
53345I wonder if I can make him understand?
53345I wonder if he speculates with his own money or the firm''s?"
53345If Mr. Talbot sends me with a large check to the bank, what shall I do?"
53345If so, how could that mother voluntarily forego her child''s society?
53345If you want money, why do n''t you earn it, as I do?"
53345In what denominations shall I get the money?"
53345Is anything the matter with you?"
53345Is it a bargain?"
53345Is my daughter Althea with you?"
53345Is she sick?"
53345Is that satisfactory?"
53345Is there any quiet place, where we shall not be disturbed or overheard?"
53345Is there much money in the safe?"
53345Is there no way of getting up stairs except by passing through the bar- room?"
53345Is this little gal your sister?"
53345Is your wife-- about your size?"
53345It is n''t about the rent, is it?"
53345Just behave yourself, and we''ll give you ten dollars-- shall we, Mike?"
53345Let me see; what shall I take her?
53345Mordaunt?"
53345Mr. Grant turned back, and said, quietly:"To whom are you speaking, sir?"
53345Mr. Gripp, do I understand that you decline to pay this bill?"
53345Mr. Jackson was pleased, but he said, by way of drawing out Dan:"How do you know but I am a mean skinflint, too?"
53345Noticing his look of perplexity, Dan approached him, and said, respectfully:"Ca n''t I assist you, sir?"
53345Now will you answer my question?"
53345Now, Dan, what is your advice?"
53345Now, my lad, what do you think of my success in collecting bills?"
53345Now, what kind of a carriage was it?"
53345Observing this, the book- keeper turned and said, sharply:"Did n''t you hear?
53345Oh, by the way, who do you think I saw to- day?"
53345Oh, where are they?"
53345Rafferty?"
53345Rogers?"
53345Rogers?"
53345Rogers?"
53345Shall he make it good?"
53345Shall we have enough to pay it?
53345Shall you have the morning papers?"
53345She could not remember this woman, but was it possible that there was any connection between them?
53345Should she never, never see them?
53345So when she said,"Well, Dan?"
53345Surely you did not earn it in one forenoon?"
53345Talbot?"
53345Talbot?"
53345Talbot?"
53345Was it possible that she could be Katy Donovan, and that this red- faced woman was her mother?
53345Was it possible they could be in earnest?
53345Was there any way of escape?
53345What are yer talkin''about?"
53345What are you going to make out of it?"
53345What did he promise you?"
53345What do you say to my plan, mother?"
53345What do you say?"
53345What do you say?"
53345What do you want?"
53345What makes you think so?"
53345What should we do then?"
53345What would justify such a handsome compensation to Fanny merely to explain his absence to his mother?
53345What would my fashionable friends say?"
53345What''ll you have now?"
53345What''ll you take to drink?"
53345What''ll you take?
53345What''s the combination?"
53345What, then, are we to do?"
53345When can you come to work?"
53345When did you see Mr. Rogers last?"
53345When does the landlord come?"
53345When does your landlord call for his rent?"
53345When the meal was over she said:"Now, will you take me back to New York?"
53345When will you return?"
53345Where did you get your fiddle?"
53345Where did you leave Mike?
53345Where do you think Talbot will put the money?"
53345Where is Althea?"
53345Where is the money?"
53345Where shall I put her?"
53345Where shall we go?"
53345Where will it all end?"
53345Who can she be?"
53345Who do you think I saw in the supper- room at the Fifth Avenue?
53345Who sent you?"
53345Who told you so?"
53345Why ca n''t you drink dacent like me?
53345Why do n''t you exert yourself and win a fortune, as other people do?
53345Why do they keep_ you_ away from her?"
53345Will four dollars a week suit you?"
53345Will you bring a lawyer to me to- morrow evening?
53345Will you bring the little girl down at once?"
53345Will you clear out now?"
53345Will you take''em now?"
53345You do n''t mean to say?"
53345You''ll open the safe, will you?"
53345You''re sure you''re on the square?"
53345Your mother would be willing to teach her until such time as she may be old enough to go to school?"
53345[ Illustration:"What''s the matter with you?"
53345have you come to take me away?"
53345here, at the Fifth Avenue Hotel?"
53345how is that?"
53345interest make it amount to in a year?"
53345she gasped,"are you hurt?"
53345she said, pitifully,"must you suffer because your father is a brute?
53345what''s up?"
53345you here?"
21316''Bliged to? 21316 A sound?
21316About being cannibals? 21316 About me, Mas''Don?
21316Afraid I shall scold him, eh?
21316Afraid of them being kind?
21316Afraid these would drug you so that I could steal the boat?
21316Afraid to go in?
21316Afraid, sir? 21316 After we had gone to bed?"
21316Again?
21316All loaded?
21316All primed?
21316Am I too heavy, Jem?
21316Am I, Mas''Don? 21316 Amongst the sharks?"
21316An emigrant, eh? 21316 And broke your ribs, and we thought you were dead?
21316And he has not been back?
21316And he is now safely locked up?
21316And he says,` What''s the matter?''
21316And him too?
21316And how came you to be in the office to see it?
21316And how often is there a post goes out for England?
21316And let us have all our trouble for nothing? 21316 And shall you give us up?"
21316And so you do do that sort of thing?
21316And suppose I do get out of them, what about you?
21316And suppose you''re hurt; what am I to say to your mother? 21316 And the shark?"
21316And the sharks, Jem?
21316And the sharks, my lad?
21316And then about that other part, old chap-- cannibalism? 21316 And then one of they chaps came and give you a crack on the head?"
21316And then,''spose he has us out in the woods at his mercy like, how then?
21316And they did not eat you?
21316And we are to stop with three such men as these?
21316And what about the pot, Jem?
21316And what are you going to do?
21316And what good would that do, Jem?
21316And what then?
21316And what''ll your mother do?
21316And when are we coming back, sir?
21316And you do n''t believe that I ever was your enemy?
21316And you said nothing just now?
21316And you stood it?
21316And you will go?
21316And you will not be so stern with him?
21316And you wo n''t go, sir?
21316And you would n''t get away because I could n''t?
21316And-- and take charge of the yard, sir?
21316And--? 21316 Any one there?"
21316Are the boats very far away?
21316Are they bringing some more poor wretches on board, Jem?
21316Are they coming to attack us, Jem?
21316Are they-- are they right away, Jem?
21316Are we nearly there, sir?
21316Are you badly wounded?
21316Are you coming up here, sir?
21316Are you going to keep the yard open all the evening, Jem?
21316Are you going to prefer the opinion of the men of the yard to mine, dear?
21316Are you hurt, Jem?
21316Are you hurt, Jem?
21316Are you hurt?
21316Are you hurt?
21316Are you in much pain, Jem?
21316Are you, sir? 21316 Arn''t come arter me, then?"
21316Arn''t gone to tell them where we are, have he, Mas''Don?
