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 |
---|---|
31889 | How are they to be fed and supported until such time? |
34304 | How many did you lose? |
34304 | In reply to the question,''What is most needed?'' 34304 Of the 29,000 remaining how many must be helped and how long? |
34304 | What''s the trouble? |
34304 | You never heard of a man wanting an umbrella when it was n''t raining, did you? |
34304 | ''Do n''t you know what is burning over there? |
34304 | Are men who go to prison totally bad? |
34304 | Can you send some one down?" |
34304 | Do you wonder I cry? |
34304 | WHY SHOULD NOT GALVESTON BE REBUILT? |
34304 | What do we need most? |
34304 | What was there to do with? |
20455 | May I further suggest that it be of such size and made with such dispatch as to reflect the great heart and resource of our commonwealth? |
20455 | Nora? |
20455 | That''s you, Jim, is n''t it? 20455 Why are you shooting?" |
20455 | And did we pray? |
20455 | Can the Federal Government assist in any way? |
20455 | Can we help you in any way? |
20455 | GIRL IN MAN''S CLOTHING"What is your name?" |
20455 | May we not have the help of your great office for this district?" |
20455 | What is our godliness and wisdom worth Against your strength embattled unaware? |
20455 | What is the remedy for these mighty floods that are sweeping and ruining the interior country? |
20455 | When are you going to take me out of here?" |
20455 | Would you like to shake hands with them?" |
60761 | Any chance of it cresting and going down? |
60761 | Anyway, what could they do? |
60761 | Can you understand me? |
60761 | Do n''t you see? 60761 Do what?" |
60761 | For yourself? |
60761 | Good news? |
60761 | Have you seeded? |
60761 | How do I know? |
60761 | How much more time would you say we had before the water covers this rock? |
60761 | How would you manage in a storm like this, if you were not rooted down? |
60761 | How? |
60761 | If it is for the doing, can you take no comfort from the fact there are others of your own kind to do it? |
60761 | Know any way to get ashore? |
60761 | Me? |
60761 | Or for the doing? |
60761 | Saved your life? |
60761 | Strike it? 60761 What about it?" |
60761 | What am I doing? |
60761 | What am I doing? |
60761 | What are you thinking about? |
60761 | What help could help me? |
60761 | What is living? 60761 What kind of this?" |
60761 | What made you come to a place like this to seed? |
60761 | What something? |
60761 | What''re you doing? |
60761 | What''ve you got there? |
60761 | Why do n''t you just let yourself go if you think like that? |
60761 | Why not here, why not now,said the plant,"when it has to be somewhere and sometime?" |
60761 | Why try to keep down out of the wind, if the waves''ll get you anyway, later? |
60761 | You ca n''t communicate with others of your people from here, can you? |
60761 | You out of your head, Cal? |
60761 | You would, would you? |
60761 | And what_ are_ you doing, anyhow?" |
60761 | Are you positive?" |
60761 | But how come you''ve got to do this? |
60761 | If I did that, would you get to the survey station as fast as you could and tell them I''m stranded here?" |
60761 | What more is there?" |
41271 | Ai n''t the river handy there? 41271 And how''s your folks? |
41271 | And so she was still kneeling? |
41271 | And where is sympathy and help more appropriate than here in the national capital? 41271 Are you all right?" |
41271 | Ca n''t pass here? |
41271 | Can we make it in five hours? |
41271 | Did you all get out? |
41271 | Do you know who I am? 41271 Do you know,"asks a tottering old man, as the pale- faced woman turns away,"whether they have found Jennie and the children?" |
41271 | Does any one know her? |
41271 | Have you anything? |
41271 | How about the babies? |
41271 | How do you know she is lost? |
41271 | How much? |
41271 | Is your house gone? |
41271 | It is a three- story house, and I do n''t think there is any trouble, do you? |
41271 | She is n''t dead, is she? |
41271 | Well, now, how many did you shoot? |
41271 | What will be the effect of the flood on the value of lots in Johnstown proper? 41271 What will you charge to take these two horses to Old Oaks Park?" |
41271 | Where are the bodies? |
41271 | Where are your folks? |
41271 | Where in the name of God,she sobbed,"did you get that chair? |
41271 | Where is he? |
41271 | Where were you? |
41271 | You challenge an officer? 41271 All over Johnstown he rode a powerful gray horse, and to each one he met whom he knew he exclaimed:Have you seen my sisters?" |
41271 | Are any of you alive? |
41271 | Are you all safe? |
41271 | As it started Acting Superintendent McIlvaine was asked:--"How quickly can we make it?" |
41271 | Fenton?" |
41271 | Here are some samples:-- Is Samuel there? |
41271 | Is Eliza safe? |
41271 | Is it our John Burn that is dead? |
41271 | Is there any hope? |
41271 | Mr. Jones,"a pale- faced woman asks, walking up, sobbing,"ca n''t you tell me where we can get a coffin to bury Johnnie''s body?" |
41271 | The first friend looked awkwardly about a moment, and then asked with suppressed eagerness:"And-- and your family-- are they all-- well?" |
41271 | They all right, too?" |
41271 | What have you?" |
41271 | Where was the telegraph office? |
41271 | You heard it again, the first salutation, whenever a friend, who had been searching for_ his_ dead, met a neighbor:"Are any of your friends gone?" |
41271 | _ To anybody in Johnstown_: Can you give me any information of Adam Brennan? |
41271 | screamed a woman who was hastening up the track,''can it be that any are in there?'' |
41271 | to its present width, as a precautionary measure against future washouts?" |
41271 | you are safe,"he exclaimed, and then added:"Is Carrie well?" |
27669 | And how did you make out, old man? |
27669 | Are many bodies being discovered now? |
27669 | Are there bodies under these ruins? 27669 Are you a Gautier man?" |
27669 | Ca n''t pass here? |
27669 | Did you all get off? |
27669 | Did you find your wife and children? |
27669 | Did your folks all escape alive? |
27669 | Do you know,asks a tottering old man, as the pale- faced woman turns away,"whether they have found Jennie and the children?" |
27669 | Do you see that fringe of trees? |
27669 | Do you you know who I am? 27669 Have yez any tobaccy?" |
27669 | Have you any instructions or inquiries? 27669 Have you enough? |
27669 | He worked for the Gautier Mill? |
27669 | Hello, where on earth did you come from? 27669 How about the movement to burn the rubbish, bodies and all?" |
27669 | How can anybody tell how many are dead? |
27669 | How do you fare? |
27669 | Now look away over to the left and then away over to the hills on the right, and what do you see? 27669 Now you would have thought that the people on the Johnstown flat would have got out of the way when warned of danger, would n''t you? |
27669 | Now, have you had enough? 27669 Oh, Mr. Jones,"a pale- faced woman asks, walking up, sobbing,"ca n''t you tell me where we can get a coffin to bury Johnnie''s body?" |
27669 | Say, mister,stammered the abashed small boy,"is this the place?" |
27669 | So you got out of it, did you, after all? |
27669 | There, you see that brick building? 27669 Well, did you ever see such a mass of wreckage? |
27669 | Well, that was cool, was n''t it? 27669 Well, what can we do for you?" |
27669 | What do you think will be the time required for the Conemaugh Valley to recover from the shock of the flood? |
27669 | What for? |
27669 | What have you there, my boy? |
27669 | What is the condition of the valley now? |
27669 | Where in the name of God,she sobbed,"did you get that chair? |
27669 | Who do you know are alive? |
27669 | You challenge an officer? 27669 You see nothing but that dazed, sickly smile that calamity leaves,"she went on,"like the crazy man wears when you ask him,''How came you here?'' |
27669 | You want to go into town, do n''t you? |
27669 | ''Where can I find a restaurant?'' |
27669 | ''Where do you think we are? |
27669 | A piece of a Bible? |
27669 | And what are you doing here, anyhow? |
27669 | Are they all saved?'' |
27669 | Are you not almost discouraged at the idea of clearing so many acres up? |
27669 | Are your dear ones saved or lost? |
27669 | As they passed one said:--"How about Aunt Mary?" |
27669 | Beneath the ghastly ruins of the once happy towns and villages along the pathway of the deluge, who shall say how many victims lie buried? |
27669 | Can the job be done safely and successfully wholesale or not? |
27669 | Can you ask, then, what became of the houses? |
27669 | Can you direct me to the nearest hack stand?'' |
27669 | Can you imagine it swelling into a mighty sea, that puny thing, that is smiling in its glee over the awful havoc it has created? |
27669 | Can you imagine that all that immense strip was covered with stores, business houses and dwellings? |
27669 | Did you ever see anything so destructive in your life? |
27669 | Do you know how many there are left? |
27669 | Do you see that old, tumble- down coal shed? |
27669 | Do you want to go in? |
27669 | Do you want us to leave that?" |
27669 | He looks every inch a soldier, does n''t he? |
27669 | Holden?" |
27669 | How''s all the folks? |
27669 | If you go up stairs, what do you think you will see in that cold, dark, damp room? |
27669 | Is he alive?" |
27669 | It is,"Will you work?" |
27669 | My God, man, would you believe me? |
27669 | Now, will you look at that? |
27669 | Queer, is n''t it? |
27669 | River, did I say? |
27669 | Shall we? |
27669 | Some one said the other day:''Why talk of sufferers? |
27669 | Stretched on these boards in this dismal room-- what do you see? |
27669 | That distance is how great? |
27669 | The General had just got up, and as the officer approached the General said:--"Who sent you here?" |
27669 | The horrors that have been enacted in that spot, the horrors that are seen there every hour, who can attempt to describe? |
27669 | The men listened attentively, and then one of them asked:"But, Mr. Smith, if we do n''t feel just like turning in to- day we do n''t have to, do we?" |
27669 | The question on every person''s lips is-- Will the Cambria Iron Company rebuild? |
27669 | The question that is heard very often is,"Where are the inhabitants?" |
27669 | There are many there, it is true, but after all, how many are good for anything? |
27669 | This led Mr. Smith to ask,"How about George Thompson? |
27669 | Two miles, do you say? |
27669 | Was this the only such scene the day saw? |
27669 | What can you expect from a description like this, picked out at random:"Woman, five feet four inches tall, long hair?" |
27669 | What could stand against such an instrument of destruction as this? |
27669 | What could they do? |
27669 | What did I tell you a little while ago? |
27669 | What do you see? |
27669 | What else can you see? |
27669 | What has become of those twelve thousand inhabitants? |
27669 | What have we here? |
27669 | What have you found there? |
27669 | What is that you have there? |
27669 | What''s that? |
27669 | What''s that? |
27669 | Where are they now? |
27669 | Where is charity to cease? |
27669 | Where''s Jim?" |
27669 | Who can tell until after the waters have wholly subsided? |
27669 | Who can tell? |
27669 | Will not some of you men help? |
27669 | Would you like to give something to help them?" |
27669 | You have been wandering around and got tangled up in the ruins and do n''t know where you are? |
27669 | You lost your two boys, did n''t you?" |
27669 | _ Walt Whitman._"Are the horrors of the flood to give way to the terrors of the plague?" |
27669 | that takes your breath, does n''t it? |
27669 | there is a man; there is his name on the sign-- Kramer, is n''t it? |
27669 | what do you see this minute? |
27669 | you just dropped in to see the sights, eh? |
26627 | ''I wonder if I could undo these knots with my teeth? 26627 And Miss Madge, and Miss Edie, and Jane are quite well?" |
26627 | And how am I to send you these goods, then? |
26627 | Are you all safe? |
26627 | Are you there? |
26627 | But did n''t you see how the tub was going down, Master Alfy? |
26627 | But do n''t you know how the wall came to burst? |
26627 | But how are we to get Mansy up? 26627 Ca n''t we stop it somehow, Master Alfy?" |
26627 | Ca n''t you give me a hand? |
26627 | Can you get my bow and arrows, Edie? |
26627 | Can you send me the old bath? |
26627 | Do you know how the water came to flow out? |
26627 | Do you know where I could borrow one? |
26627 | Do you think we could pull the tub up with Mansy in it to the window? |
26627 | Had n''t we better hurry on? |
26627 | Has not the butcher come? |
26627 | How am I to scramble over the upper sash? |
26627 | How are you to get here, Mansy? |
26627 | How can they be brought here? |
26627 | How fur do''ee want to go? |
26627 | I s''pose, missus,he said, looking at Mansy,"you could n''t give a half- starved creetur a crust o''bread, could ye? |
26627 | I say, youngster, what was it you heard me and my mate say this morning? |
26627 | Is it an ecker, or is it the young gent? |
26627 | Me pulled up in a washin''tub? |
26627 | My dear boy,exclaimed the good old woman,"how did this water happen? |
26627 | Now, Edie dear, can you let down a chair and some hassocks for me to stand on? |
26627 | Now, can you row? |
26627 | Now, what is he a- comin''in? |
26627 | Oh, you''ve heard it''s the reservoir? |
26627 | Out with what? |
26627 | Shall I help? 26627 Still, here we are, Mansy; and the next question is how long shall we be obliged to stay?" |
26627 | That''s what we''ve got to do, help one another-- and mind you think of that, my boy; but the question is, how can you get it up to the house? |
26627 | WHAT HAVE YOU HEARD? |
26627 | WHAT HAVE YOU HEARD? |
26627 | Well, can you row this boat, or shall we tow it along? 26627 Well, how are we to get to the house?" |
26627 | What can have happened to the lad? |
26627 | What did you hear me and my mate saying this morning, and what have you told about it? |
26627 | What for? |
26627 | What right have you to ask me? |
26627 | What shall we do now? |
26627 | What shall we do? |
26627 | Whatever did you tie yourself like that for? |
26627 | Whatever is that boy doing? |
26627 | Where are the children? |
26627 | Where are those things for the house? 26627 Why, what''s that''ere?" |
26627 | Wo n''t this do? |
26627 | You have got up there, have you? 26627 And had the village suffered at all? 26627 And how had the man neglected his duty, and caused the flood? 26627 Are they far? |
26627 | But he''s reg''lar caught hisself in a trap, ai n''t he?" |
26627 | But how shall I get back to the house? |
26627 | But however did you get here, Master Alfy?" |
26627 | But what about a knife to cut it?" |
26627 | But-- what was one voice saying? |
26627 | Ca n''t you bring the pony and cart through that gate? |
26627 | Ca n''t you get me out, Alfy dear?" |
26627 | Do you hear that, you wagabone?" |
26627 | Have some more tongue, Mansy dear? |
26627 | How did it happen?" |
26627 | How should the tin be disentangled? |
26627 | How was he to descend? |
26627 | However did it get loose?" |
26627 | I suppose the girls have something left?" |
26627 | I wonder if I could undo these knots with my teeth? |
26627 | Is it not fun?" |
26627 | Is the mill- dam broke, do you think?" |
26627 | It has not been a bad time, though, has it, Mansy?" |
26627 | Look there, could we not catch the line on there?" |
26627 | Now tell me where it comes from, if you can, and how the flood happened?" |
26627 | Quite an island, eh? |
26627 | Should he find much damage done at the village? |
26627 | Should he give him something to eat? |
26627 | Should you know them again?" |
26627 | That''s what we used to learn at school-- Island House, eh?" |
26627 | There were a few boats on the river, but how was one to be brought from thence to the flood near the house? |
26627 | They crack nuts, why not untie knots? |
26627 | Was that indeed the house she had left quite safely in the smiling sunlight of yesterday morning? |
26627 | What are you doing, Alfy?" |
26627 | What did you come here for?" |
26627 | What shall we do now?" |
26627 | What sort of men were they? |
26627 | What was that noise? |
26627 | What was that noise? |
26627 | What was to be done now? |
26627 | What would your parients say, on the Continong?" |
26627 | Whatever is he up to now?" |
26627 | Whence came the flood, and how? |
26627 | Where are the children?" |
26627 | Where are they?" |
26627 | Where does all the water come from?" |
26627 | Where does it come from? |
26627 | Where''s the tub?" |
26627 | Why, do n''t you remember at the seaside regatta, last year men had a race in tubs?" |
26627 | [ Illustration:"''I WONDER IF I COULD UNDO THESE KNOTS WITH MY TEETH? |
26627 | exclaimed Mansy,"however did he get there? |
26627 | go in that rockety thing again, Alfy?" |
26627 | he cried,"quite like the baby in the nursery rhyme--''Hush- a- bye, baby, on the tree top,''you know, eh, Mansy dear? |
26627 | he shouted,"and my kite string?" |
26627 | house all surrounded by water? |
26627 | however did you get tied up like this''ere?" |
26627 | is that you? |
26627 | me get in the washing- tub?" |
26627 | she exclaimed,"what''s that? |
26627 | she exclaimed;"and how am I to get down on the other side?" |
26627 | what did he want to come here for; and how did he come?" |
26627 | what next?" |
26627 | where are we?" |
26627 | where has the flood gone to?" |
21074 | Ai n''t this a fierce deal, though? |
21074 | And all of you managed to cling to the timbers of the bridge? |
21074 | And did n''t they tell me it was about twenty miles down the valley that Asa French lived? |
21074 | And if Asa French''s place is twenty, we ought to strike in there right soon, had n''t we, Max? |
21074 | And that oar going bad did n''t knock us out at all, did it? |
21074 | And to think,said Bandy- legs, sadly,"I''ve got the best sort of a life preserver at home you ever saw; but what good is it to me now?" |
21074 | And, Max, that''s about fifteen miles below Carson, is n''t it? |
21074 | Are we going to hit up against it, Max? |
21074 | B- b- but you all saw how I d- d- dropped the n- n- noose right over him, did n''t you? 21074 But d''ye think it''ll come this way?" |
21074 | But do you see that dark object on it move any? |
21074 | But how can we do anything for him, Max? |
21074 | But is there any one aboard? |
21074 | But what ails Toby there; he seems to be excited over something? |
21074 | But what if the river keeps booming along like this for a week? |
21074 | But why ca n''t we hold on to some of these timbers, and make a jolly old raft? |
21074 | Can we make Carson in a day? |
21074 | D- d- do you think it''s g- g- going to be as b- b- bad as all that, Max? |
21074 | Do you know what you make me think of, you fellows? |
21074 | Do you remember whether there''s a bend about a mile or so above the French farm house? |
21074 | Does anybody know where Steve is? |
21074 | Give us the word, Max? |
21074 | Had n''t we better be going, Max? |
21074 | Hain''t that same kinder rough on us, young feller? |
21074 | Have you got your knife laid on the rope? |
21074 | Hope now you ai n''t never give that jolly little automatic back to the lady? |
21074 | Hopes as how that ai n''t all you means to hand out, younker? |
21074 | How about oars? |
21074 | How do you come to be here alone, you girls? |
21074 | How do you do, ma''m? |
21074 | How does she seem to be, Bandy- legs? |
21074 | How far have we come, Max? |
21074 | How high was it the last report? |
21074 | I saw Mr. Harding talking to you; what did he say? |
