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 |
---|---|
33022 | And Spedito answered,"Then why did you trust us?" |
33022 | And the count fearing these words of Marco''s, said:"Why?" |
33022 | And the other replied,"If I could find a good way of escape, wouldst thou be content?" |
33022 | He was asked:"Who?" |
33022 | O you Pisans, what manner of golden money is yours?" |
33022 | The Principality=[?] |
33022 | This counsel pleased the Pope, but he said:"Whom do we will to be Emperor?" |
33022 | Who buys Manfred?" |
2363 | ( said he) what must we do, Aurelian? |
2363 | Am I to be the Sacrifice to expiate your Offences past; past ere I was born? |
2363 | But who can tell the astonishment Aurelian felt? |
2363 | How did she know this to be Aurelian, if he were? |
2363 | How? |
2363 | Nay farther, put it to the Extremity, What if she should upon farther Conversation with him proceed to Love him? |
2363 | No, I''ll own my Flame, and plead my Title too.--But hold, wretched Aurelian, hold, whither does thy Passion hurry thee? |
2363 | Or how could she consent to Marry a Man already Destined for another Woman? |
2363 | She asked him if he would endeavour to convey her to the Monastery she had told him of? |
2363 | Ungrateful and Undutiful Wretch( cry''d he)''how hast thou requited all my Care and Tenderness of thee? |
2363 | Well, what follow''d? |
2363 | What Hopes were there for her? |
2363 | What Promises did he ere make or I receive? |
2363 | Whither am I come? |
2363 | Whither, whither shall I fly, A poor unhappy Maid; To hopeless Love and Misery By my own Heart betray''d? |
2363 | alass, I know not what I say; How can he be False, or True, or any Thing to me? |
37793 | Signors,he said,"why would you confound and undo so good a city? |
37793 | Against whom would you fight? |
37793 | Against your own brothers? |
37793 | And when he saw him, he asked him:''Are you Messer Donato Alberti?'' |
37793 | Andrea Tafi, worker in mosaic( 1250?-1320? |
37793 | Back I shrink-- what is this I see and hear? |
37793 | But is not the reality even more beautiful than the dreamland Florence of Lapo Gianni''s fancy? |
37793 | Could Saint John there draw--''His camel- hair make up a painting- brush? |
37793 | Does he already smell the blood that his daughter will shed, fifty years later, on St. Bartholomew''s day? |
37793 | Has any echo of the Risorgimento reached them? |
37793 | How oft, within the time of thy remembrance, Laws, money, offices and usages Hast thou remodelled, and renewed thy members? |
37793 | In the parting one of his children said to him:''Father, why dost thou abandon us and leave us so desolate?'' |
37793 | Morto da Feltre( 1475?-1522? |
37793 | Niccolò di Piero Lamberti da Arezzo( 1360?-1444? |
37793 | O, wind, If Winter comes, can Spring be far behind?" |
37793 | Quante volte del tempo che rimembre, legge, moneta, offizio, e costume hai tu mutato, e rinnovato membre? |
37793 | Those amorous thoughts which were so lightly dressed, What are they when the double death is nigh? |
37793 | What victory shall ye have? |
37793 | What would one have? |
37793 | Where''s a hole, where''s a corner for escape? |
37793 | when thou shalt have found that there is no God, what wilt thou have done?" |
2464 | Then why would you, by your discords, reduce to slavery in a time of peace, that city, which so many powerful enemies have left free, even in war? 2464 What is it you imagine you can do, that would be an equivalent for the sweets of liberty, or make men lose the desire of their present conditions? |
2464 | And will anyone contend that the principles set forth by Machiavelli in his_ Prince_ or his_ Discourses_ have entirely perished from the earth? |
2464 | But were Machiavelli''s doctrines really new? |
2464 | But who is so simple as to be surprised at it? |
2464 | Did he discover them? |
2464 | Do you not observe with how much more moderation we bear defeat than you your victory? |
2464 | Has diplomacy been entirely stripped of fraud and duplicity? |
2464 | Has our country fostered us only to be her destroyer? |
2464 | Has she honored us that we may overwhelm her with disgrace? |
2464 | Have they relieved Furli, and rescued her from the hands of the duke? |
2464 | Have we been victorious only to effect her ruin? |
2464 | Have you considered the mighty things which the name of liberty implies to such a city as this, and how delightful it is to those who hear it? |
2464 | Have you forgotten that when disunited Castruccio, a low citizen of Lucca, subdued her? |
2464 | Now tell me, what law is there which forbids, disapproves, or condemns men for being pious, liberal, and benevolent? |
2464 | Now we would ask you, and have you answer on your honor, What is there yet ungranted, that you can, with any appearance of propriety, require? |
2464 | Once I possessed horses, arms, subjects, grandeur and wealth: can it be surprising that I part with them reluctantly? |
2464 | To what end will your divisions bring our city? |
2464 | To whom will they flee for assistance now? |
2464 | What can you expect from your disunion but subjugation? |
2464 | What else couldst thou, not from us merely, but from any others, have either had or expected? |
2464 | What greater disease can afflict a republic than slavery? |
2464 | What indomitable resolution need be apprehended from the people whom so many and such recent enmities have disunited? |
2464 | What injury have we done to justify so intense desire of our destruction? |
2464 | What more could we either give or promise thee? |
2464 | When will there be an end of your demands? |
2464 | Why break the long- continued peace of Italy? |
2464 | Why enter into league with the pope and the king, against the liberties of this republic? |
2464 | and how long will you continue to abuse our liberality? |
2464 | and what remedy is more desirable for adoption than the one by which alone it can be effectually removed? |
2464 | but their designs have been discovered; and what had they in view? |
2464 | or from the property of which you already have plundered, or may yet plunder us, but poverty? |
2464 | or that a duke of Athens, your hired captain did so too? |
10769 | Am I really to live again? |
10769 | But what are we going to have for dinner? |
10769 | Why do n''t you speak to me? |
10769 | 1232?) |
10769 | 1240-? |
10769 | 1266--by Bronzino, and the version of Leonardo''s S. Anne at the Louvre by Andrea Salaino of Milan( 1483?-1520?). |
10769 | 1276?) |
10769 | 1302), and Giotto( 1267-? |
10769 | 1337), and pass steadily to Luca Signorelli(? |
10769 | 1410?) |
10769 | 1428?) |
10769 | After all these pictures, how about a little climbing? |
10769 | After that what is an ordinary person to say? |
10769 | And the portent? |
10769 | Art thou gone Below the mulberry, where that cold pool Urged to devise a warmer, and more fit For mighty swimmers, swimming three abreast? |
10769 | But the Uffizi? |
10769 | Donatello born( d. 1466) 1387 Fra Angelico born( d. 1455) 1391 Michelozzo born( d. 1472) 1396(?) |
10769 | For the rest, is there not the library? |
10769 | For the serious student the first room is of far the most importance, for there he may begin with Cimabue(? |
10769 | Giovanni Bellini born( d. 1516) Antonio Pollaiuolo born( d. 1498) 1430 Cosimo Tura died 1431 Andrea Mantegna born( d. 1506) 1432(?) |
10769 | I doubt his memory much, his heart a little, And in some minor matters( may I say it?) |
10769 | Is it perhaps the unfinished Leonardo after all? |
10769 | Knowing this( as he did know it) how could he be wholly cast down? |
10769 | Masaccio died 1428 Desiderio da Settignano born( d. 1464) 1429(?) |
10769 | Of this court what can I say? |
10769 | So where are we? |
10769 | The pictures, although so few, are peculiarly attractive, being the work of two very rare hands, Piero della Francesca(? |
10769 | Was there ever anything prettier? |
10769 | What sports, what cares( Since there are none too young for these) engage Thy busy thoughts? |
10769 | What then would he have said of one who has spent not a few afternoon hours, between five and six, in watching the game of pallone? |
10769 | Who painted it if not Filippino? |
10769 | Who, sitting here, can fail to think that? |
15772 | ''Mais après tout,''he said,''un homme d''Etat est- il fait pour être sensible? |
15772 | And after in the incountering of the rest of tharmie, you shewed, that the thing folowed with a moste greate scilence? |
15772 | And why straighte waie you made them to retire into tharmie, nor after made no mension of them? |
15772 | Any envy oppose him? |
15772 | Any people deny him obedience? |
15772 | By those that thei worship, or by those that they blaspheme? |
15772 | By what God or by what sainctes may I make them to sweare? |
15772 | Can not the faightyng of the battaile be otherwise avoided, then in devidyng the armie in sunderie partes and placyng the men in tounes? |
15772 | Doubt not: Doe you not heare the artillerie? |
15772 | Has he spoken truth or falsehood? |
15772 | Have not we wonne a field moste happely? |
15772 | Have not you a Proverbe, whiche fortefieth my reasons, whiche saieth, that warre maketh Theves, and peace hangeth theim up? |
15772 | Have ye any rule to know the foordes? |
15772 | How can they, that dispise God, reverence men? |
15772 | How shoulde I beleeve that thei will keepe their promise to them, whome everie hower they dispise? |
15772 | How would you choose them? |
15772 | I am herein satisfied, but tell me, when the armie had to remove, what order kepte thei? |
15772 | If it chaunce that the River hath marde the Foorde, so that the horses sincke, what reamedy have you? |
15772 | In pitchyng the Campe, had thei other respectes, then those you have tolde? |
15772 | In the chosen, shall there bee likewise brought in any auncient facion? |
15772 | In whom ought there to bee more love of peace, then in him, whiche onely by the warre maie be hurte? |
15772 | In whome ought there to bee more feare of GOD, then in him, which every daie committyng himself to infinite perilles, hath moste neede of his helpe? |
15772 | Is his word the truth and will his truth prevail? |
15772 | Marcus Craussus, unto one, whome asked him, when the armie shoulde remove, saied beleevest thou to be alone not to here the trumpet? |
15772 | N''est- ce pas un personnage-- complètement excentrique, toujours seul d''un côté, avec le monde de l''autre?'' |
15772 | Of what age would you choose them? |
15772 | Or will you that thei also retire together, with the battailes? |
15772 | Peut- il considérer les liens du sang, les affections, les puérils ménagements de la société? |
15772 | Should his word be his bond for ever? |
15772 | Should the Prince be all- virtuous, all- liberal, all- humane? |
15772 | Should true religion be the master- passion of his life? |
15772 | Tell me firste, why made you not your ordinaunce to shoote more then ones? |
15772 | Tell therefore, how you would arme them? |
15772 | That thei can scarse welde their sweardes? |
15772 | Then do you praise the keping of order? |
15772 | Then what good fashion shoulde that be, whiche might be impressed in this matter? |
15772 | Then woulde you prepare a power like to those whiche is in our countrie? |
15772 | Therfore, I would knowe of you whereof it groweth, that of the one side you condempne those, that in their doynges resemble not the antiquitie? |
15772 | To the Church? |
15772 | To the People? |
15772 | To the Princes and Despots? |
15772 | To these should it be well to give some provision? |
15772 | To whom should he turn? |
15772 | What are the Italians? |
15772 | What armes would you that thansignes of all the armie, shoul''d have beside the nomber? |
15772 | What carriages would you, that every one of these battailes should have? |
15772 | What exercises would you cause theim to make at this present? |
15772 | What is Italy to- day? |
15772 | What manner of man was Machiavelli at home and in the market- place? |
15772 | What number would you make? |
15772 | What proporcion have the souldiours, whiche are requiset to bee in the warre with those, whiche in the peace are occupied? |
15772 | What waie ought to bee used then? |
15772 | When there should bee made besides the diche within, a diche also without, should it not bee stronger? |
15772 | When woulde thei abstaine from plaie, from laciviousnesse, from swearynge, from the insolence, whiche everie daie they committe? |
15772 | Where shall I hope to find the things that I have told of? |
15772 | Wherefore would you that I should dispraise it? |
15772 | Whereof cometh so moche disavauntage? |
15772 | Which maner of arming, do you praise moste, either these Dutchemens, or the auncient Romanes? |
15772 | Who shall carrie thinstrumentes to make the waie plaine withall? |
15772 | Why? |
15772 | Would any gates be shut again him? |
15772 | Would not every Italian fully consent with him? |
15772 | Would you make an ordinaunce of hors, to exercise them at home, and to use their service when nede requires? |
15772 | Would you make any difference, of what science you would chuse them? |
15772 | Would you, that water should bee in the diches, or would you have them drie? |
15772 | Woulde you live without them? |
15772 | and again''Jugez done s''il doit s''amuser à ménager certaines convenances de sentiments si importantes pour le commun des hommes? |
15772 | and how would you arme them? |
15772 | men, should have to doe an acte seperate, how would you order them? |
15772 | or keping them, how would you kepe them? |
15772 | wher of maie I make them ashamed, whiche be borne and brought up without shame? |
15772 | whie shoulde thei be ruled by me who knowe me not? |
45469 | Ad quid aliud in civile bellum corruimus? 45469 ''What premium do you ask for this?'' 45469 121) in the lines:Or fu giammai Gente si vana come la senese? |
45469 | :"Who could imagine that those men"( the Florentines)"should presume to be sons of the Church, while fighting against her?" |
45469 | Also, were not Rome and Italy one and the same thing? |
45469 | Art ignorant mayhap where the rank fox lurketh in hiding? |
45469 | Art not, then, the man expected by us all? |
45469 | At thirty- one the share[ of one hundred]? |
45469 | Besides, what was it that really led to the birth of the Florentine Commune? |
45469 | But how was success to be assured? |
45469 | But what can be done while we lack so many of the elements most needed for the completion of this task? |
45469 | But what gave birth to the Commune? |
45469 | But what had become of the Guelph Federation, and of the name of Italy invoked to call it into being? |
45469 | But what was the real nature and origin of this new magistracy? |
45469 | But what were these statutes for the good of the trade of which so many magistrates enforced the observance? |
45469 | Can any historical information be derived from it, either directly or indirectly? |
45469 | Can we be surprised at the hatred roused by the Uberti, or at the civil war of which they were the cause? |
45469 | Can we possibly suppose that such results could be achieved without a long, preliminary course of preparation? |
45469 | Did not the Roman Commune arise at the same period? |
45469 | Did not the_ scholae_, progenitors of the guilds, survive during the Lower Empire and throughout the Middle Ages? |
45469 | Do not emperors and kings of the Romans yield submission to us, yet are they not superior to Florence? |
45469 | Do ye dare, ye alone, to cast off the yoke of freedom and seek for new kingdoms, even as though_ alia sit florentina civitas, alia sit romana_? |
45469 | During the vacancy of the Imperial throne, did not the Holy See appoint King Charles of Anjou Vicar- general of Tuscany? |
45469 | For even when the Consuls are seen in the exercise of their functions, what are they, what do they do, according to chronicles and documents? |
45469 | How are we to explain this congeries of different laws? |
45469 | How could a tribe incapable of comprehending Roman life persecute it to extinction on all sides? |
45469 | How could they be destroyed by barbarians ignorant of crafts which were nevertheless indispensable to their own needs? |
45469 | How is it possible, therefore, to give any idea of the political form of a municipality fashioned in such wise? |
45469 | How, indeed, could war be avoided, when the commercial power of Florence felt the increasingly imperative need of free access to the coast? |
45469 | If Latin civilisation had been utterly destroyed, how came it that the dead could rise again to combat the living? |
45469 | If so, what is it? |
45469 | In fact, how could it possibly be that so much good sense should breed so much disorder? |