21316Arn''t hurt, are you, Mas''Don?
21316Arn''t it being a bit obstinate like, Mas''Don?
21316Arn''t it good?
21316Arn''t it? 21316 Arn''t seen a ghost, have you?"
21316Arn''t the road wide enough for you?
21316Arn''t there? 21316 Arn''t you going to take them, too?"
21316Ask him what?
21316Asleep?
21316At Norfolk Island, sir?
21316Ay, to be sure,he said;"why do n''t you take a light from him?"
21316Ay? 21316 Beat them off?
21316Because here comes a boat after us.--Hear the skipper?
21316Because we''re going to make a run for it before long, eh, my pakeha?
21316Been for a walk, Don?
21316Believe it, my lad? 21316 Better, sir?
21316Better? 21316 Better?"
21316Bit? 21316 Breakfast?
21316Breakfast? 21316 Broken?
21316But I ought not to have deserted uncle?
21316But Ngati?--where is Ngati?
21316But are n''t we soon going ashore?
21316But are you in much pain now?
21316But ca n''t we send a letter home, sir?
21316But here we are, and-- what''s that there noise?
21316But is that true?
21316But my mother?
21316But my uncle-- my mother, what will they think?
21316But s''pose they find us out? 21316 But shall we be beaten?"
21316But shall we come across any hot baths by- and- by?
21316But sure-_lie_ Miss Kitty do n''t?
21316But that noise you made?
21316But the men on sentry?
21316But the others? 21316 But there will not be much fighting, will there-- I mean real fighting?"
21316But what about your shoulder?
21316But what are we to do?
21316But what is a pakeha?
21316But what shall I do?
21316But what''s to become of me, sir? 21316 But where are they?
21316But where are they?
21316But why do they want us with them?
21316But why, Jem?
21316But you are a lifer, and have run away, have n''t you?
21316But you do n''t think the poor lad met such a fate as you hinted at?
21316But you think he has run away?
21316But you will let me send a message to them at home?
21316But you will let me send word home?
21316But you''ll leave the ship, mate?
21316But you''ll try and fetch him back, sir?
21316But your mother do n''t, sir?
21316But, if it breaks, what shall I say to little Sally?
21316But-- but, that man?
21316But-- it don''t-- it do n''t mean any games, does it?
21316Ca n''t you find the candle?
21316Ca n''t you open it more?
21316Ca n''t you stand, Jem?
21316Can I bear your weight? 21316 Can I do anything for you?"
21316Can I do it?
21316Can I help?
21316Can I manage it? 21316 Can I?
21316Can they see us?
21316Can we do it? 21316 Can we do it?
21316Can you bear me if I try to open it, Jem?
21316Can you bear my weight, Jem?
21316Can you bring your guns along the valleys and up into the mountains?
21316Can you do that?
21316Can you hear me, Jem?
21316Can you manage it, Jem?
21316Can you manage to get over?
21316Can you reach out far enough for me to come between you and the rock?
21316Can you show us a safe anchorage?
21316Can you walk?
21316Chance? 21316 China?"
21316China?
21316Come home, sir?
21316Come, I like that, Mas''Don; arn''t I had enough to make me think of''em?
21316Come, Jem, who''s stealing some one else''s ideas now?
21316Come, Mas''Don,he said, cheerily,"going to work all night?"
21316Cooking? 21316 Could it have been a man going on all fours?"
21316Could n''t we make some matches, Jem?
21316Could n''t we make some matches? 21316 Could n''t yer get on without yer best man i''th''yard?"
21316Could we get down here?
21316Could you manage to walk as far as the village? 21316 Could you, though?"
21316Cutoff?
21316Dead?
21316Dear lad, dear lad; how are you now?
21316Deserting?
21316Did I think of two ropes?
21316Did I, lad? 21316 Did n''t I tell you it was peace?"
21316Did n''t know I was coming out to look after you, did you, young Don?
21316Did n''t think of a rope, did you?
21316Did you desert from His Majesty''s sloop?
21316Did you ever see such a young ruffian?
21316Did you fight Mike in the yard one day?
21316Did you see Miss Kitty last night?
21316Did you speak, Josiah?
21316Did you, Mas''Don? 21316 Did you, though, Mas''Don?
21316Do I know? 21316 Do I look like a sheep, Mas''Don?"
21316Do I want to commit murder? 21316 Do I want what?"
21316Do n''t I tell you I''ll walk?
21316Do n''t I tell you? 21316 Do n''t feel tired, do you?"
21316Do n''t we? 21316 Do n''t what, Mas''Don?"
21316Do n''t you feel like fighting now?
21316Do n''t you hear?
21316Do n''t you wish you may get it, old chap?
21316Do what?
21316Do you charge the boy too, sir?
21316Do you dare climb down?
21316Do you feel as if they were, Jem?
21316Do you hear me, Don? 21316 Do you hear me?"
21316Do you hear, you scoundrels?
21316Do you hear?
21316Do you know these men?
21316Do you know what a bosun''s mate is, my lad?
21316Do you mean the ship, or here with the boat?
21316Do you not hear me, Don?
21316Do you not understand, my good woman, that my son has not been home all night?
21316Do you think any of the men here would try to escape with us?
21316Do you think he''ll take my message, Jem?
21316Do you think if we got away in the woods, we could manage to live, Jem?
21316Do you think it possible to go down?
21316Do you think it will be cowardly to leave these poor creatures in the power of the enemy?
21316Do you think we shall escape?
21316Do you want to commit murder, Jem?
21316Do you want to fight, then?
21316Do you, Jem?
21316Do? 21316 Do?"
21316Do?
21316Do?
21316Does he think this here''s the rigging of a ship, and want us to set sail?
21316Does it hurt you very much?
21316Does it pain you very much?
21316Does it, sir?
21316Don, my boy, what foolish obstinate fit is this which has come over you?
21316Drinking?
21316Drop? 21316 Dull?
21316Eh, mates?
21316Eh? 21316 Eh?
21316Eh? 21316 Eh?"
21316Eh?
21316Eh?
21316Eh?
21316Eh?
21316Eight guineas? 21316 Escape, Mas''Don?
21316Escape? 21316 Escaped from the Maoris, and then from a party of men you think were runaway convicts?"
21316Faces a alley, eh?
21316Feel anything-- of what?
21316Feel better, Mas''Don?
21316Feel better, now?
21316Feel scared, Mas''Don?
21316Fib? 21316 First chance?"
21316Flogged?
21316For doing a kind act? 21316 Found''em?"
21316Gammon, eh?
21316Gentlemen, p''r''aps, on your travels?
21316Getting tired, Jem?
21316Give in? 21316 Give you up?
21316Go? 21316 Go?
21316Go? 21316 Going to fight on our side?"
21316Going? 21316 Good to eat?"
21316Got a light, mate?