21074 | I suppose there''s nothing inside that could be used in place of a boat? |
21074 | I wonder now if I could get his picture when he comes closer? 21074 I wonder what became of those two poor fellows?" |
21074 | If I can reach him at all it''s got to be from the end of the raft here, the further point, do n''t you see? |
21074 | In the name of goodness, do you mean it''s been washed away, where it runs along the river? |
21074 | Max, you''ve been down this far before, I reckon, even if most all our camping trips were to the north and west of Carson? |
21074 | Not much danger of that,ventured Steve;"but even then why should it matter to us if trains could n''t run?" |
21074 | Pretty good edge, has it? |
21074 | See another baby coming along? |
21074 | Seems like she was coming right along over the same course we did; how about that, Max? |
21074 | Some of that crowd think we''re sillies for staying out here, do n''t they, Steve? |
21074 | Then do we have to let it go, and be marooned up there? |
21074 | Then you''re afraid the house will go before long? |
21074 | Then you''ve changed your mind about wanting to sleep here in this camp, have you? |
21074 | Things are looking some different from what they did while we were drifting along on that wobbly old piece of the broken bridge, eh, fellows? |
21074 | To be sure we do, Toby, so rattle it off, wo n''t you? |
21074 | W- w- well, when it''s f- f- flooding like it is now, do n''t you reckon it''s the right thing to keep an ark, if so be you g- g- got one? 21074 W- w- what for?" |
21074 | We are whooping it up at a mile a minute clip, ai n''t we, Max? |
21074 | We could n''t do anything to help move this old raft closer to shore, could we, Max? |
21074 | Well, do n''t you see that''s going to bring us pretty close to where the French house used to lie? |
21074 | What about the others? 21074 What did you think you heard?" |
21074 | What for? |
21074 | What in the dickens can it be? |
21074 | What is it, Bandy- legs? |
21074 | What makes you think so? |
21074 | What you shoutin''about, old codger? |
21074 | What''s all this mean? |
21074 | What''s doing, Max? |
21074 | What''s going on here? |
21074 | What''s the matter now? |
21074 | What''s the matter with yer? |
21074 | What, away out here? |
21074 | What? |
21074 | Whatever can they be doing up there; and where''s Bessie''s Uncle Asa, that he''s left them all alone in the storm? 21074 Whatever can we do?" |
21074 | When will we go aboard? |
21074 | Where away? |
21074 | Why, however could he have got there, and who is he, d''ye reckon, Max? |
21074 | Will we have to keep any sort of watch, d''ye think, Max? |
21074 | Will we? |
21074 | Wonder what''s he''s up to? |
21074 | Wonder who it is? |
21074 | Yes, it might, just as you say,Max replied;"but why do you speak of it in that way-- used to lie?" |
21074 | You just bet I have, and when you say the word he''s goin''to jump for that biggest feller''s throat like a cyclone; ai n''t you, Bose? |
21074 | You''ll want help with the doors, too, of course, Max? |
21074 | You''ve got a knife in your pocket, have n''t you? |
21074 | A feller has got to eat if he wants to live, do n''t he?" |
21074 | Ai n''t there any way we could help the old raft to hurry up, and strike the house so we could climb up there? |
21074 | And s- s- say, he seems to be s- s- swimmin''this way, do n''t he?" |
21074 | Are you all through? |
21074 | Bandy- legs, how about you; wo n''t you come along with Toby and me out on the bridge?" |
21074 | But do you think it''s safe to have that terror around? |
21074 | But p''raps ye''ll be sorry fur actin''like that by us, wo n''t he, Bill?" |
21074 | But, Max, do n''t you glimpse something up there clinging to the roof? |
21074 | But, Max, what can we do?" |
21074 | CHAPTER V THE PRICE THEY PAID"Look at him, would you?" |
21074 | Ca n''t you make your way over here closer to us?" |
21074 | Can you make it all right, Shack?" |
21074 | Could n''t have asked for anything better, could we? |
21074 | Could that shack shelter several men besides the girls whose frightened faces they could see peeping out? |
21074 | Do n''t you say the same, Bandy- legs and Toby?" |
21074 | Do you think we''re heading that way fast enough? |
21074 | Do you understand that, Mazie, Bessie, Mabel? |
21074 | Hain''t had nawthin''since mornin'', and we''re nigh famished, that''s straight goods; ai n''t it, Bill?" |
21074 | He belongs to a neighbor of my uncle, and he used to come to me as though he rather liked me; did n''t you, Bose?" |
21074 | Here, Shack, give me another lift, will you? |
21074 | I say, Max, whatever are we agoin''to do with the three, if the old coop does take a notion to cut loose?" |
21074 | I say, Max?" |
21074 | I wonder what''s become of its mother and father? |
21074 | If now youse could only let us have a snack it''d be doin''a real kindness, and we''d thank you straight; would n''t we, Bill?" |
21074 | Is she safe enough?" |
21074 | Kim erlong, Bill, we quits cold right here, see?" |
21074 | Look at him gasping for breath, would you? |
21074 | Luck? |
21074 | Max, have n''t you thought up a plan?" |
21074 | Max, it''s a s- s- sure enough s- s- sea serpent, ai n''t it, now?" |
21074 | Max, what can we do to save it? |
21074 | Now how about it, ma''m?" |
21074 | Now, mebbe some of you''ve been awonderin''what made me fetch this coil of new clothes line along, danglin''from my arm? |
21074 | Now, would n''t you like to join us to- night, because it''ll be a lonely time for you here, and it may start in and rain again? |
21074 | Plenty of forest all right, eh, Max; and we wo n''t have any great time makin''a fire, if only we get matches? |
21074 | Say, I know now why you would n''t go ashore, Max; you did n''t want to be mobbed, did you? |
21074 | Shack, what''s that rag around your finger for? |
21074 | So it was that when he could catch his breath, after swallowing a gulp or two of muddy water, he called out:"Are you all right, Toby?" |
21074 | So, Toby, please do n''t glimpse anything else, and give us fits, will you?" |
21074 | Steve, Bandy- legs, how is it with you?" |
21074 | Steve, how''s things getting on at the store?" |
21074 | Supposin''we takes a notion this here is comfy enough fur two ducks that''d like to stay to breakfast, and share yer stock o''grub? |
21074 | That''s plain enough English, is n''t it, Mister, or do you want me to tell you to clear out?" |
21074 | The current will sweep us across the river when we swing around that same bend, wo n''t it?" |
21074 | The question is with us, after the fire, what? |
21074 | The shaking did n''t feel any worse, did if? |
21074 | Then besides, even if you did get some of the timbers to stick there, how could you fasten them together so as to make that raft? |
21074 | There, do n''t you s- s- see? |
21074 | Toby, what''s the latest?" |
21074 | W- w- want to k- k- know?" |
21074 | W- w- watch him p- p- pop up again, would you? |
21074 | We''ll never forget this experience, will we, Bessie?" |
21074 | Well, well, what do you know about that? |
21074 | What did you tell him, Steve?" |
21074 | What''d ye do''bout that, younker?" |
21074 | Whatever do you want to growl that way? |
21074 | Where''d old Noah a been if he''d allowed himself to be tempted to b- b- bargain for his b- b- boat when the rain started to come down? |
21074 | Why do you ask me that, Steve?" |
21074 | Would hunger prevail, or the disposition to continue fighting cause the animal to keep on chewing the end of Toby''s club? |
21074 | You did expect to make a fine haul here, did n''t you? |
21074 | You stand ready to spell me if I play out, will you?" |
21074 | You''ll forgive me, wo n''t you?" |
21074 | cried Steve;"who under the sun could be wanting us to give him a helping hand, d''ye think, Max?" |
21074 | he now burst out with,"just looky there, will you? |
21074 | how long d''ye think the town of Carson could live without grub?" |
21074 | just look out there at the river, would you?" |
21074 | listen to the way they''re tearing along, would you?" |
21074 | muttered the other;"I wonder now if they''ve got any gun between''em? |
21074 | see it drop right over the old rooster would you?" |
21074 | shouted Steve, hoarsely;"who''d ever think it could have held out so long? |
21074 | sneered the man; and then changing his manner again he went on to demand harshly:"What if we do n''t mean to clear out? |
21074 | so that''s the way the thing runs, is it, kid?" |
21074 | then he''s an all right sentry after all, ai n''t he?" |
21074 | there, that you, Steve? |
21074 | were there many people on it when it fell?" |
21074 | what can we do now, Max?" |
21074 | what was that?" |
21074 | what''s the answer going to be to this thing?" |
21074 | what''s the answer to this question; where''s this thing going to end?" |
21074 | where is it, Toby?" |
21074 | why not?" |
21074 | would you look at that?" |
21697 | A beast? 21697 Am I dreaming?" |
21697 | Am I, then, so rude, so callous? |
21697 | An''he''ll not be for sellin''you the knowl? |
21697 | An''ma mere-- my moder, ole Liz Rollin, an''ole Daddy, has you hear of dem? |
21697 | An''what may that pe? |
21697 | And Angus Macdonald, what of him? |
21697 | And father also, I suppose? |
21697 | And fight? |
21697 | And what induces you now to bring him back? |
21697 | And what of my father, Samuel Ravenshaw? |
21697 | And you return? |
21697 | And, Elsie,he added, in a deeper voice, drawing her nearer,"will you accept the hunter?" |
21697 | Better and better,said Victor;"and what of the people?" |
21697 | Bless me, Ian, iss it jokin''ye are? |
21697 | But what about the house on fire? |
21697 | But why did you not bring Ian Macdonald along with you, Vic? |
21697 | But why did you not help him in the hunt? |
21697 | But why hesitate? |
21697 | By the way,asked Ian,"was not poor John Flett nearly drowned about the beginning of the flood?" |
21697 | Can it pe possible? 21697 Changed? |
21697 | Come, Ian, why do n''t you eat? 21697 Come, Winklemann, be thankful that you are alive.--By the way, Ian, where are the animals you killed?" |
21697 | Did he see you? |
21697 | Did you ever see Paradise, that you know so well what it is like? |
21697 | Did you feel_ that_, Peegwish? |
21697 | Do Christians swear, an''drink, and fight, and get angry till the blood makes the face blue, and strike with the fist? |
21697 | Do n''t you know? |
21697 | Do n''t you think, Sam, that we might have the barn prepared, in case some of our neighbours have to leave their houses? |
21697 | Do you think it safe to stay? |
21697 | Doomed? 21697 Eh, zoo got''i m by heart a''ready? |
21697 | Eh? |
21697 | Give up Tony? 21697 Hallo, Flett, d''ee want help?" |
21697 | Has my Indian father ever found Tonyquat telling lies? |
21697 | Has the wedding come off yet? |
21697 | Have n''t swallowed much water, I hope? |
21697 | Have you found a tree? |
21697 | Have you got everything you want, Ian? |
21697 | Have you got your powder- horn and bullets handy? |
21697 | Have you seen anything of Herr Winklemann lately? |
21697 | Hef you forgotten the cawtie? |
21697 | How can the pole- star guide one? |
21697 | How d''you know that I do n''t like it? |
21697 | How zat poss''ble? |
21697 | I do n''t know,she said, bending quickly over her work;"how should_ I_ know? |
21697 | I killed ten animals myself, and Ian Macdonald missed fifteen; Winklemann dropped six, besides dropping himself--"Vat is dat you zay? |
21697 | I say, Vic,remarked Ian, with a significant smile,"why wo n''t you go after the buffalo?" |
21697 | Indeed, and what like was it, and what sort of people were there? |
21697 | Is Lambert''s own house safe? |
21697 | Is Louis Lambert with you? |
21697 | Is Tonyquat a Christian? |
21697 | Is it melliferous, then? |
21697 | Is it true? 21697 Is n''t Samuel looking after it?" |
21697 | Is n''t it? |
21697 | It''ll no pe for sellin''the knowl, ye are? |
21697 | Mine boy, have he comin''back? |
21697 | Nay, but you do n''t object to my answering it, do you? |
21697 | No bones broken? |
21697 | Nobody objects to your having it all your own way,retorted Victor, somewhat testily,"but why should you be so secret about it? |
21697 | Not much hurt, I hope? |
21697 | Oh man, man, what for did ye leave us? |
21697 | Peegwish,he said, quickly dropping the things with which he had been busy,"is there a stout rope anywhere? |
21697 | Shall ve go an''chase dem? |
21697 | Succeed? 21697 The truth?" |
21697 | Tonyquat is a boy who keeps his word? |
21697 | True, but how does that sentiment accord with your wish that you might spend eternity in hunting buffalo? |
21697 | Tut, man,said Mr Ravenshaw, a little testily,"why drag in the subjects of the knoll and my Elsie to- night, of all nights in the year?" |
21697 | Vas you ever here before? |
21697 | Vat is dat you say? 21697 Vat is dat?" |
21697 | Vat shall ye do vidout bot or canoe? |
21697 | Vat then? |
21697 | Vat vor you smok? |
21697 | Ver is mine boy? |
21697 | Ver is mine boy? |
21697 | Vid yoos head? |
21697 | W''as''e marrer now, eh? |
21697 | W''ass-''e- marrer? |
21697 | Wa''s wrong? |
21697 | Was it then your_ good_ heart that made you bring him back? |
21697 | Wass it wastin''your time wi''small fush you will pe doin'', an''every wan else workin''hard? 21697 Wat- chee?" |
21697 | We''ll give them dinner after the shooting is over, sha n''t we, father? |
21697 | Well? |
21697 | Were there any ducks and geese there? |
21697 | What are you doing here? 21697 What can he mean by bally, Cora?" |
21697 | What cheer? |
21697 | What d''ee want wi''the barley? |
21697 | What de matter? |
21697 | What do you mean? |
21697 | What do you want here, Petawanaquat? |
21697 | What have you got there? |
21697 | What if we have overshot them? |
21697 | What made you take him away? |
21697 | What say you, Rollin? |
21697 | What says he, Liz? |
21697 | What see ye, Liz? |
21697 | What then? 21697 What wass you doin''there?" |
21697 | What wedding? |
21697 | What''s that you say? |
21697 | What''s wrang? |
21697 | What_ is_ a Christian? |
21697 | What_ wull_ I do whan it grups them? |
21697 | When will zoo take me back to my own fadder? |
21697 | Where is Tony? |
21697 | Who all is he bringing? |
21697 | Why did you not stop at some of the houses higher up the river to feed? |
21697 | Why should I? |
21697 | Will they succeed, think you, in overtaking the murderers? |
21697 | Will they take me to my own father? |
21697 | Will you play us a tune, Angus? |
21697 | You do n''t propose to give it up, do you? |
21697 | You remember our last meeting in the smoking- box on the knoll? |
21697 | You want bally? |
21697 | You''s killed''i m two or tree time over; vy, you''s axed''i m, stabbed''i m, shotted''i m, busted''i m, squashed''im-- ho!--"Am I much damaged? |
21697 | You''ve got everything out, I fancy? |
21697 | You''ve had the target put up, Cora? |
21697 | You''ve heard the report brought by the Indian about the flood, I fancy? |
21697 | ` Unromantic,''eh? 21697 Before starting he entered the hut, and said to Winklemann, who was filling hismoder''s"pipe for her--"You vill be here ven I come back? |
21697 | Bot did any von ever hear of a chile vat cry for a pipe ven it was porn?" |
21697 | But where should he remove to? |
21697 | Can he tell where it comes from, or whither it goes? |
21697 | Choke me?" |
21697 | Could a civilised man have done much more? |
21697 | Could it be fire? |
21697 | Could they be boats? |
21697 | D''ye see them, Tony? |
21697 | De ting vat leetil chile have?" |
21697 | Did she too recognise tones which recalled other days-- and the puling cries of infancy? |
21697 | Did ye hear a cry, lads?" |
21697 | Do you know much about that redskin whom your father called Petawanaquat?" |
21697 | Do you think I would present Elsie with a collar thus procured? |
21697 | Does not the white man''s Book say,` If your enemy thirst, give him drink?'' |
21697 | Elsie, if-- if-- but what am I saying? |
21697 | Even if he had, what could he do? |
21697 | Had He not taken the guilt of man on Himself in the person of Jesus, in order that, without injustice, He might be the justifier of sinners? |
21697 | Had not Peegwish glared prophecy with a degree of solemnity that rendered words not only impossible, but unnecessary? |
21697 | Had not old Sam Ravenshaw said all through the winter that"something would come of it"? |
21697 | Had the young man gone mad? |
21697 | Has a war party of Sioux come down on us, or is the river about to break up?" |
21697 | How are we to get over the difficulty?" |
21697 | How often do bright sunshine and profound calm precede a storm? |
21697 | I will put my fuddle into the canoe, an''my sister she will pe ready at wance.--Wass you ready, Martha?" |
21697 | If I were to do so in such circumstances would you hold me unaccountable?" |
21697 | If you were to miss, you know-- which you''re sure to do-- and we were not there-- eh?" |
21697 | Instead of answering, Ian turned with a twinkle in his eyes, and asked abruptly:"By the way-- when does Louis Lambert return?" |
21697 | Is it to be wondered at that there were sounds of rejoicing that night round the blazing camp- fires? |
21697 | Is not Jesus the one thing? |
21697 | Is not that so, Angus?" |
21697 | It also freed Winklemann''s spirit to some extent, and called it back to life, for he exclaimed,"Vat is dat?" |
21697 | It vould give him con-- con-- vat you call him? |
21697 | It was an absurd dream, no doubt, but are not dreams generally absurd? |
21697 | It will pe goin''to the fort ye are?" |
21697 | Need we say more to convince the intelligent reader that this is the hut of old Liz? |
21697 | No, she was not yet married, he felt sure of that; but what mattered it? |
21697 | Old Ravenshaw could not refuse her to me now, but of what avail is his consent without Elsie''s? |
21697 | Robbiboo, ducks, and-- no, is it tea? |
21697 | Surely you wo n''t refuse a gift from so old a friend as I on the eve of my departure for Canada?" |
21697 | Tell me, for I am anxious about it, have you spoken to your father about selling the field with the knoll to my father?" |
21697 | The truth is, I came to ask if Winklemann has been seen to pass your windows this morning?" |
21697 | Victory? |
21697 | Was it a beast?" |
21697 | Was it not the daily remark of Angus Macdonald that such a state of things,"could not go on for ever-- whatever"? |
21697 | Was not the kidnapped one his brother-- his"own"brother? |
21697 | Was not the kidnapper a redskin-- a low, mean, contemptible savage? |
21697 | Were not the parsons, as you style them, sent to raise our thoughts to God and heaven by preaching Christ? |
21697 | What div_ ye_ ken aboot floods?" |
21697 | What have you got to give us, eh? |
21697 | What if he should be observed by those at Willow Creek, and they should send assistance? |
21697 | What if he should miss? |
21697 | What if the gun should miss fire? |
21697 | What induced you to steal him?" |
21697 | What say you, Vic?" |
21697 | What shall I say to the Governor?" |
21697 | What wad I be feared o''whan ye''re there?" |
21697 | What was it?" |
21697 | What was to be done? |
21697 | When appetite was partially appeased Ian propounded the question, What was to be done? |
21697 | When did you eat last?" |
21697 | Where are you going with the chair?" |
21697 | Whether it''s right or no, who can tell?" |
21697 | Who do shot''i m? |
21697 | Who shall attempt to describe the meeting that followed? |
21697 | Who was to give in? |
21697 | Who''s that big fellow ahead after the old bull?" |
21697 | Why did not your prophetic soul enable you to see further and tell of our present state of comparative good fortune, Mr Wiseman?" |
