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
41291And in 1897 she wrote: For God''s sake what does it mean that you do n''t answer?...
41291[ Illustration: WHO WILL WELCOME THEM?]
41291or,"How are you?"
60145Who Were the Romans?
60145One would ask, on hearing such a person mentioned,"Does he belong to the sects or to the church people?"
60145Speranza, Gino,_ Race or Nation?_ Stanard, Mary Newton,_ The Story of Virginia''s First Century_.
60145When General Braddock, whose army was nearly wiped out by the French and Indians in 1755, sighed,"Who would have thought it?"
60145Why should outsiders be allowed to come in and take the jobs and lower the living standards of American labor?
14825But can they withstand saturation?
14825CHAPTER VIII THE CITY BUILDERS"What will happen to immigration when the public domain has vanished?"
14825How else could it be when peoples of two such diverse epochs in racial evolution meet?
14825Moreover, in the light of the law, who was a"merchant"and who a"visitor"?
14825The labor unions are led by them; and what would municipal politics be without them?
14825What race of people?
14825What sort of nation?
14825Whence come these millions?
14825Where can they go?
37774And in what war can the sincere Christian ever have stronger inducements to pray for the success of his country, than in this?
37774For what can be more unreasonable, than to draw from different, and even opposite premises, the same conclusion?
37774If we can not regret the defeat of the two former tyrants, what must they be who can triumph in the mischiefs of the two latter?
37774May I be permitted a short digression on the subject of those exiles?
37774Must a revolution be equally necessary in the case of two sorts of Government, and two sorts of Religion, which are the very reverse of each other?
37774What English heart did not exult at the demolition of the Bastile?
37774What lover of his species did not triumph in the warm hope, that one of the finest countries in the world would soon be one of the most free?
20638Really, do you see anything that makes it go? 20638 Where''s the overseer?"
20638Why, what_ is_ that?
20638Any wonder that people hurried to dinner and enjoyed it?
20638Besides, the girl had opened the temptation by asking,"Who was the handsome man in the glasses?
20638Do they even resemble each other?
20638Does n''t this excuse us?
20638He might take us anywhere-- how could we tell?
20638How do you feel?
20638How shall I tell you what we felt at the sight?
20638Is it possible that we will ever again be so happy?
20638No other dreams?
20638Now was n''t that like in a prison?
20638Oh, who cared if there was n''t enough to eat?
20638Something made me think of a description I had read of criminals being carried on long journeys in uncomfortable things-- like this?
20638The great question was, Would we be able to keep it exactly according to the host of rules to be obeyed?
20638The wheels and hoofs make a great noise; the wind is stronger, and says,"Do you hear the sea?"
20638They smiled at each other as if they meant to say,"I am having a good time; so are you, are n''t you?"
20638Were they seeking an assurance?
20638What else could I do with so much time and not even a book to read?
20638Where?
20638Which of us was?
20638Whirl, noise, dance, uproar-- will it last forever?
20638Who cared for anything in the whole world?
20638Why ca n''t papa come to us?
20638Why ca n''t we get off the hateful ship?
20638Why so many ceremonies at the landing?
20638how do you happen to be here?"
7090Are you quite sure the pattern is large enough?
7090Arithmetic right?
7090But how? 7090 Do you know which way to go?"
7090Do you mean the one with the rosebuds on her gown?
7090Has Miss Renestine come home?
7090How were the lessons today, Renestine?
7090Is not this solemn beauty? 7090 May I have your looking glass, then, Aunt Caroline?"
7090May I sit down?
7090Miss Jewel, Mr. Starr would like to be presented to you, may I bring him to you?
7090Mr. Starr, do you know of any experience more cruel than this parting of parents in Europe with their children to come to America? 7090 Oh, Mr. Starr, was it you who brought us out of the Wilderness and restored us to our families?
7090Well, dear, how are you getting on with the ball dress?
7090What has happened?
7090Where have I seen her before? 7090 You are not captured, are you, Jaffray?"
7090You are not going to back out, are you?
7090You mean about setting the negroes free?
7090Ai n''t she purty, Miss Tiny?
7090Aunt Caroline ca n''t cook and care any longer for the children too, so what was to be done?
7090Can you help me settle upon the place, time and occasion?"
7090Do you see the one I mean?
7090Has the baby been asleep a long time, Aunt Caroline?"
7090Her five children were to be lived for, of course, but how could she face the long years before her?
7090In his last moments he said to a friend:"What does it matter whether a man lives a little longer or not?
7090Jaffray, have you noticed how dainty the chintz furniture is and how well it goes with the walls?
7090Not ride in carriages and have pretty clothes and.learn to speak English?
7090Renestine, can not you come with the skirt and let me lay it in your trunk?
7090Shall we dance?"
7090Starr?"
7090The task was serious and exacting, she realized, but how to grasp its thousand details?
7090We have a common bond of sympathy, may I hope it means a tie of friendship?"
7090What you mean holden dat chile in yer lap and you fast ter sleep?
7090Will you tell me something of your life?
7090Yer heah?
7090You were not born here?"
57471Who will hang his head in blushes For the stains to toiling due? 57471 According to this logic, if all were workers and all producers-- what then? 57471 All the way my Saviour leads me, What have I to ask beside? 57471 And all this waste, to do what? 57471 And how can work be found for the artisans in the cities? 57471 And they, also, when the Saviour revealed Himself, hadburning hearts of love;"and did not our hearts burn with love also?
57471But will they provide an outlet for the working man''s commodities at colonial prices?
57471Can I doubt His tender mercy, Who through life has been my guide?
57471Can these be absorbed into the various trades?
57471Can they compete with the world with men''s present wages, and eight hours''labor?
57471How then can we compete with the world without we start fairly?
57471I landed with?
57471Is it patriotic?
57471Is it philanthropic?
57471Is it then a wise policy on the part of a paternal Government to unduly encourage the manufacture of wine in bonuses and viticultural colleges?
57471Is it, then, too much to ask that a few millions be spent in the cause of peace, to enable them to do battle with rugged nature?
57471Now, doubtless, the question will be asked by many situated as I was, and others,"Can I do the same?"
57471Strength?
57471The question then is, will Europeans grow these products?
57471They may have a rough time for a few years, and many ups and downs, but what of that?
57471To allay this?
57471To feed men?
57471To give health?
57471To warm?
57471We should rather begin at the bottom-- with men of low estate-- for, hath not God chosen such?
57471We were thankful, though, that we did not ship on board that ill- fated vessel; but ought we to attribute her loss to_ fate_?
57471Were all these good gifts ever intended to be worse than destroyed?
57471What are we then to do without this cheap labor?
57471What can be done in arid countries without water?
57471What would India, Egypt, Italy,& c., be without irrigation?
57471What would be the state of most countries without the markets and wealth of England?
57471Where, then, are the boasted millions of population to come from, which so many calculate upon?
57471Why is it?
57471Without these are cultivated, how can the population increase as it should?
57471became £ 8000?"
28693And how do you get the oysters?
28693And if we did, what of it?
28693And leaf der_ Mary Rebecca_?
28693Are you game, my lad?
28693But can you manage the boat alone?
28693But how can I get out of making a last raid?
28693But what are you going to do about his fishing for sturgeon? 28693 But where do you say we are?"
28693But why was he not hanged for murder?
28693Can it be they do n''t recognize us?
28693Did n''t I see you on the dock in Oakland the other day?
28693Did you notice that short, Mexican- looking chap?
28693How were we to know till we tried her?
28693I say, lad, is n''t it rather a novelty for the fish patrol to be taking to horseback?
28693I wonder how long it took to get the load?
28693Imagination?
28693In the name of reason and common sense, what is that? 28693 Is there any way I can speak to him?"
28693Let me take the boat out?
28693Mean?
28693Now will you head for the beach?
28693Now will you keep off?
28693S''pose you can tell your oysters wherever you see''em?
28693So he''s been complaining to you, has he?
28693To pay your half?
28693Well,he grunted,"what''s the matter?
28693Wha''fo''?
28693What d''ye mean, you yellow- faced heathen, lying here in a fairway without a horn a- going?
28693What d''ye want''em for?
28693What do we care?
28693What do you think, lad?
28693What for talkee talkee? 28693 What of der wind?"
28693When you see a thing, you''ve got to see it all around, or what''s the good of seeing it at all? 28693 Where do you say we are, Charley?"
28693Where''d you swipe the old tub?
28693Where''s the owner?
28693Who says the dagoes wo n''t win?
28693Wot is it?
28693Wot''r you growlin''about now?
28693Wot''s yer port?
28693Yer mighty wise, ai n''t ye?
28693You all- a right?
28693A fleeting expression of annoyance passed over the patrolman''s face, and then he said,"Yes?"
28693And why does he come here anyway, flaunting his law- breaking in our faces?
28693But if they pulled like mad, I wonder how our progress can be described?
28693But why not call the capture of Demetrios Contos the last?
28693House afire?"
28693In short, did we know of any sailors who would bring the yacht into Benicia?
28693Of all unmannerly craft did you ever see the like?"
28693Sabbe?"
28693So I say, Mr.---- What did you say your name was?"
28693Understand?"
28693Understand?"
28693We''ll save our laugh to the end, eh, lad?"
28693What do you say?"
28693What do you say?"
28693What do you want?"
28693What else can I do?"
28693What if he had done it merely to entice me ashore?
28693What if he has out only fifty feet?
28693What if it were Yellow Handkerchief?
28693What if this departure of Yellow Handkerchief''s were a sham?
28693What''ll we do with them, Charley?"
28693Will you lend a hand?"
50470Afraid of what?
50470And you?
50470Are we_ sure_ to meet them?
50470Are you afraid?
50470Both together?
50470But how are we to get there, brother?
50470Does a man pay extra to his servants?
50470Good Peter,said Queen Anne,"who are these?"
50470Governor Hunter, what of this?
50470Have you been to Schoharie? 50470 Have you returned, Heinrich?"
50470How are my brothers and sisters?
50470How much?
50470How will we make ourselves understood by them?
50470Is it cold there?
50470Is it for this that we have come so far?
50470Is there any danger?
50470Is this Schoharie?
50470It is coming very fast, is it not?
50470Might they have food and water for us?
50470O great King of Rivers,said she to the foremost Indian,"who are these your companions?"
50470Oh, sir, can we not go in to- day?
50470Schoharie?
50470Shall we meet storms like that?
50470Shall we see the Queen?
50470What are they?
50470What are you going to do now, Conrad?
50470What has become of it?
50470What is it, boy?
50470What is it, father?
50470What is it, lad?
50470What is the matter?
50470What is the matter?
50470What is this?
50470What will we do about the language of the savages?
50470When shall we see it again?
50470When will we start?
50470Where are we going?
50470Where do we go?
50470Where is Quagnant?
50470Where is father?
50470Where will they take us, father?
50470Who are you?
50470Who are you?
50470Why are they here? 50470 Why should any one molest people so poor as we are?"
50470Why start to- morrow?
50470Will our new home be near these kind Indians?
50470Will we be hungry?
50470But was it rescue?
50470Can you find your way thither?"
50470Could I speak to them?
50470Did you see our friends?"
50470Do you need any?"
50470Do you think the Germans could make tar?"
50470Do you wish to buy?"
50470Have you come, oh, fool, to wait also?"
50470He had counted his children over before he left the ship,--was separation to come so soon?
50470Is there no pine there?"
50470These-- his boys and girls-- what would befall them?
50470Was it possible that he meant to lead Conrad far away and desert him?
50470What did you find?
50470What does it mean?
50470What has befallen you?"
50470Where did they go?"
50470Why does he not come to take it?"
50470Will you be true to your brothers?"
50470Will you remember her counsels, lad?"
50470Would the Queen provide for them until they could sail?
50470Would there be ships enough to carry them all to the New World?
50470Would you like to enter on this strange apprenticeship?"
23264Ailwin, do you think we could get him over to the Red- hill? 23264 Already?"
23264And if I can not get there, is there one in the house?
23264And then I may plant some flowers upon his grave, may not I? 23264 And what do you think, my dears, of the life our Protestant brethren are leading now, in some parts of the world?"
23264And what next day?
23264And what were you to do, if you found anything more?
23264Are you all at the mercy of a boy like Roger Redfurn,asked the pastor,"so that you look as if a plague had come with this fresh breeze?"
23264Are you going to be ill, do you think, dear?
23264Are you now beginning to cry about that? 23264 Are you, indeed?"
23264But have you all got some too?
23264But the Red- hill,said Mildred,"what do you mean about the Red- hill?
23264But what is all this water? 23264 But when will it be over?
23264But where can we go? 23264 But wo n''t anybody send a boat for us?"
23264But wo n''t you tell us? 23264 But, Oliver, were we wrong to use the meal?
23264Can not we take care of her here till father comes home?
23264Can not you set down your pail, and help me to row?
23264Close by? 23264 Did you ever see the like?"
23264Did you hear him say that? 23264 Do you feel yourself warmer now, neighbour?"
23264Do you really think so?
23264Do you think a drop of cherry- brandy would warm you, neighbour?
23264Do you?
23264Have you heard the cow low, Roger?
23264He is not here on the hill, then, Roger?
23264Horn spoons and pewter drinking- mugs to his old red earthenware?
23264How can you talk so, Roger, and keep your anger so, when we are all so unhappy? 23264 How could a boy make a flood?"
23264How could you get this nice fish? 23264 How dared you settle upon my ground, to mock me with your fire and your supper?
23264How do I know that I shall find it again, the next time I look?
23264How long have I been asleep?
23264How often have I been to the bottom? 23264 How shall I get in?"
23264How should you?
23264How? 23264 How_ do_ they bear it all, then?"
23264I am sorry that you choose to lie here, hungry and cold, instead of..."What business have you in my island?
23264I can,said Oliver;"but what is Mildred to do?"
23264I do n''t mind that, very much,said Mildred,"but how do you think we are to get away, with this great river between us and home?"
23264I will go and call father, shall I?
23264If they are both dead, do you not think they are together now?
23264If they do n''t send a boat, and the flood goes on, what are we to do? 23264 Is that Nan?"
23264Is that for me?
23264Is the baby worse? 23264 Is there anything going forward just now which particularly encourages our enemies to attack us?"
23264May we use it? 23264 Oh, when?"
23264Shall we take him on the raft now? 23264 So that is the reason of this prodigious hurry, is it, my boy?
23264Then do not you think you and I could fetch off a good many things, while he watches Geordie on the grass? 23264 Then what makes you cry so, dear?
23264To be sure you did not let them float off, along with the kitchen things that got away through the wall?
23264To cook a supper?
23264Well, what of that?
23264What business has anybody in my island? 23264 What business have you to call him by his wrong name?--how is he ever to learn his name if people come calling him by the wrong one?
23264What can I do?
23264What do you mean by hundreds and thousands of years?
23264What do you mean by that?
23264What do you think he means?
23264What do you think we have found to eat?
23264What have we here?
23264What is that?
23264What is the use of guessing and guessing?
23264What shall we do if he comes?
23264What sort of things?
23264What was it they said to you, Oliver, as they were going off?
23264What will you do with it?
23264What''s the matter now, dear?
23264When? 23264 Where are they?"
23264Where is it?
23264Where? 23264 Who deserves it, if you do not, I should like to know?
23264Who gave you the gold?
23264Who wants to get to the hills? 23264 Why do n''t you call him Spy?"
23264Why, you do n''t think they are drowned?
23264Will not that do for to- night?
23264Will they come this way when they have done drawing the pond?
23264Would it be of any use if I were to go with you, and say it was all my fault?
23264Would you like some milk?
23264Yes, indeed, for who but you?
23264You have George safe?
23264You will do it again to- morrow, will not you, if he should be fretful?
23264Your alabaster things will change away for a watch; will not they? 23264 Your father can swim; and why does not he?
23264And do you think it would have been perverse in her not to run away with them?"
23264And is this dress anything like Ailwin''s cloak?
23264Are you afraid of the storm?
23264Are you alone here, Oliver?"
23264Are you now beginning to find that out, after all this time?"
23264Are you sure the flood is going down?"
23264But do remember that Mildred is only a little girl; and consider poor Geordie too; he is quite ill. You wo nt tease him?
