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
2095And what''s your name?
2095Are you married?
2095Are you single now?
2095But is she a slave?
2095But then,thought she,"what if I should be detected?
2095Can you eat your allowance?
2095Did you ever run away?
2095Did you ever strike your master?
2095Do you enjoy good health?
2095Has he no friends with him?
2095Have you a good appetite?
2095Have you heard that the Jamisons are down with the fever?
2095How can that be done?
2095How did you find out my name and address?
2095How do you do, my dear sir? 2095 How long did you live with your first owner?"
2095How long did you live with your second master?
2095How long did you live with your third master?
2095How many men have owned you?
2095How old are you?
2095How old did you say you was?
2095How old is you?
2095I did not send for you; what is your business?
2095If she can get free with a little money, why not give her what I have?
2095If that boat is going up the river,said he,"why not I conceal myself on board, and try to escape?"
2095In the name of the Lord, what am I indebted to you for?
2095In the tobacco field, eh?
2095Indeed, sir, is not that young woman white?
2095Is Jerome safe?
2095Now, my dear Carlingham, would you really have the negroes enjoy the same rights as ourselves?
2095Only five hundred for such a girl as this? 2095 Please read that paper over again, will thee?"
2095Satisfaction?
2095Then you will be mine after all?
2095Well, Toby, or Mr. Tobias, if dat will suit you better, you are now twenty- three years old; dat''s all,--do you understand dat?
2095Well, will thee read it for me?
2095Were you ever whipped much?
2095What are you wiping your eyes for?
2095What business has she to die of grief?
2095What can this mean?
2095What de angel of de Lord want here?
2095What de matter wid you?
2095What did you want to see her for?
2095What do I owe you?
2095What do you think had better be done for him?
2095What do you want here?
2095What do you want here?
2095What do you want with me?
2095What do you want?
2095What do you want?
2095What have you been about, sir, and where was you last night when I was called?
2095What have you done for me?
2095What say you,said Carlingham,"about the right of man to his liberty?"
2095What were you nailing up your door for, then, as if you were afraid we would enter?
2095What''s your business?
2095What''s your name?
2095What''s your name?
2095What''s your name?
2095Where is he from?
2095Where is you sick?
2095Where were you employed in Virginia?
2095Where were you raised?
2095Who are you that comes here at this late hour?
2095Who dat dar?
2095Who dat dar?
2095Who do you belong to?
2095Who is that woman? 2095 Who is your mistress?"
2095Who to, I want to know?
2095Who''s dar?
2095Whom did you wish to see?
2095Why do you wish to make me free?
2095Why persist in your wish to talk with me?
2095Why, do n''t you know me? 2095 Why?"
2095Wondah whose brat dat ar''dat missis bringin''home wid her?
2095Would you rather be a slave than be free?
2095Yes; but we will teach them better, wo n''t we, Dinah?
2095You were born in America?
2095As soon as Jerome had so far recovered as to be able to speak, he said,--"Where am I, and what does all this mean?"
2095How much do you say?"
2095How old is you?"
2095I thought you told me you were only twenty- five?"
2095Isabella was now in her native town, and near her daughter; but how could she communicate with her?
2095Now, do you think you could keep up with the rest of the hands?"
2095On Sam''s returning to his master''s bedside, the latter said,"Well, Sam, what do you think is the matter with him?"
2095Placing himself directly opposite his patient, and folding his arms across his breast, looking very knowingly, he began,--"What''s de matter wid you?"
2095The doctor happened to be in the yard, and met the colonel and said,--"How are you now?"
2095Then why not I teach them a lesson?"
2095Uncle Jim, is it?"
2095Uncle Tony hearing them, and finding that he had been imposed upon, opened his door, came out with stick in hand, and said,"Is dat you, Mr. Mark?
2095Was she still in prison, and if so, what would be her punishment for aiding him to escape from prison?
2095What could these persons want there?
2095What right has a slave to himself, his wife, or his children?
2095What would have been his feelings had he known that at his death his wife and children would be considered as his property?
2095Who can imagine the feeling with which poor Clotelle received the intelligence of her kind friend''s death?
2095Why should the white man be esteemed as better than the black?
2095With this remark the old cook gave one of her coarse laughs, and continued:"Missis understands human nature, do n''t she?
2095Would he ever behold her again?
2095Would she be hanged in his stead, or would she receive a different kind of punishment?
2095and why did that child call you papa?"
2095he would ask himself;"and why should they take my book?"
2095how could she see her?
2095is he dead?"
28631A little walk would n''t do you good?
28631Am I late?
28631And ca n''t I be of even more help-- without any returns? 28631 And may I come, sometimes, and see you?"
28631And what are you going to do with yourself, now, Amabel?
28631And what if it was not because of my dissolute life she left me? 28631 Are n''t you tired?"
28631Are they only feminine?
28631Augustine? 28631 Better than the company of some people, you mean?"
28631Bring her out? 28631 But does the world always know what_ is_ the proper place?"
28631But what was it then?
28631But you knew that you were to see her again;--do you mind so much?
28631But-- how will you manage it, Amabel?
28631Ca n''t I do anything? 28631 Ca n''t bear to be called a saint?
28631Can you ask?
28631Can you deny,said Augustine,"that you have always led a dissolute life?
28631Claimed?
28631Dearest,--should I have been less sudden?
28631Did n''t he, do you think? 28631 Did you care-- so tremendously-- about him?"
28631Divorces you?
28631Do I displease you?
28631Do I horrify you?
28631Do I please you?
28631Do I shock you?
28631Do n''t you see that it''s not real? 28631 Do you call it sin, that blinded love?
28631Do you care at all for me?
28631Do you want me to go?
28631Does Hugh know that it is impossible?
28631Does he?
28631Does n''t know me?
28631Does one?
28631Don''t-- oh don''t-- call it that-- call me that!--"Call you a saint? 28631 Fidelity and real love?"
28631Gloomy? 28631 Good?
28631Has Mr. Augustine gone?
28631Have you disgraced publicly-- you and us? 28631 Have you had a good read?"
28631Have you no consideration for me-- for us? 28631 He looks like you, does n''t he?"
28631He?
28631He?--What do you mean?
28631His plans? 28631 How absurd of me:--I have been sleeping.--Have you just come?"
28631How can I? 28631 How can you know that?"
28631I do n''t think that they atone; but they may redeem it, may n''t they? 28631 Is anything the matter?"
28631Is it a fad?
28631Is it because of him that she is cloistered here?
28631Is it impossible?
28631Is it just as you found it, Amabel?
28631Is it really so bad as that?
28631Is it strange?
28631Is it time?
28631Is n''t that the animal?
28631Is n''t the world sad?
28631It is n''t always the animal, exactly, is it?--or emotion only? 28631 Kill me?"
28631Knew? 28631 Lady Elliston?"
28631Let''s see: what do you have? 28631 Must you have a very interesting wife?"
28631My dear, what for?--There, do n''t cry.--You have stopped crying? 28631 My husband bad?
28631Never what?
28631No, not Augustine,said her husband''s voice:"But you can be glad to see me, ca n''t you, Amabel?"
28631No? 28631 Nothing?
28631Of course;--it is time now.--Augustine, will you ring?
28631Oh, why do you say that? 28631 Out?
28631Parting you? 28631 Perhaps not: but,"his voice had now the delicate aptness that she remembered,"how could I believe that there was a chance for me?
28631Please do n''t frighten me.--Are you really angry?--_I_ do n''t frighten you?
28631Power? 28631 Punishment?
28631Really like it?
28631Separated? 28631 Since when, my mother''s?"
28631Splendid?
28631Tea? 28631 The Greys?
28631The manners of girls have changed, I fancy, since my day; and she is n''t a boy- girl, like our nice Marjory, either?
28631Then I may be frank?
28631To hear that I''m sensual? 28631 Unusual circumstances?"
28631Was n''t he even sorry for me?
28631Was the weather at Haversham as bad as everywhere else?
28631Well, what then? 28631 What can I say?--if you will think of yourself in this preposterous way.--As for Augustine, he does not know and how should he ever know?
28631What did you talk about?
28631What do you mean? 28631 What do you mean?"
28631What has he to do with it? 28631 What have you been doing to yourself?
28631What have you meant by coming here today? 28631 What have you said to him?"
28631What have you to say then?
28631What if I do n''t deny it?
28631What if I do n''t deny it?
28631What is Lady Elliston''s girl like?
28631What is there in you to love?
28631What makes you say that?
28631What sort of a time have you had, Augustine?
28631Who is it?
28631Why are you here, in this dismal room, this dismal house? 28631 Why?"
28631Will it cut him up very much, do you think?
28631Will you please change your shoes at once?
28631Will you rest before dinner? 28631 With shame?
28631Would you like me to come in and interrupt your talk?
28631You are morbid, my poor child.--But do you notice nothing when I say that only we three know?
28631You are such a little nun that you ca n''t bear to be loved?--Is that it? 28631 You can forgive me?"
28631You did n''t keep to the path?
28631You do consent to that?
28631You have come to tell me?
28631You mean that you do n''t mind it because you are so used to it?
28631You mean you wo n''t part from the child?
28631You mean-- for having married me-- when you loved her?
28631You notice what I say, Amabel?
28631You nun; you saint.--Does that girlish peccadillo still haunt you?
28631You wo n''t find the air too much?
28631You wo n''t trust me?
28631After a moment Amabel asked:"Has it given you so much?"
28631Ah, fuddling your brains with that stuff, still, are you?
28631Amabel spoke at last:"How, scot- free?"
28631Amabel, is it possible; has Hugh been making love to you?"
28631And he, too, flushed a little now in saying, gently, tentatively;--"May I see the little boy?"
28631And how should he know?
28631And where had he found, at nineteen, that assurance, an assurance without his father''s vanity or his mother''s selflessness?
28631And you will come out, Amabel?"
28631But how tell Augustine that there had been more than the clear impossibility; how tell him that deeper than renouncement was recoil?
28631But if the illicit passion thinks itself real and thinks itself enduring, and proves neither, what of it then?
28631But must it be so ugly?
28631But, as she looked, his eyes reminded her of something; was it of that fancied cry within the church, imprisoned and supplicating?
28631Could she not ask him to take her back, to forgive her, to love her?
28631Cowardice?
28631Did he not know?--Did he not understand?
28631Do n''t you see that it''s because you suddenly find me beautiful, and because, as a woman of snow, I allure you, that you think you love me?
28631Do n''t you want a little walk?
28631Do you feel it gloomy here, Augustine?"
28631Do you hear?
28631Do you really deceive yourself?"
28631Do you really want him to be a philosopher, my dear?"
28631Do you think that the famous lovers of romance were sinners?"
28631Does it make you a better man, Augustine, or a happier one, to spend all your time reading philosophy?"
28631Get you anything?"
28631Had he some mental talisman by which he accurately gauged all values, his own included?
28631Happy?
28631Has anything come between you and Augustine?
28631Has anything happened?
28631Has it hurt so horribly?"
28631He crossed the room suddenly and leaned over her:--"Amabel darling,--what must I do to atone?
28631He suspects nothing, you think?"
28631Heaven knows I want to be kind to you-- do all I can for you; I''ve not once reproached you, have I?
28631Her son''s?
28631His speaking of"the child,"made her heart stop beating, it brought the past so near.--And was Charlock House to be her very own?
28631How are you, Lady Channice?
28631How are you?
28631How can I do anything else?"
28631How can you say such things to me?"
28631How could he not know that, for years, she had cared for him more than for anything, anyone?
28631How do you know I could n''t have behaved as you believed I did behave, if only I''d had the chance?
28631How face Bertram now,--Bertram with his tenacious hopes?
28631How face her husband-- ever-- ever-- in the far future?
28631How in the dickens did you run across them?"
28631How old is he, Amabel?
28631How should he not be?
28631Hugh is a trump, is n''t he?
28631I am your mother''s friend, and you want nothing of me?
28631I knew you cared, but I never knew how much.--I ought to have had more self- conceit, ought n''t I?"
28631I suppose you do go and hear Brahms, Augustine?"
28631I''m afraid I must ask you.--I do n''t often have a chance to talk with your mother.--I''ll see you later, eh?"
28631If he said nothing and asked nothing, what would he think?
28631Is it because of some evil in his life that she is cloistered?"
28631Is it gloomy?
28631Is n''t Augustine here?
28631Is n''t he very big?"
28631Lady Channice repeated:"you think that they atone-- if they make part of an illicit passion?"
28631Lady Elliston said:"But,--won''t you come out now?"
28631Must it be ugly?
28631Really nothing?
28631Shall we go to the fire?"
28631She was strong, but was not her strength unscrupulous?
28631She was sweet, but was she not too skilful?
28631Sir Hugh lifted his brows in amused inquiry;"My dear boy, what do you know about that, pray?
28631So may I always kiss your hand?"
28631Still determined to be a philosopher?
28631Sugar?
28631Take him back?
28631There was a moment''s silence and then Augustine said:"Did she ever ask you?"
28631This was not like their courtship.--Yet, it reminded her,--of what did it remind her as he murmured words of victory, clasped her and kissed her?
28631Was it her son who spoke these words?
28631We''ve learned that from Plato and Hegel, have n''t we?"
28631Well, my little man, shall we be friends?"
28631What could I have claimed?
28631What did she not owe to it-- unfortunate one-- of atonement and devotion?
28631What do you mean by speaking so?"
28631What do you mean?
28631What do you think of lovers to whom that happens?
28631What does it do for him, that''s what I ask?
28631What girlish impulse had mingled incredibly with her gratitude, her devotion?
28631What if you''ve built up a cock- and- bull romance that has no relation to reality in your empty young head?
28631What is there for him to know?
28631What of him?"
28631What other woman could have lived the life you''ve lived?
28631What then?
28631What would Augustine say to her if the truth were spoken?
28631What would Augustine say?
28631What would happen now?
28631What would he ask?
28631What''s the book?
28631What''s the good of it?
28631What''s your alternative?"
28631What, for his seeing, could stand between them now?
28631What-- who-- had she loved for all these years?
28631Where does it lead him?
28631Where we used to talk about race horses they talk about the Absolute,--eh, Augustine?
28631Where?"
28631Where?"
28631Why could it not be quiet and even kind?
28631Why do you ask me?"
28631Why has n''t he been to see me in London?"
28631Why have n''t I been able to make friends before?
28631Why have n''t you come out and claimed things?"
28631Why have you let yourself be cloistered like this?
28631Why, you strange angel?"
28631Will there be time for a walk?"
28631Will you answer me, I say?
28631With not nearly enough money?
28631Wo n''t you dine with us on Saturday night?"
28631You are coming down?"
28631You knew of his marriage?"
28631You promise me that?"
28631You wo n''t be so mad as to tell him?"
28631You''ll give me some tea, dearest?"
28631You''re not alone?"
28631You_ have_ left him, Amabel?"
28631and you, Augustine?
28631milk?"
28631she asked at last;"Tristan and Iseult?--Abà © lard and Hà © loise?--Paolo and Francesca?"
28631what is romance-- I mean romance of the kind that jeopardizes''goodness''--what is it but the most subtle self- deception?
33, said he;is it thou?
33Am I mad? 33 And I!--how am I to live longer, breathing the same air with this deadly enemy?"
33And about what?
33And now what wouldst thou with me touching this man?
33And what am I now?
33And what of him?
33And what other time?
33And what reason is that?
33And wherefore?
33And why not, mother?
33And will he always keep his hand over his heart?
33And will he hold out both his hands to me, as when thou ledst me to him from the brook- side?
33And will the minister be there?
33Art thou like the Black Man that haunts the forest round about us? 33 Art thou my child, in very truth?"
33Ay-- how is that, good Master Dimmesdale?
33Better? 33 But did your reverence hear of the portent that was seen last night?
33But how to avoid it? 33 But where is this mother of thine?
33But wilt thou promise,asked Pearl,"to take my hand, and mother''s hand, to- morrow noontide?"
33Child, what art thou?
33Didst thou ever awake and find thy mother gone?
33Do I feel joy again?
33Do you see that woman with the embroidered badge?
33Dost thou know me so little, Hester Prynne? 33 Dost thou know thy mother now, child?
33Dost thou know, child, wherefore thy mother wears this letter?
33Dost thou mock me now?
33Dost thou not think her beautiful? 33 Dost thou remember me, Hester, as I was nine years agone?
33Dost thou think I have been to the forest so many times, and have yet no skill to judge who else has been there? 33 Dost thou think the child will be glad to know me?"
33Doth he love us?
33Doth the universe lie within the compass of yonder town, which only a little time ago was but a leaf- strewn desert, as lonely as this around us? 33 Has he not paid thee all?"
33Hast thou not tortured him enough?
33Hast thou seen it?
33Hast thou?
33Have you another passenger?
33Hester,said he,"hast thou found peace?"
33How can you question it?
33How knewest thou that I was here?
33I wonder if mother will ask me what it means?
33Is it the Black Man?
33Is not this better,murmured he,"than what we dreamed of in the forest?"
33Is the world, then, so narrow?
33Is the worshipful Governor Bellingham within?
33Mother,said she,"what does the scarlet letter mean?"
33Never, sayest thou?
33Now, what mortal imagination could conceive it?
33Sayest thou so?
33Shall we not meet again?
33Shall we not spend our immortal life together? 33 Tell me, then, what thou art, and who sent thee hither?"
33Then why not reveal it here?
33This woman has brought shame upon us all, and ought to die; is there not law for it? 33 Thou wilt not reveal his name?
33Thy mother is yonder woman with the scarlet letter,said the seaman,"Wilt thou carry her a message from me?"
33Welcome home, reverend sir,said the physician"And how found you that godly man, the Apostle Eliot?
33Were it not better,said he,"that you use my poor skill tonight?
33What choice had you?
33What do we talk of marks and brands, whether on the bodice of her gown or the flesh of her forehead?
33What does the letter mean, mother? 33 What does this sad little brook say, mother?"
33What else could I look for, being what I am, and leading such a life as mine? 33 What evil have I done the man?"
33What evil thing is at hand?
33What has the letter to do with any heart save mine?
33What have we here?
33What have you to do with us?
33What is he?
33What is it that haunts and tempts me thus?
33What is it, good Mistress Hibbins?
33What little bird of scarlet plumage may this be? 33 What mean you?"
33What say you, worshipful Master Bellingham? 33 What see you in my face,"asked the physician,"that you look at it so earnestly?"
33What sent you hither?
33What shall I say?
33What should ail me to harm this misbegotten and miserable babe? 33 What should he say, Pearl,"answered Hester,"save that it was no time to kiss, and that kisses are not to be given in the market- place?
33What wouldst thou say, child?
33Whence come you, Hester?
33Wherefore dost thou desire it?
33Wherefore have all the people left their work to- day? 33 Who is he?
33Who is that man, Hester?
33Who speaks?
33Why dost thou smile so at me?
33Why doth the minister sit yonder?
33Why not announce thyself openly, and cast me off at once?
33Why should not the guilty ones sooner avail themselves of this unutterable solace?
33Why, know you not,cried the shipmaster,"that this physician here-- Chillingworth he calls himself-- is minded to try my cabin- fare with you?
33Why, what is this, mother?
33Will he go back with us, hand in hand, we three together, into the town?
33Will not it come of its own accord when I am a woman grown?
33Wilt thou come across the brook, and own thy mother, now that she has her shame upon her-- now that she is sad?
33Wilt thou die for very weakness? 33 Wilt thou go and play, child?"
33Wilt thou go with us to- night? 33 Wilt thou let me be at peace, if I once tell thee?"
33Wilt thou not frown? 33 Wilt thou stand here with mother and me, to- morrow noontide?"
33Wilt thou yet forgive me?
33Wouldst thou avenge thyself on the innocent babe?
33Yes, mother,answered Pearl,"But if it be the Black Man, wilt thou not let me stay a moment, and look at him, with his big book under his arm?"
33You would tell me, then, that I know all?
33( Had Hester sinned alone?)
33And didst thou ever meet him?
33And does he now summon me to its fulfilment, by suggesting the performance of every wickedness which his most foul imagination can conceive?"
33And dost thou go to meet him in the nighttime?"
33And is this his mark?"
33And thou, Arthur Dimmesdale, dost thou yet live?"
33And was this the man?
33And what hast thou to do with all these iron men, and their opinions?
33And wherefore should it not bring you peace?"
33And whither was he now going?
33And, moreover, is there not a quality of awful sacredness in the relation between this mother and this child?"
33Are my purposes wo nt to be so shallow?
33Are you there?"
33Art thou a Christian child-- ha?
33Art thou in life?"
33Art thou not afraid of nightmares and hideous dreams?"
33But dost thou know, my child, what this letter means which thy mother is doomed to wear?"
33But how gat such a guest into my hall?"
33But how?
33But now thou wilt?"
33But now-- since I am irrevocably doomed-- wherefore should I not snatch the solace allowed to the condemned culprit before his execution?
33But where was his mind?
33But where was little Pearl?
33But who art thou, that meddlest in this matter?
33But who can see an inch into futurity beyond his nose?
33But why does he not wear it outside his bosom, as thou dost, mother?"
33Canst thou do nothing for me?
33Canst thou tell me, my child, who made thee?"
33Could it be true?
33Could there be plainer speech than this?
33Couldst thou surely tell, Hester, whether he was the same man that encountered thee on the forest path?"
33Did I make a contract with him in the forest, and sign it with my blood?
33Did he wish to die?
33Did the sun, which shone so brightly everywhere else, really fall upon him?
33Didst thou ever meet the Black Man, mother?"
33Dost know thy catechism?
33Dost thou know the man?
33Dost thou not see what I would say?
33Dost thou remember me?
33Doth this bring thee no comfort?"
33Doth thy sentence bind thee to wear the token in thy sleep?
33Ha, Hester Prynne?"
33Had Mr. Dimmesdale actually spoken?
33Had seven long years, under the torture of the scarlet letter, inflicted so much of misery and wrought out no repentance?
33Hast thou enticed me into a bond that will prove the ruin of my soul?"
33Hast thou exhausted possibility in the failure of this one trial?
33Hast thou forgotten it?"
33Hath he not pleaded well for the poor woman?"
33Hath she affections?
33Hath she any discoverable principle of being?"
33Hath she not expressed this thought in the garb of the poor child, so forcibly reminding us of that red symbol which sears her bosom?"
33How can it be otherwise?
33How fared it with him, then?
33How is it, Hester?
33How may this be unless you first lay open to him the wound or trouble in your soul?"
33Is Hester Prynne the less miserable, think you, for that scarlet letter on her breast?"
33Is it a play- day for the whole world?
33Is it because, when the minister wrote his name in the book, the Black Man set his mark in that place?
33Is it true, mother?
33Is the imp altogether evil?
33Is there no reality in the penitence thus sealed and witnessed by good works?
33Is there not shade enough in all this boundless forest to hide thy heart from the gaze of Roger Chillingworth?"
33Is there such a Black Man?
33Must I sink down there, and die at once?"
33Must it be thou, or I, that shall deal with this poor sinner''s soul?"
33O Thou to whom I dare not lift mine eyes, wilt Thou yet pardon me?"
33Or art thou one of those naughty elfs or fairies whom we thought to have left behind us, with other relics of Papistry, in merry old England?"
33Or is she an elfish spirit, who, as the legends of our childhood taught us, is forbidden to cross a running stream?
33Or might it suffice him that every wholesome growth should be converted into something deleterious and malignant at his touch?
33Or was there, as it rather seemed, a circle of ominous shadow moving along with his deformity whichever way he turned himself?
33Or would he spread bat''s wings and flee away, looking so much the uglier the higher he rose towards heaven?
33Or, if not, thou strange and elfish child, whence didst thou come?"
33Or, must she receive those intimations-- so obscure, yet so distinct-- as truth?
33Prithee, young one, who art thou, and what has ailed thy mother to bedizen thee in this strange fashion?
33See ye not, she is the scarlet letter, only capable of being loved, and so endowed with a millionfold the power of retribution for my sin?
33Shall I lie down again on these withered leaves, where I cast myself when thou didst tell me what he was?
33So thou thinkest the child will love me?"
33That unsunned snow in the matron''s bosom, and the burning shame on Hester Prynne''s-- what had the two in common?
33Then she spoke aloud--"Silly Pearl,"said she,"what questions are these?
33Then what was he?--a substance?--or the dimmest of all shadows?
33Thou wilt love him-- wilt thou not?"
33Was I not all this?"
33Was existence worth accepting even to the happiest among them?
33Was he weary of his labours?
33Was it but the mockery of penitence?
33Was not the secret told me, in the natural recoil of my heart at the first sight of him, and as often as I have seen him since?
33Were such a man once more to fall, what plea could be urged in extenuation of his crime?
33Were there not the brilliant particles of a halo in the air about his head?
33What can a ruined soul like mine effect towards the redemption of other souls?--or a polluted soul towards their purification?
33What can thy silence do for him, except it tempt him-- yea, compel him, as it were-- to add hypocrisy to sin?
33What canst thou do for the child in this kind?"
33What choice remains to me?
33What did it betoken?
33What have they all come to do, here in the market- place?"
33What is that the minister seeks to hide, with his hand always over his heart?
33What kind of business in life-- what mode of glorifying God, or being serviceable to mankind in his day and generation-- may that be?
33What know I of the minister''s heart?
33What mean you?"
33What say you to it, once again, brother Dimmesdale?
33What sayest thou?"
33What think ye, gossips?
33What was it?
33What were they?
33What will now be the course of his revenge?"
33What would the minister have said, mother?
33What, could he, whose sphere was in great cities, be seeking in the wilderness?
33What, in heaven''s name, is she?
33When hast thou been so sluggish before now?
33When the whole had gone by, she looked up into Hester''s face--"Mother,"said she,"was that the same minister that kissed me by the brook?"
33Where are you?"
33Wherefore should we linger upon it now?
33Whither leads yonder forest- track?
33Who is he?
33Who is he?"
33Who made me so?"
33Whom would they discern there, with the red eastern light upon his brow?
33Why did I not understand?
33Why did we not find it sooner?"
33Why does he do so, mother?"
33Why hast thou not avenged thyself on me?"
33Why shouldst thou tarry so much as one other day in the torments that have so gnawed into thy life?
33Why, then, had he come hither?
33Why, with such rank in the learned world, had he come hither?
33Will he continue, then, to keep our secret?
33Will not my aid be requisite to put you in heart and strength to preach your Election Sermon?"
33Wilt thou forgive?"
33Wilt thou give up that only privilege?
33Wilt thou not love him?
33Wilt thou reject that priceless benefit?"
33Wilt thou ride with me some fine night to see thy father?
33Wilt thou tell her this, thou witch- baby?"
33Wilt thou yet purge it out of thee, and be once more human?
33Would he arouse him with a throb of agony?
33Would he have clapped his hand over his heart, and scowled on me, and bid me begone?"
33Would he startle him with sudden fear?
33Would not the people start up in their seats, by a simultaneous impulse, and tear him down out of the pulpit which he defiled?
33Would you bring infamy on your sacred profession?"
33Would you, therefore, that your physician heal the bodily evil?
33and is it Mistress Hester that has a word for old Roger Chillingworth?"
33and why does the minister keep his hand over his heart?"
33and why dost thou wear it?
33can this be you?
33cried Pearl, after listening awhile to its talk,"Why art thou so sad?
33exclaimed a man in the crowd,"is there no virtue in woman, save what springs from a wholesome fear of the gallows?
33or am I given over utterly to the fiend?
33that dares thrust himself between the sufferer and his God?"
33that have made thee feeble to will and to do?
33that will leave thee powerless even to repent?
33what is your purpose?"
33what right had infirmity like his to burden itself with crime?
33why dost thou not come to me?"
36854''How is it possible?'' 36854 A fanatic,"he thought,"what shall I do with him?"
36854After the first evening?
36854Ah then, it came to that?
36854All, Victorine?
36854Allow me to tell you how every thing came about?
36854And Herr van der Weyden?
36854And did I really love her? 36854 And did that never occur to you?"
36854And did you never think what would come of this?
36854And do you really think of departing at the New Year?
36854And does that comfort me?
36854And how is it to be explained? 36854 And how shall this broken- down, sick man, weary with his tortures, find it?
36854And is Herr van der Weyden going back to Java again?
36854And is the wound serious?
36854And since when have we declined to admit Herr Berger?
36854And then?
36854And what did he say?
36854And what was this one thing?
36854And why should I?
36854And will you perhaps also attempt to justify the fact that he never concerned himself about his child?
36854And will you tell other people so?
36854And you adhered to that,he began again,"whatever Father Rohn might say?
36854And you answered?
36854Are you cruel enough to remind me of that?
36854Are you going already? 36854 Are you really ill?"
36854Begun? 36854 Berger?"
36854Better, I hope?
36854Business? 36854 But can we ascribe all the blame to him?"
36854But do you go?
36854But do you know him?
36854But ought this remote possibility to mislead you? 36854 But under what pretext?
36854But what else could one expect?
36854But what is this solution?
36854But why not? 36854 But why?"
36854But wo n''t you go up to the house after all?
36854But you are going home?
36854But you surely did not inquire about that?
36854Can I believe you rather than my mother? 36854 Can I suffer this?
36854Dead?
36854Did he send you to me on this mission?
36854Did the accused choose her Counsel?
36854Did you come on that account?
36854Did you tell the Chief Justice this?
36854Do n''t be afraid-- I only want----"You have come to warn us?
36854Do you know anything about the matter?
36854Do you know what the man- servant is called?
36854Does that poor creature in here strike you as being dangerous?
36854Does your Lordship wish to make an inspection?
36854Escaped?
36854Has he been here already?
36854Has he been here?
36854Has she been suddenly taken ill?
36854Have you read this, Sir?
36854He asked me if there was no one I was attached to, who loved me, to whom my life or death mattered? 36854 He does not suspect it?"
36854He is going to stay in Austria?
36854He surely did n''t torture you with bigoted speeches?
36854Her fate moves you?
36854How am I to understand this?
36854How are you?
36854How can you know that?
36854How could you tell this untruth? 36854 How did it come about that I broke my oath?
36854How do you know that?
36854How do you think of living now?
36854How is Victorine Lippert?
36854How long will this sleep last?
36854How shall I thank you?
36854How-- how does the case stand?
36854I need not tremble any more? 36854 If it should be they?"
36854If the worst were to happen?
36854In Gratz?
36854In any case?
36854In the dark?
36854In the first place: how would the fellow get out of the sick- room or out of his cell into the corridor of the female patients? 36854 In the prison?"
36854Indeed? 36854 Indeed?"
36854Indeed?--and what is the truth?
36854Is this the way to go on after a bad attack of the heart on the evening before? 36854 It is all discovered, is it not?"
36854It will not strike others, but will she not herself guess the truth?
36854It-- it came upon you as a surprise?
36854May I not?
36854May he not pay a visit to a friend and stay to supper there? 36854 Monstrous, is n''t it?
36854No,he then murmured,"how should I know him?"
36854None the less resolved?
36854Nor you either, Franz?
36854Nothing, what should he say? 36854 Oh-- in what way?"
36854Should I otherwise be so calm? 36854 So Fräulein von Tessenau is the happy bride?"
36854So he has none the less resolved to go on with that?
36854So many people believe in it, good earnest men who have seen and suffered much misfortune, how should a simple girl dare to doubt it? 36854 So many?"
36854So people suspect nothing? 36854 Something, my Lord?
36854Tessenau?
36854Thank me?--What for?
36854Thank you,said the raftsman after the door was shut"Well, how I know of your trouble?
36854That was in the beginning of your career?
36854The decision? 36854 The doctor told you?
36854The door through which one can get from here into the prison?
36854The law? 36854 The minister''s telegram?"
36854The worse has past, has n''t it?
36854Then I suppose you have come to buy the house?
36854Then why do you dissent from me with such conviction? 36854 Then you refuse me justice?"
36854Then you still insist that I shall proceed with it?
36854There is such a veritable hurly- burly at the residence, that even Franz hardly knows his way about-- where do you mean to stay?
36854This glimpse into a child''s soul makes you tremble? 36854 Was not the assassin an Italian?"
36854Well, how goes it now?
36854Well, what do you say to that? 36854 Well,"asked Berger,"is the witness here already?
36854Well?
36854What are you doing there?
36854What are you studying so diligently?
36854What are you thinking of?
36854What do you say to this?
36854What do you think of doing?
36854What does that matter to me? 36854 What has happened?"
36854What has happened?
36854What have I done to you?
36854What is the matter with you? 36854 What is there to prevent me?
36854What is this?
36854What need of asking?
36854What shall I say?
36854What to do?
36854What will you do?
36854What? 36854 What?
36854What?
36854When are you to take over the conduct of the Courts?
36854When do you leave Bolosch? 36854 Where did you see him?
36854Where is Fräulein Brigitta?
36854Which are they, my lord?
36854Who granted you the postponement?
36854Who has been playing this joke upon you? 36854 Who is the bridegroom?"
36854Whom does our present transaction relate to?
36854Why did you not discover yourself to me, or why did you not appeal to the Emperor for pardon?
36854Why do n''t you go to confession?
36854Why do you say such a horrible thing? 36854 Why do you suppose that?"
36854Why have you again put off going?
36854Why not?
36854Why should I? 36854 Why should you wish her to live?
36854Why wo n''t you go to Vienna? 36854 Why, what is there to discover?"
36854Why?
36854Why?
36854Will you allow me a question?
36854Wo n''t you be too lonely there?
36854Would it not be possible to take out a summons for perjury?
36854Would this be justice?
36854Yes, you must certainly be a countryman of his?
36854You are angry with me?
36854You are going to her?
36854You are going to the trial?
36854You are not going up to the house?
36854You are taking up the studies of your youth again, Fräulein Brigitta?
36854You asked him about her?
36854You divine the rest?
36854You have finished drawing up the appeal? 36854 You have now taken old Franz into your confidence?"
36854You know nothing of him?
36854You know there were not?
36854You shudder, George?
36854You took the girl abroad?
36854You want to refer to something again?
36854You_ will_ not?
36854Your Lordship does not know?
36854Your Lordship is going to receive the procession on my balcony?
36854Your arms?
36854Your lot?
36854''Are you still here?''
36854''Do you recognize that coat of arms?''
36854''Have you ever,''he now himself asked,''heard of any keys that my predecessor is said to have handed over?''
36854''Have you received my citation?''
36854''What are you looking for, my Lord?''
36854''What do you want playing the spy here?''
36854''What does this mean?''
36854''What door?''
36854''Why did you go away?''
36854''Why did you not do your duty to your child?
36854''You are a German, are you not Baron Sendlingen?
36854''You wish to convince me that you were not in criminal collusion with Mirescul?
36854..."Do I know it?"
36854After twenty- four hours nothing will be found, as we set about searching the house just to show our good intentions-- eh?''
36854Again he does not know whether he will see her or what he ought to do.... And do I know, would any one know in the presence of such a fate?"
36854All the functionaries of the Courts fell into the greatest state of excitement: who was safe if Sendlingen fell?
36854An energetic Judge could without doubt do so, but will old Hoche, now over seventy, succeed?
36854And at the same time it frightened him: for how could he look him in the face?
36854And could anything else be expected?
36854And could you save her by such a step?
36854And had not this change really set in even more visibly than her physical improvement?
36854And has he, too, to expiate it with honour and life?"
36854And how tragically it affects you?
36854And if I did, how could that trouble me?
36854And if Thou wouldst not do this, why didst Thou suffer us two to be born?
36854And if he then approved of his friend''s resolution not to preside, could he now urge him to undertake a similar task?
36854And if that were so, would it be cause for complaint?
36854And is my guilt greater than his?
36854And is such a person worth so much money?
36854And just as before, it seemed to annoy him to be surprised in the act.--Isn''t that strange?"
36854And therefore once again-- what will you do, Victor?"
36854And while I drove home through the snow- lit winter''s night, I kept repeating these words, for how was I henceforth to live without seeing her?"
36854And why was there no end to this suffering, a great, a liberating, a redeeming end?
36854And why?
36854Are there any pressing matters to be rid of?"
36854At length Berger asked:"You did not know that she bore your child in her bosom?"
36854Awful, thrilling was the cry-- a cry for help?--or a cry of baffled rage?
36854Berger stood still irresolutely; the place was so desolate, so uncanny; should he stay any longer?
36854Berger stopped irresolutely; should he wake him up and question him?
36854Berger was silent-- should he, dared he, tell the truth?
36854Berger?"
36854Berger?"
36854Berger?"
36854Berger?"
36854Berger?"
36854Berger?"
36854Besides you would not have starved here?''
36854But I, what can I appeal to?
36854But can small expedients be of any use?
36854But there we are confronted with the second riddle: how did she come by the file?
36854But was it really all- just?