45469 | In fact, what other city can boast annals penned by such men as Villani, Compagni, Machiavelli, Guicciardini, Nardi, Varchi? |
45469 | In short, what substantial information can be gleaned from the"Chronica de origine civitatis"? |
45469 | Is it not better to describe events as they occurred, rejecting all foregone conclusions? |
45469 | Is there any new and original principle that assimilates the heterogeneous elements and constitutes a new law? |
45469 | It is related that on nearing the scaffold Neracozzo said to Azzolino:"Whither are we going?" |
45469 | It may be asked how the consuls were enabled to give effect to their verdicts? |
45469 | Know ye not that true liberty consisteth in voluntary obedience to Divine and human laws? |
45469 | Knowest thou not that Florence is its name? |
45469 | Lapus Benvenuti qui vocatur Borrectus populi sancti Petri Maioris iuratus die suprascripto(?) |
45469 | Meanwhile, which party conquered in the struggle following Matilda''s death? |
45469 | Must we say that this revival was due to the French? |
45469 | Quid aliud candida nostra signa petebant? |
45469 | Says the notary,''What are these_ lattizzi_?'' |
45469 | The notary passes on to another woman wearing ermine fur, saying to himself,''What excuse can she allege for that? |
45469 | This time next year I''ll sell to you, or you to me, at what price shall we say?'' |
45469 | Thus we are often moved to inquire, How can this be the work of far- seeing diplomats, of great politicians? |
45469 | Until fresh documents are found, what reasons can be alleged to justify us in denying it at this distant date? |
45469 | Was he in the right or the wrong? |
45469 | Was he not recognised as such by themselves? |
45469 | Was it not sometimes successful in repulsing the foe? |
45469 | Was not Henry the master of the world? |
45469 | Was not this belief justified by the fate of Milan, Cremona, and Brescia? |
45469 | What amount of accurate knowledge can be derived from all this? |
45469 | What could be said to the Pope? |
45469 | What could have caused an act rendering war unavoidable, after such strenuous efforts to establish peace? |
45469 | What germs of truth can be gleaned from all this? |
45469 | What may it profit thee to subdue Cremona? |
45469 | What was the nature of this change? |
45469 | What was the position attained by the seven greater guilds at the moment we are now studying? |
45469 | What, then, are these enactments? |
45469 | What, then, were these Enactments of Justice, as originally framed, and what is to be learnt from them? |
45469 | Why should not Boniface be able to clench a similar bargain on even more effective and permanent terms? |
45469 | Why should the Pope desire the election of an emperor save for the purpose of weakening the Angevin power? |
45469 | Why so much vagueness in indicating the chief magistrate of the Republic? |
45469 | Why tarriest thou? |
45469 | Why this alliance against the Empire at the moment when it was no longer a source of alarm? |
45469 | [ 202] What was the pressing danger? |
45469 | [ 46] How is the reader to disentangle this skein? |
45469 | [ 90] In fact, what names do we find among them in Florence? |
45469 | do we not find them dividing all society, including both the soldiery and foreigners in Rome and in Ravenna? |
4956 | ''And thou now demandest an additional two hundred and fifty?'' 4956 ''Can there be two such voices?'' |
4956 | ''Canst change me a good obligatory note for five hundred?'' 4956 ''From whence comes this man?'' |
4956 | ''In what respects?'' 4956 ''Shall we fly?'' |
4956 | ''What mean you?'' 4956 ''You agree to this?'' |
4956 | ''Your story is plausible, but what shall we do with you? 4956 A cabriolet?" |
4956 | A wind? 4956 Ah, why should you wonder? |
4956 | All Florence is after him- what want you? |
4956 | An obscure artist? 4956 And in two weeks hold yourself in readiness to--""To-- to what?" |
4956 | And my horse? |
4956 | And now what do you propose to do? |
4956 | And the gates close at ten? |
4956 | And this is the work of thy hands? |
4956 | And thou wilt marry the humble painter? |
4956 | And what concession am I to make in return? |
4956 | And what does it want, pray, Mister Critic? |
4956 | And will not yours assent? |
4956 | And will you not go? |
4956 | Are the guns all- ready- loaded? |
4956 | Are you hurt? 4956 Are you hurt?" |
4956 | At eleven? |
4956 | Behold thy large fortune; am I not penniless?-thy noble birth; am I not an humble citizen? 4956 But are they not, Florinda?" |
4956 | But the seal- how shall I manage that? 4956 But we get two hundred, you know?" |
4956 | But why this haste, dear Carlton? |
4956 | By what means? |
4956 | Can some of ye speak and tell me? 4956 Can they be asleep? |
4956 | Can you accommodate me within? |
4956 | Canst not take the hint? |
4956 | Come, what say you? |
4956 | Did n''t I tell you? 4956 Did you see me?" |
4956 | Do you forgive me, Carlton, for this? 4956 Do you know French?" |
4956 | Do you know how much the immaculate Johnson, who came home so rich, had when he landed at Melbourne? |
4956 | Do you know, Petro, how Signor Carlton first became acquainted with Florinda? 4956 Do you think so?" |
4956 | Does he refuse? |
4956 | Does your excellenza think so? |
4956 | Dost thou mean that? |
4956 | Emily,said her father,"Is not your horse restive? |
4956 | Fail? 4956 Fie, man, do n''t you see he''s busy now?" |
4956 | From England? |
4956 | Gone? 4956 Gone?" |
4956 | Hark, heard you not some one? |
4956 | Have I not possessions enough for both of us, dear Carlton? 4956 Have you forgotten all that we heard coming out?" |
4956 | He who had his snuff- box ever in his hand? |
4956 | Henry,said Mr. Inglis, somewhat awkwardly,"you may a- will it be convenient? |
4956 | Ho, ho- you have, have you? |
4956 | Hold, will you bring weapons, or shall I procure them? |
4956 | Home? 4956 How beautiful is this lovely place?" |
4956 | How can I ever repay you? 4956 How can we get off? |
4956 | How now, traitorous villain? 4956 How then can Ranadar live?" |
4956 | I do not think I understand you- is it your wish that I should enjoy the whole of the proceeds of my singing? |
4956 | I know the proverb; but each case is a peculiar one, and this- is not this more so than any other? |
4956 | I thought you were gone- do you wish to tempt me further? |
4956 | In the street? |
4956 | In what respect? |
4956 | Is it a fact that he is American? |
4956 | Is it a vision or reality? |
4956 | Is it possible you still believe yourself Brandini''s wife? |
4956 | Is your excellenza satisfied? |
4956 | It is, indeed,was the response,"Are you, too, satisfied, gentlemen?" |
4956 | Knew you personally this Knight Templar of whom you speak? |
4956 | Look, do you see him? |
4956 | Maffeo, what was that you heard about these cursed Turks, when you were ashore? |
4956 | Mario again? 4956 Mario, is all forgotten? |
4956 | No,he said,"my home is near by, and why should I remain here? |
4956 | Nor think strange of me? |
4956 | O father, why now? 4956 Of what part are you a native?" |
4956 | One of the troupe is ill, and I wish to obtain some one to supply her place- but I suppose you are unacquainted with any opera? |
4956 | Pray, how much money have you? |
4956 | Pray, what is that, Carlton? |
4956 | Saved? 4956 Signor, you have observed his intimacy with Florinda?" |
4956 | Since you respect and love art so highly, father, why did you not learn this? |
4956 | Speak freely; what would you ask? |
4956 | The horses? 4956 Then I inspire you, do I?" |
4956 | Then why speak of cabriolets in this connection? |
4956 | To attend my--"Well? |
4956 | True, but what has that to do with thy coat, Carlton? |
4956 | True,said Florinda,"my parents died while I was yet too young to know or love them and thine, Carlton?" |
4956 | WHAT is to be done? |
4956 | Well, Carlton, what of our little knight of the snuff- box, eh? |
4956 | Well, what will you do? |
4956 | Well? |
4956 | What did he say? |
4956 | What have you? |
4956 | What is announced in the programme? |
4956 | What is the matter? |
4956 | What is to be done? |
4956 | What kind, sir? |
4956 | What means this scene? |
4956 | What of that? |
4956 | What proof, sir artist,said the duke,"shall we have of the genuineness of this production?" |
4956 | What return? 4956 What so strangely affected the Signora Florinda?" |
4956 | What use is there to run, Maffeo? |
4956 | What will not a man do for love? 4956 What would you?" |
4956 | What, can a Turkish vessel equal our swift ship? |
4956 | What- go to Melbourne? 4956 What- that it is hard to live here now- that the emigrants suffer- that the diggings are crowded? |
4956 | When did you leave the knight of the black armor? |
4956 | Where am I? |
4956 | Where are you bound, young''un? |
4956 | Where is my father? |
4956 | Where is the saviour of my child? |
4956 | Where would I be now- where would my daughter be, if Mario had not been near to save us, if he, careless of his own life, had not been our preserver? 4956 Whither away, in such haste?" |
4956 | Who is he? |
4956 | Who is that by the side of the duke? |
4956 | Who of all you know is best in this art? |
4956 | Who? |
4956 | Why did you decide to be a servant? 4956 Why do you push forward, Carlton?" |
4956 | Why do you speak thus to me, Stella? 4956 Why dost thou wear such a threadbare coat, Carlton? |
4956 | Why not renounce it then? 4956 Will he not? |
4956 | Will he stop, or go back? |
4956 | Will three weeks be too soon, Emmie dearest? |
4956 | Will you give the money? |
4956 | Will you renounce crusading henceforth? |
4956 | With all my heart.-Carlton, do you not remember that you left the heroine of that story you were last telling me in a most critical situation? |
4956 | Would you know the cause of it? |
4956 | Yes sir, and I thought--"You thought, did you, sir, and pray, sir, what business had you to think? 4956 Yes, I know him well, and have reason to know him?" |
4956 | Yet is he so presumptuous, my father? |
4956 | You are a stranger here, are you not? |
4956 | You are an Italian, I suppose? |
4956 | You are now content? |
4956 | You are prospering, then? |
4956 | You are sure he will forgive me? |
4956 | You forgive me? |
4956 | You must? |
4956 | You remember the little Frenchman, who lived so long with me? |
4956 | You will not be offended? |
4956 | Your excellency? |
4956 | ''Is there magic at work? |
4956 | ''What have you to say for yourself, fellow? |
4956 | A gentleman like you to be a servant? |
4956 | Ah, ha? |
4956 | Am I not?" |
4956 | And hast thou really so tender a heart, and yet couldst enter into so hard- hearted a conspiracy? |
4956 | And what could move her father if this could not? |
4956 | Are you yet alive, then? |
4956 | But could it be his daughter? |
4956 | But great Heaven, shall this be done longer? |
4956 | But if I do, then will I despair? |
4956 | But look- what is the matter with the horses?" |
4956 | But tell me, would you go home if you could get a good situation here?" |
4956 | But who will think of yielding? |
4956 | By Jove, would n''t Aldborough laugh if he were to see me here? |
4956 | Can I assist you to mount?" |
4956 | Can I hope, dearest Emily?" |
4956 | Can the rowers be insane?" |
4956 | Can this be so?" |
4956 | Can you stay? |
4956 | Can you write another letter?" |
4956 | Could you write a letter in that language?" |
4956 | Did he retaliate and put them to shame? |
4956 | Did not you say he sold some to you?" |
4956 | Did you not, Emily? |
4956 | Did you not?" |
4956 | Did you save my daughter?" |
4956 | Do you hope to live?" |
4956 | Do you know anything of business?" |
4956 | Do you know him?" |
4956 | Do you remember when you saw me first?" |
4956 | Do you? |
4956 | Emily, can you not guess? |
4956 | Emily, where is my desk?" |
4956 | Forgive thee? |
4956 | Gita, what brought your mistress here, and under such escort? |
4956 | Have you made your fortune?" |
4956 | He wound his arms lovingly around the happy Emily, and--"Halloo, what are you two people doing over there in the corner?" |
4956 | How could it happen that it should be Stella, my daughter? |
4956 | How hast thou possibly attained to such extraordinary proficiency with the sword?" |
4956 | How on earth came he to be a footman?" |
4956 | How- how can I thank you?" |
4956 | I do n''t see what you can do here, though?" |
4956 | I hope you are more tender than you were yesterday?" |
4956 | I suppose it is partly owing to your natural progress from childhood to womanhood- why, you must be nineteen?" |
4956 | I wonder who he can be?" |
4956 | If he was not the actual murderer, was he not the instigator of the whole business? |
4956 | Is it because the song is so familiar to her ear, that she is thus moved? |
4956 | Is it indeed you?'' |
4956 | Is it the pleasure of your excellenza that I add the finish before the present assembly?" |
4956 | It is not yet too late- say, shall it be pistols? |
4956 | None?" |
4956 | O Teresa, can not you comprehend and believe, that I expect and desire none?" |
4956 | O, do you ask what made me? |
4956 | Shall I complete the story?" |
4956 | Shall I then refuse to make her happy? |
4956 | Stella Borelloni, can an obscure man aspire to the hand of the fairest in Tuscany?" |
4956 | Tell me my child, are you ill? |
4956 | The audience scarce endured the first disappointment, and how will they receive the second? |
4956 | The genius who formed this? |
4956 | The impassioned youth bent down before her, but she prevented him, and suddenly asked:"How do you proceed with your painting?" |
4956 | Then with less passion, but with regal, even awful dignity, she freezingly inquired--"What have you to say?" |
4956 | They will jingle pleasantly, will they not?" |
4956 | Thou hast ridden in a cabriolet, signor?" |
4956 | Was he pleased with it?" |
4956 | Was it possible that Villani, her tormentor and cruel persecutor, indeed wished her well and desired to become her friend? |
4956 | Were you not sure of it- sure of her, you young dog, and of me also? |
4956 | What brought you in these regions, away from town and habitations?'' |
4956 | What can I do? |
4956 | What can I make of a man like that? |
4956 | What can a man do in such a case as that?" |
4956 | What course did the old man pursue in this dilemma? |
4956 | What do you say to that? |
4956 | What does this mean? |
4956 | What has thy profession to do with arms, that thou shouldst ever deign to know their use? |
4956 | What is birth and wealth and pride, when compared to the glory of such illustrious actions?" |
4956 | What is it you mean?" |
4956 | What is the matter, Stella? |
4956 | What led you to it? |
4956 | What startles the fair girl so suddenly? |
4956 | What was his amazement when he saw her raise her head and gently sigh his own name? |
4956 | What was his return to them for the spirit they had ever manifested towards him? |
4956 | What will you do here? |
4956 | Where is he? |
4956 | Who are you who are thus saved when Moslems have perished?" |
4956 | Who can she be, and where does she live? |
4956 | Who is he? |
4956 | Who is the artist?" |
4956 | Who is there who in beauty can equal Iona? |
4956 | Who was your teacher?" |
4956 | Whose son are you?" |
4956 | Why are you so pale? |
4956 | Why ca n''t we be friends, Teresa? |
4956 | Why did they not give notice of this?" |
4956 | Why did you send him away thus?" |
4956 | Why do you not know that you are free?" |
4956 | Why not wait for a time? |
4956 | Why not? |
4956 | Why then, I ask, should there be strife between us upon this subject? |
4956 | Why, Marden, my boy, what else is there to do?" |
4956 | Why?" |
4956 | Will you do so?" |
4956 | Would any light cause make me do it?" |
4956 | Would you call it presumption in me if I told you that I loved you? |
4956 | Yet how can I give her to him? |
4956 | You are not in earnest?" |
4956 | You come here, you confess your name, and your atrocious deed? |
4956 | You will come with the sunset, tomorrow?" |
4956 | a- to- my writing desk- hem?" |
4956 | are you wounded, father?" |
4956 | carried away? |
4956 | how is that? |
4956 | is this foolish heart forever crying more?" |
4956 | said the other--"a bad business?" |
4956 | say you so? |
4956 | will you say that others are saved beside you?" |
4956 | you would- you, the brillliant, the aristocratic Melville- the''double first''at Oxford? |
3694 | Be not unkind and fair: misshapen stuff Is of behaviour boisterous and rough: How like you that, Signior? |
3694 | Drink to me only with thine eyes,or"Still to be neat, still to be dressed"? |
3694 | Oh life, no life, but lively form of death;is''t not excellent? |
3694 | and will no sunshine on these looks appear? |
3694 | ''Sblood, you jest, I hope? |
3694 | ''Sblood, you will not draw? |
3694 | ''Sheart, these phrases are intolerable, Good parts? |
