Questions

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

identifier question
52216But how does this ice bank up? 52216 What is it that causes this phenomenon?
52216Prestwich quotes Daubuisson as having seen the shaft of the mine lined with ice to a depth of 80 toises( 144 meters?).
52216The freezing talus is situated at the foot of Tussey Mountain: it is big, and is composed of small sandstone(?)
52216The temperature of the Recca was then at 0 °; during the summer, the temperature of the water rises to 27 °(?).
42314And how did Penelope explain the mystery?
42314How much do you want?
42314How now, Caudal?
42314How shall we have them?
42314Loolowcan, my lad, my experienced guide, cur nesika moosum; where sleep we?
42314Why did n''t the old fool drop his wampum,--shell out, as one might say,--and make tracks?
42314''Dare you go to the caves where my treasures are hid?''
42314And always the question was,''How may I put hiaqua in my purse?''
42314Are all of the glaciers that flow from the mountain wasting away?
42314But where can aught, save firs with ostrich digestion, grow on these rough, forest- clad shoulders?
42314Every word of Tamanoüs had thus far proved veritable; but might there not be a bitter deceit at the last?
42314Had Tamanoüs been revealing to another the great secret?
42314Had Tamanoüs been widely at work in that eventful night?--or had the spiritual change the old man felt affected his views of the outer world?
42314I lapped,--an excellent test of pluck in the days of Gideon son of Barak;--and why?
42314If mortal can gain the thoughts of immortality, is not his earthly destiny achieved?
42314If we find this to be the case, what climatic changes does it indicate?
42314Is this a rebuff?
42314Need I say that the grouse was admirable, that everything was delicious, and the Confucian weed first chop?
42314That flame just glimmering over the tree- tops, was it a camp- fire of friend or foe?
42314This boon of fire,--what wonder that men devised a Prometheus greatest of demigods as its discoverer?
42314Was there another searcher in the forest, and a bolder than he?
42314What cloud, piled massive on the horizon, could cast an image so sharp in outline, so full of vigorous detail of surface?
42314What was to be done?
42314When will he come down, down, down, Down to the salmon- pot and me?''
42314Why so, sweet fountain, which I may name Hippocrene, since hoofs of Klale have caused me thy discovery?
42314said I, baptizing him by the name of the part that saved his life;"canst thou follow toward fodder?"
42314what could campaigners do without thy fatness, thy leanness, thy saltness, thy portableness?"
34192Are you going?
34192But how,the person addressed may retort,"can a mass which you assume to be viscous exist under similar conditions?
34192Can the pressure produce the cleavage?
34192How,I have asked,"can the oblique structure persist across the lines of greatest differential motion throughout the length of the glacier?"
34192How,demands the antagonist of the sliding theory,"can a secondary glacier exist upon so steep a slope?
34192After twelve hours we find the stake fifteen inches distant from its first position: I would ask Mr. Thomson how did it get there?
34192And how can the veins run, as they are admitted to do,_ across the lines of maximum sliding_ from their origin throughout the glacier to its end?
34192But what is it which thus moves?
34192Can it be doubted that this Savoyard priest had a premonition of the Conservation of Force?
34192Can it be supposed that the particles of ice execute a motion of this kind?
34192Can it be that the superior exposure is more favourable to the formation of the magnetic oxide of iron?
34192Can it be then that the ice exhibits a similar deportment?
34192Does not all this sound more like a fairy tale than the sober conclusions of science?
34192Had not their motion through the air something to do with the shape of these hailstones?
34192Has it been liquefied and re- frozen?
34192He asks himself, what will be the effect of pressure upon a mass containing such plates confusedly mixed up in it?
34192How are the moraines to be accounted for?
34192How have the blocks vanished that once loaded the moraines near the Tacul?
34192How many inches are there in 192,000 miles?
34192How, in fine, does the end of a glacier become its end?
34192I asked myself why I deviated from my original intention?
34192I turned to Bennen, and said,"Shall we try the Jungfrau?"
34192I was in exceedingly good condition-- could I not reach the summit alone?
34192If it be viscous, what prevents it from rolling down?"
34192If sixty steps cost an hour, what would be the cost of two hundred?
34192Imagine a wide strand covered by a tide which holds such powder in suspension:[B] how will it sink?
