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 |
---|---|
17820 | Ca n''t I go see my mother, first? |
17820 | Why do you want to put that poor young girl in jail? |
17820 | And what better can we do than to live for others? |
17820 | I do n''t suppose the jury was out twenty minutes were they?" |
17820 | Lord, how long, how long?" |
17820 | Yet, how was I to make people believe? |
17820 | the overflowing thankfulness of my grateful heart at that moment, who could picture it? |
34594 | (?) |
34594 | = Gray, A. F.=(?) |
34594 | Because it is acquiesced in? |
34594 | Because it is approved? |
34594 | Escapes to the woods.=--If an opportunity for escape should present itself, the first question for the slave was,"In what direction shall I turn?" |
34594 | He is asked,''Where is your warrant?'' |
34594 | Reasons for escape.=--First, why did the slave seek to escape? |
34594 | Why? |
34594 | Would not this re- enact the Fugitive Slave Law of 1850? |
34594 | [ 166] It had come down to the question, How could the Union be preserved? |
34594 | [ 1726? |
34594 | and he produces none;''Where is your evidence of claim?'' |
34915 | ''Have you not irritated, have you not annoyed your American friends and the American people rather than done them good?'' |
34915 | And while these American gentlemen were extending their hands to me, and saying,''How do you do, Mr. Douglass? |
34915 | But it is asked,''What good will this do?'' |
34915 | But what was the fact? |
34915 | But why expose the sins of one nation in the eyes of another? |
34915 | But, where, pray, can we go to find moral power in this nation sufficient to overthrow Slavery? |
34915 | For example: Prejudice against Color is continually becoming weaker in this land; and why? |
34915 | Have they the moral power necessary to accomplish this mighty task? |
34915 | How can I, I say, love a country thus cursed, thus bedewed with the blood of my brethren? |
34915 | My fellow countrymen, what think ye he said of you, on the other side of the Atlantic? |
34915 | Shall we go to Politicians or Political Parties? |
34915 | Shall we go to the Church for this influence? |
34915 | The pulpit? |
34915 | To what institution, to what party shall we apply for aid? |
34915 | What are they doing at this moment? |
34915 | What country have I? |
34915 | What is the press doing? |
34915 | Why attempt to bring one people under the odium of another people? |
34915 | Why? |
34915 | or''What good has it done?'' |
13990 | And have you no other name but Tom? |
13990 | And how old is your little brother? |
13990 | But was she not deranged? |
13990 | But was she not fiendish, or beside herself with passion? |
13990 | But why did you not trust in God-- why not wait and hope? |
13990 | Did you ever hear of God or Jesus Christ? |
13990 | Well, Tom, how old are you? |
13990 | What is your father''s name? |
13990 | Who made you, Tom? |
13990 | _ And who was this woman? 13990 And where had she lived? 13990 Is it fit that such deeds and such a law should have your sanction and support? 13990 Reader, is your patriotism of the kind which believes, with the supporters of old monarchies, that the Sovereign Power can do no wrong? 13990 Said the preacher,Margaret, why did you kill your child?" |
13990 | Taking the eldest boy by the hand, the preacher said to him, kindly and gently,"Come here, my boy; what is your name?" |
13990 | What compensation has the United States Government ever made to Adam Gibson, for the injurious act of its agent, Ingraham? |
13990 | What is the true character of a law, whose working, whose fruits are such as this meagre outline of its history shows? |
13990 | What produced that? |
13990 | Will you countenance or support the man, in the church or in the state, who is not its open and out- spoken opponent? |
13990 | Will you not, rather, yourself trample it under foot, as alike the disgrace of your country, the enemy of humanity, and the enemy of God? |
13990 | Will you remain in a moment''s doubt whether to be a friend or a foe to such a law? |
13990 | _ Two slaves_ of Sylvester Singleton, living near Burlington,( Ky.?) |
13990 | where thus taught? |
15128 | Then why,said master,"did you not perform my orders in the note?" |
15128 | And what does it show us? |
15128 | At last I pretended to awake, and called out, who''s there-- that you, Lizzy? |
15128 | But do you reply that in many instances they have violated this compact and have not been faithful to their engagements? |
15128 | But, again, gentlemen, what have we to gain by this proposed change of our relation to the general government? |
15128 | He said"nigger, did Mr. Cobb flog you?" |
15128 | Master then came out and said, now I saw this boy''s horses clean last night and in the stable, so now tell me which of you turned them out? |
15128 | Now, Mary, I want you to tell me at once whose you mean to be-- mine or Dan''s? |
15128 | They will be the calm and deliberate judges in the case? |
15128 | What interest of the South has been invaded? |
15128 | What justice has been denied? |
15128 | What must I do, select another victim for further punishment, or confess the truth and bear the consequence? |
15128 | What reasons can you give to the nations of the earth to justify it? |
15128 | What right has the North assailed? |
15128 | When we asked a three- fifths representation in congress for our slaves was it not granted? |
15128 | Why was I born black? |
15128 | and what cause or one overt act can you name or point, on which to rest the plea of justification? |
15128 | and what claim founded in justice and right has been withheld? |
9941 | Did Mr. Leadbitter know when you left? |
9941 | How and when did you learn to write? |
9941 | Who wrote these names and weights on this slate, Charles? |
9941 | You ran away, did you? |
9941 | A gentleman was passing along the highway, when he was met by a poor maniac, who accosted him, saying,"What do you thank God for?" |
9941 | Always praying? |
9941 | Did the"law"prohibit me from studying lessons out of a book about Jesus, and learning to read about Jesus as my mistress did? |
9941 | God had delivered him from the very tomb of death; why need I fear? |
9941 | He looked at me with astonishment, and in surprise asked,"What are you doing here?" |
9941 | How could I ever expect to escape to a country where I could be a free man? |
9941 | How many of you ever think to thank God for sunshine or for reason? |
9941 | If I, a slave, could accomplish this much, how much should the favored preachers of the country accomplish? |
9941 | Strange, was it not? |
9941 | Then what had we, poor wretches, to thank God for? |
9941 | What had I to complain of? |
9941 | What law? |
9941 | What was to be done with me for my unpardonable crime? |
9941 | What was to be my fate? |
9941 | What would you have done if you had been in her place? |
9941 | When my mistress sent my young mistresses to Jesus would n''t she send me along with them just the same as she sent me to school with them? |
9941 | Why could n''t we lighten our young masters and mistresses of that labor as well as other kinds of labor? |
9941 | Why not? |
9941 | Why should_ I_ not study lessons in the school- house for my young mistresses? |
9941 | Why was I so faithful and dutiful to my slave master? |
9941 | what is that?" |
59500 | Do you not call me a good master? |
59500 | See these poor souls from Africa Transported to America; We are stolen, and sold to Georgia-- Will you go along with me? 59500 What for?" |
59500 | Who is a negro- driver? 59500 Why?" |
59500 | Why? |
59500 | Are you a Christian? |
59500 | Are you a friend of the Bible? |
59500 | Are you a friend of the missionary cause? |
59500 | But in truth what injury is done them by this? |
59500 | Dear Lord, dear Lord, when slavery''ll cease, Then we poor souls will have our peace;-- There''s a better day a coming-- Will you go along with me? |
59500 | Do you love God whom you have not seen? |
59500 | He had me brought into the room where he was, and as I entered, he asked me where I had been? |
59500 | He looked at it and laughed;--"And so you told him that you did not belong to me?" |
59500 | He soon lit a lamp, and coming up, looked me full in the face, saying,"Well, my son, you have come to get uncle to tell your fortune, have you?" |
59500 | Lord, break them slavery powers-- Will you go along with me? |
59500 | Reader, are you an Abolitionist? |
59500 | See wives and husbands sold apart, Their children''s screams will break my heart;-- There''s a better day a coming-- Will you go along with me? |
59500 | Shall watch and ward be''round him set, Of northern nerve and bayonet?" |
59500 | She has got religion!_"Why should this man tell the purchasers that she has religion? |
59500 | What are you doing in his behalf? |
59500 | What care I for clothing or food, while I am the slave of another? |
59500 | What do you purpose to do? |
59500 | What have you done for the slave? |
59500 | What should be my occupation, was a subject of much anxiety to me; and the next thing what should be my name? |
59500 | Where will be the independence, the proud spirit, and chivalry of the Kentuckians then?" |
59500 | Who will be an idler now? |
59500 | shall ye guard your neighbor still, While woman shrieks beneath his rod, And while he tramples down at will The image of a common God? |
59500 | when shall it be, That we poor souls shall all be free? |
59500 | who would not die?" |
15132 | Do you not call me a good master? |
15132 | See these poor souls from Africa Transported to America; We are stolen, and sold to Georgia, Will you go along with me? 15132 What for?" |
15132 | Who is a negro- driver? 15132 Why?" |
15132 | Why? |
15132 | Are you a Christian? |
15132 | Are you a friend of the Bible? |
15132 | Are you a friend of the missionary cause? |
15132 | Dear Lord, dear Lord, when slavery''ll cease, Then we poor souls will have our peace;-- There''s a better day a coming, Will you go along with me? |
15132 | Do you love God whom you have not seen? |
15132 | He had me brought into the room where he was, and as I entered, he asked me where I had been? |
15132 | He soon lit a lamp, and coming up, looked me full in the face, saying,"Well, my son, you have come to get uncle to tell your fortune, have you?" |
15132 | Reader, are you an Abolitionist? |
15132 | See wives and husbands sold apart, Their children''s screams will break my heart;-- There''s a better day a coming, Will you go along with me? |
15132 | She has got religion!_"Why should this man tell the purchasers that she has religion? |
15132 | What are you doing in his behalf? |
15132 | What do you purpose to do? |
15132 | What have you done for the slave? |
15132 | What should be my occupation, was a subject of much anxiety to me; and the next thing what should be my name? |
15132 | Who will be an idler now? |
15132 | when shall it be, That we poor souls shall all be free; Lord, break them slavery powers-- Will you go along with me? |
28021 | And what induced you to run away? |
28021 | But, mother, if I do get asleep, you wo n''t let him get me? |
28021 | Crossed on the ice? |
28021 | Do n''t know? |
28021 | Is it possible? |
28021 | Ma''am,she said, suddenly,"have you ever lost a child?" |
28021 | Mamma,said one of the boys, gently touching her arm,"are you going to give away those things?" |
28021 | Shall we take off the cloak, mas''r? |
28021 | So, Uncle Tom, where are you going? |
28021 | To- night,said Mrs. Bird,"how is it possible-- and where to?" |
28021 | Well, I wo n''t, then, for your sake; but only to think of it-- isn''t it a shame? 28021 What''s little missy''s name?" |
28021 | Where are you going, mother? |
28021 | Who-- who shall separate us from the love of Christ? |
28021 | You''re_ sure_, an''t you, mother? |
28021 | After a short pause, Mrs. Bird asked:--"And where do you mean to go to, my poor woman?" |
28021 | Do n''t you know me?" |
28021 | In all the world what brings you here?" |
28021 | Is it very far off ma''am?" |
28021 | Mr. Bird turned round and walked to the window, and Mrs. Bird burst into tears; but, recovering her voice, she said--"Why do you ask that? |
28021 | Now, what''s your name?" |
28021 | So, now, you hold on to her, and grow up, and be a comfort to her, thar''s my own good boy-- you will, now, wo n''t ye?" |
28021 | Tell me where you came from, and what you want?" |
28021 | Would you now turn away a poor, shivering, hungry creature from your door because he was a runaway? |
28021 | Would you, now?" |
28021 | Ye an''t offended, Mas''r George?" |
28021 | have you got him?" |
17851 | Any restraint? |
17851 | Mammy,I said,"is this you?" |
17851 | Mammy,I said,"what''s the matter?" |
17851 | You have broken it, have you? |
17851 | And then when we are quite done up, who cares for us, more than for a lame horse? |
17851 | Are there no restraints( supposing them necessary) short of absolute slavery to keep"troublesome characters"in order? |
17851 | But who cared for that? |
17851 | Did one of the many by- standers, who were looking at us so carelessly, think of the pain that wrung the hearts of the negro woman and her young ones? |
17851 | He"_ induced her to take a husband_?" |
17851 | Her husband then wrote to my master to inquire whether I was to be sold? |
17851 | How can one treat such arguments seriously? |
17851 | How can slaves be happy when they have the halter round their neck and the whip upon their back? |
17851 | If the fact were true, what brutality of mind and manners does it not indicate among these slave- holders? |
17851 | Is not this pretext hypocritical in the extreme? |
17851 | Is this then a power which any man ought to possess over his fellow- mortal? |
17851 | Mr. Wood asked him who gave him a right to marry a slave of his? |
17851 | Mrs. Pell came out to me, and said,"Are you really going to leave, Molly? |
17851 | True: But was it not her home( so far as a slave can have a home) for thirteen or fourteen years? |
17851 | Was it not there she hoped to spend her latter years in domestic tranquillity with her husband, free from the lash of the taskmaster? |
17851 | Were not the connexions, friendships, and associations of her mature life formed there? |
17851 | What''s the reason they ca n''t do without slaves as well as in England? |
17851 | When I came upon the deck I asked the black people,"Is there any one here for me?" |
17851 | While the woman was in this distressed situation she was asked,''Can you feed sheep?'' |
17851 | or which any good man would ever wish to exercise? |
7104 | Did anybody send''em word? |
7104 | Do I know you? 7104 Funeral to- morrow, likely?" |
7104 | Hamlet''s which? |
7104 | Is dat so? |
7104 | Was Peter Wilks well off? |
7104 | What''s onkores, Bilgewater? |
7104 | When did you say he died? |
7104 | Wher''you bound for, young man? |
7104 | Why do n''t it, Huck? |
7104 | Why do you reckon Harvey do n''t come? 7104 YOU talk like an Englishman, DON''T you? |
7104 | Ai n''t that sensible?" |
7104 | And what kind o''uncles would it be that''d rob-- yes, ROB-- sech poor sweet lambs as these''at he loved so at sech a time? |
7104 | Ask him to show up? |
7104 | By and by, when they was asleep and snoring, Jim says:"Do n''t it s''prise you de way dem kings carries on, Huck?" |
7104 | He says:"If gentlemen kin afford to pay a dollar a mile apiece to be took on and put off in a yawl, a steamboat kin afford to carry''em, ca n''t it?" |
7104 | He see me, and rode up and says:"Whar''d you come f''m, boy? |
7104 | How does he go at it--give notice?--give the country a show? |
7104 | How old is the others?" |
7104 | Is Mary Jane the oldest? |
7104 | Is that ALL?" |
7104 | It make me mad; en I says agin, mighty loud, I says:"''Doan''you hear me? |
7104 | Now, WOULDN''T he? |
7104 | S''pose he contracted to do a thing, and you paid him, and did n''t set down there and see that he done it-- what did he do? |
7104 | S''pose he opened his mouth-- what then? |
7104 | S''pose people left money laying around where he was-- what did he do? |
7104 | Says the king:"Dern him, I wonder what he done with that four hundred and fifteen dollars?" |
7104 | The king he smiled eager, and shoved out his flapper, and says:"Is it my poor brother''s dear good friend and physician? |
7104 | The windows and dooryards was full; and every minute somebody would say, over a fence:"Is it THEM?" |
7104 | Then he says:"How are you on the deef and dumb, Bilgewater?" |
7104 | Then he says:"What did you want to walk all the way up to the steamboat for?" |
7104 | Twenty people sings out:"What, is it over? |
7104 | Well, then, what kind o''brothers would it be that''d stand in his way at sech a time? |
7104 | Well, what did he do? |
7104 | What was the use to tell Jim these warn''t real kings and dukes? |
7104 | Wher''does he live?" |
7104 | Why do n''t your juries hang murderers? |
7104 | Why, Billy, it beats the Nonesuch, DON''T it?" |
7104 | Will you?" |
7104 | You AIN''T him, are you?" |
7104 | You going to Orleans, you say?" |
7104 | You prepared to die?" |
7104 | and Abner Shackleford says:"Why, Robinson, hain''t you heard the news? |
7104 | they give a glance at one another, and nodded their heads, as much as to say,"What d''I tell you?" |
7101 | And ai n''t you had nothing but that kind of rubbage to eat? |
7101 | And so you ai n''t had no meat nor bread to eat all this time? 7101 Have you got hairy arms and a hairy breast, Jim?" |
7101 | How you gwyne to git''m? 7101 Is that what you live on?" |
7101 | Well, are you rich? |
7101 | Well, what did come of it, Jim? |
7101 | Well, you must be most starved, ai n''t you? |
7101 | What did you do with the ten cents, Jim? |
7101 | What did you speculate in, Jim? |
7101 | What kind of stock? |
7101 | What''s de use er makin''up de camp fire to cook strawbries en sich truck? 7101 What''s de use to ax dat question? |
7101 | What, all that time? |
7101 | Why did n''t you roust me out? |
7101 | Why, Jim? |
7101 | Why, how long you been on the island, Jim? |
7101 | And what do you reckon they said? |
7101 | And what do you think? |
7101 | And, besides, he said them little birds had said it was going to rain, and did I want the things to get wet? |
7101 | But you got a gun, hain''t you? |
7101 | But you wouldn''tell on me ef I uz to tell you, would you, Huck?" |
7101 | By and by Jim says:"But looky here, Huck, who wuz it dat''uz killed in dat shanty ef it warn''t you?" |
7101 | Did you hear''em shooting the cannon?" |
7101 | Did you speculate any more?" |
7101 | Do n''t you see I has?" |
7101 | He says:"What you doin''with this gun?" |
7101 | How could a body do it in de night? |
7101 | How long you ben on de islan''?" |
7101 | Next time you roust me out, you hear?" |
7101 | Then I says:"How do you come to be here, Jim, and how''d you get here?" |
7101 | Then he studied it over and said, could n''t I put on some of them old things and dress up like a girl? |
7101 | Thinks I, what is the country a- coming to? |
7101 | W''y, what has you lived on? |
7101 | Want to keep it off?" |
7101 | Well, WASN''T he mad? |
7101 | What you want to know when good luck''s a- comin''for? |
7101 | What you''bout?" |
7101 | Why did n''t you get mud- turkles?" |
7101 | You ca n''t slip up on um en grab um; en how''s a body gwyne to hit um wid a rock? |
7101 | You know that one- laigged nigger dat b''longs to old Misto Bradish? |
7100 | But how can we do it if we do n''t know what it is? |
7100 | How you going to get them? |
7100 | Must we always kill the people? |
7100 | No, sir,I says;"is there some for me?" |
7100 | Now,says Ben Rogers,"what''s the line of business of this Gang?" |
7100 | Oh, that''s all very fine to SAY, Tom Sawyer, but how in the nation are these fellows going to be ransomed if we do n''t know how to do it to them? 7100 Ransomed? |
7100 | The widow, hey?--and who told the widow she could put in her shovel about a thing that ai n''t none of her business? |
7100 | Well, hain''t he got a father? |
7100 | Well,I says,"s''pose we got some genies to help US-- can''t we lick the other crowd then?" |
7100 | Who makes them tear around so? |
7100 | And looky here-- you drop that school, you hear? |
7100 | Did you come for your interest?" |
7100 | Do n''t I tell you it''s in the books? |
7100 | Do n''t you reckon that the people that made the books knows what''s the correct thing to do? |
7100 | Do you reckon YOU can learn''em anything? |
7100 | Do you want to go to doing different from what''s in the books, and get things all muddled up?" |
7100 | He says:"Why, what can you mean, my boy?" |
7100 | He set there a- mumbling and a- growling a minute, and then he says:"AIN''T you a sweet- scented dandy, though? |
7100 | He took up a little blue and yaller picture of some cows and a boy, and says:"What''s this?" |
7100 | Hey?--how''s that?" |
7100 | How can they get loose when there''s a guard over them, ready to shoot them down if they move a peg?" |
7100 | How do THEY get them?" |
7100 | I ai n''t the man to stand it-- you hear? |
7100 | I said, why could n''t we see them, then? |
7100 | I says to myself, if a body can get anything they pray for, why do n''t Deacon Winn get back the money he lost on pork? |
7100 | Is something the matter?" |
7100 | Kill the women? |
7100 | Now, what do you reckon it is?" |
7100 | Pretty soon Jim says:"Say, who is you? |
7100 | Say, do we kill the women, too?" |
7100 | Say, how much you got in your pocket? |
7100 | Then Ben Rogers says:"Here''s Huck Finn, he hain''t got no family; what you going to do''bout him?" |
7100 | Then he says:"Who dah?" |
7100 | Whar is you? |
7100 | What I wanted to know was, what he was going to do, and was he going to stay? |
7100 | What you know''bout witches?" |
7100 | What''s that?" |
7100 | Who told you you might meddle with such hifalut''n foolishness, hey?--who told you you could?" |
7100 | Why ca n''t Miss Watson fat up? |
7100 | Why ca n''t a body take a club and ransom them as soon as they get here?" |
7100 | Why ca n''t the widow get back her silver snuffbox that was stole? |
7100 | Why could n''t you said that before? |
7100 | You lemme catch you fooling around that school again, you hear? |
7100 | You think you''re a good deal of a big- bug, DON''T you?" |
7100 | You think you''re better''n your father, now, do n''t you, because he ca n''t? |
7100 | You''ll take it--won''t you?" |
7100 | and I as high as a tree and as big as a church? |
49129 | And how were you led to a better knowledge of the Saviour? |
49129 | And if they''re too many for you, and you get seized, you''ll never tell my part in this business? |
49129 | And is it possible that you were brought up ignorant of religion? 49129 Are you a fugitive slave, Sir?" |
49129 | Buffalo; how far is that from Canada? |
49129 | But how are you going to raise enough to pay the remainder of the thousand dollars? |
49129 | But is it possible that you are not a scholar? |
49129 | Ca n''t I help you any way, massa? |
49129 | Ca n''t I? |
49129 | Did n''t you see the damned nigger strike me? |
49129 | Do n''t you know, man? 49129 How far is it to Canada?" |
49129 | How long have you been here? |
49129 | How long will it take you to get ready? |
49129 | How so, massa? |
49129 | Is he indeed a fugitive slave? |
49129 | Kentucky, massa? 49129 Look here, Sir,"said he;"What, under heaven, have you got up there?" |
49129 | Sick, massa? |
49129 | The university of adversity,said he, looking up with astonishment;"where is that?" |
49129 | Want to go to Canada? 49129 Well, Sir,"said he,"do you suppose I am going to bring that stuff across the Atlantic for nothing?" |
49129 | Well, boy, how''s your master? 49129 What thousand dollars?" |
49129 | Where are you going,''Siah? |
49129 | Where do you stop? |
49129 | Where shall I read, father? |
49129 | Who drives them? |
49129 | Who would not wish to die like those Whom God''s own spirit deigns to bless? 49129 Why not?" |
49129 | Why, father,said he,"ca n''t you read?" |
49129 | Why, what in the devil have you been doing, Sie? 49129 Will your master sell you? |
49129 | Do you suppose I am going to have that insult up there?" |
49129 | He expressed the strongest interest in me, and after about a half hour''s conversation he inquired,"At what university, Sir, did you graduate?" |
49129 | He had observed my excitement, and added,"He writes pretty, do n''t he?" |
49129 | He put his hand on my head and said,"Be a good fellow, wo n''t you?" |
49129 | He said,"Where is thee going?" |
49129 | Here Green,"said he to a ferryman;"what will you take this man and his family over for-- he''s got no money?" |
49129 | How did you attain to the knowledge of Christ?" |
49129 | I had a wife and four dear children; how should I provide for them? |
49129 | I had begun the work in faith, I had expended the money honestly, and to the best of my judgment, and now should the whole enterprise fail? |
49129 | Kentucky? |
49129 | L.?" |
49129 | On being informed, the next inquiry usually was,"Where are they going?" |
49129 | The first edition of my book was ready for sale, and now What shall I do? |
49129 | The inquiry was often propounded to me by the drivers,"Whose niggers are those?" |
49129 | The man of the house met me in the same style; but his wife, hearing our conversation, said to her husband,"How can you treat any human being so? |
49129 | To sink into that soft repose, Then wake to perfect happiness?" |
49129 | Was this wrong? |
49129 | What could I do to set myself right? |
49129 | What did he do?" |
49129 | What is it?" |
49129 | When he had finished, Tom turned to me and asked,"Father, who was David?" |
49129 | Where did he live? |
49129 | Why should I not prevent this wrong if I can, by shortening their lives, or those of their agents, in accomplishing such detestable injustice? |
49129 | Will you tell me, Sir, how you learned our language?" |
49129 | Without replying he went on,"wo n''t you, wo n''t you? |
49129 | You can do it; wo n''t you, wo n''t you?" |
49129 | You''re running away, ai n''t you?" |
49129 | and you a Christian?" |
49129 | do n''t you know? |
49129 | is that you? |
49129 | why hast thou forsaken me?" |
49129 | you want to work?" |
10401 | Daniel,he said, addressing me by my Christian name,"what are you doing here? |
10401 | In what position is the prisoner placed by the evidence? 10401 Who is this man? |
10401 | _ District Attorney_.--What newspaper is that from which the counsel reads? 10401 And does not this open a plain path for this prisoner out of the danger of this prosecution? 10401 And how did the slaves behave after they were captured? 10401 And, looking at those facts, is it necessary for me to open my lips in reply? 10401 Are you going to presume that the chickens run into his bag of their own accord, and without his agency? 10401 Are you to presume that the horse came to him of its own accord? 10401 Because the people in another land have arisen and triumphed over the despot, who had done-- what? 10401 But shall this prisoner be allowed to take advantage of his own wrong? 10401 But was not the vessel chartered in Philadelphia to carry off negroes? 10401 By what second- sight are you to look into this void space and time, and to say that Drayton enticed them to go on board? 10401 Can any man be a patriot who pursues such a course? 10401 Can you, without any evidence, say that Drayton enticed them, and that by no other means could they come onboard? 10401 Did he not know they were slaves? 10401 Did he, or not? 10401 Did not that show his authority over them,--that the slaves were under his control, and that he was the master- spirit? 10401 Do n''t you think he ought to? 10401 Do they get up a debate in Congress, and a riot in the city of Washington, every time a theft is committed or attempted in the District? 10401 Does that look as if he seduced them? 10401 For what have we rejoiced? 10401 Has he done anything to take this case out of the transportation statute, and to convert it into a case of stealing? 10401 Has the District Attorney, with all his zeal, pointed out a single particle of evidence of that sort? 10401 He came here from Philadelphia for them; they are found on board his vessel; Drayton says he would steal a negro if he could; is not that enough? 10401 He chartered the vessel to carry off negroes; and, if they were free negroes, or he supposed them to be, how was he to realize an independent fortune? 10401 How can you ask me to abandon it, and thus become a party to my own degradation? 10401 How is he introduced to the jury by his Philadelphia friends? 10401 If he had employers, who were they? 10401 If his confessions are to be taken at all, they are to be taken together; and do they not tend to prove such a state of facts? 10401 If they had been running away, would they not have been downcast and disheartened? 10401 Is he an enlightened friend of freedom, or even a judicious friend of those with whom he affects to sympathize, who adopts such a course? 10401 Is there any crowd or excitement here? 10401 It was all very well for the prisoner''s counsel to smooth things over; but was I, instead of calling him a liar, to say, he told a fib? 10401 Might not somebody else have done it? 10401 Might they not have gone without being enticed at all? 10401 Now, he can not be guilty of both; and which of these offences, if either, does the evidence against him prove? 10401 Now, is it the only possible means of accounting for the presence of Houver''s slaves on board to suppose that this prisoner enticed them? 10401 Now, what is possession of a slave? 10401 Now, which of these two acts is proved against this prisoner? 10401 Shall the record of this trial go forth to the world showing that you have found a fact of which there was no evidence? 10401 The question for you is, Does the evidence in this case bring the prisoner within the law as laid down by the court? 10401 The real question in this case was, Which had I done? 10401 The whole question in this case is, Were these slaves stolen, or were they running away with the prisoner''s assistance? 10401 The wood was a blind; besides he lied about it;--would he have ever come back to collect his note? 10401 There was the fact of their being under the hatches, concealed in the hold of the vessel,--did not that prove he meant to steal them? 10401 We now ask a categorical answer,--Will you remove your press? 10401 We now ask of you, Shall this be done? 10401 Were not these slaves found in Drayton''s possession, and did n''t he admit that he took them? 10401 When I call him a thief and a felon, do I go beyond the charge of the grand jury in the indictment? 10401 Where can the government produce positive testimony to the taking? 10401 Where is the least evidence that the prisoner seduced these slaves, and induced them to leave their masters? 10401 Who does not know that such men are, practically, the worst enemies of the slaves? 10401 Why discuss, when they can not act? 10401 Why first lay down an abstract principle, which they intend to violate in practice? 10401 Why had not these black people, so anxious to escape from their masters, as good a light to their liberty as I had to mine? 10401 Why say he knew he should end his days in a penitentiary? 10401 Why say he took them for gain, if he did not steal them? 10401 Why say if he got off with the negroes he should have realized an independent fortune? 10401 Why so, if the negroes were not slaves? 10401 Why, then, this sudden feeling in his behalf? 10401 Will not these wailings of anguish reach the ears of the Most High? 10401 Would not they have said, Now we are taken? 10401 Would they not exhaust the law- books to find the severest punishment? 10401 You are to look at the evidence; and where is the evidence that the prisoner seduced and enticed these slaves? 15130 Are you free?" |
15130 | Are you travelling any distance, my friend? |
15130 | Can thee read or write any, James? |
15130 | Do you know why these boys have not got home this morning yet? |
15130 | Have you got papers? |
15130 | I suppose, then, you are provided with free papers? |
15130 | If one man sin against another, the judge shall judge him, but if a man sin against God, who shall entreat for him? |
15130 | Were you away yesterday? |
15130 | What are you rolling your white eyes at me for, you lazy rascal? |
15130 | --"What does thee know about that boy?" |
15130 | After an hour or two of such freaks of joy, a gloom would come over me in connexion with these questions,"But where are you going? |
15130 | And could He not also have given the gospel to us without making us slaves? |
15130 | And has a man no sense of honour because he was born a slave? |
15130 | Another said,"Who would have thought that rascal was so''cute?" |
15130 | Are you then, by sustaining the relation of a slaveholder, forming a character to dwell with God in peace? |
15130 | BROTHER- IN- LAW.--"How did thee find out that fact?" |
15130 | BROTHER- IN- LAW.--"What did he offer thee to find the boy?" |
15130 | BROTHER- IN- LAW.--"Where art thou from?" |
15130 | BROTHER- IN- LAW.--"Who did he run away from?" |
15130 | But what is generally the fate of such female slaves? |
15130 | But what treatment did you see fit to return me for all this? |
15130 | But what, my dear sir, is a reputation among posterity, who are but worms, compared with a destiny in the world of spirits? |
15130 | But why this enormous sum for two mere children? |
15130 | Could He not have made this a great and wealthy nation without making its riches to consist in our blood, bones, and souls? |
15130 | Has he no need of character? |
15130 | How do I know what precipices may be within its bounds? |
15130 | How do I know what ravenous beasts are in this wood? |
15130 | How shall I act so that he will reap the benefit of my time and talents? |
15130 | How shall I know when I am on the right road again? |
15130 | How would an untutored slave, who had never heard of such a writer as Archdeacon Paley, be likely to act in such a dilemma? |
15130 | I answered him politely; when the following occurred:--"Who do_ you_ belong to?" |
15130 | I can not rest in this wood to- morrow, for it will be searched by those men from whom I have escaped; but how shall I regain the road? |
15130 | I know that Pennsylvania is a free state, but I know not where its soil begins, or where that of Maryland ends? |
15130 | I ventured to ask the lad at the gate another question-- Which is the best way to Philadelphia? |
15130 | I was arrested, and the demand made upon me,"Who do you belong to?" |
15130 | If you ask me if I expected when I left home to gain my liberty by fabrications and untruths? |
15130 | If you ask me whether I had expected before I left home, to gain my liberty by shedding men''s blood, or breaking their limbs? |
15130 | If you ask me whether I now really believe that I gained my liberty by those lies? |
15130 | Is not my liberty worth more to me than two hundred dollars are to them? |