3694 | ''Slid, in my house? |
3694 | ''Slid, was there ever seen a fox in years to betray himself thus? |
3694 | ''Swounds, cuckold? |
3694 | ( My sister, I should say,) my wife, alas, I fear not her: ha? |
3694 | ), fol., 1616; The Alchemist, 4to, 1612; Catiline, his Conspiracy, 4to, 1611; Bartholomew Fayre, 4to, 1614(? |
3694 | );(?) |
3694 | A brother''s house to keep, to look unto? |
3694 | A gentleman, sir; oh, uncle? |
3694 | A gentleman? |
3694 | A gentleman? |
3694 | A gentleman? |
3694 | A love of mine? |
3694 | A match? |
3694 | A neighbour of mine, knave? |
3694 | A pox on him, hang him, filching rogue, steal from the dead? |
3694 | A pox on your match, no time but now to vouchsafe? |
3694 | A soldier? |
3694 | A stomach? |
3694 | A swarm, a swarm? |
3694 | A young gentleman of the family of Strozzi, is he not? |
3694 | ADVISED, informed, aware;"are you--?" |
3694 | About what time was this? |
3694 | Abroad with Piso? |
3694 | Again, what earthy spirit but will attempt To taste the fruit of beauty''s golden tree, When leaden sleep seals up the dragon''s eyes? |
3694 | Alas, brother, what would you have me to do? |
3694 | Alas, no: what''s a peculiar man to a nation? |
3694 | Alas, sir, where should a man seek? |
3694 | Am I not poison''d? |
3694 | Am I not sick? |
3694 | An she have overheard me now? |
3694 | And what could have been the nature of this"purge"? |
3694 | And what would that be, think you? |
3694 | And where''s Lorenzo? |
3694 | And whither went the knave? |
3694 | Apollo? |
3694 | Are any of the gallants within? |
3694 | Arrest me, sir, at whose suit? |
3694 | Art thou a man? |
3694 | Art thou sure of it? |
3694 | Away, you fool, did I know it was you that knock''d? |
3694 | Ay, I know that sir, I would not have come else: how doth my cousin, uncle? |
3694 | Ay, and our ignorance maintain''d it as well, did it not? |
3694 | Ay, but what harm might have come of it? |
3694 | Ay, but would any man have offered it in Venice? |
3694 | Ay, did you ever see it acted? |
3694 | Ay, never spare any body here: but say, what tricks? |
3694 | Ay, rank fruits of a jealous brain, lady: but did you find your husband there in that case, as you suspected? |
3694 | Ay, say you so? |
3694 | Ay, sir, that''s true, cousin, may I swear as I am a soldier, by that? |
3694 | Ay, sir, there you shall have him: when can you tell? |
3694 | Ay, what of him? |
3694 | Ay, why not the ghost of a herring Cob, as well as the ghost of Rashero Bacono, they were both broiled on the coals? |
3694 | BEDSTAFF,(?) |
3694 | BULLED,(?) |
3694 | Ban to my fortunes: what meant I to marry? |
3694 | Body of me, it was so late ere we parted last night, I can scarce open mine eyes yet; I was but new risen as you came; how passes the day abroad, sir? |
3694 | Brother Thorello, what a strange and vain imagination is this? |
3694 | Brother, did you see that same fellow there? |
3694 | Brother, had he no haunt thither, in good faith? |
3694 | Brother, sister, brother, what, cloudy, cloudy? |
3694 | But I marle what camel it was, that had the carriage of it? |
3694 | But art thou sure he will stay thy return? |
3694 | But did your mistress see my man bring him a message? |
3694 | But how should he know thee to be my man? |
3694 | But soft, where''s Signior Matheo? |
3694 | But where didst thou find them, Portensio? |
3694 | But wherefore do I awake this remembrance? |
3694 | But who directed you thither? |
3694 | But( quis contra diuos?) |
3694 | But, Cob, What entertainment had they? |
3694 | But, Musco, didst thou observe his countenance in the reading of it, whether he were angry or pleased? |
3694 | But, sirrah, what said he to it, i''faith? |
3694 | But, what? |
3694 | By God I am ashamed to hear you: respect? |
3694 | By my troth, sir, will you have the truth of it? |
3694 | CRY("he that cried Italian"),"speak in a musical cadence,"intone, or declaim(? |
3694 | Call you this poetry? |
3694 | Cob, canst thou shew me of a gentleman, one Signior Bobadilla, where his lodging is? |
3694 | Cob, which of them was''t that first kiss''d my wife? |
3694 | Cob? |
3694 | Collar, sir? |
3694 | Come, come, what needs this circumstance? |
3694 | Cousin Stephano: good morrow, good cousin, how fare you? |
3694 | Cousin, how do you like this gentleman''s verses? |
3694 | Cousin, is it well? |
3694 | Cousin, what think you of this? |
3694 | Cousin, will you any tobacco? |
3694 | DIBBLE,(?) |
3694 | DISTANCE,(?) |
3694 | DOR,(?) |
3694 | Defy me, strumpet? |
3694 | Dic mihi musa virum: are you an author, sir? |
3694 | Did not I tell you there was some device? |
3694 | Did you so? |
3694 | Didst thou come running? |
3694 | Dissemble? |
3694 | Do I live, sir? |
3694 | Do you hear, is''t not best to get a warrant and have him arrested, and brought before Doctor Clement? |
3694 | Do you hear, sir? |
3694 | Do you hear? |
3694 | Do you let them go so lightly, sister? |
3694 | Do you prate? |
3694 | Doctor Clement, what''s he? |
3694 | Drunk, sir? |
3694 | EYEBRIGHT,(?) |
3694 | FIGGUM,(?) |
3694 | FROLICS,(?) |
3694 | FUGEAND,(?) |
3694 | Fasting days: what tell you me of your fasting days? |
3694 | Found your close walks? |
3694 | Francisco, Martino, ne''er a one to be found now: what a spite''s this? |
3694 | GRASS,(?) |
3694 | Gaspar, Martino, Cob:''Sheart, where should they be, trow? |
3694 | Gentleman, shall I intreat a word with you? |
3694 | Go to, tell me is not the young Lorenzo here? |
3694 | Go with thee? |
3694 | God save you, friend, are not you here by the appointment of Doctor Clement''s man? |
3694 | God send me never such need: but you said you had somewhat to tell me, what is''t? |
3694 | God''s life, I have lost it then, saw you Hesperida? |
3694 | God''s my life; did you ever hear the like? |
3694 | Gone? |
3694 | Good brother, be content, what do you mean? |
3694 | Good: But wherefore did he beat you, sirrah? |
3694 | HOIDEN, hoyden, formerly applied to both sexes( ancient term for leveret? |
3694 | Ha, how do you like it? |
3694 | Ha, how many are there, sayest thou? |
3694 | Ha, you speak against tobacco? |
3694 | Hast thou done? |
3694 | Hath he the money ready, can you tell? |
3694 | Hath the brize prick''d you, ha? |
3694 | He plays upon my forehead, brother Giuliano, I pray you tell me one thing I shall ask you: is my forehead any thing rougher than it was wo nt to be? |
3694 | He spake not with the fellow, did he? |
3694 | He will not swear: he has some meaning, sure, Else( being urged so much) how should he choose, But lend an oath to all this protestation? |
3694 | Heart of me, what made him leave us so abruptly? |
3694 | Her husband? |
3694 | Her love, by Jesu: my wife''s minion, Fair disposition? |
3694 | Hesperida? |
3694 | His friends? |
3694 | Ho, Piso, Cob, where are these villains, trow? |
3694 | Ho, who keeps house here? |
3694 | Hold, hold, what, all policy dead? |
3694 | How an he see it? |
3694 | How extempore? |
3694 | How is that? |
3694 | How is the bearing of it now, sir? |
3694 | How know I? |
3694 | How knowest thou that? |
3694 | How long hast thou been coming hither, Cob? |
3694 | How mean you pass upon me? |
3694 | How now, Piso? |
3694 | How now, cousin? |
3694 | How now, sirrah; what make you here? |
3694 | How now, what cuckold is that knocks so hard? |
3694 | How say you, cousin? |
3694 | How shall we do, Signior? |
3694 | How should that be? |
3694 | How so? |
3694 | How then? |
3694 | How will you sell this rapier, friend? |
3694 | How, Prospero first tell her, then tell you after? |
3694 | How, Scavenger? |
3694 | How, by St. Peter? |
3694 | How, incipere dulce? |
3694 | How, the bastinado? |
3694 | How, the lie? |
3694 | How? |
3694 | How? |
3694 | How? |
3694 | How? |
3694 | How? |
3694 | How? |
3694 | Humour? |
3694 | I am sure My sister and my wife would bid them welcome, ha? |
3694 | I am vext I can hold never a bone of me still,''Sblood, I think they mean to build a Tabernacle here, well? |
3694 | I am within, sir, what''s your pleasure? |
3694 | I had rather it were a Spaniard: but tell me, what shall I give you for it? |
3694 | I marle whether it be a Toledo or no? |
3694 | I must go, what''s a clock? |
3694 | I pray you, sir, is this Pazzi house? |
3694 | I should enquire for a gentleman here, one Signior Lorenzo di Pazzi; do you know any such, sir, I pray you? |
3694 | I should put myself against half a dozen men, should I? |
3694 | I thank you, sir, I shall be bold, I warrant you, have you a close stool there? |
3694 | I wonder, Signior, what they will say of my going away, ha? |
3694 | I''faith( I am glad) I have smoked you yet at last; What''s your jewel, trow? |
3694 | I, sir? |
3694 | If thou wilt not,''s hart, what''s your god''s name? |
3694 | Illias aeternum si latuisset opus? |
3694 | In sadness I think it would: I have a reasonable good leg? |
3694 | In what place was that service, I pray you, sir? |
3694 | Indeed, sir? |
3694 | Indeed, that might be some loss, but who respects it? |
3694 | Is Cob within? |
3694 | Is a fit simile a toy? |
3694 | Is he gone too? |
3694 | Is she not at home? |
3694 | Is this Musco? |
3694 | Is this the man, my son so oft hath praised To be the happiest, and most precious wit That ever was familiar with Art? |
3694 | Is''t not simply the best that ever you heard? |
3694 | It''s better as''tis: come, gentlemen, shall we go? |
3694 | It''s not he: is it? |
3694 | It''s your right Trinidado: did you never take any, signior? |
3694 | Let who will make hungry meals for you, it shall not be I: Feed you, quoth he? |
3694 | Lie in a water- bearer''s house, a gentleman of his note? |
3694 | MINSITIVE,(?) |
3694 | Mass, that''s true, when was Bobadilla here? |
3694 | May I? |
3694 | May it please you, Signior, in all the provinces of Bohemia, Hungaria, Dalmatia, Poland, where not? |
3694 | Might? |
3694 | Musco, this is rare, but how got''st thou this apparel of the Doctor''s man? |
3694 | Musco,''sblood, what wind hath blown thee hither in this shape? |
3694 | Musco? |
3694 | Musco? |
3694 | Must I go? |
3694 | Must I? |
3694 | My companions? |
3694 | My father read this with patience? |
3694 | My father? |
3694 | Nay, an you heard him discourse you would say so: how like you him? |
3694 | Nay, but I pray thee, Cob, what makes thee so out of love with fasting days? |
3694 | Nay, do not speak in passion so, where had you it? |
3694 | Nay, do not turn away: but say i''faith was it not a match appointed''twixt this old gentleman and you? |
3694 | Nay, good Signior, will you regard the humour of a fool? |
3694 | Nay, nay, I like not these affected oaths; Speak plainly, man: what thinkst thou of my words? |
3694 | Nay, proceed, proceed, where''s this? |
3694 | Nay, sir, I can not tell; unless it were by the black art? |
3694 | Nay, sir, rather you should ask where they found me? |
3694 | Nay, speak, I pray you, what tricks? |
3694 | Nay, you have stunn''d me, i''faith; you have given me a knock on the forehead will stick by me: cuckold? |
3694 | No matter, Hesperida, if it did, I would be such an one for my friend, but say, will you go? |
3694 | No time but now? |
3694 | No? |
3694 | No? |
3694 | Not a whit, sir, I pray you what, sir, do you mean? |
3694 | ODLING,(?) |
3694 | Of me, knave? |
3694 | Of whom? |
3694 | Oh ay, humour is nothing if it be not fed, why, didst thou never hear of that? |
3694 | Oh, God''s lid, by your leave, do you know me, sir? |
3694 | Oh, God''s pity, was it so, sir? |
3694 | Oh, God''s precious, is this the soldier? |
3694 | Oh, Musco, didst thou not see a fellow here in a what- sha- call- him doublet; he brought mine uncle a letter even now? |
3694 | Oh, art thou there? |
3694 | Oh, did you find it now? |
3694 | Oh, fear you the constable? |
3694 | Oh, gallant, have I found you? |
3694 | Oh, husband, is''t you? |
3694 | Oh, it was a good figure observed, sir: but did you all this, Signior, without hurting your blade? |
3694 | Oh, my guest, sir, you mean? |
3694 | Oh, old incontinent, dost thou not shame, When all thy powers in chastity are spent, To have a mind so hot? |
3694 | Oh, sir, have I forestall''d your honest market? |
3694 | Oh, sister, did you see my cloak? |
3694 | Oh, that villain dors me, He hath discovered all unto my wife, Beast that I was to trust him: whither went she? |
3694 | Oh, what is''t? |
3694 | Or why are we obsequious to his law, If he want spirit our affects to awe? |
3694 | Out on thee, more than strumpet''s impudency, Steal''st thou thus to thy haunts? |
3694 | Out, I defy thee, I, dissembling wretch? |
3694 | PARANTORY,(?) |
3694 | PATOUN,(?) |
3694 | Paton, pellet of dough; perhaps the"moulding of the tobacco... for the pipe"( Gifford);(?) |
3694 | Pawn? |
3694 | Peto, bring him hither, bring him hither, what, how now, signior drunkard, in arms against me, ha? |
3694 | Piso, canst thou tell? |
3694 | Piso, come hither: there lies a note within, upon my desk; here, take my key: it''s no matter neither, where''s the boy? |
3694 | Piso, remember, silence, buried here: When should this flow of passion( trow) take head? |
3694 | Piso, what gentleman was that they praised so? |
3694 | Piso, where is he? |
3694 | Poetry? |
3694 | Portensio? |
3694 | Prate again as you like this, you whoreson cowardly rascal, you''ll control the point, you? |
3694 | Respect? |
3694 | Reveal it, sir? |
3694 | Rougher? |
3694 | Say that a man should entertain thee now, Would thou be honest, humble, just, and true? |
3694 | Servant, what is that same, I pray you? |
3694 | Signior Bobadilla, why muse you so? |
3694 | Signior Giuliano, was it not? |
3694 | Signior Giuliano? |
3694 | Signior Matheo, is''t you, sir? |
3694 | Signior Matheo, who made these verses? |
3694 | Signior Prospero? |
3694 | Signior Thorello, is he within, sir? |
3694 | Signior, did you ever see the like clown of him where we were to- day: Signior Prospero''s brother? |
3694 | Signior, did you never play with any of our masters here? |
3694 | Signior, will you any? |
3694 | Since I came I saw mine uncle; and i''faith how have you done this great while? |
3694 | Sir, how if thy Father should see this now? |
3694 | Sirrah Prospero, what shall we do, sirrah? |
3694 | Sirrah, how dost thou like him? |
3694 | Sister Hesperida, I pray you fetch down the rose- water above in the closet: Sweet- heart, will you come in to breakfast? |
3694 | Sister, what have you here? |
3694 | So, sir, and how then? |
3694 | So, what time came my man with the message to you, Signior Thorello? |
3694 | So: but what business hath my neighbour? |
3694 | Soft, who''s this comes here? |
3694 | Speak to him? |
3694 | Spite of the devil, what do I stay here then? |
3694 | Stay, now let me see, oh signior snow- liver, I had almost forgotten him, and your Genius there, what, doth he suffer for a good conscience too? |
3694 | Strangers? |
3694 | TIM,(?) |
3694 | Thanks, gentle Piso: where is Cob? |
3694 | That may be, for I was sure it was none of his word: but when, when said he so? |
3694 | That''s well said, Musco: faith, sirrah, how dost thou approve my wit in this device? |
3694 | That''s well, an my clerk can make warrants, and my hand not at them; where is the warrant? |
3694 | That, that: who? |
3694 | The state that he hath stood in till this present Doth promise no such change: what should I fear then? |
3694 | This a Toledo? |
3694 | This is but a device to balk me withal; Soft, who''s this? |
3694 | This, sir, a toy of mine own in my non- age: but when will you come and see my study? |
3694 | Thy father: where is he? |
3694 | Thy rheum? |
3694 | To me, sir? |
3694 | To practise such a servile kind of life? |
3694 | To the sword? |
3694 | Tricks, brother? |
3694 | True, I am a gentleman, I know that; but what though, I pray you say, what would you ask? |
3694 | Tut, beside him: what strangers are there, man? |
3694 | Tut, this is not to the purpose touching your armour, what might your armour signify? |
3694 | UNBORED,(?) |
3694 | Uncle, afore I go in, can you tell me an he have e''er a book of the sciences of hawking and hunting? |
3694 | Uncle? |
3694 | Unless that villain Musco Have told him of the letter, and discovered All that I strictly charged him to conceal? |
3694 | Very good, but, lady, how that you were at Cob''s, ha? |
3694 | WHETSTONE, GEORGE, an author who lived 1544(?) |
3694 | WHINILING,(?) |
3694 | WHIT,(?) |
3694 | Was Shakespeare then concerned in this war of the stages? |
3694 | Was your man a soldier, sir? |
3694 | Well, Piso, thou has sworn not to disclose; ay, you did swear? |
3694 | Well, disarm him, but it''s no matter, let him stand by: who be these? |
3694 | Well, let this breathe awhile; you that have cause to complain there, stand forth; had you a warrant for this arrest? |
3694 | Well, rise; how dost thou now? |
3694 | Well, what remedy? |