34192Is it meant that the molecules composing these sensible particles have re- arranged themselves?
34192Is it meant that these particles, each taken as a whole, were re- arranged after deposition?
34192Might not a solid rock by ages of pressure be folded as above?
34192Nature was dumb, but the question occurred,"Had she been addressed in the proper language?"
34192Professor Forbes states and answers the question,"How far a glacier is to be regarded as a plastic mass?"
34192The ancients had their spheral melodies, but have not we ours, which only want a sense sufficiently refined to hear them?
34192The question reminds one of the poet''s answer when asked whence was the Rhodora:--"Why wert thou there, O rival of the rose?
34192The question then was, supposing the two beams to be equal when the tube was filled with air, will the exhausting of the tube disturb the equality?
34192Was it necessarily softer than it is at present?
34192We ask ourselves how is the permanence of the glacier secured?
34192What effort of the imagination could transcend the realities here presented to us?
34192What is Light?
34192What is the agency which enables us to split Honister Crag, or the cliffs of Snowdon, into laminæ from crown to base?
34192What is the consequence of this?
34192What is this force?
34192What then can be the cause of the noise?
34192What then can the viscous theory mean apart from the facts?
34192What then is the meaning of viscosity or viscidity?
34192What was the physical condition of the rock when it was thus bent and folded like a pliant mass?
34192Whence come the blocks which we often find at the terminus of a glacier, and which we know belong to distant mountains?
34192Whence those frozen blossoms?
34192Why for æons wasted?
34192[ G] But you will ask, how, according to my view, does pressure produce this remarkable result?
34192[ Sidenote: VISCOUS THEORY;--WHAT IS IT?]
34192[ Sidenote:"SHALL WE TRY THE JUNGFRAU?"
34192_ C''est bien la route?_ demanded my companion.
34192why does it not slide down as an avalanche?"
43374''Baranov''? 43374 ''Where in the world did you get those fish?''
43374A calf?
43374A cinnamon?
43374A glacier bear? 43374 All ready, boys?"
43374And you''ll call again here yourself, wo n''t you? 43374 Anybody else want any?"
43374Are ye hurt, boy?
43374But,persisted Mr. Percival,"do you expect to sail these waters again, in just ten years from now?
43374Ca n''t he swim?
43374Coming right up through, Ran?
43374Did they find their cinnabar?
43374Did you take dinner at Larry''s?
43374Do you know how long it is, from the source to the front?
43374Do you know,asked Tom,"how this place started?"
43374Do you see that dark strip lying between this end of the glacier and the open sea?
43374Do you suppose they would let us go inside their house?
43374Feeling better? 43374 Git out o''the way, will you?
43374Have some salmon berries?
43374Have you got provisions?
43374Have you heard from Bess lately?
43374How did you get here?
43374How do you do, gentlemen? 43374 How long have you gone without this unfortunate bell?"
43374How many times did you say you had crossed the Continent?
43374How many trout did you catch, Doctor?
43374I say-- Thomas,sung out Fred, after ten minutes of this sort of work,"is that blanket-- any lighter-- than''twas?"
43374I wonder how thick this glacier is?
43374Is he near here, do you think, Solomon? 43374 Is n''t there some special flower you want, that you have n''t had?"
43374Is she a princess in disguise?
43374Is she to be a life- long friend, dating from this moment when our paths meet for the first time?
43374Is that what Kittie manes by my''fate''?
43374Is your father raound?
43374It seems just a common, every- day log, do n''t it, Tom?
43374Let that girl alone, I say, or--"Well, or what?"
43374Look here, old fellow,cried Tom,"is it going to be this way all day?"
43374Milk, sor? 43374 Of course you''re willing, are n''t you, sir?
43374Say, Fred( from Tom),"lend me your eyeglasses, will you?
43374Serves him right, do n''t it? 43374 So you want to put your finger in the pie, do you?
43374Stoppin''on the_ Queen_?
43374Take another biscuit, wo n''t you, Tommy?
43374That''ll be seeing a bit of Alaska that is n''t down on the programme, eh?
43374There-- put your feet down-- can''t you touch bottom?
43374Thinkin''o''buyin''?
43374Too bad to leave the fire, though, is n''t it?
43374Was n''t it burned once, father?
43374Weddings, funerals, and all?