21316Got him?
21316Got no money, my lad? 21316 Guy?"
21316Had n''t I better go first, and try the rope, Jem?
21316Had n''t you better have your breakfuss?
21316Hail sooner?
21316Has he ever-- been at war?
21316Has that ugly- looking chap Ramsden been telling tales about us?
21316Has the candle gone out, Jem? 21316 Have I, Jem?
21316Have n''t made up your minds to come and join us?
21316Have n''t we got enough ready, Jem?
21316Have they been rowing-- I mean paddling-- all night, Jem?
21316Have we done right, Jem?
21316Have we scared them off?
21316Have you thought any more about what you said you heard last night?
21316Have-- have I been ill, Jem?
21316Have-- have you seen Don this morning?
21316He wo n''t be up to any games, will he?
21316Header?
21316Hear that, Jem? 21316 Hear that, Mas''Don?
21316Hear that?
21316Hear you? 21316 Heard?
21316Heavy? 21316 Here, I say, what''s the good of our coming there?"
21316Here, I''m a- coming, arn''t I?
21316Here, can you come to me and untie this?
21316Here, what are you doing of?
21316Here, what yer doing? 21316 Here, what yer going to do?"
21316Here, what''s your hurry, my lads?
21316Hot? 21316 How are they to know that you will not be treacherous?"
21316How are we to get away again?
21316How are you now, Jem?
21316How came all this here?
21316How can I fetch them back? 21316 How can I tell?"
21316How can I, when he''s sticking on like a rat?
21316How can any one sleep at a time like this?
21316How can we go?
21316How come I in the office to see it?
21316How could I get away when they had caught you?
21316How could we help it?
21316How did I come here? 21316 How do you feel?
21316How do you know?
21316How do you know?
21316How is it you speak good English?
21316How long will she last before she comes down?
21316How should we find you?
21316How was I to know that this was a foreign out- door kitchen?
21316How''s that, sir?
21316How, Mas''Don?
21316How? 21316 How?"
21316Hullo, Jem, you here?
21316Hullo, lad?
21316Hungry? 21316 Hungry?"
21316Hurt, Jem?
21316Hurt, mate?
21316Hurt, my lad? 21316 Hurt?
21316Hurt? 21316 Hurt?
21316I arn''t a horse, am I?
21316I do n''t know; why?
21316I mean much knocked about? 21316 I s''pose they''ll give us something to eat when we get there, eh?"
21316I say, Mas''Don, did our ugly swim last night send you half mad?
21316I say, Mas''Don, though, it''s a bad job being caught; but the rope was made strong enough, warn''t it?
21316I say, did you ever hear the story of the pot and the kettle?
21316I say, have you got anything to eat?
21316I say, lads, you saw me bring that big one down?
21316I suppose you do n''t want to come home, eh?
21316I wonder whether they really could fight if there was a row?
21316I''ll, Mas''Don? 21316 I''m pretty sure I arn''t broke, Mas''Don; but feel just as if I was cracked all over like an old pot, and that''s werry bad, you know, arn''t it?
21316I? 21316 I?
21316If I let go and dropped, how far should I fall?
21316If you please, sir--"Well, if you please what?
21316Ill use me, Don?
21316In irons?
21316Is he better?
21316Is he dead?
21316Is he going to drown me, Mas''Don?
21316Is he going to take us across this tumbling river, Mas''Don?
21316Is it bad news, then?
21316Is it dark enough?
21316Is it much furder, indeed? 21316 Is it not your own fault, my darling?"
21316Is it now? 21316 Is n''t it an awful place?"
21316Is n''t this nearest one Ngati''s canoe, Jem?
21316Is the water so hot as that?
21316Is there time?
21316Is there, my lad? 21316 Is this true, young man?"
21316It is true then, my lads, you deserted your ship?
21316Jem, are you mad?
21316Jem, are you there?
21316Jem, do you think you could make a dash of it as soon as they open the door?
21316Jem, my lad, do n''t you know where you are?
21316Jem, what are you saying? 21316 Jem,"he said,"shall we ever see our dear old home again?"
21316Kill them?
21316Killed''em? 21316 Kitty not in her room?
21316Know where we went wrong, Mas''Don?
21316Know, sir? 21316 Knowing what you do, Jem?"
21316Larfin''? 21316 Light?
21316Like fruit?
21316Like it? 21316 Lindon, what have you to say to this?"
21316Lively?
21316Look at him, Mas''Don? 21316 Look here,"he exclaimed in a hoarse voice;"what nonsense is this?"
21316Look like it, Mas''Don? 21316 Look sharp, we want to get rid of these cords; where''s your knife?"
21316Lots of''em would desert,Jem said one night, as he lay in his hammock so close to Don''s that they touched,"only--""Well, only what?"
21316Mad? 21316 Made you be sailors, eh, whether you would or no?"
21316Magistrates!--my boy?
21316Magistrits? 21316 Matter?
21316Matter?
21316May I come in?
21316May they come aboard, sir?
21316Me, sir? 21316 Me, sir?"
21316Me? 21316 Mean to go, Master Don?"
21316Mean what?
21316Mean, my lad? 21316 Mean?
21316Might it be a war canoe coming to try and capture the ship?
21316More do I; but what can we do? 21316 More to the left, warn''t it, mate?"
21316More, Jem?
21316Mrs Wimble, did you sweep up this room to- day?
21316Mrs Wimble?
21316Must? 21316 My dear Laura, do you think I have not worries enough without your coming here?"
21316My legs?
21316Nearly there? 21316 Nearly there?
21316Next, sir? 21316 Nice place to go to sleep standing up, Mas''Don.--Think he''ll come?"
21316No one else?
21316No press- gang waiting for us down at the bottom here, Mas''Don?
21316No signs of them, Mr Jones?
21316No, Jem; are you?
21316No, my lad; were you?
21316No; do you?
21316Nobody would ha''cared? 21316 Noo Zealand, eh?"
21316Not hurt?
21316Not of our white faces, Jem? 21316 Not such trouble as this, my lad?
21316Not with pearl- ash or soda?
21316Nothing, Jem?
21316Now I appeal to Master Don: was it me, sir, as was late? 21316 Now a bit o''bread and butter, Mas''Don?"
21316Now did you ever hear such a aggrawatin''woman?
21316Now do I look like one?
21316Now then, is it to be quietly?
21316Now then, where did you get them?
21316Now you: are you ready?
21316Now, are you coming into shelter?
21316Now, then, is that boat going to be all night?
21316Now, then, where''s that there ship?
21316Now, what''s the use o''your talking like that? 21316 Now,"said Don laughing,"do you call that an ostrich?"
21316Obstacles?
21316Obstinate? 21316 Of what?"
21316Oh, Mas''Don, are you going to stand this? 21316 Oh, do you?"
21316Oh, have we?