36854But we took courage and told the man everything; our real name, and that we were only called von Tessenau here----""How did he come by this name?"
36854But what can it matter to me in my position?
36854But what is to be done to prevent it?
36854But what result was to be expected?
36854But what would be the good?
36854But you are still young, why will you cease to hope?
36854Ca n''t you understand that this life would be unendurable if a high- minded deed, a noble victory over self, did not at times rend the web?
36854Can my honour be more sacred than her life?"
36854Can this be against Thy will, Thou who art a God of love and mercy?
36854Can this lessen the burden of the fate?--for her, for him?"
36854Can you expect that of me?"
36854Can you expect this of me, you, who are yourself a Judge, bound by oath to judge both high and low with the same measure?"
36854Certainly my fears were foolish; how should it be found out?
36854Certainly the conflict was now more acute, more painfully accentuated, but was Sendlingen''s duty as a Judge any the less on that account?
36854Could he be guilty of perjury to save them both?
36854Could he then say:''I have no suspicion who could have helped her?''
36854Dear Heaven, how wretched he looks, and I am not accustomed to be spoken to by him in that way; but what does that matter?
36854Do n''t you see that a man in my situation can not think of himself or any such secondary consideration?"
36854Do n''t you think so, my Lord?"
36854Do you hear?
36854Do you know him?"
36854Do you know no remedy for it?"
36854Do you know so certainly that you will still be here then, that you will still have time then to hurry to Vienna?
36854Do you know this girl?"
36854Do you know whom this concerns?"
36854Do you see now that we liberals and our newspapers are some good?
36854Do you still intend to appeal?
36854Do you suppose that I never mean to enter that cell?"
36854Does he not understand that this very explanation tells most of all against the Minister?
36854Does n''t that appear probable to you too?"
36854Does that strike you as being better?
36854Does your Lordship desire that I should ask him for them?"
36854For look here-- how does the case stand?
36854From caution?
36854From mistrust?
36854Had he deserved this fate?
36854Had not the doctor himself said that she could only be saved by a change in her frame of mind?
36854Had the gentry no relations in Germany then?
36854Has he had news from Vienna?"
36854Has not justice suffered at your hands by your respect for the law, that justice, I mean, which speaks aloud in the heart of every man?"
36854Has the decision arrived?
36854Has your indisposition perhaps returned?"
36854Have you anything else to do here?
36854Have you begun the examination?"
36854Have you ever visited and repeatedly visited other condemned criminals?"
36854He has surely not been deceived?
36854His Majesty is severely wounded, if it had not been for the presence of mind of the butcher, Ettenreich----"He stopped abruptly,"What is the matter?"
36854How could he do this?
36854How could you have the heart to renounce a career that smiles upon you as yours does?"
36854How do you know that?
36854How has Baron Sendlingen been since?"
36854How should this poor, pale, timorous child defend herself alone against such a man?
36854How_ could_ you?"
36854I am no murderer, am I?"
36854I bade her be of good cheer, and then I told her much about his Lordship-- who knows better how, who knows him better?
36854I could only offer her my hand and ask:''Did that brute insult you?''
36854I had to have Mirescul arrested: were there not the bales of tobacco which the superintendent had seized?
36854I might say to Him:''Was n''t I obliged to try and keep her from sin by using the strongest words?
36854I warned you by your own life, and by causing your conscience and presentiments to speak to you-- why did you not obey Me?
36854Is he so much under your thumb that he must give you previous notice of his intention?
36854Is her guilt any the less for this, will this bring her child to life again?
36854Is n''t it odious?"
36854Is n''t that so?
36854Is n''t that unjustifiable?"
36854Is there a man in the wide world, who would have the heart to blame him for this?
36854Is there anything else to be done?"
36854It is inconceivable that the person has got out of the country; where would she get the money from?
36854Just this one thing: does it follow that this man must be a wretch?
36854May I accompany you back to your residence?
36854May I read it?
36854Most of them looked after him in utter astonishment; what could have brought the Chief Justice so early out of doors?
36854My father''s fate-- my future ruined-- may a man fight against himself in this way?
36854My heart is so full.... You are going to her-- are you not?
36854No?
36854Once more, and for the last time, I ask your Excellency, to what Court am I to surrender myself?"
36854One thing more, where did Franz leave him?"
36854Or have you ever perhaps known of a case among educated people?"
36854Or was he silent because he could speak no more?
36854Or was it perhaps the silent misery of his face, the beseeching look of his eyes?
36854Ought fidelity to the Law be stronger than fidelity to Justice?
36854Perhaps it is owing to overwork at the Inquiry in Vienna?"
36854Perhaps-- for who knows himself and his own heart?
36854Shall I pardon her now because she is the daughter of an influential man of rank, because she is your daughter?
36854She had a claim upon me-- could I make her my wife?
36854Should this consideration be more authoritative than every other?
36854Since when?"
36854Supposing he should now be examined on oath?
36854Tell me yourself, my Lord, does she look as if she were ill?"
36854That he is really guilty and can be convicted in spite of your neglect of duty?
36854That you should pay her a visit?
36854The barrister had a severe struggle with himself; should he tell the doctor the whole truth?
36854The old gentleman, you say, comes from Bavaria?"
36854The voice of nature speaks thus in the breast of every man, even the roughest, and should it be silent in me?"
36854They were kind, good people at Oosterdaal, the driver had told her that the gentleman was going to have driven there, why had he given up the idea?
36854This arrangement was evident enough, but how could I show surprise at what made me so blessed?
36854Thou wilt make reparation, sayst Thou, in Thy Heaven?
36854To our poor young lady, to Victorine?"
36854Was it because his face seemed familiar to her, mysteriously familiar, as if she had seen it ever since she could think?...
36854Was it not indelicate and selfish to gratify his own longing at the price of deeply and painfully stirring up his friend''s heart?
36854Was not the position the same as on the day of the trial?
36854Was the train too slow for him?
36854We were at our wits''end?
36854Were there not perhaps fatal circumstances that bound him against his will and prevented him doing his duty to your poor mother?"
36854What business?"
36854What do the doctors say?"
36854What do you advise, my Lord?"
36854What do you hope to attain?
36854What do you think of that?"
36854What does it matter to me what his name is, or his station?
36854What does your Lordship say to this calamity?
36854What else is Franz in the world for?"
36854What is his object?"
36854What is the reason of it?"
36854What is the result?"
36854What serious effect could this have upon the fate of your child?
36854What shall I do; merciful Heaven, what shall I do?"
36854What should he do?
36854What would have been the result, your Excellency?
36854When did he go out?"
36854When do you go to Vienna?"
36854When?"
36854Whether he is living or dead?
36854Who will vouch that it may not then be too late?
36854Whom else have I to thank but you?"
36854Why did Sendlingen hesitate to choose this course?
36854Why do you upset me?
36854Why expose yourself, for the sake of such an abandoned creature, to an action for libel on the part of the Countess and her servant?
36854Why should the news distress you?
36854Why should you have done this?"
36854Why vainly sound the lowest depths?
36854Why, therefore, did he wish that the attempt should be made?
36854Why, what is the matter?"
36854Why?
36854Why?
36854Will it be a solution if I succeed with my appeal, if the sentence of death is commuted to penal servitude for life or for twenty years?
36854Will you believe me?"
36854Would it not be possible to hand over the inquiry to some one else?"
36854Would not Death have been a deliverer here?
36854Would this flood ever subside again and the soil bring forth flowers and fruit?
36854Would you perhaps like to preside at it?"
36854You are surprised?
36854You naturally want to conceal where your daughter is now living?"
36854You say it is against your feelings to preside at to- morrow''s trial?"
36854You want me to lodge a petition for pardon?
36854You were very intimate with him, do you know?"
36854You will take back your words, wo n''t you?
36854asked Bergen"How am I to understand that?"
36854goodness me, what is the matter with you?
36854he has surely gone mad?
36854said I,''what does he want there?''
36854the Lord Chief Justice and now----""Have you seen him?"
36854there was no word of release or deliverance: how could I have broached it, how have claimed it from her?
36854you have not received other news?
33798? â � � queried the Senior Tutor.
33798After all, what is life for me?
33798All the superficial answers were ready at once; but was not her real objection only another facet of the diamond of selfishness?
33798And after all, when mother died, what was I to do?
33798And doesnâ � � t it exactly describe you?
33798And for Lily what could he still do?
33798And for the tenth place?
33798And if she had taken them, why not?
33798And if the Dean, why not Harbottle, his History tutor?
33798And it was an old friend.â � � â � � How dare you tell me anything about him?
33798And now must he regard his fatherâ � � s memory with condemnation?
33798And were not murders as foul being committed every moment?
33798And what about the murdered girl?
33798And what was Lily doing there?
33798And what was to happen to her now?
33798And what would he do after his degree, his third in greats?
33798And who was Jack?
33798And who was Lonsdale?
33798And who was Sylvia?
33798And why did Barnes keep fidgeting on the other side of the folding doors?
33798And why did Michael so particularly want him?
33798And why had he made the recollection worse for himself by letting Maurice enlarge upon his indignation?
33798And why was he here?
33798And with whom had Sylvia been to Brighton?
33798And yet supposing she had not taken the money?
33798And yet what should I do?
33798And, after all, why should he not?
33798Anyone does, donâ � � t they?
33798Appropriateness to what?
33798Are you going out or am I going out?
33798Are you going out?
33798Are you going to be selfish enough to satisfy your own silly pride at the expense of her happiness?
33798Arenâ � � t you unpacked_ yet?_ You are a slacker.
33798Arthur Lonsdale?â � � â � � Who?
33798Avery pulled up, suddenly hurt: â � � Does he?
33798Barmy Sid?
33798But by what small margin had his own mother escaped the doom of Lily?
33798But really what else could I do?
33798But what did fate intend should be his effect upon these people?
33798But what exactly was himself doing on the committee?
33798But where do you think I saw her?
33798But why arenâ � � t you married?
33798But why should I argue with you for your benefit?
33798But will you be happy here without me?â � � â � � Without you?
33798But would she let me so much as speak to you, even with the door only on the jar?
33798But you are sorry for me, Guy?
33798By the way, was there not some well- reasoned psychological explanation of this physical condition?
33798Canâ � � t you see that she has no moral energy?
33798Canâ � � t you see that sheâ � � s vain and empty- headed?
33798Canâ � � t you see that?
33798Canâ � � t you see the headlines?
33798Clarissa Vine, wasnâ � � t she called?
33798Could he ask Mrs. Ross to come up to town?
33798Could seventeen be captured anew?
33798Couldnâ � � t you say â � � noâ � �?
33798Did one sentence reach it, or was the whole business of the sermon merely an excuse to sit here basking in the stuffiness of the homely church?
33798Did you ever hear of such a thing?
33798Did you ever see such a house?
33798Did you ever?
33798Did you hear what he said?
33798Did you see her going down the road?
33798Didnâ � � t you say just now that I was very lucky?
33798Do they ever go out?
33798Do they still make meringues at your place?
33798Do you ever read a paper called The Spectator?
33798Do you get hold of them?
33798Do you know Pembroke?
33798Do you like my new hat?
33798Do you mind letting me through, sir?
33798Do you mind reading my slashing attack on the policy of the Oxford theater?
33798Do you think I could act, if I had a chance?
33798Do you think I let any one of those dozens touch her?
33798Doesnâ � � t it make you shiver?
33798Donâ � � t you find Christ Church a bit large?
33798Donâ � � t you?
33798Enough to give you the horrors, isnâ � � t it?
33798Five years ago he had been the first to speak: now, must it be she who sometimes spoke first?
33798For it is the same spirit in terms of action, isnâ � � t it?
33798Gainsborough...? â � � Michael began.
33798Get on with it, Royâ � � or whatâ � � s your name?
33798Going to work this morning?
33798Had civilization complicated too unreasonably the problem of evil?
33798Had he not rather been peering to see in their souls the reflection of his own?
33798Had not his own mother been sinned against by his father?
33798Have neither of you ever heard of anybody whose faith was confirmed by the realization of evil?
33798Have some cocoa if I make it?
33798Have you been to see Sandifer yet?
33798Have you ever thought of the romance in Troy measure?
33798He had an affair with Lily, didnâ � � t he?â � � â � � Ronnie Walker?
33798He shuddered to think how soon this airy beauty must have perished; and even now what was she?
33798Henry Meats had been very much like Henry Barnes; but where was now that lambent flame in the eyes?
33798Here was shelterâ � � why had he not shaped his career to stay forever in this cold peace?
33798Hope does have an anchor, doesnâ � � t she?
33798How could he refuse her this?
33798How long was it since he and Chator were here?
33798How much do you want to spend?
33798How should he ever know that he was not primarily responsible?
33798How should he obtain lunch?
33798How were Stella and Alan getting on at Compiègne?
33798How would he find his rooms?
33798I could argue against it on your side by telling you that you have no chance of keeping Lily faithful to you?
33798I mean, wouldnâ � � t she rather object to me smoking cigars?_ â � � Great scott!â � � interjaculated Michael.
33798I say, Guy, did you ever hear of anyone being cut out by a top- hat, cuckolded by a top- hat?
33798I say, are we all straight?
33798I say, which balls are you going to?
33798I say, why do they stick â � � Mr.â � � in front of your name over the door?
33798I think I shall be much better at selling cars, donâ � � t you?
33798I wonder how much of it is really applicable?â � � â � � To what?
33798If Stella comes, why not ask Mrs. Ross to chaperone her?
33798If you steal my purse and I follow you round and tell a copper, what would he do?
33798In that case, why establish Lily at Ararat House before they were married?
33798In the drawing- room of Cobble Place all was calm, as indeed, Michael thought, why on earth should it not be?
33798In this topsyturvydom might there not be perceived a great constructive force?
33798In what direction had she driven away?
33798Is it a heather mixture?
33798Is it necessary?
33798Is she dark?
33798Is that it?
33798Isnâ � � t Mrs. Ross a little on the heavy side?
33798Isnâ � � t it a vegetable?
33798Isnâ � � t there?
33798It would have been mysterious, that household, in any case, but was it necessary to assume that there was anything wrong?
33798Itâ � � s no good for you to nag at me, Fane.â � � â � � And what about the woman?â � � â � � Her?
33798Iâ � � ve only seen her in the distance.â � � â � � And youâ � � ve really fallen in love?
33798Just say youâ � � re not coming?
33798Kenneth, what are you going to be when you grow up?
33798Last Wednesdayâ � � or was it Thursday?â � � time goes by so fast, it seems hardly worth while to count the days, does it?
33798Letâ � � s see, that is your name?
33798Lilyâ � � s rather cross with me for taking her away from â � � such a nice boy.â � � Does that please you?
33798Listen, will you let me leave you for a very few days so that I can find the house youâ � � re going to live in?
33798Look here, have we all got to buy this rotten paper of yours?
33798Love and kisses.__ Lily._ Whatâ � � s the good of_ writing_ â � � kissesâ � �?
33798Marry her?
33798Maryâ � � s?
33798Meanwhile why should not Michael accompany him to some Cotswold village?
33798Michael darling, why are you laughing?
33798Michael, eh?
33798Michael?
33798Michael?
33798Miss Harper asked me to call her â � � Mabel.â � � Rather cheek, I thought, donâ � � t you think so?
33798Murdered ambition, murdered love, murdered pity, murdered gratitude, murdered faith, did none of these cry out for vengeance?
33798Must he confess that a positive sanctity abode in this church?
33798Must he hate him?
33798Must he withdraw entirely and confess defeat?
33798No.â � � â � � Oh, really?
33798Now that isnâ � � t a nice thing to do, is it?
33798Now the question is, what ought I to do?
33798Nowâ � � â � � â � � â � � Look here, â � � said Meats, â � � give over, will you?
33798Of what was she forever thinking?
33798Oh, and his coal and his gas as well?
33798Oh, why did Dick Prescott kill himself?
33798Oh, why had he not managed to get in front of those vehicles in time?
33798Only I never knew her, see?
33798Or should he drive home and perhaps find them there?
33798Or was all his life until this moment a dream, and was this reality?
33798Or was she a manâ � � s mistress, the mistress of a man of forty?
33798Or why not ask Sylvia herself?
33798Or would she not?
33798People always do, donâ � � t they, when they revisit places theyâ � � ve known in younger days?
33798Perhaps it was being married to Alan; or was Lily the reason?
33798Rather sporting of him, what?
33798Seriously, Stella, why did you send for me?
33798Sheâ � � ll move about this room as wonderfully as those swans upon the canal.â � � â � � Michael, whatâ � � s happened to you?
33798Sheâ � � s been away to Italyâ � � is there a place called Italy?
33798Should he announce his quest for her approbation and sympathy?
33798Should he call a hansom and drive home?
33798Should he call out to her, when next they passed him?
33798Should he engage them?
33798Should he go to the Orange and talk to Daisy?
33798Should he start the argument again by insisting that he had meant even twice as much as he had said?
33798So whatâ � � s the use in your carrying on so mad?
33798So who knows whatâ � � s happened since?
33798Supposing I get this fellowship?
33798Supposing Saunders came in here to fetch something?
33798Supposing she did not visit the Orient again for a long time?
33798Surely Saunders would have realized that his visit to Daisy was harmless: and yet would he?
33798That isnâ � � t right, is it?
33798Thatâ � � s Irish, isnâ � � t it?
33798Thatâ � � s a nice thing, isnâ � � t it?
33798The Orient Promenade?
33798The devotion of a lifetime could not wash out his deliberate sin againstâ � � and who was she?
33798Then she doesnâ � � t care for you?
33798There was never anything more.â � � â � � And Lonsdale?
33798They make pastry there, donâ � � t they?
33798Through me?
33798To what was he to lead them?
33798Topping, what?
33798Usually, itâ � � s the other way about, isnâ � � t it?
33798Very soon?
33798Was he to hide ignominiously behind this confounded curtain, and what on earth would happen if he were discovered?
33798Was it Sylvia who was making it difficult?
33798Was it a presentiment he felt, or was it merely thunder in the air?
33798Was it more than a figure of speech, an exaggerative personification under great emotion of what most people would call chance?
33798Was it possible to declare confidently the absolutism of evil?
33798Was it possible, then, to say that evil was something more than a mere failure to conform to goodness?
33798Was not Maurice coming to lunch?
33798Was that also to vanish on account of marriage?
33798Was that the thiefâ � � s and liarâ � � s film glazing her eyes as they stared straight into his own?
33798Was there not somewhere at the other end of Oxford a lecture at eleven oâ � � clock?
33798Was this a quixotic notion, to leave one set of people free from the necessity to hand themselves over to evil?
33798Well, I donâ � � t really call them safe, do you?
33798Well, why should I stand aside now and let you carry her off, even though you do want to marry her?
33798Well, would you like to think your house was going to be used to separate two people very much in love with each other?
33798Were they of no account?
33798Werenâ � � t you reading a book by William Morris the other day?
33798What about the Dean?
33798What can I worship?
33798What chance, thought Michael, could he stand against such an impenetrable phalanx of conversation as was bound to ensue from such a preponderance?
33798What clergyman?
33798What compact had he broken that men should freeze to stones and crush him?
33798What could Oxford give but the bells of out- worn beliefs, and the patter of aimless footsteps?
33798What could have brought Stella back from Vienna?
33798What could have induced Maurice to make such a fool of himself in Vennerâ � � s?
33798What could they be talking about?
33798What critical moment had arrived in the unpacking of Lonsdaleâ � � s wine to make the scout so heedless of Templeton- Collinsâ � � call?
33798What did the name matter?
33798What did the past matter?
33798What did they care, but that they were paid by society to remove rubbish?
33798What did they know of Meats and his life?
33798What do you think you are, unless youâ � � re jealous?
33798What fiery mission are you upon?
33798What had happened to Stella during this last year?
33798What if she does tell the coppers Iâ � � ve been living on her?
33798What indeed was the good of writing â � � kissesâ � �?
33798What invitation glittered in her look?
33798What is it Browning says?
33798What on earth was Barnes doing?
33798What on earth would he say when he arrived at the college?
33798What rumor of Cissie Cummings had traveled even to Leppard Street?
33798What undergraduate paradox are you trying to wield against me?
33798What was I saying?
33798What was he?
33798What was she doing at this moment?
33798What was that word you found just now?
33798What was the use of reading history unless the alchemy of literature had transcended the facts by the immortal presentation of them?
33798What was this column called?
33798What was to happen to all the people with whose lives he had lately been involved?
33798What, after all, did he know of this underworld without having lived of it as well as in it?
33798What?
33798Whatever next?
33798Whatâ � � s a little family opposition when you know youâ � � re going to be able to do what you want?
33798Whatâ � � s it done for me?
33798Whatâ � � s she like, Wandering Willie?
33798Whatâ � � s the name of the joker who keeps these digs?
33798Whatâ � � s your club?
33798Whatâ � � s your other name?
33798When should he obtain lunch?
33798Where are we going?
33798Where did you get that tea- caddy?
33798Where did you meet him?
33798Where have you been all these years?
33798Where is she?
33798Where should he obtain lunch?
33798Where the devil was this driver going?
33798Where the hell is that watch?
33798Where was Mauriceâ � � s sensitiveness that it could not react to his unexpressed hatred of the idea of living with him?
33798Where was she now?
33798Where were they now?
33798Who can stop you?
33798Who knows what may happen in Germany?
33798Who knows what she may not take it into her head to do?
33798Who was he?
33798Who was his mother?
33798Who was that bounder you were so fond of, and that girl who painted?
33798Whom on earth could he get to stay with Lily?
33798Whoâ � � s going to stay in the flat with her?
33798Whoâ � � s the maker?
33798Why canâ � � t Mrs. Castleton go to Bath by herself?
33798Why did she not step forward to greet him, if indeed she were Lily?
33798Why did you do that?
33798Why didnâ � � t Alan Merivale turn up?
33798Why didnâ � � t she turn round?
33798Why had Stella objected to his marriage with Lily?
33798Why had he gone to The Oxford to- night?
33798Why had he not returned to London with the others?
33798Why had he not stayed at Wychford?
33798Why had he spoken to Drake?
33798Why not again more completely?
33798Why not employ two servants, two of the automatons who simplified life as it was simplified in Cheyne Walk?
33798Why should he enter the world and call down upon himself such troubles and torments as had vexed his youth in London?
33798Why should he?
33798Why should not he take her for what she wasâ � � shrewd, mirthful, kind, honest, the natural light of love?
33798Why was he being so hard on Maurice?
33798Why was he so absurdly prejudiced against Germany?
33798Why was it so difficult to abandon the Sirenian creakings of this chair?
33798Why, then, had Barnes not met him at the Orange to- night?
33798Why, then, had he invited Maurice to go abroad?
33798Will Pauline like Lily?
33798Will nothing in all the world ever be what it seems?â � � â � � Look here, Michael, are you sure you werenâ � � t too hasty?
33798Will you have a squash and a biscuit?
33798Will you promise me not to worry yourself over my movements?
33798Will you?
33798With all the irritation of its verbal cleverness, he rejoiced to read_ Quo Vadis_?
33798Would he have to announce himself?
33798Would he have to stay in this recess all night?
33798Would it not be better to marry at once?
33798Would not Michael come too?
33798Would that hum of conversation never stop?
33798Would you be my guests here, although I shall be away?
33798Would you like to come with me to Mrs. Carruthersâ � � and hear some of the statistics?
33798Wouldnâ � � t you distinguish between New York and London?
33798Yet the Orient Promenade?
33798Yet what calamity did he fear?
33798Yet why should not the stoic ideal be applied to such a death?
33798You didnâ � � t expect to see me, eh?
33798You donâ � � t think Iâ � � m just a fool being shown his folly?
33798You like the color?
33798You remember I used to say you were like Pallas Athene?
33798You were glad to feel secure?
33798You were young and beautiful?
33798You were young, werenâ � � t you?
33798You wonâ � � t mind being bored a bit by my governor?
33798Youâ � � ll do what I ask?
33798Youâ � � re sure you donâ � � t mind my burying myself in the country?
33798Youâ � � ve heard of The Patchbox?
33798_ Dear Sylvia,__ If you arenâ � � t afraid of being beaten, why are you afraid to let me see Lily?__ I dare you to let me see her.
33798_ May 8.__ Dear M.,__ Whatâ � � s all this about Mrs. Ross chaperoning me at Oxford?
33798_ â � � The Failure of the Modern Illustrator._ â � � But wait a minute, who do you think itâ � � s by?
33798â � � Am I?
33798â � � And get a quart of milk for a cat?
33798â � � And the case against the male defendant?
33798â � � And what about your profession?
33798â � � And what made you do that?
33798â � � And what on earth are you going to do with twenty- two copies?
33798â � � And whom could you have wanted to meet this evening?
33798â � � And yet do you realize that weâ � � re only talking of eight years ago?
33798â � � But I did know herâ � � very well.â � � â � � Couldnâ � � t you foresee what she was bound to become?
33798â � � But everybody seems keen to speculate on the result.â � � â � � Why donâ � � t you take up a strong line of patronage?
33798â � � But how am I a corrective outside the fact that Iâ � � m your brother?
33798â � � But isnâ � � t it rather a shame to ask Miss Fane to play?
33798â � � But rather touching, donâ � � t you think, Michael?
33798â � � But why donâ � � t you and Stella go away somewhere together?
33798â � � By Jove, have you really?
33798â � � Can we make up a bridge four?
33798â � � Canâ � � t you keep your fat little paunch down?
33798â � � Dick Prescott?
33798â � � Did I make an ass of myself just now?
33798â � � Did you ever?
33798â � � Did you see that bad man Carben combing the potatoes out of his hair with a fork?
33798â � � Do you remember when we used to lie awake talking in bed at Carlington Road?
33798â � � Do you think I shall be able to stay here to- night?
33798â � � Do you think itâ � � s fair to try to prevent Lily from marrying me?
33798â � � Do you trust her?
33798â � � Donâ � � t I keep on telling you that Iâ � � m going?
33798â � � Donâ � � t you know back- slang and rhyming- slang?
33798â � � Donâ � � t you realize, even with all your researches into philosophy, that after to- night we shall only see each other in dreams?
33798â � � Famous cricketers, of course, that is?
33798â � � For me?
33798â � � Get her back into your life again?
33798â � � Go on, did you?
33798â � � Hat?
33798â � � Havenâ � � t you got the sense to see that this woman was attacked first?
33798â � � He must take them the Sacraments.â � � â � � My dearest boy, what are you talking about?
33798â � � How are you getting on?
33798â � � How can you let Sylvia persuade you against marriage?
33798â � � How dare you?
33798â � � I can say no more, can I?
33798â � � I saw a man arrested for murder this afternoon.â � � â � � Did you really?
33798â � � I say, Mr. Hoggins, have you got any of that home- brewed beer on draught?
33798â � � I say, arenâ � � t you rather keen on pictures?
33798â � � I think rather a Quakerish person, donâ � � t you, Alan?
33798â � � Is Michael going?
33798â � � Isnâ � � t he lovely?
33798â � � Knew?
33798â � � Lily, how can you bear to let Sylvia manage you like this?
33798â � � Lily, why are you so cold with me?
33798â � � Lily, you will marry me, wonâ � � t you?
33798â � � Look here, I say, why donâ � � t you tell me what youâ � � re crying about?
33798â � � Me?
33798â � � Mother, I must keep faith with myself.â � � â � � Only with yourself?
33798â � � Muck yourself, you dirty old case- keeper!â � � â � � You call me a case- keeper?
33798â � � My hat, Stella, where did you pick up that girl?
33798â � � No, I think youâ � � re awfully sweet.â � � â � � Well, why donâ � � t you marry me?
33798â � � No, no; why will you persist in ascribing the worst motive to everything I say?
33798â � � Oh no, I say, really, are you?
33798â � � Oh, and by the way, where are you going for your honeymoon?
33798â � � Oh, donâ � � t you know?
33798â � � Oh, really?
33798â � � Oh, what for?
33798â � � Rain, rain, go to Spain.â � � So ominous, isnâ � � t it?
33798â � � She isnâ � � t a straight- cut any longer.â � � â � � Well, what did I tell you?
33798â � � So was this fellow Wilberforce who lost his handkerchief, and what do you think?
33798â � � That sounds very gloomy, doesnâ � � t it?
33798â � � Through here?
33798â � � To think that Aunt Enormous was once in the ballet at the Opera.â � � â � � How dare you laugh at me?
33798â � � Venner, â � � said Lonsdale one evening, â � � do you remember the Bishop of Cirencester when he was up?
33798â � � We went down to see it last week.â � � â � � Oh, Alan, why did you tell him?
33798â � � Well, I canâ � � t stay moping indoors all the evening, can I?
33798â � � Well, howâ � � s Oxford?
33798â � � Well, kid, I suppose you know best, but Michael is a Jewish name, isnâ � � t it?
33798â � � Weâ � � ll get a hansom.â � � â � � What, ride in a hansom?
33798â � � What about you?
33798â � � What did I do?
33798â � � What did I say?
33798â � � What did you have for lunch?
33798â � � What do you want to go away for?
33798â � � What does Lonsdale think?
33798â � � What house is that?
33798â � � What made you come here?
33798â � � What made you come to this inn?
33798â � � What was it again?
33798â � � What would you think?â � � â � � Think?
33798â � � What?
33798â � � Whatâ � � s the good in you standing gaping there?
33798â � � Whatâ � � s the matter?
33798â � � Where shall we go?
33798â � � Who could say so easily?
33798â � � Who?
33798â � � Why are you living in Leppard Street?
33798â � � Why didnâ � � t you wire which train you were coming by?
33798â � � Why donâ � � t you come back with me?
33798â � � Why donâ � � t you go back on the streets yourself?
33798â � � Why is the door of her bedroom locked?
33798â � � Why not let me get you one, sir, and send it round to Cheyne Walk?
33798â � � Why not?â � � â � � Why not?
33798â � � Why should I?
33798â � � Why, are you making exhaustive researches into the social aspects of Oxford life?
33798â � � Why, whatâ � � s the matter with it?
33798â � � Why?â � � â � � Why?
33798â � � Will Lily be dressed soon?
33798â � � Will nothing persuade you?
33798â � � Will you answer one question?
33798â � � Will you wear the mantilla I brought you from Spain?
33798â � � Wonâ � � t I?
33798â � � Would you be frightfully bored if I asked you to come down to the station and meet them?
33798â � � You are serious, arenâ � � t you?
33798â � � You donâ � � t remember me, I expect?
33798â � � You offered me five quid a week, didnâ � � t you?
33798â � � You seemed to take no interest in the opera, and you usually enjoy Puccini, donâ � � t you?
33798â � � You think Lilyâ � � s a tart, donâ � � t you?
33798â � � You think?â � � â � � What?
33798â � �_Michael, why do you make me love you so?_â � � Was that the last protest she ever made against the thralldom of passion?
2070''Air you Jean Isbel, son of ole Gass Isbel?'' 2070 ''Counterfeit?
2070''Who saw me?'' 2070 ''Why was n''t I smart?''
2070''You say you saw me?'' 2070 Adios means good- by?"
2070Agreed.... All daid black, is n''t he, except that white face? 2070 Am I drunk that you grab me?"
2070Am I nice?
2070Am I out of my haid, or are y''u?
2070Am I to pack my belongin''s or leave them heah?
2070An'', say, did n''t thet last shot sound too sharp fer Somers''s forty- five?
2070An''are y''u Bill Isbel?
2070An''how are we goin''to get their bodies?
2070An''now what do you think of Jean Isbel?
2070An''now what''s left for me?
2070An''powerful thoughtless an''--an''blind-- lettin''men kiss you an''fondle you-- when you''re really a growed- up woman now?
2070An''then what?
2070An''then, what d''ye think? 2070 An''whar''s Guy Isbel?"
2070An''what then, boy?
2070An''which way?
2070An''who told you I was goin''to ride in to- day?
2070An''who''s that?
2070An''why?
2070An''you want to leave it?
2070And where have y''u been, uncle? 2070 And you never opened it?"
2070Ann, did you ever meet Ellen Jorth?
2070Ann, do you think she''s a bad girl?
2070Anyhow, the woods was full of flyin''bullets.... Springer, did you account for any of them?
2070Anythin''to interest me?
2070Are y''u goin''to stay heah-- an''wait for them?
2070Are you a sheep herder?
2070Are you goin''to stay here always?
2070Are you hurt-- bad?
2070Are yu goin''away again?
2070Are-- you-- all right?
2070Aw, dad, you do n''t reckon they''ll round us up heah?
2070Bad? 2070 Between sheepmen and cattlemen?"
2070Blaisdell, did y''u ever heah of me in Texas?
2070Blue, how air y''u?
2070Blue?
2070But I asked you to marry me?
2070But I''m shore curious.... Daggs, then-- he was nothin''to y''u?
2070But what''s the use of thinkin''? 2070 By whom?
2070By whom?
2070Cain''t I run a horse round heah without being chased?
2070Cain''t it be helped?
2070Care- less?
2070Colter, what are y''u goin''to do?
2070Colter, what''re we goin''to do?
2070Colter-- where-- oh, where are Y''u takin''me?
2070Colter? 2070 Dad, tell me, is there goin''to be a war?"
2070Dad, when y''u play cards do n''t y''u call a spade a spade?
2070Dad, where''s my pack?
2070Dad, will those hogs-- eat human flesh?
2070Deals? 2070 Did I say I would n''t?"
2070Did Sprague tell you aboot this half- Indian Isbel-- aboot his reputation?
2070Did he look to you like a real woodsman?
2070Did he say Spades belonged to him?
2070Did he shoot himself accidentally?
2070Did y''u go with them?
2070Did y''u know many Texas girls?
2070Did y''u offer to give Spades back?
2070Did y''u see Isbel?
2070Did y''u talk to him?
2070Did y''u tell the truth-- when y''u denied ever bein''a sweetheart of Simm Bruce?
2070Did you come heah to see me?
2070Did you get a bead on anythin''?
2070Did you know who they were?
2070Do n''t you know?
2070Do y''u?
2070Do you like him?
2070Do you like it?
2070Does it mean anythin''to y''u?
2070Does old Sprague live here?
2070Doon''t y''u know anythin''about-- about people? 2070 Ellen, did Jean Isbel see this black horse?"
2070Ellen, has Colter told y''u yet-- aboot-- aboot Lee an''Jackson?
2070Ellen, what riled Daggs?
2070Ellen, what''s happened to y''u?
2070Ellen, y''u shore know I always loved y''u-- now do n''t y''u?
2070For my sake?
2070For what?
2070Forty- four, eh? 2070 Gamblin''?"
2070Game I... Game of what?
2070Girl, have y''u lost your nerve?
2070Girl, we''re strangers, but what of that? 2070 Girl, what do you mean?"
2070Girl, what the hell are y''u sayin''?
2070Go with them? 2070 Gun?
2070Hash Knife Gang? 2070 Have n''t you sense enough to see that?
2070Have you got a horse?
2070Have you no shame? 2070 Hey, Ellen, are y''u there?"
2070Hey, Jim-- what''s the shootin''?
2070How aboot Simm Brace?
2070How aboot friends?
2070How aboot the sheep?
2070How do you know, boy?
2070How many left in that Isbel outfit?
2070How so?
2070How them winders have wooden shutters thet keep a light from showin''outside? 2070 How''d this heah young Isbel strike you?"
2070How''d y''u- all guess that?
2070How''d yu do that? 2070 How''s Tad?"
2070How''s that, Johnny?
2070How-- so?
2070Insulted you?...
2070Is that a wolf?
2070Jean, do you know any of them?
2070Jean, what you make of it?
2070Jean, would it be any easier for our women if we let these men shoot us down in cold blood?
2070Jean-- can you-- can you shoot that far?
2070Jim, what''s to be done?
2070Killed them-- that way?
2070Like what?
2070Mah child, when''d Kurnel Jorth ever play for fun?
2070Mah dear, shore you set on my knee just the other day, now, did n''t you?
2070Man, could I do more?
2070Me? 2070 My name-- mentioned?"
2070No.... Did Sprague tell you anythin''about the row he saw me in?
2070Of course there are honest an''square sheepmen in the Basin?
2070Oh, did he really say that? 2070 Pepe, when is Antonio comin''back?"
2070Please keep this-- this meetin''of mine with her all to yourself, wo n''t you?
2070Queen, is my uncle Tad heah?
2070Reckon you''re used to bunkin''outdoors?
2070Say, Bruce,said Daggs,"was this heah palaverin''of yours an''Jean Isbel''s aboot the old stock dispute?
2070Say, ca n''t he twinkle through the forest? 2070 Say, did you see any strange horse tracks?"
2070Say, do y''u expect me to believe that?
2070Say, do you reckon Blue really is King Fisher?
2070Say, was Daggs in thet Jorth outfit?
2070See?