15130 | Is not this enough without the blood of some half- score of souls? |
15130 | Let me ask any one of Anglo- Saxon blood and spirit, how would you expect a_ son_ to feel at such a sight? |
15130 | Nay, is Christ divided? |
15130 | Now arose a serious query-- which is the right prong for me? |
15130 | On being informed that I was, I asked her if she knew where I could get employ? |
15130 | On the questions, What shall I do for the slave? |
15130 | PED.--"I belong in Conn."BROTHER- IN- LAW.--"Did thee see the boy''s master?" |
15130 | PED.--"I understand he had a black boy with him last winter, I wonder if he is there yet?" |
15130 | PEDLER.--"Do you know one W.W. somewhere about here?" |
15130 | Shall I call on my brother as I pass through, and shew him what I am about? |
15130 | The question may be asked, Why I have published anything so long after my escape from slavery? |
15130 | The question was, shall I hide my purpose from them? |
15130 | Then what will become of your own doubtful claims? |
15130 | What are you going to do? |
15130 | What kind of a man was he?" |
15130 | What substance is there in a piece of dry Indian bread; what nourishment is there in it to warm the nerves of one already chilled to the heart? |
15130 | What will you do with freedom without father, mother, sisters, and brothers? |
15130 | What will you do? |
15130 | What will you say when you are asked where you were born? |
15130 | Where did he come from?" |
15130 | Will not the whole family be sold off as a disaffected family, as is generally the case when one of its members flies? |
15130 | Will they not be suspected? |
15130 | Will this afford a sufficient sustenance after the toil of the night? |
15130 | Yes, sirs, many of our masters are professed Christians; and what advantage is that to us? |
15130 | You know nothing of the world; how will you explain the fact of your ignorance?" |
15130 | moreover, how will my flight affect them when I am gone? |
31424 | Against this evident mistake or wilful perversion, what is the evidence? |
31424 | Am I not right in saying, nothing whatever-- nothing more than any man would be subject to, who acted as counsel? |
31424 | And how could he know it? |
31424 | And if he did not, is he not to be presumed to have assented? |
31424 | But what is it? |
31424 | But when explained by Mr. Minns, what is it? |
31424 | Can not we show by him that a part of this return is matter of form, and that he does not know whether it is true or not? |
31424 | Dana._ Do you know the person you arrested, was the person named in the warrant? |
31424 | Dana._ Does the Commissioner mean to rule that a man may be hung in a criminal case, on the return of an officer in another, and that a civil case? |
31424 | Dana._ Mr. Riley, do you know whether the man you arrested was the man named in the original warrant? |
31424 | Dana_--Do you deny you did so? |
31424 | Davis._ Do you remember his saying anything further concerning his position, showing any religious feeling? |
31424 | Davis._ It was that which reminded me of fugitive slave warrants? |
31424 | Davis._ What Mr. Morris? |
31424 | Did your Honor feel bound to join in the pursuit last Saturday, when the mob passed you at the corner of Court street? |
31424 | Do you feel bound, of a pleasant evening, to walk about in the neighborhood and see what fugitives you can find and dispose of? |
31424 | Does the Commissioner also rule that the Government need not show that the man arrested was the man claimed, and that the man rescued was Shadrach? |
31424 | Has it come to this? |
31424 | Have they got you?" |
31424 | He said,"Why?" |
31424 | How can the man''s admission that his name is Shadrach affect us? |
31424 | How is this extraordinary spectacle to be accounted for? |
31424 | I said to him--"What, have they rescued the man?" |
31424 | If such evidence is sufficient, who can be safe? |
31424 | If this is not so, what is the result? |
31424 | Is a man to be bound by statements of others? |
31424 | Is not a Southern man to go into a United States Court? |
31424 | Lunt._ Can you say that none of those who acted as counsel here, spoke of it? |
31424 | Lunt._ Did you attend the meetings at Faneuil Hall in October, relating to the Fugitive Slave Bill? |
31424 | Lunt._ Did you hear Mr. Davis testify the other day, if so, what did he say? |
31424 | Lunt._ Did you speak at that meeting? |
31424 | Lunt._ Does the Commissioner mean to rule in that testimony? |
31424 | Lunt._ Is Mr. Davis often at the office of the Commonwealth? |
31424 | Lunt._ Now with whom is he associated? |
31424 | Lunt_ here put the question,--Do you approve of the rescue? |
31424 | Lunt_--Are you one of the editors of the Commonwealth? |
31424 | Marsh._ Soon after Mr. Davis came in and sat down, he rose, coming towards me, and asked who Mr. Clark was, whether he was a southern man? |
31424 | Mr. Davis meets Mr. Riley in the morning, upon which, after an inquiry whether he has seen Mr. Curtis, he asked if he has a slave case? |
31424 | Mr. Riley, you did n''t know that the person you arrested was the man named in the original warrant and complaint, as the slave of Debree? |
31424 | Now what were the grounds in general, on which the warrant was issued? |
31424 | Now, may it please your Honor, how long and when was Prescott at that post? |
31424 | On what principles of proof is the judgment to be made up? |
31424 | Take from us that great argument, and what can the defendant and myself do? |
31424 | The only witness to this is Prescott; and how does he stand? |
31424 | The question here is, has a law of the United States been violated? |
31424 | Up to this point, what is the evidence against Mr. Davis? |
31424 | Was he counsel? |
31424 | We might well ask, what if this were Mr. Davis? |
31424 | What can the defendant say to discourage colored men from the use of force? |
31424 | What does it prove? |
31424 | What evidence has there been of any of these facts? |
31424 | What is the evidence? |
31424 | What next? |
31424 | What other evidence can there be of counsel''s authority? |
31424 | What single thing did he do as counsel? |
31424 | What then is the predicament in which Prescott has involved himself? |
31424 | What was he waiting for? |
31424 | Where is the remedy? |
31424 | Who passed this law? |
31424 | Who, Mr. Commissioner, is the defendant, at the bar? |
31424 | Why did n''t he publicly disclaim any assent to these proceedings? |
31424 | Why do you volunteer in it? |
31424 | Why is it that the defendant stands here at this bar a prisoner? |
31424 | Why should the criminal proceedings of this day have taken place at all? |
31424 | Why was Mr. Riley warned? |
31424 | Why? |
31424 | Would any compensation tempt you to do it? |
31424 | _ Cross Examined._ Who have you heard speak of it? |
31424 | _ Mr Dana._--For what purpose this narrative to be read here? |
31424 | _ The Commissioner._ Did you know him to be engaged in his legal duties? |
31424 | _ The Commissioner._ Do you contradict your return? |
31424 | _ The Commissioner._ Why did n''t you report the remark of Mr. Davis to the Commissioner? |
7107 | And JIM? |
7107 | Blame it, ca n''t you TRY? 7107 But looky here, Tom, what do we want to WARN anybody for that something''s up? |
7107 | But my lan'', Mars Sid, how''s I gwyne to make''m a witch pie? 7107 Geewhillikins,"I says,"but what does the rest of it mean?" |
7107 | HANNEL''m, Mars Sid? 7107 HIM?" |
7107 | Keep what, Mars Tom? |
7107 | Oh, DO shet up!--s''pose the rats took the SHEET? 7107 Then what on earth did YOU want to set him free for, seeing he was already free?" |
7107 | Well, anyway,I says,"what''s SOME of it? |
7107 | Well, then, what possessed you to go down there this time of night? |
7107 | Well, then, what we going to do, Tom? |
7107 | Well-- WHAT? |
7107 | What DOES the child mean? |
7107 | What letter? |
7107 | What letters? |
7107 | What three? |
7107 | What whole thing? |
7107 | What you been doing down there? |
7107 | What''s them? |
7107 | Where''s Jim? |
7107 | Who is your folks? |
7107 | Why, what else is gone, Sally? |
7107 | Why, where ever did you go? |
7107 | Will you do it, honey?--will you? 7107 With WHO? |
7107 | Yes, DEY will, I reck''n, Mars Tom, but what kine er time is JIM havin''? 7107 You do n''t KNOW? |
7107 | You numskull, did n''t you see me COUNT''m? |
7107 | You would n''t look like a servant- girl THEN, would you? |
7107 | ''n''who dug that- air HOLE? |
7107 | And after a minute, he says:"How''d you say he got shot?" |
7107 | And by and by the old man says:"Did I give you the letter?" |
7107 | And you wo n''t go? |
7107 | But Tom thought of something, and says:"You got any spiders in here, Jim?" |
7107 | Ca n''t you think of no way?" |
7107 | Could you raise a flower here, do you reckon?" |
7107 | Did you tell Aunty?" |
7107 | Hain''t you got no principle at all?" |
7107 | Has n''t he got away?" |
7107 | He''d LET me shove his head in my mouf-- fer a favor, hain''t it? |
7107 | His eyes just blazed; and he says:"No!--is that so? |
7107 | How''d it get there?" |
7107 | How''s that? |
7107 | I says to myself, spos''n he ca n''t fix that leg just in three shakes of a sheep''s tail, as the saying is? |
7107 | I says:"Why, Jim?" |
7107 | I was going to say yes; but she chipped in and says:"About what, Sid?" |
7107 | Is dat like Mars Tom Sawyer? |
7107 | S''e, what do YOU think of it, Sister Hotchkiss, s''e? |
7107 | Sh- she, Sister Hotchkiss, sh- she--""But how in the nation''d they ever GIT that grindstone IN there, ANYWAY? |
7107 | Snake take''n bite Jim''s chin off, den WHAH is de glory? |
7107 | THINK of it, s''I? |
7107 | Think o''that bed- leg sawed off that a way, s''e? |
7107 | Think o''what, Brer Phelps, s''I? |
7107 | Tom looks at me very grave, and says:"Tom, did n''t you just tell me he was all right? |
7107 | WELL, den, is JIM gywne to say it? |
7107 | WHERE''S it gone, Lize?" |
7107 | What HAS become of that boy?" |
7107 | What IS you a- talkin''''bout? |
7107 | What are we going to do?--lay around there till he lets the cat out of the bag? |
7107 | What makes them come here just at this runaway nigger''s breakfast- time? |
7107 | What you going to do about the servant- girl?" |
7107 | What you reckon I better do? |
7107 | What''s a bar sinister?" |
7107 | What''s a fess?" |
7107 | Where could you keep it?" |
7107 | Where you been all this time, you rascal?" |
7107 | Where''s the raft?" |
7107 | Who''d you reckon?" |
7107 | Who''s Jim''s mother?" |
7107 | Why, Huck, s''pose it IS considerble trouble?--what you going to do?--how you going to get around it? |
7107 | Why, that ai n''t TOM, it''s Sid; Tom''s-- Tom''s-- why, where is Tom? |
7107 | Would he say dat? |
7107 | You got any rats around here?" |
7107 | You got anything to play music on?" |
7107 | says Aunt Sally;"IS he changed so? |
7107 | says Aunt Sally;"the runaway nigger? |
7107 | spos''n it takes him three or four days? |
13989 | Again I ask, what would be your judgment of this law, if your_ own_ daughter and infant grand- daughter had been its victims? |
13989 | And if it could not be obtained right speedily, would you not ride over the Constitution roughshod? |
13989 | And see our Freedom''s light grow dim, Which should have filled the world with flame? |
13989 | And shall we know, and share with him, The danger and the growing shame? |
13989 | And what do the people of the other eighteen States of that enlightened country answer to this monstrous demand? |
13989 | And, writhing, feel, where''er we turn, A world''s reproach around us burn? |
13989 | Are these sons and daughters of our Presidents, our Governors, our Senators, our Generals, and our Commodores, descendants of Ham? |
13989 | Are they not born to the same immortal destinies?" |
13989 | Are we pledged to craven silence? |
13989 | Are you the sons of the men of 1776? |
13989 | Are_ they_ Africans? |
13989 | But are your fellow- men to be bought and sold, like herds of cattle? |
13989 | But is_ that_ the measure of justice becoming the character of a free Commonwealth? |
13989 | But suppose_ habeas corpus_ and jury trial granted, what then? |
13989 | By what law of God can we justify the treatment of Margaret Garner? |
13989 | Did humanity aid him? |
13989 | Did you never put yourselves in their stead, and imagine how_ you_ would feel, under similar circumstances? |
13989 | Do those who give us awfully solemn lessons about the inviolability of compacts, mean that one man is bound to rob another because he has_ agreed_ to? |
13989 | Do you think that mother had a murderer''s heart? |
13989 | Has the morality of the nineteenth century culminated in_ this_, that a mere compact can convert vice into virtue? |
13989 | Have they not the same origin with yourselves? |
13989 | Have we no honest pride, that we so tamely submit to this? |
13989 | How, then, can they excuse themselves, or expect the civilized world to excuse them, for making, or sustaining, unjust and cruel laws? |
13989 | I could not help exclaiming,''Is this the land of boasted freedom?'' |
13989 | If you resort to the alleged legal obligation to return fugitives, it has more plausibility, but has it in reality any firm foundation? |
13989 | In the course of it, Mr. Smith, of Chatauqua, said:--"How_ came_ slavery in this country? |
13989 | Indignantly he asked,"Who can be the possessor of human beings save God? |
13989 | Is any man to be even_ so_ surrendered, with our consent? |
13989 | Is it the way we_ expect_ they will be received? |
13989 | Is not your own nature the same with that of those you call your slaves? |
13989 | Is_ that_ the way Southern masters receive the"fugitives from injustice"whom we drive back to them? |
13989 | It is law; and it is your duty to submit to[ Transcriber''s note: word cut off] patiently"? |
13989 | Marshal, with loaded pistols and drawn swords, and in military costume and array; and for what purpose? |
13989 | Or do you''lack gall, to make oppression bitter?'' |
13989 | Runaways with"blue eyes, light hair, and rosy complexions"? |
13989 | Shall Honor bleed? |
13989 | Shall Pity''s bosom cease to swell? |
13989 | Shall Truth succumb? |
13989 | Shall freemen lock the indignant thought? |
13989 | Shall pen, and press, and soul be dumb? |
13989 | Shall tongues be mute, when deeds are wrought Which well might shame extremest hell? |
13989 | Shall watch and ward be round him set Of Northern nerve and bayonet? |
13989 | Shall we resort to the Old Testament argument, that anodyne for the consciences of"South- Side"divines? |
13989 | Those men that you say belong to you, did not God create them free? |
13989 | To a preacher, who asked her,"Why did you not trust in God? |
13989 | Under these circumstances, are we bound to be their field- drivers and pound- keepers any longer? |
13989 | Was_ that_ a man to be treated like a chattel? |
13989 | Was_ this_ being received as"a brother beloved"? |
13989 | What are you grieving about? |
13989 | What asks the Old Dominion? |
13989 | What could you want more?'' |
13989 | What good excuse can be offered? |
13989 | What has been seen, what has been felt, by every man, woman and child in this metropolis, and in this community? |
13989 | What lethargic disease has fallen on Northern souls, that they dare not be as bold for Freedom as tyrants are for Slavery? |
13989 | What satisfactory reasons can be alleged for submitting to this degradation? |
13989 | While woman shrieks beneath his rod, And while he tramples down, at will, The image of a common God? |
13989 | Who can pay the value of a being created in the image of God? |
13989 | Why did n''t you wait and hope?" |
13989 | Would you not regard it as a league between highwaymen, who had"no rights that you were bound to respect"? |
13989 | _ Our_ voices, at your bidding, take up the blood- hound''s yell? |
13989 | _ We_ gather, at your summons, above our fathers''graves, From Freedom''s holy altar- horns to tear your wretched slaves? |
13989 | _ We_ hunt your bondmen, flying from Slavery''s hateful hell? |
13989 | and that this is an inheritance to be transmitted by us to our children, for all generations? |
13989 | and virtually by every man, woman and child in Massachusetts? |
13989 | he exclaims;"what does a slave''s marriage amount to? |
13989 | shall the great reckoning come, To lift the weak, and strike the oppressor dumb? |
13989 | suppose for one moment that poor abused boy was your own little Johnny or Charley, what would you say of the law_ then_? |
13989 | suppose this innocent girl had been your own Mary or Emma, would you not straightway demand amendment of the Constitution, in no very measured terms? |
13989 | the pitiless persecution of that poor little"famished hand"? |
13989 | the surrender of Sims and Burns? |
7103 | Any men on it? |
7103 | Bilgewater, kin I trust you? |
7103 | Brought you down from whar? 7103 But you can guess, ca n''t you? |
7103 | Cairo? 7103 Dern your skin, ai n''t the company good enough for you?" |
7103 | Do n''t anybody know? |
7103 | Do you belong on it? |
7103 | Drot your pore broken heart,says the baldhead;"what are you heaving your pore broken heart at US f''r? |
7103 | Has anybody been killed this year, Buck? |
7103 | Has there been many killed, Buck? |
7103 | Has this one been going on long, Buck? |
7103 | Him? 7103 How I gwyne to ketch her en I out in de woods? |
7103 | How''m I going to guess,says I,"when I never heard tell of it before?" |
7103 | I do n''t know where he was,says I;"where was he?" |
7103 | Laws, how do I know? 7103 No?" |
7103 | Now, George Jackson, do you know the Shepherdsons? |
7103 | Oh, you did, did you? 7103 Old man,"said the young one,"I reckon we might double- team it together; what do you think?" |
7103 | WHICH candle? |
7103 | Well, if you knowed where he was, what did you ask me for? |
7103 | Well, then, what did you want to kill him for? |
7103 | Well, who done the shooting? 7103 What are you prowling around here this time of night for-- hey?" |
7103 | What did he do to you? |
7103 | What do you want? |
7103 | What got you into trouble? |
7103 | What town is it, mister? |
7103 | What was the trouble about, Buck?--land? |
7103 | What''re you alassin''about? |
7103 | What''s a feud? |
7103 | Who''s me? |
7103 | Why did n''t you tell my Jack to fetch me here sooner, Jim? |
7103 | Why, blame it, it''s a riddle, do n''t you see? 7103 Why, how did you get hold of the raft again, Jim-- did you catch her?" |
7103 | Why, where was you raised? 7103 Yes, it IS good enough for me; it''s as good as I deserve; for who fetched me so low when I was so high? |
7103 | You mean to say our old raft warn''t smashed all to flinders? |
7103 | All through dinner Jim stood around and waited on him, and says,"Will yo''Grace have some o''dis or some o''dat?" |
7103 | And did the sad hearts thicken, And did the mourners cry? |
7103 | Are you all ready? |
7103 | Come slow; push the door open yourself-- just enough to squeeze in, d''you hear?" |
7103 | Conscience says to me,"What had poor Miss Watson done to you that you could see her nigger go off right under your eyes and never say one single word? |
7103 | Do n''t you know what a feud is?" |
7103 | Do you like to comb up Sundays, and all that kind of foolishness? |
7103 | Do you own a dog? |
7103 | Do you reckon you can learn me?" |
7103 | Do you want to spread it all over?" |
7103 | Down by the wood- pile I comes across my Jack, and says:"What''s it all about?" |
7103 | Every little while he jumps up and says:"Dah she is?" |
7103 | George Jackson, is there anybody with you?" |
7103 | Have you ever trod the boards, Royalty?" |
7103 | He says:"Ai n''t they no Shepherdsons around?" |
7103 | How does that strike you?" |
7103 | I ben a- buyin''pots en pans en vittles, as I got a chanst, en a- patchin''up de raf''nights when--""WHAT raft, Jim?" |
7103 | I ranged up and says:"Mister, is that town Cairo?" |
7103 | Is dey out o''sight yit? |
7103 | Is your man white or black?" |
7103 | It ai n''t my fault I warn''t born a duke, it ai n''t your fault you warn''t born a king-- so what''s the use to worry? |
7103 | One of them says:"What''s that yonder?" |
7103 | Say, boy, what''s the matter with your father?" |
7103 | Say, how long are you going to stay here? |
7103 | Says he:"Do n''t you know, Mars Jawge?" |
7103 | So I laid there about an hour trying to think, and when Buck waked up I says:"Can you spell, Buck?" |
7103 | So the question was, what to do? |
7103 | Soon as I could get Buck down by the corn- cribs under the trees by ourselves, I says:"Did you want to kill him, Buck?" |
7103 | That''s the whole yarn-- what''s yourn? |
7103 | The man sung out:"Snatch that light away, Betsy, you old fool-- ain''t you got any sense? |
7103 | Then I thought a minute, and says to myself, hold on; s''pose you''d a done right and give Jim up, would you felt better than what you do now? |
7103 | Then the duke says:"You are what?" |
7103 | Thinks I, what does it mean? |
7103 | Was it a Grangerford or a Shepherdson?" |
7103 | We both knowed well enough it was some more work of the rattlesnake- skin; so what was the use to talk about it? |
7103 | Whar was you brought down from?" |
7103 | What IS the matter with your pap? |
7103 | What did that poor old woman do to you that you could treat her so mean? |
7103 | What did you say your name was?" |
7103 | What do you mean?" |
7103 | What is he up to, anyway? |
7103 | What''s your lay?" |
7103 | What''s your line-- mainly?" |
7103 | When Jim called me to take the watch at four in the morning, he says:"Huck, does you reck''n we gwyne to run acrost any mo''kings on dis trip?" |
7103 | Who''s there?" |
7103 | Why did n''t you come out and say so? |
7103 | Why did n''t you step into the road, my boy?" |
7103 | is dat you, honey? |
7103 | it wo n''t do to fool with small- pox, do n''t you see?" |
7103 | would a runaway nigger run SOUTH?" |
7103 | you ca n''t mean it?" |
11171 | ''And Eliza, Sam?'' |
11171 | ''And when will my trouble be over?'' |
11171 | ''Art thee sure?'' |
11171 | ''Burnt up? |
11171 | ''But you love your father and mother?'' |
11171 | ''But, mother, if I do get asleep, you wo n''t let the bad man take me?'' |
11171 | ''Can you drive horses, Tom?'' |
11171 | ''Cousin, what in the world have you brought that thing here for?'' |
11171 | ''Do n''t I make a pretty young fellow?'' |
11171 | ''Do n''t know?'' |
11171 | ''Do n''t you see how much Miss Ophelia has done for you? |
11171 | ''Do n''t you think so?'' |
11171 | ''Do you know who made you?'' |
11171 | ''For you to teach, did n''t I tell you?'' |
11171 | ''Get it? |
11171 | ''Halloa, there, Simeon,''he shouted,''what news? |
11171 | ''Have you ever heard anything about God, Topsy?'' |
11171 | ''How can she?'' |
11171 | ''How can you let her do that?'' |
11171 | ''How did you come?'' |
11171 | ''How long have you lived with your master and mistress, then?'' |
11171 | ''How old are you, Topsy?'' |
11171 | ''Is it a great way off?'' |
11171 | ''Is it a year, or more, or less?'' |
11171 | ''Is n''t it nice?'' |
11171 | ''Is that you, Sam?'' |
11171 | ''Is there a boat that takes people across the river now?'' |
11171 | ''Law, you niggers,''she would go on,''does you know you''s all sinners? |
11171 | ''Laws, now, is it?'' |
11171 | ''Mas''r George? |
11171 | ''Mother, I do n''t need to keep awake, do I?'' |
11171 | ''Not while I am in trouble, Tom?'' |
11171 | ''Now cousin, what is this for? |
11171 | ''Poor Topsy,''said Eva,''why need you steal? |
11171 | ''So, Uncle Tom, where are you going?'' |
11171 | ''Sold him?'' |
11171 | ''There,''said Miss Ophelia,''will you tell me now you did n''t steal the ribbon?'' |
11171 | ''Tom,''said Aunt Chloe,''why do n''t you go too? |
11171 | ''Topsy,''Miss Ophelia would say, when her patience was at an end,''what makes you behave so badly?'' |
11171 | ''Topsy,''said Miss Ophelia,''do n''t you know it is wicked to tell lies?'' |
11171 | ''Was your master unkind to you?'' |
11171 | ''Was your mistress unkind to you?'' |
11171 | ''Well, now, tell me,''said Miss Ophelia,''have you taken anything else since you have been in the house? |
11171 | ''Were you a slave?'' |
11171 | ''What can you do? |
11171 | ''What could make you leave a good home, then, and run away, and go through such danger?'' |
11171 | ''What did you burn them up for?'' |
11171 | ''What for, pussy? |
11171 | ''What has Tom done that master should sell him?'' |
11171 | ''What has she been doing now?'' |
11171 | ''What in the world made you tell me you took those things, Topsy?'' |
11171 | ''What is it?'' |
11171 | ''What is it?'' |
11171 | ''What is missy''s name?'' |
11171 | ''What is the matter now?'' |
11171 | ''What is the matter, mother?'' |
11171 | ''What is this?'' |
11171 | ''What is to be done with her, then?'' |
11171 | ''What makes you behave so?'' |
11171 | ''What makes you so naughty, Topsy?'' |
11171 | ''What makes you so sober?'' |
11171 | ''What''s this?'' |
11171 | ''When?'' |
11171 | ''Where are they?'' |
11171 | ''Where is he?'' |
11171 | ''Why are you in such a hurry?'' |
11171 | ''Why do n''t you try to be good? |
11171 | ''Why not?'' |
11171 | ''Why not?'' |
11171 | ''Why, Eva, where did you get your necklace?'' |
11171 | ''Why, Tom, do n''t you think that you are really better off as you are?'' |
11171 | ''Why, that''s Miss Feely''s ribbon, an''t it? |
11171 | ''Why, what''s the matter?'' |
11171 | ''Why? |
11171 | ''You''re going to be good, Topsy, you understand?'' |
11171 | ''You''re sure, an''t you, mother?'' |
11171 | Are they coming?'' |
11171 | Are you going to use him for a rattle- box, or a rocking- horse, or what?'' |
11171 | Besides, what does he want with his freedom? |
11171 | But I want to ask you, whose is she-- yours or mine?'' |
11171 | But, O Lord, how can I? |
11171 | Could n''t you go all around and try and persuade people to do right about this? |
11171 | Did nobody ever tell you? |
11171 | Do n''t you know me?'' |
11171 | Do n''t you love anybody, Topsy?'' |
11171 | Do you see?'' |
11171 | How could it a got into my sleeve?'' |
11171 | Is it very far off, is Canada''? |
11171 | Is n''t there any way to have all slaves made free?'' |
11171 | Now, what''s your name?'' |
11171 | She sprang up saying,''Oh, my Harry, have they got him?'' |
11171 | Suddenly their old black man- of- all- work put his head in at the door and said,''Will missis come into the kitchen?'' |
11171 | Well, what else?'' |
11171 | What did you do for your master and mistress?'' |
11171 | What do you mean? |
11171 | What makes you so sad?'' |
11171 | What on earth did you want to bring this one for?'' |
11171 | What was to be done with Topsy? |
11171 | Where were you born?'' |
11171 | Who was your mother?'' |
11171 | Will thee tell her?'' |
11171 | Will you remember?'' |
11171 | [ Illustration]''Do you know how to sew?'' |
11171 | [ Illustration]''Where do you mean to go to, poor woman?'' |
11171 | what shall we do?'' |
7106 | Ai n''t them old crippled picks and things in there good enough to dig a nigger out with? |
7106 | But it''s SOMEBODY''S plates, ai n''t it? |
7106 | DO with it? 7106 Did n''t I SAY I was going to help steal the nigger?" |
7106 | Did you ever see us before? |
7106 | For what? |
7106 | How can he blow? 7106 How long will it take, Tom?" |
7106 | How''d you get your breakfast so early on the boat? |
7106 | I do n''t reckon he does; but what put that into your head? |
7106 | Not a word? |
7106 | SOLD him? |
7106 | To dig the foundations out from under that cabin with? |
7106 | Tools for what? |
7106 | Tools? |
7106 | WORK? 7106 Well, spos''n it is? |
7106 | Well, then, what''ll we make him the ink out of? |
7106 | Well, then, what''s the sense in wasting the plates? |
7106 | Well, then,I says,"how''ll it do to saw him out, the way I done before I was murdered that time?" |
7106 | Well, then,I says,"if we do n''t want the picks and shovels, what do we want?" |
7106 | What PUT it dar? 7106 What did you think the vittles was for?" |
7106 | What do we WANT of a saw? 7106 What do we want of a saw?" |
7106 | What do we want of a shirt, Tom? |
7106 | What in the nation can he DO with it? |
7106 | What made you think I''d like it? |
7106 | What''s THAT got to do with it? 7106 Whereabouts?" |
7106 | Who do you reckon''t is? |
7106 | Who''d you give the baggage to? |
7106 | Why? |
7106 | You wo n''t, wo n''t you? 7106 You''re s''rp-- Why, what do you reckon I am? |
7106 | And I DID start to tell him; but he shut me up, and says:"Do n''t you reckon I know what I''m about? |
7106 | And s''pose he steps in here any minute, and sings out my name before I can throw him a wink to keep quiet? |
7106 | And turns to me, perfectly ca''m, and says,"Did YOU hear anybody sing out?" |
7106 | And what would you want to saw his leg off for, anyway?" |
7106 | And you would n''t leave them any? |
7106 | But at supper, at night, one of the little boys says:"Pa, may n''t Tom and Sid and me go to the show?" |
7106 | Didn''he jis''dis minute sing out like he knowed you?" |
7106 | Do n''t I generly know what I''m about?" |
7106 | Does you want to go en look at''i m?" |
7106 | Going to feed the dogs?" |
7106 | Hain''t he run off?" |
7106 | Hain''t we got to saw the leg of Jim''s bed off, so as to get the chain loose?" |
7106 | He can hide it in his bed, ca n''t he?" |
7106 | Honest injun, you ai n''t a ghost?" |
7106 | I hunched Tom, and whispers:"You going, right here in the daybreak? |
7106 | I says:"What do we want of a moat when we''re going to snake him out from under the cabin?" |
7106 | I wonder who''tis? |
7106 | I''ve a good notion to take and-- Say, what do you mean by kissing me?" |
7106 | It was all she could do to hold in; and her eyes snapped, and her fingers worked like she wanted to scratch him; and she says:"Who''s''everybody''? |
7106 | Just keep a tight tongue in your head and move right along, and then you wo n''t get into trouble with US, d''ye hear?" |
7106 | Look yonder!--up the road!--ain''t that somebody coming?" |
7106 | Looky here, warn''t you ever murdered AT ALL?" |
7106 | Looky here-- do you think YOU''D venture to blow on us? |
7106 | Mrs. Phelps she jumps for him, and says:"Has he come?" |
7106 | Now I want to ask you-- if you got any reasonableness in you at all-- what kind of a show would THAT give him to be a hero? |
7106 | Pretty soon Tom says:"Ready?" |
7106 | S''pose he DON''T do nothing with it? |
7106 | Say, gimme a chaw tobacker, wo n''t ye?" |
7106 | She was smiling all over so she could hardly stand-- and says:"It''s YOU, at last!--AIN''T it?" |
7106 | So Tom says:"What''s the vittles for? |
7106 | So Tom turns to the nigger, which was looking wild and distressed, and says, kind of severe:"What do you reckon''s the matter with you, anyway? |
7106 | So she run on:"Lize, hurry up and get him a hot breakfast right away-- or did you get your breakfast on the boat?" |
7106 | So, then, what you want to come back and ha''nt ME for?" |
7106 | The next minute he whirls on me and says:"Do you reckon that nigger would blow on us? |
7106 | The old gentleman stared, and says:"Why, who''s that?" |
7106 | Then I says to myself, s''pose Tom Sawyer comes down on that boat? |
7106 | Then he did n''t look so joyful, and says:"What was your idea for asking ME?" |
7106 | Then he says, kind of glad and eager,"Where''s the raft?--got her in a good place?" |
7106 | Then he turns to Jim, and looks him over like he never see him before, and says:"Did you sing out?" |
7106 | Tom he looked at the nigger, steady and kind of wondering, and says:"Does WHO know us?" |
7106 | WHAT did he sing out?" |
7106 | WHEN did he sing out? |
7106 | WHO sung out? |
7106 | Was you looking for him?" |
7106 | We ai n''t a- going to GNAW him out, are we?" |
7106 | What kep''you?--boat get aground?" |
7106 | What made you think somebody sung out?" |
7106 | What''s the good of a plan that ai n''t no more trouble than that? |
7106 | When we was at dinner, did n''t you see a nigger man go in there with some vittles?" |
7106 | Where''d YOU come from?" |
7106 | Where''d she get aground?" |
7106 | Where''s that ten cents? |
7106 | Where?" |
7106 | Who IS it?" |
7106 | Who ever heard of a state prisoner escaping by a hickry- bark ladder? |
7106 | Who ever heard of getting a prisoner loose in such an old- maidy way as that? |
7106 | Who nailed him?" |
7106 | Who''s THEY?" |
7106 | Whoever would a thought it was in that mare to do it? |
7106 | Why ca n''t you stick to the main point?" |
7106 | Why would n''t they? |
7106 | Why, hain''t you ever read any books at all?--Baron Trenck, nor Casanova, nor Benvenuto Chelleeny, nor Henri IV., nor none of them heroes? |
7106 | Will you?" |
7106 | Would n''t that plan work?" |
7106 | You do n''t reckon it''s going to take thirty- seven years to dig out through a DIRT foundation, do you?" |
7106 | You''ll say it''s dirty, low- down business; but what if it is? |
7106 | ai n''t it there in his bed, for a clew, after he''s gone? |
7106 | ain''dat Misto Tom?" |
7106 | and do n''t you reckon they''ll want clews? |
7106 | anybody hurt?" |
7106 | do he know you genlmen?" |
7106 | she says,"what in the warld can have become of him?" |
7105 | But I reckon we ought to tell Uncle Harvey she''s gone out a while, anyway, so he wo n''t be uneasy about her? |
7105 | But I thought YOU lived in Sheffield? |
7105 | But what time o''day? |
7105 | Come, ai n''t that what you saw? |
7105 | Do n''t mind what I said-- please don''t-- you WON''T, now, WILL you? |
7105 | Do n''t they give''em holidays, the way we do, Christmas and New Year''s week, and Fourth of July? |
7105 | HOW''D you come? |
7105 | His''n? 7105 How does he get it, then?" |
7105 | How''s it a new kind? |
7105 | I do n''t know; leastways, I kinder forget; but I thinks it''s--"Sakes alive, I hope it ai n''t HANNER? |
7105 | I thought he lived in London? |
7105 | Is it KETCHING? 7105 Looky here,"I says;"did you ever see any Congress- water?" |
7105 | None of it at all? |
7105 | Nor church? |
7105 | They do n''t, do n''t they? 7105 WHOSE pew?" |
7105 | Was you in there yisterday er last night? |
7105 | Well, did you have to go to Congress to get it? |
7105 | Well, then, how''d you come to be up at the Pint in the MORNIN''--in a canoe? |
7105 | Well, then, how''s he going to take the sea baths if it ai n''t on the sea? |
7105 | Well, then, what are they FOR? |
7105 | Well, then, what does the rest of''em do? |
7105 | Well, what DID you say, then? |
7105 | Well, what in the nation do they call it the MUMPS for? |
7105 | Well, who said it was? |
7105 | Well, why would n''t you? |
7105 | What did you reckon I wanted you to go at all for, Miss Mary? |
7105 | What is it you wo n''t believe, Joe? |
7105 | What is it, duke? |
7105 | What other things? |
7105 | What!--to preach before a king? 7105 Where do you set?" |
7105 | Where is it, then? |
7105 | Which one? |
7105 | Who? 7105 Why, what do they want with more?" |