3694 | What ail you, sweet- heart? |
3694 | What are you, sir? |
3694 | What do you mean? |
3694 | What is he that gave you this, sirrah? |
3694 | What lunacy is this that haunts this man? |
3694 | What manner of man is he? |
3694 | What mean these questions, pray ye? |
3694 | What might the gentleman''s name be, sir, that sent it? |
3694 | What new book have you there? |
3694 | What news with you, that you are here so early? |
3694 | What say you, sir? |
3694 | What should I think of it? |
3694 | What were I best to do? |
3694 | What would I have you do? |
3694 | What would you do? |
3694 | What would you have me do, trow? |
3694 | What''s Signior Thorello gone? |
3694 | What''s his name, say you, Giuliano? |
3694 | What''s that, sister? |
3694 | What''s that, sweet- heart? |
3694 | What''s the matter, varlet? |
3694 | What''s the matter? |
3694 | What''s the news? |
3694 | What''s thy name? |
3694 | What''s your name, sirrah? |
3694 | What, Cob, art thou here? |
3694 | What, Piso? |
3694 | What, are they gone? |
3694 | What, at the Green Lattice? |
3694 | What, did Thorello give him any thing to spend for the message he brought him? |
3694 | What, do you take incipere in that sense? |
3694 | What, is the fellow gone that brought this letter? |
3694 | What? |
3694 | What? |
3694 | What? |
3694 | What? |
3694 | What? |
3694 | What? |
3694 | Whence springs this quarrel? |
3694 | Where bought you it, Signior? |
3694 | Where got''st thou this coat, I marle? |
3694 | Where hast thou served? |
3694 | Where is Lorenzo and Prospero, canst thou tell? |
3694 | Where is Prospero? |
3694 | Where is he, canst thou tell? |
3694 | Where is he? |
3694 | Where''s the match I gave thee? |
3694 | Whither went thy master? |
3694 | Who will not judge him worthy to be robb''d, That sets his doors wide open to a thief, And shews the felon where his treasure lies? |
3694 | Who''s there? |
3694 | Who''s there? |
3694 | Who''s this? |
3694 | Who, Giuliano? |
3694 | Who? |
3694 | Why do you laugh, sir? |
3694 | Why do you pish, Signior? |
3694 | Why mighty? |
3694 | Why should he then say, be smooth foreheaded, Unless he jested at the smoothness of it? |
3694 | Why so, but what can they say of your beating? |
3694 | Why so? |
3694 | Why that''s well, come then: what say you, are all agreed? |
3694 | Why, I hope you will not a hawking now, will you? |
3694 | Why, Musco, who would have thought thou hadst been such a gallant? |
3694 | Why, Signior Giuliano, are you such a novice to be arrested and never see the warrant? |
3694 | Why, an he were, sir, his hands were not bound, were they? |
3694 | Why, are you so sure of your hand at all times? |
3694 | Why, but I will buy it now, because you say so: what, shall I go without a rapier? |
3694 | Why, by-- what shall I swear by? |
3694 | Why, cousin, you shall command me an''twere twice so far as Florence, to do you good; what, do you think I will not go with you? |
3694 | Why, do you hear? |
3694 | Why, dost thou go in danger of thy life for him? |
3694 | Why, dost thou know him? |
3694 | Why, dost thou not know him? |
3694 | Why, hear you, Signior? |
3694 | Why, how are you deceived, gentlemen? |
3694 | Why, how com''st thou transmuted thus? |
3694 | Why, how now, brother, who enforced this brawl? |
3694 | Why, how now, cousin, will this ne''er be left? |
3694 | Why, how now, signior gull: are you a turn''d filcher of late? |
3694 | Why, how now? |
3694 | Why, is not here your cloak? |
3694 | Why, sayest thou? |
3694 | Why, sir, you are no constable, I hope? |
3694 | Why, this is a mere trick, a device; you are gulled in this most grossly: alas, poor wench, wert thou beaten for this? |
3694 | Why, was he drunk? |
3694 | Why, was''t not rare? |
3694 | Why, what should they say? |
3694 | Why, what unhallowed ruffian would have writ With so profane a pen unto his friend? |
3694 | Why, what villainy is this? |
3694 | Why, what''s a clock? |
3694 | Why, what''s the matter with you? |
3694 | Why, what''s the matter? |
3694 | Why, what''s the matter? |
3694 | Why, woman, grieves it you to ope your door? |
3694 | Why, you are no soldier? |
3694 | Why, you have done like a gentleman, he has confest it, what would you more? |
3694 | Why? |
3694 | Why? |
3694 | Why? |
3694 | Wilt thou be true, sweet Piso? |
3694 | With all my heart, sir, you have not another Toledo to sell, have you? |
3694 | Yes, faith, but was''t possible thou should''st not know him? |
3694 | Yes, sir, what of him? |
3694 | Yet more ado? |
3694 | You are pleasant, your name is Signior Lorenzo, as I take it? |
3694 | You do not, you? |
3694 | You said it was a Toledo, ha? |
3694 | You sold me a rapier, did you not? |
3694 | You translated this too, did you not? |
3694 | You will keep it? |
3694 | Your cloak, sir? |
3694 | Your cloak? |
3694 | Your turn? |
3694 | abroad? |
3694 | am I Signior Giuliano? |
3694 | am I melancholy enough? |
3694 | and in my throat too? |
3694 | and sham''st thou not to beg? |
3694 | and to entice And feed the enticements of a lustful woman? |
3694 | are you not well? |
3694 | ask thy pander here, Can he deny it? |
3694 | away, by the life of Pharaoh, you shall not, you shall not do him that grace: the time of day to you, gentlemen: is Signior Prospero stirring? |
3694 | could I keep out all them, think you? |
3694 | did I e''er hurt thee? |
3694 | did I ever threaten thee? |
3694 | did I not charge you keep your doors shut here, and do you let them lie open for all comers, do you scratch? |
3694 | do tricks? |
3694 | do you long to be stabb''d, ha? |
3694 | do you not mean Signior Bobadilla? |
3694 | does thou inhabit here, Cob? |
3694 | dost thou feel thyself well? |
3694 | doth he bear his cross with patience? |
3694 | doth none stand out? |
3694 | doth she haunt Cob''s? |
3694 | excellent good parts? |
3694 | fetch me my armour, my sword, quickly; a soldier speak with me, why, when, knaves? |
3694 | flacon) round the neck(?). |
3694 | gone? |
3694 | ha? |
3694 | hark you, hath she, hath she not a brother? |
3694 | has he not given you rhymes, and verses, and tricks? |
3694 | hast thou no harm? |
3694 | have you found that out? |
3694 | have you it? |
3694 | he lodge in such a base obscure place as thy house? |
3694 | here he is; come on, you make fair speed: Why, where in God''s name have you been so long? |
3694 | his friends? |
3694 | how am I then not poison''d? |
3694 | how am I then so sick? |
3694 | how began the quarrel''twixt you? |
3694 | how came he by that word, trow? |
3694 | how doest thou, good Cob? |
3694 | how knowest thou then that he opened it? |
3694 | how long since? |
3694 | how now, sirrah, what''s the matter? |
3694 | how should she know his parts? |
3694 | how then? |
3694 | how, knave? |
3694 | is my brother within? |
3694 | is not Thorello, my tried husband, here? |
3694 | is not your son a scholar, sir? |
3694 | is this your own invention? |
3694 | is''t not well penned? |
3694 | is''t you that are arrested at signior freshwater''s suit here? |
3694 | lost your purse? |
3694 | mack, I think it be so indeed: what is this humour? |
3694 | must it be fed? |
3694 | now on my soul, welcome; how dost thou, sweet rascal? |
3694 | now: Cob? |
3694 | of whom, I pray? |
3694 | or wrong thee? |
3694 | peace of me, knave? |
3694 | so many? |
3694 | swear he kill''d thee? |
3694 | that alters the case; who gave you knowledge of your wife''s being there? |
3694 | that rogue, that slave, that fencing Burgullion? |
3694 | the elder brother? |
3694 | the sign of the dumb man? |
3694 | to 1587(?). |
3694 | to Madonna Hesperida, is she your mistress? |
3694 | upon my soul, he loves you extremely, approve it, sweet Hesperida, will you? |
3694 | varlet, have you it? |
3694 | verses? |
3694 | were they not gone in then ere thou cam''st? |
3694 | what are you startled now? |
3694 | what call you him? |
3694 | what colour hast thou for that? |
3694 | what is he? |
3694 | what is he? |
3694 | what is''t? |
3694 | what lineage, what lineage? |
3694 | what meant he? |
3694 | what moves thee to this choler, ha? |
3694 | what noise is there? |
3694 | what pretext? |
3694 | what should he do? |
3694 | what stir is here? |
3694 | what stuff is here? |
3694 | what talk you of respect''mongst such As had neither spark of manhood nor good manners? |
3694 | what tricks? |
3694 | what would he think of me? |
3694 | what would you have, ha? |
3694 | what would you have? |
3694 | what''s a tall man unless he fight? |
3694 | what''s he? |
3694 | what''s here to do? |
3694 | what''s the matter? |
3694 | what, all sons of silence? |
3694 | what? |
3694 | when had you it? |
3694 | when went he? |
3694 | when, knave? |
3694 | where is this knave? |
3694 | where''s this? |
3694 | where? |
3694 | where? |
3694 | which way? |
3694 | who is within here? |
3694 | who was it, say''st thou? |
3694 | who wrong''d you in my house? |
3694 | who, Lorenzo? |
3694 | why dost thou not speak? |
3694 | why mighty? |
3694 | why, dost thou think that any reasonable creature, especially in the morning,( the sober time of the day too) would have ta''en my father for me? |
3694 | why? |
3694 | will he be poison''d with a simile? |
3694 | you do not flout me, do you? |
3694 | you stand amazed now, do you? |
4520 | ''” “ What by that? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | --and I said,''Chi? |
4520 | A fair man? |
4520 | A maudlin crying to be loved, which makes your knees all go rickety. ” “ Think that''s it? ” said Jim. |
4520 | A red light? ” “ Oh, that''s only the pit- bank on fire, ” said Robert, who had followed her. |
4520 | A rug for your knees? |
4520 | Ah, my dear fellow, what is life but a search for a friend? |
4520 | All right? |
4520 | Almost angered him? |
4520 | Am I not right? ” “ Quite. |
4520 | And I may be no other to her-- ” “ Then why not let it be so, and be satisfied? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | And I thought to myself: have I lost my cloak? |
4520 | And Tanny is all right, you say? |
4520 | And did she? |
4520 | And if I can fall in love-- But it''s becoming so damned hard-- ” “ What, to fall in love? ” asked Lilly. |
4520 | And if I do n''t choose to let you see me crying, that does n''t prove I''ve never had a bad half hour, does it? |
4520 | And is n''t it a great deal of honour for one man? |
4520 | And it does make a difference, does n''t it, Tanny dear? ” “ A great difference, ” said Tanny. |
4520 | And it does n''t matter, not to anybody but myself. ” “ What becomes of anybody, anyhow? |
4520 | And it is n''t natural, quite, to break it.--Do you know what I mean? ” She paused a moment. |
4520 | And she likes him too, does n''t she? ” said Tanny. |
4520 | And so-- you see-- everything goes-- ” “ But you will begin again? ” “ Yes. |
4520 | And supposing I am as you say-- are you any different? ” “ No, I''m not very different. |
4520 | And that if I enter into an undertaking, it will be successful. ” “ And your life has been always successful? ” “ Yes-- almost always. |
4520 | And then shot him dead. ” “ Was he dead? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | And then what? |
4520 | And was it not his privilege? |
4520 | And what did you think of it? ” “ Very fine. ” “ I think it is. |
4520 | And what have they learnt?--Why did so many of them have presentiments, as he called it? |
4520 | And what''s the bonum publicum but a mob power? |
4520 | And when will you be moving in? ” said Francis. |
4520 | And why? |
4520 | And will you practise with me, so that I can accompany you? ” said Manfredi eagerly. |
4520 | And wo n''t you let me take the accompaniment? |
4520 | And you are in the Nardini just across there, are you? |
4520 | And you can tell me if it is foolish to you.--Shall I tell you? |
4520 | And you have a family in England? |
4520 | Any relation of Robert? ” “ Oh, yes! |
4520 | Anybody? ” “ Rather! ” came the deep voice of Clariss. |
4520 | Are n''t you better off without him? ” “ I am. |
4520 | Are n''t you yourself seeking? ” “ Oh, that''s another matter, ” put in Argyle. |
4520 | Are n''t you? |
4520 | Are you all of you? ” “ Absolutely wild, ” said Lilly laconically. |
4520 | Are you all right? ” she said. |
4520 | Are you as keen on innocence as Manfredi is? ” “ Innocence? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Are you as keen on innocence as Manfredi is? ” “ Innocence? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Are you going to play without music? ” “ Yes, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Are you quite all right here? |
4520 | Are you quite comfortable? |
4520 | Are you sure you have everything? |
4520 | At what time? |
4520 | At what time? ” “ Any time, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Bach? |
4520 | Because the Germans are the only people who could make a war like this-- and I do n''t think they''ll ever do it again, do you? |
4520 | Been going to the dogs, eh? ” “ Or the bitches, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Beethoven inspires that in me, too. ” “ He makes you feel that all will be well with you at last? ” “ Yes, he does. |
4520 | Better-- better-- ” “ Good-- you say? |
4520 | Bring it, will you? |
4520 | But I keep myself from realising, do n''t you know? |
4520 | But I often wonder what will become of me. ” “ In what way? ” She was almost affronted. |
4520 | But I was n''t really. ” “ Then you expected him? ” “ No. |
4520 | But I''d rather meet her abroad than here-- and get on a different footing. ” “ Why? ” “ Oh, I do n''t know. |
4520 | But ah, what is it, you know? |
4520 | But as one must frown at something, why not at the bowler hat? |
4520 | But did you go up, now, to the belvedere? ” “ To the top-- where the vines are? |
4520 | But did you go up, now, to the belvedere? ” “ To the top-- where the vines are? |
4520 | But do n''t you give private recitals, too? ” “ No, I never have. ” “ Oh! ” cried Francis, catching his breath. |
4520 | But do you think I might? ” “ Oh, yes. |
4520 | But here you are in bed like a woman who''s had a baby.--You''re all right, are you? ” “ Yes, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | But in the heart--? |
4520 | But it drives us, and eats away the life-- and yet we love each other, and we must not separate-- Do you know what I mean? |
4520 | But my God-- what do you think of it? ” “ Seems pretty mean, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | But my LIFE seems alone, for some reason-- ” “ Have n''t you got relations? ” he said. |
4520 | But then what does a white mouse like that need? |
4520 | But there''s nothing doing for me in France.--When do you go back into the country, both of you? ” “ Friday, ” said Lilly. |
4520 | But they hardly count over here. ” “ Why do n''t you get married? ” he said. |
4520 | But was he HURT--? ” “ I do n''t know. |
4520 | But what could be better? |
4520 | But what did you FEEL about it, privately? ” “ I did n''t feel much. |
4520 | But what do you call the common good? ” replied the little doctor, with childish pertinence. |
4520 | But what if you have n''t got much education, to speak of? ” “ You can always get it, ” she said patronizing. |
4520 | But what is that for a life? ” cried the Marchese, with a hollow mockery. |
4520 | But what is the something? ” “ I do n''t know. |
4520 | But what was it you played? ” Aaron told him. |
4520 | But what was the good? |
4520 | But where ELSE? |
4520 | But where is it, when it comes to? |
4520 | But whether to go and live with him? |
4520 | But why console him? |
4520 | But why, why? |
4520 | But why? |
4520 | But will you try? ” “ Yes, I''ll try. ” “ Manfredi is just bringing the cocktails. |
4520 | But you and Tanny; why, there''s the world, and there''s Lilly: that''s how I put it, my boy. ” “ All right, Argyle.--Hoflichkeiten. ” “ What? |
4520 | Ca n''t stand that fellow, can you? |
4520 | Ca n''t you pull yourself together? ” But Aaron only became more gloomily withheld, retracting from life. |
4520 | Ca n''t you rouse him up? ” “ I think it depresses him partly that his bowels wo n''t work. |
4520 | Can I have it with soda? |
4520 | Can the heart ever beat quite alone? |
4520 | Can you find it satisfactory? ” “ Is it even true? ” said the Major. |
4520 | Can you find it satisfactory? ” “ Is it even true? ” said the Major. |
4520 | Can you help me out, Mr. Sisson? |
4520 | Chi sono chi vengono? |
4520 | Chi?'' |
4520 | Chianti? |
4520 | Coffee will no doubt be served. ” “ Will you take my arm, Sir? ” said the well- nourished Arthur. |
4520 | Come at half- past six, as today, will you? |
4520 | Could any race be anything but despicable, with such an antecedent? |
4520 | Could he have expected so much, in one life- time? |
4520 | Damn them all, why do n''t I leave them alone? |