2070Seein''that you an''Lee Jorth hate each other, why could n''t you act like men? 2070 Shore y''u do n''t think I''d run off if my dad got in a fight?"
2070Shore y''u never expected me?
2070Slater, what''s this heah black''s name?
2070So y''u- all got home?
2070So? 2070 Son, did you bury Bernardino?"
2070Spades?
2070Stolen-- pasture-- tracked him up heah?
2070Tell me, uncle, what''s goin''on down in the Valley?
2070That aboot your bein''so good?
2070That y''u, Jean?
2070Then you''ll meet me here day after to- morrow?
2070Then-- Are you on the ranchers''side?
2070Thet made Bruce bust out puffin''an''spittin'':''Wha- tt, fer instance? 2070 This-- sheepman, Jorth?"
2070To those hogs? 2070 Too late?"
2070Uncle John, y''u shore cain''t mean my father would n''t stop fightin''long enough to drive the hogs off an''bury those daid men?
2070Uncle Tad, are y''u heah?
2070Uncle, are y''u in pain?
2070Wal, Ellen-- how aboot Jean Isbel-- our half- breed Nez Perce friend-- who was shore seen handlin''y''u familiar?
2070Wal, Jean, do you recollect them shootin''-irons?
2070Wal, Miss Jorth, I reckon you mean we''re a bad lot of sheepmen?
2070Wal, are y''u goin''away with me?
2070Wal, boss, what did I tell you?
2070Wal, come in an''set down, wo n''t you?
2070Wal, now what''s up?
2070Wal, then, why did you let them? 2070 Wal, this stand- offishness of yours?"
2070Wal, what happened out there?
2070Wal, what if it is?
2070Wal, what''re they goin''to do after dark, an''what''re WE goin''to do?
2070Wal, what''s your trick?
2070Wal, would n''t you git kind of a hunch thet the rustlers was-- say a leetle friendly toward the sheepmen?
2070Was Slater near you when he yelled out?
2070Was he glad to hear it?
2070Was it-- y''u?
2070Was n''t thet a queer way fer a man to act?
2070Well then, why did you ask?
2070Were n''t any of y''u decent enough to look after my uncle?
2070Whar?
2070What did I fetch you, hey?
2070What did he have in that package? 2070 What did he think of me?"
2070What did he want up heah?
2070What did you do with it?
2070What did you see?'' 2070 What difference does that make?
2070What do I care for the talk down in that Basin?
2070What do y''u mean?
2070What do y''u want there?
2070What do y''u want?
2070What do you make of this kind of fightin''?
2070What for-- y''u hussy? 2070 What is it, Shepp?"
2070What more do we want?
2070What of? 2070 What started such rumor?"
2070What the hell''s up?
2070What was it, then?
2070What''ll become of her? 2070 What''s got into y''u?"
2070What''s in a name?
2070What''s that?
2070What''s the good word?
2070What''s the matter with him?
2070What''s the matter, kid?
2070What''s this?
2070What''s-- wrong-- up heah?
2070What- at? 2070 Where bound?"
2070Where did it happen? 2070 Where do we come in?"
2070Where is he?
2070Where was me an''Guy, huh? 2070 Where was your gun?"
2070Where you goin''with your gun? 2070 Where''s Antonio?"
2070Where''s Queen?
2070Where''s Somers?
2070Where''s dad an''Uncle Jackson?
2070Where''s father?
2070Where''s my dad?
2070Where?... 2070 Which one do you want, Jean?"
2070Which way is the Rim?
2070Who are they goin''to fight?
2070Who did, then?
2070Who has?
2070Who is he?
2070Who''re they?
2070Who''re--- you?
2070Who''s after you?
2070Who''s goin''to tell the women?
2070Who''s this man Greaves?
2070Who''s with y''u, Colter?
2070Who-- did it?
2070Who? 2070 Who?"
2070Whose gun is that?
2070Why did y''u want to tell me that particularly?
2070Why do you hate me so?
2070Why not?
2070Why not?
2070Why should I?
2070Will somebody please tell me where to find my father, Gaston Isbel?
2070With y''u, dad, at the haid of one faction and Gaston Isbel the other?
2070Wo n''t y''u take me away?
2070Word has been passed ag''in''your good name-- your honor.... An''hevn''t you given cause fer thet?
2070Would n''t you like to know? 2070 Would you go away with me?"
2070Y''u mean that?
2070Y''u will be-- Ellen-- unless--"Aw, shut up that kind of gab, will y''u?
2070Y''u''re shore?
2070Yes?
2070You know he''s got this Daggs to lead his faction against the Isbels?
2070You know this talk of sheepmen buckin''the cattlemen is all a blind?
2070You mean Greaves or some of his friends?
2070You''re not insulted?
2070''Why not?
2070... An''what''s likely to come of this mess?"
2070... An''why not?"
2070... Could y''u forgive a Jorth?"
2070... Dad, ca n''t this fight be avoided?"
2070... Did he-- really mean it?"
2070... Do y''u know anythin''about hogs?"
2070... How can a girl be nice when she has no clean, decent woman''s clothes to wear?"
2070... How''re y''u buckin''up, girl?"
2070... Now ai n''t y''u, shore?"
2070... Wal, I might hev reckoned so.... Ellen, how do you stand on this hyar sheep an''cattle question?"
2070... What kind of a game do you think you can play with me?"
2070... What you mean, girl, runnin''like a streak right down on us?
2070... What''ll become of all the women?
2070... Who did kill my father?"
2070Aboot his father''s range an''water?
2070After all, was it not merely an accident?
2070Ai n''t this a store?
2070Ai n''t y''u a hoss tracker thet rustlers cain''t fool?
2070Ai n''t y''u a plumb dead shot?
2070Ai n''t y''u an Injun, Jean Isbel?
2070Ai n''t y''u wuss''ern a grizzly bear in a rough- an''-tumble?
2070An''Antonio''s gone.... Now, honest, Ellen, did n''t y''u heah rifle shots off somewhere?"
2070An''Bill an''Guy?"
2070An''how do y''u account for layin''me out with every dirty name y''u could give tongue to?"
2070An''partickler aboot, sheep?"
2070An''what for?"
2070An''where''s Queen?"
2070An''you, Jean, where''s your girl?
2070And why not?
2070Any truth in that?"
2070Are You well, dad, an''all right?"
2070Are n''t y''u takin''a terrible chance?"
2070Are y''u cut?
2070Ask him?"
2070Besides, if she had wanted to run off from Colter, where could she go?
2070Between whom?"
2070But could he lie there to hear-- to see-- when he had a knife and an arm?
2070But how much longer are yu goin''to be like this heah?"
2070But thet was only natural, considerin''--""What?"
2070But what did it matter who was to blame for the Jorth- Isbel feud?
2070But what if you throwed your sheep round my range an''sheeped off the grass so my cattle would hev to move or starve?"
2070But what the hell CAN we do?"
2070But what was the vague sense of all not being well with him-- the essence of a faint regret-- the insistence of a hovering shadow?
2070But would n''t you hev a queer idee aboot it?"
2070By what monstrous motive had she done that?
2070By whom?
2070Ca n''t you feel the same about me?"
2070Ca n''t you see that?
2070Ca n''t you tell that?
2070Colter-- cain''t y''u see?"
2070Could he live up to the character that somehow had forestalled his advent in Grass Valley?
2070Could she escape her fate?
2070Could she ever forget?
2070Could these be friends of the Jorth crowd, on the way with warnings of the approach of the Isbels?
2070Could y''u?"
2070Dad, what was the idea askin''me to pack out an arsenal?"
2070Did Bill know what Blue knew?
2070Did Colter mean what Daggs had always meant?
2070Did he say anythin''about what he an''the rest of them are goin''to do?"
2070Did n''t Jean find the black hoss up at Jorth''s ranch?"
2070Did they sense that their father would never come back?
2070Did you find it?"
2070Do y''u heah that?
2070Do you Isbels want to be killed like sheep?"
2070Do you?"
2070Ellen did not return his greeting, but queried, almost breathlessly,"Did y''u come by our ranch?"
2070First off, what did Jim Blaisdell tell you?"
2070Had Gaston Isbel truly and dishonestly started her father on his downhill road?
2070Had he become infatuated, all in a day, with this Ellen Jorth?
2070Had he fallen?
2070Had he met her only that morning?
2070Had not the Ellen Jorth incident ended?
2070Had she reached out to clasp him?
2070Had they lied?
2070Has he any children?"
2070Have any of you a word to say in Ellen Jorth''s defense?
2070Have yu got any hay for the hosses?"
2070He might kill y''u and-- then where would I be?"
2070He never lived heah.... An''my sister Ann said-- he got sweet on y''u.... Now did he?"
2070Hev you any relatives away from hyar thet you could go to till this fight''s over?"
2070How aboot that?"
2070How aboot that?"
2070How aboot thet?''
2070How about Jorth?
2070How can a novel be stirring and thrilling, as were those times, unless it be full of sensation?
2070How can the truth be told about the pioneering of the West if the struggle, the fight, the blood be left out?
2070How could it happen?
2070How strange that the little ones seemed to realize the meaning of this good- by?
2070Hussy?
2070I ca n''t say the meetin''was not interestin'', at least to me.... Will you tell me what you know about her?"
2070I expect him back soon.... Did y''u come to see him?"
2070I meant only hevn''t you been, say, sort of-- careless?"
2070I met you... fell in love with you in a flash-- though I never knew it till after.... Why do you hate me so terribly?"
2070I must stick to Dad.... or kill myself?"
2070I said so, did n''t I?"
2070I seen him nount his horse an''ride away.... Now, girl, what hev you to say?"
2070I wonder, Colter-- did y''u ever have a home-- a mother-- a sister-- much less a sweetheart?"
2070I''m lost.... What does it matter?
2070I--""Tad, how''s your hurt?"
2070If I thought so, would I want to see you again?"
2070If nature had not failed her, had God failed her?
2070If she had done sore injury to Isbel what bad she done to herself?
2070Is he daid?"
2070Is n''t there something I can do?"
2070Is that all?"
2070Jorth will have some of these fellows.... Now, are we goin''to wait to be sheeped off our range an''to be murdered from ambush?"
2070Just to be born, just to suffer, just to die-- could that be all?
2070Loved her?
2070Me?"
2070Meetin''me in the woods?"
2070Must she decay there like one of these rotting logs?
2070Must she forever be repulsing these rude men among whom her lot was cast?
2070My sister?
2070News?"
2070Now does n''t he?"
2070Say,''Uncle Jean, what did you fetch us?''
2070She might be crushed and destroyed by life, but was there not something beyond?
2070She rose and asked,"Where can I sleep?"
2070Shore my pride made me a fool.... An''now have I any choice to make?
2070Shore you ai n''t goin''to say good mawnin''to this heah bad lot?"
2070So y''u wish Jean Isbel would hop in heah, do y''u?"
2070Solitude, the empty aisles of the forest, the far miles of lonely wilderness-- were these the added all?
2070Still-- was she glad, after all?
2070Strange, is n''t it?
2070Suppose y''u''re on the way to Grass Valley?"
2070The little ones?"
2070The silence then broke with a hoarse,"What''s thet?"
2070Then-- what did dad do?"
2070There was shore--""Who-- who was killed?"
2070Wal, what is it, then-- if I''m safe to ask?"
2070Wal, what''re you goin''to do aboot it?"
2070Wal, where was you headin''for before you got lost?"
2070Was he hiding?
2070Was he jealous of the men who had the privilege of her kisses?
2070Was he not faithless to his father?
2070Was he thinking of the miserable battle his father had summoned him to lead-- of what it would cost-- of its useless pain and hatred?
2070Was it an omen?
2070Was it not a sudden transition of her nature to the dominance of hate?
2070Was it only a day since he had met Ellen Jorth?
2070Was it the situation that struck her with a foreboding perplexity or was her intuition steeling her against this man?
2070Was it too late?
2070Was she riding to escape from herself?
2070Was that what I come out heah for?"
2070Was the row in Greaves''s barroom aboot sheep?"
2070Was there no end to this gulf of despair?
2070Was your mother decent?
2070Was your sister decent?
2070Well, who''s we?"
2070Were they mistaken in the canyon?
2070Whad''d you do, Jean?"
2070What ailed her?
2070What could they mean?
2070What could this one be?
2070What could, they mean?
2070What did he want of her?
2070What did it matter?
2070What did old Isbel have in his mind?
2070What did she care what it contained?
2070What did you do?"
2070What do I care what y''u believe?"
2070What do y''u want heah?"
2070What else on earth can we do?"
2070What good, what help, Jean wondered, could the cold, sweet, granite water, so dear to woodsmen and wild creatures, do this wounded, hunted rustler?
2070What had happened to her?
2070What had made all the difference?
2070What had she done that day?
2070What had she learned?
2070What had she to hide from Jean Isbel?
2070What had that star to do with hell?
2070What if he admired her?
2070What lay before him?
2070What mattered all else?
2070What might they mean to poor, ragged, untidy, beautiful Ellen Jorth?
2070What then did it portend now?
2070What then?"
2070What was he goin''to do with it?"
2070What was her story?
2070What was in it?
2070What was the faint, deep, growing thrill that accompanied some of his thoughts?
2070What was the use?
2070What was there about Colter with which she must reckon?
2070What was this lying calm when there seemed to be a stone hammer at her heart?
2070What with?"
2070What would be left?
2070What''d he look like?"
2070What''d you think then?"
2070What''re y''u drivin''at, Uncle John?"
2070What''s a name, anyhow?
2070What''s his name, dad?
2070What, fer instance?, asked Isbel, quick an''sarcastic.
2070Where was Jean Isbel going?
2070Where was that splendid and terrible daring of the gunman?
2070Where were your herders an''cowboys?
2070Where you been, girl?"
2070Where''d y''u leave yours?"
2070Who is he?
2070Who saw it?
2070Who was she?
2070Who were they?
2070Who would ever think of Ellen Jorth?
2070Who''s stealin''''em?"
2070Why did he not wait in the open to fight and face the death he had meted?
2070Why had he come back?
2070Why had she not resented his action?
2070Why queer?
2070Why should he ponder?
2070Why should he remember?
2070Why should it not be pleasant to run across some one new-- some one strange in this heah wild country?"
2070Why''d you do thet, Jean?"
2070Why?
2070Will y''u?"
2070Will you tell me where my dad lives?"
2070Would it be a Jorth or an Isbel?
2070Would n''t it be better for us first to see if he crossed the canyon?
2070Would the dog yelp that way if the man was dead?
2070Would you be friends with her if you could?"
2070Y''u mean I could n''t do that now?"
2070Y''u''re from the coast?"
2070Yet was that all?
2070cain''t y''u tell a decent woman?
2070is there no other way?
2070she whispered in her distraction,"is there nothing left-- nothing at all?"
2070what''s the matter?"
15416''Besides''what?
15416''Cast her out''? 15416 ''Sorry''?"
15416A funny little pink and black devil, is n''t it?
15416Ai n''t Nature under God''s direction?
15416All well, I hope?
15416Altogether?
15416And I say that, though a publican and the wife of a publican; and so do you, do n''t you, Job?
15416And d''you think I care what they say about me?
15416And do n''t Nature tickle us to our own undoing morning, noon, and night? 15416 And how are the gee- gees?"
15416And how d''you think about it? 15416 And how''s Mister Roberts, Sarah?"
15416And if I think of anything may I tell you?
15416And if he does? 15416 And if they are, what does it matter as long as they are all straightforward?
15416And my credit can go to the devil, I suppose?
15416And see the baby?
15416And the Red Hand has been here, has it? 15416 And what about her?
15416And what are your wishes alongside of your acts? 15416 And what did he call justice?"
15416And what did you do, Dick? 15416 And what does he say, Nelly?"
15416And what if I decline to take ten shillings a week, after fifty years of work in his beastly Mill?
15416And what is the best?
15416And what other point of view, in keeping with honour and religion, exists?
15416And what''s the result? 15416 And what, if I say''no''?"
15416And when d''you weigh in?
15416And why should Bridetown be denied the privilege of numbering a beautiful girl amongst its population?
15416And why should I be asked to pull tons less of solid weight? 15416 Apart from the necessity and justice,"she said,"and taking it for granted that the thing must happen, what is your opinion of the future?
15416Are you a villain? 15416 Are you sure it''s all for his sake?
15416Are you sure-- can you be sure, Ray? 15416 Are you?
15416At least you''ll do nothing to come between us?
15416Because you get a few tea- parties and old women at nine- pence a head on your little bit of grass?
15416Better than Sabina Dinnett?
15416But Sabina?
15416But if I want to make him mine? 15416 But surely''The Tiger''s''your house, sir?"
15416But that being so, ca n''t you see you ought to support me in everything?
15416But what about you? 15416 But what know they?
15416Can I help you?
15416Can anything be fair to her short of marriage?
15416Can even a man I thought large- minded and broad- minded and all the rest of it, go on twaddling about this as if he was an old washer- woman? 15416 Can that worry you?"
15416Can you give me a few minutes, Uncle Ernest? 15416 Can you think I''m sorry?
15416Could your child be anything but clever with his hands, Sabina?
15416D''you know the lime- kiln on North Hill?
15416D''you know what you''re doing?
15416D''you mean he''s stopping the allowance?
15416D''you mean his brother, or the Mill?
15416D''you mean''The Magnolias''?
15416D''you think Ray has grown bad- tempered, father?
15416D''you think you could speak to Richard for me, and put out the truth concerning''The Seven Stars''?
15416Dead?
15416Did Sabina agree easily?
15416Did he say anything about his plans?
15416Did n''t it make you ill?
15416Did we quarrel? 15416 Do the people like the new master?"
15416Do you honestly mean that you could look the world in the face if you ruin this woman?
15416Do you know any particular place that he liked?
15416Do you see anything of Raymond?
15416Do you? 15416 Do you?"
15416Does he want to?
15416Engaged to be married, of course?
15416Everything''s all right, I suppose?
15416Good God-- is there no peace, even here?
15416Granted, but he do n''t ask many questions of Alice Chick or Nancy Buckler, do he? 15416 Have n''t you ever guessed what I felt?"
15416Have you any friends you particularly wish to be there? 15416 Have you noticed how a natural instinct makes the young long to escape from the presence of age?
15416Have you seen Bert, the newspaper boy? 15416 Have you written to Daniel?"
15416He was n''t quite a rogue, was he?
15416Holidays round again, young man? 15416 Hope the will was all right?"
15416How can I say it''s an open question after this? 15416 How can I tell?
15416How can he?
15416How can we? 15416 How could she think so?"
15416How could you love and cuddle a ghost?
15416How d''you know that, Aunt Jenny?
15416How did you happen to be a spinner?
15416How did you play? 15416 How long are you going to take?"
15416How should I talk? 15416 How would it be if you sold the hunter and got a nice everyday sort of horse that you could ride, or that Sabina could drive?"
15416How''s the works?
15416How''s your rheumatism?
15416How''s your uncle, Job?
15416However do you get through it all?
15416I hope your brother was sporting?
15416I know, but I hope you''ll have a big night off before the deed is done and you take leave of freedom-- what?
15416I lay you dressed him down then?
15416I suppose Daniel will come up to the scratch all right?
15416I suppose you thought I should go to my father''s funeral? 15416 I wonder-- I wonder, Ray?"
15416If I showed you my den in the store, would you swear to God never to tell?
15416If I''m his boy, why ai n''t my mother his wife, like all the other chaps''fathers have got wives?
15416If it is n''t?
15416In other words you''ve changed your mind?
15416Is Mister Raymond here?
15416Is his mother going?
15416Is it true Sabina is going to have a baby? 15416 Is n''t it a darling little church?"
15416Is n''t nature all powerful and blood thicker than water? 15416 Is she going to see me, or is n''t she?"
15416Is she going to the mill to- morrow?
15416Is that true, or is n''t it?
15416Is the wedding day fixed?
15416Is the wedding put off then?
15416Is there nothing in paternity?
15416It''s war then?
15416It''s you, is it?
15416Just to show you''re a bit out of the common, perhaps?
15416Know more of him than I do?
15416May I say a few words to you?
15416May I speak to you a moment before you start with Miss Waldron?
15416Meaning what?
15416Might we? 15416 Miss Waldron, of course?"
15416Most true, I''m sure; but you did n''t come to tell me that?
15416Mr. Ironsyde wants everything just so, and why not?
15416Mrs. Northover''s compliments and might we have the big fish kettle till to- morrow? 15416 No doubt your first would turn in his grave if you did,"he admitted;"but what about it?
15416No newspaper on Saturday-- how was that?
15416Not walking too fast for you?
15416Now how did you divine that? 15416 Or mine be anything but fond of machinery?"
15416Perhaps you''d rather not? 15416 Perhaps you''ll tell me how the world could get on without string?"
15416Ray been here?
15416Say it''s an open question-- then what?
15416Shall I come in and dine this evening?
15416Shall you play any cricket this summer?
15416She told you then-- against my wishes?
15416Since when did rain frighten you?
15416Since when?
15416So what do you say? 15416 Stories about what?"
15416Surely everything has shrunk?
15416Surely-- surely after yesterday?
15416Talking of good things, d''you remember our walk to Chilcombe in the year one? 15416 Teetotal, is n''t he?"
15416That old lady with the yellow wig?
15416The enemy sowed tares by night, and what can be more devilish than sowing the tares of evil on virgin soil? 15416 Then the whole estate belongs to Raymond, now?"
15416Then why fling away your chances and be impossible and useless and an enemy to society, when society only wants to be your friend? 15416 Then you''d say--?"
15416Then you''ll leave, no doubt, and what will Missis Northover do then?
15416Vexed with you, Sally? 15416 We look to see ourselves reflected in our offspring, yet how often do we?"
15416Well then, what follows? 15416 Well, what''s that to me?
15416What about Sabina?
15416What about a nice little handy''jingle''for her to trundle about in?
15416What about all that talk of changes for the better before Mister Ironsyde died then?
15416What about her life?
15416What about you, then?
15416What allowance did dear Henry make him?
15416What am I to do if I ca n''t trust her?
15416What are you going to do, then?
15416What are you to do? 15416 What can I do about it?
15416What can I say to that? 15416 What common ground is there?
15416What could be more unjust and cruel and wicked than that?
15416What d''you call making a mistake? 15416 What d''you think of her?"
15416What do the Drawing Frames do to it?
15416What do you know about things to talk to me like that? 15416 What do you mean when you say he''s a''cure,''Sarah?"
15416What do you say to that, Job?
15416What do you think of Estelle?
15416What do you think?
15416What do you want to hide for, pretty?
15416What does John Best say?
15416What does that mean?
15416What does that mean?
15416What have you seen then?
15416What in God''s name has come over you? 15416 What is it, then?"
15416What luck?
15416What perfectly beautiful thing can I get for Ray and Sabina for a wedding present?
15416What shall I do without you? 15416 What shall I say about the girls?"
15416What shall you do about it?
15416What should that be, I wonder?
15416What the deuce is the matter?
15416What the devil business is that of yours?
15416What the dickens is it?
15416What then? 15416 What was I saying?
15416What was it?
15416What would you do? 15416 What would you think if I told you I was going to marry her, Waldron?"
15416What''s he done now?
15416What''s he done then? 15416 What''s the matter?
15416What''s the matter?
15416What''s the matter?
15416What?
15416Whatever will you say next?
15416Where shall you live?
15416Where will you get them?
15416Where''s Raymond?
15416Where''s home going to be-- that''s the question?
15416Where''s the fun?
15416Where?
15416Who ever would have thought the man jealous?
15416Who is going into Parliament?
15416Who the devil cares about himself? 15416 Who the devil''s that?"
15416Who would wish you to?
15416Who''d deny them, Sabina? 15416 Why ai n''t your mother his wife?
15416Why did you come? 15416 Why do you think that?"
15416Why not, Missis Dinnett?
15416Why not? 15416 Why not?
15416Why not?
15416Why not?
15416Why should n''t I go on sitting between you?
15416Why should n''t I if I want to?
15416Why should n''t he come, John?
15416Why use words like that? 15416 Why?
15416Why? 15416 Will you let me tell mother, to- day?
15416Wo n''t you see Sabina before you go, Raymond? 15416 Worse than seducing her and leaving her alone in the world with a bastard child, I suppose?"
15416Would it come right,he ventured to ask,"if you gave up spinning?"
15416Would n''t you?
15416Would thicky cat sclow me?
15416Would you say that he bore Sabina a grudge?
15416Yes-- that''s not very wonderful, is it? 15416 You advise against, then?"
15416You ask what I think about Estelle?
15416You ca n''t accuse me of wanting to stick my nose into other people''s business, can you, Ray? 15416 You can say that?
15416You did n''t tell them?
15416You do n''t grudge any of these things, Ray?
15416You do n''t mean he is in love, or anything like that?
15416You might hope it; but why do you think it? 15416 You oppose your will to mine, then, Sabina?"
15416You see, Estelle-- how can I explain? 15416 You surely do n''t want to quarrel with all his friends as well as him?
15416You thought that, Nelly? 15416 You wo n''t chuck football, anyway?
15416You''ll show him the baby, wo n''t you, Sabina?
15416You''re going?
15416You''re not prepared to help me, then, or make any suggestion-- for the child''s sake?
15416You''re sure? 15416 You''ve heard, of course, about the goings on?
15416You''ve made a start, Ray?
15416Yours? 15416 ''The Seven Stars''more to it than''The Tiger''?
15416A break must mean Sabina''s social ruin; but would union mean ruin to Raymond?
15416A man''s idea of being''sporting''does not mean telling stories to a trusting and loving girl, does it?
15416A very serious thing has happened and if we older heads--""Who told you about it?"
15416Above all, what sort of line would his Aunt Jenny take?
15416After all, why not?
15416Ai n''t she always at it-- always tempting us to go too far along the road of our particular weakness?
15416And Sally Groves, and one or two of my best friends at the Mill?
15416And ai n''t laziness the particular weakness of all women and most men?
15416And did n''t she wait all the morning to see if you''d come to her-- and me?
15416And how does such a man expect anybody to care about him?
15416And if the problem was reduced to that, what became of her theories?
15416And if you once grant there are more view points than one, where are you?"
15416And more important still, was it true?
15416And now he''ll find I''ve been to her, and that may-- oh, my God, why did n''t I keep quiet a little longer, and trust him?"
15416And what do I lose?
15416And what will the result be?
15416And who shall blame her?"
15416And who''ll blame him?
15416And whose spirit does n''t meet in their thoughts, or works, the dead who are still living?"
15416And why not?"
15416And why should you care for one little, unwanted boy?
15416And you-- how are you?
15416Anyway, it showed you''d got plenty of good friends, surely?"
15416Are there no means of winning him?"
15416Are you coming to the''smoker''at''The Tiger''next month?"
15416Are you game for a paying guest?
15416Are you ready for another bottle of gingerbeer?
15416Are you the father of it, or are n''t you?"
15416As things are it seems to me you might like to be quietly and privately married away from Bridetown?"
15416But I suppose you mean I''d better not?"
15416But Sabina?"
15416But is n''t that a thing to avoid?
15416But what''s the sense of losing your temper in other people''s quarrels?
15416But where were the words capable of lending any conviction to such a sentiment?
15416But why should she cut off her nose to spite her face and refuse my friendship and help because I wo n''t marry her?"
15416By the way, may I call you Sabina?"
15416Ca n''t you see that it''s your place, Sabina, to use your influence on my side?"
15416Ca n''t you see that you''ll always suffer it if you take no steps to right it?
15416Ca n''t you see what this means to her?
15416Can I get his trust, or ca n''t I?"
15416Can he ever make you anything but a bastard and an outcast?
15416Can not you imagine men big enough to work for humanity without reward?
15416Can you do such wonders as Miss Dinnett?"
15416Chick?"
15416Churchouse?"
15416Could I bring my horse?"
15416Could power modify character?
15416Could she have listened to so grave a determination on Daniel''s part and taken no step to prevent it?
15416Could she still be so stern after the years that had swept over their quarrel?
15416Could such an unworldly and inexperienced woman be right?
15416D''you know what I would do if I had my way?
15416D''you know what it is?
15416D''you think I''m going to chuck away an hour of this day for a thousand mothers?"
15416Did n''t you ever wonder how you got off so well after trying to burn down the works?
15416Did n''t you hear me tell you I was with child by you?
15416Did n''t you tell me years and years ago I''d fight your battles some day?
15416Did she know that Daniel had dismissed him?
15416Did you ever pull with me, or anybody, if you could help it?
15416Did you get any ideas out of the man?"
15416Did you play any cricket at school?"
15416Did you really think that?"
15416Do n''t education and all that count?
15416Do n''t you feel like that?"
15416Do the colours of babies''eyes change, like kittens''eyes, Ray?"
15416Do you believe in the resurrection of the body, Estelle?
15416Do you know who ought to own these works when your father dies?"
15416Do you like poetry, Mercy?"
15416Do you like your office?"
15416Do you yourself think''The Tiger''is a finer house and more famous than my place?"
15416Does anybody know of your engagement except my nephew and myself?"
15416Does it seem to you to be interesting?"
15416Does she know how good- looking she is?"
15416For were not all three Fates to be seen at their eternal business here?
15416For what sort of a home could he establish?
15416For why?
15416Go round to the kitchen, will''e?"
15416Granted that she made a mistake, is her mistake to wreck her whole life?
15416Granted wrong things happened, how are you helping to right the wrong?
15416Had Ironsyde arrived at his determination from honest conviction, or thanks to the force of changed circumstances?
15416Had not Mary Dinnett just reminded him that this was a Christian country?
15416Have there not been plenty of such men-- before Christ, as well as since?"
15416Have you any good reason for thinking it?"
15416Have you got a room?"
15416Have you noticed that garden chair in the porch?"
15416He ignored me as his son, and so I ignore him as my father; and who would n''t?"
15416He was masterful and possessed self- assurance; but what man can lead and control without these qualities?
15416How could he endure to hear that people had been rude to her, and uttered coarse jests in her hearing aimed only at her ear?
15416How do you read the fact that my father directs Raymond''s allowance to cease, Uncle Ernest?"
15416How do you stand with her?"
15416How had God got the heart to let him live for this?
15416How often have you been there since we went?"
15416How the devil do people find out about one?
15416How was I to know such an idea was in your mind?
15416How was he to know you would n''t try to burn the works again-- and succeed next time?"
15416How worse?
15416How would it be if you took him into the office at Bridport, where he would be more under your eye?"
15416I hope he is well?
15416I shall never want to work again, or think of work, or anything else on earth till-- till-- What does he matter anyway-- or his ideas?
15416I should have liked to see you married; yet, after all, why not?
15416I suppose you''ll grant that much?"
15416I suppose you''re not properly his father if you do n''t marry her?"
15416I suppose you''ve been told often enough who your father is?"
15416I wonder if you would begin with Roberts at the lathes, or Cogle at the engines?"
15416I''m not frightened to chance my luck, am I, Sabina?"
15416I''ve a right to know that, I suppose?"
15416If I want to assume paternity-- claim it, adopt him as my son-- to succeed me some day?"
15416If I want to lift him up and assure his future?
15416If the hunt that''s going on does n''t find him, how shall you do it?
15416Is it out of any care for me he''d lift me up?
15416Is n''t a good father a good father?"
15416Is not the English word''canvas''only''cannabis''over again?
15416Is she doubtful too?"
15416Is that conducive to a religious trust in God, or a rational trust in man for these outlawed thousands?"
15416Is the allowance to be continued?"
15416Is the deed done, or is n''t it?
15416Is there any more?
15416Is there anybody here who can take your place for a month or six weeks?"
15416Is there to be no finality in your resentment?
15416It has got rights of some sort, surely?
15416It''s selfish--?
15416Life''s so difficult even for the luckiest of us; but it is n''t the luckiest who are the pluckiest generally-- is it?
15416Me leave''The Seven Stars''after thirty- four years?"
15416Me?
15416Miss Waldron says it''s up to me to try and get the boy off; but the question is shall I be serving him best that way?"
15416Mister Ironsyde do n''t like you, and why should he?
15416Mr. Churchouse here is the best gentleman on God''s earth; but he do n''t understand a mother''s heart-- how should he?
15416Need I say more?"
15416No doubt you''ve seen me in the company of Sabina Dinnett?"
15416No two people feel the same about it, surely?
15416Not the finest pleasure gardens in Bridport, I suppose?"
15416Now what constitutes life?
15416Perhaps you''ve never seen a bumble- bee either?"
15416Raymond?"
15416Shall I have a look round for you?"
15416Shall I quarrel with a gracious flower because a wandering bee has set a seed?
15416Shall an elderly and faulty fellow creature rise in judgment at the weakness of youth?
15416Shall it be, or sha n''t it, Richard?"
15416Shall you be back to tea?"
15416She herself had not suggested it; for what advantage could be gained by such a step?
15416So what''s the good of wasting time talking as though you could?
15416So you''re up against the laws and out for the liberties?
15416Suppose you went so far as to let him befriend you, could he ever make up for not marrying your mother?
15416Supposing this marriage does n''t really make for the happiness of either of them?"
15416Surely he wo n''t chain an open- air man like you to a wretched desk all your time?"
15416Surely his own work does n''t throw him into the company of the girls?"
15416Surely nothing can make it impossible to clear my good name, Raymond?"
15416Surely that was a pretty good sign he means to be friendly?"
15416Surely the child must come round sooner or later?"
15416Surely we can meet on the common ground of his welfare and leave the rest?"
15416That was what we may expect from men of honour and right bringing up?"
15416The turbine has a poetic side, do n''t you think?"
15416Then where shall I be?"
15416Then why waste nervous energy and strength on all this silly hate?"
15416To do this was surely not required of her, for whereunto would it lead?
15416Upon which a sailor- man, who listened to him, shouted out,''Oh death, where is thy sting?''
15416Was it"sporting"?
15416Was n''t that an adventure-- to give a better tea than anybody in Bridport?"
15416Was n''t there all the morning?
15416We were n''t conventional last year, so why the dickens should we be this?
15416Were you deaf yesterday?
15416What about my point of view?"
15416What are the years to me?
15416What are you but a machine?"
15416What can be worse than a man that lies to women and seduces an innocent girl under promise of marriage?
15416What chance would she have of ever winning Daniel to acknowledge and respect her if the facts came to his ears?
15416What choice of action have you got if you''re a gentleman?
15416What did you do?
15416What do you gain?
15416What do you mean, Legg?
15416What does it matter where the capital is as long as the nation has got it safe?
15416What good comes into the world with hate?
15416What good does it do you to hate?"
15416What has he done for me that I should ease him and do as he pleases?
15416What has the community done for us, that we should become slaves for it?
15416What have I done but love you with all my heart and soul?
15416What have I done in the past to lead you to any such conclusion?
15416What have I ever done to make you put other people''s points of view before mine?"
15416What is beauty?
15416What is it that over- rides the natural relationship and poisons him against me?
15416What is the good?
15416What is the sense of all this hate?
15416What motiveless malignity actuated Levi Baggs meanwhile, who can say?
15416What must be the result of any such meeting?
15416What on earth happens to us if Daniel fires me out of the Mill?"
15416What sense is there to it?"
15416What should I write to Daniel, but to tell him he''s the biggest cur and hound on earth?"
15416What the deuce do you want to escape from your flesh for, if it''s healthy and tough and fine?"
15416What thinking man, or boy, has not for that matter?
15416What wonder she lost her head?
15416What would become of England if every man was made in the pattern of his father?
15416What would he do when he knew it?
15416What''s he got out of all his hate and unkindness to the world?"
15416What''s the fuss about now?"
15416What''s the good of working for yourself?"
15416What''s the matter with this?"
15416What''s the matter with you?"
15416What''s the trouble?"
15416What''s your father done to you?
15416Whatever are you talking about?"
15416When that John Best drops out, as he ought to do, for he''s long past his work, will he get ten shillings a week?
15416Where is the sense of this blind enmity against me?
15416Who am I to cast anybody out, Missis Dinnett?
15416Who are you to take his side and cringe to him?
15416Who does n''t know dead people personally, and go to tea with them, and hear their bones rattle?
15416Who ever was vexed with you?"
15416Who had lost more than he by his unreason?
15416Who''ll blame me for being bad and indifferent-- wicked if you like?
15416Who''s F.H.?"
15416Who''s he that he should be lifted up to represent honest, God- fearing men?"
15416Why did Raymond demand continued silence even in the face of offences put upon her by her neighbours?
15416Why did not my nephew come, if he started to come?"
15416Why did you advise me to look out what I was doing last night?"
15416Why do n''t the yarn teach us a lesson?
15416Why do you shrink from doing now what you wanted to do at first?"
15416Why must I think your friendship and your money are the best possible things for him?
15416Why should I advise him to take what I refused for myself twelve years and more ago?
15416Why should he?