21316Oh, is it? 21316 Oh, is it?
21316Oh, she was, was she?
21316Oh, that''s it, is it?
21316Oh, then you mean to fight, do you?
21316Oh, this is a friend, is it?
21316Oh, yes,said Jem drily;"we could get down easy enough; only the thing is, how should we be when we did get down?"
21316Ostrich?
21316Over? 21316 Paid?
21316Patient? 21316 Pay for the boathook?"
21316Picked this up on the floor, Lindon?
21316Please,''m, would you mind coming here?
21316Plenty of powder and ball?
21316Post? 21316 Pot?"
21316Pressed?
21316Proud and stubborn, eh, Laura?
21316Put them down, will yer?
21316Rather what?
21316Ready, Jem?
21316Ready?
21316Real?
21316Rum game, arn''t it?
21316Same as you have, Mike Bannock? 21316 Say, Mas''Don, do n''t you feel as if you''d like a cup o''tea?"
21316Say, Mas''Don, do you mean it now?
21316Say, Mas''Don, how do they cook their food?
21316Say, Mas''Don, they wo n''t hang us, will they, if they ketches us?
21316Say, Mas''Don, think we can trust him?
21316Say, Mas''Don,he whispered,"did you hear oars?"
21316Say, mate, what are they?
21316See anything, Mr Jones?
21316See that, Mas''Don? 21316 See them?"
21316See? 21316 Seems rum, do n''t it?"
21316Shall I ask him that, Mas''Don?
21316Shall I call them back, sir?
21316Shall I send up, Josiah?
21316Shall us, Mas''Don?
21316Shall we beat them off?
21316Shall we dive?
21316Shall we get him aboard, and keep him?
21316Shall you be fit?
21316Shall you?
21316Sheep? 21316 Should n''t be too tempting for''em, eh?
21316Should you? 21316 Sleep?
21316Sleep? 21316 Smell?
21316So bad as that?
21316Some one knocked him down?
21316Somebody calling you, Mas''Don?
21316Sorry? 21316 Sorry?
21316Sorry?
21316Stand, sir? 21316 Stood it?"
21316Stoopid? 21316 Stoopid?
21316Stops your breath? 21316 Storm, Mas''Don?
21316Sulky, eh? 21316 Surely you will not take them as prisoners, sir?"
21316Take whom-- the Maoris? 21316 Take yer hat off, ca n''t yer?"
21316Tell on them?
21316Thankye, sir, I''m glad of that; and if I might make so bold, sir, about Master Don--"What do you wish to say, man?
21316That all?
21316That is n''t his name, is it?
21316That''s a pretty good scar, is n''t it? 21316 That''s easy enough to say, Jem; but what way is there?"
21316That''s it, is it?
21316That''s what I''m doing, Jem, but-- do you think it''s much further?
21316That''s your game, is it? 21316 The captain?"
21316The women and children, Jem?
21316Then how came you to be a sailor boy? 21316 Then how shall we know, my lad?
21316Then indeed, Josiah, you do not think Lindon guilty?
21316Then it is going to be quite a savage battle, Jem?
21316Then it is not true?
21316Then it must be a werry pretty sight indeed; eh, Mas''Don?
21316Then it''s war, is it?
21316Then that was a lie?
21316Then that was a war- party we saw?
21316Then they''ll have to do it sharp, for it''s morning now, though it''s so dark down here, and I thought we were moving; ca n''t you feel?
21316Then what shall we do?
21316Then why did n''t you at last, too? 21316 Then why did n''t you say so?
21316Then why did you scold him?
21316Then why do n''t you eat it, man?
21316Then you are not a savage?
21316Then you are not wounded?
21316Then you do n''t believe it, Jem?
21316Then you would n''t go with me, Jem?
21316There, Mas''Don,whispered Jem,"hear that?"
21316There, what did I tell you?
21316They can understand English, then?
21316Think as Mrs Wimble picked up any of the money, sir?
21316Think he''s insensible, or only shamming?
21316Think it is real danger, Mas''Don?
21316Think it is them, Jem?
21316Think it''s my ribs? 21316 Think it''s safe to begin again?"
21316Think not, Jem?
21316Think not, Jem?
21316Think so, Mas''Don?
21316Think so, sir?
21316Think that''s fire?
21316Think there''s any big snakes here? 21316 Think there''s much more on it to come down?"
21316Think they heared it, Mas''Don?
21316Think they suspect anything, Jem?
21316Think they''ll send to look for us, Mas''Don?
21316Think they''re in yonder, mate?
21316Think? 21316 Thinking you''d like to go right away, Master Don?"
21316This do, sir?
21316Threatening, eh?
21316Through there, Jem?
21316Time? 21316 Tired, Jem?
21316Tired? 21316 To be cooked?"
21316To come and fetch you away, my lad? 21316 To- night, Jem?
21316Tomati Paroni,said Don thoughtfully;"is that New Zealand for Tom-- Tom--?"
21316Tomati, Mas''Don?
21316Took a bundle?
21316Toward shore, Jem, or out to sea?
21316Uncle, you wo n''t believe what he says?
21316Very mellow apple?
21316Very well then, Mas''Don; the question is this-- Will you or wo n''t you?
21316Want eat?
21316Want to pay me what you owes me, master?
21316Want, sir?
21316Was I? 21316 Was it?"
21316Was n''t that the man who had us shut up here?
21316Wash off? 21316 We could n''t slip out yet, Jem?"
21316We must climb back, Jem, as-- Look here, would these trees bear us?
21316Well, I know that,cried Jem;"and what''s the good of a button being on, if it comes off directly you touch it?
21316Well, I-- well, of all-- there!--why, Mas''Don, did you feel that way?
21316Well, Jem, what do you say?
21316Well, but do n''t you see, it would have looked so bad to say,` I got that eye a- fighting?'' 21316 Well, but do we want to save''em, Mas''Don?
21316Well, do n''t you know what that means?
21316Well, do you call that nonsense?
21316Well, home''s where you settle, arn''t it? 21316 Well, how do we know as we should n''t be killed?
21316Well, my lads,he said,"how are the sore places?"
21316Well, my lads,said a hearty voice just then;"how long are you going to play at being old women?
21316Well, of course, I know that; but what does it mean?
21316Well, that part arn''t tempting, is it, Mas''Don?
21316Well, we are n''t cats, Mas''Don, are we? 21316 Well, well, what?"
21316Well, what could it have been? 21316 Well, what happened?"
21316Well, what is it?
21316Well, what is it?
21316Well, what of that? 21316 Well, what of that?"
21316Well, what sort of a place is it, Mas''Don?
21316Well, who said we were n''t?
21316Well,said the bluff man,"why do n''t you get up?
21316Well?
21316Well?
21316Well?
21316Well?
21316Well?
21316Well?
21316Well?
21316Well?
21316Were you hit, Jem?