43374Well, boys,remarked Mr. Percival, coming up at this moment,"have you found your berths yet?"
43374Well?
43374What I want to know,broke in Randolph,"is how you ever got to Sitka as soon as we did?"
43374What are those sailors up to?
43374What are you going to do with me, Phil Bradford?
43374What are you up for, father?
43374What do they mean?
43374What do think-- of the-- scenery?
43374What do you mean by that, sir?
43374What do you mean? 43374 What does he want it for?"
43374What does this mean?
43374What is it, Solomon?
43374What is it, dear? 43374 What is it, father?"
43374What is it?
43374What kind of a bear is it?
43374What kind of a bird is it?
43374What kind of a flower is that?
43374What kind of trees are these, driver?
43374What kind?
43374What shall we call it?
43374What shall we see next?
43374What takes the gold out?
43374What tribe do they belong to?
43374What was it-- not grizzly?
43374What''s that creature down by the water?
43374What''s that noise?
43374What''s this-- a circus?
43374When did they really get to work?
43374When do you begin to work?
43374Where are the girls?
43374Where do you sleep?
43374Where''s Bessie?
43374Where-- where are we?
43374Which way are you going?
43374Who is that?
43374Why did n''t they keep up?
43374Why do n''t you get up a paper?
43374Why''Tri- Weekly''?
43374Why,asked Randolph,"how long has this railroad been built?"
43374Will he prove a delightful companion, I wonder?
43374Wo n''t you come in?
43374Wo n''t you leave me?
43374You want some more, do you?
43374*****"Have you a piece of string, pa?"
43374A fellow can send his mother poetry(?)
43374ALIVE OR DEAD?
43374ALIVE OR DEAD?
43374After breakfast Solomon skinned the bear in good shape"--"Where is the skin now?"
43374And what chapter was it?
43374Are ye ready, boys?"
43374Are you hurt?"
43374Are you sure you are right about that, sir?"
43374Are you warm enough, Bessie?"
43374Bess, I suppose, and Miss Selborne?"
43374Ca n''t we get up something new so as to have some fun?"
43374Can it be that Bert employs his sister as an amanuensis?
43374Coffee?
43374Did you sleep any, poor boys?"
43374Do n''t it wear on ye bein''tied up, instead o''rootin''raound in the woods I took ye from last March?
43374Do they ever sleep, do you suppose?"
43374Do you see how thick it begins to look ahead?"
43374E.''stand for?"
43374Editor?"
43374Eggs?
43374Else, why is it the''Decade''?"
43374Find a pelt ye liked?"
43374Got some kindling, Fred?"
43374Had the_ Queen_ run ashore?
43374Have n''t ye got any ambition?
43374Have they found any game?
43374He''s not a Russian, is he?"
43374How curiously the hundred tourists looked into one another''s eyes?
43374How long d''ye stay here?"
43374How many more articles have you in the----?"
43374How much do you ask for this one?"
43374How soon do you start North?"
43374How''s that?"
43374Is he a big one?"
43374Kane?"
43374May I come and see her?
43374May I see you home?"
43374Nearly one half of the Excursion party had left them at Niagara, waving handkerchiefs and singing,"Should auld acquaintance be forgot?"
43374Next morning the sole topic was, How soon will they return?
43374Now, what can I show you in the way of furs or Indian curios, gentlemen?
43374Only a bird on a bough of fir-- Look, can you see his feathers stir, And hear his wee notes, soft and low, Echoes of songs of long ago?
43374Perhaps for some of them the sacredness of a life- long companionship was waiting-- who could tell?
43374Shall I read it now?"
43374She would n''t let any one hurt you, would she, Sonny?"
43374Stop him, will you, Phil?"
43374The horses just went up hand over hand, as if''twas a ladder"--"Did you see a bear?"
43374Whar are ye?"
43374What could it be?
43374What is it-- moss, or low bushes?"
43374What is that little creature, that looks something like a very large gray squirrel with no tail?
43374What sort of a bear is it?
43374What was the matter?"
43374What''s your names?"
43374When d''ye expect him back?"
43374Who is he, I wonder?"
43374Will night ever come?
43374Will you take us?"
43374With only half his wits about him, and a vague remembrance of his experience the previous year, Tom sprang up hastily, crying out,"Is there a fire?"