23264But what shall we ever do about Roger?
23264Call him; will you?"
23264Can not Spy help?
23264Can not we help them?
23264Can not we keep still and rest to- day?"
23264Can not you defend yourselves against them?"
23264Can not you stay quietly to- day?"
23264Can you climb a tree?
23264Come, now, is not this a sign that we ought to make it up?"
23264Could you bear this, children?"
23264Did anybody notice it?
23264Did either Stephen or Nan wear their hair this way?
23264Did you ever see Geordie look sweeter?
23264Did you hear?"
23264Do n''t I see him?"
23264Do n''t you think Roger is ill?"
23264Do n''t you think so, Oliver?"
23264Do n''t you think the country- people in the hills would get out boats when they saw the flood spreading?"
23264Do n''t you think you hear him now?"
23264Do you believe that your cloak and stockings were sent in Nan Redfurn''s way, that she might take them?
23264Do you know where the tree was cut down, the other day?"
23264Do you see anything coming?
23264Do you suppose I shall sleep with that boy hid among the trees?
23264Eh?"
23264Get away-- will you?
23264Have you been running all the way from Lincoln spire?"
23264He half turned back, but turned again, saying--"Ca n''t you tell him I will come again by- and- by?
23264He whispered to Oliver,--"Mildred, and who else, my dear?
23264How can you talk so?
23264How could Mildred attend to this, when she was sure she was wanted to turn over the gypsum, and see what she could find?
23264How dare you think of such a shocking thing?"
23264How did it get there?"
23264How is poor Geordie?"
23264How should any boat live in such a flood as that?
23264How?"
23264I say, lad, can you think of anyway of making a fire?
23264If he should not sleep better than this at night, what should he do?
23264If so, what might not they look for next?
23264In a moment he was by her side, saying--"What is the matter, dear?
23264In this corner.--What is the matter, Oliver?
23264Is he awake?"
23264Is it about Geordie?"
23264Is it not Roger?"
23264Is it possible that you are all alive, after such a calamity as this?"
23264Is not that a pretty waterfall?
23264It was plain now that the fever had seized upon them; and where it would stop, who could tell?
23264Mildred, what have you been doing, that you are so out of breath?
23264Now, ca n''t you step in?"
23264Oliver, where is he?
23264Perhaps the pastor perceived this too, when he turned round, for he said--"What is the matter, children?
23264Pray what do you mean by that?"
23264Shall I get you a sup of cherry- brandy?"
23264Shall we ever get home again?"
23264She looked in her brother''s face, and said--"I wonder who this chest belonged to?"
23264She saw these things in a moment, but did not heed them till afterwards,--for, where was Oliver?
23264So mother is safe,--really?"
23264That will do,--wont it?
23264They had fallen; and who knew what had become of kind Pastor Dendel?
23264Was he thinking about that?"
23264We are not going there, where Roger is,--are we?"
23264We have got the gipsies upon us now; and what will become of my poultry?
23264What business has your garden in our carr?
23264What can have become of the Redfurns?
23264What could they want with a young tree, so well off as they were for drier fire- wood than it would make?
23264What do you see?"
23264What does it mean?"
23264What harm do you suppose will happen, Ailwin?
23264What have you done?"
23264What is he fit for?
23264What is this coming?"
23264What made you do so?
23264What makes you look so frightened?
23264What shall we do?"
23264What then?"
23264What was that heap of blue cloth?
23264What was that?
23264What was the matter with him just now, do you think?
23264What will they do next?"
23264What''s the matter now?"
23264When will it go away?"
23264When will these clouds have emptied themselves?
23264Where are you, Roger?
23264Where did you get it?"
23264Where is Roger?
23264Where is father''s old hat?
23264Where shall his grave be?"
23264Which of them do you think ought to be ashamed of tin cups?"
23264Which of these trees stands nearest to the nearest of yon upper windows?"
23264Who made this flood?"
23264Who should tell her that father was carried away into all those waters, without having spoken one word to us?"
23264Why does not he speak?"
23264Why, did you never hear of the plagues of Egypt?"
23264Why?"
23264Why?"
23264Will it ever run off again?
23264Will you do this, Ailwin?"
23264Will you not patiently resign your other little one?"
23264Wo n''t that be good?"
23264Would he?
23264Would not that make a tent, somehow?"
23264Your father--?"
23264cried Mildred, from the stairs.--"What is the matter with him, Ailwin?
17841''Ow''s Mr. Vanderlyn to find, then?
17841''Ow''s''e hever goin''to know w''ere we''ave moved to?
17841''Tear- ing? 17841 ''Yn''t I?"
17841''Yn''t got that, nyther,''ave yer?
17841A blow, Madame?
17841A ring? 17841 Ah, Anna, no; such thoughts are what they call, up at the park, the-- the-- what is it?
17841Ah; you have quarreled?
17841An''do n''t you never tyke no coals to''em that you do n''t tell abaht-- you''ear?
17841And do you think that such a love will ever come to me?
17841And he has never told you anything?
17841And that, Madame?
17841And you?
17841And, father, what shall I do then?
17841And, see again?
17841Anna, you love this man-- Herr Vanderlyn?
17841Anna,he demanded, in a voice that was not like his own,"what have you done?
17841Anna,he said, aghast,"what is there for her to know?
17841Another bride and groom?
17841Are you sure you are quite well?
17841As much? 17841 Bring it along?"
17841But is n''t she a corker, mother?
17841But that note from Anna?
17841But who, mine liebschen?
17841But, what is this?
17841Can one make love wait?
17841Cawn''t Hi do nothink for''er, sir?
17841Change the tickets, Anna? 17841 Confessed to what?"
17841Did he never go back to his home-- his native land-- to Germany, you know, to see his relatives?
17841Did no one ever visit you from Germany?
17841Did you hear that? 17841 Did you never ask him about that?"
17841Do when he speaks? 17841 Do you like it, father?"
17841Do you not see that this is torture? 17841 Does she sleep, still?"
17841Father,said Anna, curiously,"why do you pull down the blinds?"
17841Father,she asked presently,"why did you change the tickets?"
17841Firrred her? 17841 Firrred her?"
17841Forget you, father? 17841 Get_ in_ there, cawn''t yer, before hit comes quite hon?"
17841Got it all framed up,he said,"that Dutchy is to have the job, have you?"
17841Guilty of what?
17841Had you no friends?
17841Hard?
17841Hi, w''ere''s yer ticket?
17841Hin me roight hear?
17841Hin yer stawckin'', eh?
17841Ho, did''e?
17841How am I to know that these are genuine?
17841How in the world did you learn that I had come here? 17841 How shall you know?"
17841I teach?
17841I, impossible? 17841 I?
17841Is n''t he?
17841It is fine for you, up there, at the great house of Mrs. Vanderlyn, eh, Anna?
17841Leave our address for Herr Vanderlyn?
17841Like it? 17841 Little M''riarrr is against your laws?"
17841Love you? 17841 Madame will make the dear young people happy?"
17841Madame,said Herr Kreutzer gravely,"do you not think he has a right to his own life-- his happiness?"
17841May I tell my mother that you''ll come?
17841Mozart, possibly, or Grieg?
17841Much work is waiting, eh?
17841My dear Count,she pleaded,"wo n''t you reconsider, please?"
17841My dear sir,she said slowly, not from unwillingness to speak but to give emphasis,"what else can I think?
17841My family?
17841Of being the father of the dearest girl in all the world, who has promised to become my wife?
17841Of family? 17841 Off the notes, you mean?"
17841S''y, yer goin''ter be a nice sweet passenger to''ave hon board, now''yn''t yer?
17841Settled that you marry her?
17841Spell them words ag''in, Miss, wo n''t you?
17841Th''bloomink ship is standin''on''er bloody''ead, yn''t''er?
17841The daughter of this old musician? 17841 The gentleman from whom you ran away?"
17841The ring gone? 17841 Then Madame will yield?"
17841They what you call it? 17841 Those swine?
17841To you? 17841 Tyke me with yer, wo n''t yer, Miss?"
17841W''at would_ Hi_ want o''_ luggage_? 17841 W''at?
17841W''ere''d yer think Hi''d''ave it?
17841W''ere''s yer luggage?
17841W''y would n''t yer go with the toff and pl''y in ther big horchestra?
17841Wat? 17841 Well?"
17841Well?
17841Were you such friends?
17841What can you do?
17841What cops?
17841What did your father do, there?
17841What do they like best, my father?
17841What gentleman?
17841What have I to say? 17841 What is it that you mean?"
17841What is it? 17841 What is that, Madame?"
17841What is this, my Anna?
17841What kin yer play?
17841What must you think of me, my liebschen? 17841 What seems to be the trouble?"
17841What''s Herr Kreutzer got to do with it?
17841What, father?
17841When do you expect the cops?
17841Who is he, father?
17841Who is he? 17841 Who is there?"
17841Why do you look so frightened?
17841Why do you say such things?
17841Why is it lucky that I have not told him?
17841Why, then, did you come back to England?
17841Wo n''t she be took haback?
17841Worried?
17841Wot mykes yer think''e did?
17841Wot''s this? 17841 Would it please him, do you think, if I should show the daughter some attention?"
17841Yes, yes; have I not told you?
17841You Mr. Krootzer? 17841 You are afraid, my child?
17841You have something to confess? 17841 You have told him?"
17841You love her, eh?
17841You love him very, very much?
17841You mean the note about her going away? 17841 You see how much we''ve got to learn?"
17841You vould not want to leave her, M''riar?
17841You will wait here for me while I say goodbye to her?
17841You wish to see her? 17841 You''ll do it?"
17841_ Now_, mother,her son asked,"what have you to say?"
17841And when would that be safe?
17841And, if they were landed in two different places, how would the young man know just where to look for her?
17841And-- what would Anna do without him?
17841Anna was as pale as death as she replied:"I am afraid she has discovered--""Discovered?"
17841But do n''t you know some really_ good_ music?"
17841But hit cawn''t be long before she''ll be''ere, can it?"
17841But how, without revealing to her what he hid, could he be certain that she understood this?
17841But would she, now, be happy there with him, in all his poverty?
17841But you will let me see my Anna for a moment-- you will let me say goodbye to Anna?
17841CHAPTER VI"Has she not come then, yet, my child?"
17841Could it be possible that all Americans were of this ilk, as the disgruntled one maintained?
17841Could it be possible that she had learned how he had lied to her about the place in which he played?
17841Could leanness be against the law, too, here?
17841Could she, after all, be wrong?
17841Could the man be crazy?
17841Did she re''ly steal a di''mond?
17841Do n''t we father-- love her?"
17841Do n''t you see how necessary that is?
17841Do they still think the first- flute a gr- r- reat musician, father?"
17841Do you think it possible that it would sway me?
17841Doubtless it had been his poverty( and was his poverty not direct result of his incompetence?)
17841Drop it, now, you''ear?
17841Eh?"
17841Had she learned that it was not a park of elegant importance?
17841Has something happened at the house?"
17841He did not even stop for greetings, but said, immediately, to his mother:"Well, mother, what are you doing here?"
17841How came she with so valuable a jewel?
17841How shall I know when it has come to me?"
17841How shall you know?
17841How would he take the news that she had not been content to wait for him to bring to her his wonderful"brave gentleman?"
17841How would her artistic soul revolt if she should hear his flute-- his precious flute!--inquiring if anybody there had seen an Irishman named Kelly?
17841I-- you say that I am quite impossible?"
17841If they had not gone most ill do you imagine that I ever would have let my Anna go to you as your companion?
17841Is n''t she a picture?
17841Is that the reason why you honor my so humble home, Madame?"
17841M''riar, M''riar-- where have you gone, M''riar?"
17841Madame, do you know what you ask?"
17841May I ask you what you must explain?"
17841Mistake?
17841Must I say more?
17841Must he not love me?"
17841Must he wait on, for other weary years?
17841My poverty does not make you forget me-- eh?"
17841Now, of course, she will know all, but-- you will let me say goodbye to her?
17841Oh, my Anna-- what is there for her to know?
17841Princesses?"
17841Remember that, and tell me, Anna, what is there for Mrs. Vanderlyn to pardon?"
17841She is here, now, is she not?"
17841She is my soul-- my life-- all I have got-- all-- all--""But am I not giving up a great deal, too?
17841Stolen, mother?"
17841Suppose her father should not satisfy these stern examiners?
17841Tear- ing?''
17841Then, turning again to Anna:"You would not even give him up for me?"
17841Think Hi''m a hactress startin''hout hon tour?"
17841To give my little Anna up?"
17841Vanderlyn?"
17841W''y,''yn''t Hi halmost learnt me letters off from bundle carts an''''oardings?
17841Was not this, as much as ever any solo on the flute had been, a triumph of high art?
17841Was this to be the end of all his striving?
17841Weak spot, somewhere, in her, do n''t you see?
17841Well what matter?
17841Well, Madame, what of that?"
17841Were the high hopes and ambitions of his splendid youth to end, at length, behind the bars of a thief''s cell?
17841What could I do?
17841What could be the matter with the child?
17841What could the girl have done to be thus frightened by the coming of the woman whose employment she had left?
17841What could this mean?
17841What did it mean-- all of it?
17841What do you want?
17841What had the thing to do with her great agitation?
17841What have you done, Herr Kreutzer?"
17841What have you done?"
17841What have you-- decided, mother?"
17841What if she had been tempted and had yielded?
17841What is it fears you?"
17841What is it, Anna?"
17841What under heaven could it mean?
17841What was she?
17841What would happen to society if thieves were left unpunished?"
17841What would such freedom bring to her?
17841When would there be a better time than now in which to tell him her sweet secret?
17841Where did you get it, Anna?"
17841Who is who, mine liebschen?"
17841Who was she?
17841Who were they and what were they?
17841Why did he confess?"
17841Why had her father kept her, all her life, in such seclusion?
17841Why not?"
17841Why should I run from anybody?"
17841Why should I run, my Anna?
17841Why weep you?"
17841Wot is she, dippy?
17841Wot?
17841Would she still--"I-- I must go to prison?"
17841Would the authorities consider that ability to play a flute divinely was sufficient ground for thinking that a man could earn his way?
17841Would the woman never come to the great point-- would she never make the charge against his Anna definite and clear?
17841Yes?
17841You are sure it is the happiness, this time, that makes you cry?"
17841You hear, Madame?
17841You scrubbin''?
17841You think love is a game of solitaire?
17841You understand?
17841You will wait for me, out here?"
17841You would not punish any one for being truly loving, eh?"
17841You''ll surely come?"
17841_ Nichtwahr_?"
4376''Daniel Mulcahey Watson, what wud you like?'' 4376 ''Robert Roblin Watson, him as they call Bugsey, what would you like?''
4376Ai n''t he a peach?
4376All work is expression,Fra Elbertus says, so why may I not express myself in blueberry pie and tomato soup?
4376And are you not?
4376And now, Camilla,she said when she had gone all over the subject,"how can we awaken the musical sense in Daniel?
4376And the cause of her death?
4376And what was that?
4376And when Jim sees Camilla, what chance will you have, Nell?
4376And, Camilla,Jim said gravely,"I am really very irresponsible, you know Nellie Slater-- she is a pretty girl, is n''t she?"
4376Are the children all well? 4376 Are ye not well, ma''am?"
4376Are you Mr. Tom Motherwell?
4376Are you actually going away on the train to- night? 4376 Aw, do, Pat, wo n''t cher?"
4376But how about the doctor, why will he not speak to you?
4376But you do n''t groan, Tom, do you?
4376Camilla?
4376Can you play it?
4376Chockaluts?
4376D''ye think she''ll ever come to see us, ma?
4376Danny is it?
4376Did I frighten you? 4376 Did he pass, Nap?"
4376Did n''t we get off lucky?
4376Did ye find it?
4376Did you ask Tom Motherwell?
4376Did you make this cake, Nell?
4376Did you see the blue, blue sky, Daniel, and the white, white snow, and did you see the little snow- birds, whirling by like brown leaves?
4376Do n''t you go to church?
4376Do ye still think I took it?
4376Do you want hot water and sheets and carbolic?