15416Why should they?
15416Why were n''t you out?"
15416Why?
15416Why?
15416Why?
15416Will it make him less miserable to go on and commit a greater?
15416Will you be so happy and comfortable along with me, at''The Seven Stars,''as you are at''The Tiger''?
15416Will you let my lawyer see you?"
15416Will you take my aunt''s arm and follow next after me, please?"
15416Would a man who loved her, as she deserved to be loved, suffer this?
15416Would you like a chicken, sir?"
15416Would you like me to see my child?"
15416Would you like one?
15416Would you ruin the pair of us?"
15416Yes, why?
15416You are satisfied that he will tell me the truth?"
15416You do n''t apprehend anything of that sort, I hope?"
15416You do n''t mind if I smoke?"
15416You do n''t remember the time when he used to steal chickens, do you?"
15416You know what a handicap is in a race?
15416You must have some reason for hating him?"
15416You see that?
15416You to set a trap?"
15416You want to marry me yourself?"
15416You wo n''t be vexed with me if I say something, will you?"
15416You''ll forgive me, wo n''t you?"
15416You''re behaving very wickedly, Mr. Ironsyde, and driving my daughter frantic; and if she ca n''t tell her mother her sorrows, who should know?"
15416she asked,"and when are you going to do it?
4398A little like Captain Nat, his father,answered Jane, ignoring Lucy''s last inference,"not so stout and--""What''s he doing?"
4398Ai n''t nobody sick, is there, Martha?
4398Alone, are ye?
4398And Barton Holt as well?
4398And I suppose you will go to the ship to meet her?
4398And Jane is coming home alone?
4398And about Lucy?
4398And after that you''ll permit me to slip away without telling anybody, wo n''t you? 4398 And did they let any of the fellows come to see you?"
4398And is that all ye come to tell her?
4398And never heard of him before?
4398And so Lucy is to stay in Paris?
4398And so ye''re home for good and all, lassie?
4398And what have I interrupted?
4398And where have YOU been, Mistress Martha?
4398And why are you away from home this morning of all others?
4398And will he be brought home to be buried?
4398And ye told him about your goin''?
4398And yet you love me?
4398And you are determined to go?
4398And you came all the way up here to tell me this?
4398And you dare to sit there and tell me that Miss Jane Cobden is that child''s mother?
4398And you do n''t find them?
4398And you do n''t like it? 4398 And you do n''t want her to go?"
4398And you do n''t want to go?
4398And you never gave him anything in return for all his devotion?
4398And you swear it?
4398And you will suffer on-- and the doctor?
4398And you''ve come home for good now, have n''t you?
4398Anybody drownded?
4398Anybody on the beach, darlin''?
4398Anything else?
4398Archie''s Tod?
4398Are n''t you going to open it?
4398Are you sure, mother?
4398Armed or peaceable?
4398Been at the mines, did ye say, captain?
4398Boys,he said with a forced smile,"who do you think''s been outside?
4398But Cap''n Nat will, and so will the doctor and Uncle Ephraim and-- who''s that comin''this early?
4398But if Bart insists?
4398But why, Jane? 4398 But ye DO know, do n''t ye?"
4398But you like them, too, do n''t you? 4398 But you''ve said nothing to anybody about Archie and Lucy, and what Bart intends to do when he comes, have you?"
4398But, Lucy, do n''t you want to do something to help him?
4398Can I help?
4398Charming man, is he not?
4398Did n''t want no assistance, did they?
4398Did she take it bad?
4398Did ye break one of the bottles, darlin''?
4398Did you ever have any one of your own friends treated in that way?
4398Did you ever hear of a man named Bart Holt,he asked,"who used to be''round here?"
4398Did you give Meg a bath, Martha?
4398Did you like it at school?
4398Did you love her father?
4398Did you take her driving?
4398Do any of you know where he is?
4398Do n''t look like it, does it, little one? 4398 Do n''t think, do n''t you?
4398Do n''t you think Lucy improved?
4398Do n''t you think it would be better to see him here instead of at the hotel?
4398Do they pay you for it?
4398Do ye think it''s all true''bout Bart?
4398Do ye want him bad?
4398Do you intend to tell Max?
4398Do you know what that is to me? 4398 Do you mean Meg?"
4398Do you really love anything, Lucy?
4398Does he come often?
4398For how long, Lucy?
4398For how long?
4398Going so soon? 4398 Good job, is it?"
4398Has Martha told you?
4398Has she anything around her?
4398Have I changed, Captain Holt?
4398Have they been gone long?
4398Have you answered it yet?
4398Have you any reason for wanting to leave here?
4398Have you made up your mind to this?
4398Have you picked out your crew?
4398Have you seen them two fly- up- the- creeks?
4398Have you talked about it to anybody?
4398Have you talked to Archie?
4398He did n''t get much of a bath, did he?
4398Hope you''re better, Martha? 4398 How can they be so wicked?
4398How do I know?
4398How do you know?
4398How do you know?
4398How does Lucy like it?
4398How have I ever failed you? 4398 How long has she known him?"
4398How old is he?
4398How old is she?
4398How?
4398How?
4398I got so worried-- aren''t you late, my son?
4398I thought Miss Lucy was expected from school to- day?
4398I''ll listen to nothin''--"Will you, please? 4398 I''m Bart Holt,"he exclaimed;"you have n''t forgotten me, Miss Lucy, have you?
4398I''m very, very sorry, captain, for you and for Bart; and the only son you have, is it not?
4398If you ai n''t goin''up to the Cobdens, ye kin, ca n''t ye? 4398 In the doctor?"
4398In you?
4398Is he a nice boy?
4398Is he bad off?
4398Is he going to die?
4398Is he ill?
4398Is he lyin''?
4398Is it about Barton Holt? 4398 Is it about Lucy?
4398Is it any better outside?
4398Is n''t it a jolly place?
4398Is she coming home?
4398Is that better than loving a man who loves her?
4398Is the head man around? 4398 Is there anything the matter?"
4398Is there anything the matter?
4398It is n''t about Lucy, then, is it?
4398It is not me,she moaned, wringing her hands,"not me-- not--""Who?"
4398It was Doctor John, was n''t it?
4398It''s going to blow, captain, is n''t it?
4398Kind o''foggy, ai n''t it?
4398Last year or two?
4398Learned them tricks at a finishin''school, did they?
4398Lovely? 4398 Lucy is about twenty- seven, is she not?"
4398Lucy?
4398Married to one o''them furriners, is she?
4398Martha wants her to leave?
4398Martha worse?
4398Max,she said, turning her head and lifting her finger at him with the movement of a conductor''s baton,"how can you lie to me like that?
4398Named after his wife?
4398No, what do they look like?
4398Norwegian, ai n''t ye?
4398Not Archie?
4398Now, what is it?
4398Now, what''s these young people been doin''that makes ye so almighty narvous?
4398Of what?
4398Oh, I adore them; do n''t you?
4398One I mean''s got a child-- big now-- must be fifteen or twenty years old-- girl, ai n''t it?
4398One of your sea yarns, captain?
4398Poor old doggie-- we all love you, do n''t we?
4398Say, sissy, does yer mother know ye''re out? 4398 See the printing at the top--''Life- Saving Service''?
4398She warn''t, warn''t she? 4398 She''s a woman-- seventeen, is n''t she?"
4398So you''ve got this fly- away back again? 4398 Someone ill?"
4398Sure? 4398 TWO YEARS?
4398Then there is something you have not told me?
4398Then why should we live apart? 4398 Then you did n''t meet him on the other side?"
4398This is n''t the dog sister Jane wrote me about, is it? 4398 Two or three masts?"
4398Want to go? 4398 Want to see him?
4398Was he the boy who said you had no mother?
4398Well, I kin tell ye where to find him,"Where?
4398Well, Lucy, what is it?
4398Well, ai n''t it right that he should make some amends for what he''s done?
4398Well, are you going to turn nurse for half the paupers in the county? 4398 Well, but is n''t he too young?"
4398Well, but, captain, is n''t it very dangerous work? 4398 Well, keep mum''bout it, will ye, till I talk to him?
4398Well, one day we were walking out to the park-- Now you''re sure you wo n''t tell sister, she''s so easily shocked?
4398Well, what did you stay out all night for?
4398Well, what did you tell him?
4398Well, what if they were-- ain''t she pretty enough?
4398Well, you have got a mother, have n''t you, darling?
4398What about?
4398What can I do? 4398 What did she say when she saw you?"
4398What difference does it make, son, when you have such a mother? 4398 What difference does that make in a matter like this?
4398What do they say?
4398What do they say?
4398What do ye think of me, Miss Jane? 4398 What do ye think, Captain Holt?"
4398What do you say she is?
4398What do you think about it, Lucy?
4398What does Bart Holt look like?
4398What does his father say?
4398What dressmaker?
4398What has happened?
4398What have I done?
4398What have you decided to do?
4398What is it all about, Lucy?
4398What is it?
4398What is she?
4398What is she?
4398What kin ye do?
4398What kind of a stamp has it got?
4398What kind of hair?
4398What right has he or anybody else to meddle with my affairs?
4398What shall I do? 4398 What shall I do?"
4398What sort of a Frenchman is he? 4398 What was your promise?"
4398What would you have me do, then?
4398What ye goin''to do-- not cut him?
4398What you been workin''at?
4398What''s he been doin''?
4398What''s he coming for?
4398What''s her name?
4398What''s his name?
4398What''s she doing upstairs so long?
4398What''s that she says?
4398What''s the matter with him?
4398What''s this? 4398 What''s up?"
4398When did this come on?
4398When did you get this marvellous idea into that wonderful brain of yours, Max? 4398 When?"
4398Where are they? 4398 Where away, Tod?"
4398Where away?
4398Where can we talk? 4398 Where did you say sister was?"
4398Where have you been?
4398Where is she?
4398Where is she?
4398Where to?
4398Where were they driving?
4398Where were you taken ill? 4398 Where''s sister?
4398Where''s the good mother? 4398 Where-- when?"
4398Who are they, pray?
4398Who criticises her?
4398Who do you think he''s coming to see, sister?
4398Who do you think it''s from? 4398 Who is it?"
4398Who is she?
4398Who said so? 4398 Who said that to you, my son?"
4398Who says so?
4398Who to?
4398Who will take charge of it, captain?
4398Who''s on the beach, I say?
4398Who, then? 4398 Who, then?"
4398Who, then?
4398Who? 4398 Who?"
4398Whom do you want to see in Philadelphia, Max?
4398Why did n''t you let her take that beast of a dog with her? 4398 Why did n''t you let me know sooner, Fogarty?
4398Why did you not tell me something of this before?
4398Why do n''t Lucy come with her?
4398Why do you say so?
4398Why not take Archie with you, dear?
4398Why not?
4398Why not?
4398Why, Lucy, what''s poor Meg done?
4398Why, he''s twenty- five years old, is n''t he?
4398Why, what do you want to leave Yardley for? 4398 Why, would you take it, captain?"
4398Why, yesterday afternoon, of course-- didn''t I tell ye so? 4398 Why?
4398Why?
4398Why?
4398Why?
4398Why?
4398Why?
4398Will he bite, Martha?
4398Will he know?
4398Will it be near the new summer hotel?
4398Will she bring any dukes and high daddies with her?
4398Will the Polly be here to- night?
4398Worried? 4398 Ye heard what Doctor John said about her bein''a woman, Meg?"
4398Yes"Not ill?
4398Yes, a heap more-- ain''t that enough along with the other things I''ve told ye?
4398Yes, and you remember my answer, do n''t you?
4398Yes, you passed the House o''Refuge, did n''t ye, comin''up? 4398 Yes-- isn''t it lovely?"
4398Yes-- most estimable gentleman, no doubt, this Mr. Fogarty, but then, dear, we do n''t invite that sort of people to dinner, do we?
4398Yes; but, John, surely you are not going to refuse this without looking into it?
4398You ai n''t got no objections, have you, ma''am?
4398You are wanted, please, Miss Lucy; may I offer you my arm? 4398 You dear, foolish sister,"Lucy''s letter began,"what should I tell him for?
4398You did n''t think, now, I was going to have a cubby- hole like this to hide you in where that old spot- cat Martha ca n''t be watching us, did you?
4398You did not leave her abroad, did you?
4398You do n''t believe it?
4398You do n''t treat Ellen so; why should you Archie?
4398You ever heard tell of a woman named Lucy Cobden, lives''round here somewheres?
4398You fellers think yer durned smart, do n''t ye?
4398You have another letter then?
4398You hearn tell, I s''pose, of how Captain Nat handled his boy t''other night, did n''t ye?
4398You know everybody''round here, do n''t you?
4398You know my son, you say?
4398You live''round here?
4398You look troubled; what has happened?
4398You lookin''for me? 4398 You love me, Jane, do n''t you?"
4398You mean that he is dead? 4398 You mean to tell me, doctor, you do n''t know what''s goin''on up at Yardley?
4398You mean, Lucy, that you would leave your child here and spend two months away from her?
4398You refer to what the people about us call a mystery-- that poor little child upstairs?
4398You remember my son Bart, of course, do n''t ye, who left home some two years ago?
4398You remember the letter I wrote you some years ago, in which I begged you to tell Ellen''s father about Archie and Barton Holt?
4398You think it is a torture for me to care for this helpless baby? 4398 You want me to lie to the department?"
4398You were at the Cobdens''?
4398You wo n''t mind, Jane, dear, will you, if I get together a few things and move over to Beach Haven for a while?
4398You work here?
4398Your son''s coming, is n''t he?
4398''Tain''t so, is it, doctor?"
4398''Tain''t yourn, it''s ourn-- ain''t it, fellers?"
4398--here he reached over and patted the child''s head, who had crept back to the captain''s arms--"or some of my lady''s news from Paris?
4398A disappointing son, am I not?
4398After a moment he raised his head and asked in a low, firm voice:"Did Bart go to Paris after he left here?"
4398Ah, captain, where have you been keeping yourself?
4398Ai n''t Jane Cobden motherin''his child?"
4398Ai n''t it hell?"
4398Ai n''t nobody sick up to Cap''n Holt''s, be there?"
4398And if she did, would this Frenchman forgive her when he learned the facts?
4398And if she loved him well enough to tell him so, why had she refused to plight him her troth?
4398And it''s all true, is n''t it?
4398And so that Bunch of Roses is going to stay over there, is she, and set those Frenchies crazy?"
4398And they tell me you have brought a little angel with you to bring up and share your loneliness?
4398And this is what you traipsed up here to tell me, is it, you mollycoddle?"
4398And to study music, too?
4398And what does the immaculate Dr. John Cavendish look like?
4398And you think I''d do it to oblige ye?
4398And you will send him away, wo n''t you, like a dear good old Martha?"
4398Anybody Sue knows?"
4398Are n''t the men often drowned?"
4398Are n''t you delighted, my son?"
4398Are ye alone?"
4398Are you crazy?
4398As he neared the steps the door was opened and Martha''s voice rang clear:"Meg, you rascal, come in, or shall I let ye stay out and freeze?"
4398Bart''s dead, is he?"
4398Been lonely, old fellow?"
4398Before the girl could reply there came a voice calling from the house:"Is n''t she fine, Martha?"
4398But what did Bart''s turning up at this late day mean?
4398But what has your son Bart got to do with it?"
4398But why had Miss Gossaway not met Miss Cobden at Fogarty''s, his being the only cabin that far down the beach?
4398But why talk about him, dear?"
4398Ca n''t you think of some way?
4398Ca n''t you trust me to do my duty in my own way?"
4398Ca n''t you trust me?"
4398Captain Nathaniel Holt''s your name-- am I right?"
4398Come''shore, did it?
4398Come, what is it?"
4398Did n''t you know I was coming by the early stage?"
4398Do n''t mind, do ye?
4398Do n''t mind, do you?"
4398Do ye hear me?"
4398Do ye hear?
4398Do you know what he means to do?"
4398Do you mind little things like that?"
4398Do you suppose I''m going to let that tow- head monopolize you?"
4398Do you think he''ll remember me?"
4398Do you want to see her?"
4398Good place to come Sundays with some of the fellows, is n''t it?
4398Had he ever failed her?
4398Had his money given out, or was he figuring to get something out of his father-- something he could n''t get as long as he remained dead?
4398Had it been her fault?
4398Had the Philadelphia school undermined her own sisterly teachings or had her companions been at fault?
4398Has he been here?"
4398Has he changed any?"
4398Has she gone to bed?"
4398Has them rats been botherin''ye?
4398Have you ever doubted me?"
4398Have you looked at the slate lately?
4398Have you seen her dog?"
4398Have you the letter with you?"
4398He never told"What kind of eyes?"
4398He''s always been fond of the sea, has he not, Captain Holt?"
4398Heard ye was under the weather; was that so?
4398His name''s Holt, ai n''t it?"
4398Home, is she?"
4398How do I look, Martha?
4398How do ye know?
4398How do you know?"
4398How do you know?"
4398How do you think he''ll take it?"
4398How long are they going to stay?"
4398How long have you been waiting, my precious?"
4398How long will you be gone?"
4398How long would her pride shut out his sympathy?
4398How old is she?"
4398How''s Miss Jane?"
4398I could have licked''em if they come on one at a time, but they got a plank and crawled up--""Crawled up where, my son?"
4398I never saw her, did I?"
4398I see''em-- lot of''em, ai n''t they?
4398If he never learned them-- and this was most to be dreaded-- what would Lucy''s misery be all her life if she still kept the secret close?
4398If they would treat me so, who am innocent, what would they do to my poor Lucy?"
4398Is Lucy ill?"
4398Is he come back?"
4398Is it Max?"
4398Is it long enough?"
4398Is it still true?"
4398Is my hair all right?"
4398Is n''t it just like her?"
4398Is she took bad?"
4398Is there anything the matter with it?
4398Is this woman somebody you have n''t told me of, Max?"
4398John says you are very beautiful, and you know the doctor is a good judge, is he not, Miss Jane?"
4398Just new built, ai n''t it?
4398Lucy slipped her arm into Bart''s, and asked simply,"What for?"
4398Malmsley?"
4398No, why should I?
4398Not dead?"
4398Not know her, and she within ten feet o''me?
4398Now, will you tell her Bart''s dead, or shall I?"
4398Oh, darlin'', is it you?
4398Pencoyd?"
4398Please go on; what kind of fun did you have?
4398Pretty position for a lady, is n''t it?"
4398Purty hot down there, ai n''t it, captain?"
4398Say, Arch, what are we goin''to do?"
4398See them poles out there?
4398See''em goin''over that three- master?"
4398Shall I tell''em?"
4398Shall we sit here, or will you come into my little salon for a cup of tea?"
4398She ca n''t hear, can she?
4398She is coming home to be married, is n''t she?"
4398She said you loved him dearly-- you do n''t, do you?"
4398She wo n''t know me, will she?
4398She''ll be pleased, wo n''t she?"
4398She''s the wife of the new butcher, and--""The butcher''s wife?"
4398Tell me, what''s Bart like?"
4398Tell me,"he said, in a sudden burst of tenderness-- all feeling about himself had dropped away--"why must you go so soon?
4398That all?"
4398That feller I sent with ye?"
4398That''s what I said, did n''t I, mother?"
4398That''s what you been up to, is it?"
4398The captain took his eyes from the face of the man and asked in something of his natural tone of voice:"Where is he now?"
4398The hotel opens in June, does it?
4398The little creature was, no doubt, helpless, and appealed to Miss Jane''s sympathies, but why bring it home at all?
4398The man walked on for some time in silence and then asked:"You''re sure the child is livin''and that the mother''s name is Jane?"
4398Then he added as an after- thought,"Are you sorry?"
4398Then he added in a gentler tone,"And this worries you?"
4398Then he added slowly, and as if not to make a point of the inquiry,"Is she alive?"
4398Then he bent his head and said in a low voice:"Wo n''t you give me half those blossoms?"
4398Then his voice dropped so that only the doctor could hear:"Ai n''t that signed''Lucy''?
4398Then raising her voice so that the doctor could be brought into the conversation, she added in her natural tone,"Whom did you say she was with?"
4398Then she added coyly,"I do n''t know whether you can keep a secret-- do you tell everything you hear?"
4398Then she added nervously, unclasping her hands and picking up her gloves:"Are n''t you pleased?"
4398Then, with a quick lifting of her head, as if the thought alarmed her, she asked in sudden haste:"And you love me, John, just the same?
4398There ai n''t nothin''gone wrong with her, doctor dear, is there?"
4398There had been, moreover, always this fear-- would he love her for shielding his mother, or would he hate Lucy when he came to know?
4398There-- wasn''t that lovely?"
4398Tod Fogarty''s stuck to him, but who else is there''round here?
4398Tod watched him for an instant, and said:"What do ye think of it, cap''n?"
4398Was Jane tired out nursing?
4398Was Lucy so in love with the life abroad that she would never come back?
4398Well, I guess I got my eyes left, ai n''t I?"
4398Well, you saw that cabin with the fence''round it?"
4398Were there not places enough in France where it could be brought up?
4398What ails him now, when he comes back and owns up like a man and wants to do the square thing, and has got money enough to see it through?
4398What could she have done to avert it?
4398What could she want with him except to talk over some subject that they had left unfinished?
4398What did he say to break your heart?"
4398What do you know about him?"
4398What do you think Miss Jane wants to do now?
4398What do you think now?"
4398What do you think?
4398What for?"
4398What had come over her bairn, she said to herself with a sigh, that she should talk so to Meg-- to anything that her old nurse loved, for that matter?
4398What has happened, little--""Take anybody else?"
4398What has happened?"
4398What have you been doing to yourself, lassie, that you should shed your shell like a bug and come out with wings like a butterfly?
4398What is he to me?"
4398What kin I do for ye?"
4398What safeguard had she herself neglected?
4398What shall I do with Lucy?
4398What should I tell Max for?
4398What would he think of it, and how, if he questioned her, could she answer him?
4398What you been doin''?"
4398What''s a''pick- up,''dearie?"
4398What''s he done now?"
4398What''s the matter?"
4398What, he asked himself a thousand times, had brought this change?
4398What, then, was disturbing her to- day?
4398When did ye leave Sweden?
4398When was his hand withheld or his lips silent?
4398When?"
4398When?"
4398Where are ye?
4398Where are ye?
4398Where are you from-- looking at the sunset?"
4398Where did he die?"
4398Where did they get that plank?
4398Where did you hear it?
4398Where ye goin'', anyway, that ye''re in such a hurry?
4398Where''s that Meg?
4398Where?"
4398Wherein had she been false to her trust and her promise to her dying father?
4398Which one are you going to take?"
4398Who else in the wide world understood her as he did, and who but he should guide her now?
4398Who has borne the weight of this, you or I?
4398Who is ill?"
4398Who is it?
4398Who sent it?"
4398Who to, pray?"
4398Who''s on the beach?"
4398Who''s yer friend?"
4398Who, then, had undermined this citadel and given it over to plunder and disgrace?
4398Whose child is it?"
4398Whose else is it?
4398Why did n''t Lucy come with you?"
4398Why did n''t ye listen?"
4398Why did n''t you stay in heaven?
4398Why did you try to come home?
4398Why do you ask such a question?
4398Why do you ask, John?"
4398Why do you ask?
4398Why do you listen to such nonsense?"
4398Why do you want to dig up all these graves?
4398Why has this whim of Lucy''s taken hold of you as it has?
4398Why not wait until spring?"
4398Why not?"
4398Why should you want to go?
4398Why worry about it?
4398Why, then, do you want to unsettle his mind?"
4398Why?"
4398Why?"
4398Will she do what Bart wants?"
4398Will ye give him to me?"
4398Will you act square with her?"
4398Wonder, little Pond Lily, if the weather''s goin''to be any warmer?"
4398Would Lucy begin this new life with the same deceit with which she had begun the old?
4398Would n''t ye think I''d be nigh crazy?"
4398Ye''d know better than that, Meg, would n''t ye-- if ye''d seen her grow up like he''s done?
4398Ye''ll be up to see her, wo n''t ye, doctor?"
4398You do n''t like him, do you, darlin''?"
4398You do n''t mind my sending for you, do you?"
4398You do n''t mind, do you?"
4398You do n''t want me to leave, do you?"
4398You heard about it, of course?"
4398You knew my boy Bart, did n''t ye, the one that''s been dead nigh on to twenty years?"
4398You knew, did n''t ye?"
4398You know her, I s''pose?"
4398You know her, do n''t you?"
4398You look tired, my son; have you had a hard day?"
4398You understood my directions?"
4398You wo n''t lose him, will ye, doctor, dear?
4398You wo n''t mind, will you?
4398You would n''t understand unless--""You wo n''t?
4398You''d blame HER, would ye-- a child just out of school, and as innocent as a baby?
4398and ye''ve come back to me for good?
4398and you just put in charge?
4398can we get in?
4398forty black bass, eleven weakfish, and half a barrel of small fry-- what do you think of that?"
4398have they heard anything from him?"
4398he cried in his best quarterdeck voice--"what are you stowaways doin''here?"
4398she asked herself; or did she still feel hurt over her refusal to take Ellen with her for the summer?
4398the captain blurted out;"and goin''to keep right on livin''the lie she''s lived ever since she left ye?
4398was she just as pretty as ever?
4398what have I done that this should be sent to me?"
4398what kind of bonnets were being worn?
4398where have you been?
4398why ai n''t you out on your sled?
33475''Do you mean it?'' 33475 ''Say now, you do n''t mean you''d talk of withdrawing?''
33475''So you want to try the case here, huh?'' 33475 ''What do you mean, Hod?''
33475''What''re you getting at?'' 33475 ''Why should I?
33475Ah, you mean revenge?
33475All that I may?
33475And Miss Julia?
33475And all this has been for me?
33475And is that where you live, over yonder?
33475And that interest is still undivided?
33475And what about my own ruin? 33475 And what''s that over yonder-- what does the crowd mean?"
33475And who the other half?
33475And why could n''t we go to Horace Brooks then?
33475And you can say that to me?
33475And you forget me? 33475 And you learned that-- in college, Don?"
33475And you''re Anne?
33475Anne?
33475Are we going to let her get away with it like this?
33475As for the United States Senate, Judge, do you think you''re fit to go there? 33475 As how?"
33475As witnesses? 33475 Aurora Lane-- you do n''t know about her?"
33475Aurora?
33475But do n''t you like it?
33475But how can I say what I want?
33475But how could you keep that secret-- what made you? 33475 But now, do you know who this young man''s people are?"
33475But that''s taking him away from me-- right now-- that''s not right!--Can''t he get out?
33475But they do n''t know-- you''ve not told?
33475But what are you going to do? 33475 But what does it mean?"
33475But what right do you leave me then to come to you?
33475But why did n''t she tell?
33475But why, Don?
33475But why-- what makes you suppose she ever would care in the first place for this boy when he was a baby?
33475But you could n''t think of_ me_, Aurora?--Have you ever, in all these years?
33475But you wo n''t tell me that you''ll marry me now?
33475But you would want me to be honest, would n''t you? 33475 Ca n''t you see that?
33475Can_ you_ keep such a secret?
33475Coffee strong enough, Don?
33475Come out-- to what?
33475Did he really leave any money for my education?
33475Did he say he would?
33475Did n''t you know I''d come?
33475Did you come into this street?
33475Do I please you in every way?
33475Do you call it blackmail now, Judge?
33475Do you think_ I''d_ desert him now that he''s in trouble? 33475 Do you want counsel to protect you now?"
33475Does any dilemma last long with you, Uncle, when there is any question of your own self- interest?
33475Does my learned brother require time for preparation of his case?
33475Does the Judge know you have come?
33475Does the defendant accept Mr. Brooks as counsel?
33475Don, if I thought it was all over, do you suppose I''d let you kiss me now?
33475Even after last night?
33475For her?
33475Forgive you-- what do you mean?--what do you_ mean_?
33475Forgive? 33475 Has he-- has he-- ever been much to you?"
33475Have n''t I? 33475 Have you disgraced us all so soon?
33475Have you heard all her history now?
33475Have you tried Henderson?
33475He got us out of worse trouble, did n''t he? 33475 He''s a sort of a waif, is n''t he-- her boy?
33475Heard? 33475 Help?"
33475Home?
33475How about the plaintiff?
33475How are you, Hod?
33475How can we pay?
33475How can we thank you?
33475How comes it he could? 33475 How could I?"
33475How could you?
33475How did you manage it, Mother?
33475How do you do, Aurora?
33475How much time have you had to decide on this?
33475How?
33475Huh,said his companion,"old Adamson tried the other way, did n''t he?
33475I am having a fine start, am I not? 33475 I beg pardon, but what do you mean, Miss Julia?"
33475I must ask you where you are going?
33475I presume you have reference to that unfortunate young man who now lies in prison? 33475 I suppose you recognize some of your own handicraft, do n''t you,''Rory?"
33475I take off my hat to you,mowed the idiot also, imitating what he saw and heard...."May I see you home-- may I see you home tonight?
33475I''ll tell you where Mr. Brooks''office is,said she--"you see that little stair just across the courthouse yard?
33475I''ve always wanted to pay all my debts-- that''s to make up for all my faults, do n''t you see? 33475 If it was n''t right, why did He say,''Suffer little children''?
33475In what way do you want us?
33475Is he anybody-- is he a man of station-- has he any business-- has he any means? 33475 Is n''t it fine?"
33475Is n''t mine?
33475Is n''t she as good as we are? 33475 Is this politics?"
33475It seems like some folks was sort of born under a cloud, do n''t it? 33475 It''s my right to talk to him a little while, do n''t you think?
33475Just excuse me for a few minutes, wo n''t you? 33475 Just think-- how else could it have been possible for me to talk with you?"
33475Kept from myself, Don? 33475 May I see you home?"
33475Men, ca n''t you believe me? 33475 Mother,"said he at length,"did you-- did you ever-- love him?"
33475Nerve?
33475No, why should I? 33475 No, why should I?
33475No? 33475 Not so much of a house, is it?"
33475Oh, Don,said she,"it''s hard, awfully hard, is n''t it, to start with such a handicap?
33475Oh, Don,she cried,"what do you mean, and what are you going to do?"
33475Oh, are you retained in this case, Hod?
33475Oh, ca n''t you forget her, Don? 33475 Oh, that?"
33475Our minds did n''t meet?
33475Our_ minds_? 33475 Prosecution-- what do you mean?
33475Quick work for the sher''ff, was n''t it? 33475 Say, do n''t she look proud?
33475Shall I tell you all about it, Don?
33475She never asked you for help?
33475So it was your plan to marry a nameless man? 33475 So that''s how you keep in training, eh?
33475So what they told me-- what I made them all take back--_it was true_?
33475Strain? 33475 That gives me some rights, does n''t it?"
33475The jury has brought in its verdict? 33475 Then how do they know-- then why should that man say what he did?"
33475Then tell me, how could I say I loved you now? 33475 Then was what-- what that man said-- was_ that the truth_?"
33475Then what could I do?
33475Then why does my learned brother speak of_ habeas corpus_ in this case, and what is the case which he is trying, or thinks he is trying? 33475 Then you would n''t run him in if you was me?"
33475Then you, too, know,interrupted Henderson,"the story of those two women-- how they brought him up from babyhood-- and kept the secret?
33475There are complications sometimes, are there not?
33475They might say I was the father?
33475This is Mrs. Lane? 33475 Tough work, was n''t it, waiting for me to get through, dear Mom?
33475Want a ride, Johnnie?
33475Was he angry at that time?
33475Was he in a hurry-- did he seem excited?
33475Was n''t it enough, Don,said she--"didn''t I have enough without all this?
33475Was n''t there-- wasn''t there a funer''l for somebody today?
33475We are trying, as I understand it, the case of this defendant, Dewdonny Lane, accused by this plaintiff, Ephraim Adamson, of assault and battery?
33475We both know everything now, so why talk?
33475We ca n''t be married now? 33475 We did n''t pass that when we came up from the station?"
33475Well, Judge,said the latter,"how is it with you today?"
33475Well, how about it, then?
33475Well, that softens up a lot of things, does n''t it? 33475 Well, then, why not end the argument?"
33475Well, then,said he,"how about you and me?
33475Well, what of that? 33475 Well, what on earth has that to do with me and Don?"
33475What about us others? 33475 What are you doing here?"
33475What are you doing? 33475 What are you going to say to me, Aurie?"
33475What can he mean?
33475What could I do-- what could be done-- where would you have any pay in that?
33475What difference is it? 33475 What do you mean by a dilemma?"
33475What do you mean, Don--_us_?
33475What do you mean, Don?--you wo n''t let me go, will you? 33475 What do you mean, he ai n''t here?
33475What do you mean? 33475 What do you mean?"
33475What do you mean?
33475What do you mean?
33475What do you mean?
33475What do you mean?
33475What do you want for it, Uncle?
33475What do you want for it?
33475What do you want?
33475What does he know?
33475What does the plaintiff say?
33475What friend was it?
33475What has happened? 33475 What have you against her?"
33475What have you done then, Tarbush?
33475What have you told him-- what is he doing-- what does it all mean?
33475What is it that you will do?
33475What is it, Don?
33475What is it?
33475What is that, Don? 33475 What is the objection-- why ca n''t you go to him?"
33475What is this?
33475What kept you so late?
33475What relations have you with this young lady?
33475What time was that?
33475What was it, Aurie?
33475What was that shot?
33475What''ll we do, boys?
33475What''s all this you are telling me, Miss Julia? 33475 What''s happened?"
33475What''s he to you, anyhow?
33475What''s he_ saying_?
33475What''s that? 33475 What''s that?
33475What''s the difference between the two cases? 33475 What''s the game?"
33475What''s up?
33475What''s wrong, Don? 33475 What''s wrong-- what''s happened?"
33475What''s wrong? 33475 What, you speak to me?
33475What-- you did that?
33475What? 33475 When did you leave there?"
33475When was it, Johnnie-- what do you mean about this man?
33475When were you married-- when-- where?
33475Where did you get this?
33475Where did you go when you were running?
33475Where did you go?
33475Where is Adamson now-- where''s the sheriff?
33475Where is he-- who was he? 33475 Where is he?"
33475Where is your father, Johnnie?
33475Where was it at-- around that corner? 33475 Where was you, then?"
33475Where were you last night at about midnight?
33475Where would it leave Don? 33475 Where''s Anne-- my ward?"
33475Where''s Don?
33475Which do you mean, the old drunkard or the young idiot?
33475Which one do you mean?
33475Who appears for the defendant?
33475Who are you?
33475Who are you?
33475Who is it?
33475Who is it?
33475Who is the young man-- if you are really in earnest about all this? 33475 Who should I of took?"
33475Who was he? 33475 Who was it?
33475Who was with you when you were going home?
33475Who''d he send for, anyway?
33475Who''s there?
33475Whose fault if we ai n''t? 33475 Why am I brought here?
33475Why are you here?
33475Why did you keep it-- why did n''t you name me? 33475 Why did you leave them?"
33475Why do n''t you want to ask Mr. Brooks to act as our attorney?
33475Why do you say that, Don?
33475Why should n''t I fight?
33475Why should we go? 33475 Why should you have?"
33475Why, Will, what do you mean? 33475 Why, great heavens!--what are you telling me?
33475Why, if you wanted me?
33475Why, what do you know of love? 33475 Why, what do you mean, my dear?"
33475Why, what do you mean? 33475 Why, what''s this?"
33475Why, where will Don go-- where will they put him?
33475Why,said he,"it''s almost as if I had_ two_ mothers, is n''t it?"
33475Why?
33475Why?
33475Will you be seated? 33475 Will you swear on the Bible?"
33475Will, what''s wrong? 33475 Without compromising yourself?"
33475Wo n''t you come in?
33475Wo n''t you kiss me, Don?
33475Wo n''t you kiss me-- again, Don?
33475Wonder where_ she''s_ goin'', this time of day? 33475 Would you like to do that?"
33475Yes, Julia, Don and I were just at breakfast-- no, we''ve not been on the street yet-- one o''clock, you said? 33475 Yes,"said Cowles,"I know that, but why are you here?"
33475Yes? 33475 Yes?
33475Yesterday?
33475You are here-- when did you come?
33475You believe me, do you not, my dear?
33475You did let him go? 33475 You did n''t love me, Mother?
33475You did n''t really think I''d ever take you back, did you, Will?
33475You did n''t see anybody?
33475You do n''t love me at all?
33475You heard me, did you not?
33475You know about him-- about the boy? 33475 You know why?"
33475You let him out of your custody when he was under commitment?
33475You mean Old Man Adamson and his eejit, do n''t you? 33475 You still can hope, then?"
33475You think he''ll like enough lick him again?
33475You want to know if the grand jury has voted that bill? 33475 You wo n''t let me help you, Don?"
33475You would marry a man like that, of no family, of no place, of no name?