21697 | Why, there''s a box of it, is n''t there, in the little cupboard on the stair? |
21697 | Will you accept it of me now? |
21697 | Would Tonyquat like to go with white strangers into the mountains?" |
21697 | You are willing to chat with me, Vic, on all other subjects; why not on this?" |
21697 | You think there''s no chance?" |
21697 | You vill not leave the ol''peepil?" |
21697 | _ Have_ I killed the-- the-- grizzly?" |
21697 | _ wo n''t_ you get up?" |
21697 | ` Shall these deeds of evil never have an end?'' |
21697 | and had not Miss Trim asserted that dreadful consequences of some sort were_ sure_ to follow? |
21697 | and would he not soon see Elsie? |
21697 | asked Victor;"was any one in it?" |
21697 | cried the German, who never declined a challenge of any kind, and who was fond of wordy war;"doos my sin joostify yours? |
21697 | do n''t you see it? |
21697 | doos killing buffalo give you right to do voolishness? |
21697 | exclaimed Elsie, with increasing amazement;"what has Lambert got to do with it?" |
21697 | exclaimed Mrs Ravenshaw, aghast with surprise,"what does the child mean?" |
21697 | have you forgotten the saying,` Faint heart never won fair lady?''" |
21697 | he exclaimed, in tones of suppressed eagerness,"will-- will you accept the collar?" |
21697 | the old man at Willow Creek, whose daughter is married to Lambert?" |
21697 | the poor lady fell; and who shall adequately describe, or even imagine, the effects of that fall? |
21697 | vat_ might_ be?" |
21697 | what sort of a bird is that?" |
21697 | where iss that wuman? |
21697 | without a pipe, Vic?" |
46011 | ''Ju ring, sah? |
46011 | A boat? 46011 A cow? |
46011 | And do you know what I think? |
46011 | And do you think whoever dropped it is still here? |
46011 | And he did n''t say how it happened? |
46011 | And how did he happen to think of us, and how did he know we were here? |
46011 | And how did you say you thought they got there? |
46011 | And now, how soon can you start for the flooded district? |
46011 | And where will we steer? |
46011 | And you do n''t know where you lived? |
46011 | Animal? |
46011 | Any accident? |
46011 | Any more? |
46011 | Anything about our friends? |
46011 | Anything out there worth filming? |
46011 | Are muskrats good to eat? |
46011 | Are they calling us? |
46011 | Are they very bad? |
46011 | Are those tents down there, Joe, or-- or is it only mist? |
46011 | Are we sinking? |
46011 | Are you restless? |
46011 | Are you sure? |
46011 | Boat? 46011 But do n''t you want to sleep in this nice boat, to- night? |
46011 | But how did it happen? |
46011 | But the question is: What''s going to become of us? |
46011 | But what am I to do with the stuff? |
46011 | But what did your father do? |
46011 | But what happened to them? |
46011 | But what is the news, Mr. Ringold? 46011 But where did you come from? |
46011 | But where is the boat in which you came here? |
46011 | But where was the bottle picked up? 46011 By whom?" |
46011 | Ca n''t we make a raft? |
46011 | Ca n''t you overlook it this once? |
46011 | Ca n''t you repair the rudder and use it? |
46011 | Can we do anything? |
46011 | Can we get one around here? |
46011 | Can you see anything? |
46011 | Charlie; eh? |
46011 | Did my mamma come? |
46011 | Did you get enough pictures, Blake? |
46011 | Did you hear, or see, anything of the players? |
46011 | Did you just take them? |
46011 | Did you see any other stuff washed up there-- anything other than debris, or anything else in the eating line? |
46011 | Did you see any suspicious characters following us? |
46011 | Did you take anything from under my berth? |
46011 | Did you? |
46011 | Do you imagine they would be there all this while? |
46011 | Do you know who it is? |
46011 | Do you remember the time she had to fall overboard, out of the boat on the lake? |
46011 | Find anything? |
46011 | Going to stand watch and watch to- night? |
46011 | Got plenty of gasoline? |
46011 | Has any thing happened? |
46011 | Have you a boat so you can take us to shore? |
46011 | Have you anything to eat? 46011 Have you found anything?" |
46011 | His company of players? |
46011 | How could such a thing happen? |
46011 | How did he happen to be left in the house? |
46011 | How did you get here? |
46011 | How did you happen to see it? |
46011 | How do you act in an upside- down house? |
46011 | How does it strike you? |
46011 | How is it? |
46011 | How''d you like''em? |
46011 | How''s that? |
46011 | How''s the weather outside? |
46011 | I guess Mr. Piper told you how we stopped to film the fire; did n''t he? |
46011 | I wonder how they took with the audiences? |
46011 | I wonder if I ought n''t to make the kid take back this money? |
46011 | I wonder if there''s a chance of saving them? |
46011 | I wonder if they think they can haul those houses to shore? |
46011 | I wonder if we could n''t work the raft off? |
46011 | I wonder if we''ll ever duplicate this? |
46011 | I wonder if we''ll ever find his folks? |
46011 | I wonder what that means? |
46011 | If it covers this place----"Where will we be? |
46011 | Is it Blake, or am I dreaming? |
46011 | Is it going up fast now? |
46011 | Is it good to eat? 46011 Is n''t it ever going to let up raining?" |
46011 | Is she rising any more? |
46011 | Is that so? |
46011 | Is that the trouble? |
46011 | Is there another town near here? |
46011 | Is there any later news of the flood, in the paper? |
46011 | Is there any town near by-- below here? |
46011 | Is there light enough? |
46011 | Is there plenty of film in her, Joe? |
46011 | Let me listen in; ca n''t you, old man? |
46011 | Looking for someone? |
46011 | Lost in the flood? |
46011 | Muskrat? 46011 No mention of Birdie Lee; is there?" |
46011 | Oh, where ever did you find him? |
46011 | Oh, you are; eh? 46011 Say, are you comin''?" |
46011 | Say, are you going to talk all day, without giving me a hint of what it is? |
46011 | Say, for cats''sake give a fellow an idea what it''s all about; ca n''t you, Blake? |
46011 | Say, had n''t you better take some of that liver regulator? |
46011 | Say, where is it? 46011 See anything?" |
46011 | Stuck? |
46011 | Such as-- what? |
46011 | Suppose we eat something? |
46011 | That loose wire? |
46011 | That you, Joe? |
46011 | The moving picture players? |
46011 | Then it was you who woke me up-- taking my shoes? |
46011 | Then it''s really news from them-- from Birdie Lee and the others? |
46011 | Then they did n''t come back? |
46011 | Then they might have been swept on down stream? |
46011 | Then we''ll be delayed? |
46011 | To keep it dry from the rain? |
46011 | Was C. C. among them? |
46011 | We have n''t made any stops since you put the films under your berth; have we? |
46011 | Well, are n''t you eating? |
46011 | Well, my little man, who are you? |
46011 | Well, what are you going to do now? |
46011 | Well, what do you know about that? |
46011 | Were you looking for us? |
46011 | Were you up? |
46011 | What are we going to do? |
46011 | What are you doing? |
46011 | What are you going to do? |
46011 | What did I tell you? 46011 What do you mean?" |
46011 | What do you mean? |
46011 | What do you mean? |
46011 | What for? |
46011 | What happened after that? |
46011 | What have we here? |
46011 | What is it, then? |
46011 | What is it? |
46011 | What is it? |
46011 | What shall we do? |
46011 | What sort of looking chaps were they? |
46011 | What was it? 46011 What was that?" |
46011 | What was that? |
46011 | What''s flap- jacks? |
46011 | What''s going on? |
46011 | What''s that, Blake? 46011 What''s that-- just ahead?" |
46011 | What''s that? |
46011 | What''s that? |
46011 | What''s that? |
46011 | What''s that? |
46011 | What''s that? |
46011 | What''s that? |
46011 | What''s that? |
46011 | What''s the matter, Blake? |
46011 | What''s the matter? |
46011 | What''s the matter? |
46011 | What''s the matter? |
46011 | What''s the trouble? |
46011 | What''s up now? |
46011 | What? |
46011 | Where are they? |
46011 | Where are you bound for? |
46011 | Where are you? 46011 Where did you come from?" |
46011 | Where did you find him? |
46011 | Where in the world did you find it? |
46011 | Where is your husband now? |
46011 | Where''d you get that paper? |
46011 | Where''s the folks that own that there motor, boat? |
46011 | Where? |
46011 | Who is it? 46011 Who told you that?" |
46011 | Who''d ever thought of seeing them here? |
46011 | Who''s that? |
46011 | Why do n''t you keep the_ Planet_? |
46011 | Why do you ask? |
46011 | Why? |
46011 | Will it ever stop? |
46011 | Will you come with us, Charlie House? |
46011 | Would I like to go in, mister? 46011 Would you like to go in? |
46011 | You mean we wo n''t get into Hannibal? |
46011 | You mean-- people? |
46011 | You would n''t think there could be so much water; would you? |
46011 | Yours? |
46011 | And say, you''ve got that little moving picture camera with you; have n''t you?" |
46011 | And so he is really your lost boy?" |
46011 | But how does it strike you?" |
46011 | But would even this respite save them? |
46011 | But you know why we came out here to Central Falls; do n''t you, Joe?" |
46011 | But, now that the germ has got to working----""Then you''ll go there with me, and take our moving picture cameras along; wo n''t you?" |
46011 | CHAPTER III MR. PIPER IS APPREHENSIVE"Well, it did n''t take us long; did it, Blake?" |
46011 | CHAPTER IV OFF FOR THE FLOOD"Here, where are you going?" |
46011 | CHAPTER IX ANXIOUS HOURS"Where are you going to head for first?" |
46011 | CHAPTER VII STALLED"What''s going on?" |
46011 | CHAPTER XVIII OVERBOARD"Well, what''s the program for to- day?" |
46011 | Can you tell us where Pin Island is?" |
46011 | Did n''t we always have good times on our trips?" |
46011 | Did n''t yo''all want me to?" |
46011 | Did there?" |
46011 | Did you see, or take them?" |
46011 | Did you start this, Joe?" |
46011 | Do you think they can be following us?" |
46011 | For a moment the boys were silent, and then Blake asked:"How did the message get to New York?" |
46011 | Have n''t you folks a boat?" |
46011 | Have you heard any word from any of your people in the flooded district?" |
46011 | How big was it?" |
46011 | How did you folks get here? |
46011 | How did you get here?" |
46011 | How is she running, Blake?" |
46011 | Is it a dream or reality?" |
46011 | Is n''t it ever going to let up?" |
46011 | Is she lost, too?" |
46011 | Is that so? |
46011 | Ringold?" |
46011 | Shall we take it in?" |
46011 | Some news that; eh?" |
46011 | Then he hung up the receiver, and, turning to his chum, asked:"What do you think has happened?" |
46011 | Then, as he gazed at his companions, and then at the pile of their possessions, C. C. Piper remarked:"What happened, anyhow? |
46011 | Think I''ll believe that?" |
46011 | Was she yours?" |
46011 | What do you expect, anyhow?" |
46011 | What does it all mean? |
46011 | What is it?" |
46011 | What next?" |
46011 | What time does the show start?" |
46011 | What was it?" |
46011 | What''s your last name?" |
46011 | Where have you been, Mamma?" |
46011 | Where may we expect to find our friends?" |
46011 | Where you folks bound for?" |
46011 | Where''s that keg of fresh water?" |
46011 | Who are you?" |
46011 | Who can want us on the''phone?" |
46011 | Will you come with us, Charlie-- er-- well,''just''Charlie?" |
46011 | Wo n''t that be nice?" |
46011 | Yet what could be done? |
46011 | You know me; do n''t you?" |
46011 | You take them pictures? |
46011 | You''re not going; are you?" |
46011 | cried Blake, as the newspaper man passed up the metal badge that entitled the wearer to go within the fire lines,"but what will you do?" |
46011 | he demanded,"the folks that helped Colonel Whitmore last night?" |
23292 | ''For Heaven''s sake, Williams, what have you got in that box?'' 23292 ''Have you any money?'' |
23292 | A card, eh? 23292 A rag rug, now-- why would n''t that be a good thing? |
23292 | A whole lot? |
23292 | Ai n''t he the brainy one, though? 23292 Ai n''t there anything we could do to help out? |
23292 | Ai n''t there nothin''I can donate? |
23292 | And I can count on you? |
23292 | And now the telephone was actually launched? |
23292 | And the current interrupters? |
23292 | And what about wireless? |
23292 | And why, pray, should he object? |
23292 | And you''re not afraid to stay way off here by yourself? |
23292 | And your boy-- if he does not go on with his studies shall you have him enter the factories? |
23292 | And your daughters are working? |
23292 | Any pickerel holes where you lived? |
23292 | Anything more you want to say to me? |
23292 | Are n''t you tired? |
23292 | Are you in bed, son? |
23292 | But are n''t there boats at the landing? |
23292 | But hang it all-- why do you want to balk and torment me so? |
23292 | But is n''t it going to cost a fortune to do the thing as you want it done? |
23292 | But was n''t it a pity? |
23292 | But you prefer the science? |
23292 | By telegraph? |
23292 | Ca n''t you, Laurie? |
23292 | Cross your heart? |
23292 | Did I say I wanted a telephone? |
23292 | Did I? 23292 Did he get it to work?" |
23292 | Did n''t he ever meet any successful inventors? |
23292 | Did n''t you hear them say that it was the bursting of the Melton reservoir which was largely responsible for this catastrophe? 23292 Did you get where you could take messages?" |
23292 | Do n''t you ever eat anything, kid? |
23292 | Do n''t you remember how long Alexander Graham Bell, the inventor of the telephone, experimented before he got results? |
23292 | Do you like haying? |
23292 | Do you recall the white mice you had once, Laurie, and how they got loose and ran all over the house? |
23292 | Do you think so, sir? |
23292 | Do-- do-- you really mean I may use the current for experiments? |
23292 | Does that convince you, Cronin? |
23292 | Ever tried landlocked salmon? |
23292 | Find it? 23292 Had they made any long- distance trials up to this time?" |
23292 | Have n''t I been decent? |
23292 | Have n''t I fallen in with every idea you''ve suggested? 23292 Have n''t you a tongue in your head? |
23292 | Have you done it to your satisfaction? |
23292 | Have you indeed, sir? |
23292 | How am I ever going to get well, or think I am well, if you keep reminding me every minute that I am a helpless wreck? 23292 How did they manage the lectures?" |
23292 | How did you happen to go into that? |
23292 | How much do you get in the shipping room? |
23292 | How old are you? |
23292 | How''s that? |
23292 | How? |
23292 | I am kinder going round in a circle, ai n''t I? |
23292 | I ca n''t for the life of me understand how he knew what he wanted to do, can you? |
23292 | I do n''t believe we could live without telephones now, do you? |
23292 | I have n''t been mixed up in as many of these jobs as you have and is it surprising that I''m a mite nervous? 23292 I need n''t have taken so much trouble after all, need I? |
23292 | I suppose they kept remodelling the telephones all the time after that, did n''t they? |
23292 | If you do n''t like it, why are you so anxious to do it now? |
23292 | Is n''t he the mind reader? |
23292 | Is there any way of lifting the water gates at the mills? |
23292 | It must all have been great fun, must n''t it? |
23292 | It seems a shame Mr. Bell should have had to take his time to do that, does n''t it? |
23292 | Mercy on us, Ted, what under the sun have you been doing until this time of night? |
23292 | My dear boy, you do not for an instant suppose that the telephones of that period had bells, do you? |
23292 | Now however do you suppose he guessed it? |
23292 | O. K."You''ve got it straight in your head what you are to do? |
23292 | Oh-- why----"Should you like to? |
23292 | Only you know we never do----"Leave me? 23292 Shall I-- do you mean that I am to go over there after work to- night?" |
23292 | So he stole time for electrical work, too, did he? |
23292 | So that outfit was yours, was it? |
23292 | So you are starting out housekeeping, are you? |
23292 | Still, I''m not certain that I ought to----"Leave me? 23292 The ground is some way down, ai n''t it?" |
23292 | Then what happened? |
23292 | Then your notion would be to plant time bombs at the factories so they will go off in the night? |
23292 | There is no way you could come up here and live, is there, Ted? |
23292 | Turner? 23292 Vermont, eh?" |
23292 | Was n''t it lucky there were no labor unions in those days? |
23292 | Well, then, why hesitate? |
23292 | Well? |
23292 | Were people killed? |
23292 | Were these transmitters and receivers made from electromagnets and strips of flat steel, as you told us the other day? |
23292 | Were you? |
23292 | What are you three conspirators up to? |
23292 | What chance had we to talk in a crowded boarding- house whose very walls had ears? 23292 What did Mr. Bell do about it?" |
23292 | What did you do in electricity? |
23292 | What do you want, youngster? |
23292 | What if he does? 23292 What kind of a bed have you got?" |
23292 | What makes you so hard on a feller, Alf? |
23292 | What was it? |
23292 | What was it? |
23292 | What''s a thing like that? 23292 What''s the matter with your staying on at Pine Lea and having your lessons with Laurie and Mr. Hazen instead?" |
23292 | What''s the sense of running our heads into a noose by landing? |
23292 | When you pile it up that way it does sound like a pretty big debt, does n''t it? |
23292 | Where are you? |
23292 | Where did persons get what they wanted? |
23292 | Where did you live before you came here? |
23292 | Where did you live? |
23292 | Where''d you learn to handle that fork, sonny? |
23292 | Where''s your backbone? |
23292 | Where, for example, did Mr. Bell get his things? |
23292 | Where? |
23292 | Who can tell where it all may lead? 23292 Who can tell? |
23292 | Why do n''t you try for a job up at Aldercliffe, my lad? |
23292 | Why in the name of goodness did n''t you say so? 23292 Why waste all this time? |
23292 | Why, are n''t you expecting to be an engineer or something? |
23292 | Why-- what in goodness have you done to the place? 23292 Would n''t you like me to wheel you back through the grove?" |
23292 | Would you like to go to college if you could? |
23292 | Would you-- would you care to come inside the shack? |
23292 | Yes, it was like magic, was it not? |
23292 | You do like it then? |
23292 | You like it? |
23292 | You like your quarters then? |
23292 | You mean I could go right ahead now? |
23292 | You understand the dangers of running too many volts through your body and of crossing wires, do n''t you? |
23292 | You would n''t be timid about sleeping off there by yourself? |
23292 | You''d like it? |
23292 | You''ll really have it put in, Dad? |
23292 | You''re Ted Turner, are n''t you? |
23292 | You''re not going to back out or squeal? |
23292 | You''re ready to stick it out, then? |
23292 | ''How will you do that?'' |
23292 | A baby? |
23292 | Ai n''t I right here and ready?" |
23292 | All is, should we ask of you some little extra service now and then, I am sure you will willingly perform it, wo n''t you?" |
23292 | And must the telephone be shut away from the public and never take its place of service in the great world? |
23292 | And so you have been taking up electricity at school, eh?" |
23292 | And the andirons, too?" |
23292 | And the telephone?" |
23292 | And what are you working at in school that is so alluring?" |
23292 | And what said Laurie''s mother? |
23292 | And why was his own vague sadness reflected in Laurie''s eyes and in those of Mr. Hazen? |
23292 | And would n''t you like some curtains? |
23292 | And you came from Newfane here? |
23292 | And your curtains came from home, too?" |
23292 | Any hope in the place?" |