43374Wo n''t you walk in?
43374You''ve both got good thick boots on, I s''pose?"
43374are you hurt?"
43374do n''t it look like a boy''s barefoot mark?"
43374do you suppose they would sell some?"
43374round again?
43374was n''t Mary''s Hill steep?
43374what a funny hotel that was at the Upper Basin-- walls of pasteboard between the rooms, and all peeling off, you know"--"Were n''t you awfully cold?"
43374which he would n''t show any one else, ca n''t he?
21698A ship- shape sort o''craft, ai n''t it? 21698 Ah, Susan, you would not rob me of my mornin''weed, would you?"
21698Ah, just so--`one down, another come on,''--that''s your motto, ai n''t it?
21698Ah, to be sure, well-- let me see, what was it? 21698 Ai n''t it fun?"
21698Ai n''t it splendid, sir?
21698Am I not right Professor?
21698An''what''s nevy?
21698And Mrs Stoutley?
21698And did Willie send this to me, dear boy?
21698And do you know_ this_ letter?
21698And is Mr Lumbard in love with any one?
21698And is n''t it equally wrong for you to have a hungering and thirsting after_ my_ cash?
21698And pray, for what purpose?
21698And the other cheruphim, Willum,said the sailor,"what of him?"
21698And will you let me sit up and watch here tonight?
21698And_ round_ buttons, too,he said, indignantly;"what on earth was the use of making round buttons when flat ones had been invented?
21698Are the roads difficult?
21698Are the young ladies going?
21698Awk''ard? 21698 Ay, that''s the pint, Professor,"said the Captain, nodding,"_ how_ do they flow, bein''made of hard and brittle ice?"
21698Ay, there''s the rub,exclaimed Lewis;"what say you to that?"
21698But I say, Professor, are you spliced?
21698But do n''t you think it weakens your influence on occasions when nothing but strong language will serve? 21698 But how descend?"
21698But now, tell me, where are they talking of going to- day?
21698But we can see, ma''am, by lookin''at it, that it_ do n''t_ flow; ca n''t we, ma''am?
21698But what if a fire should break out?
21698But why not start at once?
21698But you have not yet told me, ladies,said Lewis, as they resumed their walk,"what has induced you to indulge in so early a ramble to- day?"
21698By the way, Doctor,he said carelessly,"were you ever in love?"
21698Can it be,he thought,"that this poor fellow is really what they say, a half- crazed gold- hunter?
21698Can ladies go?
21698Can you not imagine,said Nita,"that it is the love of Nature?"
21698Capital, is n''t it?
21698Captain Wopper,she suddenly exclaimed, looking up and drawing a note from her pocket,"do you know this?"
21698Certainly, my boy; but why do you come to me? 21698 Come, Captain, have you no remark to make by way of inspiring a little hope?"
21698Coorious-- eh?
21698Could n''t be better; could it?
21698Could n''t we try a long shot?
21698Could she bear movin''to- morrow, a mile or so?
21698D''ee hear that?
21698D''you know where they have gone to, mother?
21698D''you mean French people?
21698D''you see anything curious, Captain?
21698D''you think she is near her end, doctor?
21698Did he lose his money to_ you_?
21698Did they leave any address-- a_ poste restante_--anywhere, or any clew whatever as to their whereabouts?
21698Did you ever hear of the diamond and gold fields of London, Miss Gray?
21698Did you ever see anything like that before Emma?
21698Did you give it him, ma''am?
21698Do n''t you think the day will keep up?
21698Do you expect to complete your measurements to- day?
21698Do you see anything, Le Croix?
21698Do you, my lad? 21698 Does no one know where to find him?"
21698Eh? 21698 Flows, ma''am?"
21698For money,assented the youth;"what have you to say against it?"
21698For money?
21698From William,exclaimed the old woman, eagerly;"why, when did you get it?
21698Gold?
21698Gold?
21698Had he left any children?
21698Had we not better tie ourselves together before attempting it?
21698Has she any friends?
21698Has the theory of regelation been put to the proof?
21698Have they not already been put to her, and satisfactorily answered some time ago?
21698Have you been asleep too?
21698Have you ever done such work before?
21698Have you sought much for it?
21698Have you? 21698 How much may it be worth, Mr Wopper?"