4376Do you want me?
4376Doc,she cried indignantly,"have n''t I towld ye a dozen times not to say that?
4376Does it hurt her, though?
4376Does she know?
4376Does she think I stole her dirty money, me that has money o''me own-- a thief is it she takes me for? 4376 Father, did you put that money there?"
4376Father,Nellie said gravely,"just to save trouble among the boys, will you do it?"
4376Goin''to Sam Motherwell''s, are ye?
4376Good land, child, have I to tell you everything? 4376 Had n''t you better go up and bring the kid down, ma?"
4376Has n''t the lady eyes and understanding? 4376 Has she eyes like stars, lips like cherries, neck like a swan, and a laugh like a ripple of music?"
4376Her? 4376 How did you convince him?"
4376How is Pearl? 4376 How is the pink lady to- day, ma?"
4376How old is the baby, James?
4376How sweet of him, is n''t it, really?
4376I went out last night to be sure I had shut the henhouse door, and I heard him groanin'', and I said, knockin''on the door,''What''s wrong, Arthur?'' 4376 I wonder is her soul attune to the melodies of life, and will she feel the love vibrations of the ether?"
4376Intoxicants, do you mean?
4376Is Mrs. Motherwell as close as he is?
4376Is he very sweet and cunning James, and do you love him very much?
4376Is he worse?
4376Is it me ye want ma''am?
4376Is she awful pretty?
4376Is she tooberkler?
4376Is your father back yet, Tom?
4376It''s what?
4376Jim ai n''t in love, is he?
4376Mary,he said, taking her face between his hands,"are you going to marry Horace Clay?"
4376Miss Barner,he said, lifting his hat,"if Daniel Mulcahey Watson and I should ask you to come for a drive with us, I wonder what you would say?"
4376Mother,Tom said,"how do you suppose that money happened to be in that overcoat pocket?"
4376Mrs. Watson, will you come upstairs, please?
4376Nellie, will you dance with me?
4376Now I wonder who''s writing to him?
4376Oh Nap, did we let him go past?
4376Oh, Doc, what is it?
4376Oh, I know, minister''s son, is n''t that lovely? 4376 Oh, it''s you, is it?"
4376Patsey, where''s your gum?
4376Pearl,he said,"what is wrong with me?
4376Pearl,she said in a strained voice,"did you see a two- dollar bill any place?"
4376Peter is growing up too fast, do n''t you think so, mother? 4376 Pillow- shams?"
4376Say,Pearl began after a pause,"who does the cow over there with the horns bent down look like?
4376Say,he said, more cheerfully than he had yet spoken,"you have n''t been drinking, have you?"
4376See here,he sputtered,"what do you know about it?
4376So ye did, poor bye,said Pearlie, her wrath all gone,"and what will I tell yez about, my beauties?"
4376Story, is it?
4376To''come back''?
4376Tom, Tom Motherwell, what are you doing here?
4376Tom, can you take a parcel for me to town to- day?
4376Tom, how did you come here?
4376Tom,she said,"did you see Skinner in there?
4376Well, Mr. Motherwell,the minister said, holding out his hand cordially as he walked over to where Sam stood,"how did it happen?"
4376Well, well,he said to himself as he untied Chiniquy,"little Jimmy''s lost his tongue, I wonder why?"
4376Well, who do you suppose sent them? 4376 Well, why do you suppose Jim comes over here every second day to get you to write a note to that friend of yours?"
4376Were you here before, early in the evening?
4376Wha''''s a matter? 4376 What ails the child?"
4376What am I bleatin''for?
4376What are her chances do you think?
4376What are wife and child to the word of a knight?
4376What are you playin''?
4376What cher got?
4376What cher take fer butcher- ride, Pat?
4376What is it, Pearl?
4376What is it, Pearl?
4376What is it?
4376What right have I?
4376What time is it?
4376What was the trouble?
4376What''s Polly''s other name?
4376What''s gone wrong with you, old man?
4376What''s up, kid?
4376What''s wrong?
4376What?
4376What?
4376When you go downstairs will you kindly bring me up a small red notebook that you will find on the desk in the library?
4376When''s he goin''to begin?
4376Where is Polly?
4376Where will I run them to then, ma''am?
4376Where''s my overcoat mother?
4376Who cares for mats?
4376Who is Polly? 4376 Who is going to drive into town for Camilla?"
4376Who is this boy, Camilla?
4376Who were ye expectin''?
4376Who''ll keep house when ma goes to wash?
4376Who''ll keep the dandrew out of me hair?
4376Who''ll make me remember to spit on me warts?
4376Who? 4376 Why did n''t ye git here earlier?"
4376Why do you do all this for me, Pearl?
4376Why do you need to tell her?
4376Why, Pearlie Watson, what are you crying for?
4376Why?
4376Why?
4376Will you be anything else?
4376Will you bring Daniel to see me to- morrow, James?
4376Wo n''t that be great? 4376 Ye would n''t mind the dark if ye''ad yer mother''s''and, would ye, miss?"
4376Yes, and what did you say?
4376You boys need n''t quarrel over Camilla for Jim Russell is coming, and when Camilla sees him, what chance do you suppose you''ll have?
4376You did n''t happen to bring anything over with you, did you, for seasickness on the boat?
4376You goin''fer butcher- ride?
4376You have n''t heard of her having a fit, have you?
4376You''ll be what, Camilla? 4376 ''He shall have dominion from sea to sea,''but what of you? 4376 An operation for appendicitis, here, in this place, and by that young man, no older than himself perhaps? 4376 Are they all as purty as you?'' 4376 Are your clothes ready, though?
4376But dead or alive, flowers are all right for folks, ai n''t they, Jim?
4376But did I hear you say Tom Motherwell was coming?"
4376But it is n''t fair to pray in a race is it?
4376But they ca n''t mane me, Camilla, sure what did I do?"
4376CHAPTER IX THE LIVE WIRE"Who is this young gentleman or lady?"
4376Ca n''t we open that wee windy, ma''am?"
4376Can ye do it, Jim?"
4376Can ye go to town, Jim, in a hurry?"
4376Could this be what he meant by harsh proceedings?
4376Danny crept up on his mother''s knee"Ma, did she give ye pie?"
4376Dear little Danny, how is he?"
4376Dear, dear, is my tie on straight?
4376Did Big Sister carry him all the way?
4376Did she live here?"
4376Do n''t you see the horse wants a drink?"
4376Do n''t you think she is a remarkably beautiful girl, Grantley?"
4376Do ye mind how poor Jeremiah was let down into the mire and ye tuk care o''him, did n''t ye?
4376Do you pay that debt?"
4376Do you pray?"
4376Do you remember what the girl said in the letter,''Inasmuch as ye have done it unto the least of these my little ones, ye have done it unto Me?''
4376Do you see anything about him to make his mother cry?"
4376Do you sing?"
4376Does oo love Big Sister?"
4376Has n''t he a fine little nub of a nose?
4376Have n''t I towld ye time out of mind that a soft answer turns away wrath, and forbye makes them madder than anything ye could say to them?"
4376Have they got an organ here?"
4376He tried to run, but his knees failed him-- what about Arthur?
4376How do you know you have n''t got a gizzard?
4376How is a precious luvvy- duvvy?
4376How would you like to be ripped clean up the back?
4376I never knowed there were so many places inside a person to go wrong, did ye, ma?
4376Inside of John Watson''s home, in spite of November''s dullness, joy and gladness reigned, for was not Pearl coming home?
4376Is it not a pagan thought, that?
4376Is it?"
4376Is n''t that McSorley over again?
4376Is that so?"
4376Is that so?"
4376Is that them things she sowed out there?"
4376It was n''t you, was it?"
4376It was only this morn''s mornin''that he sez to me, sez he, as I was comin''away,''Ma, d''ye think she''ll give ye pie for your dinner?
4376It''s awful stylish for a little lad like Danny to be wearin''pants under his dresses, and now what about boots?
4376Jim Russell whispered to Camilla, as he passed near where she and Arthur sat,"Will you please come and help Nellie in the pantry?
4376Ma, what''s an oliver, d''ye think?"
4376Mary said tearfully,"if Pearlie goes away?"
4376Mr. Ducker inquired gently,"general breaking down of the system, I suppose?"
4376Mrs. Motherwell looked up apprehensively"What are you crying for, Pearl?"
4376Oh, is that you Pearl?
4376Pearl cried,"do n''t you want to hear what ye''r goin''for?
4376Pearl was disgusted with the professor and her thoughts fell into vulgar baseball slang:"Playin''to the grand stand, ai n''t ye?
4376Polly had died at daybreak-- didn''t the letter say?
4376Russell?''"
4376Sam, ca n''t we save that poor old woman from the poorhouse?
4376Say, doctor"--Pearlie''s face was troubled--"what do you think of his looks?
4376Say, how about a collar?"
4376She says,"Duz he want anyone to wash his back?"
4376She would n''t cut them, would she, miss?
4376Slowly his memory came back-- he had come for the doctor; and the doctor was to be back in an hour, and now it was nearly morning, did n''t she say?
4376So Wilford said again:"Aw, do, Pat, wo n''t cher?"
4376So- Bossie?"
4376Solomon, was n''t it, who said it was''they who tarry long at the wine''?
4376The call came in these words:"If Tom Snider can do it, why not me?"
4376The doctor went on:"''Who hath sorrow, who hath woe, who hath redness of eyes?''
4376The two little White girls always knew, but do you think they would tell?
4376Then the question arose, and for a while looked serious-- What was Danny to wear on his head?
4376Was it a dream?
4376Was it the faith of that decrepit old woman in that bare little room across the sea, mumbling to herself that God had not forgotten?
4376Was my new suit done?"
4376Was there ever such a turkey as that one?
4376Watson?"
4376We did n''t send the flowers, we have never done anything for anybody and we have plenty, plenty, and what is the good of it, Sam?
4376Well Danny, me man, how goes it?"
4376Well, why was n''t he at home?
4376What about the poppies?
4376What do you bet she has n''t opened it?"
4376What do you take me for anyway?"
4376What does she care who gets the milk?
4376What does she think I come for?"
4376What in the world was making Pearl cry?
4376What kin I do with ye?"
4376What makes you think he is sick?"
4376What need has a man of brains when he goes into politics?
4376What terrible pain is this that has me in its clutches?"
4376What the mischief were they saying?
4376What was he doing here?
4376What was the smell?
4376What will I tell about, honey?"
4376What would Mrs. Francis say to that?
4376What would you like to see in here?''
4376What''s her name?''
4376What''s the good of money if you ca n''t have a little fun with it?
4376What''s yours?"
4376When I was gittin''the tub for Arthur yesterday, and gittin''water het, she said,"What are you doin'', Pearl?"
4376When did you come?"
4376When he drove up to the kitchen door his mother looked up from her ironing and asked:"What kept you, Tom?"
4376Where''s this?"
4376Where''s yer sense, Doc?"
4376Who was it?"
4376Who would ever think of sending them?"
4376Why should Arthur be sick?
4376Why should Tom fall into evil ways?
4376Will you open the window upstairs for me?"
4376You are engaged are you not?"
4376and I said,''No, but what''s wrong?''
4376and Where does your lap go to when you stand up?
4376and he said,''Oh, I beg your pardon, Pearl, did I frighten you?''
4376and''Patrick Healy Watson, as is called Patsey, what is your choice?''
4376childer dear, d''ye think a foine lady like her would be bothered with the likes of us?
4376he cried angrily,"ai n''t that blamed thing paying yet?
45530''How now, Malvolio?''
45530''When I behold thy lovely face''Neath waves of burnished gold,''--what''s the rest of it, Les?
45530A little timid, huh?
45530And how am I going to get out of this?
45530And who may you be?
45530Any of that liniment, Les, that I use?
45530Are you deeply engaged in the affairs of a certain man here named Bill?
45530Are you hostess?
45530Are you hurt, Dal?
45530Are you sure that the purchase was completed?
45530Are you visiting at Steeple Rocks, Count Herschfeld?
45530Boston?
45530But why would they do that? 45530 Could n''t we buy some of those fish?
45530Could there be some other ledge along here, and someone on it?
45530Count Herschfeld?
45530Did either of you see it?
45530Did n''t I bring home the bacon myself?
45530Did you get thrown, Peggy?
45530Did you want our retreat discovered, Peggy?
45530Do n''t you really want to, Leslie?
45530Do volcanoes smoke tobacco?
45530Do you girls realize what has occurred? 45530 Do you know all about old- fashioned''log- raising,''Dal?"
45530Do you know what it is that Bill meant?
45530Do you know who any of them are?
45530Do you like your governess?
45530Do you suppose that Mr. Tudor will do anything?
45530Do you suppose that anything we_ have_ said here has been heard?
45530Do you suppose that it_ is_ the schooner and that the yacht has gone to meet it now? 45530 Does Mr. Ives know that you are in this with Bill?"
45530Does n''t it_ fill_ you, some way?
45530From what country?
45530Grim and mysterious, are n''t they, Sarita?
45530Has she made friends with the Count? 45530 Have we decided to go?"
45530Have you a light? 45530 Have you another ax, Dalton?"
45530Have you been waiting long? 45530 Have you seen anything of Peggy or Jack to- day?"
45530He told me that I might name it,Leslie replied,"did n''t you, Dal?"
45530Hello, Beth, getting ready to paint up the place?
45530Honestly, though, could we put out to sea in this boat?
45530How about little Peggy''s sake, Leslie?
45530How about our sleeping there, then? 45530 How about the Three Bears?"
45530How did it happen, Leslie, that you never came here?
45530How did you happen to get out here? 45530 How do we know that you own this land?
45530How do you do, Miss Secrest and--?
45530How old is he?
45530How would I know, sweet Peggy?
45530Hunting a quiet place, then?
45530I certainly heard enough about Dad, did n''t I?
45530I did n''t make any conditions, did I, Evan, in my letter? 45530 I do n''t blame him for taking that case, do you, Leslie?"
45530I know that Dal does not like Mr. Ives, from something he said; but why should n''t he like Peggy?
45530I missed the path, did n''t I?
45530I suppose that you will show him to some place not too far from the spring, Dal?
45530I thought of that, but I imagine that people have climbed all over there before, do n''t you?
45530I''m doing all the clearing up after supper, and you shall have a free day to- morrow, too, sha n''t she, Sarita?
45530If there is this much of a cave here, why_ might n''t_ there be one somewhere below? 45530 If you want to, but who could see us in this dark?"
45530Is it a fishing schooner, or_ the_ schooner, I wonder?
45530Is n''t this Steeple Rocks? 45530 Is there anyone besides Mr. Ives who feels inhospitable?"
45530Is your father here?
45530Is your father inside? 45530 It is safe enough with a flat boat, is n''t it?"
45530It is stronger way back here, do n''t you think so?
45530It would be a fine thing, would n''t it,he asked,"to hunt down Peggy''s step- father with a glass that he will probably pay for?"
45530It''s''what are the wild waves saying?'' 45530 Kin ye see very fur with them, Miss?"
45530Lemme show this to Bill?
45530May I ask your name?
45530More communications from the Ives?
45530My, Beth, you think of everything do n''t you? 45530 Neither did we what?"
45530No, Sarita, of course not, but what is it that Shakespeare says about opportunity?
45530Now, Leslie, are you going to play the part of_ l''enfant terrible_?
45530Oh, Mother, stop a minute, wo n''t you? 45530 Oh, he does, does he?"
45530Pardon me, madam, is this the Ives''headland, and are these what are called Steeple Rocks? 45530 Perhaps so, but would n''t I have heard a boat?"
45530Sarita, this is more like an Eyrie than ours, is n''t it? 45530 Say are ye a friend of them Secrests?
45530See this letter that I have for you? 45530 See?
45530Shall I tell Mother, Jack?
45530Shall we tell Peggy?
45530Shall you begin to cut down the trees that you have marked, Dal, now that you know our title is all right?
45530She cares a lot, does n''t she?
45530She is a nice little thing, is n''t she? 45530 So Bill''s got ye at last, has he?
45530So, if your brother agrees, will you not consent? 45530 Sure enough, who knows?"
45530Sure you have, but what will Beth think? 45530 That all right?"