21316What am I to say to the old lady?
21316What am I to say to you, Don, if you talk like this?
21316What are they a- saying on, Mas''Don? 21316 What are we going to do now?"
21316What are you going to do, Jem?
21316What are you muttering about?
21316What are you whispering about, youngster?
21316What at, Mas''Don? 21316 What birds?"
21316What can I do? 21316 What can that be, Jem?"
21316What cheer, messmates? 21316 What d''yer mean?
21316What did he say to you?
21316What did they say?
21316What did you think it was, then?
21316What do you mean, Ngati?
21316What do you mean?
21316What do you mean?
21316What do you mean?
21316What do you mean?
21316What do you mean?
21316What do you mean?
21316What do you say to escaping without spears?
21316What do you think of that, Jem?
21316What does he mean by that?
21316What does he mean?
21316What does it mean? 21316 What does that mean?"
21316What for, Jem?
21316What for?
21316What for?
21316What for?
21316What for?
21316What for?
21316What for?
21316What has Uncle Jos been saying to you, mother?
21316What have you done with the rest?
21316What have you got there?
21316What is it, Mas''Don?
21316What is it, sir?
21316What is it? 21316 What is it?"
21316What is it?
21316What is the matter?
21316What is?
21316What island did you say, sir?
21316What made you say that?
21316What next, Jem?
21316What of that? 21316 What of that?"
21316What of that?
21316What paying will make up for what we go through?
21316What shall I do? 21316 What shall I do?
21316What shall I say?
21316What shall us do?
21316What shall us do?
21316What shall we do then?
21316What shall we do, Jem? 21316 What shall we do?"
21316What ship''s that?
21316What should I ha''done?
21316What time did Master Lindon come home?
21316What to?
21316What was it made on?
21316What was it, then?
21316What was you dreaming about, Mas''Don?
21316What will they do?
21316What would you do?
21316What yer been doing of?
21316What yer do that for?
21316What yer doing that for?
21316What yer mean with your ugly job?
21316What yer thinking''bout, Mas''Don?
21316What''s all over?
21316What''s he doing now?
21316What''s it got to do with me? 21316 What''s it got to do with you?"
21316What''s made him so late? 21316 What''s matter, mate?"
21316What''s that mean, Mas''Don?
21316What''s that to you?
21316What''s that, Jem?
21316What''s that?
21316What''s that?
21316What''s the good o''your going first? 21316 What''s the good, sir?
21316What''s the matter, Jem?
21316What''s the matter, Mas''Don?
21316What''s the matter?
21316What''s the matter?
21316What''s the matter?
21316What''s the matter?
21316What''s the matter?
21316What''s the matter?
21316What''s the use o''calling yourself a fool, Mas''Don, when you means me all the time? 21316 What''s to be done next?
21316What''s to be done, Mas''Don?
21316What''s utu?
21316What, after taking all this trouble? 21316 What, and be a miserable coward?
21316What, being ironed, sir? 21316 What, brimstone?
21316What, can you see your way to escape?
21316What, do n''t you know what it all means, Mas''Don?
21316What, for my nephew?
21316What, get him out? 21316 What, his slave?"
21316What, in getting away from being slaves aboard ship? 21316 What, like it is at Bath?"
21316What, me? 21316 What, me?
21316What, not to meet your own wife?
21316What, old Ramsden? 21316 What, on that little island?
21316What? 21316 What?
21316What? 21316 What?
21316What? 21316 What?"
21316What?
21316What?
21316What?
21316What?
21316What?
21316What?
21316What?
21316What?
21316When everybody believes me guilty?
21316When?
21316Where am I?
21316Where are the boats?
21316Where are the enemy, Jem?
21316Where are the men from the ship?
21316Where are they taking us?
21316Where are they?
21316Where are you going, Jem?
21316Where are you hurt, Jem?
21316Where are you shovin''to, mate?
21316Where are you?
21316Where are you?
21316Where can he be going now?
21316Where did you know him?
21316Where do you feel in pain, Jem?
21316Where is Jem?
21316Where is Ngati?
21316Where shall we hide?
21316Where shall we put''em, sir?
21316Where''bouts-- where''bouts, sir?
21316Where''s Mas''Don?
21316Where, Jem?
21316Where? 21316 Where?
21316Where?
21316Whereabouts was it?
21316Which, begging your pardon, sir, you do n''t think now as--"Well?
21316Who are you? 21316 Who could it be?"
21316Who was there after you?
21316Why did you say that, Jem?
21316Why do n''t you give''em the word, and have me pressed?
21316Why do n''t you jump?
21316Why do n''t you lock- up and come in to tea?
21316Why do you not speak?
21316Why do you say that?
21316Why not now, Mas''Don?
21316Why not, my lad? 21316 Why not, sir?
21316Why not? 21316 Why not?"
21316Why not?
21316Why, Jem,he said,"have I been asleep?"
21316Why, Mas''Don, that there do n''t mean a fight, do it?
21316Why, if this is so easy, Mas''Don,said Jem,"why could n''t we get right among the trees and make for the woods?"
21316Why, what do you mean, Jem?
21316Why, what should an Englishman speak?
21316Why, who told you that, my lad?
21316Why, who''d ever believe him i''preference to you?
21316Why, you are never going to turn tail?
21316Why, you do n''t mean to give us up, do you?
21316Why? 21316 Why?"
21316Why?
21316Why?
21316Why?
21316Will it bear us, Jem?
21316Will that there pattern all over your face and chest wash off?
21316Will the rain hurt the rope?
21316Will they go on feeding us like this?
21316Will they kill us if we stay?
21316Will they take us aboard ship?
21316Will you be quiet, Sally? 21316 Will you have this lad, sir, to carry a spare gun for you?"
21316Will you take a bit of good advice, my lad?
21316Will you take my message?
21316Without you?
21316Wo n''t have one too, Mas''Don?
21316Wo n''t you come up and have some rum?
21316Wo n''t you feel frightened, Mas''Don?
21316Wonder where they''ll take us?
21316Would n''t you like to go up there, Mas''Don?
21316Would they give us a candle, Jem, do you think, if I was to knock?
21316Would you mind pulling the bell-- werry gently? 21316 Wretch?
21316Ye- es, I think so, Mas''Don; only arn''t there no other way?
21316Yes, I heared you say so twice; but what does it mean?
21316Yes, Jem,said Don drily;"and how are you going to get them there?"
21316Yes, and in a quarter of an hour we can be there; that is, if you can walk fast?
21316Yes, but how, Jem? 21316 Yes, do you know anything about them?"
21316Yes, if you shout quite close?
21316Yes, of course; but I say, my lad, I do n''t look so rum as you, do I?
21316Yes, sir; and can she speak to you a minute?
21316Yes, that''s the way to look at it, Jem; but it''s a miserable world, is n''t it?