21698How much would it cost now?
21698How provoking, could n''t we jump it?
21698How you knows w''at I mean?
21698How_ very_ impolite,said Susan,"and what did you do?"
21698I admit nothing,retorted the other;"but now, what have you got to say to me?"
21698I did not know that_ you_ were to be here, Netta?
21698I fear you will find this rather severe?
21698I not see it; where is the sunshine?
21698I say, Professor, do''ee mean to tell me that the whole of that there Mairdy- glass is movin''?
21698I thought you said last night that weather never affected you?
21698I want to know if you think you could behave yourself if you was to try?
21698Ignore it? 21698 In whose arms?
21698Indeed?
21698Indeed?
21698Indeed?
21698Is Nita unwell, Emma?
21698Is it possible,said Emma, as she gazed at the rugged and riven mass of solid ice before her,"that a glacier really_ flows_?"
21698Is my uncle_ very_ poor?
21698Is n''t it provoking?
21698Is she any better to- night, sir?
21698Is that you, Cappen?
21698Is that your sole occupation?
21698Is the Professor''s request reasonable?
21698Is the place picturesque as well as dangerous?
21698Is there not danger in being so close to such places?
21698Kind messages for me,repeated Lewis, in a tone of bitterness,"what sort of messages?"
21698Know''s of it? 21698 Lost yer bearin''s, capp''n?"
21698Lost your bearin''s, Antoine?
21698Low? 21698 May I join you in this after- portion of the day''s work?"
21698May I keep this?
21698May I stay beside her?
21698Mother,he said, earnestly,"you do n''t feel easy under this breeze,''cause why?
21698My dear fellow,returned Lawrence,"have you no such thing as gratitude in your composition?"
21698Never; I have seen sunrises and sunsets in many parts of our own land, but nothing at all like that; what_ can_ be the cause of it?
21698Nita said nothing about writing to you, did she?
21698No, Monsieur,replied Le Croix, quietly, as he shook the snow from his garments--"And you?"
21698No?
21698Not a bad notion, mother; but what if Dr Lawrence, after gettin''the money, did n''t want to marry Miss Gray?
21698Not done anything wicked, I hope?
21698Not hurt, I hope?
21698Nothin''for you an''me to do,said Gillie to the artist;"p''r''aps we''d better go and draw-- eh?"
21698Now, Madame,said Captain Wopper,"are you convinced?"
21698Now, do come with us, Captain Wopper,he said;"it will be such fun, and we should all enjoy you_ so_ much-- wouldn''t we, Emma?"
21698Now, mother, what d''ee think o''that?
21698Now, old girl, is it to be?
21698Now,said Lewis when he had finished,"are you satisfied?
21698Now,said she,"what do you mean by sayin''that this is a curious world?
21698Now,said the latter,"did you ever have a Turkish bath?"
21698O, Roby? 21698 Of course it do n''t, but that ca n''t be helped, you know-- can it, sir?
21698Oh, I see; you mean the Glacier des Bois?
21698One of the what, ma''am?
21698P.S.--You ai n''t comin''back soon-- are you?
21698Professor,said Nita, half- turning her back on the afflicted artist,"how, when, and where be all this ice formed?"
21698Raither spoiled your drawin'', though, ai n''t it, sir?
21698Rather a wet place, ma''am; ai n''t it?
21698Rather low in the roof, however, do n''t you think?
21698Secondly, ma''am, can you tell me where Willum''s sister- in- law lives,-- Mrs Stout,_ alias_ Stoutley?
21698Shall I find her in her own room?
21698Silence, you booby!--Well, boy, what does it suggest to_ you_?
21698Slept well, old girl?
21698So I have; dear me, what is it?
21698So, then, you know him?
21698Spliced?
21698Sunshine?
21698That was a narrow escape, Le Croix?
21698That''s not very curious is it?
21698There''s nobody else up, is there?
21698To a tee?
21698Undoubtedly; but why ask such a question of me?
21698W''y do I think so?
21698W''y do n''t you do it quickly, then?
21698W''y, mother,cried the small boy-- who answered to the name of Gillie--"don''t you see I''m engaged?
21698W''y, what''s the matter with you, boy?
21698W''y-- ye- es, it''s Willum''s, ai n''t it?