33475You yourself were not at the gate then?
33475You''d see that boy perish-- you''d let him die? 33475 You''ll swear secrecy on the Book?"
33475You''ll tell her?
33475You''ve not been home? 33475 You-- in what way am I bound to you?
33475You-- you two women--gasped Judge Henderson--"do you know what you''re doing here?
33475_ I have no father?_She could not reply.
33475_ Where''s my dad?_A long silence fell.
33475_ Who was my father?_demanded the young man, now, sternly.
33475''All I was going to say was, maybe you''d like to have me help you, say left- handed, thataway?
33475''But one thing is sure, you ai n''t hiding it none that you''re out for Senator?''
33475''On what terms?''
33475''They tell me you''re mentioned strong for the other ticket and are out after the place your own self?''
33475--But this one here,"said Horace Brooks slowly,"was taken when you were still younger,_ say, when you were twenty- two_, was n''t it?"
33475A man''s past----""Or a woman''s?"
33475Ai n''t that the truth?"
33475Ai n''t that the truth?"
33475Am I cruel?
33475Am I right?"
33475Am I very rich, Nunkie?"
33475And I ca n''t see why you did n''t tell, Aurie-- what made you keep it all a secret?"
33475And do you think for a moment these things will_ not_ be known if I take this case?"
33475And even a poor boy might grow up to be a gentleman-- was not that true-- oh, might it not after all be true?
33475And he was not discharged?"
33475And here are all your friends?"
33475And his mother----""You know his mother?"
33475And how was he kep''hid for more''n twenty year?"
33475And if there was ruin now of what here once was fresh and fair, if ruin lay about them now, who had wrought that ruin?
33475And is it always the one who starts first that finishes best?
33475And is n''t that our solution-- the only one in all the world possible for us?"
33475And what made the other lawyer, Henderson, drop the case?
33475And what would they now do to her?
33475And what''s ruin?
33475And when I do----""What then?"
33475And why does he not get on?"
33475And you think I''d be coward enough to take your money to get out of here-- after what I have learned about myself since yesterday?
33475And, naturally we come to you as our champion-- who should help us if not you yourself?
33475Anne, my dear girl, what can I say to you to alter you in this foolish resolve?"
33475Are n''t you coming?"
33475Are you a good guesser?''
33475Are you crazy-- what do you mean by arresting me when I''m just walking home with my mother?
33475Are you going to throw yourself on the court now and ask for forgiveness?"
33475Are you in any conspiracy of his?
33475Are you in debt?"
33475Are you so selfish, so egotistic as all that?"
33475Are you sorry for that now, or proud?"
33475But I know you-- you''re two good partners, that''s what you are-- two good scouts together-- isn''t it true?"
33475But I presume you are in a hurry to get away?
33475But do n''t I understand you, your fight, what it means to buck a game where all the cards are stacked?
33475But her face-- now her face-- have you not seen it?
33475But how did I learn who was the father of that boy?
33475But love and loyalty-- they''d be sweet, would n''t they?"
33475But now, now-- you_ did_ have the heart of a father, then?
33475But scared?
33475But tell me, what does this mean-- this murder?
33475But tell me, what made them pick on you?"
33475But there are many things in the world besides just being happy, do n''t you think?
33475But what has it cost this community to produce you-- what are you asking it to cost me and those I love?
33475But what shall I do?
33475But what''s it all about?
33475But when did all the men in the world start even?
33475But who gave you the notion?
33475But who''s this young feller?
33475But why-- that''s what I want to know-- why?"
33475But women do n''t seem to see any of the intervening obstacles that exist, do they, Miss Julia?"
33475But you came-- when you knew you had a mother, why you came to her, did n''t you, Don?
33475But you say there were witnesses to this confession?"
33475But, Don----""Yes?"
33475But-- tell me, ca n''t I help you?"
33475But_ this_ case is different----""Why?"
33475Ca n''t you believe that?"
33475Ca n''t you credit me at least a little?
33475Ca n''t you forgive me, Miss Lane, ca n''t you forgive me any?"
33475Ca n''t you give her up?"
33475Ca n''t you keep it, too?
33475Ca n''t you see I''ve got to play fair?
33475Can we say as much?"
33475Can you beat that?
33475Come to think of it, it looks like Eph ai n''t got much glory out of it so far, has he?"
33475Could it be possible that she had grown defiant-- was she restive under the weight of the years?
33475Could n''t we cross the square without all that?"
33475Could n''t you guess that?--couldn''t you have figured out that much for your own self?
33475Could n''t you see your own flesh and blood-- and mine?
33475Could she be silent now?
33475Could she lie to him now?
33475Cowles?"
33475Did anyone ever hear the like of_ that_?
33475Did anyone see you coming over here?"
33475Did it not say something about"All ye"?--something about"Whosoever"?
33475Did it not say"Come unto Me"?
33475Did n''t I take him to jail?"
33475Did n''t I tell you I wanted to stand between you and trouble-- any trouble?
33475Did n''t I?
33475Did n''t you ever know-- didn''t you ever kiss a woman in all your life and know what that meant?"
33475Did n''t you know he would before you went to ask him?
33475Did n''t you know that man?
33475Did n''t you know then he was your boy?"
33475Did not our_ hearts_ meet-- don''t they meet now-- and is n''t_ that_ what it all means between a man and a woman?"
33475Did she have some more?
33475Did you hear that funeral march?
33475Did you know that, Anne?"
33475Do I say too much, Judge Henderson?"
33475Do n''t I know what it means to descend into hell?
33475Do n''t I know?"
33475Do n''t lie about it-- if you did n''t know him,_ why_ did n''t you?
33475Do n''t you believe that, Aurora?
33475Do n''t you love me, Don?
33475Do n''t you think of your own prospects?
33475Do n''t you want to do this for him-- for us-- how can you_ help_ wanting to?
33475Do n''t you want to make anybody happy?"
33475Do you know the deep pool beneath the bridge where the water turns around?
33475Do you know what this marriage would mean to me?
33475Do you know what this means?
33475Do you mean to charge me with killing this man?
33475Do you suppose I''d take my life from you-- such a life as it''s got to be now?"
33475Do you think I am going to stand that, when it comes to me-- me and him-- the man I have promised-- the man I love?
33475Do you think I do n''t suffer, too?"
33475Do you think I''ll do?"
33475Do you think any woman of my family would do that?
33475Do you think as a judge you could keep a good lawyer from getting these two pictures introduced in evidence in that case?"
33475Do you think the people of this community will want to send you to the United States Senate if they ever get a look at that act?
33475Do you think they would relish the thought that_ you''re_ the special prosecutor where_ your son_ is on trial for his life?
33475Do you think this is blackmail now?
33475Do you think you want to try this case against this boy-- your son-- her son?
33475Do you think you want to try this murder case?
33475Do you want to fight?"
33475Do you want to hang a man-- are you anxious to begin that?"
33475Do you want to keep a man from his chance all his life-- do you want to help railroad him to the gallows?
33475Drops in the same bucket?
33475Even every bad- chance candidate out of your way is so much to the candy for you, Judge, ai n''t it so?''
33475Food for you and your ambition?
33475Had he not given freely, as a sacrifice, the greatest gift a man has-- his hope for power and preferment?
33475Had it been a passage of angels she herself had witnessed here?
33475Had they killed him?
33475Had this sudden and sensational resurrection of her past brought rebellion to her heart, all these years so patient, so gentle?
33475Has he said good- by to you?
33475Has he said he was n''t worthy of you, because he had-- no father?
33475Has it gone so far?
33475Has she identified us two-- have you really been fair with her?"
33475Have I ever lied to you?"
33475Have n''t I lived them, and would n''t I know him-- didn''t I-- when I saw him?
33475Have n''t I taken it up with God-- there on my knees?"
33475Have n''t I?"
33475Have you fooled me, tricked me-- made a loafer of me?
33475He could n''t have done this-- who was it, do you think?"
33475He wo n''t have as hard a time as I''ve had?
33475He''ll succeed, wo n''t he?
33475Her gown was God knows what-- gingham or calico or silk or cloth of gold, who shall say?
33475Hod Brooks''voice was low as he went on:"Now, as to trying this case, Judge, I brought you in here to ask you what you really want to do?
33475How came this to pass?
33475How can that come?"
33475How can the law be set aside?"
33475How could I believe I was his father?
33475How did it happen?"
33475How did they settle it out of court?
33475How much have the past twenty years paid you?"
33475How old is he-- who is he?"
33475Huh?
33475I believe, Judge Henderson, that you represent the plaintiff in this case?"
33475I did n''t know much at first-- I did n''t feel that it was all so wrong-- I did n''t know much of anything at all, do n''t you see?"
33475I do n''t see how you could----""How I could disown him?
33475I suppose you''ve heard about him fighting here around town yesterday?"
33475I think they are both germane to this case-- don''t you?
33475I''m going to stay-- I''m going to stick-- do you hear?
33475I''m just getting acquainted with you, am I not?
33475I''m ready-- what is it that you wish?"
33475I''m second choice-- that''s my fate, is it-- that''s as high as I get?
33475I''m sorry if he''s done wrong-- has he been bad to you?"
33475I''ve been trying to live so that-- so that----""So what, mother?"
33475I''ve got nothing left to trade-- but, Judge, do you think you and I really ought to fight-- over this particular case?"
33475I''ve known your mother for years-- I think a lot of her and her friend Miss Julia, do n''t you see?
33475If it is, whoever was his father, huh?
33475If it was not this man, they will ask, Who was it?
33475If that were true of all the women in the world, how much world would there be left?
33475If we did, we''d take ourselves with us wherever we went, would n''t we?
33475In jail indefinitely?"
33475In the dish, you say, there was only some crude cottage cheese for Aurora Lane?
33475In the next twenty years-- can I live as well as that?"
33475In time they begin to think themselves apart from the rest of the world-- don''t you think that about yourself now?
33475In what capacity then can I serve you, Miss Julia?"
33475Is it likely?
33475Is my name Don Brooks?"
33475Is n''t her family-- don''t you know the Oglesbys of Columbus-- who they are and what they stand for-- where they came from?
33475Is n''t it true, Aurie?"
33475Is n''t that enough?
33475Is n''t there anything welcome in that thought for you?
33475Is that all one gains-- is that all one may expect-- is that all a woman ought to do for the man she loves?
33475Is that all she ought to expect from a man?
33475Is that indeed so?
33475Is that it, mother?"
33475Is that the book they call the Bible-- that tells of love and mercy, and truth, and justice, and forgiveness of sins?
33475Is that the man?
33475Is that the trade?"
33475Is that what you mean?
33475Is that-- can that really be true of any man?"
33475Is there more trouble?"
33475It all comes out, time''n again-- ain''t it the truth?
33475It ca n''t be-- I wo n''t have it-- you hear me?"
33475It is your duty, then, to prevent me from_ my_ duty?
33475It must have been just about one o''clock, was n''t it?"
33475It was her son, a man finished, a gentleman, she hoped.... Could he not be a gentleman?
33475It was honest money, Don, you know it was that, do n''t you-- you believe it was honest?"
33475It will be so fine for you to do that-- so dramatic-- so fitting, wo n''t it?"
33475It would mean satisfaction to you?"
33475It''s a terrible thing-- the town''s all upset-- haven''t you heard anything of it?"
33475It''s an awful thing, is n''t it?
33475It''s been hid this long, why not longer?"
33475It''s hot tonight, is n''t it?
33475Justice?
33475Let me have a little of it, ca n''t you, Don?
33475Love in the first place for Dieudonné Lane-- or was it, really, in the first place, love for him?
33475Love?
33475Lucky for us-- but_ why_?"
33475Miss Julia turned upon him, her large dark eyes flashing:"Why do you bring her into it?
33475Miss Julia, ca n''t you go with me?"
33475Murdered?"
33475Must she lose also her boy, for whom she had lived, for whom she had denied herself all these years-- the boy who was more than life itself to her?
33475Must you be in a hurry to leave us?"
33475My heart''s ashes, that part, ca n''t you understand?
33475My mother----?"
33475No, what was it?"
33475Now, what had poor old Joel ever done-- all his life-- to deserve bein''murdered like a dog?
33475Now, who_ was_ that other man, Aurora?"
33475Of course you have heard?"
33475Oh, Aurie, do n''t you remember when I''d come and tap there on the window-- and you''d come and let me in?
33475Oh, Judas-- worse-- you are ten times worse than Judas!--Drag you down-- drag all the town, all the state, all the society down?
33475Oh, are you better than the world?
33475Oh, do n''t you see what is your duty?
33475Oh, was n''t the world cruel enough to me, Don?
33475Only-- Anne, Anne-- surely you do n''t think I had any idea before yesterday-- about my father?
33475Or are you just a man, like the rest of them?
33475Or, had she only dreamed that they were here?
33475Poor boys had come up and come through-- had they not?
33475Prosecute him--_Don_?
33475Prosecute_ him_?
33475Sacrifice?
33475Sanctuary?
33475She called out,"Who''s there?"
33475She spoke now in short, quick, sobbing breaths...."Don, do you know the little stream that runs through the edge of the town?
33475Sidling up to her, his hat off, he said,"May I see-- may I see you home this-- this evening?"
33475Silas,"said old Aaron to his friend,"who''d a thought it?
33475Since you''re getting all the best of the bargain, is it a bargain, then?''
33475So why not end it?
33475Suppose it were I in trouble-- would_ he_ forget me?
33475Suppose you do win it, what''ve you won?
33475Tarbush?"
33475Tell me, are you Miss Oglesby, his kin from over Columbus way?"
33475Tell me, is my guess right?
33475Tell me-- was it that man who defended me?
33475That was taken some years ago, when you were young, was n''t it?"
33475That''s doctrine, is n''t it?"
33475The Tarbush case-- what do you mean?"
33475The law?
33475The question now is, How are you going to pay any of your debts?
33475The sheriff and others and his own father heard him say that he had killed Tarbush, do n''t you see?
33475The sheriff shot him?
33475Them was days when----""Why ai n''t Eph in town today?"
33475Then shall I?
33475Then why should she connect me with this?"
33475There was a little silence in the room, and then the coroner began again:"Where were you just now?"
33475There was some sort of-- of funer''l, was n''t there, in town today?
33475There''s nothing like letting bygones be bygones in this world-- isn''t that the truth?"
33475They ca n''t help that, can they, Don?"
33475They ca n''t keep him down, can they?
33475Too bad he died, was n''t it, Mom?"
33475Trouble-- what do you mean?
33475Twenty years?
33475Very well, some men have had to do that-- you have had to yourself, Nunkie, is n''t it true?
33475Was he here?"
33475Was he so poor as all that?"
33475Was not this anthem universal in its wording?
33475Was that all you saw?
33475Was there any place where she might be safe, where she might be unmolested?
33475Was there such a place as sanctuary for her in all the world?
33475Was this not far worse than facing death for both of them?
33475We''ll have to start at the bottom; and I ask you, did n''t you start that way?"
33475We''re both orphans-- can''t you be a father for us both?
33475We''ve all got to do that some time-- there does n''t seem to be any good way of getting clear of an honest debt, does there?
33475Well?"
33475Were they coming again?
33475Were they going to kill her boy?
33475Were they going to kill her, too?
33475Were they going to tell her that?
33475Were you so busy looking at your own picture on the wall-- so wrapped up in your own ambitions, that you could n''t see anything else?
33475What are you doing here?"
33475What can I do for you?''
33475What can I do?"
33475What could it mean?
33475What did they mean?
33475What do you know about the way I feel toward Anne?"
33475What do you mean?
33475What do you mean?
33475What do you mean?
33475What do you mean?"
33475What do you think about it?"
33475What do you think?
33475What do you want of him?
33475What do you want of me-- after what I''ve said-- after what I''ve done to you?
33475What do you_ mean_?"
33475What does it leave to me, if they take my boy-- all I have in the world?
33475What does it mean?"
33475What does this mean?"
33475What had they not and more than once done in this little savage town?...
33475What have I done to any of you?
33475What have I done to you?
33475What have you done?
33475What have you done?
33475What have you done?
33475What is his evidence going to be?
33475What made him look at us the way he did?
33475What made you come?
33475What made you come?"
33475What made you come?"
33475What made you come?"]
33475What made you do that?"
33475What made_ you_ suspect it?
33475What place was there left for her in all the world?
33475What right had she to do that?"
33475What village could ask more than was the portion of Spring Valley in these few hurrying days?
33475What was hatred or revenge to her?
33475What was it?
33475What was that last coarse, terrible threat that they had meant?
33475What was to happen now to William Henderson, the leading citizen of Spring Valley?
33475What would they do now?
33475What''s all this?
33475What''s been wrong here?
33475What''s he to you?
33475What''s revenge to me?
33475What''s that?"
33475What''s the matter with you people?
33475What''s twenty years, come to forgettin''things like what she done?"
33475What''s twenty years?
33475What''s under all this?
33475What''s under this?
33475What''s up here?
33475When did all this happen?"
33475When they say things of how we was born, you would fought, I hope?
33475Where did you get it, Mom?"
33475Where did you meet him?
33475Where have you been-- at church?"
33475Where have you been?
33475Where have you learned so much-- so soon?
33475Where is Cowles?
33475Where is he-- who is he?"
33475Where was Don?
33475Where''s that boy, that killed the marshal?"
33475Where''ve you been, anyhow?"
33475Which of us may first cast a stone?"
33475Who did it-- whom do they suspect?"
33475Who did it?"
33475Who more natural to help you than myself, feeling as I have, as I do?"
33475Who was the other man, and why do you think so?
33475Who would deny poor little Miss Julia her splendid dreams?
33475Who''ll fight old Eph Adamson?"
33475Who''re you?
33475Who''re you?
33475Who''s he?"
33475Who''s with me?_"The town of Spring Valley never mentioned the name of this speaker.
33475Whose business was it?
33475Why could n''t you find some other girl to love, away from here?"
33475Why did Miss Julia do that?"
33475Why did he do that, Mother?
33475Why did n''t you ask your uncle, Judge Henderson?"
33475Why did n''t you go into court and force me to do my duty to my own flesh and blood-- and to you?"
33475Why did n''t you stay away?
33475Why did n''t you try that case, Judge?
33475Why did that man tell me to fight them all?"
33475Why did you save me-- why did Miss Julia come that night?
33475Why do n''t you all burn her as a witch in the public square?"
33475Why have you come here?"
33475Why not settle up, at last?"
33475Why not?
33475Why should I rob you of your chance?"
33475Why should he not?
33475Why should he, ever?
33475Why should we run away now?
33475Why waken them this late?"
33475Why, where does that leave you-- where does it leave_ me_?"
33475Why?
33475Why?"
33475Will he too refuse us?"
33475Will she know who I am when she knows who_ you_ are-- and what you are not?
33475Will you let me in?"
33475With_ us_?"
33475Wo n''t they pass?
33475Would she still keep her oath now, after this?
33475Would_ he_ forsake me?
33475Yes,_ pity_ you-- but-- love you?
33475Yesterday?"
33475You ca n''t forget what you have learned-- you ca n''t get away from your college education now, can you?
33475You did n''t see anything strange?"
33475You did n''t suspect it then, in the justice court, did you?"
33475You do n''t believe it''s true this here_ is_''Rory''s son, now do you?
33475You do n''t know how I got them?
33475You do n''t think that, do you?"
33475You fought?
33475You hated me?"
33475You have not pledged your word-- to_ him_?"
33475You hear me, now?"
33475You know, sometimes even a minister asks,''Lord, shall we smite with the sword?''"
33475You said''Will''?
33475You undertake to go into a situation which reaches wider than this town, wider than this state, do you?
33475You were not expecting me?"
33475You would debar me from the one great right of all my life?
33475You would n''t deny me my own chance in the world?"
33475You would n''t want me to lie?
33475You''d do_ that_?"
33475You''d send him to the gallows now-- my boy-- and yours?
33475You''re a pretty pair, you two, ai n''t you?
33475You''re my parent-- can''t you be his, too?
33475You''re talking about yourself, your reputation, your success-- how about Don?
33475You''ve heard the news by now?"
33475You''ve not seen him-- he has not told you?"
33475You?
33475You_ know_ I''d not deceive you-- you_ do_ know that?"
33475Your own ambition-- your own pleasure, your own comfort-- those were the things that have controlled you always-- don''t I know, have n''t I heard?
33475[ Illustration:"I was kissing you and saying good- bye... when Miss Julia came in--"]"You were going to put me in a home-- in some institution?"
33475_ Don''s your son?_"She turned to Aurora inquiringly.
33475_ My_ opportunity?
33475_ Respect_ you-- is that what you mean?
33475_ what''s he saying, Dan_?"
33475broke out Judge Henderson--"this man Brooks?
33475demanded Aurora Lane in sudden terror--"what''s going on there?
33475demanded Judge Henderson,"both of you, that you''ll never tell nor hint a word of this to any human being in the world-- not even to him-- the boy?"
33475do n''t you think it''s terrible enough, with him there in jail?"
33475he half screamed,"your_ mother_?
33475man, what could you have meant?--You told her you would marry her?"
33475said Anne Oglesby--"when I love you so much?"
33475what''ll he do to us now?"
43092A closer connection? 43092 A little key that you have lost?"
43092A trap? 43092 A woman or a ghost?"
43092About the letter that is hidden? 43092 Am I so changed?"
43092Am I sure?
43092Am I too late? 43092 And how can we do that?"
43092And if she finds it? 43092 And is it not the true view-- especially in the case of young Frankland and his wife?"
43092And it is yours to take and yours to put? 43092 And may I go my ways now, and take my good news to Sarah''s bedside?"
43092And nowhere else?
43092And suppose it should turn out that there is such a room?
43092And suppose the servant refuses to risk losing his place, which he must do if he accepts your condition?
43092And the Secret, dear-- the Secret she was afraid to tell my father?
43092And there are many rooms in the house? 43092 And what did you hear, Mrs. Pentreath, while you were searching for the missing and absent party on the second floor?
43092And what in the world do you stand there for-- between us and the sunlight?
43092And what in the world made Captain Treverton sell Porthgenna Tower?
43092And what is your idea, Rosamond?
43092And where are you going to next, ma''am, after we have been into the drawing- room? 43092 And why?"
43092And why?
43092And your father never heard of her again?
43092Any news to- day?
43092Are there any myrtles growing at the north side of the house?
43092Are there any pictures on the walls?
43092Are there thieves in the house in broad daylight?
43092Are you going far, very far away, Sarah, when you leave me?
43092Are you going to make all that laburnum into a nosegay?
43092Are you sorry, Madam, for Sarah, my niece? 43092 Are you sure of that?"
43092Are you tired already, Rosamond? 43092 Are you very fond of Cornwall, ma''am?"
43092Are you well enough, dear, to amuse yourself with work?
43092Because the Secret is written in a letter--"Yes; and what of that?
43092Before your grave is dug? 43092 Betzee, my dear,"repeated Uncle Joseph,"has all this talking been too much for your ears?
43092Burst it open? 43092 But are you sure it is clear in every part?
43092But do we know that it has not been opened since then?
43092But how would you act, Lenny, if you were that husband?
43092But if he fails?--if any thing happens?--if she is really ill?
43092But if she does find it?
43092But she suspects nothing of the Secret?
43092But suppose your wife was close to you-- as close as I am now? 43092 But the warning, Lenny-- the warning, so pointedly and mysteriously addressed to me?
43092But what?
43092But why did she say the words to_ me_? 43092 But will you excuse me for noticing that it seems rather a mournful fondness?
43092Ca n''t you shut the window, yet?
43092Ca n''t you tell, by the sound, which is which of those bells yet?
43092Can this one serve the same purpose as the other?
43092Can you see any thing written on the cover?
43092Chennery, my dear fellow, I do n''t look as if I was sitting all on one side, do I?
43092Cost what it may, you will go? 43092 Dear Miss Sturch will pardon an invalid?"
43092Did I not say enough? 43092 Did he find the air unhealthy?
43092Did many people go by it?
43092Did she ask to go up into Mrs. Frankland''s room?
43092Did the station- master issue the tickets for that train?
43092Did you not get a message from me this afternoon?
43092Did you punch his head?
43092Did you unbolt the door?
43092Did_ you_ see any thing of those strange visitors who behaved so oddly?
43092Do they say it is the ghost of a man or of a woman?
43092Do you come to me already?
43092Do you hear that, Lenny? 43092 Do you know where he has gone?"
43092Do you put trust enough in the foreigner to believe that he would give you his right name and address if you asked him?
43092Do you remember giving a ticket this morning, by the eleven o''clock down- train, to a lady traveling alone?
43092Do you remember the description the servant- girl gave us, on the night we arrived here, of the ghost of the north rooms?
43092Do you think we want your foreign noises, and your foreign morals, and your foreign profanity here? 43092 Do you think you will be any the worse for a little freer circulation of air?"
43092Does it really? 43092 Does the floor look safe to walk on?"
43092Does the top open?
43092Forgive him? 43092 Frankland, did you say her name was?"
43092Frighten you? 43092 Had you not better light a candle?"
43092Hard trials, love? 43092 Has it?"
43092Has she been long asleep?
43092Have I kept it all as I should?
43092Have I not told you?
43092Have I the courage to stay in Cornwall? 43092 Have I?
43092Have you been all this time away, and not got into the room yet?
43092Have you got the letter?
43092Have you really made your will at last, Sir?
43092Have you thought of any plan for finding out your niece''s address?
43092Have you told her all?
43092Hope? 43092 How came we never to think of that before?"
43092How came you to know that?
43092How can a box that has not been opened since seventeen hundred and sixty help us to discover the mystery of Mrs. Jazeph and the Myrtle Room?
43092How can it be fancy when I see the face? 43092 How could they do otherwise when they are getting so much praise?
43092How dare you ask us to carry things for you?
43092How dare you talk to me about my niece? 43092 How dare you trifle with a serious subject and a serious question in that way?
43092How do I know I am fit to go there? 43092 How do you do?
43092How do you do? 43092 How many days did they travel toward the north?"
43092How too late? 43092 How would you end it, love?"
43092I am really at a loss,Mr. Orridge began--"quite at a loss, I assure you--""To know what I mean?"
43092I beg pardon again, ma''am,pursued the housekeeper;"but, in case any of the gentry of the neighborhood should call to- day?"
43092I do remember Mrs. Frankland''s letter, ma''am; and what then?
43092I fancy that I could feel perfect happiness, and yet--"And yet what?
43092I mean close to the walls,she added, seeing the man look puzzled;"under the windows, you know?"
43092I mean-- uncle, you remember that Captain Treverton was my master when I lived at Porthgenna Tower?
43092I only wanted to hear whether she has got my message-- whether she knows that I am waiting and longing to see her, if she will but let me come?
43092I suppose you have some preparations to make?
43092I think this person had better leave the room, Sir?
43092I think, Rosamond, my feet have told me already what the floor is like?
43092I wonder if you will always be as anxious about me, and as fond of me, as you are now?
43092I wonder what he thought about me when he was dying?
43092I wonder which it is?
43092If you find your niece well, and willing to travel,said Leonard,"you will bring her back to Truro at once?
43092If you please, Sir, are you sure it''s really the lady who is up there?
43092In the book- case? 43092 Is Mr. Buschmann at home?"
43092Is any thing the matter?
43092Is it all my fault? 43092 Is it late?"
43092Is it of any importance?
43092Is it only to tell me what I can see for myself that you are stopping now?
43092Is it true that Mrs. Frankland''s nurse was sent away last night by Mr. Frankland''s order?
43092Is my master alive now? 43092 Is she worse?
43092Is that for one of us?
43092Is the change to the damp coolness of this place affecting you in any way?
43092Is the loss of your mother the only sad association he has with the place?
43092Is the train at eleven in the morning an up- train or a down- train?
43092Is there any thing that alarms you in the picture?
43092Is there much of it, Rosamond?
43092Is there no key in any of them?
43092Is there such a room at Porthgenna?
43092Is your knee easier, dear? 43092 It is n''t often that people trouble themselves to send letters to you-- is it?
43092It is the same boy, and he is digging still-- and, if you please, what of that?
43092Leave this business in my hands, if you will be so good.--What reasons did you say, ma''am?
43092Lenny,she said, rather sadly,"I wonder whether we are any of us capable of feeling perfect happiness in this world?"
43092Lenny,she whispered,"have I made you angry with me?"
43092Locked up in a room?
43092May I ask for your niece''s address in London, in case we wish to write to you?
43092May I ask,said the doctor,"who is to be intrusted with the responsibility of making the communication you mention?"
43092May I be allowed to ask, ma''am, if any thing has been found this time in the north rooms?
43092May I make you sure, before I go away, that I shall forget nothing?
43092May I sit down before you go any further? 43092 May I?
43092Might not the tape and seal have been put round it by any body at some more recent period of time? 43092 More like myself?"
43092More than you can examine in one morning?
43092Mother?
43092Must I, Rosamond? 43092 Must we send for a locksmith?"
43092No one?
43092Not even to hysterical affections, now and then?
43092Not the doctor? 43092 Now what are the facts, and circumstances, and events?"
43092Of what, then?
43092Of your mother?
43092Oh, Lenny, do you hear that? 43092 Perhaps,"she suggested, deferentially,"you think that the foreign old gentleman would be likely to insist on going over the house with the lady?"
43092Pray, did you ever hear of a room on the north side of our old house called the Myrtle Room?
43092Remember? 43092 Say?
43092Say?
43092Seven times eight?
43092Seven times eight?
43092Shall I tell you exactly how he looks, and what his bed is like, and how the room is furnished?
43092Shall I write?
43092Shall we add any new words to the old, worn letters as they stand now?
43092Shall we have the other doors opened?
43092Shall we stay here as long as we thought we should, and be as happy as we have been every where else? 43092 Shall we talk about other places where I have lived, which you have never seen?
43092Shall we try the writing- table by the fire- place, next?
43092So sadly, sadly changed, Uncle Joseph?
43092Stomach still out of order-- eh, Phippen?
43092Suppose I meant our future at Porthgenna?
43092Suppose you tell us, my dear, what led you to suspect that she was mad?
43092Sure?
43092Surely there must be something besides writing-- some inestimable powder, or some bank- note of fabulous value-- wrapped up in all these folds?
43092Surely you are not going yet?
43092Surely you let in too much light?
43092Surely, you did not walk all the way here?
43092That is your opinion, is it?
43092The Captain''s brother? 43092 The future?"
43092The repairs?
43092Then it seems you care no more for the loss of the money than he does?
43092Then you would take the responsibility of showing them both over the house, seeing that they have both come to the door together?
43092They are covered with paper, are they not?
43092Thinking about what?
43092Try if you ca n''t remember?
43092Wait?
43092Was it not to take my pipe, and ask him to make me think? 43092 Was that wrong?
43092Well, but if he has,persisted Rosamond,"what harm does it do to his master?
43092Well, what have you found now?
43092Well,said Mr. Orridge, bustling into the hall,"you were all rather surprised last night when the housekeeper came back, I suppose?"
43092Were there no passengers but passengers from the town?
43092Were you speaking to me, Rosamond?
43092What are the walls like?
43092What are we to do? 43092 What are you doing now?"
43092What are you thinking about, Rosamond?
43092What are you thinking about? 43092 What binds me to give the letter to my master at all?"
43092What did I promise you last night?
43092What did I tell you?
43092What did she say? 43092 What did you say?"
43092What did you see, Rosamond, when you opened the door? 43092 What do I care,"thought Shrowl,"whether he sees me or not?
43092What do I want with a book, when I have got you for my guide? 43092 What do we stop for now?"
43092What do you come here for?
43092What do you mean by that?
43092What do you mean, Sir, by addressing such outrageous language as that to a respectable female?
43092What do you say to that piece of furniture? 43092 What do you think, Mrs. Jazeph, of a house with one whole side of it that has never been inhabited for sixty or seventy years past?
43092What do_ you_ say, Miss Sturch?
43092What does it look like, Rosamond?
43092What does that mean? 43092 What dream was it, Lenny?"
43092What fool''s question is this? 43092 What future, Rosamond, can you possibly mean?"
43092What harm are we doing, if we give the man his five pounds? 43092 What have you heard?"
43092What in the world are you doing there at the foot of the bed?
43092What is before us now?
43092What is it? 43092 What is it?"
43092What is that?
43092What is the matter?
43092What is the use, Rosamond, of supposing events that never could have happened?
43092What lesson, Lenny?
43092What made you so long before you spoke to me, Rosamond?
43092What makes you ask that question, my dear?
43092What must it be made of not to break?
43092What precious thing lies hidden in this paper?
43092What reasons?
43092What were they talking about just now, out of our hearing? 43092 What words of mine could change it?"
43092What work do you do? 43092 What would you do with her, Lenny, if you were writing the story?
43092Whatever do you think she''s doing now?
43092When I showed you her letter,he said,"what did I tell you?
43092When will my attendance be required, Sir?
43092Where are you?
43092Where did the journey end? 43092 Where does he stick now?"
43092Where is she? 43092 Where is she?"
43092Where shall I look next, dear?
43092Where? 43092 Where?"
43092Which bottle? 43092 Who are you?"
43092Who goes of her own accord to the sacrifice? 43092 Who is that?"
43092Who the devil would you have me leave my money to?
43092Who?
43092Why could not the provoking man tell us at once in round numbers what the repairs will really cost?
43092Why did you frighten me?
43092Why do I talk of heaven?
43092Why do n''t you give the strip of print a turn, as well as the sheet of writing?
43092Why do n''t you look? 43092 Why do n''t you speak?"
43092Why do n''t you tell us how she bore it?
43092Why do you move the candle?
43092Why do you stop?
43092Why do you stop?
43092Why does nobody ever go into these mouldy old rooms?
43092Why give it to him at all? 43092 Why need we tell the Secret to any one?"
43092Why not his brother?
43092Why not our eccentric friend, Andrew Treverton?
43092Why not? 43092 Why not?"
43092Why the letter? 43092 Will she last out the night, I wonder?"
43092Will you come out of it with me now?
43092Will you please to take a seat, ma''am?
43092Will you step in for a moment, and wait here while I speak to the steward?
43092Would you like to shake hands?
43092Would you mind waiting for me here a little while, uncle? 43092 Would you really care to hear all my thoughts?"
43092Yes, yes, you are sure of that, or you would not have told me so, would you? 43092 Yes-- but when the servant comes, what are we to say?"
43092Yes?
43092Yes?
43092You are not going?
43092You are not offended with me, I hope?
43092You are quite sure of that, I suppose?
43092You are sure of that?
43092You guess?
43092You have forgiven him? 43092 You have had workmen in the house?"
43092You insist? 43092 You just let me alone-- will you?"
43092You like''em?
43092You mean on the stairs?
43092You promise me, also, that you want nothing but to take the letter out of the Myrtle Room, and put it away somewhere else?
43092You promise me, my child, that the hiding of this Secret does good, and that the finding of it will do harm?
43092You remember my message?
43092You said she asked you a question?
43092You think that is better?
43092You understand now?
43092You will go?
43092You will help me and strengthen me, when the time comes, to meet my mother as I ought? 43092 You will keep us here?
43092You will not go to- night?
43092You will wait, my child, and rest with me till to- morrow?
43092You would take her to your heart, Lenny? 43092 Your niece''s name is Sarah Leeson?"
43092''Are you base enough to take the treatment you have received in the light of a favor?''
43092''Could I tell it,''she said,''to the master who trusted me?
43092''Did he look angry?
43092''Did you think what was the matter with me, when you sent me away to change the air?''
43092''Do I make a fine, buxom, comely servant- woman?''
43092''Oh, you are, are you?''
43092''Was her husband there to hear her?''
43092''What do you mean?''
43092A little farewell song, my child, before you go?"
43092A little mouthful more?"
43092A low, clear, sweet voice, inside the room, inquired who was waiting without?
43092Ah, have you got the crying look in your eyes again, Sarah?
43092Ai n''t you glad of that?
43092Am I not a woman?
43092Am I standing too much in the way of this marriage?
43092Am I to have a proper explanation of the abstracting and purloining of those keys, or am I not?"
43092And are there not rocks and trees, very stiffly done, high up, at the left- hand side?"
43092And have I not been forbidden to enter the Myrtle Room?
43092And how do you know that?"
43092And how do you think they succeeded?"
43092And how shall I get her to close her eyes, so long as she has the temptation to keep them open upon_ you_?"
43092And how was she to leave it?
43092And how?
43092And if she finds the letter?"
43092And my eyes?"
43092And now about the story?
43092And now they are comfortably disposed of, I can get round at last to the main part of my story-- the sale of Porthgenna Tower.--What is it now?
43092And she said again:''Has it made between them no misery?
43092And so she is married?
43092And so she is one of the Cornish Trevertons?
43092And the letter in which the Secret is written is hidden in one of the many?