45530That so?
45530That sounds fine, but are you not building near your''lake''?
45530The last thing he said to me was''Ca n''t you let a guy go to bed?'' 45530 Too fine a morning to waste this way, is n''t it?''"
45530Want to get out?
45530Was that what it was? 45530 We have neighbors over in that direction, then?"
45530Well, excuse me, sir, would you prefer to ask your questions of my father? 45530 Well, is n''t that whom you send for when anything is out of fix?"
45530Well,Peggy continued, answering their thought,"could n''t I_ learn_?"
45530What are you folks doing here?
45530What became of my horse?
45530What brilliant idea have you now, Sarita? 45530 What do you mean, Dal,--stay_ alone_, or no school for any of us?"
45530What do you suppose he meant, Dal?
45530What do you think we ought to do about it, Miss Peggy?
45530What does he do?
45530What else could it be?
45530What harm could we do here? 45530 What has the head boss done,"grinned Dalton,"that she is willing to confess to a mere underling?"
45530What is his business, Peggy?
45530What is the matter with him?
45530What is the matter with my taking a hand in this?
45530What should we do without our Peggy?
45530What would a triumvirate of girls be?
45530What would it be called Pirates''Cove for,asked Leslie,"if no pirates ever went there?
45530What ye doin''yourself?
45530What''re you doing?
45530What''s Beth been up to?
45530What''s that sign up there?
45530What''s that?
45530What''s the matter with Sarita?
45530What''s the matter with''em?
45530What?
45530What_ is_ the matter with me, anyhow?
45530When shall we have the first meeting of the''triumvirate''?
45530Where do they come from?
45530Where is the deed?
45530Where is your mother, Miss Peggy?
45530Who knows?
45530Who''s been sitting in_ my_ chair?
45530Who, then, is the executor of your estate?
45530Whoever heard of a hole in a Cove?
45530Why ca n''t I leave in the daytime if you can?
45530Why is that strange?
45530Why should he want us to go away, Peggy?
45530Why, it''s the Eyrie crowd, is n''t it?
45530Will they want you after this?
45530Wot''s the matter? 45530 Would you consider finding out for me, if I should take you into my employ without interfering with your work for Bill?
45530Yes, it is, Les, for anybody that wants to be in touch with civilization, but who wants to be for the summer?
45530You are sure that it is smuggling, Dal?
45530You do n''t suppose, Dal, that they could think us spying?
45530You do n''t want to see anybody, do you, Beth? 45530 You''re going to make enough money to give up fishing by that time, are n''t you?"
45530Your mother would n''t be surprised to see Bill there,--not very, would she, Peggy?
45530_ Was_ they any message fer him?
45530_ What_ have you been suspecting, Jack?
45530And why should Dad let him hide there?
45530Any of yer folks sick?"
45530Anything to report?"
45530Are n''t you the man who runs a lot of the fishing around here?"
45530Are there any parties around here from whom I may need to protect myself?"
45530Are you sure that you are whole?"
45530Are you the mayor of the village?"
45530Beth turned to the women and inquired,"New York?"
45530But Leslie and Sarita are not''opposing''Mr. Ives exactly, are they?"
45530But now Jack was offering to help the ladies out of the boat"What are you going to do now?"
45530But what has happened to change you about going out in the boat?
45530But what other plan was there in which they were probably concerned?
45530But would it?
45530CHAPTER IX THE FIRST TREE FALLS"Dal, are you sure that we ought to do this?"
45530Ca n''t you continue to come here instead?
45530Ca n''t you?"
45530Can I count on you not to betray me?"
45530Can such things be purchased near you?
45530Can that be done?"
45530Can we do anything for you this morning?"
45530Can you meet that?"
45530Could Jack and Peggy keep their knowledge from Mr. Ives and that household of suspicious foreign servants?
45530Could he be connected with rum- running, do you suppose?"
45530Could n''t you see the little lookout window from the bay?"
45530Dal wants you to see the place, do n''t you Dal?"
45530Dal, please help us with the cots, and did you think what a fine dresser that big box will make, girls?
45530Did n''t I_ kill_ you, falling on you that way?
45530Did n''t Peggy relate what he said about disliking the''intimacy''with us?"
45530Did n''t the pioneers always help each other?"
45530Did n''t you kind of like her?"
45530Did n''t you rescue, me from a-- stony grave?
45530Did you hear him smashing through the woods?"
45530Did you honestly_ buy_ that mirror in the store by the station?
45530Did you say that a schooner was expected about the twenty- eighth?"
45530Did you say that you have your outfit ready?
45530Did you see that boat come out of the Cove?"
45530Do n''t I look grown up?"
45530Do n''t you smell cigar smoke, girls?"
45530Do n''t you suppose that he could even get the records fixed up if he wanted to?"
45530Do n''t you want to go with us?"
45530Do ye mind lettin''me look through''em?"
45530Do you know him?"
45530Do you know what I''m going to do, Beth?"
45530Do you know, Peggy, why he thinks he owns this land?"
45530Do you like her mother?"
45530Do you mind?"
45530Do you remember Mrs. Peacock?
45530Do you remember, Sarita, how those gulls the other day were floating near that place?
45530Do you suppose that Beth would go anywhere with you along and no liniment?"
45530Does he want all this woods and country about the bay to himself?"
45530Does n''t the whole mass make you think of the cathedrals,--the cathedrals that you and I are going to see some day, Leslie?"
45530Have n''t you very much to live on, either?"
45530Have you any information about the schooner that is bringing in the immigrants?"
45530Have you any way of defending yourself?
45530Have you built your Eyrie, then, or started it?"
45530Have you got a boat?"
45530Have you had trouble?"
45530Have you seen the schooner?"
45530He could n''t have heard the chopping clear from Steeple Rocks, could he?"
45530He felt like adding,"any objections?"
45530He made little comment at first and the impatient Peggy urged him, saying,"Well, Jack, why do n''t you go''up in the air''about it?"
45530He was not very responsive and one"How do you do, Miss?"
45530Her head was on Leslie''s shoulder, but she was startled awake when Peggy clutched Leslie and whispered,"Oh, who is this?
45530How about these woods and the places around here,--are they safe for my sisters and our friend?"
45530How are the village people about talking to strangers?
45530How did you know?"
45530How do I make up as an English lord, Bill?"
45530How do you account for that, Leslie?"
45530How do you like lobster and shrimps, Beth?"
45530How would a girls''camp strike you, and I might have a few boys somewhere?"
45530I offered him a bunk with me,--you would n''t mind, would you, Les?"
45530I s''pose everybody in town knows--""Say, wot was it about?
45530I understand that your father is not living?"
45530I was going to watch to see where Bill came out, were n''t you?"
45530I_ was_ quite a performer, was n''t I?
45530If Mr. Marsh ca n''t get away, why could n''t they put the youngsters in the old Ford and drive through?"
45530If it were Mother that wanted it, I could understand, but what does Dad care whether I speak French or not?"
45530If you are a writer, I suppose that you want a quiet spot?"
45530Is he afraid of somebody?
45530Is he any coast guard feller?"
45530Is it going to be bad weather?"
45530Is n''t it queer?
45530Is n''t that funny?
45530It is not very long till the twenty- eighth, is it, Dal?"
45530It is too bad, but why can you not look up a camp at some other place upon the coast?
45530It looks as if the secret of Steeple Rocks were nearly ours, Sarita, does n''t it?"
45530It will be all right if I escape to the Eyrie, will it?"
45530It will be all right with you, Bill, wo n''t it?
45530Ives?"
45530Just what is it that Dad is doing?"
45530Let''s see, what''s that sweet poem?
45530Mercy, what''s that?"
45530Morgan?"
45530Mr. Ives''appearance?"
45530Now will you act for me?"
45530One of Bill''s spies?"
45530Patriotism?
45530Perhaps Beth will remember it, and I can ask her casually,''by the way, Beth, do you remember,''and so forth?"
45530Promised Bill and Mr. Ives to leave these shores?"
45530Say, what did we do with those towels?
45530See?"
45530Shall I tell Jack to light the lights outside?"
45530Shall we boil it before drinking?"
45530She liked the appearance of the gentlemanly stranger, but would it do to offer him a place to camp in their woods?
45530She was about to say something, when to the girls''surprise they heard an exclamation,"What is that?"
45530So this is Leslie?"
45530Suppose he asks me about this?"
45530Sure he''s a writer fellow all right?"
45530Sure you can carry it off so that Bill will not suspect?
45530That''s yer''nishiation, did ye know it?"
45530The man was almost fascinating when he smiled in this persuasive way, Sarita was thinking, but why so suave and urgent?
45530Then that forbidding old cliff is interesting anyway, do n''t you think so?"
45530There does n''t seem to be anything to do, Beth,--do you care if I go to hunt Sarita?"
45530They certainly would not take Peggy and Mrs. Ives, would they?
45530They could scarcely expect her to help them, could they?
45530Tudor?"
45530Tudor?"
45530Turned out to be Ives''daughter?"
45530Want a little pay in advance?"
45530Want my flashlight, Dal?"
45530Want to try it?"
45530Was he there when your mother sent word for us to come?"
45530Was something to happen to them before that time?
45530Was the outdoor life making her think less of the"welfare of the children?"
45530Were they aliens properly coming in under the quota allowed by the government?
45530Were we?"
45530What could it mean?
45530What do you expect?
45530What do you think, Leslie?"
45530What do you think, Sarita?"
45530What do you think, girls?"
45530What do you think?
45530What else did he know?
45530What is it, Peggy?"
45530What is the matter?
45530What more is there to do, Beth?"
45530What ought she to do about telling her mother?
45530What ought to be done now?
45530What possessed us?
45530What sort of a chap is Tom Carey?"
45530What was it beside the blanket discussion?"
45530What was scene number one?
45530What was the girl doing?
45530What wuz ye lookin''fur?
45530What''s the difference?
45530What-- are you hurt?"
45530When did you purchase the land to which you refer?"
45530When we_ have_ a Pirates''Cove right at our door, so to speak, why not get some good of it?"
45530Where are the clothes you traveled in?
45530Where are the rest of those linen napkins?
45530Where do you suppose it comes from?"
45530Where have you been, Peggy?
45530Where is Sarita?"
45530Where is Sarita?"
45530Where is your horse?"
45530Where shall I find your brother?"
45530Where''s Beth?"
45530Who could help being happy here?
45530Who in the world could he be?
45530Who was that beau, Beth, that wrote about your''waves of burnished gold''?"
45530Why did n''t you tell me?"
45530Why not tell her now?"
45530Why should this man hide away?
45530Why, Mother, why could n''t she tutor me?
45530Will they throw me out?"
45530Will you be afraid?"
45530Will you be ready to take her back in the launch when we come down?"
45530Will you go back there now with me?
45530Wot''e ye doin''here?"
45530Would Mr. Tudor tell?
45530Would it come off?
45530Would n''t that be fun?"
45530Would n''t we look great to a grand duchess, in this rig, for instance?"
45530Would to- morrow morning be too soon?
45530You are going to keep your launch inside the bay, are n''t you?"
45530You got it fixed with Ives about yerself?"
45530You have had a hard enough time to earn our income, and if I slash around and spend all our principal, you''ll be thinking''What''s the use?''
45530You noticed that he carried his little typewriter case, did n''t you?"
45530You wo n''t be afraid without me, will you, girls?"
45530Your report will probably be accepted, will it not?"
45530[ Illustration: Map of Steeple Rocks]"What great thoughts are you thinking Dal?"
45530_ Are_ you happy, Beth?"
45530she cried,"Going to tell Beth, Dal?"
60099''Ow is a man to keep''is self- respect?
60099After all,she said,"hurting this little man would n''t bring mamma her pink roses, would it, dear?"
60099Ai n''t it cold?
60099Ai n''t sugar high?
60099Ai n''t that fierce?
60099Ai n''t that grand?
60099An''have ice- cream?
60099And now about you?
60099And why should you be,Norah had answered,"with everything in the world that money can buy?"
60099And will yuh stay fer dinner?
60099And,said Father McGowan,"you have come to me because you are temporarily embarrassed for funds?"
60099Annette,said a girl from across the room,"how are you getting on?
60099Annie,she- said at last,"ai n''t they lovely?"
60099Any one coming to dinner?
60099Are they well around you?
60099Are you an upholder of the green velvet''throw''on the parlour organ, Miss Madden?
60099Are you one of_ us_?
60099Are you still set on this working business? 60099 Are you warmly enough dressed?"
60099Are you well, Father McGowan- dear?
60099But she''s Cecilia''s best friend,objected Stuyvesant,"and why would she do anything to hurt her?"
60099C- could I have a sundae?
60099C."Well?
60099Can I stay and talk?
60099Cecilia,said Marjory,"_ were_ you engaged to Tommy Dixon?"
60099Cecilia?
60099Celie,he said,"you was n''t sweet on that young Twombly?
60099Celie,said Jeremiah,"what_ has_ this fellow did to the potatoes?
60099Come up to your room to- night?
60099Could n''t you see how dear and all that kind of thing she was?
60099Darlin''?
60099Dear,she said,"do you think I''d love you less, for-- for loving some one else?
60099Dearest Keefer Stuyvesant,she whispered shakily,"whose tears are these?
60099Dearest,said Cecilia,"you would not want him punished, would you?
60099Did you tell Mrs. De Pui?
60099Did-- did you collect girls''photographs?
60099Do n''t you want some new frills, or something?
60099Do n''t you want to get in cooler things?
60099Do n''t you want to smoke?
60099Do you want me to like him?
60099Do yuh feel_ some_ better?
60099Doctor Van Dorn?
60099Does he get crushes?
60099Does he play tennis?
60099Does n''t she care for you?
60099Does she still faint over it?
60099Does_ he_ set and study much?
60099Father McGowan,said Cecilia,"shall I ever be allowed to forget my inferiority to the most?
60099Father McGowan,she whispered,"oh, Father McGowan-_dear_, where are you?"
60099Good little woman?
60099Has n''t Stuyvesant a huge fortune?
60099Has she been a good friend to you?
60099Has the doctor been here?
60099Have I seemed like a kid to you?
60099Have you a patent protection on those bricks?
60099Have you come to tell me to be a good girl at the swell school?
60099He ai n''t? 60099 He ai n''t?"
60099Hot toddy?
60099How are you going to give it?
60099How are you, dear?
60099How can I help him?
60099How could you ever dislike her, Annette?
60099How did Mr. Twombly happen to come?
60099How did the girls treat her?
60099How did you know?
60099How do you do?
60099How do you take your tea?
60099How is your sister?
60099How long were you there?
60099How old are you, John?
60099How yuh feel, honey boy?
60099How''d do?
60099How''re yuh?
60099How''s she?
60099How''s the pain?
60099How''s your father?
60099How_ is_ he?
60099Huh?
60099I beg pardon?
60099I do n''t see how even a set of simpering, half- witted, idiotic, jealous girls could_ help_ seeing----"So you''re in love with her?
60099I hope you do me?
60099I judge it was dusty?
60099I see what you are going to destroy, but what are you going to put in their places? 60099 I was afraid you was frettin''over him,"said Jeremiah;"you was n''t?"
60099I wonder what I shall wear?
60099I would n''t?
60099I''d like to know why not?
60099In time you may even elevate your lorgnette and ask coldly,''Who_ is_ she?''
60099Is he your gent''man friend?
60099Is he_ crazy_?
60099Is it as bad as that?
60099Is n''t it ennobling, and broadening, and all that kind of thing?
60099Is n''t it utterly_ hope_less?
60099Is n''t that almost too beautiful?
60099Is_ that_ why you came to me?
60099John dear,said Cecilia,"_ are_ you sick?"
60099John, dear?
60099Kept him in the backyard or in the cellar, it would be better?
60099Look here, Stuyv,he said,"_ did_ you say that?"
60099Look here, Stuyv,he said,"is this a bluff?
60099Look here,said John seriously,"did you go through that period?"
60099Mary,he whispered,"what makes her look like she wants to cry?"
60099May I, Miss Cecilia, or the doctor? 60099 Miss Cecilia, may I introduce Doctor Holt?