21698Was he the worse of liquor at the time?
21698Well, booby, what have_ you_ got to say to it?
21698Well, mother,said Captain Wopper,"now that I''ve given you a full, true, an''partikler account of Switzerland, what d''ee think of it?"
21698Well, what then? 21698 Well, what then?"
21698Well, where was I?
21698Were you ever troubled with that complaint, Captain Wopper?
21698What about the door- key, mother?--you''ve no objection to my calling you mother, have you?
21698What are those curious things?
21698What are yonder curious things?
21698What are you staring at?
21698What baby?
21698What can the imp be up to?
21698What can the youngster mean? 21698 What d''you mean by interrupting me?"
21698What is he used for?
21698What is it-- a crow?
21698What is the nature of the case?
21698What is this?
21698What is to be done?
21698What may it be worth, now?
21698What may the Jardang be?
21698What may the pint be?
21698What number, sir?
21698What sort of a ingine, my lad?
21698What sort of an outside- in fashion is that, Slingsby?
21698What was that?
21698What''s a page, lad?
21698What''s that you say about expenses, cousin?
21698What''s the matter?
21698What''s to be done?
21698What''s wrong?
21698What, then, shall we do?
21698What_ do_ you refer to, Doctor Tough?
21698Where shall we dig?
21698Where?
21698Which is the warning,asked Slingsby,"the gleam of sunshine or the eagle?"
21698Which, the view or the victuals?
21698Who is it that has touched the springs of your liberality? 21698 Who said that I was fond of it?"
21698Why are you so fond of gold, Le Croix?
21698Why do n''t you show a light then,retorted the Captain,"or blow your steam- whistle, in such a dark hole?
21698Why do you think so?
21698Why do you want it?
21698Why does he think so?
21698Why not cross and let Emma see how we manage by cutting steps in the ice?
21698Why, Lawrence,said Lewis,"did n''t they tell us that we could see the top of Mont Blanc from Chamouni?"
21698Why, look here,said he,"you go and starve yourself, and deny yourself all sorts of little comforts-- what then?
21698Will you take me as a lodger, for better and for worse? 21698 Will you try?"
21698Wot sort o''copper?
21698Yes I do; an''how d''ee think they spell the name o''that feller Laycrwa?
21698Yes, but_ how_ do they flow, being so brittle?
21698Yes, it''s coorious, ai n''t it, sir,said Gillie,"an''at other times everything seems to go right-- don''t it, sir?"
21698Yes,said the Captain, meditatively,"I''ve got my eye--""Your weather eye?"
21698You are an impudent little thing,retorted Susan, with a laugh;"but tell me, what do you find so curious about the people up- stairs?"
21698You are right,said Emma;"were you not present last night when we discussed our plans for to- day?"
21698You are well acquainted with it, doubtless?
21698You did n''t expect a thousand- pound note, did you?
21698You do n''t mean to say that you''re agoing to go under that cliff?
21698You do n''t mean to tell me,he said slowly,"that you gamble?"
21698You gave him, meanin''Willum, nothing else, I suppose?
21698You have n''t a spare room here, have you?
21698You have n''t got''em, have you?
21698You''ll have to show, Monsieur, some of your mountaineer skill here?
21698You''ve no objection to my taking a look, have you?
21698You? 21698 You_ do n''t_ mean it?"
21698Your grandchild?
21698Your object, then, is to verify, not to discover?
21698_ What_ does not move?
21698Again Mrs Roby admitted the charge, and demanded to know,"what then?"
21698Ai n''t I your-- your-- husband''s brother''s buzzum friend-- Willum''s old chum an''messmate?
21698Ai n''t you convinced?"
21698And the Captain,--how would_ he_ have conducted himself in the circumstances?
21698And who can tell what a terrible yet hopeful war is going on within that care- worn, sin- worn man?
21698Another wing, if you please-- ah, finished?
21698Are you to be trusted?"
21698But are you really in earnest about my going abroad?"
21698But how do you come to know all this, sir, and why do you ask?"
21698But tell me, Susan, is_ your_ fair buzzum free from the-- the tender-- you know what?"
21698But what about the key of the door, mother?
21698But, I say, Gillie,_ was n''t_ it a big''un?
21698By the way, can you lend me ten pounds just now, mother?"