7105 | Why, who''s got it? |
7105 | Why? |
7105 | --so as to get them to let Miss Mary Jane go aboard? |
7105 | And ai n''t that a big enough majority in any town?" |
7105 | And do you reckon they''d be mean enough to go off and leave you to go all that journey by yourselves? |
7105 | And leave my sisters with them?" |
7105 | And not sell out the rest o''the property? |
7105 | And they call it the MUMPS?" |
7105 | And when the king got done this husky up and says:"Say, looky here; if you are Harvey Wilks, when''d you come to this town?" |
7105 | And you ca n''t get away with that tooth without fetching the whole harrow along, can you? |
7105 | But answer me only jest this one more-- now DON''T git mad; did n''t you have it in your mind to hook the money and hide it?" |
7105 | Ca n''t you SEE that THEY''D go and tell? |
7105 | Did you inquire around for HIM when you got loose? |
7105 | Do n''t you know nothing?" |
7105 | Do n''t you reckon I know who hid that money in that coffin?" |
7105 | Do they treat''em better''n we treat our niggers?" |
7105 | Do you reckon that''ll do?" |
7105 | Hain''t we got all the fools in town on our side? |
7105 | Hain''t your uncles obleegd to get along home to England as fast as they can? |
7105 | How fur is it?" |
7105 | How is servants treated in England? |
7105 | How would you like to be treated so?" |
7105 | How''d they act?" |
7105 | I live up there, do n''t I? |
7105 | I reckon he can stand a little thing like that, ca n''t he?" |
7105 | I says to myself, shall I go to that doctor, private, and blow on these frauds? |
7105 | If the profits has turned out to be none, lackin''considable, and none to carry, is it my fault any more''n it''s yourn?" |
7105 | If they have, wo n''t the complices get away with that bag of gold Peter Wilks left? |
7105 | If you do n''t hitch on to one tooth, you''re bound to on another, ai n''t you? |
7105 | Is a HARROW catching-- in the dark? |
7105 | Is it ketching?" |
7105 | Is she took bad?" |
7105 | Is there anybody here that helped to lay out my br-- helped to lay out the late Peter Wilks for burying?" |
7105 | Long as you''re in this town do n''t you forgit THAT-- you hear?" |
7105 | NOW what do you say-- hey?" |
7105 | Next, she says:"Do you go to church, too?" |
7105 | S''pose she dug him up and did n''t find nothing, what would she think of me? |
7105 | Say, where IS that song-- that draft?" |
7105 | Says I, kind of timid- like:"Is something gone wrong?" |
7105 | Shall I go, private, and tell Mary Jane? |
7105 | She says:"Did you ever see the king?" |
7105 | She says:"Honest injun, now, hain''t you been telling me a lot of lies?" |
7105 | So when I says he goes to our church, she says:"What-- regular?" |
7105 | So, says I, s''pose somebody has hogged that bag on the sly?--now how do I know whether to write to Mary Jane or not? |
7105 | The doctor he up and says:"Would you know the boy again if you was to see him, Hines?" |
7105 | The duke bristles up now, and says:"Oh, let UP on this cussed nonsense; do you take me for a blame''fool? |
7105 | The duke says, pretty brisk:"When it comes to that, maybe you''ll let me ask, what was YOU referring to?" |
7105 | The duke says:"Have you seen anybody else go in there?" |
7105 | The king kind of ruffles up, and says:"Looky here, Bilgewater, what''r you referrin''to?" |
7105 | The king says:"Was you in my room night before last?" |
7105 | The king says:"Why?" |
7105 | Then I says:"Blame it, do you suppose there ai n''t but one preacher to a church?" |
7105 | Then I says:"Miss Mary Jane, is there any place out of town a little ways where you could go and stay three or four days?" |
7105 | Then the doctor whirls on me and says:"Are YOU English, too?" |
7105 | Then the duke says:"What, all of them?" |
7105 | Then the old man turns towards the king, and says:"Perhaps this gentleman can tell me what was tattooed on his breast?" |
7105 | They sets down then, and the king says:"Well, what is it? |
7105 | Tired of our company, hey?" |
7105 | Very well, then; is a PREACHER going to deceive a steamboat clerk? |
7105 | Was there any such mark on Peter Wilks''breast?" |
7105 | Well, did he? |
7105 | Well, we got to save HIM, hain''t we? |
7105 | Well, what do you think? |
7105 | What WILL he do, then? |
7105 | What did they do? |
7105 | What did you RECKON he wanted with it?" |
7105 | What do we k''yer for HIM? |
7105 | What does HE want with a pew?" |
7105 | What was it?" |
7105 | What''s the matter with her?" |
7105 | When I struck Susan and the hare- lip, I says:"What''s the name of them people over on t''other side of the river that you all goes to see sometimes?" |
7105 | When was that?" |
7105 | Where WOULD he live?" |
7105 | Where WOULD it be?" |
7105 | Where did you hide it?" |
7105 | Why?" |
7105 | William Fourth? |
7105 | Would YOU a done any different? |
7105 | Would ther''be any sense in that? |
7105 | Your uncle Harvey''s a preacher, ai n''t he? |
7105 | and"Where, for the land''s sake, DID you get these amaz''n pickles?" |
7105 | is he going to deceive a SHIP CLERK? |
7102 | AIN''dat gay? 7102 And ai n''t it natural and right for a cat and a cow to talk different from US?" |
7102 | Could n''t they see better if they was to wait till daytime? |
7102 | Dad fetch it, how is I gwyne to dream all dat in ten minutes? |
7102 | Does a cat talk like a cow, or a cow talk like a cat? |
7102 | Drinkin''? 7102 Get?" |
7102 | Gone away? 7102 Goodness gracious, is dat you, Huck? |
7102 | Goshen, child? 7102 HOW? |
7102 | How does I talk wild? |
7102 | I is, is I? 7102 If fifteen cows is browsing on a hillside, how many of them eats with their heads pointed the same direction?" |
7102 | Is a cat a man, Huck? |
7102 | It''s natural and right for''em to talk different from each other, ai n''t it? |
7102 | Looky here, Jim; does a cat talk like we do? |
7102 | No-- is that so? |
7102 | No; is dat so? |
7102 | Oh, that''s the way of it? |
7102 | Oh, well, that''s all interpreted well enough as far as it goes, Jim,I says;"but what does THESE things stand for?" |
7102 | Roun''de which? |
7102 | Say, wo n''t he suspicion what we''re up to? |
7102 | They''re-- they''re-- are you the watchman of the boat? |
7102 | Well, den, why could n''t he SAY it? |
7102 | Well, does a cow? |
7102 | Well, then, a horse? |
7102 | Well, then, what makes you talk so wild? |
7102 | Well, then, why ai n''t it natural and right for a FRENCHMAN to talk different from us? 7102 Well, we can wait the two hours anyway and see, ca n''t we?" |
7102 | Wh-- what, mum? |
7102 | What fog? |
7102 | What wreck? |
7102 | What''s de harem? |
7102 | What''s the matter with you, Jim? 7102 What''s your real name? |
7102 | What, you do n''t mean the Walter Scott? |
7102 | Where''bouts do you live? 7102 Which side of a tree does the moss grow on?" |
7102 | Who? 7102 Why, Huck, doan''de French people talk de same way we does?" |
7102 | Why, are they after him yet? |
7102 | Why, pap and mam and sis and Miss Hooker; and if you''d take your ferryboat and go up there--"Up where? 7102 You hain''t seen no towhead? |
7102 | --wouldn''t he spread himself, nor nothing? |
7102 | Ai n''t I right?" |
7102 | Ai n''t that so?" |
7102 | And THEN what did you all do?" |
7102 | And could n''t the nigger see better, too? |
7102 | And what FOR? |
7102 | And would n''t he throw style into it? |
7102 | Bekase why: would a wise man want to live in de mids''er sich a blim- blammin''all de time? |
7102 | But Bill says:"Hold on--''d you go through him?" |
7102 | But he''ll be pooty lonesome-- dey ain''no kings here, is dey, Huck?" |
7102 | But how you goin''to manage it this time?" |
7102 | But now she says:"Honey, I thought you said it was Sarah when you first come in?" |
7102 | But other times they just lazy around; or go hawking-- just hawking and sp-- Sh!--d''you hear a noise?" |
7102 | But s''pose she DON''T break up and wash off?" |
7102 | But when he did get the thing straightened around he looked at me steady without ever smiling, and says:"What do dey stan''for? |
7102 | Dad blame it, why doan''he TALK like a man? |
7102 | Did n''t you?" |
7102 | Do n''t anybody live there? |
7102 | Do n''t you know about the harem? |
7102 | Do you know him?" |
7102 | Do you reckon Tom Sawyer would ever go by this thing? |
7102 | Does three hundred dollars lay around every day for people to pick up? |
7102 | Does you know''bout dat chile dat he''uz gwyne to chop in two?" |
7102 | En did n''t I bust up agin a lot er dem islands en have a turrible time en mos''git drownded? |
7102 | En what dey got to do, Huck?" |
7102 | En what use is a half a chile? |
7102 | En you ain''dead-- you ain''drownded-- you''s back agin? |
7102 | HAIN''T you ben gone away?" |
7102 | Has I ben a- drinkin''? |
7102 | Has I had a chance to be a- drinkin''?" |
7102 | Has everybody quit thinking the nigger done it?" |
7102 | He stirred up in a kind of a startlish way; but when he see it was only me he took a good gap and stretch, and then he says:"Hello, what''s up? |
7102 | How do dat come?" |
7102 | How much do a king git?" |
7102 | I says to myself, there ai n''t no telling but I might come to be a murderer myself yet, and then how would I like it? |
7102 | I says:"Who done it? |
7102 | I''m for killin''him-- and did n''t he kill old Hatfield jist the same way-- and do n''t he deserve it?" |
7102 | In this neighborhood?'' |
7102 | Is I ME, or who IS I? |
7102 | Is I heah, or whah IS I? |
7102 | Is a Frenchman a man?" |
7102 | Is a cow a man?--er is a cow a cat?" |
7102 | Is it Bill, or Tom, or Bob?--or what is it?" |
7102 | Is your husband going over there to- night?" |
7102 | It''s only saying, do you know how to talk French?" |
7102 | Looky here, did n''t de line pull loose en de raf''go a- hummin''down de river, en leave you en de canoe behine in de fog?" |
7102 | Me? |
7102 | Now ain''dat so, boss-- ain''t it so? |
7102 | Now if you''ll go and--""By Jackson, I''d LIKE to, and, blame it, I do n''t know but I will; but who in the dingnation''s a- going''to PAY for it? |
7102 | Pretty soon she says""What did you say your name was, honey?" |
7102 | RAF''? |
7102 | S''pose a man was to come to you and say Polly- voo- franzy-- what would you think?" |
7102 | Says I--"I broke in and says:"They''re in an awful peck of trouble, and--""WHO is?" |
7102 | See? |
7102 | She looked me all over with her little shiny eyes, and says:"What might your name be?" |
7102 | So she put me up a snack, and says:"Say, when a cow''s laying down, which end of her gets up first? |
7102 | Then she took off the hank and looked me straight in the face, and very pleasant, and says:"Come, now, what''s your real name?" |
7102 | Warn''dat de beatenes''notion in de worl''? |
7102 | Well, then, I said, why could n''t she tell her husband to fetch a dog? |
7102 | Well, you answer me dis: Did n''t you tote out de line in de canoe fer to make fas''to de tow- head?" |
7102 | What does I do? |
7102 | What he gwyne to do?" |
7102 | What tow- head? |
7102 | What''s the matter with''em?" |
7102 | What''s the trouble?" |
7102 | What''s your real name, now?" |
7102 | Where are they?" |
7102 | Where would I go to?" |
7102 | Which end gets up first?" |
7102 | Who told you this was Goshen?" |
7102 | Why did n''t you stir me up?" |
7102 | Why, hain''t you been talking about my coming back, and all that stuff, as if I''d been gone away?" |
7102 | Why, how in the nation did they ever git into such a scrape?" |
7102 | Why, what in the nation do you mean? |
7102 | You been a- drinking?" |
7102 | You take a man dat''s got on''y one or two chillen; is dat man gwyne to be waseful o''chillen? |
7102 | is HE her uncle? |
7102 | what are they doin''THERE, for gracious sakes?" |
11137 | Are you not afraid that they will resist? |
11137 | Are you sure,said Rosa,"that master thinks of such a frightful doom for us?" |
11137 | As you please, then,he said, rather dubiously,"but look well to your weapons; are they in order?" |
11137 | Can you keep three poor devils here to- night? |
11137 | Does your mother still reside in C----? |
11137 | Have you any travelers here to night? |
11137 | How many? |
11137 | Poor man,said his benefactor,"can it be that you have a wife with you, wretched as yourself?" |
11137 | Resist? |
11137 | Shall I not visit for these things? 11137 What,"said he,"are you so chicken- hearted as to suppose those d----d cowardly niggers are going to get up an insurrection?" |
11137 | Where are they? |
11137 | Ah, who? |
11137 | And are not a vast majority of the polar race excluded? |
11137 | And are we alone excluded from what the world chooses to denominate polite society? |
11137 | And for what, pray, is all this grand outlay-- this vast expenditure? |
11137 | And for what? |
11137 | And for what? |
11137 | And for what_ is_ all this? |
11137 | And if allowed to them, is it not equally justifiable when the commerce is prompted by affection rather than that of lust and force? |
11137 | And what, think you, was the cause of this terrible calamity? |
11137 | And who does not? |
11137 | And who is responsible? |
11137 | And who will wonder, if his slaves rejoiced to hear of his death? |
11137 | And why should they be compelled to leave the State of Ohio? |
11137 | Are not the clergy, a class of men equally ineligible to office? |
11137 | But are we alone shut out and excluded from any share in the administration of government? |
11137 | But can these out- gushings of a benevolent heart-- the purest impulses of a noble nature-- be permitted to flow out spontaneously, in open daylight? |
11137 | But is the poor, flying fugitive from the house of bondage, safe one moment within your borders? |
11137 | But what could be done? |
11137 | But what sees the oppressed negro? |
11137 | But what was he to do for food? |
11137 | But where is Mr. M''Carter, the more fortunate party in the duel? |
11137 | But where should they go? |
11137 | But who can describe the anxiety written on every face, as they prepared for the third and last trial? |
11137 | But why, oh why, had I been forced to flee thus from my fellow men? |
11137 | But, to what, my friends, do you owe all these blessings? |
11137 | Can I be accommodated? |
11137 | Can I see your barn?" |
11137 | Can any one wonder that I, and other slaves, often doubted the sincerity of every white man''s religion? |
11137 | Can it be a matter of astonishment, that slaves often feel that there is no just God for the poor African? |
11137 | Can it be for the best interest or good of the enslaved? |
11137 | Can this be so? |
11137 | Do the Northern or Free States of the Union think to clear their skirts of the abomination of Slavery, by saying that they own no slaves? |
11137 | Do the best interests of our common country require it? |
11137 | Does not the Bible inform us that"God hath created of one blood all the nations of the earth?" |
11137 | Dr. Bruno asks,"Gentlemen, are you ready?" |
11137 | Else, why should my oppressors feel so unwilling that their slaves should possess that which they thought so essential to themselves? |
11137 | For what fault, or for what crime was I pursued by armed men, and hunted like a beast of prey? |
11137 | Have we any direct influence over his human chattels? |
11137 | He gazed upon the suffering man with an angry expression, and inquired in a tone of command,"Daniel, what have you been doing?" |
11137 | Helm demand it? |
11137 | Helm, soul and body; and if his brutal owner chose to destroy his own property, certainly had he not a right to do so, without let or hindrance? |
11137 | Helm? |
11137 | His face, covered with blood, was so swollen that he could hardly see for some time; but what of that? |
11137 | How could intelligent men, or gentlemen, if you please so to term them, look placidly on such a horrid scene? |
11137 | How many pure Africans, think you, can be found in the whole slave population of the South, to say nothing of their nativity? |
11137 | I ask, Almighty God, are they who do such things thy chosen and favorite people? |
11137 | I asked him what I should do? |
11137 | I opened it myself, and a gentleman, looking carefully about the place, inquired,"Are you full?" |
11137 | If any, what are his prospects? |
11137 | In the day of final reckoning, think you, he will regret having plead the cause of the bondman? |
11137 | Is a falsehood to be pardoned because uttered by a negro? |
11137 | Is it benevolence that binds him with his master''s chain? |
11137 | Is it no sin in the sight of the Almighty, for Southern gentlemen(?) |
11137 | Is my reader about to throw the blame of our nation''s wrong on England, and accuse her of first tolerating Slavery? |
11137 | Is not the necessity of an"_ under ground railroad_,"a disgrace to the laws of any country? |
11137 | Is not truth the same, whether proclaimed by black or white,--bond or free? |
11137 | Let us ask then, why did our Omnipotent Creator make the marked distinction? |
11137 | Look around you, my friends: what rational enjoyment is not within your reach? |
11137 | Look you then to yours; are you less capable of securing your rights than they? |
11137 | Oh, God, is there no protection for me in the laws of New York? |
11137 | Oh, when will this nation"cease to do evil and learn to do well?" |
11137 | Oh, who, with feelings of common humanity, could look quietly on such torture? |
11137 | Otherwise, how could a gentle, and in other respects, amiable woman, look on such scenes of cruelty, without a shudder of utter abhorrence? |
11137 | Ought it then to be deemed less criminal because transpiring on the free soil of the American Republic? |
11137 | Should it not also remind those who have guests to entertain, of the sinfulness of putting the cup to their neighbor''s lips? |
11137 | Starting to his feet in great alarm, he cried out"Where is Davis?" |
11137 | The gentleman sprang from his carriage, bounded through the open door, and in the most excited manner, began to inquire"who owns this establishment? |
11137 | The_ pay_ is all well enough, I know, but if you get killed your wages will stop; and then who, do you suppose, will indemnify me for the loss? |
11137 | Then who is it that rivets the chain and increases the already heavy burden of the crushed slave, but he who has the power to do with him as he wills? |
11137 | Think you, that a righteous God will fail to judge a nation for such flagrant sins? |
11137 | Was it, think you, a personal enmity that the cowardly scoundrel had toward our worthy Northern Senator, which induced the attack? |
11137 | Was there no heart of humanity to interfere and arrest the murderous designs of these madmen? |
11137 | We admit it; but did she not repent of the evil she had done, and speedily break every yoke, and let the oppressed go free? |
11137 | What a spectacle was that, for the sight of a brother? |
11137 | What could I do next? |
11137 | What could I do? |
11137 | What had I done? |
11137 | What prevented the Doctor from an exertion to save his life? |
11137 | What stronger proof can we ask in favor of our position, than the intolerant spirit of the South? |
11137 | What then are the means by which so dreadful a calamity may be avoided? |
11137 | What though her soil be fertile, yielding a yearly product of wealth to its possessors? |
11137 | What though his skin be black as ebony, if the heart of a brother beats in his bosom? |
11137 | What though she may have been justly styled,"The Mother of Presidents?" |
11137 | What would my Rochester friends think of my conduct? |
11137 | What_ should_ I then have done? |
11137 | When a rumseller gives that to a man, which he knows will"steal away his brains,"and make him a maniac, how can he anticipate his future conduct? |
11137 | When will he return? |
11137 | When will they judge character in accordance with its moral excellence, instead of the complexion a man unavoidably bears to the world? |
11137 | Who can imagine a position more painful? |
11137 | Who has murdered my poor brother?" |
11137 | Who will bear to his loving and unsuspecting wife, the sad intelligence of her sudden bereavement? |
11137 | Why hold with an unyielding grasp, so miserable and useless a piece of property? |
11137 | Why not let him go then? |
11137 | Why should we, on this day of congratulation and joy, turn our view upon the origin of African Slavery? |
11137 | Why then are the mails so closely examined, and fines imposed on prohibited anti- slavery documents? |
11137 | Why was I there panting and weary, hungry and destitute-- skulking in the woods like a thief, and concealing myself like a murderer? |
11137 | Why, indeed, was the black man created, if not to fulfil his destiny_ as a negro_, to the glory of God? |
11137 | Will any of you say that it can be of no use to you, or that you can not read it? |
11137 | Will he be welcomed to your homes, your tables, your firesides? |
11137 | Will not my friends think of these and many other advantages in favor of a country life, and practice accordingly? |
11137 | Will they not blot out from their fair escutcheon the foul stain which Slavery has cast upon it? |
11137 | Would not his keeper be made to answer, and perhaps to suffer for his escape and theft? |
11137 | how then were my high hopes fallen, and how much more hateful appeared that slavery which had blighted all my military prospects? |
11137 | saith the Lord; and shall not my soul be avenged on such a nation as this?" |
11137 | to mix blood and amalgamate the races? |
11137 | what a state of mind was this in which to meet inevitable death? |
11859 | And I suppose you think I can not get to heaven? |
11859 | And alone? |
11859 | And are ye from ould Ireland? |
11859 | And what part may ye be from? |
11859 | And what should I take off my hat for? |
11859 | And what would you have done, if you had seen her? |
11859 | Art thou a slave? |
11859 | Art thou acquainted with him? |
11859 | Art thou instructed by the managers of the rail- road to proceed in this manner on such occasions? |
11859 | Art thou quite sure about the age of the moon? |
11859 | Art thou to receive sixty dollars for apprehending the man mentioned in this advertisement? |
11859 | Aye? |
11859 | But how would you talk about slavery if you were there? |
11859 | But what for you ask about de moon? |
11859 | But who would trust me? 11859 Could you find her, if you tried?" |
11859 | Did he die in thy stable? |
11859 | Did you say I dared not grant a warrant to search your house? |
11859 | Didst thou not tell me thou wert ordered to turn me out? 11859 Dost thou know James Hunter?" |
11859 | Dost thou know what Hannah answered, when I asked if she would marry me? |
11859 | Dost thou think I am such a coward as to forsake my principles, or conceal them, at the bidding of a mob? |
11859 | Dost thou_ like_ to come back? |
11859 | Has a Coroner''s inquest been called? |
11859 | Have you seen my man? |
11859 | How canst thou prove that the man thou hast arrested is the one here advertised? |
11859 | How dark must the complexion be, to justify thee in receiving such uncertain evidence? |
11859 | If his head were cut off, would n''t he die? |
11859 | If thou wert ill, how wouldst thou like to have thy throat cut, instead of being kindly nursed? |
11859 | If you called upon me, and I told you that I knew where he was, but would not inform you, would you consider yourself treated kindly? |
11859 | Is it French, or English? 11859 Is this the key hanging here?" |
11859 | Oh, what have I ever done, or said, that you should ask me such a question? |
11859 | Perhaps if thou hadst known that fact, thou wouldst not have invited_ me_? |
11859 | Perhaps it is my shoes thou meanest? |
11859 | Shall I find mine goots? |
11859 | Take it off? |
11859 | Tell me how you know I will find mine goots, and where I will find de tief? |
11859 | The way did not openfor_ them_ to be so active; and why should_ his_ zeal rebuke_ their_ listlessness? |
11859 | Then you do n''t remember a man that lived with your neighbor, Mr.----? |
11859 | Then, will you please to walk out, sir? |
11859 | Thou wert not concerned in this robbery, wert thou? |
11859 | Well wo n''t the same key that locked it unlock it? |
11859 | Well, Mr. Hopper,said the Recorder,"what have you to say in justification of your very extraordinary proceedings?" |
11859 | Well,said Mr. Ingersoll,"what would_ you_ do in such a case? |
11859 | Well,said he,"do I look anything like his majesty?" |
11859 | Were they young men, or old convicts? 11859 What are you going to do with this man?" |
11859 | What do they want to do it_ for_? |
11859 | What do you mean? |
11859 | What dost thou mean by that? 11859 What dost thou mean? |
11859 | What if he is my son? |
11859 | What secret? |
11859 | What use would it be? |
11859 | What will they do with me? |
11859 | What would be the use of saying it, if she were_ not_ within hearing? |
11859 | What wouldst thou think of such testimony in case of thy own daughter? |
11859 | What''s the matter with my hat? |
11859 | What''s this? |
11859 | What_ could_ I understand,said she,"except that you intended to make me your wife?" |
11859 | Where can I go to be safe? |
11859 | Where is he? 11859 Where is she?" |
11859 | Wherein does his majesty differ from other men? |
11859 | Who can tell whether he is thy slave or not? 11859 Why dost thou not make a resolution to behave better?" |
11859 | Why dost thou offer me thy finger? |
11859 | Why, what''s the matter with Zeke? |
11859 | Wilt thou go with me? |
11859 | Would that satisfy you, master Perry? 11859 You give your consent, do you?" |
11859 | _ Is_ it your lamb, my brave little fellow? |
11859 | _ Must_ I go? |
11859 | And would not the heart of her poor widowed mother break, if she should ever know that her child was a thief? |
11859 | Art thou not ashamed of thyself?" |
11859 | As soon as he rose in the morning, he went to his mother and said,"What shall I do? |
11859 | At last, when the disappointed visitor turned to go away, he would call out,"Perhaps thou means Isaac T. Hopper? |
11859 | But after taking a few steps, he turned back and said,"Where can I find you, if I should ever be able to make restitution for the wrong I have done?" |
11859 | But being disposed to amuse himself, he inquired very seriously,"What time of the moon was it, when thy goods were stolen?" |
11859 | But even supposing the charge to have been true, do not your laws award sufficient punishment? |
11859 | But is a landscape any the less real, because there is sunshine on it, to bring out every tint, and make every dew- drop sparkle? |
11859 | But perhaps thou hast seventeen hundred dollars to spare?" |
11859 | But suppose I were not free, what would you be willing to take to manumit me?" |
11859 | But the Friend again inquired,"What for? |
11859 | But what good will_ that_ do me? |
11859 | But where was the need of being so active in the cause, as Isaac T. Hopper was, and always had been? |
11859 | Canst thou ask forgiveness of thy sins of our Heavenly Father, whom thou hast so grievously insulted by thy hypocrisy? |
11859 | Canst thou lay down thy head at night, without feeling the sharp goadings of a guilty conscience? |
11859 | Charles replied,"I trust thou dost not intend to jest with me, after all the trouble thou hast caused me?" |
11859 | Could she not take it, without being seen, and pay for it secretly, when she had earned money enough? |
11859 | Crossing the yard in this desperate haste, he encountered the brother, who called out,"Where are you going?" |
11859 | Didst thou know he was stolen?" |
11859 | Do n''t you know me?" |
11859 | Dost thou not believe him?" |
11859 | Dost thou not hear a voice telling thee it is wrong to hold thy fellow men in slavery, with their wives and their little ones?" |
11859 | Dost thou not see marks of the shears? |
11859 | Dost thou suppose I am going to do thy duty for thee?" |
11859 | Dost thou suppose the laws of Pennsylvania tolerate such proceedings?" |
11859 | Dost thou think thou shalt come back again?" |
11859 | Dost thou wish to be free?" |
11859 | Ennells, hearing the name, said,"So your name is Hopper, is it? |
11859 | Friend Hopper followed him quickly, and called out,"Dost thou want to buy some soap- fat? |
11859 | Friend Hopper started up and inquired,"Why didst thou push that woman away?" |
11859 | Godwin, in some of his writings, asks,"What is it that enables a thousand errors to keep their station in the world? |
11859 | Had they ever been in Sing Sing?" |
11859 | Hadst thou not better ask to be re- admitted? |
11859 | Hast thou any friends?" |
11859 | Hast thou any further business with me?" |
11859 | He asked himself whether he had done right thus to take advantage of that obliging boy? |
11859 | He said to the magistrate,"May it please your honor to grant me a warrant against Mr. Godwin? |
11859 | He said to their leader,"Art thou the impertinent fellow who has been intruding upon my premises, in my absence?" |
11859 | He started up instantly, and turning to a young man behind him, he said,"Couldst thou have done that any better?" |
11859 | He stepped out, shook hands with him, and said in kindly tones,"Dost thou remember me, and how I caused thee to be fined for swearing?" |
11859 | He took her kindly by the hand, and said,"Julia, what does all this mean?" |
11859 | He went out and accosted him thus:"Friend, art thou watching my house?" |
11859 | He went up to the officer, and said,"Is n''t it a rule of the custom- house not to charge a man for the tools of his trade?" |
11859 | His first salutation was,"Where can I find that ungrateful villain Dan? |
11859 | Hopper?" |
11859 | How darest thou lay a finger upon the man after the magistrate has discharged him?" |
11859 | How did you get away?" |
11859 | How wouldst thou like to be made a slave?" |
11859 | How_ can_ I be a better woman, if I try ever so hard?" |
11859 | I ask whether you could witness all this, without the most poignant grief? |
11859 | I suppose thou art aware that it is the_ people_, not the_ building_, that constitutes a church?" |
11859 | If I should make up my mind to give him a chance, what would you be willing to sell him for?" |
11859 | If he was here, he would be in no danger; would he?" |
11859 | If slavery were_ ever_ justifiable, under_ any_ circumstances, which of these two characters ought to have been the master, and which the slave? |
11859 | In answer to some remark from Friend Hopper, the preacher said,"Do you think I am not a Christian?" |
11859 | Is it possible thou art parading the streets so late in the night, at this cold season of the year? |
11859 | Is it possible, sir?" |
11859 | Is it so?" |
11859 | Is there no better alternative? |
11859 | Must I take off my coat?" |
11859 | My friend, hast thou a conscience void of offence? |
11859 | Now, the law makes me free; and ought you to blame me for taking the advantage which it offers me? |
11859 | Oh, how did it happen?" |
11859 | Oh, what if she should be discovered? |
11859 | On account of these images? |
11859 | Once, when no one else happened to be near him, he said to me in a low, confidential tone,"Maria, is there anything peculiar in this room?" |
11859 | One day, when Friend Hopper met him in the street, he said,"Jim, why dost thou wear that long beard? |
11859 | One of them, who began to conjecture the cause, inquired,"Dost thou dislike it because it is made of cotton?" |
11859 | She rose quickly to meet him, and her voice choked as she said,"Friend Hopper, do you know me?" |
11859 | She sprang up instantly, and looking in his face with intense anxiety, exclaimed,"Am I pardoned? |
11859 | The agent became extremely irritated, and said indignantly,"Do you think I would swear to a lie?" |
11859 | The children, some of whom were very small, twined their little arms round him, eagerly inquiring,"Where have you been? |
11859 | The magistrate asked,"How could you say you believed the woman had a right to her freedom? |
11859 | The magistrate was highly offended, and asked in an angry tone,"What was your object in procuring a writ of_ habeas corpus_?" |
11859 | The mistress of the house heard him, and leaning over the balustrade of the stairs, she screamed out,"What do you want with me, sir?" |
11859 | The nobleman took her hand kindly, and said,"My dear, are you an innocent girl?" |
11859 | The officer looked embarrassed, and said, half smiling,"But how am I to get you out?" |
11859 | The prospect seemed rather discouraging, and the trader said,"Come now, suppose you buy Zeke yourself? |
11859 | Then turning to Friend Hopper, he added,"You admit it was a trick, do n''t you?" |
11859 | They wo n''t let me out without somebody will be security for me; and who will be security for an old convict?" |
11859 | Thou hast received fifty dollars as the reward of thy treachery; but what good can it do thee? |
11859 | Was it friendly, was it respectful in him, to do more than his religious Society thought it necessary to do? |
11859 | What can I do to earn an honest living? |
11859 | What could an earnest, direct character, like Isaac T. Hopper, do in the midst of a sect thus situated? |
11859 | What do you come here for? |
11859 | What does possess you, Isaac? |
11859 | What is it you do want? |
11859 | What motive could he have for harming me?" |
11859 | What proof is there that you are not a band of kidnappers? |
11859 | What sum do you think these people will take to withdraw them?" |
11859 | What will my poor mother say when she knows of my disgrace?" |
11859 | What would you be willing to take for a deed of manumission?" |
11859 | What_ did_ you come alone for? |
11859 | What_ shall_ I do?'' |
11859 | When Friend Hopper took him into an adjoining room, he exclaimed in an imploring tone,"Ca n''t you give me some advice?" |
11859 | When Mr. Godwin answered,"Yes,"he turned to Friend Hopper and repeated the question:"Zeke is free, and nobody can take him; can they, Mr. Hopper? |
11859 | When he came into the hall after dinner, Friend Hopper gave him a nod of recognition, and said,"How art thou, Pierce Butler? |
11859 | When he had done speaking, he said,"How do you do, Mr. Godwin? |
11859 | When he rejoined his companion, who had agreed to wait for him at some appointed place, he was met with the inquiry,"Well, what luck?" |
11859 | When one reflects upon the time that must have been bestowed on all these avocations, do his pecuniary embarrassments require any further explanation? |
11859 | When the business was entirely completed, the colored man said,"Zeke is now free, is he?" |
11859 | When the family sat down to breakfast, Mr. Tatem said,"Where is Samson?" |
11859 | When the papers were prepared the slave was called into the parlor, and Isaac Jackson inquired,"Would''st thou like to be free?" |
11859 | When thou liest down at night, is thy mind always at ease on this subject? |
11859 | Where shall I put them?" |