60099Mister, will yuh please attend to this here baggage?
60099Mrs.,he said,"how_ is_ he?"
60099My_ dear_,said another,"_ have_ you seen the boy?
60099Name?
60099Norah,said Cecilia,"am I-- am I what you''d call pretty?"
60099Norah,said Cecilia,"which is my prettiest dress?"
60099Norah,she said,"you will be very good to Johnny and paw?
60099Now ai n''t it?
60099Now that you are awake,said Cecilia,"what do you think of those near- men you''ve been introducing me to all summer?"
60099Now what''s he doing?
60099Of course,he said,"but how''d you know?"
60099Oh, yes,said Cecilia,"are n''t they fearful?
60099Oh,she said,"I thought it was John, but-- but you wanted to see me?"
60099Oh,--the Gov''ner?
60099Once only did he pass my way''When wilt Thou come again? 60099 One of your friends?"
60099Pardon?
60099Perhaps to- morrow you''ll feel differently?
60099Please do n''t tell her we were watching her, will you, John?
60099So you saw a man climbing up the grape arbor?
60099Sure? 60099 Sure?"
60099Thank you, dear,said Cecilia, and then:"Josephine, which is my most pretty dress?"
60099That dress now,he said,"ai n''t it kind of plain?
60099That was a jolt--he said shortly,"these roads,--did it jar you?"
60099The Higgenmeyers are dear, are n''t they?
60099The small Saint Cecilia does n''t, does she? 60099 Then we''ll go riding?"
60099Twombly responsible?
60099Um?
60099Want me?
60099Want to smoke?
60099Was he good looking?
60099Was yuh lookin''fer me, sir?
60099Well, old woman,he said loudly,"how yuh feelin'', better?"
60099Well, young man,he, said,"speeding?"
60099Well?
60099Well?
60099Well?
60099Well?
60099Well?
60099Well?
60099Wh- what have you been doing since I saw you?
60099What are you going to do with it?
60099What are you laughing at?
60099What colour are they?
60099What else am I here for?
60099What else did she say?
60099What fer?
60099What is a priest to do,asked Father McGowan,"when all his inclinations are to kiss a young lady''s hand?"
60099What is it?
60099What is the difference?
60099What is the matter with that woman?
60099What is this?
60099What say?
60099What was the boy''s name, Cecilia?
60099What was the matter with him?
60099What''s his name?
60099What''s in that box?
60099What''s in this box?
60099What''s your name, please?
60099What''s your name?
60099What''s-- that?
60099What?
60099What?
60099What?
60099Whatcha go for?
60099Whatud he say?
60099When did you break it off?
60099Where is he now?
60099Where is the doctor?
60099Where you going to college?
60099Where yuh goin''?
60099Where''s Father McGowan?
60099Where''s your necklace?
60099Which is my very prettiest dress?
60099Who is Norah?
60099Who shall I tell_ her_ they''re from?
60099Who''s the girl who dances like a duck with the rheumatism?
60099Who? 60099 Who?"
60099Why did n''t you help me?
60099Why did n''t you tell him who you were?
60099Why does n''t he help then? 60099 Why is n''t she here?
60099Why not?
60099Why should I? 60099 Will you forgive me, little Saint Sebastian?"
60099Will you_ please_ give me the next?
60099Will yuh, now?
60099Will-- will yuh bless the toad?
60099Wo n''t he be thirsty when he sniffs my lemonade?
60099Would it help to tell?
60099Would you kind of help me keep interested?
60099Would you like to stop?
60099Yes, John?
60099Yes?
60099Yes?
60099You are n''t still doing that?
60099You did n''t use to cry much, did you, dear child?
60099You do n''t mind?
60099You give her that?
60099You know what Stephen Leacock said about intellectual honesty?
60099You like to have pretty things, do n''t you?
60099You mashed on her too?
60099You prefer a man who is slippery both inside and out?
60099You say it''s an evidence of_ youth_ to get drunk?
60099You will come with me?
60099You will help him again?
60099You will help him?
60099You''ll stay? 60099 You''ll write me and tell me how,--how you all are?"
60099Your father?
60099Your sister cared for him, did n''t she?
60099Yuh ai n''t, are yuh?
60099Yuh think so, Celie?
60099_ Ai n''t_ she gettin''fine?
60099_ Ai n''t_ she learnin''quick? 60099 _ Ca n''t_ you help me?"
60099_ Ca n''t_ you?
60099_ How_ did you know?
60099_ Now_ what?
60099_ She_ is n''t going with us?
60099( It is n''t interesting, is it?)"
60099Ai n''t being kind being a lady?"
60099Ai n''t it pretty?
60099Ai n''t she purty?
60099Ai n''t she, right along?
60099Am I going to be a sentimental old maid, Father McGowan- dear?"
60099An''what can I do?
60099And Cecilia?
60099And it was not Marjory after all,--well, would n''t he be the happiest fellow on earth?
60099And,--is there any punishment more cruel than life?"
60099Are n''t her legs_ beautiful_?
60099Are n''t you going to look at your flowers?
60099Are you glad I''m going to college?"
60099Awfully good to her.... Had her life, his,--ever been as dreadful as that flash?
60099Bernard Shaw?
60099Bully, are n''t they?"
60099But have you saw the one I give her?
60099But you do, do n''t you?"
60099But,--what''s the use of saying all this?
60099But,--you_ will_ give me a chance?"
60099By the white wall?"
60099CHAPTER XI ACCEPTANCE"Celie, be yuh happy?"
60099CHAPTER XIV PINK"You are an advocate of gum- chewing?"
60099CHAPTER XIX SPRING"What are_ you_ doing here?"
60099Ca n''t we sit on this wall?
60099Can I?
60099Cecilia looked impressed and murmured,"Really?"
60099Cecilia wondered about her hat, or perhaps her petticoat hung out below her skirt?
60099Cecilia wondered vaguely if it could n''t be repaired and shone up?
60099Cecilia-- dear?"
60099Could you find us some?"
60099Dearest,_ where_ have you gone, and why?"
60099Did I tell yuh about the bath- tub?"
60099Did n''t you love the whole world more because of mamma?
60099Do n''t that count for nothing?
60099Do n''t you like''em fancied up with ruffles and lace and stuff?"
60099Do n''t you want no coffee?"
60099Doing what?"
60099Drat him, is he_ crazy_?"
60099Ever hear it?"
60099For the good of this Madden man''s soul you should help him to be truthful, not to so belittle his nature by----""You''re worried about his soul?"
60099Gimme the salt, will you?"
60099Have I_ any_ chance?"
60099Have you a match?"
60099Have you misunderstood what I thought?"
60099He gulped convulsively and almost yelled:"Great night, is n''t it?"
60099He looked on her, frowning deeply, then said with an unconcealed irritation showing in his voice:"Will you at least take him my card?"
60099He met sympathy in some quarters, curt refusals in others, and worst of all he sometimes met:"Cancer of the stomach?
60099He wondered what he was driving at anyway?
60099He wondered with dull misery if all his years would be full of this"where is the rest of me?"
60099Hev I got ta steal again?''
60099His picture?
60099How he_ did_ love----"And then Mrs. Higgenmeyer had come along and called loudly of the night:"Purty night, ai n''t it?"
60099How''s Jacky darling?"
60099How''s John?"
60099How''s Siberia to- day?"
60099I am not bitter, am I, Norah?"
60099I did, but what kin yuh do?
60099I know they''re unusual, now are n''t they, Annette?"
60099I sez''What kin I do?
60099I wonder how he is?"
60099I''ll stop for you in a moment, that is, if you''ll come?"
60099If the doctor had said no one but Van Dorn could help her, Lord, what chance had they?
60099If you''d help me keep interested,--will you?"
60099Is n''t it splendidly romantic?"
60099Is n''t that enough to make any one happy?"
60099Is she still coughing, and is she drinking the milk I send?"
60099Is the durn fool blind?
60099It is n''t a nice name, is it, Evangeline Cecilia?"
60099It wo n''t work,''an''I''d say,''Is it going to rain, Father McGowan?''
60099It''s all so relative, is n''t it?
60099John?"
60099Life''s question mark,--Fate''s smile,--or God''s hand?
60099Look here, John, whatcha think of that shaft?
60099Norah, you use the blue glass butter dish, wo n''t you?"
60099Not Lady Grenville- Bowers?"
60099Now ai n''t it purty?"
60099Now do you want a drink?
60099Oh, dear child, is n''t that beautiful too?"
60099One can always find enjoyment when looking for it, ca n''t one?
60099PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA TO MY DEAR MOTHER SOURCE OF MY INNER PINK ROSES CONTENTS CHAPTER I Where Is Gawd?
60099Perhaps John had made the supreme effort and had managed to speak those few words?
60099See that he does no harm, but do n''t do more,''an''I sez,''It''s snowin''now, ai n''t it?''
60099Send another car for her, or take her along?"
60099Shall I always feel this way?"
60099Shall I ask one of the Welsh twins?
60099She looked awfully cold, and she said,''May I ask where you have been, Cecilia?''
60099She remembered John''s sneer and his question:"Been shopping at the''Five and Ten''?"
60099She turned white as----""Did she say that?"
60099She wondered if this Browning person could have made a success at manufacturing bricks?
60099She wondered whether she would ever get the chance to thank that Mr. Keefer Stuyvesant Twombly for those lovely flowers?
60099She would not lie, but if he cared to misunderstand how could she, Marjory, help that?
60099She''s a wonder; why, in school----"John broke off, another thought interrupting:"Why did n''t you let me jolly her about your picture?"
60099So her dear father and the fact that she was born in poverty made her an outcast?
60099Sometimes she wondered if K. Stuyvesant Twombly were living, and if so, where?
60099The Maddens own all this?
60099The blue glass butter dish had once seemed so very lovely...."Are they giving me anything to take your place?"
60099The mystery echoed...."Father McGowan- dear,"she whispered,"where_ are_ you?
60099There was a longer interval, then a sharp"What?"
60099There was an interval then the doctor heard him say:"Your prettiest dress?
60099They did not match, but why be particular?
60099They exchanged the usual formalities, then Father McGowan said:"Well?"
60099To be as sure of Stuyv''s always closeness,--to have Cecilia so cared for...."Ca n''t you let her out a little?"
60099Understand?"
60099Want a cooky, dearie?"
60099Were n''t they_ ever_ coming?
60099What are you going to wear to- night?"
60099What could it be?
60099What did I say that for?
60099What made me say it?
60099What''s that?"
60099What''s the matter with you?"
60099What''s the name of it?"
60099What''s wrong with you?"
60099When Johnny wants paw to wear collars all the time, you take him out and give him doughnuts to divert him, will yuh?"
60099Where did you meet him,_ dear_?"
60099Where''ll I meet you?"
60099Where''s his companion?
60099Where''s your handkerchief?
60099Who said that, Cecilia?
60099Who was that who passed us?
60099Whose is it?
60099Why do n''t he come down here an''love?"
60099Why does he do it?
60099Why were you so stiff- necked about my help, Annette?
60099Why?"
60099Will you smoke?"
60099Will you walk back with me?"
60099Wo n''t they be_ killing_?"
60099Wo n''t you come have a piece of pie now?
60099Wo n''t yuh now?"
60099Would n''t that be nice?"
60099Would your sister mind?''
60099You are Cecilia?"
60099You did mention that, did n''t you?"
60099You do n''t mean a long trip?"
60099You do n''t mind?"
60099You know Father Tabb''s poem about it?"
60099You know how foolish duty may be at nineteen?
60099You read those articles?"
60099You see, of course, that the other girls''advantages have not been yours?"
60099You want me to be happy?"
60099You will help me?
60099You will, wo n''t you?"
60099You will?
60099You wo n''t worry?
60099You''ll bless it?
60099You''ll come to my house, too?"
60099You''ll try to get him through this smartness?"
60099You-- you do n''t read that kind of stuff, do you?"
60099You_ was n''t_?"
60099Your influence is wonderful with me.... How do you like being an''Influence''?
60099Yours or mine?"
60099_ Ai n''t_ he cute, now?"
60099_ Ai n''t_ he in?"
60099_ Ai n''t_ it cute?"
60099_ Do n''t_ she sparkle?"
60099_ Have_ you ever seen her father?"
60099_ How_ can we be apart when I feel like this?"
60099_ Why_ not?
60099ai n''t that it?"
60099and of his gasping,"John,--you''d be willing?"
60099asked Annette;"turned you down?"
60099came in a rather husky voice,"Pussy needs some Mothersill''s, does n''t she?"
60099he questioned,"and set around in white pants?"
60099or Arnold Bennett?"
60099said John aghast,"what am I going to do without you?
60099she answered;"but you''re sure he''s not really hurt?"
60099she thought,"what_ is_ the matter with me?
42672A fine subject for joking, to be sure,said the little one, indignantly;"suppose I had been drowned?"
42672Already done?
42672Am I dreaming?
42672And are you quite certain that they had a boat above here?
42672And cattle?
42672And do they only grow Indian corn in this neighbourhood-- no cotton, no tobacco?
42672And do you really think that a ram can bid defiance to the wolves?
42672And for what end?
42672And further up the Big Halchee-- are there no settlements there?
42672And hares and partridges?
42672And he has turned schoolmaster?
42672And how did you get off?
42672And now, all at once, wants to become a farmer?
42672And our place of concealment?
42672And that is----"Hallo, there,said the American, jocularly,"does it produce its effect upon you?
42672And the maize- crib?
42672And there is no town hereabouts?
42672And two have to sleep in one bed?
42672And what do you call that one?
42672And where shall you go to?
42672And why, Bertha?
42672And will you indeed accompany me, my dear Helldorf?
42672And you really suppose that you will be able to make that person answerable for the fraud?
42672And you remained here?
42672And you, yourself, will settle?
42672And_ why_ not?
42672Another striped pig, perhaps?
42672Are the schools all established on the same system as this one?
42672Are there more people to sleep here, then?
42672Are they making no railroads, no canals, hereabouts? 42672 Are we still far from the mouth of the Halchee?"
42672Are you a carpenter?
42672Are you wounded?
42672Bears are dangerous animals-- are they not?
42672Big Halchee?
42672Bought already?
42672But I do n''t consider it right to mystify the people in such a way as to their feelings; why not speak to them in clear distinct words? 42672 But I do n''t understand you,"said Bertha, surprised;"why do you suppose that they will destroy a deer- calf?--can they observe it in their flight?
42672But are they turkeys, after all?
42672But are you not afraid that such a flood may reach you some time or other, and sweep you away with it?
42672But could you understand all that the people inside there were saying?
42672But handicraftsmen are well paid here, are they not?
42672But how about''Hell?''
42672But how are we to get on, then?
42672But how are we to take what we may raise to market?
42672But how can any one think of settling in such a melancholy, desolate place?
42672But how can that be possible?
42672But how is it with cereals?
42672But how is that possible?
42672But how was that possible?
42672But is it not possible,said Becher, despondingly,"that we may be at the wrong place?
42672But it''s true, what business had the fellow to talk about''Doetsch?''
42672But of what use will they be, doctor?
42672But shall we not disturb him?
42672But shall you be able to find the route in the dark?
42672But the houses?
42672But the town,asked Pastor Hehrmann, in surprise--"you do n''t mean to call your solitary house a town?"
42672But what do you shoot the squirrels with? 42672 But what in the name of goodness are we to be at here?"
42672But what is to become of Charles?
42672But what shall we do with the girls?
42672But when several wolves are together, as no doubt is often the case?
42672But where can the little one be?
42672But where to seek them?
42672But why did n''t you bring it with you, then?
42672But why do you wish to remove, then?
42672But why not discuss an affair which hereafter will be by no means unimportant, and for which we have ample leisure just now?
42672But would it not be possible to forward the cargo much more easily and quickly to its destination by the Big Halchee?
42672But you are not going to leave your house now to accompany us?
42672But you have never told me yet where it is,said the doctor suspiciously;"why all this secrecy?"
42672But you have told us nothing about the game?
42672But you will go to a lawyer, surely,said Werner, indignantly--"won''t you?
42672But, Captain,said one of the much- injured lads,"where is the squall to come from?