21698By the way, where is Miss Gray?"
21698Can you find such an article?"
21698Can you recommend one?"
21698Can you tell me where he lives?"
21698Can you, Captain Wopper?"
21698Come, dux( to Slingsby, who happened to stand at the head of the line), tell me, sir, what does it suggest?"
21698D''ee hear?"
21698D''you happen to know her?"
21698D''you mean gone from Chamouni, mother?"
21698D''you think you could recommend a page?"
21698Did n''t I hear that_ he_ broke his arm coming up his own stair?
21698Did she send for me?
21698Did she tell you what I am?"
21698Did you ever look steadily at the Count, Susan?"
21698Did you ever visit the poor, Mrs Stoutley?"
21698Did you find a doctor?"
21698Do n''t you agree with me, Count?"
21698Do n''t you think that the free and easy, quiet look of our guide and porters indicates that such work looks more dangerous than it really is?"
21698Do you mean that he tried to shoot himself?"
21698Do you refer to this part of it, or to the whole of it?"
21698Do you see them?"
21698Do you think this a wise step?"
21698Do you want proof?
21698Does Monsieur intend to make a divergence to the Col de Balme?"
21698Fitted, did I say?
21698Gillie, you powder- monkey, where are my shoes?"
21698Have I not been playing billiards every night nearly since I came here, despite Captain Wopper''s warnings and the lesson I got from poor Leven?
21698Have you got a cap?"
21698He never wrote you very long ones, ma''am, I believe?"
21698He''s mountain- mad-- mad as a Swiss March hare, if not madder-- By the way, Susan, wot d''ee think o''the French?"
21698Help her?
21698How could I refuse him?
21698How did it ever get up there?"
21698How, then, did you escape?"
21698How_ can_ you talk of such dismal things to a patient?
21698I hope I did n''t frighten''ee?"
21698I say, capp''n, wot''s this?"
21698I wonder why that queer careworn look comes over her angel face when she hears me say that I''ve been having a game of billiards?
21698I''ve got neither wife nor chick, as you know, an''so, wot I means to do is to give the bulk of it to them that I love while I''m alive-- d''ee see?''
21698I''ve had such a queer dream, d''you know?"
21698If it moves, or if it do n''t move, wot''s the odds, so long as yer''appy?
21698If she had n''t got you she''d have got another, and that would have been a coincidence to_ him_, d''ee see?
21698If the ice is six feet, or six hundred feet thick, what then?
21698Is he alive?"
21698Is it necessary, we again ask, to detail all this?
21698Is it true?"
21698Is n''t betting gambling?"
21698Is n''t it wrong for me to have a longing desire and itching fingers to lay hold of_ your_ cash?"
21698Is n''t that a grand idea?"
21698Is she very ill?
21698Is that true?"
21698Is the Col de Balme worth going out of one''s way to see?"
21698Is the person a man or a woman?"
21698It might disagree with her, d''ye see?"
21698It would n''t be a bad joke to buy it-- eh?"
21698Lewis drew them out with alacrity, and laughingly asked,"how many?"
21698May I ask, ma''am, what became of these two cheruphims, as you''ve very properly named''em?"
21698Miss Gray, shall I assist you to a-- no?
21698Miss, is anything wrong?"
21698Mrs Roby?"
21698Mrs White is up to the elbows in soap- suds, taking at least ocular and vocal charge of the babe in the mud, and her husband is--"drunk, as usual?"
21698My time at Chamouni is short; will you permit me, on arriving at the Mer de Glace, to prosecute my inquiries?
21698Need we say that Captain Wopper stuck to Mrs Roby and the"new cabin"to the last?
21698Need we say that Emma and Nita were pattern wives?
21698No doubt he is very kind to her in public, but may there not be a very different state of things behind the scenes?"
21698Not the family of poor Le Croix?"
21698Now the question is,"continued the Captain, looking seriously at the kettle with the defiant spout,"what am I to advise Willum to do?"
21698Now then w''ot d''you want to know?"
21698Now, Lawrence,"continued Lewis,"what should we do?
21698Now, in the third place, where am I to find a lodging?"
21698Now, you promise to do this for me?''
21698Only, please, do n''t mention it among your friends, as it would p''raps lower their opinion of you, d''you see?