43092And what followed and succeeded that?
43092And what if I do n''t, parson?"
43092And you found the fine dry air so good for you that you stopped?''
43092And you will forgive me-- won''t you, Lenny?--if I promise never to behave so badly again?
43092And you will go soon?"
43092And you will let us know when you are both at home again?"
43092Another death?
43092Another mouthful of water?
43092Any thing wrong in connection with her, Sir?"
43092Are there candles we can light without disturbing any body, without calling any body in here?"
43092Are there no doubtful lines, no unfinished corners any where?
43092Are there no foot- marks on it, after Mrs. Jazeph''s visit, that might lead us to the right door?"
43092Are you an infidel?"
43092Are you dreaming with your eyes open?"
43092Are you faint?
43092Are you grieving for your husband?"
43092Are you happier than you used to be?
43092Are you ill?
43092Are you in service still, Sarah?
43092Are you not well?"
43092Are you not your own master yet?"
43092Are you sure of that?
43092Are you three at the door there, and not one heart of mercy among you?
43092Are you tired of me in eight days?
43092Are you very certain, Sarah?
43092As binding as an oath?
43092As your friend I ask you now-- tell me all the truth?''
43092Back again, through the library, into the breakfast- room?
43092Before your body is cold?"
43092Before your coffin is made?
43092Betsey, is it?
43092Buschmann?"
43092But I am always telling you that, am I not?
43092But are the keys in the locks?"
43092But can I tell you how he looks when he first begins to take notice?
43092But it was enough to make almost any body angry, just at first-- wasn''t it, dear?
43092But tell me first-- this is the west front, I suppose?--how far are we from the north rooms?
43092But the question is, are you competent as well as willing?
43092But what labyrinth are we getting into now?
43092But will you excuse me if I ask one question?
43092But, Lenny, supposing your guess about Mrs. Jazeph is right?--""Yes?"
43092But, Rosamond, are you sure of the success of your plan before we undertake it?
43092But, in the mean time, what is to be done in this difficulty about the nurse?
43092By giving formal warning, and so exposing herself to questions which would be sure to confuse and terrify her?
43092Ca n''t you find the match- box?"
43092Can I get you a glass of water, or may I give you my bottle of salts?"
43092Can I send her any thing, or do any thing for her?"
43092Can she visit it on me from the other world, if I keep the promises I swore to observe, and do no more?
43092Can you help us, Mrs. Jazeph?
43092Can you throw any light on the matter?"
43092Can you walk now?"
43092Chance brought us together--""Us?
43092Could I tell it afterward to the child, whose birth was a reproach to me?
43092Could she listen to the story of her mother''s shame, told by her mother''s lips?
43092Could she summon the courage to give him the letter there?
43092Could you walk on the other side, my dear fellow?
43092Did I tell you no more?
43092Did any body come into the room with you?
43092Did it make you cry when you thought of me after that?"
43092Did she cry much, Chennery, when you were marrying her?"
43092Did the chalked numbers stop there?
43092Did you ever hear of a bride and bridegroom who started with fairer prospects in life than our bride and bridegroom of to- day?"
43092Did you ever hear of any thing so ridiculous?
43092Did you ever hear that Mrs. Jazeph was subject to fits of any kind?"
43092Did you ever, in all your experience, Mr. Munder, meet with such a letter before?
43092Did you hear me open the door, Lenny?
43092Did you wake me, my love?
43092Did you wish to see him, ma''am?"
43092Do listen a little to the music: you remember the box?--my brother Max''s box?
43092Do n''t you know me?"
43092Do n''t you think we ought to open them and see where they lead to?"
43092Do you accuse?
43092Do you believe that the dead can come back to this world, and follow the living every where, and see what they do in it?"
43092Do you feel as if you thoroughly understood the whole room now, Lenny?"
43092Do you feel it?"
43092Do you get tired of hearing me?
43092Do you hear that, Sir?"
43092Do you know so little of my half of humanity as to doubt what I should do the moment the room was discovered?
43092Do you know that we are in the Myrtle Room?"
43092Do you mean to dispatch a friend to Porthgenna to go over the house with Mr. Horlock?
43092Do you mean to tell me that I am to let him go, after what has happened, without at least insisting on his giving me his name and address?"
43092Do you mind trying the experiment?"
43092Do you refuse my last request?
43092Do you think we have any charge that a magistrate would listen to, to bring against these people?"
43092Do you think--?"
43092Do you want any thing to drink?
43092Do you want me to show you again, or do you think you can do it now for yourself?"
43092Do you want to get up again?"
43092Do you wish to hear it again?
43092Does he play Mozart?
43092First of all, I suppose, I must make you understand how large it is?"
43092Foreigner?
43092Foreigner?
43092Frankland?"
43092Frankland?"
43092Guess what has made you late this morning?
43092Had she heard footsteps?
43092Have I not my third reason still?
43092Have they rested, rested always, rested forever, since that time?"
43092Have you any notion, Betsey, why she fainted?"
43092Have you been into the room?"
43092Have you done dinner, darling, and did you drink my health when you were left at dessert all by yourself?"
43092Have you dropped any hint of the Porthgenna project to your father?"
43092Have you ever had any practice in nursing?"
43092Have you forgotten the box that the divine Mozart gave to my brother with his own hand, when Max was a boy in the music school at Vienna?
43092Have you got any book here that you are fond of?"
43092Have you had your breakfast yet?"
43092Have you had your supper yet?"
43092He does n''t take a dangerous quantity of sleep, does he?
43092He said,''Are you at peace with all the world?''
43092He stopped again, reflected a little, looked up suddenly at Shrowl, and said to him,"Have you lit the oven fire yet?"
43092He was hard and cruel with you, then?
43092How am I to slip out of sight, even if we do get in?
43092How are we to persuade them to let us in?
43092How can I ever tell her that I know the Secret?
43092How can he have any heart at all, and not be fond of her?"
43092How can she ever look at me in kindness again?''"
43092How can she forgive me?
43092How could I conscientiously inflict such a digestion as mine on a member of the fairer portion of creation?
43092How could I ever have heard of the Myrtle Room?
43092How could I frighten you?
43092How could I tell him the Secret?
43092How dare you touch me?"
43092How do you know it?"
43092How is the lady?
43092How old are you to- day?
43092How will she listen to it now, Uncle Joseph, when she hears it from_ you_?
43092How would you end it, love?"
43092How?"
43092I am right, am I not, in stating those two reasons as the reasons she gave for her disappearance?"
43092I am very capricious, am I not, to be so suddenly weary of the very subject that I have been fondest of talking about for so many weeks past?
43092I do n''t tire you sitting on your knee, do I?
43092I mean to put it away in lavender against your next birthday; or against your funeral, which is just as likely at your time of life-- isn''t it, Sir?"
43092I mean, how long would it take us to get to them, if we wanted to go now to that part of the house?"
43092I mean, how would you make her husband behave to her?
43092I never set eyes on you, Shrowl, but I ask myself whether, in the whole range of creation, there is any animal as ugly as man?
43092I should think the local produce, in the way of food, must be coarse now, in those barbarous regions?
43092I spoke too suddenly, did I not, my child?"
43092I suppose he took her boxes?"
43092I suppose you ca n''t guess what that thing is?"
43092I was thinking of making it fast, and of drawing down the blind-- if you had no objection, ma''am?"
43092I wonder if the mercy of God will recompense me for our long separation on earth?
43092I wonder whether your niece has took a fancy to write to you?
43092I wonder whether your niece would knock the old house about for your sake, now, if you was to clean yourself up and go and ask her?"
43092If I say, How do I dress?
43092If my sins are forgiven, how shall we meet there?
43092If she was alive now-- if she had seen what I saw, if she had heard what I heard in the nursery-- could she expect me to give him the letter?"
43092If we pray in heaven, shall I teach you your prayers there, as some comfort to me for never having taught them to you here?"
43092If you please, listen now, and hear if I can say to you over again all that you have said to me?"
43092In England or in Scotland?"
43092In my own name, in the name of Mrs. Pentreath, in the name of our employers, in the name of decency, in the name of wonder-- what do you mean by it?"
43092In the mean time, I must go on telling you about the room, must I not?
43092Is he like what you were at his age?
43092Is it a boy or a man?"
43092Is it a chair, or a table?
43092Is it a letter for you or for me?"
43092Is it so great a wonder that I will not let my sister''s child go alone to make a venture in the dark?
43092Is not a living guide like you, who talks and walks about, better for me than dead leaves of print and paper?
43092Is she afraid of my discovering a crime?
43092Is she as you feared to find her?
43092Is she far away from us, I wonder?
43092Is she ill?"
43092Is she tolerably comfortable?
43092Is the beginning that you loved him?"
43092Is the child well?
43092Is there any course in particular which you feel disposed to point out?"
43092Is there any danger in my seeing her?"
43092Is there any other woman in the world, my love, who has a face so beautiful and so kind as yours?"
43092Is there any thing else before we come to the furniture?
43092Is there nobody within reach who can be trusted to nurse her?"
43092Is your writing- case in the room, Rosamond?"
43092Jazeph?"
43092Jazeph?"
43092Jazeph?''
43092Jazeph?''
43092Joseph, did you say?--No?--Jazeph?)
43092Lenny, are you there?
43092Let me see, what was his name?
43092Load the stomach in youth, and what becomes of the digestion in age?
43092May I look at it?"
43092May I not risk the worst that can happen, so long as I hold religiously to all that I undertook to do on my oath?"
43092Me?"
43092Mother, did you ever sit on father''s knee when you were married?"
43092Mr. Frank Something, was it not?"
43092Mr. Frankland gives you warning-- don''t you, Lenny?
43092Must I say more, you poor, afflicted, frightened creature-- or is it enough so?''
43092Must I scream myself into fits before I can make you hear?"
43092My eyes serve for both of us now, do n''t they?
43092No person has a better right to touch it than you?"
43092No?
43092Not at all like his brother, the Captain, I should suppose?
43092Now, Lenny, what do you call that woman?
43092Of all the lost creatures in this big, wide world, are you--?''
43092Oh, Lenny, I do love you so; how can I think of any body but you?
43092Oh, Lenny, you would not let her drop broken- hearted at your feet?
43092Oh, mother, did I distress you much in my ignorance?
43092Oh, the weeks and weeks I have been vainly asking myself-- Why should Mrs. Jazeph warn me against going into the Myrtle Room?
43092Oh, what comforting message can I send besides?
43092Oh, why does every body keep telling me that I am ill?
43092Or is it the most precious thing in all the house, in all Cornwall, in all England, in all the world?
43092Or shall I read to you, mother?
43092Or was it inside-- in the Myrtle Room?
43092Or was there something stirring that just touched the sense of hearing, that just deepened the dismal stillness, and no more?
43092Orridge?"
43092Ought a man who can talk in that way to be the friend of any human being with the slightest respect for his species or himself?"
43092Perhaps you may remember the account of the disaster in the newspapers?"
43092Perhaps you thought I should forget that to- day was your birthday?
43092Pray come here--(what is her name, doctor?
43092Really and truly, have I?
43092Rosamond, is Mr. Buschmann seated?"
43092Sarah, to all this, says in astonishment,''Why?''
43092Say I am an emperor, and what do I want more than that?
43092Say, for the last time, Sarah, is it yes or no?"
43092Second, if she had arrived, what had Uncle Joseph heard about her?
43092Secretly-- as a thief might go?
43092Shall I give any name?"
43092Shall it be physic, or beer, or what?"
43092Shall we examine the furniture here?"
43092Shall we fill it, love, with the initials of my mother''s name, and the date of her death?
43092Shall you be like my little child to me-- the child I never saw again after she was five years old?
43092Shall you?"
43092She is my niece, if you please; and all that I want to know is-- Where does she live?''
43092Silenced?
43092So an accident happened to his eyes?
43092Some tea, then?
43092Spots did he see before his eyes?
43092Suppose I ask you what I am like now, could you tell me without making a mistake?"
43092Suppose we take a turn in the garden, Phippen?
43092Surely Mozart will sing to_ me_, for my mother''s sake?"
43092Surely the floor of the landing must be dusty?
43092Surely this is a fine summer day?"
43092Surely you have not altered your opinion on that point already?"
43092Tell me, Sarah, what has made you faint?
43092Tell me, my poor love, do I help to make up for that loss?
43092Tell me, uncle, have you ever felt the cold steal round and round the roots of your hair, and crawl bit by bit down your back?
43092That is the end, Sarah-- but the beginning?
43092The boy is gone where the better music plays, where the sickness shall never waste or the sorrow touch him more?''
43092The fact is, I have been to church; and what do you think I have been doing there?
43092The first of the questions was, Whether Mrs. Frankland had said any thing about the Secret?
43092The floor?"
43092The husband shall have chosen for his wife a young lady bearing as ancient a family name as--""As your name?"
43092The second was, Whether she had spoken any chance word to lead to the suspicion that she had found out the situation of the Myrtle Room?
43092The tall book- case opposite the window?
43092There is something like a plan, I think?
43092There is the window of your old study, where I had my attack of heart- burn last time-- in the strawberry season; do n''t you remember?
43092There was nothing very unnatural in that course of proceeding, I suppose?
43092This--''How do you do?
43092To travel about there a little, I suppose?"
43092To what trials do you refer?"
43092Uncle Joseph reflected, and shook his head again-- then said:"One word, Sarah; does Mrs. Frankland know which is the Myrtle Room?"
43092Uncle, you remember where I was living, and what had happened to me, when--""When you came here in secret?
43092Under these circumstances, what could I do?
43092Very, very, very sure?"
43092WILL THEY COME?
43092Wait for what?
43092Wait till when?"
43092Was Mr. Frankland presuming upon his position as a gentleman of fortune?
43092Was her master sending for her already?
43092Was her mother ashamed to look at her?
43092Was it a serious illness, or a dreadful grief, that had turned her gray in the prime of her womanhood?
43092Was it enough to destroy that one only?
43092Was it irritation at having been kept waiting so long by herself in the landlady''s room?
43092Was it outside the door on which her back was turned?
43092Was it something you would rather not repeat?"
43092Was that last wish binding on the person to whom it had been confided?
43092Was there ever a strong emotion in this world that could adequately express its own strength?
43092Well, in the first place, how tall am I when we both stand up side by side?"
43092Were_ all_ sounds silenced?
43092What am I to expect of the rest of mankind after that?
43092What are we standing here for?
43092What are you waiting for?
43092What can Doctor Chennery be about?
43092What connection?
43092What did all that whispering mean between the housekeeper and the steward when we first got into the hall?
43092What did her whole conduct mean for the last half- hour?
43092What did she want to do in the room, when she made that attempt to get into it?
43092What did that mean?
43092What did we all do, Sir?
43092What did you and I hear, Sir, on the first floor?"
43092What do you mean by harping perpetually on my fortune?
43092What do you mean by us?"
43092What do you mean?"
43092What do you see now?"
43092What do you think of that?"
43092What do you think they mean?"
43092What does he mean by making the attempt?"
43092What does he want?"
43092What does my hair look like in your portrait?"
43092What else is there that has a cupboard or a drawer in it?"
43092What feeling was she anxious to conceal?
43092What follows?
43092What had she actually bound herself to do?
43092What has frightened you so?"
43092What have we been stopping for?
43092What have you got to say to them?
43092What have you met with to make you cry?
43092What in the world does the vicar mean by talking about mature consideration?
43092What is the next thing?
43092What is there below the eyes?"
43092What is there to cry about, or to thank about?
43092What is to prevent me from trying?
43092What is your name, you very rosy, good- natured looking girl?
43092What is your opinion, Mr. Munder?
43092What made me break out so?
43092What need have you of your sense of touch, when you have got_ me_?
43092What need to say the end?
43092What shall I begin with?
43092What shall we do?"
43092What shall you say?"
43092What shock had stricken her hair, in the very maturity of its luxuriance, with the hue of an unnatural old age?
43092What sort of ghost is it?
43092What stops them now?
43092What trap?
43092What use is the Plan of the north rooms to him?
43092What was it, dear and good Sir, that we said when we were first let in?
43092What was the name of the old place-- I am so interested in it-- it began with a P, surely?"
43092What was to be done next?
43092What''s the matter now?"
43092What''s the use of talking nonsense about your money?
43092What?"
43092When shall we pay our flying visit to Porthgenna, Lenny, and plunge into the important business of checking Mr. Horlock''s estimate for the repairs?"
43092When we leave this place of Porthgenna, and get back to my house, you will not go away?
43092When you asked me to hide you?
43092Where are we standing now?"
43092Where are you?"
43092Where did she take her ticket for?"
43092Where is the landlady?"
43092Where is the nurse?"
43092Where is the nurse?"
43092Whereabouts were we in that delightful story of yours when this little domestic interruption occurred?"
43092Wherefore all this about a husband and a wife?
43092Which way are we to go next?"
43092Who are you, you extremely audacious person?
43092Who bought the place?"
43092Who can say what she must have suffered when she came as a stranger to my bedside?
43092Who can tell that you may not get tired and leave the place again after a few days-- especially if you go into the empty rooms?
43092Who can this woman really be?
43092Who else could have come in with you?
43092Who helps me with little Joseph by night and by day?
43092Who is she?
43092Who is with Mrs. Frankland now?"
43092Who makes a pillow for him on her arm when his head is weary?
43092Who should it be?"
43092Who was that famous character you told us about, Miss Sturch, who was blind, and did n''t show it any more than Leonard Frankland?"
43092Who was there to tell me?"
43092Who was this familiar old gentleman with the foreign accent and the fantastic bow?
43092Who will ever repair a place for you?
43092Who?
43092Why did that woman keep her eyes fixed so constantly on me?"
43092Why did we not hear from him before we left West Winston?"
43092Why did you stop me?"
43092Why do n''t you read about it?
43092Why do you ask me such a question?"
43092Why do you think the lady fainted?"
43092Why must he kiss and play always with the children of other women?
43092Why not let the secret die with her and die with me, as it ought?
43092Why should any body find the letter that was hid in it?"
43092Why should he know it?
43092Why should she hit on that one?"
43092Why should they lay a snare for_ me_?"
43092Why should_ you_ not explain?"
43092Will he come back?"
43092Will it be long before we find her?
43092Will not the abandoning of my fortune be a dreadful loss to us?"
43092Will you allow me the honor of leading and conducting you, Sir, to the apartment in question?"
43092Will you let us still go back together now that she has died?"
43092Will you step this way, and see her at once, Sir?
43092With me in what?"
43092Without a word to her master?
43092Wonderful plans and projects were they not?
43092Would it be safest to hold to the letter of Mrs. Frankland''s instructions, and ask him to wait outside while the lady was being shown over the house?
43092You are readier than I am, uncle; you said last night that you would think about how to advise me for the best-- what did your thoughts end in?
43092You do n''t mean to say she is gone?"
43092You do n''t think me ungrateful?
43092You enjoy this nice warm atmosphere, do n''t you, Lenny?
43092You found it in a picture, Rosamond?
43092You found the letter at the back of the picture, Rosamond?
43092You guess now what the thing was that Mistress Treverton had it in her mind to do?"
43092You have lost your place; and why?"
43092You know that the sea- captain, the brave and good man Treverton, took for his wife an artist on the stage-- what they call play- actress here?
43092You noticed the sudden change in that man''s behavior after the housekeeper spoke to him-- you must have noticed it?
43092You said he was blind from his birth, my dear doctor, did you not?
43092You said it was a curious story, did you not?"
43092You see, Mr. Orridge, I was determined to act justly and kindly; I was ready to make allowances-- and what do you think she said in return?
43092You think that was wrong of the mistress?"
43092You understand me?
43092You will give a little time to Uncle Joseph, for the poor dead mother''s sake?"
43092You will not bear too hardly on my loss of memory, Miss Sturch?
43092You will write to me sometimes, when I am left all alone?
43092You wo n''t say No to a turn in the garden?"
43092You would open your arms to her without an instant of unworthy doubt?"
43092_ Are you there before me?_"The stealthily rustling sound inside paused-- renewed itself-- died away again faintly; away at the lower end of the room.
43092_ You?_"said the old man, speaking very quietly, and looking very steadily at the steward.
43092about the Myrtle Room?"
43092about the house of Porthgenna?
43092an impostor?"
43092and have I some share in making that happiness, though it is ever so little?"
43092and what did he mean by talking to her as if she was his intimate friend?
43092and wherefore?"
43092and who is to be sacrificed?"
43092and why?
43092are there candles in the room?
43092are you trying to entrap me into paying you compliments?"
43092ca n''t we do something better than that?
43092can I tell you all the thousand pretty things he will do when he first tries to talk?
43092did he change ever so little, when you got that message from her?''
43092did he look sorry?
43092do you frighten yourself, do you try to frighten me about a boy?"
43092do you pity her?"
43092do you think he has heard me?"
43092does the black dress I made for you rustle no louder than that?"
43092for the love of Heaven, what is it you mean to do?''
43092has it made you deaf?"
43092has it nothing wrenched away of all the love and all the happiness that binds them the one to the other?''
43092have you the heart to leave me again?"
43092he said,"why do you talk so?
43092how dare you ask us?"
43092how dare you come in without knocking at the door?"
43092is there a ghost in the house?
43092it is that you want to know?"
43092it is, is it?"
43092knowing that I had only succeeded in my deceit because your affliction made you incapable of suspecting deception?
43092leave off, will you?
43092married?"
43092not even my master?"
43092not quite asleep, yet?"
43092of all the people in the world, how could_ I_ frighten you?"
43092only hope?
43092or afraid of my tumbling through the floor?
43092or did I wake myself?"
43092or do you shut the door?"
43092or do you threaten?
43092or nearer, much nearer than we think?"
43092or out at once into the passage?
43092or the dingy old writing- table, in the recess behind the fire- place?
43092or would it be best to act on her own responsibility, and to risk giving him admission as well as his companion?
43092she asked herself,"and leave the letter here, to be found when I am gone?"
43092she repeated, in mournful, questioning tones--"Mother?"
43092she said, sadly, putting her cheek against his,"are you angry with me still?"
43092sixteen years ago, in this town, and in this same house?
43092the man in the shop is moving-- has he heard me?
43092us?
43092was the answer that fell from Mr. Phippen''s lips.--"I wonder whether Miss Sturch keeps a bottle of camphor julep in the family medicine- chest?"
43092were you indeed?"
43092what can I say--?"
43092what does she see?"
43092what has changed you so?"
43092what has happened?
43092what has she gone that way for?"
43092what is she frightened about?"
43092what on earth are we to do?"
43092where are you?"
43092where is she?"
43092where?
43092where?"
43092who are you?"
43092why do n''t you stop him?
43092why do we not go on?"
43092why do you speak of her in that way?"
43092without so much as one line of writing to thank him for his kindness and to ask his pardon?
43092you depend on me for all that your touch fails to tell you, and I must never be unworthy of my trust-- must I?
43092you doubt it?
43092you said,''Do n''t be hard on her''--do you remember?
43092you will not leave Uncle Joseph again?
1023''Such as they were''?
1023''Tis so well known here, is it, comrade?
1023A Chancery suitor?
1023A brickmaker''s wife, Charley? 1023 A little spoilt?
1023A nonentity, sir?
1023A present?
1023ARE we safe?
1023About myself, sir?
1023Against the soldier?
1023Ai n''t there really?
1023Ai n''t you?
1023Air you in the maydickle prayfession yourself, sir?
1023Airing yourself, as I am doing, before you go to bed?
1023All is still in readiness, George Rouncewell?
1023Am I right, Esther?
1023Am I to read it now?
1023Am I to read this?
1023Am I? 1023 Among them odd heaps of old papers, this gentleman, when he comes into the property, naturally begins to rummage, do n''t you see?"
1023An artist, sir?
1023An enemy?
1023And I am to hide my guilt, as I have done so many years?
1023And I do n''t think you would wish to leave me just yet, Rosa, even for a lover?
1023And I hope, Ma, you give us your consent and wish us well?
1023And Mr. Jellyby, sir?
1023And Small is helping?
1023And about your wardrobe, Caddy?
1023And could n''t George, the sergeant, see that my door was locked?
1023And could you not take the same means of rendering a Conversation unnecessary? 1023 And did you?"
1023And do n''t YOU know, my love?
1023And do n''t you know that you are prettier than you ever were?
1023And do n''t you occupy yourself at all?
1023And do you always lock the babies up when you go out?
1023And do you know how pretty you are, child?
1023And do you live alone here with these babies, Charley?
1023And do you often go out?
1023And do you think Mr. Woodcourt will make another voyage?
1023And have the children looked after themselves at all, sir?
1023And he would probably add,''Is there such a thing as principle, Mr. Harold Skimpole?''
1023And his address?
1023And how did you like the ride? 1023 And how did you reassure him, Caddy?"
1023And how do you come to be the messenger, Charley?
1023And how do you find yourself, my poor lad?
1023And how do you get on, Richard?
1023And how do you get on?
1023And how do you live, Charley? 1023 And how is your mama, Caddy?"
1023And how was it?
1023And how''s young Woolwich?
1023And in the meanwhile leave Bleak House?
1023And it sounds-- somehow it sounds,said Mr. Skimpole,"like a small sum?"
1023And not only here, but you will go to Mr. Snagsby''s too, perhaps? 1023 And pray has he done so?"
1023And reminding you that she and her sister had differed, had gone their several ways?
1023And she was getting medicine for him, Charley?
1023And so, Phil,says George of the shooting gallery after several turns in silence,"you were dreaming of the country last night?"
1023And that thus the suit lapses and melts away?
1023And that''s the lad, sir, is it?
1023And the furniture, Charley?
1023And the letters are destroyed with the person?
1023And there you are, my partner, eh?
1023And there you sit, I suppose, all the day long, eh?
1023And this is brother, is it, my dears?
1023And this is not a conspiracy, perhaps?
1023And to attend the court no more?
1023And to confer upon me the favour of your distinguished recommendation?
1023And to- night too?
1023And what about him?
1023And what are you crying for?
1023And what can you have to say, Snagsby,demands Mr. Tulkinghorn,"about her?"
1023And what classes of chance people come to practise at your gallery?
1023And what do you call these little fellows, ma''am?
1023And what do you know?
1023And what does the sergeant say about this business?
1023And what have you been thinking about THEM, my busy bee?
1023And what is THAT to me?
1023And what is doing?
1023And what is he to do then?
1023And what kind of man,my Lady asks,"was this deplorable creature?"
1023And what two reasons, Mr. George? 1023 And when did mother die?
1023And where did you see her, Charley?
1023And where might it be now?
1023And where''s Bart?
1023And where''s the tinker?
1023And who have we got here to- night?
1023And who is W. Grubble, Charley?
1023And who told YOU as there was anybody here?
1023And who,quoth Mrs. Snagsby for the thousand and first time,"is that boy?
1023And why,I could scarcely ask him,"why, guardian, pray tell me why were THEY parted?"
1023And will he get this appointment?
1023And you are to go down at twelve?
1023And you can refuse, you mean, eh? 1023 And you do n''t think it''s an answer, eh?
1023And you do n''t think the patient would object to him?
1023And you mean to say you''re going to give me a lift to this place, wherever it is, without charging for it?
1023And you, Caddy,said I,"you are always busy, I''ll be bound?"
1023And you, being a good man, can pass it as such, and forgive and pity the dreamer, and be lenient and encouraging when he wakes?
1023And your papa, Caddy?
1023And, my dear,said Mr. Badger,"what do I always tell you?
1023Angel and devil by turns, eh?
1023Another one, eh?
1023Any time, sir?
1023Anything been doing?
1023Are YOU there?
1023Are division and animosity your natural terms, Richard?
1023Are the Dedlocks down here, Lawrence?
1023Are the pictures all as they used to be?
1023Are there any more of you besides Charley?
1023Are these her rooms?
1023Are these your good men, my dears?
1023Are they, my dear?
1023Are those the fever- houses, Darby?
1023Are we in Holborn?
1023Are we not, sir?
1023Are you a married man, sir?
1023Are you arrested for much, sir?
1023Are you going back to our young friend?
1023Are you hungry?
1023Are you in debt again?
1023Are you not going in, sir?
1023Are you quite sure,returns the ironmaster in an altered voice,"that your name is Steel?"
1023Are you so much? 1023 Are you sure you''re quite so much as six foot three?"
1023Are you the boy I''ve read of in the papers?
1023Are you waiting to see Sir Leicester?
1023Are you well wrapped up, Miss Summerson?
1023Art in heaven-- is the light a- comin, sir?
1023At what place? 1023 At work so late, my dear?"
1023Aye, aye?
1023Aye, my dear? 1023 Aye?
1023Aye? 1023 Aye?
1023Aye?
1023Aye?
1023Because I thought there warn''t enough of you, perhaps?
1023Been along with your friend again, Bart?
1023Begging your pardon for interrupting you a moment?
1023Being a prudent man and accustomed to take care of your own affairs, you begin to rummage among the papers as you have come into; do n''t you?
1023Bounds, my dear?
1023Bounds? 1023 Brickmakers, eh?"
1023Bring it here, Sir Leicester Dedlock, Baronet? 1023 Bucket the detective, sir?"
1023But I may ask you a question, Richard?
1023But do n''t you know that people die there?
1023But do you think that, among those many papers, there is much truth and justice, Richard?
1023But every man''s not obliged to be solvent? 1023 But he do n''t, I suppose?"
1023But how do you and your neighbour get on about the disputed right of way?
1023But how do you make it out?
1023But is the secret safe so far?
1023But it was, sir,said I, to bring him back, for he began to rub his head,"about a will?"
1023But knows a quantity, I suppose? 1023 But not always, dear George?"
1023But nothing that might not be sent to a pattern young lady?
1023But now I have told you, you do n''t think it wrong of me, do you?
1023But settled?
1023But was she here when the lady came? 1023 But what did you think upon the road?"
1023But where?
1023But why is it to be mine?
1023But why should she walk shoeless through all that water?
1023But would it not be adding to his unhappiness to marry without his knowledge or consent, my dear?
1023But would you allow me the favour of a minute''s private conversation?
1023But, bless the woman,cried my guardian with his hand in his pocket,"how is she going?
1023But, guardian, may we not hope that a little experience will teach him what a false and wretched thing it is?
1023But, my child,she returned,"is it possible that you do n''t know what has happened?"
1023But, suppose,said my guardian, laughing,"he had meant the meat in the bill, instead of providing it?"
1023By his son, sir?
1023By that means you got promotion? 1023 Ca n''t you make them hear?
1023Ca n''t you wake him?
1023Can I save the poor girl from injury before they know it?
1023Can it do any good?
1023Can you fully trust me, and thoroughly rely on what I profess, Esther?
1023Can you give a fellow anything to read in the meantime?
1023Can you give the person of the house any information about this unfortunate creature, Snagsby?
1023Can you read it?
1023Can you say it here?
1023Can you show me the place as I go back?
1023Care? 1023 Charley, do you mean?"
1023Charley, do you mean?
1023Charley,said I,"are you so cold?"
1023Charley?
1023Chops, do you think? 1023 Come to me?"
1023Come up on the tramp?
1023Complain? 1023 Could I speak to you alone for a moment?"
1023Could you fetch me a pinch from anywheres?
1023Could you trust in him?
1023Custody? 1023 Dead, miss?
1023Dear guardian, how could I object to your writing anything for ME to read?
1023Dear mother, are you so resolved?
1023Did I understand you? 1023 Did I?"
1023Did he do it on purpose?
1023Did he look like-- not like YOU?
1023Did he owe you any rent?
1023Did he take no legal proceedings?
1023Did he?
1023Did she die at ninety, guv''ner?
1023Did she eat or drink here?
1023Did she go last night? 1023 Did she go last night?"
1023Did she speak much?
1023Did she though, really, Charley?
1023Did the lady die?
1023Did they though?
1023Did they?
1023Did you ever know English law, or equity either, plain and to the purpose?
1023Did you ever see such a stupor as he falls into, between drink and sleep?
1023Did you hear me ask you where you have come from?
1023Did you imply that he has children of his own, sir?
1023Did you know this morning, now, that you were coming out on this errand?
1023Did you wish to see him, sir?
1023Did your ladyship,says Mr. Guppy,"ever happen to hear of Miss Barbary?"
1023Dining at his expense, Bart?
1023Do I look as if I suppressed anything, meant anything but what I said, had any reservation at all, no matter what?
1023Do I not? 1023 Do n''t he?
1023Do n''t you know, miss? 1023 Do n''t you know?"
1023Do n''t you read or get read to?
1023Do n''t you think you can receive his evidence, sir?
1023Do n''t you?
1023Do n''t you?
1023Do they look like that sort of thing?
1023Do they look like that sort of thing?
1023Do you consider him in present danger, sir?
1023Do you contemplate undeceiving Sir Leicester to- night?
1023Do you dread a particular person?
1023Do you generally put that elderly young gentleman in the same room when he''s on a visit here, Miss Summerson?
1023Do you happen to carry a box?
1023Do you intend to remain in the house any time? 1023 Do you know my-- guardian, Mr. Jarndyce, ma''am?"
1023Do you know the name?
1023Do you know the relief that my disappearance will be? 1023 Do you know this turning?"
1023Do you mean in point of reward?
1023Do you mean it though, Tony?
1023Do you mean to let her go in that way?
1023Do you mean what business have we come upon?
1023Do you mean your husband?
1023Do you really?
1023Do you really?
1023Do you recollect me?
1023Do you recollect the lady''s voice?
1023Do you remember me, George?
1023Do you rub your legs to rub life into''em?
1023Do you think he did it on purpose?
1023Do you think it will ever be in a settled state?
1023Do you think my cousin John knows, dear Dame Durden?
1023Do you think so?
1023Do you think your friend in the city would like a piece of advice?
1023Do you think, Rosa, you are any relief or comfort to me? 1023 Do you though, indeed?"
1023Do you want to see it?
1023Do you wish to hold any conversation with me in private?
1023Does Mr. Badger think so too?
1023Does he indeed?
1023Does he still say the same of Richard?
1023Does he teach?
1023Does his wife know of it?
1023Does the man generally sleep like this?
1023Eh? 1023 Eh?"
1023Else why should he talk about his''twenty minutes past''and about his having no watch to tell the time by? 1023 Esther, will you forgive me?
1023First,said my guardian,"can we do anything for your personal comfort, George?"
1023For debt?
1023For me?
1023For me?
1023For the Chancellor,said the old man with a chuckle,"not to be acquainted with a Jarndyce is queer, ai n''t it, Miss Flite?
1023For the best?
1023For two good names, hey?
1023For what is he in prison then?
1023For which, sir?
1023For?
1023Forgotten? 1023 From Kenge and Carboy''s, surely?"
1023George''s godson, is he?
1023George,says the man, nodding,"how do you find yourself?"
1023George? 1023 Goes out pretty well every day, do n''t she?"
1023Going before the Chancellor?
1023Good gracious, what''s that?
1023Good heaven, my dear little woman,said he,"how do you come here?
1023Guardian, you do n''t think it possible that he is justly accused?
1023Guardian,I said, rather hesitating and trembling,"when would you like to have the answer to the letter Charley came for?"
1023Guardian,said I,"do you remember, when we were overtaken by the thunder- storm, Lady Dedlock''s speaking to you of her sister?"
1023Guardian,said I,"you remember the happy night when first we came down to Bleak House?
1023Had he committed any crime?
1023Had n''t you better see,says Mr. Tulkinghorn to Krook,"whether he had any papers that may enlighten you?
1023Had you known him long?
1023Has Miss Summerson lost both her parents?
1023Has Sir Leicester had any visitors this morning?
1023Has he any suspicions?
1023Has he asked for me?
1023Has he decided to do so?
1023Has he robbed you?
1023Has he so little pity or compunction?
1023Has he?
1023Has she been very ill?
1023Have I not been what I have meant to be since-- I brought the answer to your letter, guardian?
1023Have many people been kind to the children?
1023Have they any names?
1023Have you anything new to communicate, officer?
1023Have you anything to say to me?
1023Have you anything to sell?
1023Have you been at the trouble of writing all that, and am I not to read it after all?
1023Have you changed your mind? 1023 Have you come merely to say so?"
1023Have you gathered any intelligence?
1023Have you given this man work before?
1023Have you got it here?
1023Have you got the pipe? 1023 Have you got them?"
1023Have you made any new discoveries?
1023Have you nearly concluded your argument?
1023Have you no wish in reference to your case?
1023Have you seen Mr. Woodcourt, this morning, guardian?
1023Having said this, have you anything else to say, mademoiselle?
1023He ca n''t say better than that, Esther, can he?
1023He had no other calling?
1023He has n''t forgotten the appointment, I hope?
1023He is quite happy?
1023He is well?
1023Here you are, hey?
1023Hey?
1023Hey?
1023Him as wos dead?