42672But, I say, where''s your hat?
42672But, gentlemen,Mr. Becher now interrupted them,"suppose we now proceed to business?
42672But, in the name of goodness, what are we to do with the women? 42672 But, my dear Mr. Wolfgang, how shall we ever be able to repay your kindness?"
42672But, my dear Sir,he continued, somewhat shyly and almost timidly,"do you live really quite alone in this spot?
42672But, my dear doctor, what, in the first place, have you to say to me?
42672Ca n''t you understand Concordia?
42672Can not they find the spot? 42672 Certainly that is a convenient mode of keeping milking cows; and the calf remains all day long in a shed?"
42672Come with us to the hills, then, where a healthier air blows,said Herbold;"you can get land from us, and----""To the hills?"
42672Do n''t single heads of cattle sometimes stray?
42672Do not fear, my good sir,said Wolfgang;"do you see the roof of yonder house?
42672Do we disturb you?
42672Do you hear anything?
42672Do you know the place?
42672Do you not see that I was right?
42672Do you see nothing, Wolfgang?
42672Do you see that black cloud, down yonder, near the horizon, in the west?
42672Do you see these marks? 42672 Do you see these marks?"
42672Do you see yonder tree, which has been felled in by- gone times?
42672Do you think so?
42672Do your cattle come home regularly, then?
42672Does the blackguard think to bribe us, too? 42672 Easily remembered!--how so?"
42672Fifty cents apiece?
42672For mankind, too?
42672Girdle?
42672Good land?
42672Had the Italian to pay his footing? 42672 Has he also lately come over from Germany?"
42672Have n''t I told you about my invention yet?
42672Have n''t you a knife about you, Nick?
42672Have we got enough milk?
42672Have you much game in this neighbourhood?
42672Helldorf?
42672How far are we from the nearest town?
42672How far is it to New Orleans?
42672How so?
42672How would it be if we were to gallop along the banks of the water- course?
42672How? 42672 I have startled you, Bertha, have I not?"
42672I say, Jack,whispered one of them to the other,"what can it be that yon fellow is throwing overboard?
42672I thought we were to carry off_ both_?
42672I? 42672 If any body should find our boat yonder?"
42672In New York,said Siebert;"do you know him?"
42672Is he trying to get away?
42672Is it far from here?
42672Is it far from here?
42672Is it much further?
42672Is it not beautiful here, father?
42672Is it not possible to bring him to account, if he has been guilty of anything so dreadful?
42672Is it raining still?
42672Is there much game here?
42672Lost ourselves? 42672 Might I ask of what kind it is?"
42672Near the dead cow?
42672No more money?
42672Normann?
42672Nothing at all?
42672Now, tell me which of these letters you know?
42672Now? 42672 Oh, I-- I-- haven''t you seen a stag come past here?"
42672Oh, Meier, are you here?
42672Oh, Mr. Helldorf, is that you?
42672Oh, pray tell us why it is called the Haunted Island?
42672Oh, then, perhaps you can tell us the way to Perl, or Pirl Street?
42672Salt them?
42672Shall I give him a tap?
42672Shall we go alone?
42672Shall we go in?
42672Shall we go up?
42672Shall we take them into the house, or shall we carry them to the settlement with us?
42672She appears to please you?
42672So I suppose that, as he had nearly completed his number, he could only take you upon trial? 42672 So this gentleman, here, wanted to bribe our watchmen, eh?"
42672Squirrels?
42672Suppose that it''s cloudy; and besides, since when, I should like to know, have all men learned astronomy? 42672 Suppose we were to station men along the banks?
42672That is hardly possible!--how are we to bring them away?
42672That is the Big Halchee,repeated the farmer, nodding;"but why do you ask?
42672The_ black_ fellow?
42672Then the dwelling- house has fallen down at some earlier time?
42672Then you consider this climate very unhealthy?
42672There is another thing which I wished to ask you; how, in the name of wonder, do you manage with the milch kine? 42672 Thou speakest so prettily, how else shall I call thee?"
42672To become a farmer?
42672We ca n''t get away yet,objected the doctor;"how are we to get the girls to the river quickly enough to be safe from pursuit?"
42672We two?
42672Well leave them here,said Wolfgang;"what''s the use of dragging them about any further?
42672Well, I do n''t exactly know, but as I have heard the land hereabouts is to be surveyed----"And that is your reason? 42672 Well, and what do you think of setting about next?"
42672Well, then, why not call it''Union''at once?
42672Well, then,said one of the peasants at last,"I''ll go myself; what need is there for fine speeches?
42672Well, what I mean is, did you imagine it like what it is?
42672Well, what else should we shoot them with?
42672Well, what more have we,the orator continued,"except what we pay dearly for?
42672Well, what next, I wonder?
42672Well, who the devil is to understand you? 42672 Well,"said Helldorf, smiling,"have you nearly done looking?
42672Well-- haven''t I kept my word?
42672Well; but how could I tell that there was going to be a fire?
42672Well?
42672Werner, can you steer?
42672What are you going to be at inside, then, Meier?
42672What are you going to do?
42672What do you think of New Orleans?
42672What grounds are there to induce me to tell you a falsehood? 42672 What grounds do you give for your apprehensions?"
42672What harm will it do us if we should pass one night under the open sky? 42672 What have we to pay?"
42672What have we to pay?
42672What have you forgotten, then?
42672What is the name of the town at the mouth of it, then?
42672What is there to defend?
42672What is to be seen there, then?
42672What makes you think that?
42672What men?
42672What number?
42672What should we have done if we had arrived in this desert without you? 42672 What was I to do?
42672What will not one do to earn money? 42672 What''s the matter?"
42672What''s to be done now with these two fellows here?
42672What, in the name of Heaven, do you do with all these pumpkins?
42672What, in the name of wonder, has happened to you?
42672What, is that the Big Halchee?
42672When shall we get to Albany, do you think?
42672Where are the proofs?--where are the people now who then lived in yonder scene? 42672 Where can the Committee be?"
42672Where is he now, then?
42672Where is the house, then?
42672Where lies the boat?
42672Where shall we go to this evening?
42672Where?
42672Who knows where they''ve poked themselves to?
42672Why do the men whisper so together?
42672Why do you''thee''and''thou''[3] me, then?
42672Why have such a far- fetched expression, which half of us do n''t understand?
42672Why, my dear Helldorf; you surely do n''t mean to affirm that the American merchants are dishonest?
42672Why, of course, I recollect our agreement,laughed Turner;"but perhaps you''re jealous?
42672Why, where should they be?
42672Why? 42672 Wild animals destroy many, too; do they not?"
42672Will you give me ten minutes''quiet audience,asked the Doctor,"and not interrupt me?"
42672Will you listen to me, or not?
42672Willingly,they all said;"where is it held?"
42672Wolfgang!--the name sounds quite German; does that gentleman belong to your association?
42672Yes, but wo n''t you go back, and fetch it?
42672Yes, yes, it would be murder-- yet that villain, has he not deserved death a thousand- fold at my hands? 42672 Yes; and what did they really turn us out for, after all?"
42672You do n''t know any other?
42672You do n''t pretend to affirm that that will injure the land?
42672You do n''t see it? 42672 You said that it was but a few hundred yards from this?"
42672You shall hear all that when I have buried my wife.--Will you help me?
42672You want to steer, do you? 42672 _ Here_ nobody asks how_ far_ it is to a place, but the question is,''_ How_ do you get there?''
42672And how were the settlers getting on in the meantime?
42672And she has got a pretty sister, too, eh?"
42672And what said Bertha to this meeting?
42672And when are you going?"
42672And when shall we start?
42672And why, during all these relations, did the dear great hearted girl hide her little head, with a deep blush, in her father''s breast?
42672And you go across the street in Cincinnati in that coat?
42672Are there no foresters[16] here, I wonder?"
42672Are there not quite people enough already in that narrow space, without us?
42672But about the merchant?"
42672But how did it fare with the settlers, now that they had arrived in the foreign, but much- wished- for country?
42672But of what use was this change?
42672But one of them trod so heavily on my poor corns the other day with his wooden machines, that I vowed to do it; but not a word-- you promise that?"
42672But should I have returned, if I had cheated you?"
42672But tell me, my dear Mr. Schmidt, how have we deserved these accusations?
42672But what cared the happy ones about these scoundrels?
42672But what did you halloo so for?"
42672But what is to be done with the girls afterwards?"
42672But where has Helldorf got to?
42672But where is the plough?
42672But, I say, brewer, between ourselves, who is to pay our passage- money when we''ve got no more?"
42672But, my dear Mr. Helldorf, may you not be mistaken?
42672But, passing over this, what title to this land can you show to the society?"
42672But, shoemaker, did you imagine the river on which our town was to be built, like what it really is?"
42672Chagrined, he slowly turned to quit the post he had hitherto kept; but-- fresh horror!--whither?
42672Did you not get what liquor you called for?
42672Did you not return gloriously and triumphantly from the former battle?"
42672Do you call that starving?
42672Do you go to New Orleans with me?"
42672Do you intend to settle?"
42672Do you know any of the letters that are written on here-- eh?"
42672Do you require greater equality?
42672Do you suppose that he knew anything about a chest belonging to me?
42672Do you suppose that he knew me again?
42672Do you suppose then that if_ I_ had wanted a girl, I need have taken a journey of seven hundred miles down the river for her?
42672Does the young gentleman suppose that I have so quickly forgotten all that I owe his old uncle?
42672Had they forgiven Dame Fortune for having cast their lot out in a woody desert?
42672Had they reconciled themselves to their new position?
42672Hast thou ever thus held a being that was dear-- very dear to thee?
42672Have I any interest in the whole affair?"
42672Have you not a supply of good healthy food in the steerage?--meat every day, and plenty of vegetables?
42672He and his wife-- by- the- bye, Wolfgang, how is your wife?
42672Helldorf smiled, but pressed the right hand which was extended to him, and replied,"And may I not guess them?"
42672How am I to support her?"
42672How can I hope-- how dare I ask, for Bertha''s hand?
42672How d''ye do, Pastor Hehrmann?--and you, my dear M. Von Schwanthal?
42672How had the ideas which they had cherished in their old home been verified?
42672How many buildings are specified, then?"
42672How many cattle will you have-- a hundred perhaps?
42672I have accepted a commission in German- town, which will oblige me to go to New Orleans, will you go with me?"
42672I see no cattle anywhere, nor, indeed, any traces of any having ever pastured here; no axe is to be heard, no-- but, hold!--what was that?
42672In August?
42672Is his companion a German?"
42672Is his luggage still on board?"
42672Is the land not good, or is the neighbourhood unhealthy?"
42672Is there any need of further description of these happy people?
42672Is this the return, doctor, that you make for my father''s friendly reception?
42672It was in Arkansas that----""Were you ever in Arkansas?"
42672Mr. Meier and Mr. Schmidt-- Mr. Siebert-- all hearty?
42672My dear Mr. Schmidt,_ how_ have we deserved this accusation?
42672Normann?"
42672Now I''ll appeal to anybody, is n''t it enough to drive one wild?"
42672Now the first thing was to re- load the gun; but what was to be done then?
42672Now the separate figures of those in it might be distinguished-- there were three of them-- two rowed, and one was at the tiller-- but what was that?
42672Or does_ not_ the assistance of the members( who are necessary to the preservation of the whole) conduce to the_ general_ good?
42672Shall we be off?"
42672Shall we now, when the string is first touched, go back from this?
42672Should he now find his way back?--might he not turn off too much either to his right or left?
42672Should he turn back, or endeavour to force his way through that desert of swamp, and catch a dreadful cold, if he got nothing else?
42672Should like to see your housekeeping there-- hem-- hem!--three bachelors-- eh?
42672So now the young gentleman may speak-- is he content?"
42672The boat started half an hour earlier than the captain had told me, and----""To what are we to attribute the honour of this visit?"
42672Then you''re perhaps actually one of the three young Germans who have made such a good start on the Black River?"
42672There a house started up-- is it, perhaps, some farm, inhabited by Germans?
42672To wade further into the mud, or to turn back, and that without having accomplished his object?
42672To- day?"
42672Trevor?"
42672Was it surprising, then, that they were not yet satisfied with their life, that they could not be satisfied?
42672Was there not something white lying in the stern?
42672We have taken up our abode here in the cabin, instead of in the steerage with you; but was not that for your good rather than for our own?
42672Well, miss,"he said, turning with gravity to the charming girl,"Do you say''Yes''or''No,''to the bargain?"
42672Well, then, some little place?"
42672Were they to let these fellows carry themselves so high, while_ they_ suffered tortures which they had not before thought possible?
42672Were they to look on, while they were neglected, and, perhaps, even laughed at behind their backs?
42672Were_ they_ to bear it quietly, and without grumbling?
42672Werner looked out upon the yellow waters, reflectively, for some time, and after a short pause, asked--"And what do you advise me to do, then?"
42672What ails you?"
42672What am I to do in Tennessee?
42672What am I to do now?"
42672What do you call all the towns, then, that are said to be in this neighbourhood?
42672What has happened that could make you believe such a thing?
42672What has the young gentleman learnt, that he comes dropping, as from the clouds into the back woods in this way?--educated at a university-- eh?"
42672What is one to do?"
42672What name did you vote for?"
42672What other motive could have impelled me to a place where I knew before hand that I should( with reason) be ill received?"
42672What say you?--shall we go in?
42672What the devil ails them?"
42672What was it that they wanted, then?
42672What was our intention when we forsook our native land?
42672What was to be done now?
42672What will you bet, now, that it does not succeed?"
42672What''s the use of frittering away our precious time here?"
42672Where do you go to?"
42672Where is your land, then?"
42672Where was this committee, when all were calling for them, and wished for their help, or at all events their sympathy?
42672Where were those fertile plantations, where that super- abundance of produce, that easy life of which they had dreamed?
42672Whereabouts is Pearl Street?"
42672Which of us can follow their track?"
42672Who else is to sew all our clothes?"
42672Will you deliver your letters of recommendation here?"
42672Yes, that''s all very well, but how seldom does it happen that any one requires an introduction for Germany?
42672You can not hope to force me to love you?
42672You have many cattle?"
42672You haven''t-- surely, you have n''t lost yourselves, have you?"
42672You will come with us-- won''t you?"
42672You''re only just arrived, ai nt you?"
42672a little pole with a gilt knob at the top?"
42672and alone in this neighbourhood?"
42672and do n''t we pay_ our own_ hard cash for those conveniences which we enjoy here?
42672and in this blackguard hole?
42672and is this house situate at the mouth of the Big Halchee?"
42672asked Bertha and Louisa, laying down their work, and looking up anxiously at the man;"and the buzzards found and killed such a poor little creature?"
42672asked Dr. Normann,"had n''t he already engaged four hundred and some odd?"
42672asked Hehrmann, surprised;"have you been long, then, in such melancholy circumstances?"
42672asked Hehrmann, tearing his double- barrelled gun from the wall:"Where to find them?
42672asked Schmidt, of the tailor;"have n''t you engaged to go with us, and actually paid for your share of the new farm?"
42672asked Siebert;"and where are the young ladies?
42672asked Wolfgang, in his turn, surprised;"Helldorf-- where did you meet with him?"
42672asked her father;"do you think that the beauty of nature alone exercises such an influence upon the human heart?
42672asked the German, surprised;"how far up the Big Halchee are you going, then?"
42672asked the shoemaker;"perhaps it was because you went to the assistance of the fat woman?"
42672can you not protect us from this dreadful man?"
42672coffee in the morning, tea in the evening, good butter and ship''s bread, even a pudding on Sundays, with plums and syrup?
42672cried Bertha, who was the first to regain her presence of mind;"what is your purpose?
42672cried Schwarz, turning round, in alarm, towards his friend;"has that blockhead hit you?"
42672exclaimed Louisa;"but why does n''t the dam hide them better?"
42672had you imagined it more agreeable, or larger?"
42672he asked, laughing, as they walked down Chatham- street towards the Post- office;"am I not a conjuror?
42672he called after him, as that worthy, who had suddenly stopped, as if in reflection, now turned and ran quickly back--"have you forgotten anything?"
42672is it a good soil?