21316Yes, yes, we know that,said Uncle Josiah sternly;"but how did you know?"
21316Yes, yes,exclaimed Don impatiently;"why not now?"
21316Yes,said Don gloomily;"the window is unfastened, and the way clear, but where''s the rope?"
21316Yes; and what did you make of that?
21316Yes; but the canoe-- where is the canoe?
21316Yes; did I not speak plainly? 21316 Yes; why not?
21316Yes?
21316Yes?
21316You are not going to keep us, sir?
21316You are quite certain, Wimble?
21316You are quite sure?
21316You are sure that you have seen no more, Lindon?
21316You charge him here with stealing money from your desk?
21316You did go to sleep, did n''t you?
21316You do n''t?
21316You do not think-- after what I said?
21316You do?
21316You feel better now, do n''t you?
21316You have felt like that, Jem?
21316You have not been keeping that scoundrel Bannock?
21316You know we were taken by the press- gang last night?
21316You like being a sailor then, Jem?
21316You mean making game of you?
21316You mean we should fall to the bottom?
21316You mean you hurt him?
21316You own, then, that you had my money, sir?
21316You saw all that, eh?
21316You see''em?
21316You were n''t a sailor, were you?
21316You''ll take my message?
21316Young? 21316 Your bundle, my dear?"
21316Your head bad? 21316 Your skipper''ll come to me to- morrow if he do n''t think you''re drowned, or-- I say, did you feel anything of''em?"
21316` Suppose you did''?
21316` There was a man in Bristol city, Fol de rol de--''"Say, Mas''Don, think there''s any monkeys here?
21316''Member that big case as was too wide to come into the lower warehouse?"
21316''Member when I fell down and the tub went over me?"
21316''Nother cup, sir?
21316''Sides, how could they ha''got on the floor?"
21316A place full of foul air?"
21316A whisper like that, my lad?
21316After they''d tied us prisoners all up and shut up all the women and children in the big_ whare_, what do you think they did?"
21316Ah, I do n''t know about me; but you could get right away, slide down the rope, get the gig up alongside--""When it''s swinging from the davits, Jem?"
21316Am I master here?"
21316Am I right?"
21316And I say, young Lavington, what have you been doing to your face?
21316And break our legs, or sprain our ankles, and be caught?
21316And now what are you going to do?"
21316And so you have made a bed of it, eh?
21316Are they giving you a hot bath?"
21316Are we in the big cellar?"
21316Are we to shoot if they do attack?"
21316Are you asleep?
21316Are you coming down?"
21316Are you getting on all right?"
21316Are you going to charge him, master?"
21316Are you much hurt?"
21316Are you?"
21316Are you?"
21316Arn''t going to tie us up, are you?"
21316Arn''t he comic?
21316Arn''t it time us two did something?"
21316Be fine, would n''t it?"
21316Being ordered about, and drilled, and sent aloft in rough weather, and all the time my Sally thousands o''miles away?
21316Bit tired, lad?"
21316Boots or shoes this morning?"
21316But I say, Mas''Don, there arn''t many chaps in Bristol as could have failed down like that without breaking theirselves, is there?"
21316But I say, mate, where''s your fighting tools?
21316But I say; what''s it mean?
21316But did n''t you tell''em as you did n''t?"
21316But do you want to break the poor boy''s ribs?
21316But that was no moment for studying trifles; and what were waistcoat buttons to liberty?
21316But they ca n''t see us, can they?"
21316But what did he say-- the skipper would forget it by to- morrow?"
21316But what in particular?"
21316But what''s quarter of a hour?
21316But, look here, how do you feel now?"
21316But, look here; what''s all this yaller stuff?"
21316But, mother, you found my bundle?"
21316Ca n''t you see we''re seven to one?"
21316Can we depend on Ngati?
21316Can you fight, Mas''Don?"
21316Can you hear anything?"
21316Can you see it now?"
21316Can you see the men, marines?"
21316Can you see the shore?"
21316Can you shake hands?"
21316Can you walk?"
21316Charge me?"
21316China?"
21316Cocky, how did you get your beak bent that way?
21316Could we break it down?"
21316Could you run away by yourself?"
21316D''yer hear?
21316Dear me, are you?
21316Did Bannock say he should stay away to- day?"
21316Did he hear?
21316Did he hurt you?"
21316Did he know?
21316Did my nephew Lindon come to the yard last night?"
21316Did n''t know that was the arm chest, did you?"
21316Did n''t want to speak to me, eh?
21316Did n''t you hear the gun?"
21316Did n''t you know?"
21316Did n''t you understand him when he spoke?"
21316Did you ever see such a miserable sneak?"
21316Did you ever see such a rum one in your life?"
21316Did you find any money on the floor?"
21316Did you hear him?"
21316Did you hear me holler?"
21316Did you see him run, Mas''Don?
21316Did you see what they did?"
21316Do n''t I tell you it''ll be all right?"
21316Do n''t you understand?"
21316Do you give in?"
21316Do you hear?"
21316Do you hear?"
21316Do you know how I feel?"
21316Do you know them''s men''s irons you''ve got on?"
21316Do you know what that means?"
21316Do you know what you were going to do when the captain knocked you backwards?"
21316Do you not hear me?"
21316Do you see?"
21316Do you think he''s dead?"
21316Do you think it likely?"
21316Do you?"
21316Does it hurt, my lad?
21316Don exclaimed suddenly,"why not now?"
21316Don twisted his head round, caught Jem by the shoulder, and favoured him with the same buzzing sensation as he whispered,--"What are you going to do?"
21316Don, my boy, why do you not speak, and beg your uncle''s forgiveness?"
21316Eh, Ngati?
21316Eh, Ngati?"
21316Eh, Ngati?"
21316Eh?
21316Eh?
21316Eh?"
21316Faces a alley, eh?
21316Feel better now, do n''t you?"
21316For England?
21316For saving my poor mother from trouble and anxiety?"
21316Fun''it?"
21316Getting tired of it?"
21316Go to his help?"
21316Going, sir?"
21316Got any tobacco, mate?"
21316Guilty?
21316HOW TO ESCAPE?
21316HOW TO ESCAPE?
21316Ha''you been there all the time?"
21316Has he come back?"
21316Has n''t he brushed it up in a point?
21316Have I been a- dreaming?
21316Have another?"
21316Have you dropped anything?"
21316Have you seen it?"
21316He says,` Am I hurt?''
21316Head hurt much?"
21316Hear that noise?"
21316Hear what he said to the fust lufftenant; this was the worst part of the coast, and the people were ready to rob and murder and eat you?"
21316Here we are safe, but I must say you''re the wussest swimmer I ever met.--Here, what are they going to do?"
21316Here, Lavington, what about that boathook?
21316Here, be quiet, will yer?
21316Here, sir, what made you start away like that?"
21316Here, what are you going to do?"