11859 | Who can question the horrible tyranny under which they suffer, after reading The Tender Mercies of a Slaveholder, and the suicide of Romaine? |
11859 | Who can tell into what blossom of poetry that little germ might have expanded, if it had been kindly nurtured under gentle and refining influences? |
11859 | Who that reads Zeke, and the Quick Witted Slave, can pronounce them a stupid race, unfit for freedom? |
11859 | Who was the conductor, that behaved in the manner you have described? |
11859 | Why do you ask that question?" |
11859 | Wilt thou come?" |
11859 | Would it not be well for the people of the South to reflect upon the tendency of their conduct? |
11859 | Would you deliver him to his master? |
11859 | Wouldst thou consider such evidence satisfactory in the case of a white person?" |
11859 | Wouldst thou shoot me, as Burr did Hamilton? |
11859 | _ Am_ I pardoned?" |
11859 | canst thou tolerate the company of a heretic?" |
11859 | exclaimed the delighted Dutchman;"and where is de tief?" |
11859 | said Friend Hopper,"and is this the way I''m trated by my coontryman? |
28038 | ''Pose any one come''pon us when we''re awake: what den? 28038 ''Pose dey come when we''re all awake-- what den?" |
28038 | And you will be free? |
28038 | Any news below? |
28038 | Are there any men on your track? |
28038 | Are ye go''n to stop her? |
28038 | Are you going alone, father? |
28038 | Are you going to shoot any one? |
28038 | Are you much hurt, sir? |
28038 | Bell? 28038 But ca n''t we get away? |
28038 | But there will be no people out on the lake in the night-- will there? |
28038 | But whar''s my watch? |
28038 | But what are you going to do, Dan? |
28038 | But what kind of a fit is it, Quin? |
28038 | But where will you go? |
28038 | But where you gwine? |
28038 | But who''s my massa now? 28038 But who''s that boy with you?" |
28038 | But why ca n''t I keep watch in the daytime, and let both of you sleep? 28038 But why did you call me Massa Dandy?" |
28038 | Ca n''t we bof turn in? |
28038 | Ca n''t we do something? 28038 Ca n''t we get away? |
28038 | Ca n''t we give him something? 28038 Ca n''t you help him?" |
28038 | Ca n''t you help him? |
28038 | Ca n''t you land me at Mr. Lascelles''plantation? |
28038 | Can they chase you on the lake? |
28038 | Can you handle a gun? |
28038 | Could they swim? |
28038 | De Kun''l ai n''t here, no how, Dandy;''pose I neber see him any more, and he neber see me any more, who''s my massa den? |
28038 | Den I shall be a free nigger? |
28038 | Did he make you give him a black eye? |
28038 | Did n''t I use you well? |
28038 | Did n''t ye see him? |
28038 | Did n''t you make me strike? |
28038 | Did you really mean to kill them, Dan? |
28038 | Do n''t you believe me, Dan? 28038 Do n''t you see the reason, Cyd?" |
28038 | Do n''t you think I had better call Cyd and Quin? |
28038 | Do you expect me to believe such a story as this? |
28038 | Do you feel better, Cyd? |
28038 | Do you know how to cook, Cyd? |
28038 | Do you know them? |
28038 | Do you know where my boxing gloves are? |
28038 | Do you see why I have taken all the boats? |
28038 | Do you suppose they know any thing about us? |
28038 | Do you think I will box with you while you have your jacket on? |
28038 | Do you think I will do that? |
28038 | Do you think I would do that, Dandy? |
28038 | Do you think the wind will die out? |
28038 | Do you think there is much danger, Dan? |
28038 | Do you think we can escape them? |
28038 | Do you think we shall escape, Dandy? |
28038 | Do you want to go back to Redlawn with him, Cyd? |
28038 | Do you? 28038 Golly-- yes; when you gwine to go, Dandy?" |
28038 | Gwine to fire into dem folks in de boat? |
28038 | Gwine to kill de dogs and kill de men? |
28038 | Have n''t you seen them, Dan? |
28038 | Have you got over being scared? |
28038 | Have you killed him? |
28038 | Hot water? |
28038 | How dared you go to sleep when you were on watch? |
28038 | How did you make it, Dan? |
28038 | How do you do, Dandy? |
28038 | How do you feel, Dandy? |
28038 | How long has he been sick? |
28038 | How long since you run away? |
28038 | How many hams have you put on board? |
28038 | How many, Massa Raybone? |
28038 | How much did you give him? |
28038 | How much have you, Dan? |
28038 | I saw that fish- skin in the locker, and I could n''t think what it was for? |
28038 | I should be in duty bound to take you, any how,replied the captain;"but what shall we do with your boat?" |
28038 | If you had been awake, you might have been shot; and then what would have become of us? |
28038 | If you please, master, what am I to be whipped for? |
28038 | In the what? |
28038 | Indeed? |
28038 | Is she dead? |
28038 | Is this the way you keep watch? |
28038 | It is terrible-- isn''t it, Dan? |
28038 | Lily? |
28038 | May I come in? |
28038 | Now, Dandy, what are you going to do with me? |
28038 | See here, Possifus,said Mr. Presby, who never called Cyd by any other name;"do n''t you want to own a boat yourself?" |
28038 | Seen ary runaway nigger in the water? |
28038 | Seen whom? |
28038 | Shall you send for your free papers? |
28038 | Suppose any one should come upon us while we are asleep? |
28038 | Suppose it should die out, Dan? |
28038 | Suppose we had left the boats? |
28038 | Suppose you should be caught? |
28038 | The what? |
28038 | Then when will you sleep? |
28038 | Well, stop-- won''t ye? |
28038 | Well, what then? |
28038 | Well, what then? |
28038 | Well, what then? |
28038 | Well, why did I strike him? 28038 Were any of you hurt in the fight?" |
28038 | Wha-- wha-- whar''s de nigger- hunters? |
28038 | Wha-- wha-- what vessel''s dat? |
28038 | Wha-- wha-- what we gwine to do? |
28038 | Wha-- wha-- what ye gwine to stop here a whole year fur? |
28038 | Wha-- wha-- what you gwine to do wid de Edif? |
28038 | Wha-- wha-- what you want to keep watch fur? |
28038 | Wha-- wha-- what''s de matter? |
28038 | Wha-- wha-- what''s the matter? |
28038 | Whar''s de boat? |
28038 | What ails him? |
28038 | What ails him? |
28038 | What am I to bear a hand to? |
28038 | What boat''s that? |
28038 | What can we do for him? |
28038 | What can you do against such men as those? |
28038 | What did you do for him? |
28038 | What did you do, Dandy? 28038 What do you fear?" |
28038 | What do you mean by that? |
28038 | What do you mean by_ lost_? |
28038 | What do you think of him, Quin? |
28038 | What do you think, Cyd? |
28038 | What do you want to shoot us fur? 28038 What for, you young villain? |
28038 | What for? |
28038 | What is it, Cyd? |
28038 | What is it? |
28038 | What is that, Dan? |
28038 | What made you think so? |
28038 | What shall we do, Dan? |
28038 | What then, Cyd? |
28038 | What will become of us? |
28038 | What would you do, Dan? |
28038 | What ye doin up here? |
28038 | What you gib me? |
28038 | What you''pose come ob dem men? |
28038 | What''s dat? |
28038 | What''s de matter wid her? |
28038 | What''s de use stoppin here so long? |
28038 | What''s dem? |
28038 | What''s dis for? |
28038 | What''s gwine to be done now, Dan? |
28038 | What''s the matter with you, Cyd? 28038 What''s the matter, Cyd?" |
28038 | What''s the matter, Cyd? |
28038 | What''s the matter, Dan? |
28038 | What''s the matter, Quin? |
28038 | What''s the matter? |
28038 | What''s the matter? |
28038 | What''s use ob bein free, den? |
28038 | What, Cyd? |
28038 | When shall we start? |
28038 | When would you leave? |
28038 | Where are they? 28038 Where are they?" |
28038 | Where are they? |
28038 | Where are we going now, Dan? |
28038 | Where are you from? |
28038 | Where be they? |
28038 | Where from? |
28038 | Where is Cyd? |
28038 | Where shall I go? |
28038 | Where ye gwine with all that stuff? |
28038 | Where you bound now? |
28038 | Where you''pose de nigger dem dogs is chasin''is? |
28038 | Where''s the other pair, you black rascal? |
28038 | Which''ll I do, Massa Dandy, stand by de moorings, or stop? |
28038 | Who else? 28038 Who is he?" |
28038 | Who''s gwine to be de cook, Dan? |
28038 | Who, Lily? 28038 Whose turn next?" |
28038 | Why did n''t you call me then, as I did you? |
28038 | Why did n''t you call me? |
28038 | Why did you change it, then? |
28038 | Why do n''t you exert yourself? |
28038 | Why do n''t you shoot de wicked dogs? |
28038 | Why do you call me master, Cyd? |
28038 | Why do you laugh, Quin? 28038 Why do you tremble so, Lily?" |
28038 | Why not? |
28038 | Why, what do you mean? |
28038 | Will you keep my secret, Lily? |
28038 | Will you let me die here? 28038 Woo-- woo-- woo-- would you shoot Massa Kun''l, if he come for to take you?" |
28038 | Would you kill him? |
28038 | Yes, what ye got all dem boats draggin arter us fur? |
28038 | You know the shape of the letter A? |
28038 | You, Lily? |
28038 | ''Pose you see de nigger hunter, wid tree, four dozen bloodhounds: wha-- wha-- what you gwine to do den?" |
28038 | But what ye gwine to do wid de paint?" |
28038 | Ca n''t we escape without shooting any of them?" |
28038 | Ca n''t we get away from this place?" |
28038 | Den''s what''s my name? |
28038 | Did n''t he insist upon my striking him? |
28038 | Do n''t you see he''s growin better all de time? |
28038 | Do you know them, Quin?" |
28038 | Do you suppose he will get well, Dan?" |
28038 | Do you think Cyd do n''t know what to do wid dese yere tings? |
28038 | Do you think I will let one of my niggers strike my son such a blow as that? |
28038 | Frow de boat overboard?" |
28038 | Have you been snoring there all the afternoon?" |
28038 | Heven''t ye seen nary nigger?" |
28038 | How dare you ask such a question?" |
28038 | How dare you insult me? |
28038 | How does it look ahead, Cyd?" |
28038 | How long''s dat, Dan?" |
28038 | I''se gwine to haul de Edif alongside, but dis chile like to know what for?" |
28038 | Is dis chile got to row de boat? |
28038 | Is n''t he gwine to go home wid us?" |
28038 | Is there no chance to escape?" |
28038 | Is you gwine to shoot?" |
28038 | Lascelles?" |
28038 | Shall I put you on shore, or not?" |
28038 | Shall we save them?" |
28038 | Suppose he should be there, and we should happen to go near his plantation?" |
28038 | Then you have n''t had any thing to eat for three days?" |
28038 | Then you understand the case-- do you?" |
28038 | Wha-- wha-- wha-- what does you mean by dat?" |
28038 | Wha-- wha-- wha-- what''s de matter?" |
28038 | Wha-- wha-- what become ob us widout Dan?" |
28038 | Wha-- wha-- what''s de matter wid Missy Lily?" |
28038 | Wha-- wha-- what''s de reason we ca n''t take de bateau and row ober to de shore, and take to de woods?" |
28038 | What did I get whipped for?" |
28038 | What do we want of a bell?" |
28038 | What do you suppose I got the guns for?" |
28038 | What do you want?" |
28038 | What fur?" |
28038 | What is the matter with you?" |
28038 | What would become of me?" |
28038 | What you gwine to do wid de wherry?" |
28038 | What you gwine to do? |
28038 | What you gwine to shoot?" |
28038 | What''s de use of keepin de watch?" |
28038 | When we get out to sea we shall have to run all the time-- shall we not?" |
28038 | Where we gwine?" |
28038 | Which shall it be?" |
28038 | Who''s a gwine to help hisself?" |
28038 | Why did she not call her companions, who were sleeping peacefully in the cabin, while she was torn and distracted by these agonizing fears? |
15263 | And now, fellow- citizens, you may ask, what is our object in thus exhibiting to you the alarming influence of the slave power? 15263 But are not the old slaves well cared for by their masters?" |
15263 | Can anything be done for the rescue of this girl from the kidnappers? 15263 Can you read?" |
15263 | Describe your father? |
15263 | Did you belong to the Baptist Church? |
15263 | Did you ever have any chance of schooling? |
15263 | Did you ever hear of the Underground Rail Road? |
15263 | Did you ever live with him? |
15263 | Did you feel that the preaching you heard was the true Gospel? |
15263 | Did you have to find yourself? |
15263 | Did you live with her? |
15263 | Do not the mills of God grind exceedingly fine? 15263 Do you ever expect to see them again?" |
15263 | Do you think that many of the slaves are anxious about their Freedom? |
15263 | Find them yourself? |
15263 | From York? 15263 Had you a wife?" |
15263 | Had you any children? |
15263 | Have I yearned for a mother''s love? 15263 Have you ever seen it before?" |
15263 | His whole set? |
15263 | How about Sunday clothing? |
15263 | How about a house to live in? |
15263 | How could you make so much money? |
15263 | How did Moore come by you? |
15263 | How did you like him? |
15263 | How do you manage to make a little extra money? |
15263 | How does he treat them? |
15263 | How have you been getting along in Canada? 15263 How have you been treated?" |
15263 | How have you had it in slavery? |
15263 | How have you lived then? |
15263 | How long ago was that? |
15263 | How many servants had she? |
15263 | How many slaves did he own? |
15263 | How many? |
15263 | How much did your master receive a year for your hire? |
15263 | How old are you? |
15263 | How then,said I,"could you put yourself in the care of that sailor, who was a stranger to you, and leave your parents?" |
15263 | How were you treated by your master and mistress? |
15263 | How would you like to be free? |
15263 | I can not but sometimes ask in my closet meditations: O God of mercy and love, why permittest Thou these things? 15263 I suppose you smoke and chew at any rate?" |
15263 | In what other particulars have you been treated hard? |
15263 | My father,said I,"has long been one of your first doctors, and do you think it right for him to sell my mother and his children in this way?" |
15263 | Now do n''t you keep late hours at night and swear occasionally? |
15263 | Suppose you are sick who pays your doctor''s bill? |
15263 | Suppose your master was to appear before you, and offer you the privilege of returning to Slavery or death on the spot, which would be your choice? |
15263 | Then how do you know that he belongs to you? |
15263 | To whom did you belong? |
15263 | Was he a member of any church? |
15263 | Were his family members of church, too? |
15263 | Were not your parents kind to you, and did you not love them? |
15263 | Were you born a slave? |
15263 | Were you not afraid of being captured on the way, of being devoured by the abolitionists, or of freezing and starving in Canada? |
15263 | What are you doing here? |
15263 | What are your impressions from what little you have seen of Freedom? |
15263 | What business did Milton Hawkins follow? |
15263 | What business did your master follow? |
15263 | What did he do? |
15263 | What do you mean by being treated badly? |
15263 | What do you think of Slavery any how? |
15263 | What has become of Harriet Tubman? |
15263 | What have you been employed at in Richmond? |
15263 | What is the reason you ca n''t get up the hill faster? |
15263 | What is your name? |
15263 | What is your name? |
15263 | What kind of a looking man was he? |
15263 | What kind of a man was William Parker? |
15263 | What kind of a man was he? |
15263 | What kind of a woman was she? |
15263 | What kind of family had he? |
15263 | What kind of preaching does he give them? |
15263 | What made you leave, Charles? |
15263 | What put it into your head to leave? |
15263 | What put it into your head to leave? |
15263 | What was the name of your master? |
15263 | What was your master''s name? |
15263 | Where are they? |
15263 | Where are you from then? |
15263 | Where did he live? |
15263 | Where did you live then? |
15263 | Where is he from? |
15263 | Who held you in bondage, and how have you been treated? |
15263 | Who was your father? |
15263 | Why did you despise him? |
15263 | Why did you leave then? |
15263 | Why did you leave your master? |
15263 | Why did you leave, John? |
15263 | Why did you leave? |
15263 | Why did you not remain then? |
15263 | Why? |
15263 | Will two hundred dollars do? |
15263 | With whom? |
15263 | Would your owner be apt to pursue you? |
15263 | _ How long, O God, how long_? |
15263 | ''How came there was no more work done that day?'' |
15263 | ''What are you going to do with it?'' |
15263 | ''What are you lecturing about?'' |
15263 | ''Why could n''t you sold me to some of the neighbors?'' |
15263 | ''Why? |
15263 | ), becoming the promenading companion of a colored man? |
15263 | *** Can you spare a little time from your book to just take a peep at some of our Alabama people? |
15263 | ***** Now, what man among them, professes to have seen this woman for twenty- one years? |
15263 | ***** What causes the delay of that book, the History of Peter Still''s Family, etc.? |
15263 | *****"You wonder why her sister, E., my loved and faithful friend, seems to be so much less known among anti- slavery people than Abbie? |
15263 | Abram''s master, Milton Hawkins, lived at Wilmington, N.C.""What prompted you to escape?" |
15263 | After all, friend, do we not belong to one of the best branches of the human race? |
15263 | After she does what she can in P., will you give her the proper direction about getting to New York and to Mr. Tappan''s? |
15263 | Again he was asked,"What kind of a man was your master?" |
15263 | Also how comes on the Underground Rail Road? |
15263 | Am I naughty, being a professed non- resistant, to advise this poor fellow to serve Father Abraham? |
15263 | Amongst other questions, he was asked:"Do you regret having attempted to escape from slavery?" |
15263 | And even now the scale may still seem to oscillate between the contending parties, and some may say, Why does not God give us full and quick victory? |
15263 | And for the sake of these few and uncertain years, shall we push off this present trouble upon our children, who have to stay here a little longer? |
15263 | And now my dear- slave- holder, who with you are bound and fast hastening to judgment? |
15263 | And what pray is that? |
15263 | And who could then have risen? |
15263 | And who need speak of the Zambesi and Dr. Livingston, or of Central or Eastern Africa; of India, or Australia, or of the prolific West India Islands? |
15263 | Another question suggests itself-- how has this great matter been accomplished? |
15263 | Are we not near in spirit? |
15263 | Art thou not thinking, dear friend, of asking your people to emigrate to the African Coast, or the West India Islands? |
15263 | At all events, could you not so reduce the price as to place it in the power of Peter''s relatives and friends to raise the means for their purchase? |
15263 | At that instant one of my friends cried out--''Where is the man that betrayed us?'' |
15263 | At the moment of recognition she sprang up, overwhelming him with her manifestations of delight, crying:"You Dr. Fussell? |
15263 | But was not such an event worthy the awakening of every power-- the congratulation of every faculty? |
15263 | But what right had a negro, which white slave- holders were"bound to respect?" |
15263 | But who laughs now at this irresistible reform? |
15263 | By whom? |
15263 | Can I depend on it? |
15263 | Can I, in your opinion, depend on the"P. Boy,"and when? |
15263 | Can it not be done? |
15263 | Can not you send to me something that will be of benefit to him, or send it direct to him? |
15263 | Can nothing be done for such cases? |
15263 | Can slaves take care of themselves?" |
15263 | Can they refer to any marks by which to identify this person? |
15263 | Can you not give me the particulars? |
15263 | Can you tell me where Sarah King is, who was at your house when I was there? |
15263 | Can you tell me? |
15263 | Can you think of anything for any of these? |
15263 | Co. Is it doing good business? |
15263 | Coming up to him, I cried out, Lord, master, have you sold me? |
15263 | Did God make me to be a slave? |
15263 | Did any of them know that you were going to leave? |
15263 | Did he contribute anything to it stamped with the signature of so clear an individuality that no other man could have contributed quite the same? |
15263 | Did n''t he preach? |
15263 | Did not even Northern men, superior in education and wealth, fear to say their souls were their own in the same presence? |
15263 | Did the English peers or peeresses? |
15263 | Did the representatives of any other country have their notions of propriety shocked by the matter? |
15263 | Did there ever live one who had less of that"fear of man which bringeth a snare,"than himself? |
15263 | Do I not owe you on the old bill( pledge)? |
15263 | Do I understand him to say we have no right to determine this matter judicially? |
15263 | Do any tidings reach you of our friend, Frederick Douglass? |
15263 | Do n''t you know they are after you? |
15263 | Do n''t you remember me? |
15263 | Do they help in the good cause? |
15263 | Do they, with the exception of the first witness examined, state even the time when she left? |
15263 | Do we not believe that the United States leads the cause of human freedom? |
15263 | Do we wish to array the Free states against the Slave states in hostile strife? |
15263 | Do we wish to excite in your bosoms feelings of hatred against citizens of a common country? |
15263 | Do you ever have any Underground Rail Road passengers now? |
15263 | Do you imagine that there is one among your hearers who does not agree with you? |
15263 | Do you know any promising young man who would accept my scholarship? |
15263 | Do you know what the gathering means? |
15263 | Do you like the country?" |
15263 | Do you need any money? |
15263 | Do you need anything for that? |
15263 | Does the counsel mean to say that in the case of a fugitive from justice he is not bound to satisfy the judge before whom, the question is heard? |
15263 | Fear you not that iron rod With which he breaks his foes? |
15263 | Fee''s daughter?" |
15263 | Fountain? |
15263 | Gentlest of spirits!--not for thee Our tears are shed, our sighs are given: Why mourn to know thou art a free Partaker of the joys of Heaven? |
15263 | Great- hearted philanthropist, what heroism could exceed thy own? |
15263 | Had not hunger and cruelty and prostitution done their work, and left her an entire wreck for life? |
15263 | Had you a mother and father, brothers and sisters? |
15263 | Had you not better keep the little one in P. till the other is taken there? |
15263 | Had you seen a feeble lambkin, Shrinking from a wolf so bold, Would ye not to shield the trembler, In your arms have made its fold? |
15263 | Has not this suffering been overshadowed by the glory that gathered around the brave old man?... |
15263 | Has thee seen, or heard anything of her lately? |
15263 | Have they produced the letter written by this kidnapper, showing how he described her? |
15263 | Have we then a nest of Abolition scoundrels among us? |
15263 | Have you a son ready for college? |
15263 | Have you had plenty of work, made some money, and taken care of yourself?" |
15263 | He then asked me if he might search the house? |
15263 | He was called out, when Loguen said, in a rather reproving and excited tone,"What are you doing here; did n''t I tell you to be off to Canada? |
15263 | He was next asked,"Had you a wife and family?" |
15263 | How could she refuse? |
15263 | How did I fare? |
15263 | How did you make up your mind to leave your wife and child in Slavery? |
15263 | How do they appear before you? |
15263 | How does this strike you? |
15263 | How is it that any great matter is accomplished? |
15263 | How long must wrongs like these go unredressed? |
15263 | How many other men in the United States, under similar circumstances, would have been thus faithful? |
15263 | I always had it in my mind to leave, but I was''jubus'',( dubious?) |
15263 | I ask if this grand passage of the inspired writer may not be applied to that heroic band who have made America the perpetual home of freedom? |
15263 | I asked him if he believed Hardcastle would keep his promise? |
15263 | I can say I was once happy, but never will be again, until I see her; because what is freedom to me, when I know that my wife is in slavery? |
15263 | I forgot to inquire of Dr. T. who is the head of your Vigilance Committee, whom I may address concerning other and further operations? |
15263 | I made it from the start, and always, my own case, thus: Did I want to be a slave? |
15263 | I ought to say, that I have no doubt but there were good reasons for the P. Boy''s going to Richmond instead of W.;_ but what can they be_? |
15263 | I suppose you know me? |
15263 | IS SHE STILL RUNNING WITH BLEEDING FEET? |
15263 | If a man pursues the only course that will bring peace to his own mind, is he deserving of any credit therefor? |
15263 | If he promises to come here next trip, will he come, or go to Richmond? |
15263 | If it is asked"how?" |
15263 | If it was an insult, why not resent it, as became high- spirited Americans? |
15263 | If so, should we send to New York, Philadelphia, or where else? |
15263 | If the entire family can not be purchased or freed, what can Vina and her daughter be purchased for? |
15263 | Impartial men, are they? |
15263 | In comparison with the method and measure of such a conviction, what matters its specific form? |
15263 | In one of her letters she thus alluded to a traveler:"I saw a passenger_ per_ the Underground Rail Road yesterday; did he arrive safely? |
15263 | In reply I remarked:"Do they belong to you, Sir?" |
15263 | In speaking of the good treatment he had always met with, a member of the Committee remarked,"You must be akin to some one of your master''s family?" |
15263 | Indeed, who could close his eyes and ears to the plaintive cries of such a mother? |
15263 | Is he doing anything for the cause? |
15263 | Is it safe for her to remain in your city or anywhere else in our"free land?" |
15263 | Is money needed to help those escaping? |
15263 | Is not the love of God and man ingrained in every line of this writing? |
15263 | Is not the reward worth striving for at any cost? |
15263 | Is she dark or light?" |
15263 | Is that you? |
15263 | Is there any fund from which a pittance could be spared to help these poor creatures? |
15263 | Is there no ray of hope in that? |
15263 | Is this possible? |
15263 | It is so with men, why should it be different with women? |
15263 | Kline replied,"Do you really think so?" |
15263 | Maria, is that you? |
15263 | Men of Cleveland, had a vulture Sought a timid dove for prey, Would you not, with human pity, Drive the gory bird away? |
15263 | Miles gritted his teeth and felt very indignant, but what could he do? |
15263 | Moreover, if it is fitting that woman should dress in every color of the rainbow, why not man also? |
15263 | My child, is it you? |
15263 | My wife and children, dearer to me than my heart''s blood, were they made for the auction- block? |
15263 | Nay, are we not under a law to do the base work of bloodhounds, hunting the panting fugitives for freedom? |
15263 | No sooner was the old man within the enclosures than he asked Dinah,"Whose child is that?" |
15263 | Now what is all this about? |
15263 | Now, my dear sir, after this recapitulation, can you not see that I have reason for great embarrassment? |
15263 | O, what will the end be? |
15263 | Observing that Lizzie( Nat''s wife) looked pretty decided and resolute, a member of the committee remarked,"Would your wife fight for freedom?" |
15263 | Oh, God, what shall I do, or what can I do for him? |
15263 | Oh, could slavery exist long if it did not sit on a commercial throne? |
15263 | Oh, how can we pamper our appetites upon luxuries drawn from reluctant fingers? |
15263 | Oh, was it not dreadful?... |
15263 | Oh, when will we have a government strong enough to make human life safe? |
15263 | On addressing Mr. W. he held out the letter and inquired:"Are you the author of this letter, sir?" |
15263 | On our way to the boarding- house, the gentleman said to me:''Is this your son with you?'' |
15263 | On the proclamation of General Fremont, the passages from her pen are worthy to be long remembered:"Well, what think you of the war? |
15263 | Or who adhered more heroically to his convictions of duty in the face of deadly peril and certain suffering? |
15263 | Or who combined more moral courage with exceeding tenderness of spirit? |
15263 | Or who gave himself more unreservedly, or with greater disinterestedness, to the service of bleeding humanity? |
15263 | Or who took more joyfully the spoiling of his goods as the penalty of his sympathy for the hunted fugitive? |
15263 | Or would it not be advisable to send them there? |
15263 | Or would your brother''s son, Peter or Levin, like to have the benefit of it? |
15263 | Our neighbor asked,"How do you like her?" |
15263 | Please answer as correctly as you can the following questions:""How old are you?" |
15263 | Poor thing, was there anything in the future for her? |
15263 | Rising up in his box, he reached out his hand, saying,"How do you do, gentlemen?" |
15263 | Said a brother,"If you can not get your family, what will you do? |
15263 | Say, have you an arm like God, That you his will oppose? |
15263 | Shall I call it an edifice or an improvised meeting- house? |
15263 | Shall we not wash your back and neck for you? |
15263 | She stopped until we came to the gate; the tears were rolling from her eyes, and she exclaimed:''Ann Maria, is it you?'' |
15263 | Should we not, therefore, endeavor to let its history gladden the earth? |
15263 | Some time since Breckinridge, in writing to Sumner, asks, if I rightly remember, What is the fate of a few negroes to me or mine? |
15263 | Still, I am under ten thousand obligation to you for your kindness when shall I ever repay? |
15263 | TO WHOM IN ALL THIS WIDE LAND OF FREEDOM SHALL SHE FLEE AND FIND SAFETY? |
15263 | Tappan?" |
15263 | The constable asked me if they were in my house? |
15263 | The first words to the mother were:"Are you traveling?" |
15263 | The last item in his charge against Wright, suggested certain questions:"How have you been used?" |
15263 | The question was then asked the owner of the barn by one of the men, if he harbored runaway negroes in his barn? |
15263 | The writer turned to him and inquired,"I suppose you are the person that the Dr. went to Washington after, are you not?" |
15263 | There are two small boxes and two large ones; we have them all secure; what had better be done? |
15263 | There may be, perhaps, those who ask what is this triumph of which I speak? |
15263 | There was an affirmative reply, and E. inquired,"How does thee find it?" |
15263 | This step looked exceedingly hard, but what else could the poor fellow do? |
15263 | Tyler?" |
15263 | Was it not rather strange that he did not want to return to his"kind- hearted old mistress?" |
15263 | Was there ever a more perfect train of evidence exhibited to prove the identity of a person, than on the present occasion? |
15263 | We confess that we began to wonder, and we asked a fine- looking man before us,"What is her color? |
15263 | We had given you up; O, what will your aunt say? |
15263 | Well, did you ever expect to see this day? |
15263 | Were not these reflections enough to incapacitate the Doctor for the time being, for cool thought as to how he should best guard against the enemy? |
15263 | What do abolitionists think of it? |
15263 | What does the gentleman say further? |
15263 | What does the"powder boy"think of it? |
15263 | What is political action? |
15263 | What is the news in the city? |
15263 | What prompted James to leave such pleasant quarters? |
15263 | What shall I do with them? |
15263 | What, is the use of harping upon this subject Sunday after Sunday? |
15263 | When will our first of August come? |
15263 | Where could be found in history a more noble and daring struggle for Freedom? |
15263 | Where is Southern Slavery now? |
15263 | Which was correct, Bill or his master? |
15263 | Who are His lambs? |
15263 | Who can know unfailing inward energy except through this new birth? |
15263 | Who could refrain from aiding on to freedom children honored in such a heroic parent? |
15263 | Who has forgotten the imprisonment of Mrs. Douglass for this offense? |
15263 | Who has not admired the sagacity with which his inquiries were dictated, and the tact and acumen with which he managed every part of his cause? |
15263 | Who has not been struck with his expressive glances toward the judge, when a doubtful point arose in the investigation of the case? |
15263 | Who would not commend such a mistress for the punctuality, if nothing more? |
15263 | Who would not help these generous- hearted men, who are devoting their whole energies to the well- being of the crushed and downtrodden? |
15263 | Who would want an office, if no opportunity should turn up whereby proof could be adduced of adequate qualifications to meet emergencies? |
15263 | Why did you not send them more things? |
15263 | Why do n''t they do so? |
15263 | Why is it before you, taking your time day after day? |
15263 | Why not, in time, become"merchants and princes,"in those countries? |
15263 | Why should it not shine? |
15263 | Why then did the Dr. bring you here?" |
15263 | Why, let me ask, is not the full light allowed to shine on this case? |
15263 | Will I not see him and you at the anniversary in New York? |
15263 | Will that little boy of seven years have to travel on foot to Canada? |
15263 | Will you act for him, as if you was in slavery yourself, and I sincerely believe that he will come out of that condition? |
15263 | Will you answer my questions with some explicitness, and without delay? |
15263 | Will you come North and live with your relatives?" |
15263 | Will you please write me when convenient and tell me what you hear about those who I fear are suffering as the result of their kindness to me? |
15263 | Will you please write to some careful person there? |
15263 | Will you tell me how many you have sent over to Canada? |
15263 | William smarted frequently; but what could he do? |
15263 | William,''said I,''do you think we would give her up?'' |
15263 | Willson, now- a- days? |
15263 | Willson? |
15263 | With an oath he would say,''now do n''t you love me?'' |
15263 | Would it be well for me, entertaining such sentiments, to sit down and write an account of my sacrifices? |
15263 | Would it not be the best way to get those in Norristown under your own care? |
15263 | Would it not be well to make a habit, in the evening in particular, of you, who are marked men, going about in little companies? |
15263 | Would not W. Goodell''s book be of use? |
15263 | Would not a like lot of Cumberland coal always sell in Philadelphia? |
15263 | Would the strong arm of a brother have been welcome? |
15263 | Would you give up and go back and work at your trade( dress- making)? |
15263 | Yet let us see how it was received by the most Christian(?) |
15263 | You Dr. Fussell? |
15263 | You have been brought to America, not emigrated to it, and who on earth has any possible right to send you away? |