1023His pocket? 1023 Hope you''re well, Mr. Bagnet?
1023How are we getting on?
1023How are your spirits now, George?
1023How dare you ask me if I knew him?
1023How de do? 1023 How de do?
1023How did he first come by that idea, though? 1023 How did you find out that?"
1023How did you know it was the country?
1023How do you do, Esther?
1023How do you do, Mr. Vholes? 1023 How do you do, Mrs. Rouncewell?
1023How do you do, all of you? 1023 How do you do, my dear old fellow?
1023How do you do, sir? 1023 How do you do, sir?"
1023How do you do? 1023 How do you find them?
1023How do you know he was n''t here?
1023How do you know he was there?
1023How do you know that, sir?
1023How do you know that? 1023 How do you mean, settled?"
1023How does it stand now?
1023How does my own Pride look, Charley?
1023How has that contest gone?
1023How long have you known it?
1023How long should I have to hold out?
1023How much do you mean to say it wants then?
1023How old ARE you, Phil?
1023How old are you?
1023How old are you?
1023How should I know why? 1023 How then?"
1023How was that?
1023How was that?
1023How, brother?
1023Hurt? 1023 I am to drag my present life on, holding its pains at your pleasure, day by day?"
1023I am to remain on this gaudy platform on which my miserable deception has been so long acted, and it is to fall beneath me when you give the signal?
1023I ask your pardon, Sir Leicester,says the trooper,"but would you accept of my arms to raise you up?
1023I ask your pardon, my good friend,said he,"but is this George''s Shooting Gallery?"
1023I ask your pardon, sir,returns the trooper,"but I should wish to know what YOU say?"
1023I assure you,said I, quite embarrassed by the mere idea of having such an attendant,"that I keep no maid--""Ah, mademoiselle, but why not?
1023I beg your pardon, sir, but I think those gentlemen are military?
1023I beg your pardon?
1023I do n''t find any fault, child-- but not to ease my mind, George? 1023 I do n''t know nothink about no-- where I was took by the beadle, do you mean?"
1023I do n''t say it was n''t handsome in you to keep my man so close, do I? 1023 I fear I surprised you, mademoiselle, on the day of the storm?"
1023I have frightened you?
1023I hear a voice,says Chadband;"is it a still small voice, my friends?
1023I hope I have not driven her away?
1023I hope I have the honour of welcoming you in good health, Sir Leicester?
1023I hope I was not the trouble, guardian?
1023I hope he approved, Caddy?
1023I hope number two''s as good?
1023I hope, Ma,sobbed poor Caddy at last,"you are not angry?"
1023I know as well, Richard-- what shall I say? 1023 I may now perhaps mention what I wished to say to you?"
1023I presume this is your other ward, Miss Clare?
1023I saw one of Mr. Tulkinghorn''s long effusions, I think?
1023I saw you observe him rather closely,said I,"Do you think him so changed?"
1023I say, brother, how is my mother to be got to scratch me? 1023 I say, my friends,"pursues Mr. Chadband, utterly rejecting and obliterating Mr. Snagsby''s suggestion,"why can we not fly?
1023I suppose now,returns that officer,"YOU will be expecting a twenty- pound note or a present of about that figure?"
1023I suppose you ai n''t in the habit of walking yourself?
1023I suppose,said my guardian, laughing,"WE may set foot in the park while we are here?
1023I take it for granted, sir,he adds,"you being one of the medical staff, that there is no present infection about this unfortunate subject?"
1023I take it, sir,says Mr. George,"that you know Miss Summerson pretty well?"
1023I think not, Esther?
1023I think this may be easily arranged, Mr. Jarndyce? 1023 I think you knew my sister when we were abroad together better than you know me?"
1023I think your ladyship,says Mr. Guppy,"can hardly remember Miss Summerson''s face?"
1023I want to know his name, if you please?
1023I was grieved to hear that you had been very ill."I was very ill."But you have quite recovered?
1023I was saying, what do you think NOW,pursues Mr. Guppy,"of enlisting?"
1023IS he after his time?
1023IS he?
1023IS it possible, guardian,I asked, amazed,"that Richard can be suspicious of you?"
1023IS it?
1023If you are not to make her happy, why should you pursue her?
1023If you have come to give me a friendly call,continues Mr. George,"I am obliged to you; how are you?
1023Impossible?
1023In gold?
1023In stature, sir?
1023In that case you will send me to the prison, perhaps?
1023Indeed, ma''am?
1023Indeed, sir?
1023Indeed, sir?
1023Indeed, sir?
1023Indeed?
1023Indeed?
1023Indeed?
1023Indeed?
1023Indeed?
1023Indeed?
1023Indeed?
1023Indeed?
1023Indeed?
1023Indeed?
1023Indians, Caddy?
1023Is Charley to bring it?
1023Is Charley your brother?
1023Is Mr. Carstone''s presence necessary to- morrow, Sir?
1023Is he gone? 1023 Is he indeed, sir?"
1023Is he worse?
1023Is he your child?
1023Is he?
1023Is it Gridley that''s wanted?
1023Is it blessed?
1023Is it blessed?
1023Is it indeed, sir? 1023 Is it not dangerous to sit in so exposed a place?"
1023Is it of course?
1023Is it reservation?
1023Is it safe now, dearest mother?
1023Is it suppression?
1023Is it what you people call law- hand?
1023Is it, indeed, sir?
1023Is it,Mr. George still muses,"blank cartridge or ball?"
1023Is it?
1023Is n''t the gentleman concerned yet? 1023 Is she here?"
1023Is she married, my dear?
1023Is that Mr. Jarndyce''s waggon?
1023Is that Snagsby?
1023Is that all?
1023Is that tantamount, sir, to acceptance, or rejection, or consideration?
1023Is that you?
1023Is that young woman mad?
1023Is the wind in the east to- day?
1023Is this a healthy place to live in, Richard, do you think?
1023Is this all you have to say?
1023Is this place of abomination consecrated ground?
1023Is this true concerning the poor girl?
1023Is this will considered a genuine document, sir?
1023Is this your young attendant?
1023It did n''t affect your appetite? 1023 It is necessary, you think, that I should be so tied to the stake?"
1023It was a troubled dream?
1023It''s a curious fact, sir,he observes, slowly rubbing his hands,"that he should have been--""Who''s he?"
1023It''s his tea- time, is n''t it?
1023It''s not agreeable, is it?
1023It''s you, young ladies, is it?
1023Jo, can you say what I say?
1023Joshua Smallweed is him that was brought here in a chair?
1023Know it? 1023 Lady Dedlock?"
1023Left behind?
1023Less pedigree? 1023 Male or female, sir?"
1023Married woman, I believe?
1023Master at home?
1023Master at home?
1023May I ask you a question?
1023May I ask, sir, what is--"Coavinses?
1023May I come in, guardian?
1023May I come in?
1023May I go with you?
1023Me, young ladies?
1023Mean and shabby, eh?
1023Meet?
1023Might not that have made her still more proud, grandmother?
1023Miss Ada Clare?
1023Miss Summerson is not related to any party in the cause, I think?
1023Money, I presume?
1023Months?
1023More what, guardian?
1023Mother,returns the trooper,"is it too soon to ask a favour?"
1023Mr. Guppy,says Mr. Tulkinghorn,"could I have a word with you?"
1023Mr. Jarndyce of Bleak House is not married?
1023Mr. Jarndyce,he said, looking off it,"you have perused this?"
1023Mr. Jarndyce--I was beginning when my mother hurriedly inquired,"Does HE suspect?"
1023Mr. Vholes, what do YOU say?
1023Mr. Woodcourt is in attendance upon Mr. C., I believe?
1023Mr. Woodcourt, you are going to London?
1023Mrs. Bayham Badger has not the appearance, Miss Summerson, of a lady who has had two former husbands?
1023Mrs. Rouncewell? 1023 My dear Dame Durden,"said Allan, drawing my arm through his,"do you ever look in the glass?"
1023My dear Esther, I am a very unfortunate dog not to be more settled, but how CAN I be more settled? 1023 My dear George,"returns his brother,"is it so indispensable that you should undergo that process?"
1023My dear Jarndyce,returned Mr. Skimpole, his genial face irradiated by the comicality of this idea,"what am I to do?
1023My dear Mr. George,says Grandfather Smallweed,"would you be so kind as help to carry me to the fire?
1023My dear Richard,said I,"how CAN you say about nothing particular?"
1023My dear friend, will you shake me up a little?
1023My dear good friend,returned Mr. Skimpole,"and my dear Miss Simmerson, and my dear Miss Clare, how can I do that?
1023My dear sir,cries Grandfather Smallweed,"would you do me a favour?
1023My dear, will you be so kind as to tell one of the lads to look after the shop while I step across the lane with Mr. Tulkinghorn? 1023 My dear,"he answered,"I know, I know, and would I put you wrong, do you think?
1023My dear,said I,"you have not had any difference with Richard since I have been so much away?"
1023My dear,said Mr. Turveydrop benignly to his son,"do you know the hour?"
1023My dear,says Mr. Snagsby when his tongue is loosened,"will you take anything?
1023My dearest Ada,asked Richard,"why not?"
1023My dears, it is true,said Mr. Skimpole,"is it not?
1023My friends,says he,"what is this which we now behold as being spread before us?
1023My little woman, why do you look at me in that way? 1023 My love, you know these two gentlemen?"
1023My prudent Mother Hubbard, why not?
1023NOT a party in anything, ma''am?
1023NOT connected?
1023Name of any collateral or remote branch of your ladyship''s family?
1023Neckett''s children?
1023Never have--"Not Prince, Pa?
1023Next month?
1023No letter that can possibly have been overlooked?
1023No one, Rick, I think?
1023No word of any kind?
1023No, really?
1023No, really?
1023No; have you really, my dear?
1023No? 1023 No?"
1023No?
1023No?
1023Nor Miss Clare?
1023Nor the man to allow his junior to be walked over either?
1023Not Richard?
1023Not even any one who had attended on him?
1023Not even that?
1023Not go there? 1023 Not half a glass?"
1023Not have Prince?
1023Not heard of him, perhaps?
1023Not hurt, I hope?
1023Not in his usual spirits?
1023Not know what, my dear?
1023Not like your ladyship''s family?
1023Not much time for it, I should say?
1023Not my flight?
1023Not of Jarndyce and Jarndyce?
1023Not of one of the greatest Chancery suits known? 1023 Not of you?"
1023Not quite so far, I hope?
1023Not related to her, sir?
1023Not so much as one short prayer?
1023Nothing amiss, Esther?
1023Now my dear, you''re steady and quite sure of yourself?
1023Now then?
1023Now where,pursues Mr. Bucket,"had she been on the night of the murder?
1023Now, I wonder who it can be about?
1023Now, Small,says Mr. Guppy,"what would you recommend about pastry?"
1023Now, did it strike your ladyship that she was like anybody?
1023Now, do you suppose he really has got hold of any other papers of importance, as he has boasted to you, since you have been such allies?
1023Now, what do you say about her doctor? 1023 Now, what do you say to that?"
1023Now, what does our young friend say?
1023Now, why do n''t you take my advice?
1023Now, will you come upstairs?
1023Now, you men, what do you want? 1023 Object to him, guardian?
1023Of course, Esther, you know what she says here?
1023Of course, Esther,he said,"you do n''t understand this Chancery business?"
1023Of-- did you say, ma''am?
1023Oh, ai n''t he though?
1023Oh, dear me, Caddy,cried Mrs. Jellyby, who had relapsed into that distant contemplation,"have you begun again?
1023Oh, do you?
1023Oh, indeed, sir?
1023Oh, indeed?
1023Oh, indeed?
1023Oh, indeed?
1023Oh, yes, his family is all very fine, Miss Summerson,replied Miss Jellyby;"but what comfort is his family to him?
1023Old Mr. Turveydrop''s wife, Miss Clare?
1023Old girl,murmurs Mr. Bagnet after a short silence,"will you tell him my opinion?"
1023On account of which, and at the same time to oblige a-- do you call it, in your business, customer or client? 1023 On business?"
1023Or a haughty gentleman of HIM?
1023Or put it, my juvenile friends, that he saw an elephant, and returning said''Lo, the city is barren, I have seen but an eel,''would THAT be Terewth?
1023Paying the money, I suppose? 1023 People do n''t come with grudges and schemes of finishing their practice with live targets, I hope?"
1023Perhaps you may remember that I expressed some anxiety on this same point when we spoke at night at Chesney Wold?
1023Perhaps you were acquainted with somebody who was a party in something, ma''am?
1023Perhaps,I hinted,"a change from both--""Might do me good?"
1023Perhaps-- er-- it may not be worth the form, but it might be a satisfaction to your mind-- perhaps you would n''t object to admit that, miss?
1023Persuade him, sir?
1023Pray is your lodger within?
1023Pray what has been done to- day?
1023Pray, cousin John,said Ada, who had just joined us and now looked over my shoulder,"what made him such a child?"
1023Pray,says Sir Leicester to Mercury,"what do you mean by announcing with this abruptness a young man of the name of Guppy?"
1023Prince, my dear?
1023Proud?
1023Quarter? 1023 Really, Miss Flite?"
1023Really? 1023 Really?"
1023Repeal it, my dear sir? 1023 Repeal this statute, my good sir?"
1023Respecting that second- hand wiolinceller, governor-- could you recommend me such a thing?
1023Responsibility, my dear Miss Summerson?
1023Rheumatism, sir?
1023Richard,I urged,"it is not so hopeless as that?"
1023Richard,said I,"you place great confidence in me, but I fear you will not take advice from me?"
1023Rouncewell''s? 1023 SHALL I wish you good day for the present on the part of myself and the gentleman of the house?"
1023Scratch you out of her will, I think you mean?
1023Secondly, what will satisfy you for the trouble of producing it?
1023Seems a fate in it, do n''t there?
1023Seen her?
1023Several members of the bar are still to be heard, I believe?
1023Sha n''t I give you a piece of anything at all, miss?
1023Shall I call him down? 1023 Shall I run''em over, Flite?"
1023Shall I tell her?
1023Shall I tell you what I always think of you and the fortune yet to come for you, my love?
1023Shall I try to guess?
1023She does not expect a judgment? 1023 She has no daughter of her own, has she?"
1023She lives the same life yet?
1023Since you refer so immediately to John Jarndyce,said Richard,"--I suppose you mean him?"
1023Sir Leicester Dedlock, Baronet, how did my calculations come out under these circumstances? 1023 Sir Leicester, will you allow me?
1023Sir Leicester, will you ring?
1023Sir,said Gridley, putting down the child and going up to him as if he meant to strike him,"do you know anything of Courts of Equity?"
1023Skimpole, is it? 1023 So we talked a good deal about it, and so I said to Prince,''Prince, as Miss Summerson--''""I hope you did n''t say''Miss Summerson''?"
1023So you gave him notice?
1023So you kept him after all?
1023So you think he might be hard upon me, eh?
1023So you think your friend in the city will be hard upon me if I fall in a payment?
1023So, as I happen to be in the habit of coming about your premises, you take me into your confidence, do n''t you?
1023Some other prospect has opened to him, perhaps?
1023Sore?
1023Still I ask you, what is this to me?
1023Still on foot?
1023Strong enough to be told a secret, I think, Charley?
1023Sure, little woman?
1023Sure?
1023Teeth, you mean?
1023That is only for their steps, of course?
1023That may not be the whole question,returns Vholes,"The question may branch off into what is doing, what is doing?"
1023That''s the whole of it, is it, George?
1023The Mr. Jarndyce, sir, whose story I have heard?
1023The army?
1023The bank, the factory, or the house?
1023The country,says Mr. George, plying his knife and fork;"why, I suppose you never clapped your eyes on the country, Phil?"
1023The old girl,says Mr. Bagnet,"puts it correct-- why did n''t you?"
1023The question is,says Mr. Tulkinghorn in his methodical, subdued, uninterested way,"first, whether you have any of Captain Hawdon''s writing?"
1023The son who wished to marry the young woman in my Lady''s service?
1023The town''s enough for you, eh?
1023Then Richard is not come in yet?
1023Then they do not know it yet?
1023Then why,she asks in a low voice and without removing her gloomy look from those distant stars,"do you detain me in his house?"
1023Then you really and truly at this point,says Mr. Guppy,"give up the whole thing, if I understand you, Tony?"
1023Then you will be so good as to let me leave Miss Summerson with you for a moment while I go and have half a word with him?
1023Then, what,retorts that worthy, pointing to the figure,"did you say it was the lady for?"
1023Then, will you come to the lawyer? 1023 There an''t,"growled the man on the floor, whose head rested on his hand as he stared at us,"any more on you to come in, is there?"
1023There you are, my partner, eh?
1023Therefore you kept your visit to yourself last night?
1023They''ll do as they are? 1023 Thinking of more important matters, I forget where you said he lived?"
1023This has been without prejudice?
1023This has caused him, Esther--"Caused whom, my dear?
1023This is where he lives, is it?
1023This other gentleman is in the preaching line, I think?
1023To keep''em safe, sir, do n''t you see?
1023To which? 1023 To your sorrow?"
1023To- morrow?
1023Tony,says Mr. Guppy after considering a little with his legs crossed,"he ca n''t read yet, can he?"
1023Tony,says Mr. Guppy, uncrossing and recrossing his legs again,"should you say that the original was a man''s writing or a woman''s?"
1023Tony,says Mr. Guppy, uncrossing and recrossing his legs,"how do you suppose he spelt out that name of Hawdon?"
1023Took away? 1023 Took the over- dose?"
1023Took?
1023Tramping high and low, have they, Charley?
1023Truly?
1023Two drunken men, eh? 1023 Two minutes wrong?
1023Uncommon precious large, p''raps?
1023Up?
1023Very full-- er-- excuse me-- lady''s name, Christian and surname both?
1023Very good; I see by these portraits that you take a strong interest in the fashionable great, sir?
1023Vholes? 1023 Volumnia?"
1023WHAT do you call him? 1023 Walk?"
1023Was Miss Barbary at all connected with your ladyship''s family?
1023Was Neckett?
1023Was he-- I do n''t know how to shape the question--murmured my guardian,"industrious?"
1023Was his name Gridley?
1023Was it Mr. Skimpole''s voice I heard?
1023Was it at all like this? 1023 Was n''t that Snagsby talking to you, Tony?"
1023Was she faint?
1023Was the boy''s name at the inkwhich Jo?
1023Was the lady crying?
1023Was you a party in anything, ma''am?
1023Was you indeed, commander?
1023Water, Miss Summerson? 1023 We are to meet as usual?"
1023Well enough?
1023Well, Bucket?
1023Well, Dame Durden?
1023Well, George, old fellow,says she,"and how do YOU do, this sunshiny morning?"
1023Well, Mr. Snagsby, if I do n''t lock him up this time, will you engage for his moving on?
1023Well, Richard,said I as soon as I could begin to be grave with him,"are you beginning to feel more settled now?"
1023Well, and how are you?
1023Well, sir?
1023Well, sir?
1023Well?
1023Well?
1023Well?
1023Well?
1023Well?
1023Were you examined at an inquest?
1023What about those rings you told me of?
1023What are you doing here? 1023 What are you doing here?"
1023What are you going to do about him?
1023What are you stopping here for?
1023What are you talking of?
1023What are you up to, now?
1023What can I do-- to-- assist?
1023What captain?
1023What college could you leave-- in another quarter of the world-- with nothing but a grey cloak and an umbrella-- to make its way home to Europe? 1023 What company is this, Rosa?"
1023What did Esther do?
1023What did they call the wretched being?
1023What do Sir Leicester care for that, you think, my angel?
1023What do they say of him?
1023What do you call him again?
1023What do you call some time, now?
1023What do you mean, George? 1023 What do you mean?"
1023What do you mean?
1023What do you say, George?
1023What do you say, Harold?
1023What do you say?
1023What do you say?
1023What do you think will be best, Miss Summerson?
1023What do you think, now,says Mr. Guppy,"about-- you do n''t mind Smallweed?"
1023What do you think, you two?
1023What do you want, sir?
1023What do you wish me not to have? 1023 What does Mr. Bucket mean?"
1023What does he do anything for? 1023 What does it mean?"
1023What does that spell?
1023What does the horrible creature mean?
1023What enemy?
1023What facts? 1023 What follows is without prejudice, miss?"
1023What foreigner?
1023What has been done to- day?
1023What has been the matter?
1023What has he done?
1023What have I to do with that, or what have you? 1023 What have you been doing here?
1023What have you been thinking about, my dear?
1023What have you done with your candle?
1023What have you got to say next?
1023What is it called, dear guardian?
1023What is it, Ada?
1023What is it?
1023What is it?
1023What is that to me?
1023What is the matter with you now?
1023What is the matter with you?
1023What is the matter? 1023 What is the matter?"
1023What is this? 1023 What is to be done with him?"
1023What letter is it?
1023What made him such a child?
1023What marshes?
1023What may YOUR game be, ma''am?
1023What name shall I say to my father?
1023What now?
1023What of that? 1023 What of that?"
1023What part is that?
1023What set me on about country boys, and runaways, and good- for- nothings? 1023 What should YOU be kept by yourself for?
1023What then, sir?
1023What then? 1023 What was it like?"
1023What was that man?
1023What was your remark, my dear friend?
1023What were the swans doing on the grass?
1023What were you going to tell me?
1023What wheels on such a day as this, for gracious sake?
1023What will you take yourself, miss? 1023 What work are you about now?"
1023What''s come to you?
1023What''s gone of your father and your mother, eh?
1023What''s the matter with the cat?
1023What''s the matter?
1023What''s the matter?
1023What''s the story, miss? 1023 What''s the use of that?
1023What''s this they tell me? 1023 What''s time,"says Mrs. Snagsby,"to eternity?"
1023What? 1023 What?
1023What? 1023 What?
1023What?
1023When are we to hear more of this?
1023When did he come from London?
1023When did he come here?
1023When shall I go?
1023Where are they?
1023Where can I lodge him hereabouts for the present? 1023 Where did you say the wind was, Rick?"
1023Where have you come from?
1023Where have you sprung up from?
1023Where in London?
1023Where is Charley now?
1023Where is Sir Leicester?
1023Where is he going?
1023Where is he now?
1023Where would you wish to go?
1023Where, sir?
1023Where? 1023 Where?
1023Whereabouts in Hertfordshire?
1023Whether you have yet thought over the many advantages of your continuing to live at that place?
1023Which?
1023Who comes here? 1023 Who copied this, sir?"
1023Who could be encouraged by Skimpole?
1023Who did you want?
1023Who do you mean? 1023 Who do you suppose would teach you wrong?"
1023Who ever did?
1023Who has locked you up here alone?
1023Who is that, Dame Durden?
1023Who is this? 1023 Who lives here?"
1023Who lives here?
1023Who took you away?
1023Who was Nimrod?
1023Who was that lady-- that creature? 1023 Who''s that at my door?
1023Who''s that?
1023Who''s this, Miss Summerson?
1023Who''s this? 1023 Who?"
1023Who?
1023Whose compliments, Charley?
1023Whose writing is that?
1023Why did they separate, guardian?
1023Why did you wish for secrecy?
1023Why do YOU come here?
1023Why do n''t you get out?
1023Why do you do it?
1023Why have you come here now?
1023Why have you told my story to so many persons?
1023Why is it best, sir?
1023Why is it so difficult, my dear?
1023Why not, Fitz Jarndyce?
1023Why not?
1023Why not?
1023Why not?
1023Why should you ever have been otherwise? 1023 Why then, my dear,"said I,"there can be nothing amiss-- and why should you not speak to us?"
1023Why, Charley,said I,"who can possibly want me at the public- house?"
1023Why, Mr. George? 1023 Why, Tony, what on earth is going on in this house to- night?
1023Why, con- found you-- it, I mean-- I tell you so, do n''t I?
1023Why, do you know how pretty you are, child?
1023Why, get along with you,said she to my guardian,"what do you mean?
1023Why, good gracious me, Miss Summerson,she returned, justifying herself in a fretful but not angry manner,"how can it be otherwise?
1023Why, good gracious,said Miss Flite,"how can you say that?
1023Why, master,quoth the workman,"do I know my own name?"
1023Why, my dear?
1023Why, what IS done?
1023Why, what age do you call that little creature?
1023Why, what do you mean?
1023Why, what had you been doing?
1023Why, what''s the matter with you, Tony?
1023Why, who can she be?
1023Why, you an''t such an unnatural woman, I hope,returns Bucket sternly,"as to wish your own child dead?"
1023Why, you see, my dears,said Mrs. Badger,"--you''ll excuse me calling you my dears?"
1023Why, you''re six foot two, I suppose?
1023Why?
1023Why?
1023Why?
1023Why?
1023Will somebody give me a quart pot?
1023Will somebody obleege me with a spittoon? 1023 Will you be more so when you have sent me away?
1023Will you come and dine with me?
1023Will you open the case?
1023Will you run over, once again, what the boy said?
1023Will you see my mother safe there in a coach, Mrs. Bagnet? 1023 Will you send her on before and walk towards your house with me?"
1023Will you take any other vegetables? 1023 Will you tell us that?"
1023Without any clue to anything more?
1023Without their knowledge at home?
1023Wo n''t it indeed, sir? 1023 Wos Jenny here when the lady come?
1023Wot I was a- thinkin on, Mr. Sangsby,proceeds Jo,"wos, as you wos able to write wery large, p''raps?"
1023Wot do you mean?
1023Would any one believe this?
1023Would it be considered a liberty, Sir Leicester Dedlock, Baronet, if I was to ask you why?
1023Would it not be better to rest now?
1023Would it not be wiser,said I,"to expect this judgment no more?"
1023Would n''t you give them a week?
1023Would you allow me to get it filled for you?
1023Would you be so good?
1023Would you believe it, governor,says Mr. Bucket, struck by the coincidence,"that when I was a boy I played the fife myself?
1023Would you believe it? 1023 Would you believe it?
1023Would you make the attempt, though single,says Mr. Snagsby in a melancholy whisper,"to speak as low as you can?
1023Would you though?
1023Wrong?
1023Yes, Tony?
1023Yes?
1023Yet what can I do? 1023 Yet would you believe that it''s HIS name on the door- plate?"
1023Yet you have a large establishment, too, I am told?
1023Yet, Charley,said I, looking round,"I miss something, surely, that I am accustomed to?"
1023You act according to my opinion?
1023You are prospering, please the Powers?
1023You are recovering again?
1023You are sure you are not the least angry with me, Ma? 1023 You are very poor, ai n''t you?"
1023You are, of course, the person who has written me so many letters?
1023You ca n''t recommend anything for the boy, I suppose?
1023You called her Jenny, did n''t you? 1023 You can not do these things?
1023You caused, Esther?
1023You do n''t expect anybody to believe this, about the lady and the sovereign, do you?
1023You do n''t happen to know a very good sort of person of the name of Gridley, do you?
1023You do n''t happen to know why they killed the pig, do you?
1023You do n''t know where?
1023You do n''t object to him, little woman?
1023You do not think he is ill?
1023You do? 1023 You find the rent too high, do you, sir?"
1023You foolish Caddy,returned Mrs. Jellyby,"do I look angry, or have I inclination to be angry, or time to be angry?
1023You had some?
1023You have an unusual amount of correspondence this morning?
1023You have brought your bird with you, I suppose?
1023You have n''t looked in at all?
1023You have no inclination in Mr. Kenge''s way?
1023You have paid me? 1023 You intend to give me no other notice?"
1023You mean about the man?
1023You often think you know me as I really am? 1023 You remember, miss, that we passed some conversation on a certain man this morning?
1023You saw it?
1023You want a description of my cousin Jarndyce?
1023You want money?
1023You were found in a doorway, were n''t you?
1023You were going to say, thirdly?
1023You will do me the kindness to remember, sir, that I am not at present placed?
1023You will not, eh?
1023You wo n''t have a lawyer?
1023You would like some hot water, would n''t you?
1023You would n''t allow me to offer you one, would you miss?
1023You''d like to see the room, young man?
1023You''re George''s mother, old lady; that''s about what you are, I believe?
1023You''re there, are you? 1023 You-- you have found her so?"
1023Young Mr. Richard Carstone is present?
1023Your ladyship is acquainted with the name of Hawdon?
1023Your maid, I suppose?
1023Your name is George? 1023 ''Well, sir,''said he,''what do you offer if I give you time?'' 1023 ''What have you done, old fellow?'' 1023 ''Why did I eat spring lamb at eighteen pence a pound, my honest friend?'' 1023 ''Why, soldiers, why-- should we be melancholy, boys?'' 1023 A bird of the air? 1023 A fish of the sea or river? 1023 A flash in the pan or a shot?
1023A ghost in it, Volumnia hopes?
1023A little capricious?
1023A little-- not to put too fine a point upon it-- drop of shrub?"
1023A man''s?
1023A mere drudge?
1023A sailor, I believe?"
1023A woman''s?
1023A young man so unfortunate,"here he fell into a lower tone, as if he were thinking aloud,"can not at first believe( who could?)
1023Ada is well?"
1023Ada remembers?"
1023After a silence he is asked,"In which room?"
1023After dodging me for all these weeks and forcing me to climb the roof here like a tom cat and to come to see you as a doctor?
1023After letting all that time go by me, what good could come of it?
1023After pausing for some time, he slowly scrawls upon it in a hand that is not his,"Chesney Wold?"
1023Ai n''t it English?
1023Ai n''t it a pity?
1023Ai n''t my son good enough for you?
1023Ai n''t she?"
1023Ai n''t that a funny name?"
1023Ai n''t the lady the t''other lady?"
1023Ai n''t you?"
1023Air we in possession of a sinful secret, and do we require corn, and wine, and oil, or what is much the same thing, money, for the keeping thereof?
1023Always a fire, eh?
1023Always my favourite, and my favourite still, where have you been these cruel years and years?
1023Am I here, sir?
1023Am I to call in any assistance, or is the trick done?"
1023Am I, sir?"
1023An''t I unfortnet enough for you yet?
1023An''t my place dirty?
1023And I ca n''t abear to part with anything I once lay hold of( or so my neighbours think, but what do THEY know?)
1023And I considered whether, if it should signify any one of these meanings, which was so very likely, could I quite answer for myself?
1023And I dare say we all thought too-- I am sure I did, for one-- would Boythorn at all interfere with what was going forward?
1023And after all, what did it matter to me, and why did it matter to me?
1023And did you really take the trouble to find out the writer of that actual thing-- what is it!--affidavit?"
1023And do you cool yourself in that stream now, my young friend?
1023And have these pets got anything on THEIR minds, eh?
1023And how are you, my dear boy?"
1023And how can I pay?
1023And how did my wife get that black eye?
1023And how did you like Mrs. Jellyby, my dear?"
1023And if I do n''t deceive myself, my Lady was muffled in a loose black mantle, with a deep fringe to it?"
1023And if he did, what would it be to see a woman going by?
1023And not in the same hand, perhaps?
1023And of Vholes''s daughters?
1023And on my replying yes, she said,"Will my room be required, my dear Miss Summerson?
1023And she kept her word?
1023And so she said to me, did I know the way to the burying ground?
1023And that''s how I know how; do n''t you see, sir?"
1023And this is your establishment?
1023And two women?
1023And we like''em all the better for it, do n''t we?"
1023And what did it matter?
1023And what did the lady say to her?
1023And what do you call these, my darling?"
1023And what do you intend to make of him, ma''am?
1023And what do you suppose it''s made of?
1023And what do you think about father?
1023And what is it, Esther?"
1023And what may be the ages of these two, ma''am?
1023And when my only prayer was to be taken off from the rest and when it was such inexplicable agony and misery to be a part of the dreadful thing?
1023And where do we go next, Miss Summerson?"
1023And where is the lady gone?
1023And which is the factory?
1023And who is that boy?"
1023And why do we need refreshment, my friends?
1023And why do you think they call me the Lord Chancellor and my shop Chancery?"
1023And why glorious, my young friend?
1023And why should you take trouble?
1023And why, my young friend?"
1023And why?
1023And with you, governor?
1023And with you, ma''am?
1023And would you just throw in a nod when I seem to ask you for it?"
1023And you are going to visit our interesting Jarndyce wards?
1023And you know little Flite?"
1023And you, my dear,"said the old lady, who was now all nods and smiles,"regarding your dear self, my love?"
1023Any way out of that yard, now?"
1023Anything wanting to the bonnet?
1023Are YOU off now, father?"
1023Are or are not our interests conflicting?
1023Are there reasons why Skimpole, not being warped by prejudices, should accept it?
1023Are they comfortable?
1023Are they to be shirt- makers, or governesses?
1023Are we going back?"
1023Are you a beast of the field?
1023Are you drunk?"
1023Are you going to return there?"
1023Are you her ladyship''s property, or somebody else''s?
1023Are you in love?"
1023Are you looking for any one?"
1023Are you ready to come, my dear friend?"
1023Are you sure you can do it carefully, my worthy man?"
1023As bright- eyed as ever, as serene, and as untidy, she would say,"Well, Caddy, child, and how do you do to- day?"
1023As he says himself, what is public life without private ties?
1023As to sparing the girl, of what importance or value is she?
1023Aye, aye, mistress, it''s you, is it?
1023Aye?
1023Bagnet?"
1023Be so good as chair that there member in this direction, will you?"
1023Before they ever drew me-- before I had ever seen them-- what was it I used to do?
1023Blest?
1023Blest?"
1023Boythorn?"
1023Bring whom?"
1023Bucket?"
1023Bucket?"
1023But I-- you wo n''t think me premature if I mention it?"
1023But Miss Summerson has mentioned to you, perhaps, that something has passed between us on former occasions?"
1023But as you, though inadvertently and without intending so unreasonable a question, asked me''what for?''
1023But at all events, Ada-- I may call you Ada?"
1023But can you restore him back to life?"
1023But do you ask ME to believe that any good is to come of Jarndyce and Jarndyce?"
1023But how could any of you feel sure of me when I could n''t so much as feel sure of myself?
1023But it''s great good fortune, is it not?
1023But might be?
1023But shall I tell you who this young lady is?
1023But she is proud, is she not?"
1023But we would agree to make him rich enough to live, I suppose?
1023But what did he do with you?"
1023But what turned out to be the case?
1023But what''s the matter, George?"
1023But why, mother?"
1023But will you promise to have me took there, sir, and laid along with him?"
1023But, my friends, have we partaken of anything else?
1023But-- my faith!--still what does it matter to me?"
1023C.?"
1023C.?"
1023CHAPTER XI Our Dear Brother A touch on the lawyer''s wrinkled hand as he stands in the dark room, irresolute, makes him start and say,"What''s that?"
1023CHAPTER XXXIV A Turn of the Screw"Now, what,"says Mr. George,"may this be?
1023COULD you give us''British Grenadiers,''my fine fellow?"
1023Ca n''t you never let such an unfortnet as me alone?
1023Call out for Flite, will you?"
1023Can dance, and play music, and sing?
1023Can we fly, my friends?
1023Can you do without rest and keep watch upon her night and day?
1023Can you feel quite assured of that, my dear?"
1023Can you hear the sound upon the terrace, through the music, and the beat, and everything?"
1023Can you make a honourable lady of her?"
1023Can you not still?"
1023Can you show me all those places that were spoken of in the account I read?
1023Carstone?"
1023Chancery, which knows no wisdom but in precedent, is very rich in such precedents; and why should one be different from ten thousand?
1023Charley,"said my guardian, turning his face away for a moment,"how do you live?"
1023Chops, eh?"
1023Coavinses?"
1023Come to fetch your property, Mr. Weevle?
1023Come, Jobling,"says Mr. Guppy in his encouraging cross- examination- tone,"I think you know Krook, the Chancellor, across the lane?"
1023Concern me?
1023Could it be possible that the will had set things right at last and that Richard and Ada were going to be rich?
1023Could we walk, my friends, without strength?
1023Could you point a person out for me, I want?
1023Count''em?
1023Cousin Ada, will you and Esther take care of Mr. Vholes when I am gone?"
1023D?"
1023Dandyism?
1023Dead?"
1023Dear me, sir, why did n''t you send your young man round for me?
1023Dear me, that''s not a common name, Honoria, is it?
1023Did he look, when he was living, so very ill and poor?"
1023Did n''t he owe us immense sums, all round?
1023Did n''t he take us all in?
1023Did n''t make you at all uneasy?"
1023Did you ever know a prayer?"
1023Did you ever see such a brute?
1023Did you know another poor person of the name of Liz, miss?"
1023Did you say that Mr. Rouncewell had been very active in this election?"
1023Did you say what does it mean, my good friend?"
1023Dismiss the Dedlock patronage from consideration?
1023Do I look as if I mean it?
1023Do I not know that?"
1023Do I understand that the whole estate is found to have been absorbed in costs?"