21316Here, why do n''t Ngati stop?"
21316How am I to make him understand?
21316How are we to get it back?"
21316How are we to manage now?"
21316How are you getting on?"
21316How are you getting on?"
21316How are you?"
21316How came he here?"
21316How can you be so absurd?"
21316How can you be so tiresome?"
21316How can you be such an ass?"
21316How dare she leave the gates when her husband is out?
21316How dare you charge him with such a crime?"
21316How dare you wish such a thing?
21316How dare you?
21316How dark it is?
21316How did you come here?"
21316How do we know it is n''t a trap, or that it''s safe to go in?"
21316How is your shoulder?"
21316How long have we been at sea now?"
21316How many more times am I to tell you that I will not have my time wasted over those lying stories of yours?
21316How shall we ask for our clothes?"
21316How soon shall we be ready to cut away?"
21316How was I to know you meant a hot bath?
21316How was it you come?"
21316How''s a man to eat his tea with you going on like that?"
21316How''s your young mate?"
21316How''s yourn?"
21316How?"
21316Hullo, what do you want?"
21316Hurt you much, my lad?"
21316Hurt?
21316I am right, though; you are an escaped convict from Norfolk Island?"
21316I can trust you, ca n''t I?"
21316I daresay you have heard what takes place afterwards, when the Maori tribes have taken prisoners?"
21316I do n''t mind for myself,"groaned Jem, in his despair,"but what will she do?"
21316I have been your friend, have I not?"
21316I said what time did Master Lindon come home?"
21316I saw him go-- out of the window, and he took a bundle with him, and-- and-- what shall I do?
21316I say, Mas''Don, arn''t you hungry?"
21316I say, Mas''Don, how do you feel now?"
21316I say, Mas''Don, what are we going to do?
21316I say, are those burning mountains?"
21316I say, do you think they can understand English?"
21316I say, figgerhead, arn''t there no other way?"
21316I say, if you hear me squeak or crack anywhere, you''ll stop me, wo n''t you?"
21316I say, mate, will he always go off like that when you pull the string?"
21316I say, shall we try it or sha''n''t we?"
21316I say, sir, do I look lively?"
21316I say, that''s gammon, is n''t it?"
21316I say, think there are many of''em about?"
21316I say, why not now?"
21316I say, would you drop if you were me?"
21316I say, you know what they do here?
21316I''ll risk it: will you?"
21316I''m afraid--""They have got ashore and escaped?"
21316If Ramsden could not live in there, how could the escaped men?
21316If it is, why do n''t they give us back our clothes?
21316If it was true, what would happen at the little farm?
21316In the middle of the night?"
21316Is he afraid to face the truth?"
21316Is it any good, Mas''Don?"
21316Is it because of the trouble at the yard?"
21316Is n''t Kitty late?"
21316Is n''t that one stealing out from behind that island?"
21316Is that you?
21316Is what he says true?"
21316It is n''t rotten, is it?"
21316It might break, and then what would your mother say to me?
21316Kitty not been to bed?
21316Know how long we''re going to stop here, Mas''Don?"
21316Let a man walk, ca n''t yer?
21316Letters?"
21316Lie down?"
21316Lindon, am I ever to be able to trust you when business takes me away?"
21316Look here, Mas''Don, shall I stop on for an hour and tell you what I''ve seen in South America?"
21316Look here, my lad, how soon do you think you''ll be strong enough to try and escape?"
21316Lost some one?
21316Mas''Don?
21316Me, miss?
21316Mind me smoking a pipe?"
21316Missing, sir?"
21316My shoulder?
21316Never was in the west country, I suppose?
21316No, my dear sister, can you not see that I mean all this as a lesson for Lindon?
21316No?"
21316Not been home?"
21316Not before?"
21316Not hit, are you?"
21316Not hurt much?
21316Not much hurt, are you?"
21316Now is it likely, Mas''Don?
21316Now then, ready?"
21316Now then, what money have you got on you?"
21316Now then, which way is it?"
21316Now you''re down and I''m up; and what d''yer think o''that, Jem Wimble?"
21316Now, are you going to clap on the hatchways, or am I to report you?"
21316Now, look here, shall us one go down each rope, or both down one?"
21316Now, then, can you tell me whether they''re coming back?"
21316Now, what shall we do?"
21316Now, will you take my advice?"
21316Of course you''ll be at the court to- morrow?"
21316Oh, come, Mas''Don, where''s your pluck?
21316One of the Maoris stole it, and you were afraid to speak?"
21316Ought she to awaken her aunt?
21316Posts like this may keep in Noo Zealanders, but they wo n''t keep in two English chaps, will they?"
21316Press- gang, eh?"
21316Rather pricky, arn''t it?"
21316Ready?"
21316Ready?"
21316Ready?"
21316Rested?"
21316Rob a good master?
21316Run away?"
21316Run for his life, or stay to help his wounded companions, and share their fate?
21316Sailor?
21316Say, Mas''Don, do you ketch hold o''the tree with your hands, or your arms and legs?"
21316Say, does he always look as handsome as that?"
21316Say, shall you give any one a chop if it does come to a fight?"
21316Say, wonder whether there''s any fish in that lake?"
21316See them big birds as we shot at?
21316Shall I send up for her?"
21316Shall I show you where you can anchor?"
21316Shall we begin now, or wait?"
21316Shall we ever see old England again, and if we do, shall I be a cripple in this arm?
21316Shall we give it up, or risk it?"
21316Shall we suck the eggs raw?"
21316Should I?"
21316Shove me into that hot pot, and boil me, would you?
21316Six to one, eh?
21316Smudging it to keep off the flies?"
21316So you''re goin''to desert, both of you, are you?
21316Stop here long?"
21316Stop here with these people, and old Tomati, or go on at once and shift for ourselves?"
21316Strikes me they wo n''t get all the men aboard this time, eh, Mas''Don?"
21316Suppose any of our fellows was to see us like this?"
21316That''s resting you, arn''t it?
21316That''s right, is n''t it?"
21316That''s the truth, is it not?"
21316That''s where they sends the chaps they transports, arn''t it?"
21316The question must have been repeated many times before Don could get rid of the dizzy feeling of confusion and reply,--"Yes; what do you want?"
21316Then where''s that ship o''war now?"
21316Then you arn''t killed?"
21316There, can I say more fairly than that?"
21316They''re not going to, eh?"
21316Think I''m a thief?"
21316Think any of these would come with us?"
21316Think that''s what made her burst?"
21316Think the captain will punish you?"
21316Think the watch''ll see''em?"
21316Think they''ll find us out?"
21316Think we could crawl into the bush from here?"
21316Think we shall be in time?"
21316Think we shall have a storm?"
21316Think you could go to sleep?"
21316Those sacks?"
21316Thought you''d like to hear how we got on?"
21316Understand?"