42672my pretty little dove, must I draw the bit a little tighter?
42672nodded the stranger;"but wo nt you have something to drink?"
42672or is the diet bad, eh?"
42672repeated contemptuously the young Israelite--"all good?
42672said Becher;"is not all which the man said plausible?"
42672said Werner, as he drew in his horse''s reins in alarm--"where are all the people gone who formerly animated this place?"
42672said the dear girl, looking affectionately into his eyes;"is it not splendid on this wonderful stream?
42672said the farmer, trying to recollect,"Normann; no, the name is strange to me-- why?"
42672said the old man, when he had hastily skimmed through it--"hem?
42672said the other, laughing bitterly;"what is not possible in these German taverns in America?
42672said the tailor, pushing him in the side, with all his strength,"what''s that?"
42672said the tailor, taking hold of the angry man''s arm;"do you think you will sleep any the better for getting your hide full of blows?"
42672so that we may run foul of bushes or snags every minute, and afterwards get too late into the Mississippi-- eh?
42672suffered enough already.--When are you going to clear out, Stevenson?"
42672that fellow has the impudence to show his pale hang- dog face among us?"
42672that was what you were going to say?"
42672the anxious voice of Pastor Hehrmann was now heard to ask--"can you discover nothing of my children?"
42672to what depth is it arable?"
42672very reasonable that-- must dine with me first-- afterwards I''ll take a ride over with you to the Black River-- can sleep there, I suppose-- eh?
42672was not that Werner''s voice?
42672was not that a sound like an oar creaking against the hard wood of a boat''s side?"
42672what has happened here?"
42672what is it really?
42672what''s the matter?"
42672what''s up there?"
42672where are you off to?"
42672where do you come from?
42672where the deuce do you drop from?"
42672whispered Normann to his comrade;"are we far from it?"
42672whispered, fearfully, the tailor;"if he over there hears you, he might take it ill.""How is he to understand German?"
42672why did n''t you come to me at once?
42672why not endeavour to strengthen them in pure unadulterated truth?"
42672why that cold word-- esteem?"
42672why, how long has the young gentleman been in America, then?"
42672would you betray me?"
42672you present yourself before decent people with those trousers?
42672you wear such a hat upon your head?
7794About me?
7794According to what rules?
7794Amusing?
7794And do you believe there''s any one in there who seriously does n''t grudge others anything? 7794 And he''s lying here instead of being out on the watch for blacklegs?"
7794And what then? 7794 And when is this plan to be realized?
7794And why should I be sorry for that, you little stupid?
7794And you''re pleased with it?
7794And you''ve really never halted at this sense of honor that works so splendidly in our favor?
7794Are n''t you going up to play with them?
7794Are they idle?
7794Are you Ferdinand?
7794Are you a human being?
7794Are you going to do anything now, father?
7794Are you going to keep on all your life?
7794Are you going to write about me in the papers?
7794Are you going?
7794Are you grown men and yet will get up a row beside the dead body of a comrade?
7794Are you scoffing at Peter Dreyer?
7794Are you sorry Sister''s getting well, grandfather?
7794Are you sorry Sister''s getting well, old man?
7794Arrange?
7794Because of me?
7794But if he wants a home, and likes us? 7794 But what are you going to do?"
7794By the by-- I suppose you have n''t any objection to my going now? 7794 By- the- bye, where is she now?
7794Ca n''t you see they''ve been turned out? 7794 Can they stand your representations?"
7794Could n''t you both move out to us? 7794 Did n''t you get any accident insurance?"
7794Did n''t you go up to her then?
7794Did you get the money for your work?
7794Did you get the place?
7794Do n''t you even say good- morning to your father?
7794Do n''t you know me?
7794Do n''t you know me?
7794Do n''t you see that he only wants to make use of you?
7794Do n''t you think I can see? 7794 Do n''t you think you''d better look after him a little while he''s packing?"
7794Do take it, wo n''t you?
7794Do you give them food then?
7794Do you go about selling newspapers?
7794Do you hear, Pelle? 7794 Do you know what I wish?"
7794Do you really think so? 7794 Do you really think then that the world can be transformed?"
7794Do you remember little Paul from the''Ark''? 7794 Do you remember what gave occasion to the punishment?"
7794Do you see any progress in the work?
7794Do you suppose any boy would be so mean as to be a blackleg?
7794Do you think I play for small sums? 7794 Do you think that''s so funny?"
7794Do you think the capable workman will submit to sharing equally with those that are less capable?
7794Do you want to speak to Peter Dreyer?
7794Do you?
7794Does she drink?
7794Does that go with the post?
7794Does that trouble you?
7794Every day?
7794Have I got a husband or not?
7794Have animals really intelligence?
7794Have n''t you been to bed all night?
7794Have they been good to you, did you say? 7794 Have you been far?"
7794Have you counted them, father?
7794Have you got anything for us to- day?
7794Have you seen anything of Karl?
7794Have you sent for the doctor?
7794Have your lodgers been making things unpleasant for you again?
7794He''s a devil- may- care fellow, is n''t he?
7794How are we going to come to terms with her?
7794How could he otherwise maintain that all work is of equal value?
7794How could we? 7794 How did you get on?"
7794How do you mean?
7794How far are you going?
7794How is Ellen?
7794How is your brother?
7794How long have you been in?
7794How much is there here? 7794 How''s it going with your peaceable revolution?"
7794How''s that?
7794How''s the old man?
7794I do n''t know anything,he said, half irritated,"so what can be the use?
7794I sha n''t die, shall I?
7794I suppose I may keep one?
7794I suppose it''s masters who''ll get it?
7794I suppose you''ll go?
7794I wonder why she did it?
7794If I die, will you be as sorry about me as you were about Johanna?
7794Is Lasse Frederik a milk- boy?
7794Is Peter Dreyer here?
7794Is he?
7794Is it anything serious?
7794Is it because you''re so old?
7794Is it long since your mother died?
7794Is it true that you and mother were once sweethearts?
7794Is n''t he going to get up then, and go? 7794 Is n''t there anything you want to start?"
7794Is she really a pastor''s daughter?
7794Is that a fact, Pelle?
7794Is that all the thanks Morten gets for what he''s done? 7794 Is that all?"
7794Is that wise now just before the winter? 7794 Is that your own opinion?"
7794Is there nothing that can be done?
7794It seems to me that''s what you and yours have always done, and have you ever succeeded in heaping coals of fire on the head of society by it? 7794 It would be nice to own the house ourselves, do n''t you think so, Pelle?"
7794It''ll be nice, wo n''t it, if the women are going to move into our forsaken snail- shells?
7794It''s anarchistic, I suppose?
7794It''s never been so bad before,whispered Ellen,"so what can be the use?
7794It''s very kind of your wife to think of it, but has n''t she enough to do already?
7794May I have two or three days to think it over? 7794 Mother, may I have those for my doll?"
7794No, where is he?
7794Of me?
7794Oh, is he going away, after all? 7794 Oh, it''s you, is it?"
7794Oh, that little fellow in the''Ark''who was going to fetch the medicine for his mother? 7794 Perhaps you could undertake it?"
7794Sha n''t we send for your mother too?
7794Shall I still get it?
7794Shall we play?
7794Shall you make the occupation of the houses obligatory for our workmen?
7794Tell me-- there was a man in the Movement a few years ago called Pelle; what''s become of him?
7794That''ll make a difference in things, I suppose?
7794Then it ca n''t have been altogether inoffensive?
7794Then perhaps Madam will not permit me to take my writing things with me?
7794There''s something in me after all, eh? 7794 They surely ca n''t punish you for what I''ve done?"
7794This is a democratic institution, is n''t it?
7794Up already?
7794Was n''t there any one there who could speak a comforting word-- the chaplain, the teachers?
7794We''re not going to do anything special, so what is there to make such a fuss about?
7794Well, are you asleep?
7794Well, ca n''t I see the picture soon?
7794Well, did you get the house?
7794Well, is he dead?
7794Were n''t you once sorry too for a little fellow when some one wanted to take his money away from him?
7794Were you and mother sweethearts, then?
7794What about my house then?
7794What am I going to do? 7794 What are we going to do now?
7794What are you doing, Thorvald?
7794What are you going to call it then?
7794What are you going to do?
7794What are you looking for in those books?
7794What are you so happy about, boy?
7794What became of you two that day on the common? 7794 What can it be?"
7794What do you know about it?
7794What do you want to think over? 7794 What does it matter whether I write a few pages more or less?"
7794What in the world are you starting for?
7794What is it you want to know?
7794What is it?
7794What is the matter with you?
7794What percentage do you reckon for interest and paying off by instalments?
7794What shall we do then?
7794What should I do there?
7794What''s it about?
7794What''s the matter now?
7794What''s the matter with Sister? 7794 What''s the matter with you, Jacob?
7794What''s the matter, then?
7794What''s the matter? 7794 When you were taken up?
7794When you''re well enough you shall be moved up into the big attic; and then we two shall live upstairs and be jolly again, wo n''t we?
7794When''s little sister coming?
7794Where have you come from?
7794Where is Marie?
7794Wherever did you get all that money from?
7794Who is doing the work, then?
7794Who is the poor child?
7794Who''s to own it?
7794Why did n''t you call me when you got up?
7794Why did n''t you make me some porridge? 7794 Why did n''t you marry?
7794Why do n''t you bring books home?
7794Why do n''t you get her into some home?
7794Why do you never come in to us now?
7794Why does n''t Nature take as much care of the poor as of the animals? 7794 Why does n''t wool grow on one''s legs?
7794Why not? 7794 Why, is that you, master?"
7794Why, is that you?
7794Wicked? 7794 Will you paint the ceiling black to show you''re sorry about me?
7794Will you soon be out of bed?
7794Will you stop the work and tell the men what has happened?
7794Would it be better for her?
7794Would n''t it be better to get the things sold little by little? 7794 Would you go and report yourself then if you were told to?"
7794Would you have us sacrifice our great plan of making all want unnecessary, for one meal of food to the needy?
7794Would you like me to be?
7794Would you like to hear it?
7794Yes, that''s true enough,answered Pelle, laughing:"but what man?"
7794You do n''t suppose he can do without a real mother, do you?
7794You mean that, for instance, unemployed bricklayers and carpenters should build houses for the workmen?
7794You really believe that they think about things just as we do?
7794You wo n''t mind making it as short as possible?
7794You''re not going, are you?
7794''What''s this about Ferdinand?
7794A couple of hundred acres?
7794And after a little pause--"We''re both clever, are n''t we, father?"
7794And do you know what I think he would like still better?
7794And even if I did-- what then?
7794And his comrades?
7794And how did matters stand?
7794And how have you been?
7794And if you ca n''t carry it through, who''ll have to take the consequences?
7794And should n''t one rather wish that they had no heart to be burdened with in a community that''s frozen to the very bottom?
7794And still you think you can make use of me?"
7794And upon my word it''s the only party that can thrash the anarchists properly, do n''t you think so?
7794And was it not just that he loved?
7794And what had he done for the children?
7794And what has been gained?
7794And what then?
7794And what were you copped for?"
7794And who knows?"
7794And who, indeed, was able to overlook an action?
7794And you''ve got nowhere to sleep to- night?
7794Are n''t you ashamed of yourself?"
7794Are n''t you glad yourself?"
7794Are n''t you glad?"
7794Are you disappointed?"
7794Are you married?"
7794As far as he could see, nothing particular had happened, and what was there to happen?
7794Brun?"
7794But I suppose we shall hear from you?"
7794But I''ve been wondering whether_ we_ could n''t find a way to gather up all this waste so that it should benefit the cooperative works?"
7794But anyhow it''s a great advance upon the last time, is n''t it?
7794But both the Movement and the community have begun to support them, and what would be more natural than that one required work of them in return?
7794But did you notice how much beauty and delicacy there was after all buried beneath the sewer- mud in her?
7794But how could they be otherwise when no change had taken place even now when they had the power?
7794But in prison-- why did you send my letters back?
7794But it was worth while lugging about a big trunk full of useless books like any colporteur, was it?
7794But the miracle?
7794But there was a sanctimonious parson at the corner of your passage, one of those moral folk-- oh, you did n''t even know that, then?
7794But we''re well and strong all of us; what does it matter?"
7794But what about you?"
7794But what did it matter to him?
7794But you yourself-- what''s your attitude toward matters?
7794Ca n''t we begin to make roads and such like, so that these men can get something to do?"
7794Ca n''t you imagine how dreadful it is to look into her wondering eyes?
7794Can you guess who it''s from?"
7794Confound it, I often thought, wo n''t there soon be an end to it?
7794Could it not?
7794Could n''t we get him out here?
7794Could n''t you go out to her with me when you get well?"
7794Did any one doubt that the poor man was in the majority-- an overwhelming majority?
7794Did he think it would revolutionize the world if every man received the entire proceeds of his work?
7794Did he want them all to go to prison only because he himself had been there?
7794Did n''t he make false coins, or rob a till?
7794Did n''t you notice how eager she was to have a look at you?
7794Did she bear his name?
7794Did she not love him then?
7794Did she still love him?
7794Did this also belong to life and require caution?
7794Did you notice that he never asked for anything?
7794Do n''t you allow that?
7794Do n''t you even know what corn''s like?"
7794Do n''t you recognize me?"
7794Do n''t you see how starved they are?"
7794Do n''t you see that my hair is gray and my forehead lined?
7794Do n''t you think we might take the shop next door, and set up a leather business?
7794Do n''t you think you''d do better to hit out at those who wrong you?"
7794Do n''t you understand that?"
7794Do we owe any one anything, I should like to know?"
7794Do you imagine that anything in this world is to be got by sleeping?"
7794Do you know what the devilish part of corporal punishment is?
7794Do you know what they call me now?
7794Do you remember my little sister Karen, who had to drown herself?
7794Do you still believe in that about the better time?
7794Do you understand?"
7794Had he not been born with a caul, upon which neither steel nor poison made any impression?
7794Had they no suspicion that they were sitting upon a thin crust, with the hell of poverty right beneath them?
7794Have n''t the thousands who have suffered and died in silence a still greater claim to be followed?
7794Have n''t you ever really been into the country?"
7794Have you become a drunkard?"
7794Have you forgotten that you fired the Movement, that you were its simple faith?
7794He came running over the ploughed field, crying hoarsely:"Wait a little, ca n''t you?
7794He had forsaken her and the home; he knew that; but had he not also made reparation?
7794He hated me because I did n''t take it over, but what could I have done with it?
7794He sank under the weight of a tremendous responsibility; and what are you doing?
7794He walked on a little without speaking, and then said:"Would you hit out properly now?
7794How could I know it?"
7794How did the Movement get on?
7794How else was it that nothing of the new happened?
7794How had Ellen drifted into this strange atmosphere of perfumes and old clothes and foreign countries?
7794How is Ellen''s business getting on?"
7794How much distress and weeping may be associated with it?
7794How would his fate shape itself?
7794How''s Johanna?"
7794How''s the baby?"
7794I say, that queer fellow-- Brun, I think you call him-- doesn''t he live with you?"
7794I suppose you think me a beast, but what can I do?"
7794I suppose you''ve voted?"
7794I suppose you''ve voted?"
7794If it were so dreadful to bear six times five among one''s own people, what could Pelle say?
7794If they were outside the existing conditions and their laws, why not arrange their own world upon the laws that were theirs?
7794Indeed?
7794Is he not like the sun himself?
7794Is it to be the work on the sun?"
7794Is it your husband that''s chucked you out?"
7794Is n''t it a matter of indifference whether they suffer want today, as compared with the question whether they will do so eternally?"
7794Is n''t that a shame?
7794Is n''t that splendid?
7794Is n''t that what the hill farmer has gone to pieces over?"
7794Is she going to be ill again?"
7794Is she just as cross?"
7794Is that not an honor?
7794Is there any other class of society that has a marching route like ours?
7794Is there anything wrong with his affairs?"
7794It might be rather convenient to turn out those who most hindered the advance, but would it lead to victory?
7794It would be difficult to build his home under these circumstances, and who was there to help him?
7794It would soon come to a great conflict, and were his foundations sufficiently strong for that?