4520 | Did he know many people? |
4520 | Did he need consolation? |
4520 | Did he scorn fortunes and fortune- making? |
4520 | Did he want to be Anthony to Cleopatra? |
4520 | Did n''t we hear that Lilly was in Germany? ” “ Yes, in Munich, being psychoanalysed, I believe it was. ” Aaron looked rather blank. |
4520 | Did you ever see anything like it? ” “ No. |
4520 | Do I speak the truth? ” “ Yes. |
4520 | Do n''t break it, will you? ” Marjory was shaking the bell against her ear. |
4520 | Do n''t you agree, Aaron? |
4520 | Do n''t you find it rather hot? ” “ Is there another bottle of beer there? ” said Jim, without moving, too settled even to stir an eye- lid. |
4520 | Do n''t you find it rather hot? ” “ Is there another bottle of beer there? ” said Jim, without moving, too settled even to stir an eye- lid. |
4520 | Do n''t you hate them? ” “ I do n''t like them. |
4520 | Do n''t you know? ” “ No, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Do n''t you remember? |
4520 | Do n''t you think it all works out rather stupid and unsatisfying? ” “ Ah, but a civil war would be different. |
4520 | Do n''t you think so? ” “ Oh, quite, ” said Angus, whose observations had got no further than the black cloth of the back of Aaron''s jacket. |
4520 | Do n''t you think that is very probable? ” “ I have no idea, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Do n''t you think we might hear him again? |
4520 | Do n''t you try to earn all you can? ” “ Ay, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Do n''t you? |
4520 | Do they want him? ” A faint smile came on her husband''s face. |
4520 | Do you believe it--? ” “ Yes, ” said Levison unwillingly. |
4520 | Do you feel the same? ” “ No, not that way, worse luck. |
4520 | Do you hear me? ” “ Miss Smitham''s coming in. |
4520 | Do you know what I mean? ” “ I do n''t know, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Do you know what Josephine Ford confessed to me? |
4520 | Do you know, I think that''s the very best drink in the tropics: sweet white wine, with soda? |
4520 | Do you like being in the country? ” “ Yes, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Do you mean us in this box, or the crew outside there? ” he jerked his head towards the auditorium. |
4520 | Do you mind that I call you Aaron? ” “ Not at all. |
4520 | Do you take this as my gospel? ” “ I take it you are speaking seriously. ” Here Lilly broke into that peculiar, gay, whimsical smile. |
4520 | Do you think a cuckoo in Africa and a cuckoo in Essex is one AND the same bird? |
4520 | Do you think it would hurt Robert? ” She screwed up her eyes, looking at Tanny. |
4520 | Do you think you''d prefer orange in yours? ” “ Ill have mine as you have yours. ” “ I do n''t take orange in mine. |
4520 | Do you understand me at all in what I say? |
4520 | Do you want a God you can strive to and attain, through love, and live happy ever after, countless millions of eternities, immortality and all that? |
4520 | Do you want to know anybody here, or do n''t you? |
4520 | Do you? ” replied Julia. |
4520 | Do-- and try me. ” “ And you will tell me what you feel? ” “ Yes. ” Aaron went out to his overcoat. |
4520 | Does it? ” “ Yes, ” said Aaron briefly. |
4520 | Eh? |
4520 | Eh? |
4520 | Eh? ” asked Jim. |
4520 | Else perhaps, where should I be? |
4520 | English moneys, eh? |
4520 | Enlighten us. ” “ Nowhere, I suppose. ” “ But is that satisfactory? |
4520 | Enough light will come in from here. ” “ Sure? ” said Manfredi. |
4520 | Every time. ” “ Then what''s to be done? ” “ Nothing, as far as I can see. |
4520 | Except that-- ” “ You do n''t care about anything? |
4520 | Fancy yourself snug in bed, do n''t you? |
4520 | Get up now, we''re going indoors. ” “ What do you reckon stars are? ” he persisted. |
4520 | Goodbye! ” “ You''ll come to Rackham? ” said Jim, leaning out of the train. |
4520 | Had he not gained it? |
4520 | Half past eight? ” “ Thank you very much. ” “ Then at half past eight the man will bring it in. |
4520 | Has a wild creature ever absolute trust? |
4520 | Has your experience been different, or the same? ” “ What was yours? ” asked Lilly. |
4520 | Has your experience been different, or the same? ” “ What was yours? ” asked Lilly. |
4520 | Have another cushion? |
4520 | Have n''t I loved you for twelve years, and worked and slaved for you and tried to keep you right? |
4520 | Have n''t I loved you? |
4520 | Have n''t I, Juley? ” “ Yes, ” said Julia, vaguely and wispily. |
4520 | Have you drunk your tea? |
4520 | Have you found it like that? |
4520 | Have you got a divine urge, or need? ” “ How do I know? ” laughed Aaron. |
4520 | Have you got a divine urge, or need? ” “ How do I know? ” laughed Aaron. |
4520 | Have you some engagement in Venice? ” “ No, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | He made out that the woman was asking him for his name--“Meester--? |
4520 | He wanted to say “ Friday then? ” “ Yes, I''d rather you went Thursday, ” repeated Lilly. |
4520 | He was breaking loose from one connection after another; and what for? |
4520 | Her own soul will wish to yield itself. ” “ Woman yield--? ” Aaron re- echoed. |
4520 | How can he be so alone? ” said the Marchese. |
4520 | How had he got his job? |
4520 | How is it to be? ” “ I do n''t vitally care either about money or my work or-- ” Lilly faltered. |
4520 | How is the cocktail, Nan? ” “ Yes, ” she said. |
4520 | How old are you? ” “ Thirty- three. ” “ You might almost be any age.--I do n''t know why I do n''t get married. |
4520 | How old? ” “ Oldest eight-- youngest nine months-- ” “ So small! ” sang Julia, with real tenderness now-- Aaron dropped his head. |
4520 | How should they? |
4520 | I am not to be badgered any more. ” “ Am I badgering you? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | I believe you''ve got the flu. ” “ Think I have? ” said Aaron frightened. |
4520 | I could kill him for it. ” “ Were you ever happy together? ” “ We were all right at first. |
4520 | I do n''t know. ” “ Too emotional? |
4520 | I enjoyed Beecham''s operas so much. ” “ Which do you like best? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | I feel I''ve come out of myself. ” “ Yes, it is a wonderful sight-- a wonderful sight-- But you have not been INTO the town? ” “ Yes. |
4520 | I feel that I myself have a special kind of fate, that will always look after me. ” “ And you can trust to it? ” “ Yes, I can. |
4520 | I felt myself go-- as if the bile broke inside me, and I was sick. ” “ Josephine seduced you? ” laughed Lilly. |
4520 | I have not been able to get over it all day. ” “ What was it? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | I hope you do n''t object to our catechism? ” “ No. |
4520 | I know she is not happy, I know I am not-- ” “ Why should you be? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | I know you do n''t believe it. ” “ What do I believe then? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | I left her as I shall leave the earth when I die-- because it has to be. ” “ Do you know what I think it is, Mr. Sisson? ” put in Lady Franks. |
4520 | I like her so much. ” “ And him? ” “ Mr. |
4520 | I like the WE, do n''t you? |
4520 | I loathe the slimy creepy personal intimacy.--''Don''t you think, Mr. Bricknell, that it''s lovely to be able to talk quite simply to somebody? |
4520 | I mean does it interest you? ” “ What-- the flute? ” “ No-- music altogether-- ” “ Music altogether--! |
4520 | I mean does it interest you? ” “ What-- the flute? ” “ No-- music altogether-- ” “ Music altogether--! |
4520 | I mean, does something drive you from inside? ” “ I ca n''t just rest, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | I never expected the mountains. ” “ You never expected the mountains? |
4520 | I only want to be left alone. ” “ Not to have anything to do with anybody? ” she queried ironically. |
4520 | I say, wo n''t you play for us one of these Saturdays? |
4520 | I should have been all right if I had n''t given in to her-- ” “ To whom? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | I think it does not. ” “ And will it ever again? ” “ Perhaps never. ” “ And then what? ” “ Then? |
4520 | I think it does not. ” “ And will it ever again? ” “ Perhaps never. ” “ And then what? ” “ Then? |
4520 | I think it does not. ” “ And will it ever again? ” “ Perhaps never. ” “ And then what? ” “ Then? |
4520 | I thought I''d better come and see, so that we can fetch you at lunch time.--You''ve got a seat? |
4520 | I told you there were two urges-- two great life- urges, did n''t I? |
4520 | I want to get a new tune out of myself. ” “ Had enough of this? ” “ Yes. ” A flush of anger came on Aaron''s face. |
4520 | I want to walk past most of it. ” “ Can you tell us where to? |
4520 | I went away. ” “ What from? ” “ From it all. ” “ From the woman in particular? ” “ Oh, yes. |
4520 | I went away. ” “ What from? ” “ From it all. ” “ From the woman in particular? ” “ Oh, yes. |
4520 | I will read it out to you later. ” “ Are n''t you satisfied? |
4520 | I''d be ashamed if I were you. ” “ Would you? ” said Jim. |
4520 | I''m a shady bird, in all senses of the word, in all senses of the word.--Now are you comfortable? |
4520 | I''m dying. ” “ What of? |
4520 | I''m not sure. ” “ You do n''t look forward to the Saturday mornings? ” he asked. |
4520 | I''m thankful we have none. ” “ Why? ” “ I ca n''t quite say. |
4520 | I''ve got TWO aunts called Tabitha: if not more. ” “ They are n''t of any vital importance to you, are they? ” said Levison. |
4520 | I, too, shall have to learn to play it. ” “ And run the risk of spoiling the shape of your mouth-- like Alcibiades. ” “ Is there a risk? |
4520 | I--? ” she exclaimed. |
4520 | IS he? ” sang Julia. |
4520 | If you do n''t breathe in, you suffocate. ” “ What about breathing out? ” said Robert. |
4520 | In God''s name, why? |
4520 | In the morning he must move: where? |
4520 | Incredibly old, like little boys who know too much-- aren''t they? |
4520 | Is he in love with her? |
4520 | Is it a God you''re after? |
4520 | Is it that you want to love, or to be obeyed? ” “ A bit of both. ” “ All right-- a bit of both. |
4520 | Is it the love urge? ” “ I do n''t know, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Is my life given me for nothing but to get children, and work to bring them up? |
4520 | Is n''t it awfully unkind to them? ” She rose in her eagerness. |
4520 | Is n''t it his duty to do what he can for himself? |
4520 | Is n''t it so, Sybil? ” “ Yes, I think so, ” said Sybil. |
4520 | Is n''t it strange? |
4520 | Is n''t it wonderful? ” said Lady Franks. |
4520 | Is n''t the result the same? ” “ It matters. |
4520 | Is that all right?--Yes, come just before twelve.--When?--Tomorrow? |
4520 | Is that the nature of love? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | Is that your intention? ” “ That I could n''t say, ” said the Marchesa, smoking, smoking. |
4520 | Is there any harm in it? |
4520 | Is there anything I could get you? |
4520 | Is this your little dodge? ” Again Aaron looked at Lilly with that odd double look of mockery and unwillingness to give himself away. |
4520 | It came naturally, though.--But why did you come, Aaron? |
4520 | It is such fine music. ” “ I find_ Ivan_ artificial. ” “ Do you? |
4520 | It makes me feel so sick. ” “ What-- do you want discords?--dissonances? ” “ No-- they are nearly as bad. |
4520 | It''ll just go on and on-- Does n''t it make you feel you''d go mad? ” He looked at her and shook his head. |
4520 | It''s all much too new and complicated for me.--But perhaps you know Italy? ” “ No, I do n''t, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | It''s no good her foisting her rights on to me. ” “ Is n''t that pure selfishness? ” “ It may be. |
4520 | It''s what does n''t go down. ” “ And how much is that? ” she asked, eying him. |
4520 | Lack of life? ” “ That''s about it, my young cock. |
4520 | League of Nations? ” “ Damn all leagues. |
4520 | Let them die of the bee- disease. ” “ Not only that, ” persisted Levison, “ but what is your alternative? |
4520 | Like to see the ball kept rolling. ” “ What have you been doing lately? ” “ Been staying a few days with my wife. ” “ No, really! |
4520 | Lilly has gone away? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Lungs are all right so far. ” “ How long shall I have to be in bed? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Major, where are you wandering off to? |
4520 | Manfredi lives for it, almost. ” “ For that and nothing else? ” asked Aaron. |
4520 | Marriage is a self- conscious egoistic state, it seems to me. ” “ You''ve got no children? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | May we ask what you bought? ” This he did not like. |
4520 | May we ask you another question, Mr. Sisson? |
4520 | May we hear you some time? ” “ Yes, ” said Aaron, non- committal. |
4520 | May we look at it? ” Josephine now turned the handle of the French windows, and stepped out. |
4520 | Meester--? ” she kept saying, with a note of interrogation. |
4520 | Miserable tea, but nobody has sent me any from England-- ” “ And you will go on till you die, Argyle? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | Mr. Lilly? ” he asked. |
4520 | Much best make rather a favour of it, than sort of ask them to hire you.--Don''t you agree? |
4520 | Music risky? |
4520 | My mother left me a bit over a thousand when she died. ” “ You do n''t mind what I say, do you? ” said Josephine. |
4520 | My wife''s gone to Norway. ” “ For good? ” “ No, ” laughed Lilly. |
4520 | No-- well, then-- would you like a bath now, or--? ” It was evident the Franks had dispensed much hospitality: much of it charitable. |
4520 | Not by ANY means. ” “ Are you not seeking any more, Lilly? ” asked the Marchese. |
4520 | Not good moneys? ” “ Yes, ” said Aaron, rather indignantly. |
4520 | Not he, otherwise whence this homage for the old man with much money? |
4520 | Not later than Thursday. ” “ You''re looking forward to going? ” The question was half bitter. |
4520 | Nothing beyond this hell-- only death or love-- languishing-- ” “ What could they have seen, anyhow? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Now we try to speak of that which we have in our centre of our hearts. ” “ And what have we there? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | Now, in life, there are only two great dynamic urges-- do you believe me--? ” “ How do I know? ” laughed Aaron. |
4520 | Now, in life, there are only two great dynamic urges-- do you believe me--? ” “ How do I know? ” laughed Aaron. |
4520 | Of me and your children? |
4520 | Of soul? |
4520 | Oh, God''s love, are n''t we fools! ” “ No-- why? ” cried Josephine, amused but resentful. |
4520 | Oh, ROBBIE, is n''t it all right, is n''t it just all right? ” She tailed off into her hurried, wild, repeated laugh. |
4520 | Oh, have n''t I? |
4520 | Oh, yes-- quite at home. ” “ Do you like it as well as anywhere? ” he asked. |
4520 | Oh-- er-- how''s your wife? |
4520 | On what grounds? |
4520 | Once outside the door, the husband asked: “ How shall we go home, dear? |
4520 | One can never be SURE of Providence. ” “ What can you be sure of, then? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | One franc? ” asked the driver. |
4520 | Only when it came he would n''t be there. ” “ Would you? ” “ Yes, indeed I would. |
4520 | Only while it stands I do want central heating and a good cook. ” “ May I come to dinner? ” said Jim. |
4520 | Or do you give the centre of your spirit to your work? |
4520 | Or perhaps you''d like to go home? |
4520 | Or was her fear only a delightful game of cat and mouse? |
4520 | Or was the fear genuine, and the delight the greater: a sort of sacrilege? |
4520 | Or white wine? |
4520 | Other things as well. ” “ But you do n''t like it much any more? ” “ I do n''t know. |
4520 | Paradisal enough for you, is it? ” “ The devil looking over Lincoln, ” said Lilly laughing, glancing up into Argyle''s face. |
4520 | Paris for the most part. ” “ Never America? ” “ No, never America. |
4520 | Plop!--Can the heart beat quite alone, alone in all the atmosphere, all the space of the universe? |
4520 | Plop!--Quite alone in all the space? ” A slow smile came over the Italian''s face. |
4520 | Poor old Algy.--Did I lay it on him tonight, or did I miss him? ” “ I think you got him, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Pray, why not? |
4520 | Rivets, and we ca n''t get them out. ” “ And where should we be if we could? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Self, self, self-- that''s all it is with them-- and ignorance. ” “ You''d rather have self without ignorance? ” he said, smiling finely. |
4520 | Shall YOU be any different in yourself, in another place? |