21316Utu?"
21316Want a passage home?"
21316Want eat?"
21316Want your hot water?"
21316Was any one ever before so unlucky as we are?"
21316Was n''t there no windows opposit''?"
21316Well, Laura, what have you to say to that?"
21316Well, have you any idea of what a bit of madness that would have been here?"
21316Well, how are we to get up?"
21316Well, now, did you ever see the likes of that?
21316Well, p''r''aps it''s what you think is the truth, I say, arn''t it lovely out here?
21316Well, what are you looking at?"
21316Well, what did you hear?"
21316Well, what do you say?
21316Well, what were you going to say?"
21316Well,"he continued as his sister entered hastily,"what does he say?"
21316Well?
21316Were n''t there three?"
21316What are they doing there?"
21316What are you going to do?"
21316What are you going to do?"
21316What chance?"
21316What could he be doing?
21316What d''yer say?"
21316What d''yer want?"
21316What did it all mean?
21316What do you mean?
21316What do you mean?"
21316What do you mean?"
21316What do you say to that?"
21316What do you say?"
21316What do you say?"
21316What does it mean?"
21316What for, my lad?"
21316What for?
21316What is writing to speaking?
21316What magistrits?
21316What of that?"
21316What say?"
21316What shall I do without a husband?"
21316What shall I do?"
21316What shall we do?"
21316What should I say to your wife if you were hurt?"
21316What should he do-- slide down and try to escape, or climb back?
21316What should he do?
21316What should he do?
21316What sound?"
21316What time did he say?"
21316What time would you like your shaving water, sir?
21316What were glorious foreign lands with their wonders to one who would be thought of as a cowardly thief?
21316What will my Sally do?
21316What will my Sally do?"
21316What will she do?"
21316What will they say?"
21316What window was that through which the sun shone brightly, and why was he in that rough loft, in company with a man lying asleep on some sacks?
21316What would Uncle Josiah say?
21316What would happen?
21316What would my Sally ha''said if she know''d I fought our Mike?"
21316What would my Sally say?"
21316What would you do, Mr Gordon?"
21316What would your mother ha''said to me when I carried you home, and told her your head had been scrunched off by a sugar- cask?"
21316What yer doing of?
21316What yer done with them?"
21316What yer going to do?"
21316What''s cooking?"
21316What''s it like, Mas''Don?"
21316What''s that?"
21316What''s that?"
21316What''s the good?"
21316What''s the matter?
21316What''s the matter?"
21316What''s the matter?"
21316What''s the matter?"
21316What''s the matter?"
21316What''s them things like?"
21316What''s up?"
21316What''s your hands for?
21316What, already?
21316What, run away now at once-- desert?"
21316What, since I lay down among the ferns this morning?"
21316What, to do what I said I''d do?"
21316What?"
21316What?"
21316What?"
21316When shall it be-- to- night?"
21316When''s Tomati coming back?
21316Where are they?
21316Where are we?"
21316Where could he be?
21316Where did he say them bags was?"
21316Where is Tomati?"
21316Where is the sergeant?
21316Where was he?
21316Where''s Jem?"
21316Where''s Ngati?"
21316Where''s Norfolk Island, mate?"
21316Where''s your hand?"
21316Which are you going to use?"
21316Who is to eat breakfast?"
21316Who''s that?"
21316Whom have you paid?"
21316Why ca n''t we take it coolly, same as they do?"
21316Why did I ever marry such a man as you?"
21316Why did n''t you hail sooner?"
21316Why did n''t you slither and go?"
21316Why do n''t you speak?"
21316Why do n''t you strike for liberty, my lad, and go and make your fortun''in furren parts?"
21316Why is it so dark?
21316Why not escape now?"
21316Why not start off and run?"
21316Why should he not take advantage of this or some other opportunity, and steal ashore?
21316Why, did n''t I help?"
21316Why, he''s quite a doctor, eh?"
21316Why, what d''yer think I see only yes''day?"
21316Why, what would they do?"
21316Why?
21316Why?"
21316Why?"
21316Will he ever get well again?"
21316Will you come quiet?"
21316Will you get a- top o''my shoulders, or shall I get a- top o''yourn?"
21316Will you go first, or follow me?"
21316Will you go to your room and promise to stay there till breakfast time to- morrow morning, if I give you my word to do the same?"
21316Will you go?"
21316Will you surrender?"
21316Wish one was dead, sir?
21316Wonder how far he went in?"
21316Wonder what shark would be like?"
21316Wonder what she''d say to it?"
21316Wonder where the bullets went?"
21316Wonder whether she''s eating her breakfast?"
21316Wonder whether they''re good to eat?
21316Would you drop?"
21316Would you drop?"
21316Yes: but what''s the matter?
21316You are n''t no worse?"
21316You can shoot, ca n''t you?"
21316You did not lose it?"
21316You did not notice anything, Lindon?"
21316You do mean to go if you get a chance?"
21316You got yourn?"
21316You have n''t got to go again?"
21316You know; the one with a figure- head with its tongue sticking out?"
21316You look as white as-- Why, what now?"
21316You said escape, did n''t you, sir?"
21316You there, Mas''Don?
21316You there, Mas''Don?"
21316You were going to hit him, were n''t you?"
21316You''ll tell her that?"
21316You''re not nervous, are you, Jem?"
21316Your uncle do n''t think you took the money?"
21316Your uncle left me in charge of the yard, and-- what yer sitting on the sugar- barrel for when there''s a''bacco hogshead close by?
21316Your work''s in the yard, is n''t it?"
21316cried Jem sharply,"what yer about?
21316cried Jem, triumphantly;"now, what do you say to that?
21316cried the captain, fiercely,"Where is the lieutenant?
21316cried the old man;"what did I say?
21316cried the trembling woman,"what does this mean?
21316he cried out of the darkness,"where are you?
21316he roared;"do n''t you know as Mas''Don arn''t gone?"
21316he said, with a grim smile,"cleared for action, and guns run out?"
21316he said, with his countenance brightening;"know what these here taste like, Mas''Don?"
21316he said,"what do you think o''them?"
21316he said;"where are our two men?"
21316he whispered,"is that you?"
21316panted Don,"Can we do it?"
21316roared Mike, savagely,"charge me?"
21316said Don angrily;"why, where would you get such savages as these?
21316said Don;"that he''d give me a big gun and plenty of powder?"
21316said Jem cheerily;"come to help?"
21316said Jem, scratching his head;"is that what you call a connundydrum?"
21316said Jem;"do it?
21316said Mike, staring;"how come I in the office to see it?"
21316said that worthy, good- temperedly,"what d''yer think of me, eh?
21316said the officer--"Norfolk Island?"
21316said the old merchant, coldly,"why have you come?
21316thought Don;"try to spear us, or surround and seize us?"
21316whispered Don;"is n''t that Tomati?"