21698Perhaps, Mr Lewis, you''ll go yourself and see the poor man?"
21698Poor Slingsby began to explain, but Nita cut him short by turning to Lewis and again demanding,"How you knows w''at I mean?"
21698See,"he said, pointing backward to their track,"see what a lovely effect of tender blue and yellow through yonder opening--""D''you mean Gillie?"
21698Shall we begin with an exploration of the garden?"
21698Shall we send him back for it?"
21698Should we accept this offer?
21698Something like the old one, ai n''t it?"
21698Suddenly the Professor stepped in front of the others, and, pointing to the knoll, said, with twinkling eyes--"What does it suggest?
21698The air would be fresher for her old lungs, would n''t it?"
21698Then what is the dinner hour?"
21698There''s to be company, too, an''you''re to be waiter--""Stooard, you mean?"
21698They descends the walley, does they?"
21698They''d never see through the dodge, and would fall in love at once, perhaps-- eh?"
21698Very particular business-- eh, lad?"
21698W''ere''ave you bin?
21698Was I present when the plans for the day were arranged?
21698We could n''t,"said the Captain, looking round the room, dubiously,"ask''em to take a quiet cup of tea here with us-- eh?
21698Well, the question is,` Guilty or not guilty?''"
21698What d''ee think, my lad?"
21698What do you think of Chamouni, Susan?"
21698What does it amount to?
21698What does it matter whether it flows six, or sixty, or six hundred feet in a day?"
21698What is Wopper?
21698What more would they have?"
21698What must it be when, along with the outward toil, there is a constant fight with a raging watchful devil within?
21698What say you?"
21698What say''ee-- eh?"
21698What would Lawrence have thought of it?
21698What''s that you''ve got in your arms?"
21698What''s to be done now, Antoine?"
21698What''s up aloft?"
21698Who has not experienced the almost unqualified pleasure of a walk, on a bright beautiful morning, before breakfast?
21698Why do you doubt it, Antoine?"
21698Why, therefore, we might ask; apply to him?
21698Why?"
21698Will you allow me to devote more of my attention to_ her_ than to yourself?"
21698Will you come?"
21698Will you give it to him in the morning?"
21698Will you promise me, like a good fellow, to consider them?"
21698Wo n''t you, dearest?"
21698Would n''t you?"
21698Would the divergence you speak of take up much time?
21698Yet, shame on you, Lewie; ca n''t you take interest in a game for its own sake?
21698You have doubtless heard of Captain Maury, of the United States Navy?"
21698You know she had to git some one to go with her son, and why not you, sir, as well as any of the other young sawbones in London?
21698You would n''t decline to take it from Willum, would you?"
21698You''ve got more cash, Willum, than you knows what to do with, so, hand over, send me a power of attorney( is that the thing?)
21698You''ve some regard for Willum''s wishes, ma''am?--you would n''t have me break my promises to Willum, would you?"
21698` I do,''says he,` and when may I expect you back in Californy, Wopper?''
21698are you appointed public prosecutor?"
21698exclaimed Susan, with an amused glance,"and what do_ you_ think of it?"
21698exclaimed the Captain, awaking to the fact that his answer was not relevant;"may I ax what is the particular pint that puzzles you, ma''am?"
21698exclaimed the imp,"may I wentur''to ax, Capp''n, wot''s the effect on_ boys_?"
21698have you never heard of a page-- a page in buttons?"
21698how is it possible that_ you_ can tell that?"
21698is our society not enough for Monsieur?"
21698lecturing the Professor?"
21698me too?"
21698monkey, what''s wrong?"
21698old girl, has she sprung a leak anywhere?"
21698said Emma,"are they not?
21698said Mrs Stoutley with a touch of sarcasm,"does Dr Lawrence intend to go?"
21698said Susan,"who for, I wonder?"
21698she exclaimed, throwing her arms round the Captain''s neck and kissing him,"uncle William, how_ could_ you deceive us so?"
21698the shappo,"continued the Captain,"and so down by the glacier dez boys--""The what?"
21698the very man I want,"exclaimed the Doctor, hastening to join them,"do you know that Miss Horetzki is ill?"
21698well-- what you say, Mademoiselle Gray?"
21698what did he say about us?"
21698what?
21698what?
21698wot a cracker, ai n''t it just?