15263 | [ A] OR HIDES SHE IN SOME COLD CAVE, TO REST AND STARVE? |
15263 | [ Illustration:] With her knowledge of the practical wickedness of the system, how could she be satisfied? |
15263 | and what is thy opinion? |
15263 | do you take a little sometimes?" |
15263 | how deplorable their situation; where will they go to, when cold weather comes? |
15263 | is this a Christian land, and are Christians thus forced to flee for their liberty?" |
15263 | my son Isaac, is this you,& c.?" |
15263 | or for the grammar school? |
15263 | why should not the expatriated blacks go to free countries and grow produce for themselves and for everybody who requires it? |
32325 | Ai n''t them old crippled picks and things in there good enough to dig a nigger out with? |
32325 | And ai n''t it natural and right for a cat and a cow to talk different from_ us_? |
32325 | And ai n''t you had nothing but that kind of rubbage to eat? |
32325 | And so you ai n''t had no meat nor bread to eat all this time? 32325 And_ Jim?_""The same,"I says, but could n''t say it pretty brash. |
32325 | Any men on it? |
32325 | Bilgewater, kin I trust you? |
32325 | Blame it, ca n''t you_ try?_ I only_ want_ you to try-- you need n''t keep it up if it do n''t work. |
32325 | Brought you down from whar? 32325 But I reckon we ought to tell Uncle Harvey she''s gone out awhile, anyway, so he wo n''t be uneasy about her?" |
32325 | But I thought_ you_ lived in Sheffield? |
32325 | But how can we do it if we do n''t know what it is? |
32325 | But it''s_ somebody''s_ plates, ai n''t it? |
32325 | But looky here, Tom, what do we want to_ warn_ anybody for that something''s up? 32325 But my lan'', Mars Sid, how''s I gwyne to make''m a witch pie? |
32325 | But what time o''day? |
32325 | But you can guess, ca n''t you? 32325 Cairo? |
32325 | Come, ai n''t that what you saw? |
32325 | Could n''t they see better if they was to wait till daytime? |
32325 | Dad fetch it, how is I gwyne to dream all dat in ten minutes? |
32325 | Dern your skin, ai n''t the company good enough for you? |
32325 | Did anybody send''em word? |
32325 | Did n''t I_ say_ I was going to help steal the nigger? |
32325 | Did you ever see us before? |
32325 | Do I know you? 32325 Do n''t anybody know?" |
32325 | Do n''t mind what I said-- please don''t-- you_ wo n''t_, now,_ will_ you? |
32325 | Do n''t they give''em holidays, the way we do, Christmas and New Year''s week, and Fourth of July? |
32325 | Do you belong on it? |
32325 | Does a cat talk like a cow, or a cow talk like a cat? |
32325 | Drinkin''? 32325 Drot your pore broken heart,"says the baldhead;"what are you heaving your pore broken heart at_ us_ f''r? |
32325 | For what? |
32325 | Funeral to- morrow, likely? |
32325 | Geewhillikins,I says,"but what does the rest of it mean?" |
32325 | Get? |
32325 | Gone away? 32325 Goodness gracious, is dat you, Huck? |
32325 | Goshen, child? 32325 Hamlet''s which?" |
32325 | Has anybody been killed this year, Buck? |
32325 | Has there been many killed, Buck? |
32325 | Has this one been going on long, Buck? |
32325 | Have you got hairy arms and a hairy breast, Jim? |
32325 | Him? 32325 His''n? |
32325 | How I gwyne to ketch her en I out in de woods? 32325 How can he blow? |
32325 | How does I talk wild? |
32325 | How does he get it, then? |
32325 | How long will it take, Tom? |
32325 | How you going to get them? |
32325 | How you gwyne to git''m? 32325 How''d you come?" |
32325 | How''d you get your breakfast so early on the boat? |
32325 | How''m I going to guess,says I,"when I never heard tell of it before?" |
32325 | How''s it a new kind? |
32325 | I do n''t know where he was,says I;"where was he?" |
32325 | I do n''t reckon he does; but what put that into your head? |
32325 | I is, is I? 32325 I thought he lived in London?" |
32325 | If fifteen cows is browsing on a hillside, how many of them eats with their heads pointed the same direction? |
32325 | Is a cat a man, Huck? |
32325 | Is dat so? |
32325 | Is it_ ketching?_ Why, how you talk. 32325 Is that what you live on?" |
32325 | It''s natural and right for''em to talk different from each other, ai n''t it? |
32325 | Keep what, Mars Tom? |
32325 | Laws, how do I know? 32325 Looky here, Jim; does a cat talk like we do?" |
32325 | Looky here,I says;"did you ever see any Congress- water?" |
32325 | Must we always kill the people? |
32325 | No, sir,I says;"is there some for me?" |
32325 | No-- is that so? |
32325 | No; is dat so? |
32325 | No? |
32325 | None of it at all? |
32325 | Nor church? |
32325 | Not a word? |
32325 | Now, George Jackson, do you know the Shepherdsons? |
32325 | Now,says Ben Rogers,"what''s the line of business of this Gang?" |
32325 | Oh, that''s the way of it? |
32325 | Oh, well, that''s all interpreted well enough as far as it goes, Jim,I says;"but what does_ these_ things stand for?" |
32325 | Oh, you did, did you? 32325 Oh,_ do_ shet up!--s''pose the rats took the_ sheet?__ Where''s_ it gone, Lize?" |
32325 | Oh,_ do_ shet up!--s''pose the rats took the_ sheet?__ Where''s_ it gone, Lize? |
32325 | Old man,said the young one,"I reckon we might double- team it together; what do you think?" |
32325 | Ransomed? 32325 Roun''de which?" |
32325 | Say, wo n''t he suspicion what we''re up to? |
32325 | The widow, hey?--and who told the widow she could put in her shovel about a thing that ai n''t none of her business? |
32325 | Then what on earth did_ you_ want to set him free for, seeing he was already free? |
32325 | They do n''t, do n''t they? 32325 They''re-- they''re-- are you the watchman of the boat?" |
32325 | To dig the foundations out from under that cabin with? |
32325 | Tools for what? |
32325 | Tools? |
32325 | Was Peter Wilks well off? |
32325 | Was you in there yisterday er last night? |
32325 | Well, anyway,I says,"what''s_ some_ of it? |
32325 | Well, are you rich? |
32325 | Well, den, why could n''t he_ say_ it? |
32325 | Well, did you have to go to Congress to get it? |
32325 | Well, does a cow? |
32325 | Well, hain''t he got a father? |
32325 | Well, if you knowed where he was, what did you ask me for? |
32325 | Well, spos''n it is? 32325 Well, then, a horse?" |
32325 | Well, then, how''d you come to be up at the Pint in the_ mornin_''--in a canoe? |
32325 | Well, then, how''s he going to take the sea baths if it ai n''t on the sea? |
32325 | Well, then, what are they_ for_? |
32325 | Well, then, what did you want to kill him for? |
32325 | Well, then, what does the rest of''em do? |
32325 | Well, then, what makes you talk so wild? |
32325 | Well, then, what possessed you to go down there this time of night? |
32325 | Well, then, what we going to do, Tom? |
32325 | Well, then, what''ll we make him the ink out of? |
32325 | Well, then, what''s the sense in wasting the plates? |
32325 | Well, then, why ai n''t it natural and right for a_ Frenchman_ to talk different from us? 32325 Well, then,"I says,"how''ll it do to saw him out, the way I done before I was murdered that time?" |
32325 | Well, then,I says,"if we do n''t want the picks and shovels, what do we want?" |
32325 | Well, we can wait the two hours anyway and see, ca n''t we? |
32325 | Well, what did come of it, Jim? |
32325 | Well, what in the nation do they call it the_ mumps_ for? |
32325 | Well, what_ did_ you say, then? |
32325 | Well, who done the shooting? 32325 Well, who said it was?" |
32325 | Well, why would n''t you? |
32325 | Well, you must be most starved, ai n''t you? |
32325 | Well,I says,"s''pose we got some genies to help_ us_--can''t we lick the other crowd then?" |
32325 | Well--_what?_he says, kind of pettish. |
32325 | Wh- hat, mum? |
32325 | What are you prowling around here this time of night for-- hey? |
32325 | What did he do to you? |
32325 | What did you do with the ten cents, Jim? |
32325 | What did you reckon I wanted you to go at all for, Miss Mary? |
32325 | What did you speculate in, Jim? |
32325 | What did you think the vittles was for? |
32325 | What do we want of a saw? |
32325 | What do we want of a shirt, Tom? |
32325 | What do we_ want_ of a saw? 32325 What do you want?" |
32325 | What fog? |
32325 | What got you into trouble? |
32325 | What in the nation can he_ do_ with it? |
32325 | What is it you wo n''t believe, Jo? |
32325 | What is it, duke? |
32325 | What kind of stock? |
32325 | What letter? |
32325 | What letters? |
32325 | What made you think I''d like it? |
32325 | What other things? |
32325 | What three? |
32325 | What town is it, mister? |
32325 | What whole thing? |
32325 | What wreck? |
32325 | What you been doing down there? |
32325 | What!--to preach before a king? 32325 What''re you alassin''about?" |
32325 | What''s a feud? |
32325 | What''s de harem? |
32325 | What''s de use er makin''up de camp- fire to cook strawbries en sich truck? 32325 What''s de use to ax dat question? |
32325 | What''s onkores, Bilgewater? |
32325 | What''s the matter with you, Jim? 32325 What''s them?" |
32325 | What''s your real name? 32325 What''s_ that_ got to do with it? |
32325 | What, all that time? |
32325 | What, you do n''t mean the_ Walter Scott? 32325 What_ does_ the child mean?" |
32325 | What_ put_ it dar? 32325 When did you say he died?" |
32325 | Wher''you bound for, young man? |
32325 | Where do you set? |
32325 | Where is it, then? |
32325 | Where''bouts do you live? 32325 Where''s Jim?" |
32325 | Whereabouts? |
32325 | Which one? |
32325 | Which side of a tree does the moss grow on? |
32325 | Who do you reckon''tis? |
32325 | Who is your folks? |
32325 | Who makes them tear around so? |
32325 | Who''d you give the baggage to? |
32325 | Who''s me? |
32325 | Who? 32325 Who? |
32325 | Why did n''t you roust me out? |
32325 | Why did n''t you tell my Jack to fetch me here sooner, Jim? |
32325 | Why do n''t it, Huck? |
32325 | Why do you reckon Harvey do n''t come? 32325 Why, Huck, doan''de French people talk de same way we does?" |
32325 | Why, Jim? |
32325 | Why, are they after him yet? |
32325 | Why, blame it, it''s a riddle, do n''t you see? 32325 Why, how did you get hold of the raft again, Jim-- did you catch her?" |
32325 | Why, how long you been on the island, Jim? |
32325 | Why, pap and mam and sis and Miss Hooker; and if you''d take your ferryboat and go up there--"Up where? 32325 Why, what do they want with more?" |
32325 | Why, what else is gone, Sally? |
32325 | Why, where ever did you go? |
32325 | Why, where was you raised? 32325 Why, who''s got it?" |
32325 | Why? |
32325 | Why? |
32325 | Will you do it, honey?--will you? 32325 With_ who?_ Why, the runaway nigger, of course. |
32325 | Yes, it_ is_ good enough for me; it''s as good as I deserve; for who fetched me so low when I was so high? 32325 Yes,_ dey_ will, I reck''n, Mars Tom, but what kine er time is_ Jim_ havin''? |
32325 | You do n''t_ know?_ Do n''t answer me that way. 32325 You hain''t seen no towhead? |
32325 | You mean to say our old raft warn''t smashed all to flinders? |
32325 | You numskull, did n''t you see me_ count_''m? |
32325 | You wo n''t, wo n''t you? 32325 You would n''t look like a servant- girl_ then_, would you?" |
32325 | You''re s''rp-- Why, what do you reckon_ I_ am? 32325 _ Ain''_ dat gay? |
32325 | _ Do_ with it? 32325 _ Hannel_''m, Mars Sid? |
32325 | _ Him?_says Aunt Sally;"the runaway nigger? |
32325 | _ Him?_says Aunt Sally;"the runaway nigger? |
32325 | _ How?_ Why, hain''t you been talking about my coming back, and all that stuff, as if I''d been gone away? |
32325 | _ How?_ Why, hain''t you been talking about my coming back, and all that stuff, as if I''d been gone away? |
32325 | _ Sold_ him? |
32325 | _ Which_ candle? |
32325 | _ Whose_ pew? |
32325 | _ Work?_ Why, cert''nly it would work, like rats a- fighting. 32325 _ You_ talk like an Englishman,_ do n''t_ you? |
32325 | Ai n''t I right?" |
32325 | Ai n''t that sensible?" |
32325 | Ai n''t that so?" |
32325 | All through dinner Jim stood around and waited on him, and says,"Will yo''Grace have some o''dis or some o''dat?" |
32325 | And I_ did_ start to tell him; but he shut me up, and says:"Do n''t you reckon I know what I''m about? |
32325 | And after a minute, he says:"How''d you say he got shot?" |
32325 | And ai n''t that a big enough majority in any town?" |
32325 | And by and by the old man says:"Did I give you the letter?" |
32325 | And could n''t the nigger see better, too? |
32325 | And did the sad hearts thicken, And did the mourners cry? |
32325 | And do you reckon they''d be mean enough to go off and leave you to go all that journey by yourselves? |
32325 | And leave my sisters with them?" |
32325 | And looky here-- you drop that school, you hear? |
32325 | And not sell out the rest o''the property? |
32325 | And s''pose he steps in here any minute, and sings out my name before I can throw him a wink to keep quiet? |
32325 | And they call it the_ mumps?_""That''s what Miss Mary Jane said." |
32325 | And turns to me, perfectly ca''m, and says,"Did_ you_ hear anybody sing out?" |
32325 | And what do you reckon they said? |
32325 | And what do you think? |
32325 | And what kind o''uncles would it be that''d rob-- yes,_ Rob_--sech poor sweet lambs as these''at he loved so at sech a time? |
32325 | And what would you want to saw his leg off for, anyway?" |
32325 | And what_ for_? |
32325 | And when the king got done this husky up and says:"Say, looky here; if you are Harvey Wilks, when''d you come to this town?" |
32325 | And would n''t he throw style into it?--wouldn''t he spread himself, nor nothing? |
32325 | And you ca n''t get away with that tooth without fetching the whole harrow along, can you? |
32325 | And you wo n''t go? |
32325 | And you would n''t leave them any? |
32325 | And, besides, he said them little birds had said it was going to rain, and did I want the things to get wet? |
32325 | And_ then_ what did you all do?" |
32325 | Are you all ready? |
32325 | Ask him to show up? |
32325 | Bekase why: would a wise man want to live in de mids''er sich a blim- blammin''all de time? |
32325 | Buck?--land?" |
32325 | But Bill says:"Hold on--''d you go through him?" |
32325 | But Tom thought of something, and says:"You got any spiders in here, Jim?" |
32325 | But answer me only jest this one more-- now_ do n''t_ git mad; did n''t you have it in your mind to hook the money and hide it?" |
32325 | But at supper, at night, one of the little boys says:"Pa, may n''t Tom and Sid and me go to the show?" |
32325 | But he''ll be pooty lonesome-- dey ain''no kings here, is dey, Huck?" |
32325 | But how you goin''to manage it this time?" |
32325 | But now she says:"Honey, I thought you said it was Sarah when you first come in?" |
32325 | But other times they just lazy around; or go hawking-- just hawking and sp-- Sh!--d''you hear a noise?" |
32325 | But s''pose she_ do n''t_ break up and wash off?" |
32325 | But when he did get the thing straightened around he looked at me steady without ever smiling, and says:"What do dey stan''for? |
32325 | But you got a gun, hain''t you? |
32325 | But you wouldn''tell on me ef I''uz to tell you, would you, Huck?" |
32325 | By and by Jim says:"But looky here, Huck, who wuz it dat''uz killed in dat shanty ef it warn''t you?" |
32325 | By and by, when they was asleep and snoring, Jim says:"Do n''t it s''prise you de way dem kings carries on, Huck?" |
32325 | Ca n''t you think of no way?" |
32325 | Ca n''t you_ see_ that_ they''d_ go and tell? |
32325 | Come slow; push the door open yourself-- just enough to squeeze in, d''you hear?" |
32325 | Conscience says to me,"What had poor Miss Watson done to you that you could see her nigger go off right under your eyes and never say one single word? |
32325 | Could you raise a flower here, do you reckon?" |
32325 | Dad blame it, why doan''he_ talk_ like a man? |
32325 | Did n''t you?" |
32325 | Did you come for your interest?" |
32325 | Did you hear''em shooting the cannon?" |
32325 | Did you inquire around for_ him_ when you got loose? |
32325 | Did you speculate any more?" |
32325 | Did you tell Aunty?" |
32325 | Didn''he jis''dis minute sing out like he knowed you?" |
32325 | Do n''t I generly know what I''m about?" |
32325 | Do n''t I tell you it''s in the books? |
32325 | Do n''t anybody live there? |
32325 | Do n''t you know about the harem? |
32325 | Do n''t you know nothing?" |
32325 | Do n''t you know what a feud is?" |
32325 | Do n''t you reckon I know who hid that money in that coffin?" |
32325 | Do n''t you reckon that the people that made the books knows what''s the correct thing to do? |
32325 | Do n''t you see I has?" |
32325 | Do they treat''em better''n we treat our niggers?" |
32325 | Do you know him?" |
32325 | Do you like to comb up Sundays, and all that kind of foolishness? |
32325 | Do you own a dog? |
32325 | Do you reckon Tom Sawyer would ever go by this thing? |
32325 | Do you reckon that''ll do?" |
32325 | Do you reckon you can learn me?" |
32325 | Do you reckon_ you_ can learn''em anything? |
32325 | Do you want to go to doing different from what''s in the books, and get things all muddled up?" |
32325 | Do you want to spread it all over?" |
32325 | Does three hundred dollars lay around every day for people to pick up? |
32325 | Does you know''bout dat chile dat he''uz gwyne to chop in two?" |
32325 | Does you want to go en look at''i m?" |
32325 | Down by the woodpile I comes across my Jack, and says:"What''s it all about?" |
32325 | En did n''t I bust up agin a lot er dem islands en have a turrible time en mos''git drownded? |
32325 | En what dey got to do, Huck?" |
32325 | En what use is a half a chile? |
32325 | En you ain''dead-- you ain''drownded-- you''s back ag''in? |
32325 | Every little while he jumps up and says:"Dah she is?" |
32325 | Everybody says,"Why,_ doctor!_"and Abner Shackleford says:"Why, Robinson, hain''t you heard the news? |
32325 | George Jackson, is there anybody with you?" |
32325 | Going to feed the dogs?" |
32325 | Hain''t he run off?" |
32325 | Hain''t we got to saw the leg of Jim''s bed off, so as to get the chain loose?" |
32325 | Hain''t you got no principle at all?" |
32325 | Hain''t your uncles obleeged to get along home to England as fast as they can? |
32325 | Has I ben a- drinkin''? |
32325 | Has I had a chance to be a- drinkin''?" |
32325 | Has everybody quit thinking the nigger done it?" |
32325 | Has n''t he got away?" |
32325 | Have you ever trod the boards, Royalty?" |
32325 | He can hide it in his bed, ca n''t he? |
32325 | He looked astonished, and says:"Hel-_lo!_ Where''d_ you_ come from?" |
32325 | He says:"Ai n''t they no Shepherdsons around?" |
32325 | He says:"If gentlemen kin afford to pay a dollar a mile apiece to be took on and put off in a yawl, a steamboat kin afford to carry''em, ca n''t it?" |
32325 | He says:"What you doin''with this gun?" |
32325 | He says:"Why, what can you mean, my boy?" |
32325 | He says:"Why,_ Tom!_ Where you been all this time, you rascal?" |
32325 | He see me, and rode up and says:"Whar''d you come f''m, boy? |
32325 | He set there a- mumbling and a- growling a minute, and then he says:"_ Ai n''t_ you a sweet- scented dandy, though? |
32325 | He stirred up in a kind of a startlish way; but when he see it was only me he took a good gap and stretch, and then he says:"Hello, what''s up? |
32325 | He took up a little blue and yaller picture of some cows and a boy, and says:"What''s this?" |
32325 | He''d_ let_ me shove his head in my mouf-- fer a favor, hain''t it? |
32325 | Hey?--how''s that?" |
32325 | His eyes just blazed; and he says:"No!--is that so? |
32325 | Honest injun, you ai n''t a ghost?" |
32325 | How can they get loose when there''s a guard over them, ready to shoot them down if they move a peg?" |
32325 | How could a body do it in de night? |
32325 | How do dat come?" |
32325 | How do_ they_ get them?" |
32325 | How does he go at it-- give notice?--give the country a show? |
32325 | How does that strike you?" |
32325 | How fur is it?" |
32325 | How is servants treated in England? |
32325 | How long you ben on de islan''?" |
32325 | How much do a king git?" |
32325 | How old is the others?" |
32325 | How would you like to be treated so?" |
32325 | How''d it get there?" |
32325 | How''d they act?" |
32325 | I ai n''t the man to stand it-- you hear? |
32325 | I ben a- buyin''pots en pans en vittles, as I got a chanst, en a- patchin''up de raf''nights when--""_ What_ raft, Jim?" |
32325 | I hunched Tom, and whispers:"You going, right here in the daybreak? |
32325 | I live up there, do n''t I? |
32325 | I ranged up and says:"Mister, is that town Cairo?" |
32325 | I reckon he can stand a little thing like that, ca n''t he?" |
32325 | I said, why could n''t we see them, then? |
32325 | I says to myself, if a body can get anything they pray for, why do n''t Deacon Winn get back the money he lost on pork? |
32325 | I says to myself, shall I go to that doctor, private, and blow on these frauds? |
32325 | I says to myself, spos''n he ca n''t fix that leg just in three shakes of a sheep''s tail, as the saying is? |
32325 | I says to myself, there ai n''t no telling but I might come to be a murderer myself yet, and then how would I like it? |
32325 | I says:"What do we want of a moat when we''re going to snake him out from under the cabin?" |
32325 | I says:"Who done it? |
32325 | I says:"Why, Jim?" |
32325 | I was going to say yes; but she chipped in and says:"About what, Sid?" |
32325 | I wonder who''tis? |
32325 | I''m for killin''him-- and did n''t he kill old Hatfield jist the same way-- and do n''t he deserve it?" |
32325 | I''ve a good notion to take and-- Say, what do you mean by kissing me?" |
32325 | If the profits has turned out to be none, lackin''considable, and none to carry, is it my fault any more''n it''s yourn?" |
32325 | If they have, wo n''t the complices get away with that bag of gold Peter Wilks left? |
32325 | If you do n''t hitch on to one tooth, you''re bound to on another, ai n''t you? |
32325 | In this neighborhood?" |
32325 | Is I heah, or whah_ is_ I? |
32325 | Is I_ me_, or who_ is_ I? |
32325 | Is Mary Jane the oldest? |
32325 | Is a Frenchman a man?" |
32325 | Is a cow a man?--er is a cow a cat?" |
32325 | Is a_ harrow_ catching-- in the dark? |
32325 | Is dat like Mars Tom Sawyer? |
32325 | Is dey out o''sight yit? |
32325 | Is it Bill, or Tom, or Bob?--or what is it?" |
32325 | Is it ketching?" |
32325 | Is she took bad?" |
32325 | Is something the matter?" |
32325 | Is that_ all_?" |
32325 | Is there anybody here that helped to lay out my br-- helped to lay out the late Peter Wilks for burying?" |
32325 | Is your husband going over there to- night?" |
32325 | Is your man white or black?" |
32325 | It ai n''t my fault I warn''t born a duke, it ai n''t your fault you warn''t born a king-- so what''s the use to worry? |
32325 | It make me mad; en I says ag''in, mighty loud, I says:"''Doan''you hear me? |
32325 | It was all she could do to hold in; and her eyes snapped, and her fingers worked like she wanted to scratch him; and she says:"Who''s''everybody''? |
32325 | It''s only saying, do you know how to talk French?" |
32325 | Just keep a tight tongue in your head and move right along, and then you wo n''t get into trouble with_ us_, d''ye hear?" |
32325 | Kill the women? |
32325 | Long as you''re in this town do n''t you forgit_ that_--you hear?" |
32325 | Look yonder!--up the road!--ain''t that somebody coming?" |
32325 | Looky here, did n''t de line pull loose en de raf''go a- hummin''down de river, en leave you en de canoe behine in de fog?" |
32325 | Looky here, warn''t you ever murdered_ at all?_""No. |
32325 | Looky here-- do you think_ you''d_ venture to blow on us? |
32325 | Me? |
32325 | Mrs. Phelps she jumps for him, and says:"Has he come?" |
32325 | Next time you roust me out, you hear?" |
32325 | Next, she says:"Do you go to church, too?" |
32325 | Now I want to ask you-- if you got any reasonableness in you at all-- what kind of a show would_ that_ give him to be a hero? |
32325 | Now ain''dat so, boss-- ain''t it so? |
32325 | Now if you''ll go and--""By Jackson, I''d_ like_ to, and, blame it, I do n''t know but I will; but who in the dingnation''s a- going to_ pay_ for it? |
32325 | Now, what do you reckon it is?" |
32325 | Now,_ would n''t_ he? |
32325 | One of them says:"What''s that yonder?" |
32325 | Pretty soon Jim says:"Say, who is you? |
32325 | Pretty soon Tom says:"Ready?" |
32325 | Pretty soon she says:"What did you say your name was, honey?" |
32325 | S''e, what do_ you_ think of it, Sister Hotchkiss? |
32325 | S''pose a man was to come to you and say Polly- voo- franzy-- what would you think?" |
32325 | S''pose he contracted to do a thing, and you paid him, and did n''t set down there and see that he done it-- what did he do? |
32325 | S''pose he opened his mouth-- what then? |
32325 | S''pose he_ do n''t_ do nothing with it? |
32325 | S''pose people left money laying around where he was-- what did he do? |
32325 | S''pose she dug him up and did n''t find nothing, what would she think of me? |
32325 | Say, boy, what''s the matter with your father?" |
32325 | Say, do we kill the women, too?" |
32325 | Say, gimme a chaw tobacker, wo n''t ye?" |
32325 | Say, how long are you going to stay here? |
32325 | Say, how much you got in your pocket? |
32325 | Say, where_ is_ that song-- that draft?" |
32325 | Says I, kind of timid- like:"Is something gone wrong?" |
32325 | Says I--"I broke in and says:"They''re in an awful peck of trouble, and--""_ Who_ is?" |
32325 | Says he:"Do n''t you know, Mars Jawge?" |
32325 | Says the king:"Dern him, I wonder what he done with that four hundred and fifteen dollars?" |
32325 | See? |
32325 | Shall I go, private, and tell Mary Jane? |
32325 | She looked me all over with her little shiny eyes, and says:"What might your name be?" |
32325 | She says:"Did you ever see the king?" |
32325 | She says:"Honest injun, now, hain''t you been telling me a lot of lies?" |
32325 | She was smiling all over so she could hardly stand-- and says:"It''s_ you_, at last!--_ain''t_ it?" |
32325 | Snake take''n bite Jim''s chin off, den_ whah_ is de glory? |
32325 | So I laid there about an hour trying to think, and when Buck waked up I says:"Can you spell, Buck?" |
32325 | So Tom says:"What''s the vittles for? |
32325 | So Tom turns to the nigger, which was looking wild and distressed, and says, kind of severe:"What do you reckon''s the matter with you, anyway? |
32325 | So she put me up a snack, and says:"Say, when a cow''s laying down, which end of her gets up first? |
32325 | So she run on:"Lize, hurry up and get him a hot breakfast right away-- or did you get your breakfast on the boat?" |
32325 | So the question was, what to do? |
32325 | So when I says he goes to our church, she says:"What-- regular?" |
32325 | So, says I, s''pose somebody has hogged that bag on the sly?--now how do_ I_ know whether to write to Mary Jane or not? |
32325 | So, then, what you want to come back and ha''nt_ me_ for?" |
32325 | Soon as I could get Buck down by the corn- cribs under the trees by ourselves, I says:"Did you want to kill him, Buck?" |
32325 | That''s the whole yarn-- what''s yourn?" |
32325 | The doctor he up and says:"Would you know the boy again if you was to see him, Hines?" |
32325 | The duke bristles up now, and says:"Oh, let_ up_ on this cussed nonsense; do you take me for a blame''fool? |
32325 | The duke says, pretty brisk:"When it comes to that, maybe you''ll let me ask what was_ you_ referring to?" |
32325 | The duke says:"Have you seen anybody else go in there?" |
32325 | The king he smiled eager, and shoved out his flapper, and says:"_ Is_ it my poor brother''s dear good friend and physician? |
32325 | The king kind of ruffles up, and says:"Looky here, Bilgewater, what''r you referrin''to?" |
32325 | The king says:"Was you in my room night before last?" |
32325 | The king says:"Why?" |
32325 | The man sung out:"Snatch that light away, Betsy, you old fool-- ain''t you got any sense? |
32325 | The next minute he whirls on me and says:"Do you reckon that nigger would blow on us? |
32325 | The old gentleman stared, and says:"Why, who''s that?" |
32325 | Then Ben Rogers says:"Here''s Huck Finn, he hain''t got no family; what you going to do''bout him?" |
32325 | Then I says to myself, s''pose Tom Sawyer comes down on that boat? |
32325 | Then I says:"Blame it, do you suppose there ai n''t but one preacher to a church?" |
32325 | Then I says:"How do you come to be here, Jim, and how''d you get here?" |
32325 | Then I says:"Miss Mary Jane, is there any place out of town a little ways where you could go and stay three or four days?" |
32325 | Then I thought a minute, and says to myself, hold on; s''pose you''d''a''done right and give Jim up, would you felt better than what you do now? |
32325 | Then he did n''t look so joyful, and says:"What was your idea for asking_ me?_"he says. |
32325 | Then he says, kind of glad and eager,"Where''s the raft?--got her in a good place?" |
32325 | Then he says:"How are you on the deef and dumb, Bilgewater?" |
32325 | Then he says:"What did you want to walk all the way up to the steamboat for?" |
32325 | Then he says:"Who dah?" |
32325 | Then he studied it over and said, could n''t I put on some of them old things and dress up like a girl? |
32325 | Then he turns to Jim, and looks him over like he never see him before, and says:"Did you sing out?" |
32325 | Then she took off the hank and looked me straight in the face, and very pleasant, and says:"Come, now, what''s your real name?" |
32325 | Then the doctor whirls on me and says:"Are_ you_ English, too?" |
32325 | Then the duke says:"What,_ all_ of them?" |
32325 | Then the duke says:"You are what?" |
32325 | Then the old man turns toward the king, and says:"Peraps this gentleman can tell me what was tattooed on his breast?" |
32325 | They sets down then, and the king says:"Well, what is it? |
32325 | Think o''that bed- leg sawed off that a way? |
32325 | Think o''what, Brer Phelps? |
32325 | Thinks I, what does it mean? |
32325 | Thinks I, what is the country a- coming to? |
32325 | Tired of our company, hey?" |
32325 | Tom he looked at the nigger, steady and kind of wondering, and says:"Does_ who_ know us?" |
32325 | Tom looks at me very grave, and says:"Tom, did n''t you just tell me he was all right? |
32325 | Twenty people sings out:"What, is it over? |
32325 | Very well, then; is a_ preacher_ going to deceive a steamboat clerk? |
32325 | W''y, what has you lived on? |
32325 | Want to keep it off?" |
32325 | Warn''dat de beatenes''notion in de worl''? |
32325 | Was Solomon Wise? |
32325 | Was it a Grangerford Shepherdson?" |
32325 | Was there any such mark on Peter Wilks''s breast?" |
32325 | Was you looking for him?" |
32325 | We ai n''t a- going to_ gnaw_ him out, are we?" |
32325 | We both knowed well enough it was some more work of the rattlesnake- skin; so what was the use to talk about it? |
32325 | Well, did he? |
32325 | Well, then, I said, why could n''t she tell her husband to fetch a dog? |
32325 | Well, then, what kind o''brothers would it be that''d stand in his way at sech a time? |
32325 | Well, we got to save_ him_, hain''t we? |
32325 | Well, what did he do? |
32325 | Well, what do you think? |
32325 | Well, you answer me dis: Did n''t you tote out de line in de canoe fer to make fas''to de towhead?" |
32325 | Well,_ was n''t_ he mad? |
32325 | Whar is you? |
32325 | Whar was you brought down from?" |
32325 | What I wanted to know was, what he was going to do, and was he going to stay? |
32325 | What are we going to do?--lay around there till he lets the cat out of the bag? |
32325 | What did that poor old woman do to you that you could treat her so mean? |
32325 | What did they do? |
32325 | What did you say your name was?" |
32325 | What did you_ reckon_ he wanted with it?" |
32325 | What do we k''yer for_ him?_ Hain''t we got all the fools in town on our side? |
32325 | What do we k''yer for_ him?_ Hain''t we got all the fools in town on our side? |
32325 | What do you mean?" |
32325 | What does I do? |
32325 | What does_ he_ want with a pew?" |
32325 | What he gwyne to do?" |
32325 | What is he up to, anyway? |
32325 | What kep''you?--boat get aground?" |
32325 | What made you think somebody sung out?" |
32325 | What makes them come here just at this runaway nigger''s breakfast- time? |
32325 | What towhead? |
32325 | What was it?" |
32325 | What was the use to tell Jim these warn''t real kings and dukes? |
32325 | What you going to do about the servant- girl?" |
32325 | What you know''bout witches?" |
32325 | What you reckon I better do? |
32325 | What you want to know when good luck''s a- comin''for? |
32325 | What you''bout?" |
32325 | What''s a bar sinister?" |
32325 | What''s a fess?" |
32325 | What''s that?" |
32325 | What''s the good of a plan that ai n''t no more trouble than that? |
32325 | What''s the matter with her?" |
32325 | What''s the matter with''em?" |
32325 | What''s the trouble?" |
32325 | What''s your lay?" |
32325 | What''s your line-- mainly?" |
32325 | What''s your real name, now?" |
32325 | What_ has_ become of that boy?" |
32325 | What_ is_ the matter with your pap? |
32325 | What_ is_ you a- talkin''''bout? |
32325 | What_ will_ he do, then? |
32325 | When I struck Susan and the hare- lip, I says:"What''s the name of them people over on t''other side of the river that you all goes to see sometimes?" |
32325 | When Jim called me to take the watch at four in the morning, he says:"Huck, does you reck''n we gwyne to run acrost any mo''kings on dis trip?" |
32325 | When was that?" |
32325 | When we was at dinner, did n''t you see a nigger man go in there with some vittles?" |
32325 | Wher''does he live?" |
32325 | Where are they?" |
32325 | Where could you keep it?" |
32325 | Where did you hide it?" |
32325 | Where would I go to?" |
32325 | Where''d she get aground?" |
32325 | Where''s that ten cents? |
32325 | Where''s the raft?" |
32325 | Where?" |
32325 | Where_ would_ he live?" |
32325 | Where_ would_ it be?" |
32325 | Which end gets up first?" |
32325 | Who ever heard of a state prisoner escaping by a hickry- bark ladder? |
32325 | Who ever heard of getting a prisoner loose in such an old- maidy way as that? |
32325 | Who nailed him?" |
32325 | Who told you this was Goshen?" |
32325 | Who told you you might meddle with such hifalut''n foolishness, hey?--who told you you could?" |
32325 | Who''d you reckon?" |
32325 | Who''s Jim''s mother?" |
32325 | Who''s there?" |
32325 | Who''s_ they?_""Why, everybody. |
32325 | Who_ is_ it?" |
32325 | Whoever would''a''thought it was in that mare to do it? |
32325 | Why ca n''t Miss Watson fat up? |
32325 | Why ca n''t a body take a club and ransom them as soon as they get here?" |
32325 | Why ca n''t the widow get back her silver snuff- box that was stole? |
32325 | Why ca n''t you stick to the main point?" |
32325 | Why could n''t you said that before? |