4520 | Shall we leave it at that, now? ” “ Yes, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Shall we? ” She rose from the table. |
4520 | Shall you? ” “ Candles! ” he repeated, putting the piccolo to his mouth and blowing a few piercing, preparatory notes. |
4520 | She the woman, the mother of his children, how should she ever even think to yield? |
4520 | She''s made up her mind she loves me, and she''s not going to let me off. ” “ Did you never love her? ” said Josephine. |
4520 | Sir William Franks? |
4520 | Six- pence a box. ” “ Got any holders? ” “ Holders? |
4520 | Six- pence a box. ” “ Got any holders? ” “ Holders? |
4520 | So what''s the good of talking about advantages? |
4520 | So you found our city impressive? ” “ Very! |
4520 | So you hope to earn your keep here? |
4520 | Tanny and I have been very much alone in various countries: but that''s two, not one. ” “ You miss her then? ” “ Yes, of course. |
4520 | Thank goodness my experience of a man has been different. ” “ We ca n''t all be alike, can we? |
4520 | That is a great pleasure. ” “ So I think.--Does your wife like it, too? ” “ Very much, indeed! |
4520 | That is n''t saying he''s a fool, neither. ” “ And what better is them that''s got education? ” put in another man. |
4520 | That''s a day to live for, what? ” “ Ha! |
4520 | That''s what I should have been if I had had my way. ” “ What instrument? ” asked Aaron. |
4520 | The Germans were false, we were false, everybody was false. ” “ And not you? ” asked Aaron shrewishly. |
4520 | The deaf Jewish Rosen was smiling down his nose and saying: “ What was that last? |
4520 | The piano? ” “ Yes-- the pianoforte. |
4520 | The spirit may move him in quite an opposite direction to the market-- then where is Lilly? |
4520 | Then he said smiling: “ So I''d better sit tight on my soul, till it hatches, had I? ” “ Oh, yes. |
4520 | Then he said to Aaron: “ Were you coming to see me, Sisson? |
4520 | They are very exclusive still, the Venetian_ noblesse_? ” said Miss Wade. |
4520 | They ought to have allowed us six times the quantity-- there''s plenty of sugar, why did n''t they? |
4520 | They were Guelfs, why not remain it? |
4520 | They''ll do a lot of cavilling. ” “ But wo n''t they ACT? ” cried Josephine. |
4520 | Tomorrow morning? |
4520 | Too much feeling for you? ” “ Yes, perhaps. |
4520 | Towards Rome? ” “ I came to meet Lilly, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Tram or carriage--? ” It was evident he was economical. |
4520 | Wahrhaftiger Kerl bin ich.--When am I going to see Tanny? |
4520 | Was he going to agree? |
4520 | Was it because he was one of her own race, and she, as it were, crept right home to him? |
4520 | Was it illusion, or was it genuine? |
4520 | Was n''t it extraordinary? |
4520 | Was not hers the divine will and the divine right? |
4520 | Was there? |
4520 | We are dilettanti, I suppose. ” “ No-- what is your instrument? |
4520 | We looked at most, I believe. ” “ And what do you remember best? ” “ I remember Botticelli''s Venus on the Shell. ” “ Yes! |
4520 | We''ll be like this again? ” she whispered. |
4520 | We''re all as right as ninepence-- what? |
4520 | We''re all right, are n''t we? ” he said loudly, turning to the stranger with a grin that showed his pointed teeth. |
4520 | We''re the only sober couple in the bunch-- what? ” cried Jim. |
4520 | We''ve got to accept the power motive, accept it in deep responsibility, do you understand me? |
4520 | Well now, and what next? |
4520 | Well now, it''ll be all right if I come up for a minute? |
4520 | Well, how are you? |
4520 | Well, then, what next? |
4520 | Well, well, might do worse.--Is it all right? ” Lilly eyed the suit. |
4520 | Well-- shall we join the ladies? |
4520 | What a nice name! ” “ No better than yours, is it? ” “ Mine! |
4520 | What about him? |
4520 | What are you thinking? ” “ Nothing. |
4520 | What did he clutch the castle- keys so tight for? |
4520 | What did they see when they looked at him? |
4520 | What did you say the address was? |
4520 | What did you say? ” said Francis, leaning forward. |
4520 | What difference did it make, anyhow? |
4520 | What do you care whether you see anybody again or not? |
4520 | What do you make of this this- or- nothing business? |
4520 | What do you say to whiskey and soda, Colonel? ” “ Why, delighted, Sir William, ” said the Colonel, bouncing up. |
4520 | What do you say, Major? ” “ She has all the airs of one, Sir William, ” said the Major, with the wistful grimness of his age and culture. |
4520 | What do you think of him? ” “ He seems sharp, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | What do you want to poke yourself and prod yourself into love, for? ” “ Because I''m DEAD without it. |
4520 | What do you want with more than one master? |
4520 | What do you want? ” “ Why, I keep saying I want to get married and feel sure of something. |
4520 | What does any man? |
4520 | What does he scheme for?--What does he contrive for? |
4520 | What else do you give? |
4520 | What else is there to it? ” Aaron sounded testy. |
4520 | What exactly brought you? ” “ Accident, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | What have n''t they to fight for? ” cried Josephine fiercely. |
4520 | What have you come for? ” “ To look at YOU, ” he said sarcastically. |
4520 | What if I do? |
4520 | What is TO CHEAP? ” “ Cheep! |
4520 | What is it a woman who allows me, and who has no answer? |
4520 | What is it? ” “ To make more money for the firm-- and so make his own chance of a rise better. ” The landlady was baffled for some moments. |
4520 | What is there to care about? ” said the Colonel. |
4520 | What liqueurs have you got? ” demanded Angus abruptly. |
4520 | What makes a child be born out of its mother to the pain and trouble of both of them? |
4520 | What pictures did you look at? ” “ I was with Dekker. |
4520 | What should he do? |
4520 | What should you say, Jimmy? ” she turned to one of the men. |
4520 | What sort of urge is your urge? |
4520 | What time is it, Manfredi? ” “ Half past six. |
4520 | What was it in her face that puzzled him? |
4520 | What was it? |
4520 | What was she going to ask of him? |
4520 | What was there in the female will so diabolical, he asked himself, that it could press like a flat sheet of iron against a man all the time? |
4520 | What was there instead? |
4520 | What were the shots? ” Aaron asked him. |
4520 | What will this beauty be? ” With finicky fingers she removed the newspaper. |
4520 | What would the world be like if everybody lived that way? ” “ Other people can please themselves, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | What''s a soul, to them--? ” “ What is it to you, is perhaps the more pertinent question, ” said Algy, flapping his eyelids like some crazy owl. |
4520 | What''s his education for? |
4520 | What''s the good of running after life, when we''ve got it in us, if nobody prevents us and obstructs us? ” Aaron felt very queer. |
4520 | What''s the objection? ” asked Struthers. |
4520 | What''s this?--What''s this? |
4520 | What''s your drink? ” “ Mine-- whiskey, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | What? |
4520 | What? |
4520 | What? |
4520 | What? |
4520 | What? ” “ Yes, I think he''s rather nice, ” said Tanny. |
4520 | What_ did_ she mean? |
4520 | Whe''to? |
4520 | When are you coming to dine with me? ” “ After you''ve dined with us-- say the day after tomorrow. ” “ Right you are. |
4520 | When shall we make it? ” he asked. |
4520 | When they had gone, he asked: “ Where is Manfredi? ” “ He will come in soon. |
4520 | When will they learn wisdom? ” “ But what do you call wisdom? ” asked Sherardy, the Hindu. |
4520 | When will they learn wisdom? ” “ But what do you call wisdom? ” asked Sherardy, the Hindu. |
4520 | Where are you going? ” “ Malta. ” “ Malta! |
4520 | Where d''you want to go? ” he heard the hearty tones of the policeman. |
4520 | Where did he live? |
4520 | Where should we be without it? ” Lilly started, went stiff and hostile. |
4520 | Where would their money be otherwise? |
4520 | Where you go? |
4520 | Where''s that--? ” “ Oh, it''s on the map. ” There was a little lull. |
4520 | Where? ” cried Julia. |
4520 | Who have you got sitting up with her? |
4520 | Who was she, what was she? |
4520 | Who? ” they cried. |
4520 | Why break every tie? |
4520 | Why ca n''t they submit to a bit of healthy individual authority? |
4520 | Why ca n''t you gather yourself there? ” “ At the tail? ” “ Yes. |
4520 | Why ca n''t you gather yourself there? ” “ At the tail? ” “ Yes. |
4520 | Why do n''t you be more like the Japanese you talk about? |
4520 | Why do you ask? ” “ I was n''t thinking. ” “ But what do you mean? |
4520 | Why do you ask? ” “ I was n''t thinking. ” “ But what do you mean? |
4520 | Why do you want so badly to be loved? ” “ Because I like it, damn you, ” barked Jim. |
4520 | Why give yourself away, anyhow? |
4520 | Why go forward into more nothingness, away from all that he knew, all he was accustomed to and all he belonged to? |
4520 | Why has n''t this man been taken to the Clearing Station?'' |
4520 | Why have you come back to me? |
4520 | Why is it, do you think, that English people abroad go so very QUEER-- so ultra- English-- INCREDIBLE!--and at the same time so perfectly impossible? |
4520 | Why is it? ” “ Shall I say what I think? |
4520 | Why is it? ” “ Shall I say what I think? |
4520 | Why not come with us to Florence? ” said Francis. |
4520 | Why not flower again? |
4520 | Why not remain an infant? ” “ Be damned and blasted to women and all their importances, ” cried Aaron. |
4520 | Why not try and love somebody? ” Jim eyed her narrowly. |
4520 | Why not? |
4520 | Why not? |
4520 | Why not? ” “ If it''s going to, it will, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Why should I know? ” “ But we must know: especially when other people will be hurt, ” said she. |
4520 | Why should I? |
4520 | Why should I? |
4520 | Why should it? |
4520 | Why should n''t he want to move? |
4520 | Why should you hesitate? ” “ All right, then, ” said Aaron, not without some feeling of constraint. |
4520 | Why were their haunches so prominent? |
4520 | Why when we were in London-- when we were at lunch one morning it suddenly struck me, have n''t I left my fur cloak somewhere? |
4520 | Why, is he in Venice? |
4520 | Why, ten francs a day, you know, pension-- if you stay-- How long will you stay? ” “ At least a month, I expect. ” “ A month! |
4520 | Why? |
4520 | Why? |
4520 | Why? |
4520 | Why? |
4520 | Why? ” They stepped down in the darkness from their perch. |
4520 | Why? ” “ Looking at them even. |
4520 | Why? ” “ You seem to. ” “ Do I? |
4520 | Why? ” “ You seem to. ” “ Do I? |
4520 | Will he never heed? |
4520 | Will he never understand? ” he thought. |
4520 | Will that suit you? |
4520 | Will you come tomorrow? ” Aaron said he would on Monday. |
4520 | Will you do it for us now, and let us see what it is like?'' |
4520 | Will you play? ” “ I should love to, ” replied the husband. |
4520 | Will you sit? ” “ Can I have a room? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Will you sit? ” “ Can I have a room? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Will you smoke? |
4520 | Will you? ” “ I thought you hated accompaniments. ” “ Oh, no-- not just unison. |
4520 | Wine? |
4520 | Wo n''t they be awfully bothered? |
4520 | Wo n''t they fight for that? ” Aaron sat smiling, slowly shaking his head. |
4520 | Wo n''t you give us hope that it might be so? ” “ I''ve no idea, either, ” said she. |
4520 | Wo n''t you smoke? ” The strange, naked, remote- seeming voice! |
4520 | Wonderful person, to be able to do it. ” “ Where has he gone? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Would you have us make money? |
4520 | Would you like to play for us some time, do you think? ” “ Do you want me to? |
4520 | Would you like to play for us some time, do you think? ” “ Do you want me to? |
4520 | Would you? ” Aaron lay still, and did not answer. |
4520 | Yes, ten francs a day. ” “ For everything? ” “ Everything. |
4520 | Yes, that. ” “ And you could n''t go back? ” Aaron shook his head. |
4520 | Yes, you can. ” “ What terms? ” “ Terms! |
4520 | Yes-- well!-- Well-- now, why are you going away? ” “ For a change, ” said Lilly. |
4520 | Yes-- what did he believe in, besides money? |
4520 | Yes? |
4520 | Yes? ” Aaron promised-- and then he found himself in the street. |
4520 | Yes? ” said the doctor. |
4520 | Yet I find_ Kovantchina_, which is all mass music practically, gives me more satisfaction than any other opera. ” “ Do you really? |
4520 | Yet what could be more conspicuous than this elegant pair, picking their way through the cabbage- leaves? |
4520 | You are? |
4520 | You ca n''t really be alone. ” “ No matter how many mistakes you''ve made-- you ca n''t really be alone--? ” asked Lilly. |
4520 | You come straight from England? ” Sir William held out his hand courteously and benevolently, smiling an old man''s smile of hospitality. |
4520 | You do n''t want me to say things, do you? ” he said. |
4520 | You know that you have got an urge, do n''t you? ” “ Yes-- ” rather unwillingly Aaron admitted it. |
4520 | You talk, and you make a man believe you''ve got something he has n''t got? |
4520 | You thought her a pretty woman, yes? ” “ No-- not particularly pretty. |
4520 | You wo n''t believe you''re right in the way of traffic, will you now, in Covent Garden Market? |
4520 | You wo n''t go down? |
4520 | You yourself have no definite goal? ” “ No. ” “ Ah! |
4520 | You''d find it rather domestic. ” “ Where do you live? ” “ Rather far out now-- Amersham. ” “ Amersham? |
4520 | You''d find it rather domestic. ” “ Where do you live? ” “ Rather far out now-- Amersham. ” “ Amersham? |
4520 | You''d like a wash? ” But Jim had already opened his bag, taken off his coat, and put on an old one. |
4520 | You''ll be the same there as you are here. ” “ How am I here? ” “ Why, you''re all the time grinding yourself against something inside you. |
4520 | You''ll come in, wo n''t you? ” Aaron nodded rather stupidly and testily. |
4520 | You''re a comic. ” “ Am I though? ” said Jim. |
4520 | You''re a married man, are n''t you? ” The sardonic look of the stranger rested on the subaltern. |
4520 | You''re awfully lucky, you know, to be able to pour yourself down your flute. ” “ You think I go down easy? ” he laughed. |
4520 | You''re quite sure now? |
4520 | You''ve got a love- urge that urges you to God; have you? |
4520 | You''ve got a permanent job? ” asked Josephine. |
4520 | _ Egoisme a deux_-- ” “ What''s that mean? ” “_ Egoisme a deux_? |
4520 | _ Egoisme a deux_-- ” “ What''s that mean? ” “_ Egoisme a deux_? |
4520 | _ Siamo nel paradiso_, remember. ” “ But why should we drink your whiskey? |
4520 | “ A little Bovril? ” The same faint shake. |
4520 | “ A man ca n''t live, ” said the Italian, “ without an object. ” “ Well-- and that object? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ A whiskey and soda, Lilly? |
4520 | “ Act? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ Ah, my dear fellow, are you still so young and callow that you cherish the illusion of fair play? ” said Argyle. |
4520 | “ All right, I think. ” “ But you''ve been back to them? ” cried Josephine in dismay. |
4520 | “ Always seeking a friend-- and always a new one? ” “ If I lose the friend I''ve got. |
4520 | “ Am I? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ Am I? ” she smiled. |
4520 | “ And I''ll come to you.--Shall I come in fifteen minutes? ” She looked at him with strange, slow dark eyes. |
4520 | “ And can you find two men to stick together, without feeling criminal, and without cringing, and without betraying one another? |
4520 | “ And do you send her money? ” she asked. |
4520 | “ And me? ” “ You''ll have to live without a rod, meanwhile. ” To which pleasant remark Aaron made no reply. |
4520 | “ And never finding? ” said Lilly, laughing. |
4520 | “ And so the war hardly affected you? |
4520 | “ And so, Mr. Sisson, you have no definite purpose in coming to Italy? ” “ No, none, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ And stay how long? ” “ Oh-- as long as it lasts, ” said Robert again. |
4520 | “ And then what? ” “ Nay, ” interrupted Aaron. |
4520 | “ And what are they going to do about Job Arthur Freer? |
4520 | “ And what are you going to do in Florence? ” asked Argyle. |
4520 | “ And what good will Malta do you? ” he asked, envious. |
4520 | “ And what''s your way out? ” Aaron asked him. |
4520 | “ And where are you bound, Mr. Sisson? |
4520 | “ And where? ” Again she was silent for some moments, as if struggling with herself. |
4520 | “ And who SHOULD have the money, indeed, if not your wives? |