23292 | Anything you want to say to me?" |
23292 | Are n''t you improving the Fernald property, I''d like to know?" |
23292 | Are you here?" |
23292 | Bell?" |
23292 | But how are you going to get along? |
23292 | But now what was the use? |
23292 | But what choice had he? |
23292 | But----""Well, why not give in and let me have this one thing as I want it? |
23292 | By and by, however, Grandfather Fernald observed:"Do n''t you think, Clarence, Turner''s pay should be increased? |
23292 | CHAPTER X WHAT CAME AFTERWARD"Was that first telephone like ours?" |
23292 | Charity-- when we owe the life of our boy, the lives of many of our workmen, the safety of our mills to your son?" |
23292 | Come, brace up, ca n''t you?" |
23292 | Consequently when he ventured to say,"I wonder if somebody would help me with this harrow?" |
23292 | Could any gifts be rarer? |
23292 | Could it be that the contrivance which worked so promisingly in the Boston rooms would not work under these other conditions? |
23292 | Cut along and get the book, ca n''t you? |
23292 | Did n''t that come from Vermont? |
23292 | Do n''t I know it? |
23292 | Do n''t you want to see if you ca n''t get him started on it? |
23292 | Do you mean there would be a chance that Laurie could walk sometime?" |
23292 | Do you mean to stand by me and see this thing to a finish or do n''t you?" |
23292 | Do you suppose I would go on with a scheme like this and leave you wandering round to blab broadcast whatever you thought fit?" |
23292 | Do you want to go ahead or do n''t you? |
23292 | Had he knocked out the entire circuit or what had he done in his fit of temper? |
23292 | Has n''t he told you?" |
23292 | Have n''t I told you I will invent some yarn to put him off the scent? |
23292 | Have you ever tried singing a note into this instrument when the sustaining pedal is depressed? |
23292 | He stopped an instant to glance into the boy''s face then added kindly,"So you think you are going to like your new quarters, eh?" |
23292 | He''s a Fernald and because he is----""But he is n''t to blame for that, is he?" |
23292 | Holmes, what is that play toy you have taken the liberty of putting up out there in the banking room?'' |
23292 | How are we ever to put this thing over if you do n''t pull yourself together? |
23292 | How came you to think of window- boxes?" |
23292 | How could they? |
23292 | How did he ever get the idea in the first place?" |
23292 | How did you happen to do that?" |
23292 | How lengthy a circuit do you expect to cover?" |
23292 | How would the notion strike you?" |
23292 | How''ll that be?" |
23292 | I have n''t stood out for a single thing but this, have I?" |
23292 | I suppose you do n''t get through much before five, do you?" |
23292 | If Mr. Wharton ran the electric wires over to the shack, what was to prevent him from utilizing the current for some of his own contrivances? |
23292 | If you swear to stand by me and do n''t do it, your miserable life wo n''t be worth a farthing-- understand? |
23292 | If you''ll say the word, I''ll start right in to- night after work and----""Why wait until to- night?" |
23292 | Immediately there was a cry from Mr. Bell who rushed into the hall, exclaiming,''What did you do then? |
23292 | In the face of such entreaty who could have remained obdurate? |
23292 | It is like ink, is n''t it? |
23292 | It was strange that a little sigh accompanied the thought for had he not always looked forward to this very prospect? |
23292 | Might there not be another Morse sounder somewhere about? |
23292 | Must he be drowned there all alone? |
23292 | Must he lie there and be borne along until he was at last carried over the dam at his father''s mills? |
23292 | One day when Mr. Watson called from his end of the line,''How do you do?'' |
23292 | Or on the village streets? |
23292 | Or was it that the force of the vibration filtered off at each insulator along the line until it became too feeble to be heard? |
23292 | Suppose a twig should crack beneath his feet and warn the vandals of his approach? |
23292 | Ted Turner?" |
23292 | Ted will be here before long, wo n''t he? |
23292 | The directness of the lad evidently pleased the elder man for he answered more kindly:"It is quiet here, is n''t it? |
23292 | The psychological reaction was too much for many a well- poised individual and I do not wonder it was, do you?" |
23292 | The room is actually a pretty one, is n''t it? |
23292 | Then I have quite a while to wait, do n''t I? |
23292 | They were working together and for the same goal and what did it matter which of them had proposed the scheme they finally followed? |
23292 | Was any spot on earth so still as this? |
23292 | Was n''t there a wire spring round here somewhere, Ruth? |
23292 | Was not studying the thing he had longed to be free to do? |
23292 | Was success to be sacrificed now that the goal was well within sight? |
23292 | Was the contest to be a losing one, after all? |
23292 | Was there no one to aid him? |
23292 | Were you sorry to give up farming?" |
23292 | What could it be? |
23292 | What did men use to fill up such a mighty receptacle, anyway? |
23292 | What did you do to get rid of them when you were up in Vermont?" |
23292 | What do you say to the notion?" |
23292 | What do you think I am, Hazen? |
23292 | What does the man think you are-- a millionaire?" |
23292 | What is he to you?" |
23292 | What luck did you have with it?" |
23292 | What man in all Freeman''s Falls could have envied him if acquainted with all the conditions of his life? |
23292 | What on earth is going to happen to me, I''d like to know?" |
23292 | What time is it?" |
23292 | What use was it then ever again to attempt to be austere and unapproachable Fernalds? |
23292 | What use will it be to take the old men of the family if the young one still lives on?" |
23292 | What was he to do? |
23292 | What was the matter now? |
23292 | What was to be done? |
23292 | What will you do for food? |
23292 | What''s a telephone?'' |
23292 | What''s the use of harrowing their feelings all up now that the thing is past and done with?" |
23292 | What''s your idea? |
23292 | Where did you get your candlesticks and your andirons?" |
23292 | Who could be navigating the river at this hour of the night? |
23292 | Who could tell? |
23292 | Who knows but I may make Freeman''s Falls a better place in consequence? |
23292 | Who knows but he may be an embryo genius? |
23292 | Why ca n''t I go down to the village now? |
23292 | Why ca n''t I?" |
23292 | Why ca n''t you be decent and come across?" |
23292 | Why ca n''t you treat me like other people? |
23292 | Why could n''t we build a handsome bridge and then develop that unused area by putting up some decent houses for our people? |
23292 | Why did n''t you fend her off as I told you to?" |
23292 | Why did n''t you say so in the first place? |
23292 | Why not make it into curtains and do away with buying window shades?" |
23292 | Why this regret and depression? |
23292 | Why waste all this time fussing?" |
23292 | Why would n''t that be the very thing? |
23292 | With money enough to do whatever one pleased, how could a person help being happy? |
23292 | Would it be well to call up the Fernalds, or telephone to the mills, or to the village, and give warning of the conditions? |
23292 | Would the Fernalds want him next season and again offer him the boathouse for a home? |
23292 | You are for destroying the mills, eh?" |
23292 | You know that, do n''t you?" |
23292 | You like to pay your bills, do n''t you?" |
23292 | You would n''t like to have some one dogging your footsteps from morning until night, would you?" |
23292 | You''re not getting cold feet so soon, are you?" |
45667 | About what? |
45667 | After all, who cares? |
45667 | Air ye what we hears called scouts? |
45667 | Allan, suppose we look to see which way he went off, because it could n''t have been along the same line as his advance? |
45667 | And Giraffe, if a hog this time, what next will we run across? 45667 And did he?" |
45667 | And in case we run across George and his pal we''re to give a yell; is that the game, Thad? |
45667 | And what do you want me to do? |
45667 | And you''d think they''d had sufficient time to reach the upper end of the island, too? |
45667 | Any wings to it, Thad? |
45667 | Anything been taken, Giraffe? |
45667 | Anything? |
45667 | As how, Giraffe? |
45667 | As t- to that bank, how''d I k- k- know it was goin''to c- c- cave in on me, t- t- tell me that, will y- y- you? |
45667 | But about the boat, Giraffe? |
45667 | But could he stand it all that time? |
45667 | But could n''t we tie her up somehow to one of those trees, you know? |
45667 | But have you seen anything of George? |
45667 | But he''s on the island, is n''t he? |
45667 | But the dog-- what d''ye reckon they could have done to him? |
45667 | But what about the wind, Thad? |
45667 | But what if we have to stay out here a long time? |
45667 | But what''d an old grunter be doing out here, tell me, Giraffe? |
45667 | But whereabouts, Thad; did n''t we cover the ground, every foot of it, while we came down here? |
45667 | But would n''t it be the proper caper for them to warn us before they show up? |
45667 | But, Thad, I ought to know a shout given by human lungs, had n''t I? |
45667 | But, Thad, just think how he must have suffered all the while we rocked in the cradle of the deep like we did? |
45667 | But, Thad, the leaves ai n''t on the trees yet, so how could he hide from us? 45667 But-- there was a rope, seems to me?" |
45667 | Can hogs swim, Giraffe, do you happen to know? |
45667 | Can we do anything, Thad? |
45667 | Could you make out what was said? |
45667 | Covering the ground, you mean, only this time we''ll look into every tree in the bargain; that''s the programme, is it, Thad? |
45667 | Did n''t you hear him grunt as he ran away? |
45667 | Do we go back to the camp now? |
45667 | Do we want to trot him along with us? |
45667 | Do you mean to tell us that you have been robbed, sir? |
45667 | Do you reckon they''ve got any sort of gun along, Thad? |
45667 | Do you think it''s going to clear up? |
45667 | Do you think that thick rope broke under the strain, Thad? |
45667 | Do you think there''s anything in that, Thad, or can it be land? |
45667 | Do you think you would know either or both of them again if you happened to set eyes on them, sir? |
45667 | Do you want to do an errand for me, Giraffe? |
45667 | Everything seems all right around here, does n''t it? |
45667 | Examine the shanty boat better, do you mean, Thad? |
45667 | Expect I''m up in the hog lingo just because I did say I always wanted to understand crow talk? 45667 Giraffe, will you do me a favor?" |
45667 | Grunt? 45667 Has she gone, Giraffe?" |
45667 | He did n''t pull any gun on the farmer, when Mr. Bailey caught him robbing his desk, you remember, Thad? |
45667 | He was here with you, how long ago? |
45667 | How about it, Thad; falling, I hope? |
45667 | How about making a shelter? |
45667 | How about that, Smithy; what happened to him? |
45667 | How about the rest; what will they be doing? |
45667 | How about the stuff aboard the old boat-- had we ought to commandeer that? |
45667 | How about this fellow? |
45667 | How d''ye mean? |
45667 | How did the grits go, Bob? |
45667 | How do we know that this place we''ve been calling an island is n''t connected with the mainland? |
45667 | How do you make that out, Giraffe? |
45667 | How does it, Davy? |
45667 | How long ago might that have been? |
45667 | How long do you suppose now we can keep sailing like this? |
45667 | I been asleep nearly all the time since, so how could I tell? |
45667 | I do n''t suppose you stopped to take a look, and see if there were any tracks around? |
45667 | I noticed that you dropped that bar in place, Thad, after you''d shut the door; what was the idea of doing that? |
45667 | I reckon, suh, you mean that we''re bound to lose the object of our chase? |
45667 | I should remark it did,added Giraffe;"and who can say what lies ahead of us yet? |
45667 | I suppose the two men did n''t wait to see what happened after they had knocked the lamp over, and the flames shot up? |
45667 | I wonder if there''s any game over here to help out, if we have to stay a long time? |
45667 | I wonder what''s up now? |
45667 | I wonder, now? |
45667 | I''m wondering what would have happened if you''d thought about the hold under the cabin before we ever quitted our old craft? |
45667 | If there''s a trail why ca n''t we start in, and track the two hoboes down? |
45667 | Is that so, Thad? |
45667 | Is that so? |
45667 | Is there a push pole on board so some of us might start the old tub back to the bank again? |
45667 | Is there any comparison between hogs and goats when it comes to making a good dinner? |
45667 | It''s easy to understand that the hobo''s on the island, but how in the wide world could he get here without wings? 45667 Just look at that squall coming across, would you?" |
45667 | Listen to him, will you? |
45667 | Listen to the crows cawing, will you? |
45667 | Looks pretty ugly, does n''t it? |
45667 | Looks ugly, does n''t it, with the wind flaws rushing over the water every little way, and making a dark streak with each squall? 45667 Mebbe he crossed over to the island when the water was low?" |
45667 | My partner? |
45667 | No going behind the returns, is there, boys? |
45667 | No signs of''em so far, Giraffe? |
45667 | Nobody said you were, Smithy,admitted Giraffe;"but, Thad, how''d it do to stop near where that tree crashed down?" |
45667 | Nothing doing, Davy,came the scornful reply;"did n''t we see that the river ran past on both sides like a mill race? |
45667 | Now how do you make that out, Giraffe? |
45667 | Now what, Thad? |
45667 | Now, whatever are you thinking about, Smithy? |
45667 | Say, Thad, I hope now_ we_ did n''t have anything to do with that fire? |
45667 | Say, Thad, do n''t you remember what I told you last night, when the rest were making so much noise, and I was dead sure I heard a shout? |
45667 | Say, what if we do get there and never once sight George and his pal, Giraffe? |
45667 | Smithy, is there a piece of that rope handy? |
45667 | Still, Thad thought we ought to do it? |
45667 | Stop stretching out the agony, ca n''t you? |
45667 | Supposing they run across George and his companion, will they let us know of their good fortune? |
45667 | Thad, do you really mean that? |
45667 | Thad, what d''ye think, has she broken away from her moorings? |
45667 | Thad, you do n''t believe him, do you? 45667 That brings it a little closer home, Davy; any more reasons?" |
45667 | That is, the track of a broken shoe which has the sole held in place by a rag bound about it, hobo fashion? |
45667 | That makes two to handle instead of one, does n''t it? |
45667 | The whole day,Bumpus remarked disconsolately,"that means twelve long hours, do n''t it? |
45667 | Then how could they reach the lower end of the island? |
45667 | Then we may be able to get across to the mainland before a great while? |
45667 | Then what happened? |
45667 | Then you hurried back to bring us the news, did n''t you? |
45667 | They''re a noisy lot, ai n''t they? |
45667 | Think now we know we''ve got a thief for a neighbor we want him to steal our blankets next? 45667 This is n''t what it seemed cracked up to be, eh, Thad?" |
45667 | Too late for what? |
45667 | Toward the river, Thad? |
45667 | Tracks-- what of, the keel of the shanty boat? |
45667 | Want to see me, Davy? |
45667 | Was it the bark of a dog, the mewing of a cat, the bray of a donkey, or the neighing of a horse, Davy? |
45667 | We can have a little fun out of the thing by planning a complete surround, ca n''t we, Thad? |
45667 | We started on this hike with the idea of overtaking the tramp who was wearing the coat the judge''s wife gave away by mistake, did n''t we? |
45667 | We''re on, Thad; is that all? |
45667 | Well, I declare, what do you think of that for pure nerve? |
45667 | Well, I reckon we had a heap to do with extinguishing the same, anyhow,Giraffe told him;"but what do you mean, Davy? |
45667 | Well, he went on again pretty soon, did n''t he? |
45667 | Well, it might be they would,the other replied thoughtfully;"and come to think of it they''re somewhere down below us, ai n''t they? |
45667 | Well, stop and think for a minute, will you, what''s happened to us? 45667 Well, things are getting warmer right along, ai n''t they?" |
45667 | Well, was it there, Thad? |
45667 | Well, well, who''d expect to run up against a porker? |
45667 | Well, what are you grunting about, then, tell us? |
45667 | Well, what d''ye think of that, now? |
45667 | Well, what d''ye think of that, now? |
45667 | Well, what luck did you have, boys? |
45667 | Well, what next, I wonder? |
45667 | Well, what''s doing? |
45667 | Well, would n''t that give you a heart- ache, now? |
45667 | What ails that woman standing there and calling out, d''ye suppose? |
45667 | What at? |
45667 | What can we do, Thad? |
45667 | What d''ye mean by the worst, Thad? |
45667 | What do you make of it, Thad? |
45667 | What from? |
45667 | What happened to the boat; none of you thought to rescue that at the same time? |
45667 | What if he did take a notion to try and swim for it? |
45667 | What if they wo n''t surrender when we ask''em? |
45667 | What is it, Giraffe? |
45667 | What is it, Giraffe? |
45667 | What is it, Thad? |
45667 | What is it, Thad? |
45667 | What is it, Thad? |
45667 | What is it, the river at last? |
45667 | What makes you say so, Davy? |
45667 | What time is it, anyway? |
45667 | What was it, then, Giraffe, if not a bear? 45667 What was that moved then?" |
45667 | What''s he going to do? |
45667 | What''s that mean, Thad? |
45667 | What''s that you say? |
45667 | What''s that you say? |
45667 | What''s the answer? |
45667 | What''s the program, then, Thad? |
45667 | What''s wrong now, Bumpus; want a little help on account of that stiff leg? |
45667 | What,_ me_ back down for a little thing like that? 45667 When do we expect to go ashore, Thad, may I ask?" |
45667 | Where did you run across the trail? |
45667 | Where''s your partner? |
45667 | Wherever do you think they''ve gone, Giraffe? |
45667 | While you- all were talking there did you hear anything queer? |
45667 | Who be you boys, anyhow? |
45667 | Who cares? |
45667 | Why do you pick out that place in particular? |
45667 | Why, do n''t you see what this means to us, Davy? 45667 Why, we''re all here, ai n''t we, Thad, the whole patrol I mean?" |
45667 | Why, what ails you now, Giraffe? |
45667 | Yes, and about that time they glimpsed us coming along; is that the way you figure it out, Thad? |
45667 | Yes, but look closer, and see if you can recognize anything familiar about the marks? |
45667 | Yes, tell us what ails you, and why you''ve been running so fast? |
45667 | Yes, why do n''t you tell us to get what we came after, and fly the coop? |
45667 | Yes-- T- had, what is it? |
45667 | You mean all night long, Thad? |
45667 | You mean he''d do it, rather than risk coming out, and being gobbled up by the militia, is that it, Thad? |
45667 | You mean like the one that brought us here? |
45667 | You mean there is n''t enough of it, do n''t you, Allan? |
45667 | You mean we have n''t been walking that ten Thad allowed us? |
45667 | You mean you think you heard some one shouting, do you? |
45667 | You remember how we found supper cooking on the stove when we broke into that boat cabin, yet never a solitary soul around? 45667 You''ve got some game started, Giraffe; what is it?" |
45667 | A healthy lot of scouts we seem like, do n''t we? |
45667 | Ai n''t I glad we''re on solid ground right now? |