32325 | Why did n''t you come out and say so? |
32325 | Why did n''t you get mud- turkles?" |
32325 | Why did n''t you step into the road, my boy?" |
32325 | Why did n''t you stir me up?" |
32325 | Why do n''t your juries hang murderers? |
32325 | Why would n''t they? |
32325 | Why, Biljy, it beats the Nonesuch,_ do n''t_ it?" |
32325 | Why, Huck, s''pose it_ is_ considerble trouble?--what you going to do?--how you going to get around it? |
32325 | Why, hain''t you ever read any books at all?--Baron Trenck, nor Casanova, nor Benvenuto Chelleeny, nor Henri IV., nor none of them heroes? |
32325 | Why, how in the nation did they ever git into such a scrape?" |
32325 | Why, that ai n''t_ Tom_, it''s Sid; Tom''s-- Tom''s-- why, where is Tom? |
32325 | Why, what in the nation do you mean? |
32325 | Why?" |
32325 | Will you?" |
32325 | Will you?" |
32325 | William Fourth? |
32325 | Would he say dat? |
32325 | Would n''t that plan work?" |
32325 | Would ther''be any sense in that? |
32325 | Would_ you_''a''done any different? |
32325 | You been a- drinking?" |
32325 | You ca n''t slip up on um en grab um; en how''s a body gwyne to hit um wid a rock? |
32325 | You do n''t reckon it''s going to take thirty- seven years to dig out through a_ dirt_ foundation, do you?" |
32325 | You going to Orleans, you say?" |
32325 | You got any rats around here?" |
32325 | You got anything to play music on?" |
32325 | You know that one- laigged nigger dat b''longs to old Misto Bradish? |
32325 | You lemme catch you fooling around that school again, you hear? |
32325 | You prepared to die?" |
32325 | You take a man dat''s got on''y one or two chillen; is dat man gwyne to be waseful o''chillen? |
32325 | You think you''re a good deal of a big- bug,_ do n''t_ you?" |
32325 | You think you''re better''n your father, now, do n''t you, because he ca n''t? |
32325 | You''ll say it''s dirty, low- down business; but what if it is? |
32325 | You''ll take it-- won''t you?" |
32325 | You_ ai n''t_ him, are you?" |
32325 | Your uncle Harvey''s a preacher, ai n''t he? |
32325 | _ Hain''t_ you ben gone away?" |
32325 | _ Now_ what do you say-- hey?" |
32325 | _ Raf''?_ Dey ain''no raf''no mo''; she done broke loose en gone!--en here we is!" |
32325 | _ Think_ of it? |
32325 | _ Well_, den, is_ Jim_ gywne to say it? |
32325 | _ What_ did he sing out?" |
32325 | _ When_ did he sing out? |
32325 | _ Who_ sung out? |
32325 | ai n''t it there in his bed, for a clue, after he''s gone? |
32325 | and I as high as a tree and as big as a church? |
32325 | and do n''t you reckon they''ll want clues? |
32325 | and"Where, for the land''s sake,_ did_ you get these amaz''n pickles?" |
32325 | anybody hurt?" |
32325 | do he know you genlmen?" |
32325 | is dat you, honey? |
32325 | is he going to deceive a_ ship clerk?_--so as to get them to let Miss Mary Jane go aboard? |
32325 | is_ he_ her uncle? |
32325 | it wo n''t do to fool with small- pox, do n''t you see?" |
32325 | s''e? |
32325 | says Aunt Sally;"_ is_ he changed so? |
32325 | she says,"what in the world_ can_ have become of him?" |
32325 | spos''n it takes him three or four days? |
32325 | they give a glance at one another, and nodded their heads, as much as to say,"What''d I tell you?" |
32325 | what are they doin''_ there_, for gracious sakes?" |
32325 | would a runaway nigger run_ south?_"No, they allowed he would n''t. |
32325 | you ca n''t mean it?" |
31406 | ''And do you think,''said he,''that I am to be bound by the last words of a man too far gone to know his own mind in the matter?'' 31406 ''But what is the use of roast meat, if we are to be roasted too?'' |
31406 | ''Follow-- where?'' 31406 ''For yourself, you black rascal?'' |
31406 | ''Member de lickins? 31406 ''Sert you? |
31406 | ''Then why did n''t he give it to you before, instead of requiring me to make such a sacrifice? 31406 ''Who is your master?'' |
31406 | A gentleman? 31406 A shave?" |
31406 | Able, child? 31406 About the schoolmaster? |
31406 | Ai n''t to home, none of''em, hey? |
31406 | Ai n''t wanted, Cudjo? 31406 All ready?" |
31406 | All right so far, Pepperill? |
31406 | All safe? |
31406 | All? |
31406 | Amuse me? 31406 And Pomp?" |
31406 | And are you so very weary of the cave? |
31406 | And did he not promise to do so? |
31406 | And did you give it me? |
31406 | And do you know there''s a secret passage from this cellar into the cellar under Jim''s shop? 31406 And do you maintain that you did not go willingly?" |
31406 | And do you remember a conversation you had with Lysander under a bridge? |
31406 | And how you that day took a journey to be away from us in our trouble? |
31406 | And if I comply? |
31406 | And if I had n''t took ye in season, you''d have returned to your base- born mire, would n''t you? |
31406 | And my daughter? |
31406 | And my dead child up yonder? |
31406 | And my faithful servant? |
31406 | And now, what is to be done? 31406 And our friends!--Carl!--have you heard from them?" |
31406 | And that is petter as being hung? |
31406 | And the property? |
31406 | And they have no suspicions? |
31406 | And vat shall you do? |
31406 | And we must conceal him? |
31406 | And what can we do? |
31406 | And what did he reply? |
31406 | And what is to become of me? |
31406 | And what? |
31406 | And where but here? |
31406 | And where is Aunt Deb? |
31406 | And ye knows whar she ar? |
31406 | And you will use it if necessary? |
31406 | And you would have us submit to them? |
31406 | And you? |
31406 | And you? |
31406 | Any one hurt? |
31406 | Anything? |
31406 | Are they well? 31406 Are ye sartin ob dat, massa? |
31406 | Are you asleep? |
31406 | Are you going again? |
31406 | Are you lost? 31406 Are you ready?" |
31406 | Are you sure the man is dead? |
31406 | Are you sure? |
31406 | Are you well, my child? |
31406 | Bold? |
31406 | But all this happened before I came to Tennessee, did it not? 31406 But how came you here? |
31406 | But how came_ she_ here? |
31406 | But how can I resolve to send a guest from my house in this way? 31406 But how do you know, my son,----""How do I know he''s there? |
31406 | But how? |
31406 | But is Mr. Villars safe? |
31406 | But is n''t she a Grace? 31406 But suppose I can show you that you are wrong, and that even by your own laws we are not, and can not be, property?" |
31406 | But whar''s the schoolmaster? |
31406 | But what comes o''de rock? |
31406 | But what had they done to him? |
31406 | But what had you done to merit such cruelty? |
31406 | But what''s he so dead set agin''the master fur? |
31406 | But why do you prefer to be away when the fun is going on? |
31406 | Ca n''t eat, sar? 31406 Ca n''t you see for yourself?" |
31406 | Can you change these rocks under our feet with empty words? |
31406 | Can you show me that spot, Toby? |
31406 | Captain,they replied,"if you not know, how should we know? |
31406 | Carl what? |
31406 | Carl, what''s this? |
31406 | Carl, why do n''t you come too? |
31406 | Condition? |
31406 | Could n''t you find nowhere else to go to? 31406 Could n''t you move the horse?" |
31406 | Danger? |
31406 | Dat ar? 31406 Dat so, Pomp?" |
31406 | Dat? 31406 Daughter, are you here?" |
31406 | De gemman? |
31406 | Dead? |
31406 | Dead? |
31406 | Deslow,laughed Stackridge, himself not ill pleased with Pomp''s arguments,"what do you say to that?" |
31406 | Did I tremble, did I shrink when you carried me through the fire? 31406 Did n''t somebody knock me on the head?" |
31406 | Did n''t we trust you? 31406 Did n''t you hear me tell ye to stop?" |
31406 | Did somepody say somepody is a willain? |
31406 | Did you meet any person on the road, travelling north? |
31406 | Did you not bring my daughter with you? |
31406 | Did you say_ shtop_? |
31406 | Do you believe Deslow will be delivered up? |
31406 | Do you hear anything? |
31406 | Do you know how to use it? |
31406 | Do you know that name? 31406 Do you know this ravine?" |
31406 | Do you remember the night my father was arrested? |
31406 | Do you see any landmarks yet? |
31406 | Do you think it was not a bitter cup for me? 31406 Do you?" |
31406 | Does old Pete visit you since? |
31406 | Does that suit you? |
31406 | Don''ye see? 31406 Dreadful? |
31406 | Fear so? 31406 Find him?" |
31406 | For me, Miss Villars? |
31406 | Gentlemen, will you fight? 31406 Go in?" |
31406 | Gone out, to- night? 31406 Good idee?" |
31406 | Got him? |
31406 | Has he killed him? |
31406 | Has the colonel orders to make the arrests? |
31406 | Have n''t I just got avay from Stackridge? 31406 Have n''t I told you not to_ wake him_?" |
31406 | Have some? |
31406 | Have you anything to confess? |
31406 | Have you had any more trouble since Pomp left you? |
31406 | Have you let Toby go? |
31406 | Have you plenty of arms? |
31406 | Have you two been together long? |
31406 | He wishes to speak with me? 31406 Her? |
31406 | Hey? 31406 Hey? |
31406 | Hey? |
31406 | Him? |
31406 | His name? |
31406 | How are you getting on, boys? |
31406 | How came we property, sir? |
31406 | How came you here, sir? |
31406 | How came you here? |
31406 | How corrupted, my friend? |
31406 | How dare you come back without her? |
31406 | How did I leave them? |
31406 | How do I know you are shmart? 31406 How do you know I am?" |
31406 | How far is it now to your ravine? |
31406 | How is he?--much injured? |
31406 | How large was this spot, this island? |
31406 | How long,she added immediately,"do you imagine we shall have to stay here?" |
31406 | How many friends have you with you? |
31406 | How many slaves do you own? |
31406 | How old is he? |
31406 | How old is she? |
31406 | How shall we get news to you? 31406 How so?" |
31406 | How''s it my fault, I''d like to know? |
31406 | How? |
31406 | I a deserter? 31406 I believe you partly promised it to me, did n''t you? |
31406 | I can read for one; and as for the rest, what good would it do''em to be edecated? 31406 I fancy you do n''t know very well where you are, sir,"said the negro, with a smile;"and you do n''t know me either, do you?" |
31406 | I suppose Toby has told you the news? 31406 I think-- you are my preserver-- are you not?" |
31406 | If you are so independent in your movements, why have you never escaped to the north? |
31406 | If you will disgrace yourself, how can I help it? |
31406 | Is he in the willage? |
31406 | Is it for me?'' |
31406 | Is it true what that man is saying? |
31406 | Is it you, Daniel, who are to bear witness against me? |
31406 | Is it you, Hapgood? |
31406 | Is it you, Mr. Stackridge? 31406 Is it you, Penn? |
31406 | Is it you, massa? |
31406 | Is justice done? |
31406 | Is justice done? |
31406 | Is no guns here? |
31406 | Is not that what you would have said to me if you had found me in your power after making me such a promise? 31406 Is that so?" |
31406 | Is the passage behind the spot where Mr. Villars is sitting? |
31406 | Is this so? 31406 Keep your liquor up there, do ye?" |
31406 | Killed? |
31406 | Kin uh do any ting fur ye, sar? |
31406 | Leafe a little trop for me, vill you? |
31406 | Lysander, how are ye? 31406 Many there?" |
31406 | Mine? 31406 Minny- fish? |
31406 | Must I die? |
31406 | My poor boy, you seem to be in trouble; can I help you? |
31406 | My wife-- my two daughters: what will become of them? |
31406 | None missing? |
31406 | Nor for me? |
31406 | Not Mass''Penn? 31406 Not even to save your life?" |
31406 | Not much skin dar, hey? 31406 Not unless Toby lied to me!--Did he?" |
31406 | Nothing for my father? |
31406 | Notwithstanding your oath that you would not tell? |
31406 | Now what''s the use, Sal? 31406 Now what?" |
31406 | Now will you behave, my girl? 31406 Now you vill tell?" |
31406 | Now, Pepperill,said Sprowl,"can you move ahead and make no mistake?" |
31406 | Now, where''s yer tar- and- feathering party? |
31406 | O, must we pass on? |
31406 | O, what shall we do, father? |
31406 | On our''count? 31406 One of your tantrums?" |
31406 | Penn, is it you? |
31406 | Penn-- has anything happened to Penn? |
31406 | Pepperill-- Dan Pepperill; ye know me, do n''t ye, Stackridge? |
31406 | Ropes? |
31406 | Sal, is it you? 31406 Sal,"--in a low voice, looking up at her, and showing his manacled hands,--"are you pleased to see me in this condition?" |
31406 | See the bodies anywhere? |
31406 | Shall I go, too? |
31406 | Shall we go through these woods? |
31406 | Shore? 31406 Sile,"interrupted Dan, earnestly,"what''ge mean I''m to do? |
31406 | Sir, who are you? |
31406 | Soon? |
31406 | Suppose? 31406 Take holt, why do n''t you?" |
31406 | The devil, Toby? 31406 The frog, Toby?" |
31406 | The man in the rawine? 31406 Then what is the grievance you complain of?" |
31406 | Then why do you stop here? |
31406 | Then you wo n''t enlist? |
31406 | Think he''s heerd us? |
31406 | Thought you''d come and meet us half way, did ye? |
31406 | To throw on her? |
31406 | Toby, what are we to do? |
31406 | Toby, who is that? |
31406 | Toby, you black devil, where have you been? |
31406 | Toby? 31406 Vas that shpeaking?" |
31406 | Vat did you say? |
31406 | Vat for you dodge? 31406 Vat is it?" |
31406 | Vat is vanting? |
31406 | Vill nothing happen? |
31406 | Virginia, that man is thy worst enemy? 31406 Vot sort of Tutchmen vos they?" |
31406 | Vot vinder? |
31406 | Vould you really be pleased to have me? |
31406 | Vy not? 31406 Was it you that rapped before?" |
31406 | Was it you? |
31406 | Was n''t it the schoolmaster? |
31406 | Was the secret known to many? |
31406 | Water? |
31406 | Well, Dutchy,--for the first time deigning to consult Carl,--"this route is taking us to the cave, too, ai n''t it?" |
31406 | Well, and if I reject your generous offer? |
31406 | Well, how are you getting on, sir? |
31406 | Well, how many negroes has your friend? |
31406 | Well, of the eleven, how many own slaves? |
31406 | Well, what do you want of me? |
31406 | Well, what luck, you lying scoundrel? |
31406 | Well, what more? |
31406 | Well, where did they take you? |
31406 | Well? |
31406 | Wha''fur? |
31406 | Wha''sh''ll we do? |
31406 | Wha-- wha-- what de debil you want hyar? |
31406 | Whar''s that Dutch boy? |
31406 | What am I to pay for? |
31406 | What are you bowing and grinning at me for? 31406 What are you going to do to that helpless, blind old man?" |
31406 | What becomes of the sugar that dissolves in your coffee? |
31406 | What business he got hyar? |
31406 | What dar? |
31406 | What dat to me, if him die, or whar him die? |
31406 | What dat ye call dis nigger? |
31406 | What dat? |
31406 | What did Gad pitch into me fur? |
31406 | What did he see, Virginia? |
31406 | What did you do with them? |
31406 | What did you mean by''barbarous system''? |
31406 | What did you pitch into me fur? |
31406 | What did you push and jump on to me fur? |
31406 | What do you demand of me? |
31406 | What do you mean by''our people''? |
31406 | What do you mean to do? |
31406 | What do you mean, Cudjo? |
31406 | What do you mean, you d-- d deserter? |
31406 | What do you think of that back, sir? |
31406 | What do you think, Pomp? |
31406 | What do you want of Mis''Stackridge? |
31406 | What do you want? |
31406 | What does anybody care for me? |
31406 | What does he want of it? |
31406 | What for do you do this, Carl? |
31406 | What good der tanks do to we? |
31406 | What has happened to Carl? |
31406 | What has happened to Penn? |
31406 | What has happened? |
31406 | What have ye been doing to the schoolmaster? 31406 What have you got in your hand?" |
31406 | What have you hung over the window, Toby? |
31406 | What is it about your boarder? 31406 What is it, Carl?" |
31406 | What is it? |
31406 | What is it? |
31406 | What is the trouble? |
31406 | What is this on it? 31406 What luck?" |
31406 | What make de cave, anyhow? |
31406 | What makes ye look so down- in- the- mouth, Dutchy? 31406 What makes you think so, Pomp?" |
31406 | What me done? 31406 What men are they?" |
31406 | What more? 31406 What news from my dear girl?--from my two dear girls?" |
31406 | What news? |
31406 | What next, you scoundrel? |
31406 | What rights could n''t you have under the government left to us by Washington? |
31406 | What smoke is that? |
31406 | What soldiers?--Who is this? |
31406 | What sort of a chap was with him? 31406 What sort of a person?" |
31406 | What sort of books_ do_ you like? |
31406 | What then are we to do? |
31406 | What to do? |
31406 | What was in the kittle? |
31406 | What was you thar at the winder fur? |
31406 | What will you say then when I tell you I have been in Bythewood''s house, since I left him? 31406 What''s going on?" |
31406 | What''s that to me? |
31406 | What''s that, you Dutchman? |
31406 | What''s that? |
31406 | What''s the Dutchman done? |
31406 | What''s the matter, Toby? |
31406 | What''s the matter? |
31406 | What''s the odds, so long as they''re men of the true sperrit? |
31406 | What''s the trouble, Carl? |
31406 | What''s use ob all dis trouble on his''count? |
31406 | What''s wantin'', sar? |
31406 | What''s wanting, Carl? |
31406 | What''s your business in town, stranger? |
31406 | What, marm? |
31406 | What, then, is the worst? |
31406 | What, then, must they think? |
31406 | What? |
31406 | What? |
31406 | When did he go? |
31406 | Where am I, then? |
31406 | Where am I? |
31406 | Where are you bound? |
31406 | Where bound? |
31406 | Where did you come from? 31406 Where did you get it?" |
31406 | Where is Aunt Deb? |
31406 | Where is Carl to- night, Toby? |
31406 | Where is Carl? 31406 Where is Salina? |
31406 | Where is Virginia? |
31406 | Where is he? |
31406 | Where is he? |
31406 | Where is the fellow? |
31406 | Where is the master? |
31406 | Where shall I go and borry to- day? |
31406 | Where you from? |
31406 | Where your husband? |
31406 | Where''s Hapgood? 31406 Where''s Sile? |
31406 | Where? 31406 Where?" |
31406 | Which of us goes down into the ravine? |
31406 | Which? |
31406 | Who dar? |
31406 | Who eber knowed you''s sech a powerful smart chil''? |
31406 | Who is it? |
31406 | Who is with you? |
31406 | Who told you to speak? |
31406 | Who warned you? |
31406 | Who will be disappointed? |
31406 | Who''s the fish this time? |
31406 | Who''s there? |
31406 | Who''s_ me_? |
31406 | Who-- what is it? |
31406 | Who? 31406 Who? |
31406 | Why did they take you prisoner? |
31406 | Why do n''t you hurry up this business? |
31406 | Why do n''t you kill and eat him? |
31406 | Why do n''t you speak? |
31406 | Why forbid him? |
31406 | Why go down there at all? |
31406 | Why not send for him? |
31406 | Why should n''t a cullud pusson hab de right to be honest, well as white folks? 31406 Why should we blacks have anything to do with this quarrel?" |
31406 | Why, what is the matter? 31406 Why, what''s the matter, Toby?" |
31406 | Will Salina come too? |
31406 | Will no one save me? 31406 Will you give me a safe conduct?" |
31406 | Will you stay here, or go with us? |
31406 | Would I be any better off there? 31406 Would n''t take the pistol? |
31406 | Would you like some cheese? |
31406 | Would you like to hear something of my story? |
31406 | Would you see her die? |
31406 | Ye pooty sick, sar? |
31406 | You are the fellow that enlisted to save the schoolmaster''s neck, ai n''t you? |
31406 | You de lady of de house? |
31406 | You have heard from them, then? |
31406 | You know they druv me to it, do n''t ye? 31406 You let Cudjo do what him pleases?" |
31406 | You mean to say, if you are licked, then you wo n''t tell? |
31406 | You offer yourself as a substitute, eh, if I will spare his life? |
31406 | You promise to take me to the cave? |
31406 | You put on the tar? |
31406 | You saw her!--where? |
31406 | You see them little saplings? |
31406 | You see vair the rock comes down? 31406 You take it?" |
31406 | You tell now? 31406 You try your chance wid Cudjo agin, miss?" |
31406 | You understand? |
31406 | You vill take me prisoner? |
31406 | You''re partic''larly interested in the young man, hey? |
31406 | You, Miss Jinny? 31406 You? |
31406 | You? 31406 Your heart is a- burnin'', ai n''t it?" |
31406 | ''Fraid your friends will get scorched?" |
31406 | ''How so?'' |
31406 | ''Josh,''says he,''what ye doin''thar? |
31406 | ''Member my gal ye got away? |
31406 | ( she gazed at him affectionately),"you ai n''t in no great danger, be you?" |
31406 | Ai n''t dar nuffin ol''Toby can be a doin''fur ye, jes''to pass away de time?" |
31406 | All ready?" |
31406 | And Pomp-- where all this time was Pomp? |
31406 | And Virginia? |
31406 | And Virginia? |
31406 | And do you remember I vas putting some supper in my pocket ven you took me to show you the cave? |
31406 | And how was his escape from the state to be effected? |
31406 | And if I am unloved, whose fault is it but my own? |
31406 | And if there should be a little fighting to do, will you help do it?" |
31406 | And some pushes just under it? |
31406 | And was not that a human form moving dimly between him and the sky? |
31406 | And whar''s old Aunt Deb?" |
31406 | And what should we leave it for?" |
31406 | And what was this he saw on awaking? |
31406 | And what''s the use of getting away from it, even if we could? |
31406 | And you know, do n''t you, how Pete came by his licking?" |
31406 | Any thing else I can do for ye?" |
31406 | Any whiskey in the house, widder?" |
31406 | Anybody in the house?" |
31406 | Are we going to make a stand here, and see if the loyal part of old Tennessee will rise up and sustain us? |
31406 | Are you hurt?" |
31406 | As he gazed, he became extremely alarmed for the safety of Stackridge and his friends: and where all this time was Carl? |
31406 | Assuredly, they must have fled from it before this time; but whither had they gone? |
31406 | At length Captain Grudd came to him, and taking him aside, said,--"Well, professor, what do you think of the situation?" |
31406 | Betray his good old master to these ruffians? |
31406 | Blood?" |
31406 | Break his promise to Virginia, his oath to Cudjo and Pomp? |
31406 | But I suppose you know so little how you came here that you would find some difficulty in tracing your way to us again?" |
31406 | But Sprowl is to watch, and be ready to shoot me down?" |
31406 | But am I equal to it? |
31406 | But could he abandon his friends? |
31406 | But had he not the morning before given way to a natural impulse, when he seized a club, firmly resolved to oppose force with force? |
31406 | But he rallied quickly, and said,--"He cure Massa Hapgood? |
31406 | But how was he to avoid participating in scenes of violence if he remained in Tennessee? |
31406 | But how was it possible to comply with his demand? |
31406 | But how? |
31406 | But if he could not, why had he remained absent all day? |
31406 | But if you starve and beat them? |
31406 | But just then Ropes shouted at him,--"What ye at thar, Pepperill? |
31406 | But now she began to question within herself,"What would Penn think?" |
31406 | But tell me-- will you not?--how you came to inhabit this dreadful place?" |
31406 | But the corporal? |
31406 | But until I attain to these, may I not use such weapons as I have?" |
31406 | But what next could she do? |
31406 | But what''s the matter with his hands, sergeant?" |
31406 | But where were the giants? |
31406 | But where were they? |
31406 | Ca n''t you loose the rope a little? |
31406 | Can I do anything for you?" |
31406 | Can I, under all circumstances, live up to it? |
31406 | Can you deny it?" |
31406 | Can you find the way?" |
31406 | Can you, Virginia?" |
31406 | Carl was in despair at this mode of treatment, for it rendered escape impossible,--and what would become of Virginia? |
31406 | Carl''s heart gave a great bound; but he answered with an air of indifference,--"To- night?" |
31406 | Dare you?" |
31406 | Dat ar wan''t you, hey?" |
31406 | Did he look like a Union- shrieker?" |
31406 | Did n''t I say,''Is it you?'' |
31406 | Did n''t he corrupt you?" |
31406 | Did n''t he, Dan?" |
31406 | Did ye see him, missis?" |
31406 | Did you ever, in whispering some secret trifle, some all- important, heavenly nothing, just brush the dearest little ear in the world with your lips? |
31406 | Did you not promise your dying brother in your presence to give me my freedom? |
31406 | Do n''t ye know nuffin''?" |
31406 | Do n''t you know me, Wirginie?" |
31406 | Do n''t you know?" |
31406 | Do n''t you see? |
31406 | Do n''t you, Dan?" |
31406 | Do they know where I am?" |
31406 | Do you ask what made me? |
31406 | Do you know whose property this is?" |
31406 | Do you remember how I vas kept quiet ven I vas_ your_ prisoner? |
31406 | Do you think it was taking too much from one who would have robbed me of my soul?" |
31406 | Do you understand?" |
31406 | Do you understand?" |
31406 | Do you, Minny- fish?" |
31406 | Does not the color of a negro''s skin, even in your free states, render him an object of suspicion and hatred? |
31406 | Does the word sound pleasant to your ears? |
31406 | Each gun with its echoes, in those cavernous solitudes, thundered like a whole park of artillery: what, then, was the effect of the volley? |
31406 | For dem''ar white trash, what ye s''pose day knows''bout takin''keer ob a sick gemman like him? |
31406 | For do you know what will happen? |
31406 | For was he not the husband of Salina? |
31406 | Good joke, ai n''t it?" |
31406 | Got his hands tied? |
31406 | Got the schoolmaster fast?" |
31406 | Had Pomp been able to find them? |
31406 | Had Toby forgotten the strain on_ his_ wrists, and the anguish of the thumbs, when this same cruel Lysander had him strung up? |
31406 | Had he really died, and was this unearthly place a vestibule of the infernal regions? |
31406 | Had she been a slave, with a different complexion, although perhaps quite as white, would it have been any the less shameful? |
31406 | Had she recognized her son''s voice? |
31406 | Hapgood?" |
31406 | Has he gone on some errand of yours?" |
31406 | Has n''t Carl come yet?" |
31406 | Has the rule of a hard master seemed grievous to you? |
31406 | Have n''t we come through fire, following you? |
31406 | Have you anything? |
31406 | Have you got your bearings yet, Carl?" |
31406 | Have you lived in this cave ever since?" |
31406 | Have you prayers to make? |
31406 | Have you sighted your man?" |
31406 | He let me down when I was hung up on the rail, and helped me home; and so I says to myself, says I,''Why should n''t I do as much by him?'' |
31406 | He resolved to try it: indeed, all unarmed as he was, what else could he do? |
31406 | Holding the branch with one hand, and gesticulating violently with the other, he exclaimed,--"Who is boss here? |
31406 | How came you here?" |
31406 | How can I depend even upon your oath? |
31406 | How could he confront, with his sensitive spirit, those merciless, coarse men? |
31406 | How could he warn her? |
31406 | How does it happen?" |
31406 | How long have you lived here?" |
31406 | How many can read and write? |
31406 | How many men here have any education? |
31406 | How to circumvent the designs of these men? |
31406 | How''s them Dutchmen?" |
31406 | How, now? |
31406 | I can not hope to change it?" |
31406 | I have committed no crime against your laws; if I have, why not let the laws punish me?" |
31406 | I trust no serious harm has been done, my dear Virginia?" |
31406 | I was just starting out to look for them.--Who comes there?" |
31406 | I''ll have the truth out of him, or I''ll have his life?" |
31406 | I''ve tried that, and what did I get for it?" |
31406 | If he, then, is an enemy, what hope is there? |
31406 | Is it cold? |
31406 | Is it damp? |
31406 | Is it gloomy? |
31406 | Is it love that unites such, or is it only the yearning for love? |
31406 | Is it sunrise yet?" |
31406 | Is n''t she loveliness itself?" |
31406 | Is there fatality in a name?" |
31406 | Is there no law, no justice, but the power of the strongest? |
31406 | It was some time before he could reply to Penn''s impetuous demand-- what had brought him up thither? |
31406 | It will be better for the poor maddened wretch himself to prevent him; do n''t you think so, Penn?" |
31406 | It''s the Dutchman, ai n''t it? |
31406 | Jest look arter my family a little, wo n''t ye? |
31406 | Meanwhile Mr. Villars had called Toby to him, and said, in a low voice,--"Is all right with your prisoner?" |
31406 | No? |
31406 | Not that village loafer, who used to go about the streets dressed so shabbily? |
31406 | Now can you see to take aim?" |
31406 | Now you see that rock?" |
31406 | Now, how is it, Pomp?" |
31406 | Now, if he preaks his part of the pargain, vy should n''t I preak mine?" |
31406 | Now, what do you know to the contrary?" |
31406 | Once more alone with this villain, would not some interesting thing occur? |
31406 | Or might they not all have become entangled in the intricacies of the wilderness until encompassed by the fire and destroyed? |
31406 | Or shall we pity it, rather? |
31406 | Penn gave her a look full of electric tenderness, which seemed to say,"Have not I been with you? |
31406 | Penn interrupted the loose and confused narrative-- Virginia: had he_ seen_ her? |
31406 | Pepperill?" |
31406 | Pepperill?" |
31406 | Remain, hoping that he would yet fulfil his promise? |
31406 | Ropes?" |
31406 | Rough streaks along dar, hey? |
31406 | Say dat ar agin, will ye?" |
31406 | Shall I show you? |
31406 | Shall an old Virginian think less of the honor of his house than an Arab?" |
31406 | Shall we condemn the weakness? |
31406 | Shall we take this old man to our den?" |
31406 | She had been there a dozen times; but could she find it in the night? |
31406 | Since the way is opened for us to live together again, why ca n''t you make up your mind to it, let bygones be bygones, and begin life over again? |
31406 | Sprowl,''says he,''do n''t be scared; it''s only me; wo n''t ye let me in?'' |
31406 | Sprowl?" |
31406 | Stackridge?" |
31406 | Stackridge?" |
31406 | Stackridge?'' |
31406 | Strike a light, and get me some supper, ca n''t you?" |
31406 | Suddenly a voice hailed them:--"Who goes there?" |
31406 | Suddenly he paused: had he heard the words of command whispered? |
31406 | That is not an unreasonable request?" |
31406 | The bright young brow contracted:"Not coming here?" |
31406 | The fatal leap of the terrified horse with his rider is known; but how came Gad on the horse? |
31406 | The grin on the old man''s face was a ghastly one, and his eyes rolled as he stammered forth,--"Miss Jinny-- ye seen Miss Jinny?" |
31406 | The master is out, then? |
31406 | Then Carl stopped again, and said,--"You see that tree?" |
31406 | Then Lysander put the question: Was he prepared to tell all he knew about the fugitives and the cave? |
31406 | Then will you side with your avowed enemies, or with those who are already fighting in your cause without knowing it?" |
31406 | There must be sunshine, and birds, and brooks,--human nature, life, suffering, aspiration, and----""And love?" |
31406 | This is the happiest day I''ve seen----""Ah, what''s happened to- day?" |
31406 | To ask my forgiveness? |
31406 | Toby, why do n''t you bring that bootjack?" |
31406 | Too late? |
31406 | Turn agin''him?" |
31406 | Vill you leave her to die? |
31406 | Villars----?" |
31406 | Villars?" |
31406 | Villars?" |
31406 | Vot shall I do? |
31406 | Was Lysander going alone with him to the mountains? |
31406 | Was ever a hero of romance in such a dismal plight? |
31406 | Was his cry heard? |
31406 | Was it any satisfaction for him to feel that he was thus avenged? |
31406 | Was it not all a dream? |
31406 | Was it not assuming a terrible responsibility to send this rampant sinner to his long account? |
31406 | Was it on the rocks over their heads? |
31406 | Was it some animal, or only a phantom of his feverish brain? |
31406 | Was it supposed that the good old practice of applying torture to enforce confession had long since been done away with? |
31406 | Was it the beauty of the earth and sky that made him shiver with so sudden and sweet a thrill? |
31406 | Was she shocked by this cold, atrocious spirit of calculation? |
31406 | Was this murder he had committed? |
31406 | Wha''ye totin''on him fur?" |
31406 | What are you doing with that nigger?" |
31406 | What are you here for? |
31406 | What chance is there for a man like me?" |
31406 | What could that something be? |
31406 | What do you mean?" |
31406 | What do you say, youngster? |
31406 | What had become of him? |
31406 | What had she fled to the mountain for? |
31406 | What have you got those bracelets on for?" |
31406 | What hinders you?" |
31406 | What if you''d seen dat back when''twas fust cut up? |
31406 | What is going to become of us, if relief does n''t arrive soon? |
31406 | What is the matter?" |
31406 | What is there to be said which he did not say?" |
31406 | What makes you think so?" |
31406 | What right had Mrs. Stackridge to be absent when she came to borrow? |
31406 | What satisfaction can there be in taking the life of so degraded and abject a creature?" |
31406 | What shall I do? |
31406 | What shall I say to them for you?" |
31406 | What should he do? |
31406 | What should she do? |
31406 | What then? |
31406 | What was he trying to lift and drag along the ground? |
31406 | What was the man doing there? |
31406 | What was to be done? |
31406 | What we want to know is, will you join us? |
31406 | What will folks say?" |
31406 | What will you do?" |
31406 | What would the world say? |
31406 | What ye want o''Cudjo?" |
31406 | What you doin''dar? |
31406 | What''s going on?" |
31406 | What''s in this box? |
31406 | What, then, was left him but to perish here, alone, uncared for, unconsoled by a word of love from any human being? |
31406 | What, then, would be his fate? |
31406 | Where am I, anyhow?" |
31406 | Where had he been during those hours of oblivion? |
31406 | Where is Salina?" |
31406 | Where is Toby?" |
31406 | Where is your husband? |
31406 | Where''s Pepperill?" |
31406 | Where''s Sile Ropes?" |
31406 | Where''s your schoolmaster? |
31406 | Whether they will ever be happily united on earth, who can say? |
31406 | Which Toby? |
31406 | Which do you prefer-- the death of a traitor, or the glorious career of a soldier in the confederate army?" |
31406 | Who brought in this fellow?" |
31406 | Who can it be?" |
31406 | Who gib ol''Toby his freedom, an''den''pose to pay him wages? |
31406 | Who had committed the barbarous act? |
31406 | Who ye goin''to mind? |
31406 | Why ai n''t ye to work?'' |
31406 | Why did he not leave the body? |
31406 | Why did n''t you tell me before?" |
31406 | Why do n''t ye bring along that ar brush?" |
31406 | Why do you come to torture me now?" |
31406 | Why do you desert us now?" |
31406 | Why do you follow to persecute us? |
31406 | Why is it I feel such trust that Virginia will be provided for? |
31406 | Why should we care which side destroys the other?" |
31406 | Why was she sitting there, wasting the time in tears and reproaches? |
31406 | Will no one speak for my life?" |
31406 | Will you come?" |