1023Do I understand that you will take her with you?"
1023Do her friends know my story also?
1023Do his words disclose the length, breadth, depth, of his object and suspicion in coming here; or if not, what do they hide?
1023Do n''t I never mean for to go to church?
1023Do n''t have what, dear Pa?"
1023Do n''t let it give you a turn?
1023Do n''t spare money?
1023Do n''t talk of duty as a child, Miss Summerson; where''s Ma''s duty as a parent?
1023Do n''t they, Tom?"
1023Do n''t you KNOW that these arm- chairs were borrowed to be sat upon?''
1023Do n''t you remember when you first began to threaten the lawyers, and the peace was sworn against you two or three times a week?
1023Do n''t you see?
1023Do n''t you, Tom?"
1023Do n''t you?
1023Do n''t you?"
1023Do they look like that sort of thing?"
1023Do we need refreshment then, my friends?
1023Do you believe there is a consideration in the world that would induce her to take such a step against her favourite son?
1023Do you happen to know any one in this neighbourhood who would receive him for a while on my paying for him beforehand?"
1023Do you hear a sound like a footstep passing along the terrace, Watt?"
1023Do you hear, Jo?
1023Do you know it?
1023Do you know that he loves YOU, yet?"
1023Do you know the place where he was buried?"
1023Do you know they would be ruined to pay off my old scores?
1023Do you know what would become of the Bagnets in that case?
1023Do you mean it?
1023Do you mean to look at?"
1023Do you see this hand, and do you think that I do n''t know the right time to stretch it out and put it on the arm that fired that shot?"
1023Do you suppose your being young and natural, and fond of me and grateful to me, makes it any pleasure to me to have you near me?"
1023Do you think father could recommend a second- hand wiolinceller of a good tone for Mr. Bucket''s friend, my dear?
1023Do you think that in these many years no others have done all they could?
1023Do you want to be let in?"
1023Does he keep them yet?
1023Does he show any turn for any musical instrument?"
1023Does he think,"Shall I not, with the aid I have, recall her safely after this, there being fewer hours in her case than there are years in his?"
1023Does this discovery of some one lost, this return of some one so long gone, come upon him as a strong confirmation of his hopes?
1023Eh?"
1023Esther, Esther, why not?
1023Esther, my dear, do you wish to ask me anything?"
1023Every night my Lady casually asks her maid,"Is Mr. Tulkinghorn come?"
1023Far happier than her Lady, as her Lady has often thought, why does she falter in this manner and look at her with such strange mistrust?
1023First, will your ladyship allow me to ask you whether you have had any strange visitors this morning?
1023Firstly( in a spirit of love), what is the common sort of Terewth-- the working clothes-- the every- day wear, my young friends?
1023For God''s sake, where?"
1023For what are you, my young friend?
1023For which reason, whenever a man unknown comes into the shop( as many men unknown do) and says,"Is Mr. Snagsby in?"
1023French, if I do n''t mistake?
1023From whence do these papers come, you say?
1023From whence have we derived that spiritual profit?
1023Generally, what kind of man?"
1023George?"
1023George?"
1023George?"
1023George?"
1023George?"
1023George?"
1023George?"
1023George?"
1023George?"
1023Give in?
1023Go to my lawyer( you remember where; you have been there before) and show your independence now, will you?
1023Good Lord, you do n''t suppose that I would go spontaneously combusting any person, my dear?"
1023Good gracious, what is the man?"
1023Grass?
1023Gridley?
1023Guppy?"
1023Gusher?"
1023Had n''t I, Jo?"
1023Had n''t you better go to bed?"
1023Had n''t you better say two fifty?"
1023Has Mr. Tulkinghorn any idea of this himself?
1023Has Mr. Tulkinghorn been disturbed?
1023Has the difficulty grown easier because of so many failures?"
1023Has the picture been engraved, miss?"
1023Have I been remiss in anything?"
1023Have I offended you?"
1023Have I read the little book wot you left?
1023Have I the pleasure of addressing another of the youthful parties in Jarndyce?"
1023Have n''t I come into court, twenty afternoons for no other purpose than to see you pin the Chancellor like a bull- dog?
1023Have n''t I seen you in the Fleet over and over again for contempt?
1023Have we not?"
1023Have you been advising him since?"
1023Have you been here ever since?"
1023Have you decided?"
1023Have you forgotten the stain and blot upon this place, and where it is, and who it is?"
1023Have you heard of her good fortune?"
1023Have you heard of it, either of you?"
1023Have you money for your lodging?"
1023Have you no consideration for HIS property?''
1023Have you rung the bell?"
1023Have you the face to tell me I have received justice and therefore am dismissed?''
1023He asked me, first of all, whether I conferred a charm and a distinction on London by residing in it?
1023He dozed often, and whenever he awoke without seeing him, said first of all,"Where is Woodcourt?"
1023He said with some embarrassment, holding the handle of the door,"Shall I have the honour of finding you here, miss?"
1023He says to the woman,"Miserable creature, what has he done?"
1023He told you himself, I''ll be bound, my dear?"
1023He turned on my coming in and said, smiling,"Aye, it''s you, little woman, is it?"
1023He was embarrassed when he found my guardian with me, but recovered himself and said,"How de do, sir?"
1023He was much amused and interested when he heard this and said,"No, really?"
1023He was very poor, I suppose?"
1023He''ll soon come back to his head,"and said to him,"Jo, Jo, what''s the matter?"
1023He-- Oh, dear me!--he never lets anything off without meaning it, does he, my dear friend?"
1023Hey?"
1023How CAN you?"
1023How am I to get through the next four or five accursed months?"
1023How am I to live?
1023How are you?"
1023How can I be bribed?"
1023How can I know without seeing them, when he do n''t know himself?
1023How can it be, if Sir Leicester is driven out of his wits or laid upon a death- bed?
1023How can we stand amazed at poor Rick?
1023How could I ever be worthy of those tears?
1023How could a man like him be expected to have any pleasure in such a discovery?
1023How could he?
1023How could that be?
1023How could you do it?
1023How could you?
1023How de do, sir?"
1023How de do?
1023How de do?"
1023How did I lose her?
1023How do you defend them?''
1023How do you do?"
1023How do you find Mr. C. looking, Miss Summerson?"
1023How do you like her, my dear?"
1023How does the mortal world go?"
1023How does your honourable worship do?"
1023How goes the world with you, George, at the present moment?
1023How have I been conducting of myself?
1023How is it with us all to- day?"
1023How much apiece was it?
1023How much are you out of pocket?
1023How should I know it?"
1023How then?"
1023How unfortnet do you want me fur to be?
1023How was it?
1023How within it?
1023How,"says the trooper, folding his arms and looking with indomitable firmness at his brother,"how is my mother to be got to scratch me?"
1023Howbeit, impelled by innocence, she asks,"What for?"
1023I ask you, what is that light?"
1023I asked,"Does he give lessons in deportment now?"
1023I began by saying"You have attended on the Lord Chancellor many years, Miss Flite?"
1023I believe if our mutual friend Smallweed were put into the box, he could prove this?"
1023I believe you had a brother who gave his family some trouble, and ran away, and never did any good but in keeping away?"
1023I broke out crying and sobbing, and I said,"Oh, dear godmother, tell me, pray do tell me, did Mama die on my birthday?"
1023I do n''t know what the business name of it may be, but I suppose there is some instrument within their power that would settle this?"
1023I do n''t like to ask such a thing, my dear, but would you walk a little way?"
1023I endeavoured to say that I knew he was far more capable than I of deciding what we ought to do, but was he sure that this was right?
1023I even heard it said between them,"Shall she go?"
1023I felt it more than I had hoped I should once when a child said,"Mother, why is the lady not a pretty lady now like she used to be?"
1023I felt very ignorant, but what could I do?
1023I give up?"
1023I have been keeping out of the way and living cheap down about the market- gardens, but what''s the use of living cheap when you have got no money?
1023I hope Mr. Jarndyce is as well as his friends could wish him?"
1023I hope you are pretty well?"
1023I knew that, did I?"
1023I know it meets your approval?"
1023I know nothing now, certainly; but what MIGHT I not if I had your confidence, and you set me on?"
1023I must have been ordered abroad, but how could I have gone?
1023I must n''t go into court and say,''My Lord, I beg to know this from you-- is this right or wrong?
1023I said just now, what good could come of it?
1023I said,''Can you, at your time of life, be so headstrong, my friend, as to persist that an arm- chair is a thing to put upon a shelf and look at?
1023I said,''You are a man of business, I believe?''
1023I say nothing else at present; but you know me, my dear; now, do n''t you?"
1023I say, you do n''t happen to have heard of a murder?"
1023I shall confer estates on both-- which is not being troublesome, I trust?
1023I suppose it will cost money?
1023I suppose your loyalty to John Jarndyce will allow that?"
1023I think the worse of him?
1023I understand you to be now consulting me professionally as to your interests?
1023I ventured to take this opportunity of hinting that Mr. Skimpole, being in all such matters quite a child--"Eh, my dear?"
1023I was not in this slight distress because I at all repined-- I am quite certain I did not, that day-- but, I thought, would she be wholly prepared?
1023I was so frightened that I lost my voice and could only answer in a whisper,"Me, sir?"
1023I''ll follow the other, by G----""The other?"
1023I''m older than HER,"nodding at his wife,"and see what she is?
1023If I inflicted this shock upon him to- morrow morning, how could the immediate change in him be accounted for?
1023If I were weak now, what had I profited by those mercies?
1023If he could see the least sparkle of relief in her face now?
1023If he forces us to it, they''ll be producible, wo n''t they?"
1023If it should prove to be valuable, you trusting yourself to him for your reward; that''s about where it is, ai n''t it?"
1023If they do n''t stop, why should I?
1023If you had a blue- eyed daughter you would n''t like ME to come, uninvited, on HER birthday?''
1023If you please, miss, did you know a poor person of the name of Jenny?"
1023In search of what?
1023In the evening I was so much worse that I resolved to prepare Charley, with which view I said,"You''re getting quite strong, Charley, are you not?''
1023In the name of the--""Of our friend in the city?"
1023In the name of-- of brimstone, why?"
1023In the night?"
1023Is Richard a monster in all this, or would Chancery be found rich in such precedents too if they could be got for citation from the Recording Angel?
1023Is a new dress, a new custom, a new singer, a new dancer, a new form of jewellery, a new dwarf or giant, a new chapel, a new anything, to be set up?
1023Is anybody in attendance who knows anything more?"
1023Is he a good doctor, my love?"
1023Is he hanging somewhere?
1023Is he to perish?
1023Is it Mrs. Rouncewell''s grandson?"
1023Is it a secret, sir?"
1023Is it anything about a picture?"
1023Is it because we are calculated to walk?
1023Is it because we are invited?
1023Is it blank cartridge or ball?
1023Is it chalked upon the walls and cried in the streets?"
1023Is it deception?"
1023Is it far from here?"
1023Is it fear or is it anger now?
1023Is it lovely, and gentle, and beautiful, and pleasant, and serene, and joyful?
1023Is it not?"
1023Is it not?"
1023Is it or is it not desirable that we should know what facts we are to prove on the inquiry into the death of this unfortunate old mo-- gentleman?"
1023Is it shut?"
1023Is it strife?
1023Is it that I am so weak as to believe, like a child, that I come here in that dress to rec- eive that boy only to decide a little bet, a wager?
1023Is it that you have almost all finished, or are you speaking always?"
1023Is it the town- talk yet?
1023Is it true?
1023Is it war?
1023Is it--?
1023Is mine less hard to bear or is it harder to bear, when my whole living was in it and has been thus shamefully sucked away?"
1023Is my daughter a- washin?
1023Is n''t it an extraordinary thing of Krook to have appointed twelve o''clock to- night to hand''em over to me?"
1023Is not this to be rich?
1023Is that the packet?"
1023Is the hand not always pointing there?
1023Is the man born yet, is the spade wrought yet?
1023Is there THREE of''em then?"
1023Is there a chimney on fire?"
1023Is there any light a- comin?"
1023Is there any one in view at present?"
1023Is there any other witness?
1023Is there any particular feeling on that head?"
1023Is there anything I can order for you?"
1023Is there anything that you require of me?
1023Is there anything you want that would lessen the hardship of this confinement?"
1023Is this just towards her?
1023Is this our previous understanding?"
1023Is this the full purpose of the young man of the name of Guppy, or has he any other?
1023It said,"What the de- vil are you crying for?"
1023It was wrong in me to take it?
1023It''s not possible that Mr. Tulkinghorn has been killed and that you suspect ME?"
1023Jarndyce?"
1023Jellyby''s?"
1023Jo, is it thou?
1023Krook?"
1023Lady Dedlock asks on sitting down to dinner, still deadly pale( and quite an illustration of the debilitated cousin''s text), whether he is gone out?
1023Lady Dedlock will not think me ill- bred, I hope?"
1023Last night?"
1023Lawyers?
1023Let me share its felicity sometimes, and what do I sacrifice?
1023Living or dead, where is she?
1023Looks as if she knew all about it, do n''t she?
1023Man or woman, ma''am?"
1023Mercenary creatures ask,''What is the use of a man''s going to the North Pole?
1023Mercury replies that she is going out to dinner; do n''t he see the carriage at the door?
1023Might it not prove a little worse than she expected?
1023Might n''t I take the liberty?
1023Might she not have to grow used to me and to begin all over again?
1023Might she not look for her old Esther and not find her?
1023Miss Summerson that was here when Gridley died-- that was the name, I know-- all right-- where does she live?"
1023Miss Summerson, if I do n''t deceive myself?"
1023Mr. Bagnet?
1023Mr. Bucket throws his light into the doorway and says to Mr. Snagsby,"Now, what do you say to Toughy?
1023Mr. George, will you order him to leave his infernal fire- arms alone and go away?"
1023Mr. Guppy looks at his friend, repeating inquiringly,"The public- house in the court?"
1023Mr. Guppy replying that he is not much to boast of, Mr. Jobling ventures on the question,"How is SHE?"
1023Mr. Jarndyce and Miss Clare quite well?"
1023Mr. Jarndyce in a troubled voice repeats,"Miss Summerson?"
1023Mr. Jarndyce is not here?"
1023Mr. Snagsby, with his cough of meekness, rejoins,"Would n''t you really, my dear?"
1023Mr. Tulkinghorn had listened gravely to this complaint and inquires when the stationer has finished,"And that''s all, is it, Snagsby?"
1023Mr. Tulkinghorn proceeds,"Well, George-- I believe your name is George?"
1023Mr. Tulkinghorn, outwardly quite undisturbed, demands,"Why not?"
1023Mr. Vholes replied aloud-- or as nearly aloud I suppose as he had ever replied to anything--"You will drive me, will you, sir?
1023Mr. Woodcourt, would you be so good as see to her, and if you can get that letter from her, to let me have it as soon as ever you can?"
1023Mrs. Bagnet gathers up her cloak to wipe her eyes on in a very genuine manner,"How could you do it?"
1023Mrs. Bagnet, you''ll take care of my mother, I know?"
1023Mrs. Chadband, no doubt?"
1023My Lady a good temper?"
1023My Lady''s out, ai n''t she?"
1023My Lady, changing her position, sees the papers on the table-- looks at them nearer-- looks at them nearer still-- asks impulsively,"Who copied that?"
1023My Lady, do you object to the twilight?"
1023My Lady, looking at the downcast and blushing face, says smiling,"Who is it?
1023My dear Esther, how can you be so blind?
1023My dear father, may I beg you to prepare your mind for what I am going to say?"
1023My dear friend, will you come and see the gentleman?"
1023My dear son, you contemplate an absence of a week, I think?"
1023My friends, of what else have we partaken?
1023My friends, why do I wish for peace?
1023My friends, why with us?
1023My guardian looked at us again, plainly saying,"You hear him?"
1023My guardian looked at us with a smile, as though he asked us,"Is it possible to be worldly with this baby?"
1023My young friend, what is bondage?
1023Nemo?"
1023Not John, I should say, nor yet Jacob?"
1023Not a word to your loving mother, who was growing older too?"
1023Not go as I have said?"
1023Not good company?
1023Not handsome?"
1023Not so much of Morgan ap-- what''s his name?"
1023Not the way to get on in life, you''ll tell me?
1023Not to your ladyship''s knowledge, perhaps?
1023Not with Captain Hawdon, and his ever affectionate Honoria, and their child into the bargain?
1023Nothing the matter?
1023Now I come to think of it,"he looked inquiringly at us with his frankest smile as he made the discovery,"Vholes bribed me, perhaps?
1023Now do n''t he, Lignum?"
1023Now for what, my dear friend?"
1023Now take my arm, will you?
1023Now the murder''s out; you despise me, Esther, do n''t you?"
1023Now you know me, do n''t you?"
1023Now, Mrs. Piper, what have you got to say about this?
1023Now, Sir Leicester Dedlock, Baronet, why do I relate all this?"
1023Now, are you right there?"
1023Now, has she deserved this punishment?
1023Now, is n''t he?"
1023Now, is not that reasonable?"
1023Now, my friends, why do I say he is devoid of these possessions?
1023Now, my young friends, what is this Terewth then?
1023Now, what do you think of this rascal?"
1023Now, what do you think the lawyer making the inquiries wants?"
1023Now, what should she give it him for?
1023Now, what''s up?"
1023Now?
1023Of any hand that is no more, of any hand that never was, of any touch that might have magically changed her life?
1023Of spiritual profit?
1023Oh, my Lady, may I beg a word with you?"
1023Open it with one of these here keys?
1023Or are you in the same mind?"
1023Or does she listen to the Ghost''s Walk and think what step does it most resemble?
1023Or if it was partly, was it wholly and entirely?
1023Or not you so much, perhaps, as your friend in the city?
1023Or pounds?
1023Or something of that sort?
1023Or what is this?"
1023Or would I have all the daughters at once in a perfect nosegay?
1023Over for the day?
1023Peas?
1023Perhaps I should only have to say to Ada,"Would you like to come and see me married to- morrow, my pet?"
1023Perhaps you could name the figures of a few wiolincellers of a good tone?"
1023Perhaps you would n''t mind Richard''s coming in, Dame Durden?"
1023Presently she asks again, is he gone YET?
1023Pretty smooth?
1023Question: And great expense?
1023Question: And unspeakable vexation?
1023Question: But you think that their abolition would damage a class of practitioners?
1023Question: Can you instance any type of that class?
1023Question: Mr. Vholes is considered, in the profession, a respectable man?
1023Really surprised, my dear Miss Summerson?"
1023Really?
1023Rich enough to have his own happy home and his own household gods-- and household goddess, too, perhaps?"
1023Rich enough to work with tolerable peace of mind?
1023Richard is outside, is he, my dear?"
1023Rick, my boy, Esther, my dear, what have you been doing?
1023Robbed me?
1023Rouncewell?"
1023Rouncewell?"
1023Rouncewell?"
1023Say everything as is kind and forgiving on your part?
1023Say you are sure before I go away, Ma?"
1023Says he,''Sir, why did you eat spring lamb at eighteen pence a pound?''
1023Says the coroner, is that boy here?
1023Secondly?"
1023Settled?
1023Shall I go?"
1023Shall I ring for them to carry you down?"
1023Shall I tell you what I think?
1023Shall he come up?
1023She can talk French, I suppose, and do geography, and globes, and needlework, and everything?"
1023She is not quite prostrated by fatigue?"
1023She said,''You remember me as come one time to talk to you about the young lady as had been a- wisiting of you?
1023She ses to me she ses''are you the boy at the inkwhich?''
1023She ses to me she ses''can you show me all them places?''
1023She stands absorbed in the same frozen way for some little time before asking,"Is there anything more to be said to- night?"
1023She stops him as he is moving out of the room by asking,"This is the notice I was to receive?
1023She was about to say?
1023Shillings perhaps?
1023Should I find Mr. Rouncewell at the factory, do you think?"
1023Should I go to Richard''s by myself?
1023Should the Skimpole have refused the note?
1023Should we go now?
1023Sir Leicester Dedlock?"
1023Sir Leicester dozes, starts up suddenly, and cries,"Eh?
1023Sir Leicester looks astounded and inquires,"Is the man in custody?"
1023Sir Leicester pauses, stares, repeats in a killing voice,"The young man of the name of Guppy?"
1023Sir, Mr. C. is playing for a considerable stake, and can not play without-- need I say what?"
1023Skimpole protests to Bucket,''What''s this for?
1023Small, what will it be?"
1023Smallweed?"
1023Smallweed?"
1023Snagsby, why did n''t you give that eight and thirty Chancery folio in Jarndyce to Nimrod?''
1023Snagsby?"
1023So I get a little practice with-- who do you think?
1023So I left Charley in the little passage, and going on to the half- open door, said,"Can I come in, Richard?
1023So I says to George when he has done, who is this old lady he has seen?
1023So he has brought you up to follow in his ways and has sent you into foreign countries and the like?
1023So he said,"My precious little woman, what are you doing here?"
1023So well- timed, is it not?
1023So what,"continued Richard, confident again by this time,"do I naturally turn my thoughts to?"
1023So when the trooper reappears with his,"Had n''t you better go to bed, miss?"
1023So you are the man,"says Mr. Tulkinghorn, opening his door with the key,"in whose hiding- place Mr. Gridley was found?"
1023So you will take me as I am, and make the best of me?"
1023Some ill- conditioned growling fellow may say to me,''What''s the use of these legal and equitable abuses?
1023Some melancholy influence is upon her, or why should so proud a lady close the doors and sit alone upon the hearth so desolate?
1023Spell it?
1023Still, even after dinner, I ask myself the question, What am I to do?
1023Still, it''s not right, you know; is it?"
1023Summer cabbage?"
1023Suppose I say to a man, how much?
1023Suppose the man says to me seven and sixpence?
1023Suspicion and misunderstanding were the fault of the suit?
1023THAT place?"
1023Take a few steps more in this direction, say they, and what is to become of Vholes''s father?
1023Take the notes out?
1023Take''em for expenses?
1023Talk in that cool way of a fellow''s living there?"
1023Tambourine playing?
1023That ai n''t a chest to be out of spirits, is it, ma''am?
1023That being settled, there is another thing-- how have you left Caddy?"
1023That is so, is it not?"
1023That it is an object to contemplate, to survey from a distance, to consider from a point of sight?
1023That visit not succeeding either, you will go again perhaps?"
1023That''s a nice innocent place to live in, ai n''t it?"
1023That''s about what YOU are, you know, ai n''t you?"
1023That''s about your intentions, if I understand you?"
1023That''s it, is it?"
1023That''s the arrangement, is n''t it, Tony?"
1023The landlord, Charley?"
1023The littlest key?
1023The pattering of a little child''s feet, ever coming on-- on-- on?
1023The place he wrote for, the place he died at, the place where you were taken to, and the place where he was buried?
1023The principle is the same, I think?"
1023The prohibition does not extend to us, does it?"
1023Then came the question, which of the two next doors?
1023Then from whence, my friends, in a human point of view, do we derive the strength that is necessary to our limbs?
1023Then he wistfully asks, with his hand on his brother''s,"Would you mind mentioning that, brother, to your wife and family?"
1023Then resuming his encouragement, he pursued aloud:"Worn out, Mr. Gridley?
1023Then what''s a fellow to do?
1023Then why are we here, my friends?
1023Then why should HE escape?"
1023Then why should they quarrel with us?
1023Then, little woman, can I do better for a time than retain Mrs. Woodcourt here?"
1023There I stood trembling, even when I heard my darling calling as she came upstairs,"Esther, my dear, my love, where are you?
1023There''s no lady in this house that signs Honoria is there?
1023This afternoon?"
1023This is a great system, Mr. Jarndyce, and would you wish a great country to have a little system?
1023This is about a London particular NOW, ai n''t it, miss?"
1023This made me think, did Lady Dedlock''s face accidentally resemble my godmother''s?
1023This old gentleman, or the Baronet?"
1023To Ada and her pretty boy, he is the fondest father; to me he is what he has ever been, and what name can I give to that?
1023To devote my life to his happiness was to thank him poorly, and what had I wished for the other night but some new means of thanking him?
1023To which Mr. Guppy retorts,"Oh, indeed?"
1023To which Mr. Guppy retorts,"Who says so?"
1023To which Mr. Guppy says,"Who''s conspiring?"
1023Took the business, Phil?"
1023Tulkinghorn?"
1023Tulkinghorn?"
1023Tulkinghorn?"
1023Ve- ry absurd, to be a little rambling, is it not?
1023Ve- ry friendly little party, are we not?"
1023Ve- ry mortifying, is it not?"
1023Ve- ry strong influence, is it not?
1023Vholes?"
1023Vholes?"
1023Vholes?"
1023Vholes?"
1023Volumnia wishes of all things to know what is doing?
1023Volumnia, do I make myself intelligible?
1023WHY are you?"
1023WHY should the Skimpole have refused the note?
1023WILL you shake hands?
1023Walks by night, does she?
1023Was anybody present related to him?"
1023Was it a five- pound note?
1023Was it this voice, or at all like this voice?"
1023Was that so?"
1023Was you ever modelled now?"
1023Was your father in the same way of life as yourself?"
1023We have been checked-- brought up suddenly, I would say-- upon the-- shall I term it threshold?"
1023We were going on in this way, when one morning at breakfast Mr. Jarndyce received a letter, and looking at the superscription, said,"From Boythorn?
1023Weevle?"
1023Well, my dear?"
1023Well, then, wos that young lady up at the house now?
1023Well,"proceeds Mr. Jobling after a defiant visit to his rum- and- water,"what can a fellow do, I ask you, BUT enlist?"
1023Well?
1023Well?"
1023What about it?
1023What am I but another dreamer, Rick?"
1023What am I to DO with this?''
1023What are they?
1023What are you doing there?"
1023What are you listening at my door for, Krook?"
1023What burying ground, Jo?"
1023What business had I to make myself known?
1023What can it be?
1023What can you anticipate when they''re so handsome as that?
1023What could I do to reassure my darling( I considered then) and show her that I had no such feelings?
1023What could have caused it?
1023What could have divided you?
1023What could they do, did she think?
1023What delusion can this be?
1023What did I do to her?
1023What did he do it for?"
1023What did he say?"
1023What do you do?
1023What do you make of that, Phil?"
1023What do you mean?"
1023What do you say I have got of my own?"
1023What do you say now to Mrs. Bucket, from her spy- place having seen them all''written by this young woman?
1023What do you say now?"
1023What do you say to Mrs. Bucket having watched the posting of''em every one by this young woman, Sir Leicester Dedlock, Baronet?"
1023What do you say to Mrs. Bucket having, within this half- hour, secured the corresponding ink and paper, fellow half- sheets and what not?
1023What do you say to coming along with me, upon this warrant, and having a good angry argument before the magistrates?
1023What do you say to this, Bucket?"
1023What do you say?"
1023What do you think?"
1023What do you think?"
1023What do you want with me?"
1023What do you want, Krook, when I have company?"
1023What do you want?
1023What do you want?"
1023What do you want?''
1023What does he care?
1023What does it matter to me?"
1023What does it mean?
1023What does she make a sham for, and pretend to give me money, and take it away again?
1023What does she mean by this look and this imploring gesture?
1023What does she try to do?
1023What follows?
1023What for?"
1023What good does it do?''
1023What has brought Mrs. Rouncewell to town so unexpectedly?
1023What has this to do with me?"
1023What have you been pouring out of window?"
1023What is he doing?
1023What is it that I naturally turn my thoughts to?"
1023What is it that I tell you?
1023What is it?
1023What is it?
1023What is it?
1023What is it?
1023What is peace?
1023What is that light?
1023What is the intention of this fool''s play, say then?"
1023What is the letter that she holds?
1023What is the matter?
1023What is the use of your contradicting?"
1023What is there in all this?
1023What might I not get to know, nearly concerning you?
1023What money has she got?"
1023What more can I do?
1023What more can we do?
1023What new occurrence is it that makes this tranquil old woman tremble so?
1023What now?"
1023What power does she suppose is in the person she petitions to avert this unjust suspicion, if it be unjust?
1023What power of cannon might it take to shake that rusty old man out of his immovable composure?
1023What shall I do?
1023What should I have done as soon as I was hard and fast here?
1023What should I have lost?
1023What should she give it him for?"
1023What should we do without strength, my friends?
1023What should you be out of spirits for?
1023What time might it be?
1023What two reasons?"
1023What two words?
1023What would he do, whether or not?
1023What would it be to see a woman going by, even though she were going secretly?
1023What''s YOUR motive?
1023What''s amiss, old boy?
1023What''s home?
1023What''s that?
1023What''s that?"
1023What''s the matter, George?
1023What''s the matter?"
1023What''s the matter?"
1023What''s the matter?"
1023What''s to be done with him?"
1023What, you know him, do you?"
1023What?
1023When Ada was singing in the dark room?"
1023When I calculated that this impetuous young woman would overdo it in new directions, was I wrong or right?
1023When it''s moonlight, though?"
1023When shall Ada come to see you, my love?"
1023When shall we give Bleak House its mistress, little woman?"
1023When she first saw me, might she not be a little shocked and disappointed?
1023When the driver stops his horses, Mr. George alights, and looking in at the window, says,"What, Mr. Tulkinghorn''s your man, is he?"
1023When was it?
1023When we repeated, with some surprise,"The sheep?"
1023Where are the digger and the spade, this peaceful night, destined to add the last great secret to the many secrets of the Tulkinghorn existence?
1023Where are we going, Esther?"
1023Where are you, Caddy?"
1023Where did she go?
1023Where has there been a murder?"
1023Where is she?
1023Where is she?
1023Where is she?"
1023Where shall I find you?"
1023Where was I?"
1023Where was it?
1023Where was it?
1023Where''s my bag of documents?
1023Where, you know?"
1023Whether Mr. Tulkinghorn is gone yet?
1023Whether he had any accomplices, or whatever the thing is called in the law?
1023Whether they are going to convict, or whatever it is, that dreadful soldier?
1023While he is thus employed, he says, after laughing at his establishing a surgery in the street,"And so your husband is a brickmaker?"
1023Who can anything about him concern more than me?
1023Who do you suppose is with me?"
1023Who fired a gun or pistol?
1023Who is it, and what''s wanted?"
1023Who is it?
1023Who is it?
1023Who is our friend, my dear friend?"
1023Who is the other?"
1023Who the devil is he?
1023Who told him not to come?
1023Who would I prefer for mistress of the ceremonies?
1023Who''s the wiser?"
1023Who?
1023Why SHOULD I go there?
1023Why am I so different from other children, and why is it my fault, dear godmother?
1023Why are we now in the mansions of the rich and great, my friends?
1023Why can we not fly, my friends?"
1023Why did he never come?
1023Why did n''t he marry,"Mrs. Bagnet answers, half laughing and half crying,"Joe Pouch''s widder in North America?
1023Why did you do it?
1023Why did you?
1023Why do n''t I know him?
1023Why do you ask?"
1023Why do you call it my allowance, and never let me spend it?"
1023Why do you not cool yourself in that stream now?
1023Why does he look at Mr. Snagsby?
1023Why does she come so close?
1023Why does she say that?
1023Why else should that look pass between them, why else should Mr. Snagsby be confused and cough a signal cough behind his hand?
1023Why has n''t he thirty thousand a year?''
1023Why is he?"
1023Why not?
1023Why not?
1023Why should I go about asking them what seven and sixpence is in Money-- which I do n''t understand?"
1023Why should I go to see them, therefore?
1023Why should I regret my incapacity for details and worldly affairs when it leads to such pleasant consequences?
1023Why should Mr. Tulkinghorn, for such no reason, look out of window?
1023Why should he do that, but that Mrs. Snagsby sees it all?
1023Why should my landlord quarrel with HIM?
1023Why should she spare others?"
1023Why should you allude to anything that is NOT a pleasant matter?
1023Why surprised?"
1023Why?
1023Why?"
1023Will HE do?"
1023Will Jenny be here soon?
1023Will Jenny be here soon?
1023Will my cousin John forgive me?"
1023Will somebody hand me anything hard and bruising to pelt at her?
1023Will you allow me to ask why you want to see the captain''s hand, in the case that I could find any specimen of it?"
1023Will you allow me to retire?"
1023Will you be so good as to take a chair here by me and look over this paper?"
1023Will you first let me speak half a word with this gentleman in private?"
1023Will you graciously let me kiss your hand?"
1023Will you tell them to send him up?"
1023Will you wait?"
1023Within a few more minutes he is reported as sending his respects, and could my Lady please to receive him for a word or two after her dinner?
1023Woodcot?"
1023Woodcourt?"
1023Wot did the lady say to her?
1023Would I have his Comedy daughter, his Beauty daughter, or his Sentiment daughter?
1023Would I take that weight-- in any metal-- for the old girl?
1023Would it not have been better for his peace that I should not have been so brought before him?
1023Would my Lady wish to see him?
1023Would she go with me?
1023Would we not, little woman?"
1023Would you allow me to look at it?
1023Would you do an old man that good turn, sir?"
1023Would you mind describing him to me?"
1023Would you mind sitting quiet-- on the family account-- while I reckon''em up?
1023Would you object to my writing it?"
1023Would you suppose him to have a head and a heart full of romance yet?"
1023Would you take a seat, sir?"
1023Would you wish to have her sent back to the village, or would you like to take her with you, or what would you prefer?"
1023YOU do?
1023YOU would n''t like it, I think?
1023Yes, my dear?"
1023Yet he is not easy about him; who CAN be?"
1023You ai n''t in the habit of conversing with a deaf person, are you?"
1023You are following what I say, my child?"
1023You are honouring me with your attention?"
1023You are of that opinion?"
1023You are so?
1023You ca n''t answer for him?"
1023You called her Rosa?"
1023You came for me, no doubt?"
1023You can read?"
1023You did n''t know him, did you?"
1023You do n''t deny that?"
1023You do n''t doubt William Guppy?
1023You do n''t forget how happily and peacefully my life is all marked out for me, and by whom?
1023You do n''t happen to have heard of a murder?"
1023You do n''t know much of my son, my dear; but you know enough of him, I dare say, to recollect him?"
1023You do n''t like Vholes, I hope?
1023You do n''t mean to set up for a new character with ME after all these years, I hope?"
1023You do n''t mind me half so much, do you?"
1023You do n''t mind that?"
1023You do n''t suspect any harm?"
1023You do, do n''t you, Phil?"
1023You feel quite at home here again, I dare say?
1023You find the long vacation exceedingly long, do n''t you?"
1023You have no occasion to come here to learn that, I suppose?"
1023You have no trouble, I hope, to keep you waking?"
1023You have no young child?"
1023You know Lady Dedlock?"
1023You know Saint Albans, sir?
1023You know Snagsby the stationer?"
1023You know the kind of document, sir-- wanting employ?"
1023You know what I told you of the attraction on the Chancellor''s table?
1023You know what they say of my lodger?"
1023You know, I dare say, that I have an attachment to my cousin Ada?"
1023You mean, do I feel as if I were settling down?"
1023You never find that anything goes off here accidentally, do you, my dear friend?"
1023You never heard of anything of that sort?"
1023You recollect that first night, when I was so unpolite and inky?
1023You remember me as give you somethink handsome for a handkercher wot she had left?''
1023You remember our friend Coavinses, Miss Summerson?"
1023You remember?"
1023You thought nothing to that effect?"
1023You understand how those things are managed?"
1023You ungrateful wretch, do you know that this is all along of you and of her goodness to you?"
1023You will forgive me all this, my Ada, before I begin the world?"
1023You will go, wo n''t you?"
1023You will like to make some change, perhaps?
1023You will not be discomposed by the Lord Chancellor, I dare say?"
1023You will not fail in YOUR duty, my son and daughter, I believe?"
1023You wo n''t be got off this way, and you wo n''t be got off that way-- what do you mean by such picking and choosing?
1023You would n''t object to say, perhaps, that although an undoubted vagabond, I am a vagabond of the harum- scarum order, and not of the mean sort?"
1023You''ll take a morsel of something?"
1023You''re beginning to get more yourself now, ai n''t you?"
1023You''re going back, Charley?
1023You''re not afraid of me, Tom, are you?"
1023You''ve been a- trying to do it, have you?"
1023You''ve done, have you?"
1023You''ve got a mark upon you somewheres or another, I suppose?"
1023You-- you would n''t perhaps object to admit that?
1023Young Mr. Rouncewell, I believe?"
1023adds,"How de do, my dear friend, how de do?"
1023and"Who gave you that name?"
1023but there failing in the exact precision of his memory and substituting for number three the question"And how do you like that name?"
1023for?
1023returned my guardian, laughing,"My dear, who would advise with Skimpole?"
1023said the gentleman,"Do n''t you want to go there?"
1023to propose it?
1023twice?
1023would THAT be Terewth?"