45667 | Always on guard, hey? |
45667 | And as you say, Giraffe, what good would just plain honey do a starving crowd? |
45667 | And, Thad, of course you notice that he was heading up country when he passed by here?" |
45667 | Bailey?" |
45667 | But Davy, can you see anything like a boat down below?" |
45667 | But Davy, do you think you could tell which direction the shout seemed to come from?" |
45667 | But do n''t you think she''s still rising, Thad?" |
45667 | But what are you thinking about, Thad, to look so serious?" |
45667 | But whatever d''ye imagine ails Davy now? |
45667 | But, Thad, he''s beginning to shiver in this air; do n''t you think we ought to get him over to the fire?" |
45667 | But, Thad, what are we going to do about this same thing? |
45667 | But, Thad, where d''ye reckon his pal has disappeared to, that he ai n''t around here? |
45667 | Ca n''t we take up the trail, and try to get our stuff back? |
45667 | Did it drop half a foot or more during the time we snoozed?" |
45667 | Did you catch any suspicious sound, Davy?" |
45667 | Did you ever know a hobo who would willingly take a bath? |
45667 | Do n''t you know the battle is n''t always to the swift or the strong? |
45667 | Do you mean he got behind a big limb, and lay there like a squirrel?" |
45667 | Do you really think that''s what''s going to happen to us here, Giraffe; and is it a funeral dirge you want me to start?" |
45667 | Do you think it''s come to a stand yet?" |
45667 | Do you understand that?" |
45667 | Get a move on you, Bumpus, do you hear?" |
45667 | Giraffe went on to remark;"what kind of a boat would you say it was, now?" |
45667 | Giraffe, back me up, will you? |
45667 | Give that bunch of bushes another whack with your club while you''re about it, will you? |
45667 | Have either of you seen a man wearing a blue coat like that?" |
45667 | Have you forgotten all about the race between the hare and the tortoise; and did n''t the old slow- moving chap come in ahead, after all? |
45667 | He might be excused, but what would happen to you, tell me that?" |
45667 | He''s got enough to carry as it is, see?" |
45667 | How about it, Thad?" |
45667 | How do we know but what he was trying to cross over, and the current swept him down stream? |
45667 | How much further d''ye think the island runs?" |
45667 | How were we to guess that the man we came after would drop in here and rob the farmer? |
45667 | How''s that come, Thad? |
45667 | How''s that, Bumpus; are you game to show us, or have I dared you to a standstill?" |
45667 | However could that be?" |
45667 | I started in to tell you how I found out she was gone from that point where we left her a while back, did n''t I? |
45667 | I''m a prisoner o''war, an''ye would n''t be so mean''s as ter pepper a harmless man, I hopes, Boy?" |
45667 | I''m surprised at you, Davy; why do n''t you grin and bear it like I do? |
45667 | If it wa''n''t so cold we''d take''em off right now, and go bare- footed, would n''t we, Jake?" |
45667 | If there''s enough left, give a turn around his ankles, will you, please? |
45667 | Is this an old island we''ve bumped against?" |
45667 | Let''s hear it, wo n''t you?" |
45667 | Look at all the water going past, would you, Thad? |
45667 | Look over there, what do you call that?" |
45667 | Never letting a single thing worth while slipping through our fingers? |
45667 | No need of saying anything to the rest, is there?" |
45667 | Now, I''d look nice doing that, would n''t I? |
45667 | Now, do you see, Smithy?" |
45667 | Now, if there''s somebody out here besides us, who could it be?" |
45667 | Only for that what would you have done, Smithy?" |
45667 | P''raps there might be chickens, and cows, and all sorts of things close by? |
45667 | Perish the thought; the boys of the Silver Fox Patrol never were quitters, were they?" |
45667 | Plenty of room for our purpose, is n''t there, boys?" |
45667 | Put a pin in that to remember it, will you?" |
45667 | Said he fixed''em fur customers what did n''t ever come back to pay the charges; did n''t we, Smikes?" |
45667 | Scout Master?" |
45667 | Step Hen; any more objections?" |
45667 | Still, it''s queer how many things we keep finding on this same island, is n''t it?" |
45667 | Tell us how you know all that, wo n''t you, Davy Jones?" |
45667 | Thad, what does this mean?" |
45667 | Thad, what shall we do?" |
45667 | The question is, ought we to arrest the hoboes on account of what they did up at Bailey''s farm?" |
45667 | There, did n''t you hear her yell to Johnny to come back at once? |
45667 | Tramp?" |
45667 | Want Thad to drop in here, and find you sound asleep on your post, do you? |
45667 | Want to know what makes me think so? |
45667 | We belong to the Little Sunshine Club, do n''t we, boys?" |
45667 | We know better than that, do n''t we?" |
45667 | Well, it would n''t do that if the way was blocked by a strip of land, would it? |
45667 | Well, put things together, and what do you get? |
45667 | What ails you, Step Hen?" |
45667 | What do the rest of you say to that?" |
45667 | What if we do here on our island?" |
45667 | What more could a fellow from Dixieland want more than hog and hominy?" |
45667 | Whatever do you want me to do, Davy?" |
45667 | Where did he go, and when?" |
45667 | Where is George?" |
45667 | Who''d blame anybody for throwing up the sponge rather''n be mashed flat by such a hippo?" |
45667 | Why do n''t they call us over, and let us in? |
45667 | Why do n''t you sit down all the time, and save yourself the trouble of falling so much? |
45667 | Why, ca n''t you feel the dampness in the air?" |
45667 | Why, on one occasion he had plunged into a burning woods, and performed prodigies of valor; what was an ice- water bath to him but a little episode? |
45667 | Why-- whatever am I thinkin''about, to be sure? |
45667 | Would they scold that way if they just happened to see a pair of hoboes eating breakfast, d''ye think?" |
45667 | You wonder why I say that, do you? |
45667 | added Davy Jones;"look at the other side coming up, would you?" |
45667 | but who''s going to be left behind?" |
45667 | chuckled Step Hen;"is n''t he just the fierce Cossack, though? |
45667 | cried Giraffe, apparently taken aback by the suggestion;"we kept our noses turned to the ground so much none of us ever bothered looking up, did we?" |
45667 | do you mean for extra grub supplies, or something else, Thad?" |
45667 | do you really think she_ may_ take a sudden notion to start out again on another cruise?" |
45667 | do you really think there''s a chance of that happening to us, Davy?" |
45667 | gasped Giraffe,"now, what d''ye think of that? |
45667 | hold on here, what''s this I see ahead of us, boys? |
45667 | how d''ye think I''d know?" |
45667 | is that so? |
45667 | is there really such a place? |
45667 | just feel the old boat jumping, would you?" |
45667 | just look at the way Giraffe throws his hands up, will you? |
45667 | me carry a stove on shore when I know a dozen ways to cook on a regular camp fire?" |
45667 | remarked Davy;"whatever d''ye s''pose ails that bunch of crows, Giraffe? |
45667 | roared Giraffe, pushing alongside;"trees, is it, and us out in the middle of the flooded Susquehanna? |
45667 | said Giraffe;"but who cares for expenses? |
45667 | so I''m a shark, am I?" |
45667 | the splash of the water would have washed all those out easy, so what was the use? |
45667 | there, what''s up?" |
45667 | was that a_ hog_?" |
45667 | well, I did n''t say I_ believed_ I''d die by poison, did I?" |
45667 | well,"Bumpus told himself,"what''s the use bothering the poor tenderfoot? |
45667 | what would we care, so long as we''re heavily armed, and eight of us all told, when poor old Crusoe was alone? |
45667 | why do n''t you shoot it, Giraffe?" |
45667 | you do n''t want the old cracked stove, I hope?" |
45667 | you mean him, does you?" |
36179 | A breakdown, eh? 36179 A dark horse with a white breast and white feet?" |
36179 | A diamond ring? |
36179 | About Grace? |
36179 | Alone? |
36179 | An engagement ring? |
36179 | And after that? |
36179 | And are you positive, Sam, it was not serious? |
36179 | And did he have any white under his neck? |
36179 | And did he know you had stolen the money? |
36179 | And did you go to Belright Fogg and give him the three hundred dollars? |
36179 | And did you pay the six dollars, Doctor? |
36179 | And how do you fellows feel this morning? |
36179 | And how far is it from here? |
36179 | And how is that getting along? |
36179 | And how long ago was this? |
36179 | And how was it you tried to keep out of our sight in that flood? |
36179 | And if Mr. Sanderson ca n''t pay, what then? |
36179 | And the fellow wore a heavy overcoat and a fur cap? |
36179 | And was the fellow dressed in a heavy, gray overcoat and a heavy fur cap? |
36179 | And what about my money-- is that safe? |
36179 | And what do you consider the farm worth? |
36179 | And what does Mr. Fogg want us to do? |
36179 | And what is Dick? |
36179 | And where had you left Mr. Sanderson''s cutter in the meantime? |
36179 | And where is it to be, Sam? |
36179 | And which way did he head? |
36179 | And you will let Songbird come here and call on your daughter? |
36179 | Andy Royce? 36179 Any of you hurt?" |
36179 | Any particular reason for going to that city? |
36179 | Any trouble with him? |
36179 | Anybody else? |
36179 | Anybody hurt? |
36179 | Anything wrong, Sam? |
36179 | Are n''t we all striving to graduate? 36179 Are those the banners you captured, Sam?" |
36179 | Are those two people going in a big touring car all by themselves? |
36179 | Are you going directly to Hope? |
36179 | Are you going up to the college? 36179 Are you mixed up in this unfortunate affair?" |
36179 | Are you sure of this? 36179 Are you sure that you''re not hurt, Grace?" |
36179 | Are you sure you are going to graduate, Sam? |
36179 | As bad as that, eh? 36179 Blackie Crowden? |
36179 | Blind lady? 36179 But how can I take it easy with that four thousand dollars missing?" |
36179 | But if he went to Dentonville and to the railroad station, could n''t you telephone to the operator there to have him held? |
36179 | But if you did n''t want to go that far, Grace, why did n''t you tell him? |
36179 | But just the same, why does she favor him at all? |
36179 | But what about Ada? |
36179 | But what brought him to Fernwood in the first place? |
36179 | But what did you just say about a man watching you when you went into the bank? |
36179 | But what in the world are you talking about, Tom? |
36179 | But what was it, Sam? 36179 But you met a man named Blackie Crowden?" |
36179 | Ca n''t ye give me more''n the ten dollars? |
36179 | Can I help you in any way? |
36179 | Can you remember what room it was? |
36179 | Can you tell me anything about him? |
36179 | Can you tell me when the next train stops there? |
36179 | Can you tell me where he is now? |
36179 | Di- did my si- sister get you, or what? |
36179 | Did Bissette have any idea who the man in the cutter was? |
36179 | Did Grace say anything? |
36179 | Did I have a passenger that stuttered? |
36179 | Did I hear somebody calling? |
36179 | Did I see a feller in a cutter goin''as fast as he could? |
36179 | Did he have any baggage with him? |
36179 | Did he steal anything from you people? |
36179 | Did he take an overcoat of yours and a fur cap? |
36179 | Did he tell you that? |
36179 | Did he wear white stockings? |
36179 | Did n''t the young man come here with her? |
36179 | Did n''t you bring your jacket? |
36179 | Did n''t you think the sandwiches and cake and other things were very nice? |
36179 | Did the fellow go straight to Ashton, or did he turn off to one of the other places? |
36179 | Did you buy this to wear at the horse show, or at a meeting of mothers''helpers? |
36179 | Did you catch him? |
36179 | Did you know us? |
36179 | Did you meet a man driving a horse and cutter very rapidly? |
36179 | Did you say Songbird sent him a hundred dollars? |
36179 | Did you say that fellow stuttered and whistled? |
36179 | Did you say that you had been out with Grace lately? |
36179 | Did you say you would pay off this mortgage? |
36179 | Did you see him-- a big fellow with a heavy overcoat and with a fur cap pulled down over his forehead? |
36179 | Discharged him? |
36179 | Do n''t you know enough to stand up when a toast is to be drunk? |
36179 | Do n''t you remember what a famous ball player he was? |
36179 | Do n''t you think I had better go along? |
36179 | Do n''t you think he''ll come back, thinking there''ll be some letters for him? |
36179 | Do n''t you think we had better retire? |
36179 | Do they blame you for the loss? |
36179 | Do you know anything of that fellow? |
36179 | Do you know he is a shyster lawyer? |
36179 | Do you know if any passengers got off here? |
36179 | Do you know what I think? |
36179 | Do you mean Belright Fogg? |
36179 | Do you mean that Crowden went off with the other person in the cutter? |
36179 | Do you mean that he is seriously injured? |
36179 | Do you really mean it, Grisley? |
36179 | Do you suppose the man was going to walk it? |
36179 | Do you think Grace is the kind of a girl to be caught by money, Sam? |
36179 | Do you think he was mixed up in this robbery? |
36179 | Do you think we can go ahead on this road now? |
36179 | Do you want to drop out? |
36179 | Do you want to ride with us? |
36179 | Does n''t that make you feel proud, Sam? |
36179 | Explains what? |
36179 | Had Mr. Sanderson heard any more from old Grisley, or Belright Fogg? |
36179 | Had any fun lately? 36179 Had n''t we better wait until we get some particulars from Songbird?" |
36179 | Hand it over,returned the youth, and then added:"Did Mr. Waltham bring his wrecked runabout to the garage here?" |
36179 | Has anything happened? |
36179 | Has the auto- stage from Fernwood got in yet? |
36179 | Have you a telephone? |
36179 | Have you any idea where we can find him? |
36179 | Have you any telephone connection with Dentonville? |
36179 | Have you heard anything more than that, Tom? |
36179 | Have you settled the snowball affair with him yet? |
36179 | How are matters going in New York, Dick? |
36179 | How are the teachers treating you these days? 36179 How are you making it these days?" |
36179 | How are you these days? 36179 How did Grace seem to be when you spoke to her?" |
36179 | How did Minnie really seem to take it? |
36179 | How did Mr. Sanderson treat you? |
36179 | How does your head feel? |
36179 | How far is that from here? |
36179 | How have you made out so far? |
36179 | How is everything, Minnie? |
36179 | How is he? |
36179 | How is it you did n''t bring Grace with you, Sam? |
36179 | How many miles to the next stopping place? |
36179 | How much money have we got locked up in that? 36179 I do n''t see anything like a house anywhere around, do you?" |
36179 | I say, Rover, what do you mean by attacking me in this fashion? |
36179 | I suppose now that you have graduated, Sam, you and Grace will be joining us here some day? |
36179 | I suppose you did n''t get the letter I sent to you and Dick yesterday-- the letter about Songbird here? |
36179 | I suppose you hear from Songbird occasionally? |
36179 | I wonder how badly he''s hurt? |
36179 | I wonder if he''ll dare to do anything to harm us? |
36179 | I wonder if we ca n''t have him captured in some way? 36179 I wonder what brought him on this back road on foot?" |
36179 | I''m glad to see Minnie sticks up for our chum, are n''t you? |
36179 | I-- er-- er---- How do you do, Rover? |
36179 | If Fogg met this Blackie Crowden, what do you suppose it was for? |
36179 | If I ca n''t get it off, what ever am I to do? |
36179 | If I do n''t want to close out the mortgage I ai n''t got to, have I? |
36179 | If I keep the mortgage, then what has he done for me? 36179 If it was, do you think that man was running away with the outfit?" |
36179 | Is it Waltham? |
36179 | Is it a good road? |
36179 | Is it the only mortgage you have, if I may ask? |
36179 | Is it yours? |
36179 | Is n''t that the whistle of a locomotive? |
36179 | Is that all there is to it? |
36179 | Is that so? 36179 Is that so? |
36179 | Is that so? 36179 Knocked my hat off?" |
36179 | Let me see-- how many miles is it to Larkinburg? |
36179 | Look here, young man, what are you driving at? |
36179 | Make good the loss? 36179 Mr. Rover, you are sure of what you are saying?" |
36179 | Of course your folks know about the loss, Songbird? |
36179 | Oh, about as usual,answered the girl, and then went on:"Of course you know all about what Tom did for us? |
36179 | Oh, is this you, Sam? |
36179 | Oh, she can take your place in one of the other autos, ca n''t she? |
36179 | On foot? |
36179 | One is that the man who stutters was really Blackie Crowden, for who else could have been here with something wrapped in a Knoxbury newspaper? 36179 Out in Denver, you say? |
36179 | Richard, do you think it is safe to stay under the trees in such a storm as this? |
36179 | Right you are, Dick,returned his youngest brother,"but that does n''t answer the question-- where is he now?" |
36179 | Sam, are n''t you a bit sorry to leave the old college? |
36179 | Sam, did Chester Waltham say anything about where he was going to take Grace? |
36179 | Sam, do you really think it can be the fellow who robbed Songbird? |
36179 | Say, is that all the blasting there is? |
36179 | See anything of him, Tom? |
36179 | See that advertisement of The Russel Department Store and that advertisement of Betts''Shoe Store? 36179 She can stay here a little longer, ca n''t she? |
36179 | She did, did she? 36179 She did,"answered Sam, and then added sharply:"You''ve made a nice mess of it here, have n''t you?" |
36179 | She''s made quite a friend of a Miss Ada Waltham at the seminary, a rich girl, has n''t she? |
36179 | So it''s decided that we are to start Monday morning, is it? |
36179 | So you are going back to New York, are you, Tom? |
36179 | Some class to me, eh? |
36179 | Songbird, why did he do it? |
36179 | Speech? 36179 Stuttered, did he?" |
36179 | Supposin''I was to say right now that I''d keep the mortgage? 36179 Sure you''ve got all the snowballs you can carry?" |
36179 | That is true, Tom,answered his wife,"but do n''t you think we had better get back to the hotel and go to bed? |
36179 | The mortgage is on this farm, is n''t it? |
36179 | Then I suppose they wo n''t be back till late? |
36179 | Then has it gone on to Riverview? |
36179 | Then if we want to catch that fellow, all we can do is to go after him, eh? |
36179 | Then what became of the other thirty- five hundred? |
36179 | Then will you go, Sam, and try to explain matters? |
36179 | Then you did n''t really care for him? |
36179 | Then you do n''t know where that fellow came from? |
36179 | Then you hope to get through too? |
36179 | They have n''t heard any more about that Blackie Crowden or the missing money? |
36179 | Tom, how many miles an hour are you making? |
36179 | Twenty- five dollars? 36179 Was he doing the errand for Mr. Sanderson or for Minnie?" |
36179 | Was the man alone? |
36179 | Was this Bissette sure it was Fogg? |
36179 | We''re going to be married early this fall, are n''t we, Grace? |
36179 | Well, I''ve got thirty days in which to make up my mind, ai n''t I? |
36179 | Well, if it was Blackie Crowden, why do n''t you have him locked up? |
36179 | Well, what''s the news? |
36179 | Well, what''s the use of staying up? |
36179 | Well, young men, what can I do for you? |
36179 | Well? |
36179 | Were you hurt in any way? |
36179 | What about her? |
36179 | What about that tour Tom mentioned? |
36179 | What am I going to do with this horse? |
36179 | What are you going to tell Songbird? |