4520 | “ And who knows what you''ve been doing all these months? ” she wept. |
4520 | “ And whom shall I submit to? ” he said. |
4520 | “ And will you sing? ” he answered. |
4520 | “ And yours, Lilly? ” asked the Marchese anxiously. |
4520 | “ Anyhow, ” he said at length, “ you''ll come, wo n''t you? |
4520 | “ Anything you wanted? ” repeated Robert, military, rather peremptory. |
4520 | “ Are n''t we perfectly satisfied and in bliss with the wonderful women who honour us as wives? ” “ Ah, yes, yes! ” said the Marchese. |
4520 | “ Are we to let t''other side run off wi''th''bone, then, while we sit on our stunts an''yowl for it? ” asked Brewitt. |
4520 | “ Are you a miner? ” Robert asked,_ de haute en bas_. |
4520 | “ Are you a socialist? ” asked Levison. |
4520 | “ Are you going out, Father? ” she said. |
4520 | “ Are you here by yourself? ” asked the sick man. |
4520 | “ Are you? ” persisted the child, balancing on one foot. |
4520 | “ Ay, an''what''s the purpose of his life? ” insisted Aaron Sisson. |
4520 | “ Ay, what? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ Being yourself-- what does it mean? ” “ To me, everything. ” “ And to most folks, nothing. |
4520 | “ Beldover? ” inquired Robert. |
4520 | “ Besides, Aaron, ” said Lilly, drinking his last sip of wine, “ what do you care whether you see me again or not? |
4520 | “ But DO you want to be with Scott, out and out, or DON''T you? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ But I do n''t know why you talk about him. ” “ Is he inexperienced, Josephine dear? |
4520 | “ But I''m not personal at all, am I, Mr. Bricknell? ” said Tanny. |
4520 | “ But ca n''t there be a balancing of wills? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ But do you think I might--? ” said Francis moodily. |
4520 | “ But do you think it''s true what he says? |
4520 | “ But does it matter? ” said Lilly slowly, “ in which of you the desire initiates? |
4520 | “ But does it matter? ” said Lilly slowly, “ in which of you the desire initiates? |
4520 | “ But for how long will you settle down--? ” he asked. |
4520 | “ But have you anything to take you to Venice? |
4520 | “ But how can I live in Italy? ” he said. |
4520 | “ But is n''t it? ” she persisted. |
4520 | “ But people always turn up. ” “ And then next year, what will you do? ” “ Who knows? |
4520 | “ But people always turn up. ” “ And then next year, what will you do? ” “ Who knows? |
4520 | “ But that''s not really how you take it? ” she said. |
4520 | “ But was n''t it an extraordinary affair? ” “ Very, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ But we can be friends, ca n''t we? ” he said. |
4520 | “ But what can have brought you to such a disastrous decision? ” “ I ca n''t say, ” she replied, with a little laugh. |
4520 | “ But what difference does it make, ” said Aaron Sisson, “ whether they govern themselves or not? |
4520 | “ But what do you really think will happen to the world? ” Lilly asked Jim, amid much talk. |
4520 | “ But what''s the good of going to Malta? |
4520 | “ But where is YOUR SEAT? ” cried Francis, peering into the packed and jammed compartments of the third class. |
4520 | “ But why ca n''t man accept it as the natural order of things? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ But why not? |
4520 | “ But why should it? |
4520 | “ But why? |
4520 | “ But why? |
4520 | “ But why? ” said Josephine. |
4520 | “ But wo n''t you come and have coffee with us at our table? ” said Francis. |
4520 | “ But you do n''t want to get away from EVERYTHING, do you? |
4520 | “ But you must earn money, must n''t you? ” said she. |
4520 | “ But you''ll let us do that again, wo n''t you? ” said she. |
4520 | “ But you''re going home to them, are n''t you? ” said Josephine, in whose eyes the tears had already risen. |
4520 | “ But, Josephine, ” said Robert, “ do n''t you think we''ve had enough of that sort of thing in the war? |
4520 | “ Ca n''t you break it? ” “ Yes, if you hit it with a hammer, ” he said. |
4520 | “ Ca n''t you rouse his spirit? |
4520 | “ Ca n''t you settle down to something?--to a job, for instance? ” “ I''ve not found the job I could settle down to, yet, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ Can I come up and have a chat? ” “ I''ve got that man who''s had flu. |
4520 | “ Can I have a room? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ Christmas- tree candles, and toffee. ” “ For the little children? |
4520 | “ Cigarette, Julia? ” said Robert to his wife. |
4520 | “ DO you agree, Mr. Sisson? ” said the Marchesa. |
4520 | “ Did YOU leave the parlour door open? ” she asked of Millicent, suspiciously. |
4520 | “ Did you ever intend to marry Jim Bricknell? ” he asked. |
4520 | “ Did you ever keep count? ” Tanny persisted. |
4520 | “ Did you indeed? |
4520 | “ Did you see the row yesterday? ” asked Levison. |
4520 | “ Did you want anything? ” Robert enquired once more. |
4520 | “ Did you want anything? ” asked Robert, from behind the light. |
4520 | “ Do n''t I? |
4520 | “ Do n''t you agree? ” He turned wolfishly to Clariss. |
4520 | “ Do they?--Don''t you think it''s nice of them? ” she said, gently removing her hand from his. |
4520 | “ Do you believe in them less than I do, Aaron? ” he asked slowly. |
4520 | “ Do you feel ill, Sisson? ” he said sharply. |
4520 | “ Do you feel quite well? ” Josephine asked him. |
4520 | “ Do you find it a tight squeeze, then? ” she said, turning to Aaron once more. |
4520 | “ Do you find it so? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ Do you find this room very cold? ” she asked of Aaron. |
4520 | “ Do you hate the normal British as much as I do? ” she asked him. |
4520 | “ Do you know how vilely you''ve treated me? ” she said, staring across the space at him. |
4520 | “ Do you love playing? ” she asked him. |
4520 | “ Do you mean that, Aaron? ” he said, looking into Aaron''s face with a hard, inflexible look. |
4520 | “ Do you mean to say you do n''t MEAN what you''ve been saying? ” said Levison, now really looking angry. |
4520 | “ Do you recognise anyone in the orchestra? ” she asked. |
4520 | “ Do you see anybody we know, Josephine? ” she asked. |
4520 | “ Do you see signs of the old maid coming out in me? |
4520 | “ Do you seek nothing? ” “ We married men who have n''t left our wives, are we supposed to seek anything? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ Do you seek nothing? ” “ We married men who have n''t left our wives, are we supposed to seek anything? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ Do you think so, my dear? ” said the old man, with his eternal smile: the curious smile of old people when they are dead. |
4520 | “ Do you think so? ” he answered. |
4520 | “ Do you think you''re wise now, ” he said, “ to sit in that sun? ” “ In November? ” laughed Lilly. |
4520 | “ Do you think you''re wise now, ” he said, “ to sit in that sun? ” “ In November? ” laughed Lilly. |
4520 | “ Do you think, Lilly, that we''re the world? ” said Robert ironically. |
4520 | “ Do you want to be believed? ” “ No, I do n''t care a straw. |
4520 | “ Do you, Aaron? ” “ I do n''t WANT to, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ Do you? ” said Lady Franks. |
4520 | “ Does a man care? ” “ He might. ” “ Then he''s no man. ” “ Thanks again, old fellow. ” “ Welcome, ” said Lilly, grimacing. |
4520 | “ Does he seek another woman? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ Does it? ” asked Lilly of the Marchese. |
4520 | “ Does n''t SHE love you? ” said Aaron to Jim amused, indicating Josephine. |
4520 | “ Does n''t it go more here? ” “ No no, no no, not at all. |
4520 | “ Eh--? ” and Jim stooped, grinning at the smaller man. |
4520 | “ Eh? |
4520 | “ Eh? |
4520 | “ Eh? ” Aaron looked up. |
4520 | “ Eh? ” “ Are you going out? ” She twisted nervously. |
4520 | “ Eh? ” “ Are you going out? ” She twisted nervously. |
4520 | “ Enough of what? ” she said. |
4520 | “ Er-- what bed do you propose to put him in? ” asked Robert rather officer- like. |
4520 | “ Father, shall you set the Christmas Tree? ” they cried. |
4520 | “ Give him time. ” “ Is he also afraid-- like Alcibiades? ” “ Are you, Aaron? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ Give him time. ” “ Is he also afraid-- like Alcibiades? ” “ Are you, Aaron? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ Glad to see you-- well, everything all right? |
4520 | “ Go up there? ” said Aaron, pointing. |
4520 | “ Have a drink, Josephine? ” said Robert. |
4520 | “ Have another? ” said Jim, who was attending fixedly, with curious absorption, to the stranger. |
4520 | “ Have n''t I? |
4520 | “ Have n''t you got the music? ” She rose, not answering, and found him a little book. |
4520 | “ Have one? ” Aaron shook his head, and Jim did not press him. |
4520 | “ Have you got any Christmas- tree candles? ” he asked as he entered the shop. |
4520 | “ Have you noticed it? ” “ No, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ Have you really broken your engagement with Jim? ” shrilled Tanny in a high voice, as the train roared. |
4520 | “ Have you? ” He lifted his head and looked at her. |
4520 | “ He wants Julia to go down and stay. ” “ Is she going? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ Help him up to my room, will you? ” he said to the constable. |
4520 | “ How are you, darling? ” she asked. |
4520 | “ How are your wife and children? ” she asked spitefully. |
4520 | “ How do I look, eh? |
4520 | “ How do you come here? ” “ I play the flute, ” he answered, as he shook hands. |
4520 | “ How do you do? |
4520 | “ How do you like Lilly? |
4520 | “ How do you like being in London? ” “ I like London, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ How is everybody? ” asked Tanny. |
4520 | “ How is the night? ” she said, as if to change the whole feeling in the room. |
4520 | “ How long ha''you been married? |
4520 | “ How lovely for you!--And when will you go to Norway, Tanny? ” “ In about a month, ” said Tanny. |
4520 | “ How many children have you? ” sang Julia from her distance. |
4520 | “ How many do you want? ” he said. |
4520 | “ How many do you want? ” “ A dozen. ” “ Ca n''t let you have a dozen. |
4520 | “ How much? ” said Aaron to the driver. |
4520 | “ How old are you? ” “ I''m twenty- five. |
4520 | “ How shall you escape it? ” said Levison. |
4520 | “ How strange!--Why is it burning now? ” “ It always burns, unfortunately-- it is most consistent at it. |
4520 | “ How''s that? ” “ Why, because, in a way the people of India have an easier time even than the people of England. |
4520 | “ How, act? ” “ Why, defy the government, and take things in their own hands, ” said Josephine. |
4520 | “ How--? ” she said, with a sudden grunting, unhappy laugh. |
4520 | “ How? ” “ You can live by your writing-- but I''ve got to have a job. ” “ Is that all? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ How? ” “ You can live by your writing-- but I''ve got to have a job. ” “ Is that all? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ I could n''t make it out, could you? ” “ Oh, ” cried Francis. |
4520 | “ I do n''t even want to believe in them. ” “ But in yourself? ” Lilly was almost wistful-- and Aaron uneasy. |
4520 | “ I do n''t know why I cry. ” “ You can cry for nothing, ca n''t you? ” he said. |
4520 | “ I hope personification is right.--Ought to be_ allegory_ or something else? ” This from Clariss to Robert. |
4520 | “ I say, do you hear the bells? ” said Robert, poking his head into the room. |
4520 | “ I say, ” said Robert suddenly, from the rear--“anybody have a drink? |
4520 | “ I suddenly saw that if there was a man in England who could save me, it was you. ” “ Save you from what? ” asked Lilly, rather abashed. |
4520 | “ I suppose so. ” “ And why? ” she cried. |
4520 | “ I think I''ll retire. ” “ Will you? ” said Julia, also rising. |
4520 | “ I think they''re anything but angels. ” “ Do you though? |
4520 | “ I went to the Uffizi. ” “ To the Uffizi? |
4520 | “ I wish I were in the country, do n''t you? |
4520 | “ I wonder what he''s doing here. ” “ Do n''t you think we might ASK him? ” said Francis, in a vehement whisper. |
4520 | “ I wonder what will become of him-- ” “--Of the one who climbed for the flag, you mean? |
4520 | “ I''m not so late, am I? ” asked Aaron. |
4520 | “ I''ve been awfully bored. ” “ Have you? ” grinned Jim. |
4520 | “ I''ve got it now in my overcoat pocket, ” he said, “ if you like. ” “ Have you? |
4520 | “ I''ve nothing to lose. ” “ And were you surprised, Lilly, to find your friend here? ” asked Del Torre. |
4520 | “ If childhood is more important than manhood, then why live to be a man at all? |
4520 | “ If it is a good government, doctor, how can it be so bad for the people? ” said the landlady. |
4520 | “ Is Mr. Lilly here? |
4520 | “ Is it pretty much the same out there in India? ” he asked of the doctor, suddenly. |
4520 | “ Is it that man Aaron Sisson? ” asked Robert. |
4520 | “ Is it true for you? ” “ Nearly, ” said Aaron, looking into the quiet, half- amused, yet frightening eyes of the other man. |
4520 | “ Is it very heavy? ” asked Millicent. |
4520 | “ Is music your line as well, then? ” asked Aaron. |
4520 | “ Is n''t it nasty? ” she said. |
4520 | “ Is n''t there a lift in this establishment? ” he said, as he groped his way up the stone stairs. |
4520 | “ Is n''t there something we could do to while the time away? ” Everybody suddenly laughed-- it sounded so remote and absurd. |
4520 | “ Is that your flute? ” asked Lilly. |
4520 | “ It IS he? ” said Josephine quietly, meeting Jim''s eye. |
4520 | “ It IS the chap-- What? ” he exclaimed excitedly, looking round at his friends. |
4520 | “ It was, was n''t it? ” she said, turning a wondering, glowing face to him. |
4520 | “ It''ll do tomorrow morning, wo n''t it? ” he asked rather mocking. |
4520 | “ It''s what chickens say when they''re poking their little noses into new adventures-- naughty ones. ” “ Are chickens naughty? |
4520 | “ Jolly-- eh? ” said Jim. |
4520 | “ Keb? |
4520 | “ Leave a message for you, Sir? ” Lilly wrote his address on a card, then changed his mind. |
4520 | “ Let''s, everybody-- let''s. ” “ Shall we really? ” asked Robert. |
4520 | “ Like me to tuck the sheets round you, should n''t you? |
4520 | “ Look, Father, do n''t you love it! ” “ Love it? ” he re- echoed, ironical over the word love. |
4520 | “ Look, Mother, is n''t it a beauty? ” “ Mind the ring does n''t come out, ” said her mother. |
4520 | “ Make haste and get better, and we''ll go. ” “ Where? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ May I stay till Monday morning? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ May he not be Guest? ” he asked, fatherly. |
4520 | “ Me? |
4520 | “ Me? |
4520 | “ Me? |
4520 | “ Me? ” he said. |
4520 | “ Me? ” he said. |
4520 | “ Me? ” said Sisson. |
4520 | “ Mind if I stay till Saturday? ” There was a pause. |
4520 | “ Must it be bloody, Josephine? ” said Robert. |
4520 | “ My dear fellow, the only hope of salvation for the world lies in the re- institution of slavery. ” “ What kind of slavery? ” asked Levison. |
4520 | “ My hat and coat? ” he said to Lilly. |
4520 | “ No, I like to have it in my bedroom. ” “ You do n''t eat bread in the night? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ No, I want none of that. ” “ Then--? ” But now she sat gazing on him with wide, heavy, incomprehensible eyes. |
4520 | “ No-- I do n''t mind it. ” “ Do you feel at home in Florence? ” Aaron asked her. |
4520 | “ No-- where''s the loaf? ” And he cut himself about half of it. |
4520 | “ Not asleep? |
4520 | “ Not good, eh? |
4520 | “ Not that you loved any other woman? ” “ God save me from it. ” “ You just left off loving? ” “ Not even that. |
4520 | “ Not that you loved any other woman? ” “ God save me from it. ” “ You just left off loving? ” “ Not even that. |
4520 | “ Now Marchesa-- might we hope for a song? ” “ No-- I do n''t sing any more, ” came the slow, contralto reply. |
4520 | “ Now then--_siamo nel paradiso_, eh? |
4520 | “ Now? ” he said. |
4520 | “ Now? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ Of what? |
4520 | “ Oh, what would you? |
4520 | “ Or what, then? ” “ Or anything. |
4520 | “ Please do take another-- but perhaps you do n''t like mushrooms? ” Aaron quite liked mushrooms, and helped himself to the_ entree_. |
4520 | “ Robert is so happy with all the good things-- aren''t you dear? ” she sang, breaking into a hurried laugh. |
4520 | “ Shall I go away? ” he said at length. |
4520 | “ Shall I? ” she said. |
4520 | “ Shall we be lovers? ” came his voice once more, with the faintest touch of irony. |
4520 | “ Shall we be lovers? ” he said. |
4520 | “ Shall we go into the sala and have real music? |