31406 | Will you favor us with a song, Virginia?" |
31406 | Will you go back to the rebels, or make a push with us for the free states? |
31406 | Will you write? |
31406 | With those stones? |
31406 | With what, you wonder? |
31406 | Wo bin ich, mutter?_"But the words were not strange to Carl; neither was the voice strange. |
31406 | Wo n''t he hear?" |
31406 | Wonder if Mis''Stackridge and the childern have gone to the mountains too? |
31406 | Would I wish to see my country submit? |
31406 | Would he be retained a prisoner, like the rest, or delivered over to the mob that sought his life? |
31406 | Would it be safe to move him, Toby?" |
31406 | Would the schoolmaster join them? |
31406 | Would you take a look at it?" |
31406 | Yet the choice was between his life and Penn''s; and had not Pomp done well? |
31406 | You are alive and vell now, ai n''t you?" |
31406 | You feel pretty sound in your witals, do n''t you? |
31406 | You hate a man that you''ve befriended, and that''s turned traitor agin''ye, worse''n you hate an open inemy, do n''t ye? |
31406 | You might almost, I think, decide the question of a man''s Christianity by his answer to this:''What is your feeling towards the negro?'' |
31406 | You offer yourself to be whipped in this old nigger''s place?" |
31406 | You promised Captain Sprowl, did you not, that you would conduct him to the cave?" |
31406 | You remember what that was? |
31406 | You think, maybe, the discussion vould not be greatly to your adwantage?" |
31406 | You understand?" |
31406 | You vill not tell? |
31406 | _ THE OLD CLERGYMAN''S NIGHTGOWN HAS AN ADVENTURE._ Where, then, all this time, was Penn? |
31406 | ai n''t it almost too bad? |
31406 | ai n''t it the schoolmaster?" |
31406 | and Carl? |
31406 | and am I nothing to you?" |
31406 | and the snug little Villars property, did he not covet it? |
31406 | and then what would you do?" |
31406 | and vasn''t I running to find you as vast as ever a vellow could? |
31406 | are you crazy?" |
31406 | are you sure?" |
31406 | but being only a"nigger,"what else could you expect of him? |
31406 | cavalry?" |
31406 | could n''t you find''em? |
31406 | cried Lysander, recoiling into the arms of his men;"what the devil do you mean?" |
31406 | cried the old clergyman, with an energy that startled them,"what are you about to do?" |
31406 | dat you, Cudjo?" |
31406 | dat you? |
31406 | dat you?" |
31406 | did I promise to say all you wished?" |
31406 | did he not?" |
31406 | did n''t him take Massa Hapgood and make him well? |
31406 | do n''t ye know Cudjo? |
31406 | do n''t ye know?" |
31406 | do n''t you''member Toby? |
31406 | forsake Virginia and her father when the toils of villany were tightening around them? |
31406 | g''e know Cudjo? |
31406 | git mad, why do n''t ye?" |
31406 | he answered, in the same language,"is it you?" |
31406 | he called, searching among the prisoners;"is Medad Stackridge here?" |
31406 | how came you here?" |
31406 | how did he come hyar?" |
31406 | is it you? |
31406 | is it you?" |
31406 | laughed Cudjo, getting down on his knees over the opossum;"how ye make dat out, by?" |
31406 | leave Stackridge and his compatriots to their fate, when it might be in his power to forewarn and save them? |
31406 | not Mass''Hapgood?" |
31406 | not mobbed?" |
31406 | or are we going to fight our way over the mountains, and never come back till a Union army comes with us to set things a little to rights here?" |
31406 | or de mornin''arter? |
31406 | or in caverns beneath their feet? |
31406 | or not?" |
31406 | or was he impressed by the awful mystery and silence? |
31406 | or was it the lovely presence at his side, in whom was incarnated, for him, all the beauty, all the light, all the joy of the universe? |
31406 | or, in listening to the syllables of divine nonsense, feel the warm breath and light touch of the magnetic thrilling mouth? |
31406 | roared Lysander,"why do n''t you bring that bootjack?" |
31406 | said Carl,"how came you here?" |
31406 | said Silas, turning angrily on the recumbent figure,"what are you stretching your lazy bones thar fur? |
31406 | said he,''do you think I was in earnest?'' |
31406 | said the agitated girl;"are you able?" |
31406 | she called,"where are you? |
31406 | that old traitor, or me? |
31406 | the Quaker will fight?" |
31406 | tink we''s go trough dat fire like we done trough tudder?" |
31406 | vot for you choke a fellow so?" |
31406 | what are you about?" |
31406 | what are you doing here?" |
31406 | what are you going to do with that old man?" |
31406 | what are you staring for? |
31406 | what can Pomp do? |
31406 | what did he see? |
31406 | what did you say to him through the winder?" |
31406 | what for?" |
31406 | what of her?" |
31406 | what?" |
31406 | where have you been?" |
31406 | who?" |
31406 | why did n''t I know you?" |
31406 | why do n''t you? |
31406 | why in hell you shtop?'' |
31406 | why not?" |
31406 | will you accept my life as an atonement for all I have done amiss? |
31406 | ye hain''t been foolin''us, have ye?" |
31406 | you deny the fact?" |
31406 | you persist?'' |
31406 | you threaten, you villain?'' |
31406 | you will?" |
31406 | you? |
55012 | ''And, Milly,''he''d say,''how do you do now? 55012 ''I hope there an''t nothing happened to Alfred, Miss Harrit?'' |
55012 | ''Member one day your ma came in, and seed me looking out of window, and she says to me,--''Milly, what makes you so dull lately?'' |
55012 | ''What makes you read such bad books?'' 55012 ''Who is God, mammy,''says I,''anyhow?'' |
55012 | ''Why?'' 55012 A runaway?" |
55012 | Ah, Harry, have you sent the letter? |
55012 | Ah,said Harry, to himself,"I see the meaning now, but what does it portend to us?" |
55012 | Alas, child, what form of religion does not? 55012 Am I not gloomy enough? |
55012 | And are you corresponding with all these lovers, Miss Nina? |
55012 | And are you going to chisel it out? |
55012 | And are you really engaged? |
55012 | And can you believe in it, daughter? |
55012 | And did she show you her dresses? |
55012 | And do n''t you think that he will be willing to do something? |
55012 | And do you really propose nothing more to yourself than how to rise in the world? |
55012 | And do you suppose your brother was really serious? |
55012 | And do you think that the master ought to give him what is just and equal, in the way of wages? |
55012 | And do you think you shall be one of them? |
55012 | And do you think,said Clayton,"that''you can set the land on fire, To burn just so high, and no higher?'' |
55012 | And have you looked at the thing in all its relations and consequences? |
55012 | And have you talked with Edward about it? |
55012 | And he should have the legal right to secure education, if he desires it? |
55012 | And her children, too? |
55012 | And his name? |
55012 | And how is Tomtit? |
55012 | And is Clayton Knight Heldebound? |
55012 | And is that all you''ve got to eat, I want to know? |
55012 | And is this the land of Egypt,said Teddy,"that we''re going to?" |
55012 | And must you, then? |
55012 | And ought the slave to have the means of enforcing this right? |
55012 | And pray what is your objection? |
55012 | And pray what sort of a person did you find? |
55012 | And suppose this course brings you into conflict with the law of the state? |
55012 | And the third? |
55012 | And what are_ you_ going to do with yourself in the world, Russel? |
55012 | And what did you eat the day before? |
55012 | And what do you consider its abuses? |
55012 | And what do you think the old Viri Romà ¦ would do in Washington? 55012 And what do your neighbors think about it?" |
55012 | And what have you heard? |
55012 | And what is that, pray? |
55012 | And what points would you alter? |
55012 | And what sort of a list will they make out? |
55012 | And what sort of a support do_ you_ expect to make out of all this? 55012 And what''s that?" |
55012 | And who are you, pray? |
55012 | And who is this Clayton that''s hanging about here? 55012 And who is this other gentleman, Nina?" |
55012 | And why do you know it''s for you? 55012 And you join yourself unto them?" |
55012 | And you think that''s because she cares anything about him? 55012 And you tink dem good times coming, sure''nough?" |
55012 | And you will serve Tom Gordon? |
55012 | And, pray, what_ have_ you heard? 55012 And,"said Clayton, breaking the silence,"just for sport, have you been engaged to me?" |
55012 | And,said his wife,"Ben, just keep clear of Abijah Skinflint''s counter, wo n''t you?" |
55012 | Anne, why in the world do n''t you get in love with somebody? |
55012 | Any letters? |
55012 | Are they really going to form such a church? |
55012 | Are you not ashamed of yourselves? |
55012 | Are you really well? |
55012 | Ask_ who_? |
55012 | Astonished at what? |
55012 | Bless you, chile, who wanted you to pray? 55012 Buried?" |
55012 | But come, Clayton, will you go? 55012 But how was poor Lewis treated? |
55012 | But is this true, Miss Nina? 55012 But what right,"said Nina, with heightened color,"has he to dictate to my servants, or me? |
55012 | But, Anne, is this the way to encourage my confidence? 55012 But, Milly, all this may be very well; but if I could n''t love him?" |
55012 | But, Milly, what shall I do? 55012 But, Tiff, what are_ you_ going to do?" |
55012 | But, do n''t you think,said Nina,"that these things do harm sometimes?" |
55012 | But, my father, why could you not have been a reformer of the system? |
55012 | But, then, if you ca n''t teach them this, what can you teach them? |
55012 | But,said Clayton,"did not the church, in the primitive ages, stand against the whole world in arms? |
55012 | But,said Clayton,"would it not be best to give them a legal ability to obey the Gospel? |
55012 | But,said Harry,"what can we do?" |
55012 | But,said Mrs. Clayton,"are there no people that are faithful?" |
55012 | But,said father Dickson,"is n''t it the right way first to find out our duty and do it, and then leave the result with God? |
55012 | By what right,he said,"does any one pry into what I receive through the post- office? |
55012 | Can I be of any assistance in securing counsel for you? |
55012 | Can I be of service? |
55012 | Can fear of fire make me love? 55012 Certainly, we pious folks know a trick worth two of that, do n''t we?" |
55012 | Child,said Aunt Nesbit,"what do you suppose you can do? |
55012 | Come along, then, ca n''t you? 55012 Come, Harry, do n''t this suit you? |
55012 | Come, now, my little Baltimore oriole, have I caught you? |
55012 | Confound you, why did n''t you stop him? |
55012 | Corn and''tatoes will have der time, and why should n''t I? 55012 Dangerous?" |
55012 | Daniel who? |
55012 | Dead? |
55012 | Did Lord Bacon say that? |
55012 | Did it tell you what the birds say? |
55012 | Did n''t I find you putting up a basket of provisions for those folks you scolded me so for taking in? |
55012 | Did n''t I tell you so? |
55012 | Did n''t I tell you, you dog,said Tom, with an oath,"that you were not to go to any more of those meetings?" |
55012 | Did n''t he talk beautifully? 55012 Did n''t ma go that way?" |
55012 | Did the Spirit tell you that? |
55012 | Did ye ever see a peartier young un? 55012 Did you hear that?" |
55012 | Do I need any one to make me gloomy? |
55012 | Do n''t I look like it, Miss Fanny? 55012 Do n''t remember how many flounces? |
55012 | Do n''t you hear? |
55012 | Do n''t you know''Our Father who art in Heaven''? 55012 Do n''t you see, gentlemen,"said Mr. Clayton,"that such a course is surrendering our liberty of free speech into the hands of a mob? |
55012 | Do n''t you see,said Clayton,"what an admission you are making? |
55012 | Do n''t you sometimes think it a little hard you should have to work so in your old age? |
55012 | Do you feel quite well, now? |
55012 | Do you know,said Clayton,"that that peace alarms me-- that strange, unearthly happiness? |
55012 | Do you know,said Nina, after something of a pause,"that I ca n''t help wondering what you took up with me for? |
55012 | Do you know,said Nina,"people think it''s a dreadful thing to be an abolitionist? |
55012 | Do you know,said she,"it''s such a change coming from New York to live here? |
55012 | Do you mean to apply that language to me? |
55012 | Do you see my wife and your brother? |
55012 | Do you see the grin going round? 55012 Do you see,"he said,"brother, what iniquities you are countenancing? |
55012 | Do you think I''ve got a pair of hidden wings? |
55012 | Do you think so? |
55012 | Do you think the judgment- day really is coming? |
55012 | Do you think they''ll seal me? |
55012 | Do you think we really shall see any? |
55012 | Do you think you can save his life? |
55012 | Do you want anything? |
55012 | Do you want to see him? |
55012 | Do? 55012 Does your foot hurt you much?" |
55012 | Dred, what do you mean? |
55012 | Drunk? 55012 Engaged to three gentlemen, Miss Nina?" |
55012 | Engaged, Miss Nina? |
55012 | Engaged, is she? |
55012 | Excited? |
55012 | Expect? 55012 For God''s sake, what''s the matter, Henry? |
55012 | Friends,said father Dickson, mildly,"by what right do you presume to stop me?" |
55012 | Good law, Miss Nina, whar on earth dese yer come from? 55012 Good?" |
55012 | Hallo, Clayton, all ready? |
55012 | Hallo, Nin, is this you? |
55012 | Hallo, old girl, how are you? |
55012 | Hannibal? |
55012 | Harry, what does make you love her so much? |
55012 | Harry, who is coming? |
55012 | Harry, who told you? |
55012 | Harry,he said,"how came you here?" |
55012 | Has the church ever endeavored to influence the legislature to allow general education? |
55012 | Has there ever been any attempt,said Clayton,"among the Christians of your denominations, to put a stop to this internal slave- trade?" |
55012 | Have I not heard? |
55012 | Have I not seen it all? 55012 Have you any definite plan of what is to be attempted?" |
55012 | Have you been in the swamps long? |
55012 | Have you considered how this will affect her? |
55012 | Have you ever made any movement in the church to prevent the separation of families? |
55012 | Have you ever studied the language of flowers, Nina? |
55012 | Have you got a Bible, here? 55012 He did?" |
55012 | He wo n''t want to be there without us, will he? |
55012 | Hey? |
55012 | Hollo, Nance, how are you? |
55012 | How are they all, Milly? |
55012 | How came she to take a fancy to him? |
55012 | How did the Lord show you this? |
55012 | How did you get into the swamp? |
55012 | How do you like it? 55012 How is Harry?" |
55012 | How is it? |
55012 | How long wilt thou halt between two opinions? 55012 How many?" |
55012 | How now, brother? |
55012 | I declare,said Nina, looking along the avenue,"what''s that? |
55012 | I do, do n''t I, Miss Nina? |
55012 | I han''t, han''t I? |
55012 | I say, Bill, why did n''t you catch her? |
55012 | I say, Fanny,said Teddy, after they had said their prayers, and lain down in their little bed,"has Tiff gone to heaven?" |
55012 | I say, Tiff, where are we? |
55012 | I say, Tiff,_ do_ you think he will come, to- night? |
55012 | I say,said father Bonnie to the trader, in an undertone, as he was walking away,"you got a good cook in your lot, hey?" |
55012 | I suppose,said Clayton,"there''s no such danger in the case of us masters, is there?" |
55012 | I? |
55012 | If de Lord could bear all dat, and love us yet, sha n''t we? 55012 In heaven? |
55012 | In this sense, where is there a free government on earth? 55012 Indeed,"said Clayton;"have you learned, then, to read?" |
55012 | Is Dr. Butler with you? |
55012 | Is he? |
55012 | Is it down under ground? |
55012 | Is it heaven? |
55012 | Is it where ma is gone? |
55012 | Is n''t it, now, Harry? 55012 Is n''t that a beautiful sight?" |
55012 | Is n''t this provoking, now? 55012 Is she that dashing little flirting Miss Gordon that I heard of in New York?" |
55012 | Is that the reason I married you? |
55012 | Is that you, Milly? 55012 Is there any stairs anywhere? |
55012 | Is this Virginia justice? |
55012 | Jim,he said,"did you see Harry go off on my horse?" |
55012 | John, what are you saying to Tiff? |
55012 | Just the way I used to do about you, Harry, is n''t it? |
55012 | Know it? 55012 Know it?" |
55012 | Law, Massa, what on earth is the use of dis yer? |
55012 | Law, Tiff, ye gwine? 55012 Laws, chile, what should you go to Him''bout, den? |
55012 | Laws, laws, Missis, how can Tiff tell? 55012 Laws, missus, dat are hot? |
55012 | Let you alone? 55012 Look here, boys, what works of the devil have you got round here? |
55012 | Lord bress you, Harry, dat you? 55012 Love you? |
55012 | Miss Nina, ca n''t you make some errand to get Harry off the place for two or three days, while Mas''r Tom''s round? |
55012 | Miss Nina, is that right? |
55012 | Miss Nina, what if all three of them should come at once-- or even two of them? |
55012 | Miss Nina, you must excuse me, but I want to ask again, is it right to trifle with the feelings of gentlemen in this way? |
55012 | Mr. Brown, you are a magistrate? |
55012 | Mr. Gordon, how can you talk so? 55012 Must n''t I?" |
55012 | My dear sister,said Clayton, taking her hand, and seating her on the seat in the garden,"have you lost all faith in me?" |
55012 | Nance, you think your old man will whale you, when he gets you? |
55012 | New Orleans is n''t a northern state,humbly interposed his wife,"is it?" |
55012 | Not at all, Mr. Bradshaw; do I look like it? |
55012 | Not? |
55012 | Now will you promise? |
55012 | Now, Harry, was ever such a smart wife as I am? 55012 Now, Tiff, can you say anything?" |
55012 | Now, do n''t you see,said Mr. Knapp,"you have stated just so many reasons why slaves must not learn to read?" |
55012 | Now, what''s the matter with you? 55012 Now, what,"said Cripps,--"Sue, what do you think I gave for these?" |
55012 | Now,said Nina,"shall we set off to- morrow morning?" |
55012 | Of course, he ought to have the legal means of maintaining it? |
55012 | Oh, Dred, is it you? 55012 Oh, I do wrong, do I? |
55012 | Oh, Tiff, how did you get away? |
55012 | Oh, Uncle Tiff, did the angels bring that? |
55012 | Oh, bress de Lord, Miss Fanny, why not? 55012 Oh, that''s it, is it? |
55012 | Oh, when will you take me there, Harry? |
55012 | Oh, you are talking about that affair, yet? |
55012 | Or do they walk to where the sky touches the ground, and get up? 55012 Over you?" |
55012 | Please, Miss Anne, is Master Clayton coming home to- night? |
55012 | Pray what pretty little place is this? |
55012 | Pray, how does he take all this? |
55012 | Pray, who is Aunt Katy? |
55012 | Pray,said Nina,"how are little Miss Fanny, and the children?" |
55012 | Right?--why not? 55012 Scold, Mr. Gordon? |
55012 | See here,he said,"what harm had this man done? |
55012 | Shall we take him along to the minister''s cabin? |
55012 | She? 55012 So you''ve fled to the wilderness?" |
55012 | So, then,said Nina, looking round with a half- laugh and half- blush,"you_ will_ persist?" |
55012 | Some of your beaux, hey? 55012 Speech? |
55012 | Such as what? |
55012 | Such things as what? |
55012 | That is, you mean, when Nina Gordon is the coquette? |
55012 | That''s a very nice book,said Mr. Carson, looking solemnly at Nina;"only, Mrs. Nesbit, an''t you afraid of the infidel principle? |
55012 | Then the slave ought to be able to hold property? |
55012 | Then, of course, he ought to be able to enter suit when this right is violated, and to bear testimony in a court of justice? |
55012 | Then, why in thunder did n''t you stop him? |
55012 | Ther''s plenty of angels there, an''t there? |
55012 | There, now, what do you think of that? 55012 There,"she said, throwing down her banjo, and seating herself on her husband''s knee,"do you know I think you are like white man in the song? |
55012 | They? |
55012 | This is true, I own, dear Anne; but what if you had loved some man that you felt sure I should not like? 55012 Tiff, does marrying father make her our ma?" |
55012 | Tiff, how did you like the sermon? |
55012 | Tiff, what the durned are you howling about? |
55012 | To be sure!--Can''t you understand English, Harry? 55012 Told you all about_ what_?" |
55012 | Tomtit, did n''t I tell you to go and clean the knives? |
55012 | Uncle Tiff, where is the land of Canaan? |
55012 | Uncle,she said, motioning Tiff towards her,"where would they have her buried?" |
55012 | Was I singing? |
55012 | We think,said the first man,"that you are doing harm, violating the laws"--"Have you any warrant from the civil authorities to stop me?" |
55012 | Well, Edward,said Mrs. Clayton,"if you are going to begin with the ministry, why do n''t you go and talk to your Uncle Cushing? |
55012 | Well, Harry, what are you going to do? |
55012 | Well, I rather spect you speak the truth; but, then, what makes father Bonnie stand up for''t? |
55012 | Well, I say,said Jones,"Russel, do n''t you think that''s too bad?" |
55012 | Well, Miss Anne, how do all your plans proceed-- all your benevolences and cares? 55012 Well, Nance, how does she do now?" |
55012 | Well, and the next? |
55012 | Well, aunt, ca n''t she do it to- morrow, or next day, just as well? |
55012 | Well, aunt, then what did the Lord make sweet peas, and roses, and orange- blossoms for? 55012 Well, brother, where have you been so late?" |
55012 | Well, but does n''t Moses say expressly,''Ye shall buy of the heathen round about you''? |
55012 | Well, but what''s the matter with your arm? |
55012 | Well, but, my dear fellow, how can your extra fastidious moral notions stand the idea of her practising this system of deception? |
55012 | Well, do you think your Aunt Nesbit is going to follow your example? |
55012 | Well, how did you introduce your business? |
55012 | Well, how do you think Clayton is going to succeed,said Jones,"if the law is so clearly against him?" |
55012 | Well, how was it with our people in South Carolina? 55012 Well, how will you help yourself, old bird? |
55012 | Well, is n''t he a good man? |
55012 | Well, my dear Anne, suppose it were so, what then? 55012 Well, now, who would have thought it?" |
55012 | Well, perhaps you are engaged to_ him_? |
55012 | Well, supposing I have? 55012 Well, then, Harry, if you feel so bad about it, what makes you pay this money for Miss Nina? |
55012 | Well, then, but as to that other one? |
55012 | Well, then, my dear, what were you engaged to him for? |
55012 | Well, then,said Clayton,"would it not be well to repeal the laws which forbid the slaves to learn to read, and put the Scriptures into their hands? |
55012 | Well, what became of her? |
55012 | Well, what do we have it for? |
55012 | Well, what do you think? |
55012 | Well, what is the matter, then? |
55012 | Well, what then? |
55012 | Well, who does n''t? |
55012 | Well, why do n''t I? 55012 Well, why do n''t you write to Mr. Clayton, and break it all off, if you feel so about it?" |
55012 | Well,said Anne,"do n''t you think it shows a great want of perception?" |
55012 | Well,said Clayton, who felt no disposition to enter into any discussion with Mr. Jekyl,"so you think he is there?" |
55012 | Well,said Clayton,"have you seen, then, what is in me?" |
55012 | Well,said Clayton,"if it''s come to that, that we ca n''t speak and discuss freely in our own state, where are we?" |
55012 | Well,said Clayton,"is n''t it better to be wrought up once in a while, than_ never_ to have any religious feelings? |
55012 | Well,said Nina,"did you notice poor old Tiff, so intent upon getting his children converted? |
55012 | Well,said Old Hundred,"and what would come o''the critturs if I was n''t lazy, I want to know? |
55012 | Well,said Russel, after a short pause,"may be there is; but, after all, Clayton,_ is_ there? |
55012 | Well,said Tom,"what was it? |
55012 | Well,said Uncle John,"perhaps he''ll get set up, to- day-- who knows? |
55012 | Well,said the trader,"but do you think that was from the Lord, the last one that spoke? |
55012 | Went not my spirit with thee? |
55012 | Were you under the impression,said he to Harry,"that this is a legal document?" |
55012 | Whar is we, puppit? |
55012 | What did you have to eat yesterday? |
55012 | What do you ask for your fish? |
55012 | What do you call your best investments, down here,--land, eh? |
55012 | What do you mean by quality preaching, Tiff? |
55012 | What do you mean by that? |
55012 | What do you mean by that? |
55012 | What do you want to make me such trouble for? |
55012 | What does Mr. Clayton expect to be the end of all this? |
55012 | What does she do? 55012 What else did the Spirit tell you?" |
55012 | What have we here? |
55012 | What if they should? |
55012 | What if we do die? 55012 What is it?" |
55012 | What is the Spirit? |
55012 | What makes you think so, aunt? |
55012 | What makes you think so? |
55012 | What may be your future course? |
55012 | What on arth now? |
55012 | What put dat ar in your head, Miss Fanny? |
55012 | What sends him anywhere? |
55012 | What sent him here, now? |
55012 | What shall I read to you, Tiff? 55012 What shall we all do without you? |
55012 | What shall we do for him? |
55012 | What shall we do? 55012 What should I want to live for?" |
55012 | What upon earth,said Uncle John,"do you suppose that last fellow was about, up in the clouds, there? |
55012 | What you doing with those potatoes? |
55012 | What you here for? |
55012 | What''s all this? |
55012 | What''s his name? |
55012 | What''s that? 55012 What''s that?" |
55012 | What''s that? |
55012 | What''s the matter with you, Tiff? |
55012 | What''s the matter, Pomp? |
55012 | What''s the matter? |
55012 | What''s the matter? |
55012 | What''s the matter? |
55012 | What''s this? 55012 What''s this?" |
55012 | What, Nina? |
55012 | What, all? 55012 What, my dear, do n''t you know that I am your husband''s young master? |
55012 | When will Mr. Gordon be here? |
55012 | Where are we, my dear fellow? 55012 Where did you come from?" |
55012 | Where do they live? |
55012 | Where do you live? |
55012 | Where is Jim? |
55012 | Where is he? |
55012 | Where is he? |
55012 | Where is the prophet? |
55012 | Where is your husband? |
55012 | Where upon earth did he pick up those phrases? |
55012 | Where was the text? |
55012 | Where''s the article? 55012 Wherefore art thou red in thine apparel, and thy garments like him that treadeth in the wine- press? |
55012 | Who are the elect? |
55012 | Who are you? |
55012 | Who are you? |
55012 | Who can that be, this time of night? |
55012 | Who do you mean by brain? |
55012 | Who gave it? 55012 Who gave you the right?" |
55012 | Who is he? |
55012 | Who is here, at this time of night? |
55012 | Who is it? |
55012 | Who is that by her? 55012 Who is there?" |
55012 | Who is your mistress? |
55012 | Who the devil cares what you understand? 55012 Who-- I? |
55012 | Who? 55012 Whose?--Harry''s? |
55012 | Why are you afraid to let me preach, this evening? |
55012 | Why because of this? |
55012 | Why ca n''t you hear me, and, if I say anything false, why ca n''t you show me the falsehood of it? 55012 Why could n''t you bring her in?" |
55012 | Why did n''t he live with her on his plantation? |
55012 | Why did n''t you wake me up? 55012 Why do n''t anybody ever teach them?" |
55012 | Why do n''t we blow it up, right off? |
55012 | Why do n''t you ask your_ Father_ to help you? |
55012 | Why do n''t you get a place of your own to stay on? |
55012 | Why do n''t you go back, then? 55012 Why do n''t you laugh?" |
55012 | Why do n''t you teach them to read it, then? |
55012 | Why not, as well as Abraham, the father of the faithful? 55012 Why not, if you told her to?" |
55012 | Why not?--Isn''t all fair in war? 55012 Why so?" |
55012 | Why the devil did n''t you send up to_ my_ house, and get some bacon? 55012 Why, Dulcimer, what''s this?" |
55012 | Why, I believe I told you I did n''t know what to advise, did n''t I? 55012 Why, Jim,"said Tom,"where have you been? |
55012 | Why, Milly, you would n''t have me go to God about_ my_ little foolish affairs? |
55012 | Why, Tomtit, what upon earth is this for? |
55012 | Why, aunt, do you think artificial flowers are sinful? |
55012 | Why, aunt, for pity''s sake, you do n''t pretend that you wish Milly to go back? |
55012 | Why, aunt, what do you know against these folks? 55012 Why, bless you, Milly,"said Harry in sudden surprise,"where are you going?" |
55012 | Why, but, chile, where alive did you get all the money to pay right sudden so? |
55012 | Why, certainly, my dear Miss Gordon; is n''t it right that every one should have his own property? 55012 Why, do n''t you feel afraid, Nina?" |
55012 | Why, do n''t you see? 55012 Why, how do you know it is n''t to make me a summer coat?" |
55012 | Why, of course, it is n''t a thing to my taste; but then, like the old parson, if I love the''little sinner,''what am I to do? 55012 Why, she will be rich, wo n''t she?" |
55012 | Why, what are we coming to? 55012 Why, what are you going to do?" |
55012 | Why, what makes you think so, Harry? |
55012 | Why, what''s the matter?--Don''t you like the study? |
55012 | Why, would n''t you like it, if he were wholly your slave? |
55012 | Why,said Anne, eagerly,"do n''t you think he''ll gain it?" |
55012 | Why,said Clayton,"do you think her mistress would sell her?" |
55012 | Why,said Mrs. Clayton,"do you suppose that my brother will be deterred from doing his duty for fear of personal unpopularity?" |
55012 | Why,said Nina,"do they think the cholera ca n''t come there?" |
55012 | Why,said the other,"do n''t he like the law? |
55012 | Why,''twon''t help de matter to be_ bad_, will it, Harry? 55012 Will they come?" |
55012 | Will you discontinue your labors is this state? |
55012 | Will you take some of this gumbo? |
55012 | With flounces? |
55012 | Wo n''t he come and bring us pretty soon? |
55012 | Wo n''t they come to me? |
55012 | Wo n''t you catch cold, Nina? |
55012 | Would n''t Miss Fanny be so kind as to favor us with a taste of it? |
55012 | Yes-- isn''t it fun? 55012 Yes; why not?" |
55012 | You are not ill, are you? |
55012 | You are, aunt? 55012 You have come, have you, Henry?" |
55012 | You know the signification of a full- blown rose? |
55012 | You know this Old Tiff, Harry? |
55012 | You think, then,said Clayton,"that the slave ought to have a legal right to his family?" |
55012 | You tink folks dat take to lying is using up your business, do n''t ye? |
55012 | _ Q._ Why were you so backward in joining them? |
55012 | ''Cause you hate Tom Gordon, does you want to act just like him?" |
55012 | ''Have you got her a husband?'' |
55012 | ''Is n''t it right,''says he,''that those that plant a vineyard should first eat of the fruit? |
55012 | ''O Lord,''says I,''I give up? |
55012 | ''[ 2]"So, now, brethren, what do you think of dat ar?" |
55012 | --_Ans._''Was not Christ crucified?'' |
55012 | A man that makes a joke of everything at your age, what will he do before he is fifty? |
55012 | After a few moments the door was partly opened, and he heard a sweet voice, saying:--"Let me come to you every day, may I? |
55012 | After all, what is liberty, that people make such a breeze about? |
55012 | Am I not a free man?" |
55012 | Am I not an outcast? |
55012 | An''t he heard de greatest ladies and gen''lemen in de land talk? |
55012 | An''t we got the freest government in the world? |
55012 | An''t you seen him?'' |
55012 | And Carson, drawing his chair close to Nina, asked, in a confidential under- tone,--"Who is that gentleman?" |
55012 | And Lisette sung:--"What are the joys of white man, here, What are his pleasures, say? |
55012 | And Teddy, who always repeated, reverentially, all his sister''s words, said, after her, in a deplorable whimper,"What shall we do?" |
55012 | And did not our Saviour tell us that our prayers and alms should be in secret?" |
55012 | And have we not always been making overtures for reunion-- really humbling ourselves to you, brethren? |
55012 | And how came that to stand? |
55012 | And how was he going to know dat it would kill him? |
55012 | And is Tiff''s brave little man got tired? |
55012 | And said I,''Huldah, has dey killed him?'' |
55012 | And we wo n''t, none of the rest of us, will we? |
55012 | And what do you think he said? |
55012 | And what do you think now?" |
55012 | And what does she see you doing, your wife, or your mother, or sister, that''s in glory? |
55012 | And what have you got in that paper? |
55012 | And what shall be the end thereof?" |
55012 | And what you suppose dey has shepherds fur,''cept de sheeps are all de time running away, and getting into trouble? |
55012 | And what''s the reason that two of the greatest insurrections came from men who read scarcely anything else but the Bible? |
55012 | And what''s the use? |
55012 | And where_ did_ you get all these things?" |
55012 | And while he plays gentleman, who takes care? |
55012 | And yet people say,''You have all you want; why are you not happy?'' |
55012 | And you, too, Lisette?" |
55012 | And, if he were further asked,''What can we do?'' |
55012 | And, so long as there is really no interfering in the way of discipline or control, what harm is done? |
55012 | And, when I humbly say,''Aunt Katy, what_ shall_ we do?'' |
55012 | And, when dey sold my poor Alfred, and shot him, and buried him like a dog, oh, but did n''t my heart burn? |
55012 | And_ did_ you see Aunt Rose in that pink bonnet, with the flowers? |
55012 | Ardaine set out that''we girls''should keep account of our expenses? |
55012 | Are legal examinations anything like searching after truth? |
55012 | Are n''t you ashamed of it, now?" |
55012 | Are n''t you well?" |
55012 | Are they restrained?" |
55012 | Are you fond of trees?" |
55012 | Are you going to have him, or he you-- hey?" |
55012 | Are you going to live for them, or they for you?" |
55012 | Art thou a God that judgest on the earth? |
55012 | Art thou a just God? |
55012 | As the laugh that rose at his last sally died away, he turned to father Dickson, and said:--"What do you think?" |
55012 | At any rate, we loved each other, and why should n''t we take as much comfort as we could? |
55012 | At last, stretching out his hand, he broke forth in passionate prayer:"How long, O Lord, how long? |
55012 | At length he said,"And how will you endeavor to excite the public mind?" |
55012 | Aunt Loo? |
55012 | Bend your neck and ask to be struck again!--won''t you? |
55012 | Besides, I''m happy, and what do I want of any of them? |
55012 | Besides, love of power has always been considered a respectable sin in us men; and why should we denounce a woman for loving her kind of power?" |
55012 | But I wonder, now, what Tom will think of my cutting him out so neatly? |
55012 | But do you suppose it can be possible that a woman of any respectable family can have married a man of this sort?" |
55012 | But how stands it with us, who can not even come into a court to plead?" |
55012 | But how were you pleased, upon the whole, at the camp- meeting?" |