36179 | What did the fellows do with those banners? |
36179 | What did you do with the rest of the money, Crowden? 36179 What do you mean by sending us into such peril as this? |
36179 | What do you mean, Rover, by attacking me in this fashion? |
36179 | What do you propose to do? |
36179 | What do you think I''m built of, iron? |
36179 | What do you think we ought to do? |
36179 | What do you want? |
36179 | What happened? 36179 What has he done?" |
36179 | What has that shyster lawyer to do with it? |
36179 | What in the world brought him here to- day? |
36179 | What is he going to do for a living? |
36179 | What is it, Tom, a puncture? |
36179 | What is this; a snowslide? |
36179 | What shall I talk about-- earthquakes in India, or the spots on Tubbs''pants? |
36179 | What was it? |
36179 | What was that? |
36179 | What will you do with the horse and cutter? |
36179 | What would he be doing away out here? |
36179 | What''s goin''on down here anyway? |
36179 | What''s it all about? |
36179 | What''s that? 36179 What''s that?" |
36179 | What''s the matter anyway? |
36179 | What''s the matter, Ike? 36179 What''s the trouble here?" |
36179 | What''s this I hear about Grace going out with a young millionaire named Waltham? |
36179 | What''s this I hear? |
36179 | What''s wrong? |
36179 | What''s wrong? |
36179 | What? 36179 What? |
36179 | When was this? |
36179 | Where are you? |
36179 | Where bound, Sam? |
36179 | Where did the snowball hit you? |
36179 | Where did you get that paper, Tom? |
36179 | Where do you live? |
36179 | Where in the world would he get that much money? 36179 Where is Grace?" |
36179 | Where is John? 36179 Where is Stockbridge?" |
36179 | Where is the nearest telephone? |
36179 | Where''s Grace? |
36179 | Which way was he headed? |
36179 | Who is going to do the twirling for Brill? |
36179 | Who is this man you mention? |
36179 | Who knocked his hat off? |
36179 | Who says I am letting him ride over me? |
36179 | Why ca n''t we do some throwing ourselves? |
36179 | Why did n''t they take the trip by themselves? |
36179 | Why did n''t you stay back until you heard the second blast? |
36179 | Why do n''t you put William Philander Tubbs in? |
36179 | Why do n''t you telegraph to them? |
36179 | Why not send a telegram asking if it will do any good for you to come home? |
36179 | Why not, if the money is n''t paid? |
36179 | Will they? |
36179 | Will you go along? |
36179 | Will you let us have this photograph? |
36179 | Will you let us know where you let him off? |
36179 | Will you tell me what kind of a looking man he was? |
36179 | Wonder where he went to? |
36179 | Would n''t it pay to get a detective on his track? |
36179 | Would you remember the place where he jumped off? |
36179 | Yes, and what do you think? |
36179 | Yes, but suppose that she cares for Waltham and his money more than she cares for me? |
36179 | Yes, but, Sam, what am I going to do if that money is n''t gotten back? 36179 You did n''t see them, did you?" |
36179 | You do n''t mean there is anything wrong between you and Grace, do you? |
36179 | You do n''t suppose they were going to stop at Brill? |
36179 | You have n''t any idea where he was stopping? |
36179 | You have n''t heard anything more regarding the money? |
36179 | You mean the road that was so thick with dust? |
36179 | You mean to say you did n''t meet Blackie Crowden at Bissette''s? |
36179 | You see, I-- I----"Is it that Chester Waltham? |
36179 | You think you are going to run things to suit yourself, do n''t you? 36179 You were n''t the young man who lost the money?" |
36179 | You will do all you can to find my brother? |
36179 | A young millionaire, eh? |
36179 | And do you think you''ll wish you were back at Brill if ever you get married?" |
36179 | And so you are trying to connect me up with that rascal, are you? |
36179 | And then he added:"Spud, did you notice the looks of that horse when he dashed past us?" |
36179 | And what about that money he was to get for me?" |
36179 | And what do you think? |
36179 | Are you friends of his?" |
36179 | But I do n''t know how we are going to find out the truth about that, and what good will it do us if we do?" |
36179 | But of one thing I wish to be sure, Rover-- did you aim at Mr. Fogg, or was the snowballing unintentional?" |
36179 | But the question is, where did he go? |
36179 | But then he added hastily:"Was that your horse, Grisley?" |
36179 | But what in the world am I to do?" |
36179 | But what''s the use of being so backward? |
36179 | CHAPTER V AT THE RAILROAD STATION"See anybody, Sam?" |
36179 | Ca n''t you and Spud go after that rascal?" |
36179 | Congratulate us._"Are n''t you going to stay to have a dance?" |
36179 | Could n''t we have just the best times ever?" |
36179 | Did Grace get you on the''phone?" |
36179 | Did he steal the turnout?" |
36179 | Did n''t you notice we had the door locked? |
36179 | Did that gardener who put the diamond ring in the inkwell ever come back to work at the seminary?" |
36179 | Did that horse run away with him? |
36179 | Did you fall out of the cutter, or were you attacked?" |
36179 | Do either of you recognize this print?" |
36179 | Do n''t I hear another sleigh coming?" |
36179 | Do n''t you know me?" |
36179 | Do n''t you think I had better wait outside?" |
36179 | Do n''t you think a man can be married and still keep full of fun?" |
36179 | Do you think we had better stop there for dinner, Tom?" |
36179 | Do you think you know the horse, Sam?" |
36179 | Do you want to come along?" |
36179 | Has he got four thousand dollars?" |
36179 | Has he proposed to her?" |
36179 | Have you any idea?" |
36179 | Have you had any more trouble with Miss Harrow, or the others?" |
36179 | Hoover?" |
36179 | How about you?" |
36179 | How did you make out?" |
36179 | How is Grace?" |
36179 | How is he going to earn it-- writing poetry? |
36179 | However, now that I know that your name is Philander Tubblets Williams, do n''t you think you''d like to ride down to Ashton with us? |
36179 | I hope you did n''t spend it?" |
36179 | I suppose you''ll nail them up in your den?" |
36179 | I thought you had left college?" |
36179 | I wonder if he is much hurt?" |
36179 | If Grace has been going out with this Chester Waltham, why has n''t she said something to me about it? |
36179 | If they ca n''t get it back, what ever will Songbird and the Sandersons do?" |
36179 | If you do n''t behave yourself and do n''t treat her like a lady I''ll-- I''ll----""Well, what will you do?" |
36179 | Is that a threat?" |
36179 | My old friend Tubby here? |
36179 | Now, if the man who did the deed was at the bank when you drew the money, how did he get here in time to hold you up?" |
36179 | Of course he was going to take Dora along?" |
36179 | Of course you wo n''t pay any such bill as this?" |
36179 | Oh, are you sure it is n''t serious? |
36179 | Rover?" |
36179 | Rover?" |
36179 | Sanderson''s?" |
36179 | She was quickly told and then asked:"Why did n''t they take my brother along with them?" |
36179 | So you came home to get cleaned up, eh? |
36179 | THE END_ This Is n''t All!_ Would you like to know what became of the good friends you have made in this book? |
36179 | The dancing continued for some time but then, of a sudden, came a cry from Dora:"Where are Sam and Grace? |
36179 | Want a man arrested?" |
36179 | Want to ketch that feller?" |
36179 | Wh- where did you co- come from?" |
36179 | What are you after?" |
36179 | What are you doing here?" |
36179 | What brings you here?" |
36179 | What can I do for you?" |
36179 | What do you mean by such actions?" |
36179 | What do you mean by that?" |
36179 | What do you think I am? |
36179 | What do you think I work for?" |
36179 | What does this mean?" |
36179 | What have you to say?" |
36179 | What is it all about?" |
36179 | What is the next station the train will stop at?" |
36179 | What package?" |
36179 | What room is he in?" |
36179 | What would you do about it?" |
36179 | What''s that ahead?" |
36179 | What-- er-- did-- er-- you do that for?" |
36179 | What?" |
36179 | Whatever brought you here? |
36179 | When are you going to start things?" |
36179 | Where are you?" |
36179 | Where did that horse come from?" |
36179 | Where is Songbird-- do you know anything about him?" |
36179 | Where is your father? |
36179 | Where?" |
36179 | Who are you?" |
36179 | Who did it? |
36179 | Why do n''t you get-- er-- er-- some cream puffs and chocolate éclares and er-- and-- er-- and mint kisses and things like that, you know?" |
36179 | Why in the world did n''t I look where I was driving, instead of rushing right over such a prime collection of rough stones?" |
36179 | Will you fasten it before I go?" |
36179 | Will you go along?" |
36179 | Wo n''t you please help me?" |
36179 | Would n''t you be apt to think that it was a pretty mean piece of business?" |
36179 | Would you like to read other stories continuing their adventures and experiences, or other books quite as entertaining by the same author? |
36179 | ai n''t this some storm? |
36179 | can you tell me where these people live?'' |
36179 | can you turn around?" |
36179 | challenged the young millionaire, and then as he drew closer he added:"Oh, the Rovers, eh? |
36179 | did he really say that?" |
36179 | do n''t you want to come with us?" |
36179 | do you mean to threaten me?" |
36179 | do you really mean you are going to have those things for a spread?" |
36179 | do you suppose that other horse was running away, and this fellow fell out?" |
36179 | do you think that money would make any difference to me?" |
36179 | gasped Ada Waltham,"is it really you? |
36179 | he''s pretty bitter over the loss of that money, is n''t he, Sam?" |
36179 | how can you ask such a question?" |
36179 | how could he have been?" |
36179 | is n''t it?" |
36179 | is n''t the check receipt enough?" |
36179 | is that fellow crazy?" |
36179 | she cried, and then added:"Who''s that with you?" |
36179 | so that''s what''s going on, is it?" |
36179 | that was a dandy catch by Rover, was n''t it?" |
36179 | what does it mean?" |
36179 | what have you done with the front handles of your cognomen, anyway? |
36179 | what in the world shall we do?" |
36179 | what kept you so long?" |
36179 | where is Songbird to- day?" |
36179 | why did n''t you tell me you were going to get up?" |
36179 | will you?" |
36179 | you do n''t mean that-- that something has happened to John?" |
54121 | A''tition, is it,said Jack"an''what mun aw do wi''it nah aw''ve getten it?" |
54121 | Ah, yo''ken, yo''ken,said Molly, brokenly,"who but Fairbanks ruined my young life?" |
54121 | Am I never to be done with that Tom Pinder? |
54121 | An what mak''o''a gown do yo''ca''that? |
54121 | An''did he? |
54121 | An''if th''advertisin''comes to nowt, what then? |
54121 | An''now what''s to be done about th''little''un? |
54121 | An''what did n''t ta tak''th''shop for, Tom? 54121 An''what for should''nt Dorothy see what yo''two men blinked yo''r een at?" |
54121 | An''what wer''text? |
54121 | An''wheer are yo''buyin''yo''r wool? |
54121 | An''who''ll stop me? |
54121 | An''why canno''Jones speik it aat plain same as Pinder? |
54121 | An''yo''stabled th''mare aw nivver heerd th''stable door oppen? |
54121 | And Fairbanks, the landlady, the midwife? 54121 And Pinder''ll have to set another lawyer on?" |
54121 | And did he? |
54121 | And do n''t_ you_ believe in God? |
54121 | And do you remember the text, father? |
54121 | And do you think he does n''t know it? 54121 And hath he not repented and would have made amends? |
54121 | And how did he make them? |
54121 | And is it true? |
54121 | And is that all you have to tell me, Mr. Tom Tinker? |
54121 | And is that what you call telling me a secret? 54121 And it is against this profit your sensitive soul rebels, your dainty fingers will not touch?" |
54121 | And she? |
54121 | And thank the missus kindly, Miss Dorothy, my respects; but whativver''s this? |
54121 | And that is? |
54121 | And that''ll cost_ him_ money, win or lose? |
54121 | And that''s what they call law, is it? |
54121 | And that''s what yo''ca''gooid news, is it, Dorothy? 54121 And the poor woman?" |
54121 | And those? |
54121 | And those? |
54121 | And what about Miss Baxter''s apprentice? |
54121 | And what did Tom say to it all? |
54121 | And what is your attainable Utopia, Miss Dorothy? |
54121 | And what''s that, Lucy? |
54121 | And who may you please to be? |
54121 | And why are you anxious powder and shot should be spent on Pinder? |
54121 | And why pray, Miss Pale- face? |
54121 | And you Tom,--and then with a hesitation as though in doubt,"I mean, Mr. Pinder, you will take something before you cross those terrible hills?" |
54121 | And you believe them? |
54121 | And you declare them as facts? |
54121 | And you, Dorothy, how long have you loved me? |
54121 | And you? |
54121 | And your glass of-- bitter? 54121 And, roughly speaking, does n''t a man''s spending power bear a sort of proportion to his earning power?" |
54121 | Ar''t sure, Tom? |
54121 | Are we safe here? |
54121 | Are you Mr. Tinker''s niece? 54121 Are you acting on his advice, uncle? |
54121 | Are you better, Tom? |
54121 | Are you quite sure you feel strong enough to hear a rather long story, Tom, or would you rather wait? |
54121 | Aw reckon, Tom, as ha''tha''ll be goin''to Aenon Chapel after tha''rt we d? |
54121 | Aye nowt to grumble at, an''we Aleck? 54121 Aye, aye, if all''s weel aw''st be poorly th''day after, sha''not aw? |
54121 | Aye? |
54121 | Be yo''Mr. Tinker, sir? |
54121 | Been asked? |
54121 | But I thought...."Yes, you thought? |
54121 | But am I really to understand, Miss Tinker, that you propose to spend your money in helping my clients in fighting your own uncle? |
54121 | But could n''t you go lower down the stream? 54121 But her name? |
54121 | But in what can I help you, Miss Tinker? 54121 But that seems just a little absurd, do n''t you think?" |
54121 | But the evidence? |
54121 | But what about Lucy? |
54121 | But what''s all this talk abaat a newfangled road o''payin''th''hands? |
54121 | But what''s it all about, Betty? 54121 But what''s this Admirable Crichton to do with Lucy''s better looks?" |
54121 | But what? |
54121 | But where''s your bonnet, Hannah, and your hat, Lucy? |
54121 | But you are certain to win in the end, or is there a glorious uncertainty about that? |
54121 | But your labour? |
54121 | But, Tom, whose duty is it to see to these things? |
54121 | By the way, Aleck, did yo''say owt to Mr. Whitelock about th''chrisenin''? 54121 Ca n''t yo''shut th''door after yo'', Tom Pinder,"exclaimed Betty,"or do yo''think yo''re big enough to do for a door yersen?" |
54121 | Ca n''t you take him on to th''farm, Fairbanks? |
54121 | Can I come in? |
54121 | Can you swim? |
54121 | Can you tell me the meaning of this locket? 54121 Come to sign your will, Mr. Tinker? |
54121 | Could n''t you allow him the name of a victory if he promised to let things go on just as they were, and you had nothing to pay those greedy lawyers? 54121 Did she speak, is there anything to show who or what she is?" |
54121 | Do n''t you think we had better know more about your Co- op? |
54121 | Do the creases show very much? |
54121 | Do they really say so? |
54121 | Do you understand me? |
54121 | Does that Tom Pinder live at Garside''s yet? |
54121 | Eh? |
54121 | Finished? |
54121 | For your sake? 54121 Go to see your sick friend?" |
54121 | H''m; that sounds like adding venture to venture, does n''t it? |
54121 | Has th''buzzer gone, Hannah? |
54121 | Has th''buzzer gone? |
54121 | Have I been poorly? |
54121 | Have yo''counted it? |
54121 | How came that weal across your cheek? |
54121 | How do you manage it? |
54121 | How would ta like to be we d, lass? 54121 I beg your pardon, Miss, but is Mr. Tinker at home? |
54121 | I beg your pardon, what did you say, Miss Dorothy? |
54121 | I hope,said Mr. Jones, at length,"I hope your teaching is based on the cardinal principles of Christianity?" |
54121 | I said, what about Miss Baxter''s apprentice? |
54121 | I wonder why Dorothy mentioned the twenty- first of May next? |
54121 | I''ve bales and bales left over from th''last shearing, have n''t we, Aleck? |
54121 | Is Tom_ very_ dear to you, Lucy? |
54121 | Is he awake, Dorothy? |
54121 | Is it serious, do you know, Jack? |
54121 | Is n''t it rather out of the way? 54121 Is n''t she a pictur''?" |
54121 | Is n''t this th''spot at Tom Pinder works at? |
54121 | Is she as nice as she is pretty? |
54121 | Is she i''th''chamber? |
54121 | Is that what you call eating arrowroot, sir? 54121 Is there any chance of my being able to get across the yard to the office?" |
54121 | It came to th''worst then? |
54121 | It''s safe enew wheer it is, is n''t it? |
54121 | It''s to''prentice him to th''blacksmith, ca n''t ta see? |
54121 | Little thanks to you,thought Tom, but what use to say? |
54121 | May I accompany you, Miss Tinker? 54121 Meaning that my uncle has gone to law with his former apprentice from some petty feeling of jealousy, or just to cripple him or even ruin him?" |
54121 | Mind where you''re walking, will you? |
54121 | Mr. Black, where is my mother? |
54121 | Mr. Black,he asked one day,"where is my mother?" |
54121 | Mrs. Tinker, perhaps? |
54121 | Nay, Miss Dorothy, I would I might say my say-- but, perhaps, you do n''t care to know our plans? |
54121 | Noah, sen yo''? 54121 Nooah,"answered Sam, somewhat mollified by the implied compliment;"nooah, what do you want?" |
54121 | Now Ben,said Tom, cheerily,"I''m ready, are you?" |
54121 | Now, how shall I begin? |
54121 | Now, what do you mean, Mr. Pinder, standing there swinging that basket like one of those boats in a fair that make you dizzy to look at them? 54121 Quick, quick, where''s Lucy? |
54121 | So aw''ve caught o'', have aw, yo''young gallows bird? 54121 So you''ve lost your application for an_ interim_ injunction?" |
54121 | Suppose I have a complaint to make against a firm higher up the stream, what are the proceedings to be taken? |
54121 | Th''dead''s soon away wi''; but what abart th''child here? |
54121 | Tha''s no bahn to th''Co- op Gospel- shop, are ta? |
54121 | That''s plain speaking,went on Mr. Tinker,"but where''s the £300 to come from? |
54121 | That''s strong, Ben, is n''t it? |
54121 | The babe? |
54121 | Then what is there to look so gloomy about? 54121 Then you expected to lose?" |
54121 | Then you would give us your custom? |
54121 | This is the lad, then, Mr. Redfearn wrote to me about? 54121 Tom?" |
54121 | Was he for sure? |
54121 | Was it long gone sir? |
54121 | Weel, were n''t aw tellin''yo''? 54121 Well what is it?" |
54121 | Well, Aleck, tha wer''tellin''me,said Redfearn,"tha''s seen Mr. Whitelock an''th''sexton an''th''undertaker, an''all''s arranged?" |
54121 | Well, I could pay him out, I suppose? |
54121 | Well, but, what''s to be done with him? |
54121 | Well, what about them? |
54121 | Well, what is it yo''would n''t be capped at? |
54121 | Well, what is it, Hannah? |
54121 | Well? |
54121 | Well? |
54121 | Well? |
54121 | Well? |
54121 | Well? |
54121 | Well? |
54121 | What about the plaintiff''s costs? |
54121 | What am I doing here? 54121 What are ta''fidgettin''abaat, Luke?" |
54121 | What could yo''do wi''a child i''th''hut, you numskull? |
54121 | What do you complain about, fouling or improperly tapping your supply? |
54121 | What do you mean, Pinder? 54121 What do you mean, sir? |
54121 | What does this mean? |
54121 | What in the name of common sense is a Bill in Chancery? 54121 What is a love- child?" |
54121 | What manner of man is he? |
54121 | What shall I read, Lucy? |
54121 | What would you say to that insolent young upstart at Co- op Mill? |