4520 | “ Shall we illuminate one of the fir- trees by the lawn? ” “ Yes! |
4520 | “ Shall we listen to it for a minute? ” She led him across the grass past the shrubs to the big tree in the centre. |
4520 | “ She does n''t love me. ” “ Is that true? ” asked Robert hastily, of Josephine. |
4520 | “ Sir William Franks? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ So you feel you have no country of your own? ” “ I have Italy. |
4520 | “ Stay all night? ” he said. |
4520 | “ Tell me, ” said Francis, “ will you have your coffee black, or with milk? ” He was determined to restore a tone of sobriety. |
4520 | “ Thank goodness the Italians are better than they used to be. ” “ Are they better than they used to be? ” “ Oh, much. |
4520 | “ That goes much lower down-- about here. ” “ Are you sure? ” said Lady Franks. |
4520 | “ That man''s sitting in it. ” “ Which? ” cried Francis, indignant. |
4520 | “ That''s how it looks on the face of it, is n''t it? ” he said. |
4520 | “ That''s the chap. ” “ Who? |
4520 | “ The nearest? ” said the policeman. |
4520 | “ Then it''s no engagement? ” said Robert. |
4520 | “ Then upon what grounds did you abandon your family? |
4520 | “ Then what''s the use of going somewhere else? |
4520 | “ Then who would be the masters?--the professional classes, doctors and lawyers and so on? ” “ What? |
4520 | “ Then who would be the masters?--the professional classes, doctors and lawyers and so on? ” “ What? |
4520 | “ Then will you come and have dinner with us--? ” Francis fixed up the time and the place-- a small restaurant at the other end of the town. |
4520 | “ Then wo n''t you come on-- let me see-- on Wednesday? |
4520 | “ There now, is n''t it handsome? |
4520 | “ They''re old-- older than the Old Man of the Seas, sometimes, are n''t they? |
4520 | “ Think they have? ” he laughed. |
4520 | “ Three. ” “ Girls or boys? ” “ Girls. ” “ All girls? |
4520 | “ Three. ” “ Girls or boys? ” “ Girls. ” “ All girls? |
4520 | “ To see her people? |
4520 | “ To whom? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ We are sure to run across one another. ” “ When are you going? ” asked Aaron. |
4520 | “ We might begin to be ourselves, anyhow. ” “ And what does that mean? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ We''re so happy in a land of plenty, AREN''T WE DEAR? ” “ Do you mean I''m greedy, Julia? ” said Robert. |
4520 | “ We''re so happy in a land of plenty, AREN''T WE DEAR? ” “ Do you mean I''m greedy, Julia? ” said Robert. |
4520 | “ We''ve got one! ” “ Afore I have my dinner? ” he answered amiably. |
4520 | “ Well now, what do you base your opinion on? ” Mr. French gave various bases for his opinion. |
4520 | “ Well then, what is it? |
4520 | “ Well, and how have you spent your morning? ” asked the host. |
4520 | “ Well, and what have you been doing with yourself? ” said he. |
4520 | “ Well, then, Angus-- suppose we do that, then?--When shall we start? ” Angus was the nervous insister. |
4520 | “ Well, then, ” said Francis, “ you will be in to lunch here, wo n''t you? |
4520 | “ Well, then? |
4520 | “ Well, who AM I to think of? ” she asked. |
4520 | “ Well, ” he said, “ you''ve got men and nations, and you''ve got the machines of war-- so how are you going to get out of it? |
4520 | “ Well, ” said Argyle, “ what have you been doing with yourself, eh? |
4520 | “ Well, ” said the little Hindu doctor, “ and how are things going now, with the men? ” “ The same as ever, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ Well-- shall I say? |
4520 | “ Were you on your way home? ” asked Robert, huffy. |
4520 | “ What SHOULD I drink? ” said Aaron, whose acquaintance with wines was not very large. |
4520 | “ What about it, then? ” asked Aaron. |
4520 | “ What about the bridegroom, Algy, my boy? |
4520 | “ What about the wife and kiddies? |
4520 | “ What about the wife? ” said Robert-- the young lieutenant. |
4520 | “ What am I going to do this winter, do you think? ” Aaron asked. |
4520 | “ What am I to put it in? ” he queried. |
4520 | “ What are you bothering about? ” he said. |
4520 | “ What are you doing today? ” Aaron was not doing anything in particular. |
4520 | “ What are you going to do about your move on? ” “ Me! ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ What becomes of me? |
4520 | “ What ca n''t you? ” “ Choose. |
4520 | “ What did you do yesterday? ” “ Yesterday? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ What did you do yesterday? ” “ Yesterday? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ What do I call the common good? ” repeated the landlady. |
4520 | “ What do I call wisdom? ” repeated the landlady. |
4520 | “ What do YOU care for? ” asked Lilly. |
4520 | “ What do YOU think, Josephine? ” asked Lilly. |
4520 | “ What do the words mean? ” he asked her. |
4520 | “ What do you make of the miners? ” said Jim, suddenly taking a new line. |
4520 | “ What do you make of''em, eh? ” he said. |
4520 | “ What do you reckon stars are? ” asked the sepulchral voice of Jim. |
4520 | “ What do you want to do? ” “ Nay, that''s what I want to know. ” “ Do you want anything? |
4520 | “ What do you want to do? ” “ Nay, that''s what I want to know. ” “ Do you want anything? |
4520 | “ What do you want to know for? ” He made no other answer, and turned again to the music. |
4520 | “ What do you want to see in me? ” he asked, with a smile, looking steadily back again. |
4520 | “ What does he do? ” “ Writes-- stories and plays. ” “ And makes it pay? ” “ Hardly at all.--They want us to go. |
4520 | “ What does he do? ” “ Writes-- stories and plays. ” “ And makes it pay? ” “ Hardly at all.--They want us to go. |
4520 | “ What else could I tell them? |
4520 | “ What gives you such a belly- ache for love, Jim? ” said Lilly, “ or for being loved? |
4520 | “ What gives you such a belly- ache for love, Jim? ” said Lilly, “ or for being loved? |
4520 | “ What have I been able to say to the children-- what have I been able to tell them? ” “ What HAVE you told them? ” he asked coldly. |
4520 | “ What have I been able to say to the children-- what have I been able to tell them? ” “ What HAVE you told them? ” he asked coldly. |
4520 | “ What have they to fight for? ” “ Why, everything! |
4520 | “ What have you come for? ” she cried again, with a voice full of hate. |
4520 | “ What have you come here for? ” His soul went black as he looked at her. |
4520 | “ What have you had enough of? |
4520 | “ What have you to do this morning? ” she asked him. |
4520 | “ What is cheap, please? |
4520 | “ What is it on the clock? ” The taxi was paid, the two men went upstairs. |
4520 | “ What is it? ” cried Julia. |
4520 | “ What is it? ” he asked. |
4520 | “ What is it? ” he said, to a rather sniffy messenger boy. |
4520 | “ What is that light burning? |
4520 | “ What is the difference then between you and me, Lilly? ” he said. |
4520 | “ What is there to say? ” ejaculated Lilly rapidly, with a spoonful of breath which he managed to compress and control into speech. |
4520 | “ What is there to talk about? ” “ Usually there''s so much, ” she said sarcastically. |
4520 | “ What makes you think so? ” “ Circumstances, ” replied Aaron sourly. |
4520 | “ What sort? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ What the hell do you take that beastly personal tone for? ” cried Lilly at Tanny, as the three sat under a leafless great beech- tree. |
4520 | “ What time is Manfredi coming back? ” said he. |
4520 | “ What train? ” said Arthur. |
4520 | “ What was it? |
4520 | “ What was it? ” It was the socialists. |
4520 | “ What was the interesting topic? ” he said cuttingly. |
4520 | “ What were they on about today, then? ” she said. |
4520 | “ What will Robert do? ” “ Have a shot at Josephine, apparently. ” “ Really? |
4520 | “ What will Robert do? ” “ Have a shot at Josephine, apparently. ” “ Really? |
4520 | “ What would you like to drink? |
4520 | “ What you give-- he? |
4520 | “ What''re you laughing at? ” repeated Aaron. |
4520 | “ What''s amiss? ” said Aaron Sisson, breaking this spell. |
4520 | “ What''s her name? ” “ Mrs. |
4520 | “ What''s that?--What would be romantic? ” said Jim as he lurched up and caught hold of Cyril Scott''s arm. |
4520 | “ What''s the good of that? ” he said irritably. |
4520 | “ What''s the matter with the fellow? ” he said. |
4520 | “ What''s tomorrow? ” said Jim. |
4520 | “ What, do n''t you think they''re wonderful? ” “ No. |
4520 | “ What? |
4520 | “ What? |
4520 | “ What? |
4520 | “ What? ” said Aaron, looking up. |
4520 | “ What? ” “ Afraid of spoiling your beauty by screwing your mouth to the flute? ” “ I look a fool, do I, when I''m playing? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ What? ” “ Afraid of spoiling your beauty by screwing your mouth to the flute? ” “ I look a fool, do I, when I''m playing? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ What? ” “ Afraid of spoiling your beauty by screwing your mouth to the flute? ” “ I look a fool, do I, when I''m playing? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ When are you going? ” he asked irritably, looking up at Lilly, whose face hovered in that green shadow above, and worried him. |
4520 | “ When did I make that start, then? ” “ At some unmentionably young age. |
4520 | “ When did you come to Florence? ” There was a little explanation. |
4520 | “ Where are you going to have it? ” he called. |
4520 | “ Where from? ” “ Watch Ireland, and watch Japan-- they''re the two poles of the world, ” said Jim. |
4520 | “ Where is Scott to- night? ” asked Struthers. |
4520 | “ Where is n''t it? |
4520 | “ Where is there a doctor? ” he added, on reflection. |
4520 | “ Where shall I come to you? ” he said. |
4520 | “ Where shall I say? ” Lilly produced the map, and they decided on time and station at which Lois coming out of London, should meet Jim. |
4520 | “ Where to? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ Where were YOU all the time during the war? ” “ I was doing my job, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ Where''s the beer? ” he asked, in deep tones, smiling full into Josephine''s face, as if she were going to produce it by some sleight of hand. |
4520 | “ Where''s the wine list? |
4520 | “ Where? |
4520 | “ Which room? ” said the policeman, dubious. |
4520 | “ Who knows all the vile things you''ve been doing? |
4520 | “ Who threw the bomb? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ Who''s your husband? |
4520 | “ Who--? |
4520 | “ Who? ” said Tanny. |
4520 | “ Who? ” “ Those two who were here this evening. ” “ Miss Wade and Mr. |
4520 | “ Why I left her? ” he said. |
4520 | “ Why are n''t you satisfied? ” “ I''m not satisfied. |
4520 | “ Why are you crying? ” he said. |
4520 | “ Why are you such a baby? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ Why do you have those people? ” he asked. |
4520 | “ Why must you interfere? ” “ Because I intend to, ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ Why not carry it out-- eh? |
4520 | “ Why not? |
4520 | “ Why not? ” Both were watching blankly the roaring night of mid- London, the phantasmagoric old Bloomsbury Square. |
4520 | “ Why not? ” replied Robert, answering for her. |
4520 | “ Why not? ” “ I do n''t want to. ” “ Why not? ” she asked. |
4520 | “ Why not? ” “ I do n''t want to. ” “ Why not? ” she asked. |
4520 | “ Why not? ” “ It''s just my nature. ” “ Are you a seeker? |
4520 | “ Why not? ” “ It''s just my nature. ” “ Are you a seeker? |
4520 | “ Why should I? ” And she looked away into the restless hive of the theatre. |
4520 | “ Why should n''t I? ” she persisted. |
4520 | “ Why should n''t you be, anyhow? ” he said. |
4520 | “ Why, have you left valuables in your overcoat? ” “ My flute, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ Why, how do you mean, what sort? |
4520 | “ Why, what more could a man want from life? |
4520 | “ Why? ” she exclaimed. |
4520 | “ Why? ” “ I know it. |
4520 | “ Will he heed, will he heed? ” thought the anxious second self. |
4520 | “ Will he never hear? |
4520 | “ Will you be alone all winter? ” “ Just myself and Tanny, ” he answered. |
4520 | “ Will you be leaving in the morning, Mr. Sisson? ” asked Lady Franks. |
4520 | “ Will you come to dinner tomorrow evening? ” said his hostess to him as he was leaving. |
4520 | “ Will you get the flute? ” she said as they entered. |
4520 | “ Will you have supper? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ Will you really come? |
4520 | “ Will you stay to dinner? ” said the Marchesa. |
4520 | “ Will you tell me why you left your wife and children?--Didn''t you love them? ” Aaron looked at the odd, round, dark muzzle of the girl. |
4520 | “ Wo n''t it break? ” she persisted. |
4520 | “ Wo n''t they be expecting you? ” said Robert, trying to keep his temper and his tone of authority. |
4520 | “ Wo n''t you come and have a cocktail? ” she said. |
4520 | “ Wo n''t you go home to them? ” she said, hysterical. |
4520 | “ Wo n''t you kiss me? ” came her voice out of the darkness. |
4520 | “ Wo n''t you let me try some accompaniment? ” said the soldier. |
4520 | “ Wo n''t you stay? ” she said, in a small, muted voice. |
4520 | “ Wo n''t you take off your coat? ” she said, looking at him with strange, large dark eyes. |
4520 | “ Wo n''t you? ” “ Yes, ” he said quietly. |
4520 | “ Would n''t you? ” he asked. |
4520 | “ Would you like a little tea? ” “ Ay-- and a bit of toast. ” “ You''re not supposed to have solid food. |
4520 | “ Would you like me to play it? ” he said. |
4520 | “ Would you like tea or anything? ” Lilly asked. |
4520 | “ Would you like to be wrapped in swaddling bands and laid at the breast? ” asked Lilly, disagreeably. |
4520 | “ Would you like to see the room where we have music? ” he said. |
4520 | “ Would you rather take a bus? ” she said in a high voice, because of the wind. |
4520 | “ Would you rather? ” she said, keeping her face averted. |
4520 | “ Yes, I prefer it. ” “ You like living all alone? ” “ I do n''t know about that. |
4520 | “ Yes, and THEN WHAT? ” cried the landlady. |
4520 | “ Yes, why not? ” said Tanny. |
4520 | “ Yes-- shall you buy us some, Father? |
4520 | “ Yes.--May I have another whiskey, please? ” She rose at once, powerfully energetic. |
4520 | “ Yes? ” he said. |
4520 | “ Yet you can give no reasons? ” “ Not any reasons that would be any good. |
4520 | “ You agree? ” “ Yes, on the whole. ” “ So do I-- on the whole. |
4520 | “ You are new in Florence? ” he said, as he presented the match. |
4520 | “ You are sure it wo n''t be too much for you-- too far? ” said the little officer, taking his wife''s arm solicitously. |
4520 | “ You believe in love, do n''t you? ” said Jim, sitting down near Aaron, and grinning at him. |
4520 | “ You brought the flute? ” she said, in that toneless, melancholy, unstriving voice of hers. |
4520 | “ You ca n''t REMEMBER us, can you? ” she asked. |
4520 | “ You can take a sudden jump, ca n''t you? ” he said. |
4520 | “ You did n''t expect me, then? ” “ Yes, oh, yes. |
4520 | “ You do everything for yourself, then? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ You do know, do n''t you? ” she insisted, still with the wistful appeal, and the veiled threat. |
4520 | “ You do n''t mind if I play it, do you? ” he said. |
4520 | “ You do n''t mind? ” “ No-- why-- It''s just as you see it.--Jim Bricknell''s a rare comic, to my eye. ” “ Oh, him!--no, not actually. |
4520 | “ You do n''t want emotions? |
4520 | “ You have n''t eaten? |
4520 | “ You have n''t heard from your husband? ” he added. |
4520 | “ You know what I mean-- ” “ You like your own company? |
4520 | “ You know you''ve been wrong to me, do n''t you? ” she said, half wistfully, half menacing. |
4520 | “ You mean the bird of your voice? |
4520 | “ You seriously think so? ” said Miss Wade. |
4520 | “ You want to stay? ” he said. |
4520 | “ You wanted the book of_ chansons_? ” she said. |
4520 | “ You will stay to dinner tonight, wo n''t you? ” she said. |
4520 | “ You wo n''t forget our candles, will you, Father? ” asked Millicent, with assurance now. |
4520 | “ You would n''t like me to wire to your wife? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ You''ll come and have dinner with me-- or lunch-- will you? |
4520 | “ You''ll eat a mince- pie in the kitchen with us, for luck? ” she said to him, detaining him till last. |
4520 | “ You''ll go to bed, wo n''t you? ” said Lilly to Aaron, when the door was shut. |
4520 | “ You''ll take another glass yourself, Sir? ” “ Yes, I will, I will. |
4520 | “ You''re going in the morning? ” said Arthur. |
4520 | “ You''re not offended, are you? ” he asked. |
4520 | “ You''ve got a husband, have you? ” “ Rather! |
4520 | “ You''ve known some life, have n''t you? ” he asked. |