55012 | But no man whips me!--no man touches_ my_ wife!--no man says to me,''Why do ye so?'' |
55012 | But say, Clayton, you live at the fountain- head;--how is the case going?" |
55012 | But then, my dear fellow, do you think you have come to anything really solid with this little Venus of the sea- foam? |
55012 | But this defending a slave- woman will suit him to a T.""She is a nice creature, is n''t she?" |
55012 | But what are we to do with dis yer''un?" |
55012 | But what are you going to do?" |
55012 | But what should he hang gold chains on a tree for?" |
55012 | But what will it be in the end thereof? |
55012 | But who comes there? |
55012 | But who should speak the astonishment and rapture which widened Lisette''s dark eyes, when the watch was produced? |
55012 | But who wants him afterwards?" |
55012 | But why prolong the torture of that scene, or rehearse the struggles, groans, and convulsions? |
55012 | But will your conscience allow you to retain the position of a slave- holder?" |
55012 | But would it follow that the golden rule obliged the lawful possessor not to take it from me? |
55012 | But, bless you, chile, honey, what''s de matter o''yer face?" |
55012 | But, come,--you look wofully tired; have you been riding all night?" |
55012 | But, could you carry your system through your plantation, as well as your house?" |
55012 | But, den, what roads is over the cross run, I want to know? |
55012 | But, if I should lose friends and popularity,_ you_ would love me still, would you not? |
55012 | But, pray, my dear, what part do_ young_ ladies take in all this? |
55012 | But, supposing I should prefer my own choice, after all? |
55012 | But, then, come to the practice of it, and what do you find? |
55012 | But, then, what do you suppose_ we_ ought to do?" |
55012 | By the bye, what do you think of that? |
55012 | Ca n''t see the poor heathen starve, can we? |
55012 | Ca n''t there be now and then a woman sufficient to herself? |
55012 | Ca n''t you give us a synopsis?" |
55012 | Ca n''t you go down? |
55012 | Ca n''t you spare Milly?" |
55012 | Can dungeons, bolts, or bars, confine thee, Or whips thy noble spirit tame?''" |
55012 | Can we help you, there? |
55012 | Can you catch?" |
55012 | Can you fight? |
55012 | Clayton,--what did he? |
55012 | Clayton?'' |
55012 | Come, now, will you cave in?" |
55012 | Come, where''s your text?" |
55012 | Could Dred have possessed himself of those lightnings, what would have stood before him? |
55012 | Could n''t you take your dog, here, and give''em a run? |
55012 | De Gordons is a nice family-- an''t nothing to say agin de Gordons-- but whar was you raised, dat ye did n''t hear''bout de Peytons? |
55012 | Den, if you do n''t understand what people''s a saying to you, any time, you must n''t star, like por white chil''en, and say,''what?'' |
55012 | Devilish glad to see me, an''t you? |
55012 | Dey says,''Come to Christ;''and I says,''Whar is he, any how?'' |
55012 | Dey wanted to get up de wagon for me; but, bless you, says I, what you s''pose de Lord gin us legs for? |
55012 | Did I ever have anything that I did not tell you? |
55012 | Did ever anybody look out of doors, such a pleasant day as this, and want to study? |
55012 | Did he not live here in quietness, tilling the ground in the sweat of his brow? |
55012 | Did he say_ that_ was in the Bible?" |
55012 | Did n''t He hang bleeding three hours, when dey mocked Him, and gave Him vinegar? |
55012 | Did n''t He sweat great drops o''blood in de garden?" |
55012 | Did n''t he have light to see his way out of the state by? |
55012 | Did n''t he have three hundred trained servants?" |
55012 | Did n''t we make a candle of his old dog- kennel? |
55012 | Did n''t we, though?" |
55012 | Did n''t you tell me, if I married you, I should have a nigger to order round, just as I pleased?" |
55012 | Did not Moses refuse to be called the son of Pharaoh''s daughter? |
55012 | Did not he that made them in the womb make us? |
55012 | Did not the same God fashion us in the womb? |
55012 | Did yer bring de medicine?" |
55012 | Did you ever see fire dat would n''t go out when de sun''s shining right in it''s face? |
55012 | Did you ever see her take a pair of gloves or a collar out of a drawer? |
55012 | Did you ever see such a desolate- looking house? |
55012 | Did you ever see such a direful place? |
55012 | Did you see Miss Gordon while he was pleading? |
55012 | Did you think I meditated such an impertinence? |
55012 | Die?--Why not die? |
55012 | Discuss freely? |
55012 | Do I want to sit all primmed up, smiling and smirking, and running to the window to see if my gracious lord is coming? |
55012 | Do n''t everybody make much of you, and do n''t you have everything that you want?'' |
55012 | Do n''t we, boys?" |
55012 | Do n''t you know that I''m mistress of the fortress here-- commander- in- chief and head- physician? |
55012 | Do n''t you mind Miss Nina was reading dat ar de bery last Sunday she come to our place? |
55012 | Do n''t you remember my telling you how happy I felt the first time I heard_ real_ music? |
55012 | Do n''t you remember that jolly, slashing- looking fellow, whom they called Bill Dakin, that came up there with his two dogs? |
55012 | Do n''t you see how the saints walk in white with the Lord, like her? |
55012 | Do n''t you see the beauty of our Lord God upon her? |
55012 | Do n''t you see? |
55012 | Do n''t you think it does?" |
55012 | Do n''t you think men ought to be_ as_ good as we are, any way?" |
55012 | Do n''t you think people are made differently? |
55012 | Do n''t you want to come out? |
55012 | Do n''t you?" |
55012 | Do they not bring with them"_ springing_ and_ germinant_ fulfilments"wherever there is a haughty and oppressive nation, and a"flock of the slaughter?" |
55012 | Do they think broadcloth coats and gold watches can comfort a man for all this?" |
55012 | Do you believe in these things?" |
55012 | Do you hear?" |
55012 | Do you know I always thought I should detest the woman that you should fall in love with? |
55012 | Do you know, Harry, I think I''m just like my pony? |
55012 | Do you know, Harry, he makes me afraid? |
55012 | Do you know, Harry, this always made me angry?" |
55012 | Do you know, Milly, she do n''t seem to know she is selfish? |
55012 | Do you know, friends, I''ve set Tiff up for six weeks, by one word? |
55012 | Do you know, that if he had been coming from_ my_ funeral, it would have been just so?" |
55012 | Do you remember, the first day you came to Canema, that I told you it seemed so sad that we must die? |
55012 | Do you see this?" |
55012 | Do you suppose they are going to let these poor devils, whites, get their bandages off their eyes, that make them so easy to lead now? |
55012 | Do you suppose, now, you''d a let him lend you dat ar money if you had n''t liked him? |
55012 | Do you think he is?" |
55012 | Do you think it would do me any good to go up there? |
55012 | Do you think, Mr. Jekyl, that doing this is doing as I should wish to be done by, if I were in the place of this woman?" |
55012 | Do you want to know what I killed them for? |
55012 | Do_ I_ ever have any chickens, or eggs, or cucumbers? |
55012 | Does not an advocate commit himself to one- sided views of his subject, and habitually ignore all the truth on the other side? |
55012 | Does up shirts well? |
55012 | Does ye s''pose dat I thinks folks has any business to be sitting on der cheers all der life long, and working me, and living on my money? |
55012 | Everything goes just as we want it to-- doesn''t it, now?" |
55012 | God in his providence is now asking the American people, Is the system of slavery, as set forth in the American slave code,_ right_? |
55012 | Good Lord, what earthly harm are we doing? |
55012 | Good law, some on''em for me, is n''t''er?" |
55012 | Gordon?--How do you do?" |
55012 | Had he any right to withhold it? |
55012 | Had he not told the Lord all about it? |
55012 | Had n''t you better come out?" |
55012 | Had the angel been there? |
55012 | Harry, Harry, do n''t you see how it hurts my fingers? |
55012 | Harry, did you mark those men? |
55012 | Has everything dropped out of you, that you ca n''t die-- that you''ll crawl like worms, for the sake of living?" |
55012 | Has he said anything to you about it, father?" |
55012 | Has n''t_ I_ suffered? |
55012 | Has to do something wicked, else I''ll get translated one dese yer days, like''Lijah, and den who''d mas''r have fur to wait on him?" |
55012 | Hast thou not eaten the fat and drunk the sweet with the oppressor, and hid thine eyes from the oppression of thy people? |
55012 | Hast thou not given thy word To save my soul from death? |
55012 | Hath not our cheek been given to the smiter? |
55012 | Hath not the potter power over the clay, to make one lump to honor, and another to dishonor? |
55012 | Hath not the potter power over the clay, to make one lump to honor, and the other to dishonor?" |
55012 | Have n''t I ripped up all my silk dresses and had them colored over, just to economize? |
55012 | Have n''t the least hope of it; wo n''t ever engage to!--So, now, wo n''t you take warning?" |
55012 | Have n''t we power to lead about a sister, a wife?'' |
55012 | Have not_ our_ wives been for a prey, and thou hast not regarded? |
55012 | Have we not been counted as sheep for the slaughter? |
55012 | Have ye buried him?" |
55012 | Have you ever known of their doing anything wicked?" |
55012 | Have you ever seen one, Tiff?" |
55012 | Have you told her how matters stand?" |
55012 | He thinks this is all right, and why need we set ourselves all up? |
55012 | He went on singing:--"Can a mother''s tender care Cease toward the child she bare? |
55012 | Hear this, ye that swallow up the needy, and make the poor of the land to fail, saying, When will the new moon be gone, that we may sell corn? |
55012 | Here?--Oh, look!--What do you think of this scarf? |
55012 | Hey?" |
55012 | His text was,''He that spared not his own Son, but freely delivered him up for us all, how shall he not with him freely give us all things?'' |
55012 | How am I to advise her? |
55012 | How are you, my fine fellow?" |
55012 | How came he here? |
55012 | How can you want to trouble me so?" |
55012 | How could a man feel it, and not be ennobled? |
55012 | How dared you come here, when you know you risk your life?" |
55012 | How dared you-- how_ could_ you be so imprudent? |
55012 | How did it come about?" |
55012 | How did you begin? |
55012 | How did you find it out?" |
55012 | How do I know? |
55012 | How do they look to you now, with that blessed moon shining down upon you? |
55012 | How do you know there is any heaven, anyhow?" |
55012 | How does she look?" |
55012 | How happy_ we_ are!--an''t we, Harry?" |
55012 | How is Miss Anne?" |
55012 | How is ye, lamb? |
55012 | How long wilt thou cast in thy lot with the oppressors of Israel, who say unto thee,''Bow down that we may walk over thee''? |
55012 | How long wilt thou endure? |
55012 | How long, O Lord, dost thou not judge and avenge? |
55012 | How many white boys did you ever see would take de trouble for to teach theirselves to read? |
55012 | How now, Dulcimer? |
55012 | How old is she? |
55012 | How will you answer for it to God?" |
55012 | How''s Sue?" |
55012 | I believe you did not get a letter which I wrote you a few days ago, did you?" |
55012 | I have positively broken all connection with Mr. Carson; I have broken with another one, and I wish"--"To break with me?" |
55012 | I knew it would be very well; but say, Clayton, what do you want to get up a petition on_ that_ point for? |
55012 | I like to know what you knows''bout de old Virginny fam''lies? |
55012 | I read a story, once, about Undine; and, do you know, Harry, I think I feel just as Undine did, when she felt her soul coming in her?" |
55012 | I say, you Nin,"turning round,"why do n''t you offer a fellow some supper? |
55012 | I suppose you would n''t object, Milly? |
55012 | I was a little thing, playing round; and I used to come up to her, dancing, and saying,--"''Mammy, what makes you groan so? |
55012 | I was vexed, and said,''And, pray, what''s the harm if she did read it? |
55012 | I wonder why the legislature, or somebody, do n''t have schools, as they do up in New York State? |
55012 | I would n''t mind taking off something of the price-- that''s fair, an''t it?" |
55012 | I''m saying, all the while, to myself,''Is that man going to be my master?'' |
55012 | I''m sure he ought to have some comfort of us, for he worked hard enough for us-- didn''t you, Uncle Tiff?" |
55012 | If a northern abolitionist comes at me now, I shake the Bible at him, and say,''Nay, but, oh man, who art thou that repliest against God?'' |
55012 | If religion be anything, must it not take the lead of society, and be its sovereign and teacher, and not its slave?" |
55012 | If the Bible does justify slavery, why do n''t they teach the slave to read it? |
55012 | If they bruise our head, we can sting their heels? |
55012 | If they could, when they come rustling together in the bag, would n''t there be a muss?" |
55012 | If they do n''t treat you well, come back Milly; will you?" |
55012 | If they had a right to rise up for their oppressions, shall they condemn us? |
55012 | If we show talent and smartness, we hear some one say, aside,''It''s rather a pity, is n''t it?'' |
55012 | Infernal dog!--I say, Cuff, cut him up!--Why do n''t you go at him?--Give it to him!--What you waiting for?" |
55012 | Is everything to be for you in the world, you little good- for- nothing?" |
55012 | Is it anything for me?" |
55012 | Is it going to make me good for people to sit up so stiff, and tell me they always knew I was a fool, and a flirt, and all that? |
55012 | Is it possible that you keep nothing locked up here?" |
55012 | Is it so desirable, that you will directly establish it over broad regions, where, till now, you have solemnly forbidden it to enter? |
55012 | Is n''t he a handsome little rogue?" |
55012 | Is n''t it charming of him? |
55012 | Is n''t it horrid, Harry? |
55012 | Is n''t it lovely?" |
55012 | Is n''t it much the same as being engaged to a cloud, or a butterfly? |
55012 | Is n''t it too bad? |
55012 | Is n''t she a beauty? |
55012 | Is n''t she good? |
55012 | Is n''t that a master''s mark?" |
55012 | Is n''t that bunch of silver wheat lovely? |
55012 | Is n''t there any church near you to which he can be called? |
55012 | Is n''t there anything in heroism and self- sacrifice?" |
55012 | Is n''t there room enough under the sky? |
55012 | Is not that the only way in which many laws are repealed? |
55012 | Is she going to be married? |
55012 | Is she not one of the sort that must have a constant round of company and excitement to keep her in spirits?" |
55012 | Is there any that regardeth our blood? |
55012 | Is there any that stirreth himself up for justice? |
55012 | Is there any use in teaching the sanctity of marriage, unless you obtain for husbands and wives the legal right to live faithful to each other? |
55012 | Is this a people prepared for the Lord? |
55012 | Is this hydra- headed monster, the mob, to be our governor?" |
55012 | Is this religion? |
55012 | Is this what people mean by conversion? |
55012 | Is we going to be shut out of communion,''cause we holds niggers? |
55012 | Is ye''freshed?" |
55012 | It seems to me it is getting a little cold here, is n''t it?" |
55012 | It was warm, but the strength was all gone out on''t; and,''Oh,''I thought,''ye poor thing, how could I ever have hated ye so?'' |
55012 | It''s asleep, is n''t it?" |
55012 | It''s just the sperits is low; and, laws, why should n''t dey be?" |
55012 | It''s perfectly lovely!--Well, do you believe, the very night I wore it to the opera, I got engaged?" |
55012 | It''s sweet to kiss the rod, is n''t it? |
55012 | It_ is_, as they told you, a_ finality_; and do n''t you see how they make everything in the Union bend to it? |
55012 | Les Cartes,$ 450?" |
55012 | Let folks har ye;''cause what''s de use of having a nigger, and nobody knowing it?" |
55012 | Let me see-- where are they?" |
55012 | Lord bless you, you do n''t think Madam Gordon is a dog to bite you, do you? |
55012 | Lord, ye por dear lamb, ca n''t folks see ye''s a born lady, with yer white, little hands? |
55012 | Milly began the well- known hymn:"And must this feeble body fail, And must it faint and die? |
55012 | Miss Nina''s allers good to ye, an''t she? |
55012 | Mother!--mother!--mother!--why do n''t you come to me?" |
55012 | Mr. Clayton and all?" |
55012 | Mr. Clayton, if it were proper for your fathers to fight and shed blood for the oppression that came upon them, why is n''t it right for us? |
55012 | Mr. Jekyl paused, and, as Clayton still sat silent, he went on:"There was no will, I presume?" |
55012 | Must I be carried to the skies On flowery beds of ease, While others fought to win the prize, And sailed through bloody seas? |
55012 | Nesbit?" |
55012 | Nina,"said he, turning to her, with a tremendous oath,"why do n''t you introduce me? |
55012 | Nothing like coaxing; is there, Tom?" |
55012 | Now what you think of dat ar? |
55012 | Now, Dr. Packthread, what efforts has the church as yet made to reform these abuses of slavery?" |
55012 | Now, are n''t these perfectly lovely? |
55012 | Now, boy,"he said, fixing his dark and evil eye upon Harry,"you did n''t know that your master was hearing you, did you? |
55012 | Now, chile, did n''t I tell you so? |
55012 | Now, did you?" |
55012 | Now, may I ask you to go to him, and make inquiries, and let me know? |
55012 | Now, see here: if everything is decreed, how am I going to help myself?" |
55012 | Now, what do you make of that? |
55012 | Now, when you see what a poor hoax human nature is, what''s the use of bothering? |
55012 | Now, you see, I''s seen gen''lemen handsome, and rich, and right pleasant, too, dat de people would n''t want at all;''cause why? |
55012 | Oh, brethren, is we de fust dat''s been took to de judgment- seat? |
55012 | Oh, brethren, who did it afore us? |
55012 | Oh, do tell me,_ is_ he dead, is he?" |
55012 | Oh, is there anything in heaven or earth for the despair of such hours? |
55012 | Oh, sinner, what will become of you in that day? |
55012 | Others may say to them,"Why, what is it to you? |
55012 | Ought we to take counsel of flesh and blood in matters like these?" |
55012 | Our place( you never were there, were you?) |
55012 | Picking up bones, slop, and swill, round the nigger huts? |
55012 | Pray, what does sister Anne say to all this? |
55012 | Preach us a sermon, now, ca n''t you? |
55012 | Say, Harry, do n''t you suppose she will let me come and look at her things?" |
55012 | Say, poor sinner, lov''st thou me?" |
55012 | Say, poor sinner, lov''st thou me?" |
55012 | Says I,''Jim, do n''t you think they''ll want you to help the music there, to- night?'' |
55012 | See here; have you noticed this article in the_ Trumpet of Liberty_?" |
55012 | Seems to be a gentlemanly good fellow, does n''t he?" |
55012 | Shall not the Red Sea be divided? |
55012 | Shall not thy soul be avenged on such a nation as this? |
55012 | Shall the axe magnify itself against him that lifteth it?" |
55012 | Shall they, therefore, empty their net, and not spare continually to slay the nations? |
55012 | Shall we commit the treason of reading over his shoulder? |
55012 | She did? |
55012 | She faintly said, as she disengaged herself,--"Tom, is it you?" |
55012 | She was n''t like Aunt Nesbit, was she, Milly?" |
55012 | She''s a good housekeeper, is n''t she, Harry? |
55012 | Since you have separated from us, what have we done? |
55012 | Sinners, will not this suffice?" |
55012 | So that poor woman''s gone, at last? |
55012 | So what can one do, you know? |
55012 | So, this is the good place he found for you, is it?" |
55012 | So, what can they do?" |
55012 | Some like books, and some like things; do n''t you think so?" |
55012 | Suppose I were a robber, and had possession of your property? |
55012 | Supposing I''m not good!--what''s to make me good? |
55012 | Supposing we have n''t?" |
55012 | Tell me,"continued he, still holding her on his knee,"which of them is it, Nin?--which is the favored one?" |
55012 | Tell you, Miss Nina; why don''you let Harry carry your letter over? |
55012 | The Lord shall stretch out upon it the line of confusion, and the stones of emptiness? |
55012 | The more Miss Nina has liked me, the less her husband may like me; do n''t you know that?" |
55012 | The officers are now recruiting: Why will you in sin persist, Or waste your time in vain disputing? |
55012 | The poor flowers droop their leaves, and look at me reproachfully, as if they said,''You did n''t want us-- why could n''t you have left us alone?''" |
55012 | The simple point is,_ did_ the man exceed his legal power? |
55012 | The thing is a fixed fact, and why should n''t I climb up on it, as well as everybody else?" |
55012 | The words were the commencement of a wild camp- meeting hymn, much in vogue in those parts:--"Brethren, do n''t you hear the sound? |
55012 | Then, we have all the family blood and the family pride; and what to do with it? |
55012 | There was an excited flash in her eyes, but she said, calmly,--"Have the gentlemen business with me?" |
55012 | There, I think he was, too,--don''t you? |
55012 | There, now, help yourself, wo n''t you? |
55012 | They eat and wipe their mouth, and say,''What have I done?'' |
55012 | They read Scripture, do n''t they? |
55012 | Think what spirit dwells within thee; Think what Father''s smiles are thine; Think that Jesus died to win thee; Child of heaven, wilt thou repine?" |
55012 | This is water, is n''t it, that you have been giving me?" |
55012 | This, that is glorious in his apparel, travelling in the greatness of his strength?" |
55012 | Thou, O Lord, art our Father, our Redeemer; thy ways are everlasting-- where is thy zeal and thy strength, and the sounding of thy bowels towards us? |
55012 | Tiff, you there?" |
55012 | Titmarsh?" |
55012 | Titmarsh?" |
55012 | To what end is it? |
55012 | To what end shall it be for_ you_? |
55012 | Wan''t dat better dan if I''d killed her? |
55012 | Was any such thing done or attempted? |
55012 | Was ever such convenient law business? |
55012 | Was he not peaceable? |
55012 | Was it not his duty to try every measure, however apparently hopeless? |
55012 | Was n''t it noble?" |
55012 | Was not the world wide enough? |
55012 | Was she pretty?" |
55012 | We are not going to be priest- ridden, are we, boys?" |
55012 | Well, do you know, I almost worship Livy? |
55012 | Well, had not your people clothes enough, and food enough? |
55012 | Well, now, do you know I am in the best spirits in the world, now that I''ve got this thing off my mind, and out of that desolate house? |
55012 | Well, now, that seems very bad of me, do n''t it?" |
55012 | Well, what''s the consequence? |
55012 | Were n''t you sent with some message?" |
55012 | Whar shall I find him? |
55012 | Whar shall I find him?" |
55012 | What about those beaux of hers? |
55012 | What are the means of grace they use there? |
55012 | What business have you passing strictures reflecting on the conduct of gentlemen of family? |
55012 | What could he do? |
55012 | What could show more plainly the utter inefficiency of the past act of the Assembly, and the necessity of adopting some measures more efficient? |
55012 | What did you do?" |
55012 | What do we want to send our girls there, to get fipenny- bit ideas? |
55012 | What do you find to interest yourself in?" |
55012 | What do you say to Moses?" |
55012 | What do you suppose she could be got for? |
55012 | What do you suppose the reason is that good people are generally so stupid?" |
55012 | What do you suppose these men care about the poor whites, and the ruin of the state, and all that? |
55012 | What do you think of it? |
55012 | What do you think? |
55012 | What do you want to hear?" |
55012 | What does he let it be so for?" |
55012 | What does she say? |
55012 | What does the rattlesnake do? |
55012 | What does the wild horse do? |
55012 | What does your Declaration say? |
55012 | What else do they make laws for?" |
55012 | What goes wrong? |
55012 | What great matter is that? |
55012 | What have you been talking to that dreadful man about? |
55012 | What have you got to say?" |
55012 | What if he should be? |
55012 | What is it to me what all these old empires have been, a hundred years ago? |
55012 | What is the reason, when we get down south, here, everything seems to be going to destruction, so? |
55012 | What must he think of me?" |
55012 | What on earth could make me think I could tolerate that man?" |
55012 | What purpose will it serve, except to unfit them for their inevitable condition-- to make them discontented and unhappy?" |
55012 | What set him on in his course? |
55012 | What shall we make of it? |
55012 | What should I have done without you? |
55012 | What should she? |
55012 | What should you know of girls''things? |
55012 | What should you want me to see trouble for?" |
55012 | What sort of a figure do you think Regulus, or Quintus Curtius, or Mucius Scà ¦ vola, would make there?" |
55012 | What sort of a system must this be, that requires such a course to sustain it?" |
55012 | What sort of converts are those who are not willing to hear the truth on every subject? |
55012 | What sort of missionary institutions are the great trading- marts, where they sell men and women? |
55012 | What then?" |
55012 | What was he, that the Presbyterian Church should be divided and hindered for him? |
55012 | What would you think, if a man''s house were on fire, and he should sit praying the Lord that in his mysterious providence he would put it out?" |
55012 | What''s dat to me what I is here?--Shan''t I reign with de Lord Jesus?" |
55012 | What''s the consequence? |
55012 | What''s the matter with the law?" |
55012 | What''s the matter? |
55012 | What''s the use? |
55012 | What''s we to do now?" |
55012 | What-- what am I to understand by this?" |
55012 | What?" |
55012 | What_ will_ you do? |
55012 | When he had finished, she said to him,--"Mr. Jekyl, I understand you are an elder in the church; is that true?" |
55012 | When he was asked, a day or two after,''If it was possible that he could see his master and family murdered, who had treated him so kindly?'' |
55012 | When will the case be called?" |
55012 | When wilt thou arise to shake terribly the earth, that the desire of all nations may come? |
55012 | Where is he?" |
55012 | Where is the durned nigger? |
55012 | Where''d dem horses a been now, if I had been one of your highfelutin sort, always driving round? |
55012 | Where''d dey a been, and what would dey a been, hey? |
55012 | Where''s Hark?" |
55012 | Wherefore forgettest thou us for ever, and forsakest us so long a time? |
55012 | Wherefore lookest thou upon them that deal treacherously, and holdest thy tongue when the wicked devoureth the man that is more righteous than he? |
55012 | Whether the question we have been accustomed, for a few years past, to put to candidates for admission among us, namely, Are you an abolitionist? |
55012 | Which is the way to that Belleville plantation? |
55012 | Who did you suppose? |
55012 | Who did you think it was? |
55012 | Who does not thrill at those words of the Marsellaise:--''O Liberty, can men resign thee, Once having felt thy generous flame? |
55012 | Who ever thought of understanding the mingled wail and roar of the Marseillaise? |
55012 | Who have you got to back you? |
55012 | Who have you talked with?" |
55012 | Who is there in this great nation that is not pledged against us? |
55012 | Who is weak, and they are not weak? |
55012 | Who knows what he''ll be saying and doing to Lisette while I am gone? |
55012 | Who the devil cares? |
55012 | Who wants to see hosses all skin and bone? |
55012 | Who will help you?" |
55012 | Who would not cry_ Amen_, if we were dragged out and hung like dogs? |
55012 | Why am I the last one to know all this? |
55012 | Why am I to hear it first from reports, and every way but from you? |
55012 | Why ca n''t she come over here, and live with me? |
55012 | Why ca n''t there be some such thing here?" |
55012 | Why ca n''t you send Aunt Katy?" |
55012 | Why could n''t he turn''em off before I saw''em? |
55012 | Why could n''t it be so?" |
55012 | Why could n''t she come over herself, and comfort an old fellow''s heart? |
55012 | Why did n''t they keep to them? |
55012 | Why did n''t you send up for some ham, and some meal? |
55012 | Why did they make slaves of us? |
55012 | Why do n''t you cut it?" |
55012 | Why do n''t you get up one to prevent the separation of families? |
55012 | Why do n''t you laugh, Harry?" |
55012 | Why do n''t you rejoice as I do?" |
55012 | Why do n''t you tell her all about it?" |
55012 | Why do n''t you_ take_ him yourself, then? |
55012 | Why have they sent the hunters upon him? |
55012 | Why is it things are made so beautiful, if we must die?" |
55012 | Why not I, as well as another man?" |
55012 | Why not? |
55012 | Why not?" |
55012 | Why not?" |
55012 | Why should he, protected by the express words of legal decision? |
55012 | Why should n''t I? |
55012 | Why should n''t I? |
55012 | Why should n''t they? |
55012 | Why should you find fault with me? |
55012 | Why should you seek to disenchant, if I_ can_ be enchanted?" |
55012 | Why sleepest thou, O Lord? |
55012 | Why withdrawest thou thy hand? |
55012 | Why, chile, would you turn against Miss Nina? |
55012 | Why, dese yer por white folks, did yer ever mind der settin''down? |
55012 | Why, is it not plain enough to any reader of the Bible, how the apostles talked to the slaves? |
55012 | Why, just look at the history of the insurrection that very nearly cut off the whole city of Charleston: what sort of men were those who got it up? |
55012 | Why, laws, do n''t you know He''s de good shepherd? |
55012 | Why, old Gen''al Peyton, did n''t he use to ride with six black horses afore him, as if he''d been a king? |
55012 | Why, then, had Clayton, who always unreservedly corresponded with his sister, not kept her apprised of his gradual attachment to Nina? |
55012 | Why, what harm had dey done him, any way? |
55012 | Will he, boys?" |
55012 | Will it do to give them the further advantages of education and facilities of communication? |
55012 | Will not the Lord be avenged on such a people as this? |
55012 | Will ye kill, and steal, and commit adultery, and swear falsely, and come and stand before_ me_, saith the Lord? |
55012 | Will you settle down on your plantation, and raise cotton and sell niggers? |
55012 | Will you take the principle that everything is to be let alone now about which the apostles did n''t preach directly?" |
55012 | Will you wear a bowie- knife and pistol, and shoot every fellow down that comes at you?" |
55012 | Wilt thou hold thy peace for all these things, and afflict us very sore?" |
55012 | Wilt thou hold thy peace forever? |
55012 | Wilt thou not avenge thine own elect, that cry unto thee day and night? |
55012 | Wilt thou not judge between us and our enemies? |
55012 | Wilt thou not visit for these things, O Lord? |
55012 | With a waggish expression from the corner of his downcast eyes, he sung,--"Oh, mas''r is often absent-- do you know where he goes? |
55012 | Would I have treated you so? |
55012 | Would he devote that sacred head For such a wretch as I?" |
55012 | Would n''t it be funny? |
55012 | Would n''t you like to take a ride with me?" |
55012 | Would you want to tell me at once? |
55012 | Would_ I_ do that?" |
55012 | Yes, what does the judge say, in this letter? |
55012 | You are satisfied, are you not, Edward?" |
55012 | You are tired of keeping accounts, are you, with me to spend the money? |
55012 | You call dat being a Christian?'' |
55012 | You have chosen her from seeing her brilliancy in society; but, after all, can you make her happy in the dull routine of a commonplace life? |
55012 | You look me in the face and tell me dat ar? |
55012 | You wo n''t take my orders, wo n''t you? |
55012 | You''ll believe it now, wo n''t you? |
55012 | You''re not one of the people that are ashamed of their work, are you, Uncle Tiff? |
55012 | _ Are_ you really engaged?" |
55012 | _ Ca n''t_ you save him?" |
55012 | _ Ques._''Do you not find yourself mistaken now?'' |
55012 | _ Question._''What do you mean by the Spirit?'' |
55012 | _ Will_ you fight? |
55012 | and did my Saviour bleed, And did my Sovereign die? |
55012 | and did n''t we give him a suit to keep him warm on the road? |
55012 | and gwine to take your chil''en? |
55012 | and why do n''t you do the other? |
55012 | and why have n''t you done that? |
55012 | and why_ do_ you do something else?'' |
55012 | are these all your children, Milly?" |
55012 | bress your soul, did n''t I?" |
55012 | cried one of the men, after her,"where are you going to? |
55012 | dat''s been scourged, and died in torments? |
55012 | did you ever see a fire in the woods? |
55012 | do n''t you suppose I''s got eyes? |
55012 | have n''t I borne this yoke long enough?" |
55012 | ho!--Has it?" |
55012 | how came you ever to be my mother''s sister?" |
55012 | how can you? |
55012 | how long? |
55012 | is n''t he mean?" |
55012 | is n''t that a horse? |
55012 | is that all?" |
55012 | it has come nigh_ thee_, has it? |
55012 | my lord Lofty? |
55012 | or any ladder to get up by?" |
55012 | or to interfere with any of our arrangements here?" |
55012 | said Fanny,"down through the ground?" |
55012 | said Harry to himself;"why should I try to teach her anything?" |
55012 | said Mr. Carson,"you do?" |
55012 | said Mr. Jekyl, elevating his eyebrows,"what''s that?" |
55012 | said Nina, catching at his sleeve as he was going out,"come back again, wo n''t you? |
55012 | said Nina, quickly,--"what?" |
55012 | said Old Hundred;"dey''s Crippses; and I like to know who ever hearn of de Crippses? |
55012 | said Tiff, turning over;"why, bress yer sweet eyes, how does yer do, dis morning? |
55012 | said Tom;"who cares whether it is right or not? |
55012 | said the other,"what is life? |
55012 | says she,''Milly, have n''t you heard dat Alfred''s dead?'' |
55012 | says she;''why not? |
55012 | she said, running towards her with eagerness,"what is the matter?" |
55012 | shelling out there, are they? |
55012 | that we may buy the poor for silver, and the needy for a pair of shoes? |
55012 | what makes yer run so fast, and leave yer missus behind ye? |
55012 | what shall we do?" |
55012 | what you going to_ him_ for?" |
55012 | what''s a fellow to do? |
55012 | what''s dat ar?" |
55012 | what''s de matter of you?'' |
55012 | what''s the matter? |
55012 | what''s the use? |
55012 | where is he?" |
55012 | who is offended, and they burn not?" |
55012 | who knew it was so hot?" |
55012 | who''s been a hurting of it?" |
55012 | will you, indeed?" |
55012 | you are, hey? |