54121 | What''s a love child, Jack? |
54121 | What''s come ovver thee, Tom? 54121 What''s her name? |
54121 | What''s ta thinkin''on, Tom? |
54121 | What''s that? |
54121 | What''s the culvert for? |
54121 | What''s your will? |
54121 | What, not to Lucy? |
54121 | Wheer''s yo''r een, Tom? |
54121 | When can he come? |
54121 | Where am I? |
54121 | Where''s Peggy? |
54121 | Wherever does all the water come from and how could they manage to trap it like this? |
54121 | Whitsuntide is it, next week? 54121 Who is it?" |
54121 | Who''d ha''thowt it, but whooa i''th''name o''wonder can it be? |
54121 | Who''s Lucy Garside? |
54121 | Who? 54121 Why are you getting flowers of a Sunday: Dorothy? |
54121 | Why do n''t you marry yourself, Jabez? 54121 Why dunno yo''offer to tak''him to Fairbanks?" |
54121 | Why so? |
54121 | Why, aunt, how can you forget? 54121 Why, does n''t ta see, tha''rt Dorothy''s choice?" |
54121 | Why,exclaimed Wimpenny,"whose mill is it?" |
54121 | Will she ever get to her story? |
54121 | Would you have cared very much, Dorothy? |
54121 | Yes, besides? |
54121 | Yes, she''d have guessed? |
54121 | Yo''could make it, easy for th''bairn? |
54121 | Yo''ll be god- mother, Betty, na''who''ll stand godfather? |
54121 | Yo''n said nowt, Mr. Black; what''s to be done wi''th''child? |
54121 | You can hold out till May 21st? |
54121 | You exalt the Son at the expense of the Father? |
54121 | You know Mr. Pinder, of Holmfirth? |
54121 | You know uncle has been very busy lately, putting in new machinery? |
54121 | You say''rightly expects,''why rightly? |
54121 | You will be good to Dorothy? |
54121 | You wo n''t leave Holmfirth, will you, Tom? |
54121 | _ And_ empty- headed? |
54121 | _ Where_ do you say you come from? |
54121 | ''Twill be his mother''s name?" |
54121 | ''Wo n''t your ludship adjourn, now?'' |
54121 | --the young lawyer raised his long white hand to his mouth and coughed very slightly"not for Lucy''s sake?" |
54121 | A better sort of prescription than a doctor''s, eh?" |
54121 | A pretty Christmas_ we_ are likely to have; but is it any message you can leave?" |
54121 | All the world knew that Martha would have money, but none the less did all the world-- of Holmfirth-- gape and exclaim with its"Did yo''evver?" |
54121 | An''what abaat heeapin''up stores o''riches i''this world wheer moth an''rust doth corrupt an''thieves break through an''steal? |
54121 | An''what for? |
54121 | And what thought Martha? |
54121 | And who''s the luckless she? |
54121 | And, after all, was she so very plain? |
54121 | Ar''t deead?" |
54121 | Are your plans settled once for all?" |
54121 | Aw onest lost a cow for three week-- yo''moind on it, Aleck?" |
54121 | Aw put it to yo''Tom, wod yo''ha''done it yersen?" |
54121 | Aw''ll just ax yo''if yo''wer to steal th''vicar''s cooat, or poise his shins for''i m, wheer do''st think tha''d sleep to- neet? |
54121 | Aw''ve nooan bin idle, an''what does ta think aw''ve getten to tell thee?" |
54121 | Brougham?" |
54121 | But Pinder fan her did n''t ta, lad?" |
54121 | But do n''t you think you might have consulted me?" |
54121 | But has ta thowt o''onything thi sen?" |
54121 | But how retreat now that all the world was saying that Tom Pinder was more than a match for Jabez Tinker? |
54121 | But how? |
54121 | But there''s never no telling, is there, Mr. Tinker? |
54121 | But this locket, speak, Tom, what does it mean?" |
54121 | But we Nonconformists are not so narrow as our Church friends, eh? |
54121 | But what ails Pinder?" |
54121 | But what are they going to do?" |
54121 | But what''s the odds? |
54121 | But what''s the use of talking? |
54121 | But which way were you going, uphill, or down?" |
54121 | But will th''money run to it?" |
54121 | But you failed in that? |
54121 | But you will not be a very bloated capitalist, will you, Tom?" |
54121 | But you wo n''t be hard on th''little lass, will yo'', Jabez?" |
54121 | By the bye, whose field do you have on Monday for your gala? |
54121 | Ca n''t you find a seat somewhere?" |
54121 | Ca n''t you let it drop?" |
54121 | Can you credit it? |
54121 | Can you forget the wrong I did your mother, and forgive the father who can never forgive himself?" |
54121 | Can you trust me?" |
54121 | Could mortal man do less? |
54121 | Could n''t I have a chop or a steak? |
54121 | Did he charge you''six-- an''-eight''for it? |
54121 | Did n''t I tell you? |
54121 | Did n''t''oo, Aleck?" |
54121 | Do n''t you mind that pretty, rosy Lucy Garside, that used to be in your class at the Sunday School? |
54121 | Do you ever meet this Pinder there?" |
54121 | Do you mean his patience or his means?" |
54121 | Do you see much of them? |
54121 | Do you understand that?" |
54121 | Do''st think there''ll be sossidge wi''it? |
54121 | Does Tom,--Mr. Pinder, take it much to heart?" |
54121 | Does n''t it savour of conceit to set yourselves apart as people better and wiser than their neighbours?" |
54121 | Does she go to our chapel?" |
54121 | Does this Moll o''Stute''s still live?" |
54121 | Dorothy pouted, but obliged,"Behold, thine handmaiden,"she said,"what wills my lord?" |
54121 | Dun they let yo''smoke i''this fine room, Tom? |
54121 | Garstang?" |
54121 | Give me a stiff''un o''rum hot wi''sugar an''a splash o''lemon; an''yo''Aleck, will''t ha''a pint o''mulled?" |
54121 | Has it occurred to you that Miss Dorothy may marry?" |
54121 | Have n''t I always done my duty by you?" |
54121 | Have you any idea what the costs may amount to?" |
54121 | Have you had a good market?" |
54121 | How are we this morning?" |
54121 | How are you?" |
54121 | How can you do that on the lines you are laying down? |
54121 | How could he? |
54121 | How did you escape, and how came I here?" |
54121 | How many o''th''parsons i''this district, dun yo''think, has sided wi''th hand agen th''maisters? |
54121 | How mony helpin''s dun yo reely think aw mieet ha''wi''out bein thowt greedy? |
54121 | How old are you boy?" |
54121 | How was she to be certain that what most people said was true, that her uncle was merely persecuting a rival in trade to crush him? |
54121 | How would they live if they could n''t? |
54121 | I can always alter it?" |
54121 | I can read a newspaper, make out a bill though it''s seldom called for i''my trade, thank the Lord, write a letter, and what more do I want? |
54121 | I really can not fancy you in a white apron, simpering over a counter and asking me''what''s the next article, miss?''" |
54121 | I understand you have a sort of service at your mill on Sunday afternoons?" |
54121 | I''d never no secrets fro''yo, Jabez, though yo''wer''always a bit close, were n''t tha, lad? |
54121 | I''th''Parish Church? |
54121 | I''th''Wesleyan Chapel? |
54121 | If I remember that it_ is_ my Master''s business, I sha n''t be so far wrong, shall I? |
54121 | Is he at th''mill? |
54121 | Is it anyone I know? |
54121 | Is it quite decent for a wench?" |
54121 | Is n''t Sam Buckley th''spinner at Wilberlee yet?" |
54121 | Is n''t ther''a law against it? |
54121 | Is that to die an untimely death? |
54121 | Is there in this wide, wide world a woman''s glass that does not tell a flattering tale to one, at least? |
54121 | It could n''t, eh?" |
54121 | It might be needed, who might say? |
54121 | It seems to me there''s something about law that forbids people to be intelligible when they''re talking of it?" |
54121 | It''ud ha''been a seet easier for thee nor startin''at th''Co- op?" |
54121 | Jones?" |
54121 | May I ask how old you are?" |
54121 | Mr. Tinker cried out:"Who''s that?" |
54121 | Neat, is n''t it?" |
54121 | Now is it a very bad case?" |
54121 | Now these water- foulings by Mr. Pinder, I suppose anyone can see them? |
54121 | Now what''s to be done?" |
54121 | Now which class of infringement do you complain of?" |
54121 | Now, good- bye,--you''re sure it''s green gloves?" |
54121 | Peggy, why do n''t you set some plates?" |
54121 | Pinder?" |
54121 | Pinder?" |
54121 | Pinder?" |
54121 | Rum start, is n''t it? |
54121 | Shall we join her?" |
54121 | Shut the door to, man,"cried a hearty voice;"do yo''want me to be blown into th''back- yard?" |
54121 | So long as the good work goes on, that''s the main thing is n''t it?" |
54121 | Sold forty head o''beast an''bought thirty as fine cattle as ever yo''clapped e''en on, eh, Aleck? |
54121 | Sykes?" |
54121 | Talk abaat bowin''th''knee to Baal?" |
54121 | Talks like a judge does n''t he? |
54121 | Tall, you say? |
54121 | Tell me, at our village Co- op does n''t a member''s dividend depend on the amount of his purchases?" |
54121 | Th''question is, what mun Tom do when he''s free?" |
54121 | Tha does n''t want a whole field to thissen, does ta? |
54121 | Tha''rt nooan bahn to duff when things are lookin''up a bit? |
54121 | Tha''s nivver crossed him i''owt, has ta, Tom?" |
54121 | There remained the hundred pounds, and the question was not easy of answer, what should he do with it? |
54121 | There''s Stephen''s th''Wesleyan minister an''Chartist he cam''to Huddersfield wheer had he to talk do''st think? |
54121 | Tinker?" |
54121 | Tom what? |
54121 | Was Dorothy honest with herself? |
54121 | Was it possible that this very sedate young man could guess beyond his brief? |
54121 | Was she justified in secretly aiding and abetting his enemy, even if that enemy were an enemy_ malgrà © lui_? |
54121 | Well, I''m ready, and pray, who is to be my''honourable opponent,''--that''s the expression, is n''t it? |
54121 | What about your scheme of Co- operative production on advanced lines? |
54121 | What do they care whether yo''win or looise? |
54121 | What do''st think, Lucy, has he said owt to yo''abaat it?" |
54121 | What does ta want to kno''for? |
54121 | What does_ ta_ mak on it, Hannah?" |
54121 | What have my likes to do with it? |
54121 | What more is there?" |
54121 | What ses ta, Betty?" |
54121 | What shall we do? |
54121 | What shall we do?" |
54121 | What''s his name?" |
54121 | What''s that word-- inter summat?" |
54121 | What_ could_ he talk about? |
54121 | What_ has_ Mr. Pinder done?" |
54121 | Wheer i''all th''parish will yo find a freer hand or a bigger heart nor Tom o''Fairbanks? |
54121 | When these are paid and other outlays deducted, there remains, or does n''t remain sometimes, what the capitalist calls his profit?" |
54121 | When will you have the will ready, Wimpenny?" |
54121 | Where''s Ben? |
54121 | Where''s Betty?" |
54121 | Where''s Jack?" |
54121 | Which way did ta think o''takkin''?" |
54121 | Whither flee? |
54121 | Who could wark wi''that blethrin''brass band brayin''up an''down th''street?" |
54121 | Who was she? |
54121 | Who''s it fro''?" |
54121 | Why is n''t Lucy here?" |
54121 | Will you be my wife?" |
54121 | Will you find the difference always in favour of the Christian?" |
54121 | Wimpenny?" |
54121 | Wo n''t there be the usual school treat this Whitsuntide?" |
54121 | Would you mind----?" |
54121 | Would you, could you speak instead of me? |
54121 | Yea or nay, or would you like to think it over?" |
54121 | Yer''none yersen tha morn, an''to be sure which on us is? |
54121 | Yo''know th''dam aboon Hall''s papper- mill? |
54121 | Yo''n bin to th''Baptis''Chapel, wheer Jabez Tinker goes?" |
54121 | Yonderwards, in the other valley, is your future home; what trials, what labours there await you, who shall say? |
54121 | You believe in Christ too, do n''t you?" |
54121 | You do n''t mean to say that if you, say, are the designer or the traveller, you are to draw no more profit out of the concern than a teamer?" |
54121 | You intend to try again?" |
54121 | You know something about co- operation?" |
54121 | You will let me take them, aunt Martha, wo n''t you?" |
54121 | You wo nt let her forget her mother or her worthless dad, will you, Jabez? |
54121 | You''re sure, now, uncle is going to win this case?" |
54121 | You''re the blood- sucker, I suppose?" |
54121 | _ Why_ was he different from other lads? |
54121 | an''what''ud ha''happened, now, just for argyment''s sake, if yo''d dropped this ere precious dockyment i''stead o''''liverin''it to me?" |
54121 | asked Mrs. Garside,"which dun yo''think''s th''blindest, Lucy, a bat or a mole?" |
54121 | asked Tom,"and how came we to be talking about them?" |
54121 | do n''t they?" |
54121 | does n''t it strike yo''i''that leet, Tom?" |
54121 | is n''t the view down the valley just lovely?" |
54121 | queried Dorothy,"who in the name of goodness is Tom?" |
54121 | queried Lucy,"finished?" |
54121 | these quiet uns is often as deep an''dark as a pit, bu''we''re all human, eh?" |
54121 | they would n''t, eh?" |
54121 | uncle, what have they done now? |
54121 | went on Ben very fiercely, to hide his softer feelings,"wheer''s thi e''en? |
54121 | why should n''t I cut in myself? |
57319 | A ching- ching? |
57319 | Agueda and I have spent more than one night up there, have we not, Agueda? 57319 Agueda,"said Aneta, as they were drying themselves in the sun,"will Castaño carry double?" |
57319 | Agueda,said Beltran,"bring my mother''s cross here, will you? |
57319 | Am I going right, Aneta? |
57319 | Am I to remain on the island, uncle? |
57319 | Ana, will you give this lady to me? |
57319 | Ana,she whispered,"Ana, who is there to help me?" |
57319 | And El Rey? |
57319 | And I must tell the Seño''? 57319 And I?" |
57319 | And am I to obey the Señor or the Señorita? |
57319 | And are the men of Palmacristi too great cowards to fight those wretches? |
57319 | And by whom, pray? |
57319 | And did I not hear you say that this Señor Escobeda hated your father, and also hated you? |
57319 | And did some one, perhaps, mix the wood ashes with them? |
57319 | And do you have no curtains at the windows? |
57319 | And do you think that will compensate me? |
57319 | And for the good God''s sake, tell me how you got here, Señorita, and will the Señor allow me to sit down? 57319 And for the love of the saints, where is our Don Gil departing to at this hour of the night? |
57319 | And he brings you news? |
57319 | And he will dare to attack us here, in our home? |
57319 | And it is low tide at ten o''clock to- night? |
57319 | And it was then that he wrote the note? |
57319 | And leave me? |
57319 | And may not cousins kiss? |
57319 | And must I make brains for every muchacho[3] between here and the Port of Entry? 57319 And no one can tamper with the light, I suppose?" |
57319 | And said--? |
57319 | And shall I tell the Seño''all, then? |
57319 | And the Señor answered--? |
57319 | And we shall have no moon? |
57319 | And what do you do with them, Gremo? |
57319 | And what is that? |
57319 | And what shall I do if we are attacked while you are away? |
57319 | And when does the child get a chance to receive notes from the Señores? |
57319 | And where but here in this very spot? |
57319 | And where is that? |
57319 | And where is your friend, Beltran? |
57319 | And who told you that you might give my food away? |
57319 | And why not come with me, Agueda? |
57319 | And why not, I should like to know? |
57319 | And why should not the little one ride him, also? 57319 And you could not get that ladder, Andres?" |
57319 | And you will not take pity on my loneliness? |
57319 | And you will remain? |
57319 | Andres, do you shoot as well as of old? |
57319 | Are we to go on board, Gil? |
57319 | Are you going to send me to him, uncle? |
57319 | Are you going to tell me why Rotiro came here to- day? |
57319 | Are you, then, the father of that little El Rey? |
57319 | At Los Santos? |
57319 | At about what time is the red lantern lighted on Los Santos? |
57319 | At what is my cousin laughing? |
57319 | Beltran? |
57319 | But how can I put on my slipper with those pegs in the heel? |
57319 | But if I choose not to go home? |
57319 | But if I will not go? |
57319 | But must we lock the door? |
57319 | But will you, Gremo? |
57319 | But you will not use it, sweet? |
57319 | Ca n''t you think a little for me, Ana? 57319 Can not Guillermina pack my bag?" |
57319 | Can not get loose from what? |
57319 | Can we bathe, Aneta? |
57319 | Can you come down by the river? |
57319 | Can you get him away without her? 57319 Can you steal out into the corridor and down the two little steps, and into the rum room, Ana, and hear what is being said?" |
57319 | Can you tell me where is the casa of Gremo, the light- keeper? |
57319 | Can you think anything else? 57319 Cousin, are you coming?" |
57319 | Dad, do you hear? 57319 De Señorit''send fo''me?" |
57319 | De li''l laidy wan''shoe off? 57319 Dead? |
57319 | Did I speak aloud? 57319 Did I? |
57319 | Did the Señor enjoy his sail across the bay? |
57319 | Did you call, uncle? 57319 Did you ever know him before, cousin? |
57319 | Did you ever see such a God- forsaken place? |
57319 | Did you see that? |
57319 | Do n''t you think you''ve made spectacle enough of yourself? |
57319 | Do you hear anything, padre? 57319 Do you hear my question?" |
57319 | Do you know the palm grove up on the far hill, on the other side of the grand camino? |
57319 | Do you know what she said to me at the last-- at the last, uncle? |
57319 | Do you know, Agueda,he said presently, looking steadily at her,"that you are better born than I?" |
57319 | Do you mean that we are to lock you in, El Rey? |
57319 | Do you mean to go alone? |
57319 | Do you not hear him off there now, cursing as usual? |
57319 | Do you not know that the young of our nation are fire and tow? |
57319 | Do you not know then that he is married? |
57319 | Do you really mean it, Felisa? |
57319 | Do you remember my mother, uncle? |
57319 | Do you see an iron bar anywhere, Raquel, in the bushes there on the left? |
57319 | Do you suppose rascals like Escobeda care for law? 57319 Do you think that Escobeda could have stopped the Coco, delayed her--?" |
57319 | Do you think that I can not read my enemy''s hand-- aye, and his meaning? 57319 Do you think that I shall welcome death because I may die in your company? |
57319 | Does Roseta ever come there? |
57319 | Does it pain you, sweet? |
57319 | Does not the Señor know that the Señor Don Gil Silencio- y- Estrada and the little Señora have gone to heaven? |
57319 | Does not the Señor know that the horses have stampeded? |
57319 | Does not the girl Agueda live there, at San Isidro? |
57319 | Does the Señora mean that I shall not eat the bread? |
57319 | Does the Señorita know that her door is open? 57319 Does the lad want me over there-- the Señor Silencio?" |
57319 | Escobeda? 57319 For me?" |
57319 | From the coffee merchant, I suppose, Señor? |
57319 | Guess from whom, Agueda; but how should you be able to guess? 57319 Had he seen the hat boxes?" |
57319 | Has the Señor forgotten that the Andres has gone to the Port of Entry? |
57319 | Have I come as far as Los Santos head? |
57319 | Have I not begged you? 57319 Have we come more than two miles, Gil?" |
57319 | Have you anything to play with, El Rey? |
57319 | Have you some glasses? |
57319 | Have you told him, Gremo? |
57319 | He does not live near it now? |
57319 | He has sent you a message, Gil? |
57319 | He must start early from the conuco? |
57319 | How can a woman climb up there? |
57319 | How dare she call you Beltran? |
57319 | How dare you bring that light? 57319 How dare you come here frightening the child? |
57319 | How dare you take that name upon your lips? |
57319 | How dare you treat me so? |
57319 | How did the Señor rescue you, my Sweet? 57319 How did you get out of the rancho, El Rey?" |
57319 | How did you manage, Gil? |
57319 | How do I go on from here? |
57319 | How do you know, Gremo? |
57319 | How is the sea, Andres? |
57319 | How many men can he muster, Gil? |
57319 | How old is the little thing? |
57319 | How, papa? 57319 I am as sorry as you can be, muchachita; but what can I do? |
57319 | I asked if the Señorit''would not ride the bull? |
57319 | I can not see what the governor has to do with me? |
57319 | I remember your mother; what of her? |
57319 | I? 57319 If I remain long enough, there will be flowers of all colors, will there not, cousin? |
57319 | If it pains me? 57319 Is it ready, Señorita?" |
57319 | Is that all, Ana? |
57319 | Is that what Andres wishes? |
57319 | Is the Señor Escobeda a nearer relative than you are, Ana? |
57319 | Is the child mad? |
57319 | Is there anything that I can ride, Uncle Adan? |
57319 | Is there anything wrong with her? |
57319 | Is this Silencio more to you than I am, then, Beltran? |
57319 | Is this the Brandon place? |
57319 | It is Agueda, is it not? 57319 It is right,"said Beltran,"and why should we wait? |
57319 | It may become a fort some day, who knows? |
57319 | May one of the peons take my horse? |
57319 | My Roseta, is that you? |
57319 | No, but I then have to ride a long way back to--"To--? |
57319 | No, papa, how could I remember him? 57319 Once more? |
57319 | Que es eso? |
57319 | Red light? 57319 Send you to him? |
57319 | Servant? 57319 Shall I drop from the window and run away? |
57319 | Shall I kill him, Señor? |
57319 | Shall I show the Señorita to her room? |
57319 | So this is Don Beltran''s little lady? |
57319 | So you would do that, would you? 57319 The Seño''Don Gil allow that I accommodate myself with a little ching- ching?" |
57319 | The Señor Silencio? |
57319 | The Señor knows the hacienda of Palmacristi? |
57319 | The Señor? |
57319 | The Señorita will get off her horse and come in? 57319 The brown bull? |
57319 | The espuela is dusty; shall brighten it, Señor? |
57319 | The first time? |
57319 | The hand of a Señor? 57319 The messenger is-- will you speak?" |
57319 | The power to accept it? |
57319 | Then you do not see that small thing over which the vultures hover? |
57319 | There will be no storm, vida mia, and if there is, has not the casa stood these many years? 57319 This way?" |
57319 | To the Señor? |
57319 | To the Señora on the veranda? |
57319 | Uncle Adan,she said,"is there a man who can take a message to the Señor?" |
57319 | Well? |
57319 | Were you going there when you called me from-- from-- down there? |
57319 | What are you doing with it? |
57319 | What do you mean? |
57319 | What do you want here? |
57319 | What do you want with me, Gremo? |
57319 | What do you want? |
57319 | What does she say? |
57319 | What does the Señor mean? |
57319 | What has he been doing now? |
57319 | What have I done to be sent away? 57319 What have I left, Agueda?" |
57319 | What have you there? |
57319 | What is it, Agueda? 57319 What is it, Gremo?" |
57319 | What is it, cousin? 57319 What is it, cousin?" |
57319 | What is it, my Heart? 57319 What is it?" |
57319 | What is that? |
57319 | What is the matter, Gil? 57319 What news, Gil? |
57319 | What shall we do now? |
57319 | What shall we sing? |
57319 | What terrible thing is that down there, Gremo? 57319 What was that, Gil?" |
57319 | What was the devilish message, Ana? |
57319 | What, dearest? |
57319 | What? 57319 When can they get the steamer off the sand spit, Señor? |
57319 | When do you think she will come, Señor? |
57319 | When will Roseta come? |
57319 | When? |
57319 | Where have I to go? |
57319 | Where is Andres? |
57319 | Where is he? |
57319 | Where is that girl, Raquel? |
57319 | Where is that lazy Ana? |
57319 | Where is the Don Beltran? |
57319 | Where is the Señorita going? |
57319 | Where is the cross, Agueda? 57319 Where shall we put the nurse?" |
57319 | Where should I go then, Agueda? |
57319 | Where to, Señora? |
57319 | Where was the precious rascal all this time? |
57319 | Where, then, is the pail of seed, Pablo? |
57319 | Which way, then? |
57319 | Who calls me? |
57319 | Who calls me? |
57319 | Who is he, little Felisa? 57319 Who is that man, cousin?" |
57319 | Who was that, Gil-- that man? 57319 Who will give you away?" |
57319 | Who, Escobeda? 57319 Who, uncle? |
57319 | Who? 57319 Whom did you see back of Troja?" |
57319 | Why could you not have told me, warned me, cautioned me? 57319 Why did I ever come to this accursed island? |
57319 | Why did you not warn us? |
57319 | Why did you place those wires there, cousin? |
57319 | Why do you go to- night? |
57319 | Why do you not speak to him? |
57319 | Why do you stay here? |
57319 | Why does he wish to see the Señor Anecito Rojas? |
57319 | Why have you come here? 57319 Why have you done no cacao planting to- day?" |
57319 | Why should I give it to you, uncle? |
57319 | Why will you persist in calling me Señor, Agueda? 57319 Why, mother?" |
57319 | Why, then, do you not go up there in the cool of the evening, Palandrez? 57319 Will the Señorita take her place?" |
57319 | Will you continue? 57319 Will you do something for me, Andres?" |
57319 | Will you leave my room? |
57319 | Would you like to come to San Isidro some time, El Rey? |
57319 | Would you like to ride the pretty little horse, El Rey? |
57319 | Would you saddle him, Natalio? |
57319 | Yes; do you know Agueda? |
57319 | You are a clever boy, Gil; but how about the future? 57319 You are still eating?" |
57319 | You can not see the beach from the casa; have you forgotten? 57319 You here, El Rey?" |
57319 | You live there? 57319 You went there?" |
57319 | You will dismount and let me send for some fruit, some coffee? |
57319 | You will go, dear Ana, you promise me, do you not? 57319 You will not leave me, Beltran-- cousin?" |
57319 | You will take some refreshment, Beltran? |
57319 | You would not do that? |
57319 | You, Agueda? |
57319 | Your grandfather, Gil, for me? |
57319 | Your uncle, where is he? |
57319 | _ I-- leave-- here?_Raquel had arisen, and was standing supporting herself by Ana''s shoulder. |
57319 | ''_ Gil!_''Do you see it? |
57319 | Agueda from San Isidro?" |
57319 | Agueda, good girl, you know the plantation of the Silencios, do you not? |
57319 | Agueda, why must you come here frightening my cousin? |
57319 | Agueda, with work dropped, finger still pressed between her small white teeth, answered, wonderingly:"A little child? |
57319 | Agueda?" |
57319 | Am I going away, Ana? |
57319 | Ana, what do you know? |
57319 | And cold? |
57319 | And does the Señor think that the Señor can come here to the casa of Palmacristi?" |
57319 | And then to Raquel,"Where did you see the girl Agueda?" |
57319 | And then, aloud,"What''s the matter, Dad?" |
57319 | And then, womanlike, not waiting for him to speak, she asked the question,"Is he coming to- night, Gil?" |
57319 | And what does the Señor think that I have to do with it?" |
57319 | And what is the hand of a Señor doing, lying along there on the shore?" |
57319 | And what more can the Señorita want than to have a gentleman, rich, handsome, devoted, offer her his hand in honourable marriage?" |
57319 | And whom did you have to tell, Señorita?" |
57319 | And why must you interfere? |
57319 | Are not you the first with me? |
57319 | Are you going to show me your fortress? |
57319 | Are you greater than God? |
57319 | Are you sure that the catch is secure? |
57319 | As they ran she asked,"Is there any sign of the Coco?" |
57319 | Aye, who were their people? |
57319 | But how did he get her, Adan? |
57319 | But should I fail-- and he is as good a shot as the island boasts-- Raquel, who would care for you? |
57319 | But what else remained for her but to appeal to Don Gil? |
57319 | But what was the haste? |
57319 | Can I be of any use? |
57319 | Can I get up the bank, Gremo?" |
57319 | Can you carry a note for me, Agueda?" |
57319 | Can you not see who it is? |
57319 | Can you not try to catch some tree or branch?" |
57319 | Could he break in the door?" |
57319 | Could he not rescue her when they were so near? |
57319 | Could it be only six months ago that she had lost her? |
57319 | Did you go up back of Troja for this?" |
57319 | Did you hear anything about his getting that band from Troja together?" |
57319 | Did you hear anything?" |
57319 | Did you remember that?" |
57319 | Did you see Don Mateo?" |
57319 | Did you see the Señor Escobeda? |
57319 | Do I not know?" |
57319 | Do n''t you think he would let me sit on the veranda?" |
57319 | Do they smell sweet, those air- plants?" |
57319 | Do you expect any-- any one-- Gil?" |
57319 | Do you hear me?" |
57319 | Do you hear? |
57319 | Do you intend to call upon my cousin to stand and deliver?" |
57319 | Do you know that I got the scarf in Naples, cousin?--that a Princess Pallavicini gave it to me? |
57319 | Do you know what they meant to do with her, Beltran? |
57319 | Do you not hear it? |
57319 | Do you not know there are the quicksands just beyond?" |
57319 | Do you not see a hoof just over beyond where the big bird lights?" |
57319 | Do you remember old Amadeo, who was struck by lightning? |
57319 | Do you remember, Agueda?" |
57319 | Do you see them, those fairies? |
57319 | Do you suppose if you asked me I would not find a way? |
57319 | Do you think it is the Señor Silencio''s messenger?" |
57319 | Do you think that I would have one of your grimy peons lay his black finger upon that scarf? |
57319 | Does he starve you? |
57319 | Does he think that I should be so stupid as to open them before his face? |
57319 | Does it seem so long, then? |
57319 | Don Noé had said,"Felisa, do you remember your Cousin Beltran, your mother''s nephew?" |
57319 | Finding fault so soon?" |
57319 | For then would the cheery voice which could no longer wait call from the veranda,"How are you this morning, little cousin?" |
57319 | For was not this Uncle Adan''s casa, and did not Don Beltran live with Uncle Adan? |
57319 | Had Don Gil asked,"Is the sea ink?" |
57319 | Had not the Señor Escobeda ordered her to do so, and was not his will her daily rule? |
57319 | Had she not lived here since the days of the old Don Oviedo? |
57319 | Has Roseta been here, Señor?" |
57319 | Have not I played there as a child? |
57319 | Have you forgotten that she brought my note to you that day?" |
57319 | Have you had dinner?" |
57319 | Have you never heard that peons should never try to think? |
57319 | He called after her,"Where are you going?" |
57319 | He could not collect them now, and if he could, of what use a skirmish in the road? |
57319 | He did not answer for a moment; then he said slowly:"Raquel, do you know what we should be doing were you not here?--I and my men?" |
57319 | He is a very fi--""Was he pleasant, or did he frown?" |
57319 | He look--""As much of a cut- throat as ever, I suppose?" |
57319 | Her only prop and stay withdrawn, what was there to count upon? |
57319 | How can I pack them unless I may open the drawer?" |
57319 | How can I send for you? |
57319 | How can one tell anything except by word of mouth? |
57319 | How could he ever have thought her even pretty? |
57319 | How could she trust a man like Don Mateo? |
57319 | How did Escobeda look?" |
57319 | How did you get back so soon--""And who told you that I was going to him? |
57319 | How does he suit you?" |
57319 | How is the little king, Andres?" |
57319 | How long should we be safe here? |
57319 | How? |
57319 | I assure the Seño''it was nothing worthy to hear; the Seño''would not--""He said--?" |
57319 | I have followers in plenty--""Those who follow you for love?" |
57319 | I wonder if you will save me?" |
57319 | I--""And why not to- day?" |
57319 | I--""Get there? |
57319 | If He can not save me, can you?" |
57319 | If she could take one ride, how many more might she not have? |
57319 | Is it the Señor E''cobeda, Señor?" |
57319 | Is n''t it lovely against my neck?" |
57319 | Is not that enough?" |
57319 | Is not the tea good?" |
57319 | Is she then carrying messages all about the country?" |
57319 | Is she your wife, Gremo?" |
57319 | Is that you, Marcoz Absalon? |
57319 | Is that you, Pedro Geredo? |
57319 | Is that you, Señor Silencio? |
57319 | Is the Señor Escobeda dead, then?" |
57319 | Is the Señorita perhaps the niece of the manager, Señor Adan?" |
57319 | Is the_ silla_ slipping?" |
57319 | Is there any whom I need fear?" |
57319 | It is you, Andres? |
57319 | Just think of putting a house-- I say, Beltran, who ever thought of putting your house down here in the valley?" |
57319 | Notice how he looks, how he speaks, what--""But the Seño''may not--""Still talking? |
57319 | Now, Agueda, how can we amuse the little thing?" |
57319 | Of whom do you speak?" |
57319 | Or within two and a half miles of the Casa de Caoba?_)"Very well, then. |
57319 | Pablo turned to Eduardo Juan, open- mouthed, as if to say,"Did you?" |
57319 | Palmacristi?" |
57319 | Porque hace Usted eso? |
57319 | Put up the sign? |
57319 | Raced over it as a boy? |
57319 | Safe with you? |
57319 | Say to him--""But how am I to get there, sweet? |
57319 | Shall we not trust those whom we love? |
57319 | She laughed a little as she asked:"Did your grandfather smuggle, Gil?" |
57319 | She wondered if this new blossoming in her heart were love? |
57319 | Should he begin at the first hour to throw away money among these shiftless peons? |
57319 | Should she love him? |
57319 | Should this northern Señorita come to be mistress here at San Isidro, what hold had he, or even Agueda herself, over its master? |
57319 | So I told--""You told? |
57319 | So evanescent was it that Gremo often said to himself,"Have they any scent after all?" |
57319 | Some bread, an egg-- a little_ ching- ching_?" |
57319 | Speak of her gently, I warn you-- I warn you--""Do you know who the man was who came to me just now?" |
57319 | The crops had never come in, as far as the Señora had discovered; and how could crops be paid for before they were gathered? |
57319 | The future? |
57319 | The question is, where is he, and when do you expect him here?" |
57319 | The southern ways, do you hear? |
57319 | These floods do not last long, do they, Agueda? |
57319 | They would be gone presently, and then she would wander forth in an opposite direction, down by the river perhaps, or over to-- where? |
57319 | To his shout of"Where are you going?" |
57319 | Was I going to awake him and ask permission to run away with his niece? |
57319 | Was it because she had always kept them cast down? |
57319 | Was it in disgust? |
57319 | Was it to be wondered at that Agueda rejoiced at Felisa''s coming defeat, at her imminent discomfiture, the moment that Beltran should see her? |
57319 | Was it worth her while? |
57319 | Was not Felisa waiting bareheaded down there by the river? |
57319 | We can garrison at your house?" |
57319 | We can not now help the Señor who lies there, can we, Señorita?" |
57319 | Well, what matter? |
57319 | What about women? |
57319 | What better tool and confidant could he procure than a peon who knew so little of times and seasons as Andres? |
57319 | What boots it to dwell upon the sufferings of a breaking heart? |
57319 | What can I do? |
57319 | What can she want?" |
57319 | What cares Marianna Romando? |
57319 | What could it be? |
57319 | What could make her more so? |
57319 | What did Beltran fear? |
57319 | What do you mean by that?" |
57319 | What do you want with me?" |
57319 | What else was her mission in life but to make his life as near Heaven as earthly existence could become? |
57319 | What have you to live for? |
57319 | What if Escobeda and his men should discover their retreat, and cut off escape at their destination? |
57319 | What if her eyes were small, her nose the veriest tilted tip, her nostrils and mouth large? |
57319 | What is it all about? |
57319 | What is it that you want, Agueda, child?" |
57319 | What is it that you want? |
57319 | What is it? |
57319 | What is it? |
57319 | What is it?" |
57319 | What is that paper that you hold in your hand, Raquel?" |
57319 | What is there to wait for? |
57319 | What more did she crave to know? |
57319 | What news? |
57319 | What question should she ask? |
57319 | What shall we do?" |
57319 | What time should you think it is, Aneta?" |
57319 | What to do? |
57319 | What was that, padre? |
57319 | What was the matter with this man? |
57319 | What was there imperceptible in Don Gil''s tone? |
57319 | What will become of the plantation if you do not obey what the Señor tells you?" |
57319 | What will become of us? |
57319 | What will the Señor say? |
57319 | What will the Señorita have? |
57319 | What will you show me, Gil? |
57319 | What would become of the two helpless women who had been so unfortunate? |
57319 | What, then, was it to a hard- working peon, what a grand señor like the Don Gil took into his mahogany house? |
57319 | When did the peon see meat in the days of the old Señor? |
57319 | When did you see fowl in a pot, except for the Señores? |
57319 | When do you think that he will let me go to the forest again?" |
57319 | When shall our wedding- day be, child?" |
57319 | When was the last one? |
57319 | When will Roseta come, Señor? |
57319 | When will Roseta come?" |
57319 | When, I ask? |
57319 | When? |
57319 | When?" |
57319 | Where am I going that I can send for you? |
57319 | Where are we, Señor? |
57319 | Where are we, for the love of God?" |
57319 | Where could she go? |
57319 | Where could she turn? |
57319 | Where do you get your information?" |
57319 | Where is that Truhan?" |
57319 | Where is the cacao, Pablo?" |
57319 | Where is the cook who does not taste in secret? |
57319 | Where was Ana, then? |
57319 | Where was the little child of whom she and Beltran had talked so much? |
57319 | Where, then, is Los Santos Head?" |
57319 | Where-- where am I to go?" |
57319 | Who am_ I_ to make promises, sweet? |
57319 | Who is the Señora on the veranda, Aneta?" |
57319 | Who knows? |
57319 | Who would go back? |
57319 | Why borrow trouble? |
57319 | Why can you never do as the Señor tells you? |
57319 | Why did you never tell me of it?" |
57319 | Why did you not send for the yacht before this?" |
57319 | Why do you say once more, cousin?" |
57319 | Why does that girl fear the storm so?" |
57319 | Why had he never noticed those eyes before? |
57319 | Why not leave it to me?" |
57319 | Why should I send you to him? |
57319 | Why was it? |
57319 | Why, my good girl, do n''t you know that is just why we wear such gowns, that people may see? |
57319 | Why, oh, why? |
57319 | Will the man never speak? |
57319 | Will you not tell me where I am going?" |
57319 | Would anything ever be as before? |
57319 | Would you like to come, child?" |
57319 | Yes, pay for it, but how? |
57319 | You are sure that we may trust him, Gil?" |
57319 | You have had a message from Escobeda?" |
57319 | You have kept it as a surprise?" |
57319 | You know it has always been my theory that a peon should not try to think, and why? |
57319 | You remember, perhaps, when she asked you, her little girl, to withdraw for a while, that she might speak with me alone?" |
57319 | You will come at once, eh, Beltran?" |
57319 | You will go?" |
57319 | give this to that-- that--''""That--?" |
57319 | he asked,"and some--""Water, Señor? |
57319 | how? |
57319 | said Don Gil, dryly,"did he send me a message, this very fine man?" |
57319 | said Gremo, raising up on his long leg,"where do you suppose I am to find the time to tell the padre? |
57319 | she exclaimed impatiently,"were the wood ashes mixed, then, with the cacao seeds?" |
57319 | that little path? |
57319 | the Señora will pardon me? |
57319 | the trunk of the old mahogany? |
57319 | what am I to do? |
57319 | what was that?" |
57319 | what was this? |
57319 | where is the Coco?" |
57319 | why did you not call me?" |
57319 | will the Señoritas please put the key on the window ledge?" |
57319 | you certainly heard something?" |