7794Member''s subscription paid, is n''t it?
7794My forefathers built a world for themselves, and why should I do less than they?
7794My impression is that she''s hated me ever since the day we spoke of her coming out here.--May I stay here for the night?"
7794No, what did he want with books?
7794Now may n''t I give you a helping hand?"
7794One day she brought a large bunch to Pelle, and asked him:"How much money am I going to get to keep Christmas with?"
7794One does n''t join the party to be bled-- you understand what I mean?
7794Or was that perhaps why they were enjoying themselves-- to- day your turn, to- morrow mine?
7794Pelle?
7794Perhaps you think it''s money that cultivates the land, or weaves materials, or drags coal out of the earth?
7794Shall we agree to let bygones be bygones, son- in- law?"
7794She had been forsaken by her husband and had two children--_ three_, he corrected himself humbly; What had become of them?
7794She seldom interfered definitely with what he did, and why should she?
7794Shown on entrance, is n''t it?
7794So you think you deserved your house- of- correction turn, while another was only suffering the blackest injustice?
7794So you''re on strike, are you?
7794Strike subscription paid, is n''t it?
7794Surely we women are n''t so terrible that there might n''t have been_ one_ that you liked?"
7794That unselfish Morten envious?
7794The book threw at once a dazzling light upon society, but where was his own class in this doctrine-- all the poor?
7794The factory- girl''s child that she tied to the stove when she went to work?
7794Their look said:"Is that really all that remains of that stalwart fellow we once knew?"
7794There might be a little kiss for you too.--Hang it!--you do n''t surely imagine you''ll be made welcome anywhere else, do you?
7794They could never be sure that he had n''t stolen something from them, could they?
7794Try to find out about it, will you?"
7794Was anything necessary beyond the state of being good?
7794Was he not himself, in all his commonplace naturalness, like a luminous spark, sprung from the huge anvil of divine thought?
7794Was he still to the fore?
7794Was his brain failing?
7794Was it a wages conflict?
7794Was it he or the spring that set fire to her?
7794Was it malice or heartless indifference?
7794Was it not strange?
7794Was n''t it us who fought the great battle to its end together?
7794Was not man a wonderful being, both in his power to shrink up and become nothing, and in his power to expand and fill everything?
7794Was she again searching for his inner being as she had done in their earliest time together?
7794Was she really waiting still, or was she contented with things as they were?
7794Was solitude so dreadful then when you had such company?
7794Was that all that was left of the old Pelle-- Lightning, as he was then called?
7794Was there after all something in his dream?
7794Was there on the whole any need of knowledge and comprehensiveness of survey in order to fight for juster conditions?
7794Well, I suppose you believed it yourself, but what do you think now?
7794Well, is it a bargain?"
7794Well, what do you think about the job?"
7794Well, what do you think of it?"
7794Were the children and Ellen well, and was she still waiting for him?
7794Were the horrible visions of the darkness of his cell returning?
7794Were they to wait too, while he surveyed the varied forms of existence-- wait and go to ruin?
7794What are you thinking of, wanting to jump into the sea and drown yourselves because you''re wet through?
7794What became of the days and the years with all that they had held?
7794What did a little confinement signify as compared with the slow drip, drip, of centuries?
7794What did he care about logical understanding between man and woman?
7794What did it matter?
7794What do you gain by striking the policemen?
7794What had become of their former pride?
7794What had she to do with Jutland?
7794What have I to do with that?"
7794What in the world did he want here?
7794What in the world did he want?
7794What in the world was there about him?
7794What right had he to demand perspicuity of these people?
7794What right have people like me to have an opinion?"
7794What shall we do?"
7794What smith?
7794What want has been caused by its passing into my hands?
7794What was all this nonsense then that the majority were to gain?
7794What was going on?"
7794What was he looking for?
7794What was she to do with all that money?
7794What was the good of defending himself?
7794What will it be about?
7794What will it matter if your strength ebbs and you suffer hunger for a little longer while you''re building your own house?
7794What would his future be like down there?
7794What''ll you give me for it?"
7794What''s it for-- is it wages?"
7794What''s your father''s name?"
7794When they shut you up in prison too, perhaps?
7794When they were asked:"Who called you?"
7794When will the scales fall from your eyes, so that you take the responsibility upon yourselves?
7794Where did they come from?
7794Where is one to apply?
7794Who in the world was it?
7794Who says thief?
7794Who''ll be the first to reach the Danish shore?
7794Why did he not simply wrest the prerogative from the upper classes?
7794Why did they not leave their comrade in his dilemma, when there were so many of them and they were so busy?
7794Why does the very sewer give birth to bright beings?"
7794Why had he been obliged, in a difficult moment, to take his gift back?
7794Why have n''t they, with all their misery?
7794Why should n''t an employer be a fellow- partisan?
7794Why should n''t he go to the"Cupping- Glass"?
7794Why then contend with it on the basis of the claims of a poor logic?
7794Why was he not still a small, impersonal fraction of this great stream which day after day mechanically followed the same round in the mill?
7794Why?
7794Will it be in the near future?"
7794Will those you leave behind be well off?
7794Will you do me the favor of taking a loan from me at any rate, while you''re looking about you?
7794Will you, father?"
7794Wo n''t that be a good story?"
7794Would he ever win her?
7794Would she have them stand on the pavement and watch the women doing the work?
7794Would they have to reckon with him, the hare- brained fellow, now again, or did he mean to emigrate?
7794Would you have more like them?
7794Would you like to see Johanna?
7794You do n''t know how lovely it is there now?
7794You got together fifty thousand men, but what did you all do, I should like to know?
7794You think you''re no end of fine fellows when you dare to bare your chest to the bayonets, but are we a match for brutality?
7794You wo n''t mind, will you?
7794You''d like me to look after a bloated aristocrat''s geese and then sit on the steps and eat dry bread to the smell of the roast bird, would you?
7794You''ll give up the house then?"
7794You''re pretending to be good, eh?
7794You''re right in saying I''m indifferent, but can one go on taking part in a battle that does n''t even spare the children?
7794You''re supporting the election fund, I suppose?
7794and you''ll let me hear how your business gets on, wo n''t you?"
7794he said,"but can you put the things back in their places?"
7794it said,"and can not even bear a little suffering?"
7794said one of the men; then, staring straight into Ellen''s face,"Have you hurt your eye?"
7794the incomprehensible?
7791A Jute? 7791 A lie?"
7791A raving man?
7791A story, is it? 7791 Afraid?
7791Aha, so he kicks, does he?
7791Am I?
7791And can you explain to me what a limb is?
7791And did you notice how nicely I let her know that you were going to be confirmed? 7791 And may n''t I go with you?"
7791And nothing happened even?
7791And run about like a dog with its nose to the ground sniffing at its master''s footsteps? 7791 And she got over it fairly well?"
7791And surely you must be schoolmaster Johan Pihl''s Johanna from Tommelilla, who left the country nearly twenty years ago?
7791And surely you must be the smith''s tom- cat from Sulitjelma, who had twins out of an old wooden shoe the year before last?
7791And the little ones?
7791And the water does n''t run into your head when you take your fingers out of your ears?
7791And then I suppose you''ll go away from here? 7791 And they''ve turned you out?
7791And what about you two? 7791 And what did you do that for?"
7791And what then?
7791And what''s become of the pupil to- day, as he has n''t rung?
7791And what''s its name?
7791And why have you ill- used him so?
7791And why should I sleep away the last of the time I shall have here, when I shall get plenty of time for that afterward? 7791 And why should she lie?"
7791And you''ve got a cow too?
7791Are n''t you coming down with us?
7791Are n''t you soon coming to show us your sweetheart?
7791Are they coming soon?
7791Are they expecting a ship?
7791Are they really?
7791Are we going out this evening?
7791Are you afraid of me?
7791Are you going already?
7791Are you going to stay there all your life?
7791Are you looking for any one?
7791Are you saying your prayers?
7791Are you to be dismissed?
7791Aye, is it really? 7791 But can two of you do more than one?"
7791But suppose he does it again?
7791But what about Anders?
7791But what for? 7791 But who''ll read the names for us then?"
7791But why had he to swear himself free?
7791But why not, man? 7791 But why should they do that?"
7791Ca n''t one of you lend us ten krones? 7791 Ca n''t you answer when you''re called, you old Swedish rascal?
7791Ca n''t you see that it''s Niels?
7791Ca n''t you take him home with you? 7791 Can I lift it?"
7791Can you manage the work?
7791Can you manage to feed the cow on it then?
7791Can you patch my everyday trousers for me to- day?
7791Can you say''A happy birthday''?
7791Can you see down there, then?
7791Did he show himself?
7791Did n''t I say you knew it?
7791Did n''t I tell you to use your ears well? 7791 Did n''t he, indeed?
7791Did n''t he, indeed?
7791Did you kill your own child? 7791 Did you see how he turned his eyes up?"
7791Did you, now? 7791 Do n''t they go to hell, then?"
7791Do n''t those who are grown up give a hand too?
7791Do n''t you think Madam Olsen''ll be here to- day?
7791Do n''t you think the Swedes can thrash all the people in the world, father?
7791Do n''t you think you''d better go up and wake him, Gustav?
7791Do n''t you?
7791Do they say so? 7791 Do they wear wooden shoes in the town?"
7791Do you even grudge us our food?
7791Do you know them, then?
7791Do you mean to say I ca n''t turn my hand to anything I like?
7791Do you miss her very much?
7791Do you see that man?
7791Do you see that one there?
7791Do you suppose I''ll go to school to be jeered at by them all?
7791Do you think I shall get leather shoes of them too?
7791Do you want to ask for mercy?
7791Do you want to see a little imp from Smaaland?
7791Does it mean a thrashing with a birch- rod?
7791Does it really give the same both ways? 7791 Does it still do that, then?"
7791Does she?
7791Does the father of Anna''s child still pay what he''s bound to?
7791Get hold of him when he comes, and send him up to me with the things, will you?
7791Good voyage?
7791Had n''t we better say good- bye to you?
7791Had n''t you better see? 7791 Handle- turner?
7791Has any one been unkind to you? 7791 Has any one been unkind to you?"
7791Have any of you girls seen him?
7791Have n''t they? 7791 Have n''t you any bed to sleep in then?"
7791Have n''t you seen Father Lasse?
7791Have none of you heard how Jacob Kristian''s widow is?
7791Have none of you seen Bodil?
7791Have you any gin, then?
7791Have you come home already?
7791Have you ever spoken to a two- krone? 7791 Have you got a bee in your bonnet?"
7791Have you got that thing now?
7791Have you heard the latest news, good people? 7791 Have you heard, children?"
7791Have you wiped your nose properly?
7791He is good, is n''t he, mother?
7791How about a mustard- plaster?
7791How am I to know that? 7791 How are you getting on, Kongstrup?
7791How can they? 7791 How can you be sure?"
7791How could I? 7791 How do people take it?"
7791How do you like working for the farmer at Stone Farm?
7791How do you swear, then? 7791 How is she, poor body?
7791How many?
7791How much land have you?
7791How old are you now, grandmother?
7791How should I know? 7791 How should I know?"
7791How''s the farmer at Stone Farm? 7791 I do n''t think they know about it yet here on the farm; but what do they say outside?"
7791I say, do n''t you know better than that?
7791I say, what''s the matter with that pocket? 7791 I should n''t be at all afraid of biting one; would you?"
7791I suppose I look like a young bride after her first baby, eh? 7791 I suppose I ought to get him home?"
7791I suppose Uncle Kalle''s rich, is n''t he?
7791I suppose none of you''ll stand a farewell glass?
7791I wonder if that is n''t Niels?
7791I wonder what it costs to be a student?
7791I wonder whether Bodil has n''t?
7791If a pound of flour costs twelve ores, what will half a quarter of coal cost?
7791Indeed? 7791 Is Lasse out?"
7791Is any one dead?
7791Is anything the matter?
7791Is it heavy?
7791Is n''t Erik going with us?
7791Is n''t he clever to think of a thing like that? 7791 Is n''t he, then?
7791Is n''t it a beauty?
7791Is n''t that Niels?
7791Is n''t there? 7791 Is she failing now?
7791Is she going to calve?
7791Is that Bible history, that one there?
7791Is that about the man who drank himself drunk in there?
7791Is that all you''ve got for me?
7791Is that it?
7791Is that you two?
7791Is that you?
7791Is that your father?
7791Is there any news?
7791It ca n''t be consumption, can it?
7791It cost a lot of money, I suppose?
7791It is n''t the rot, I hope?
7791It was a good thing you did n''t answer that,said Lasse;"but what more then?"
7791It would cost a lot of money, would n''t it?
7791Just suppose some fine ladies were to come here, and he started calling that out after them?
7791Knut? 7791 Laban, do you mean?"
7791May n''t I carry that a little way?
7791May n''t I wheel the barrow out?
7791Niels-- have any of you seen Niels?
7791No; just bring five, will you? 7791 Now is n''t that only a lie?"
7791Now what does that stand for?
7791O- oh? 7791 O-- oh, inde-- ed?"
7791Oh dear, what shall I do?
7791Oh, are we?
7791Oh, does he really?
7791Oh, indeed, is he?
7791Oh, it''s you, is it, laddie? 7791 Oh, nonsense: is it?"
7791Oh, was it you?
7791Oh, we shall soon be hearing news from you, sha n''t we?
7791Oh, you''re an old crippled pensioner, are you? 7791 Oh, you''re too grand, are you?"
7791On your bare body?
7791Or perhaps you think I can do it all for you?
7791Perhaps we ought to taste the good things first, then?
7791Shall I know another day, then, without asking?
7791Shall we Meet in the town for a drink?
7791Shall we have a look at him?
7791Shall we sing''How blessed are they''?
7791Shall we take Jacob''s twelve sons, too?
7791She surely has n''t laid hands upon herself?
7791Should n''t good children take the work off their parents''shoulders as they grow up and are able to do it? 7791 So that good boy Pelle got angry and kicked out, did he?"
7791So that''s what was after you, is it?
7791So they mock and make fun of their own parents?
7791So you break stones too? 7791 So you''re obstreperous, are you?"
7791Swear? 7791 Sweden, is it?
7791Take your fingers out of your ears?
7791That''s meant to be a cow, is n''t it?
7791That? 7791 The mistress ca n''t bear to see him, I suppose?"
7791Then I suppose he''s to be foreman?
7791Then may I come with you next time?
7791Then perhaps you work on the farm here in the busy seasons?
7791Then what have you been doing?
7791Then where are the two eldest?
7791Then will none of you?
7791Then you wo n''t want to go to sea?
7791Then you''ve been wandering about and let your father believe that you''d gone to school? 7791 Then you''ve heard nothing?"
7791They fill the room well, do n''t they? 7791 They''re surely not going to do it?"
7791Was it these three?
7791Was it wine?
7791Well, ca n''t mice crawl, I should like to know?
7791Well, did you run in to Madam Olsen to- day?
7791Well, how are you getting on, old man?
7791Well, how many times have you had a baby in your house since last year?
7791Well, how was your mother?
7791Well, now, I suppose we ought to be getting home?
7791Well, what do you want?
7791Well, what if she was?
7791What about you, Lasse?
7791What are you doing?
7791What are you going to do with that?
7791What are you going to kill him with, father?
7791What are you so pleased about?
7791What are you standing there and staring into the water for? 7791 What can be wrong with him?"
7791What did he want over here?
7791What did he want? 7791 What do I want to know them for?"
7791What do you mean by coming here and saying''thou''to grown- up people and calling them''boy''? 7791 What do you say?
7791What do you think the bailiff will say?
7791What do you want to know them for, father?
7791What in the world does she want? 7791 What is birch- fat, then?"
7791What on earth''s the good of fretting?
7791What the dee-- And why not, may I ask?
7791What the devil are you up to now, you swine?
7791What was that noise?
7791What were the things?
7791What''s Christmas really for?
7791What''s a Jute?
7791What''s all that nonsense about?
7791What''s he done?
7791What''s that one there?
7791What''s the good of that to me?
7791What''s the matter now?
7791What''s the matter now?
7791What''s the matter with you, Erik?
7791What''s the matter, laddie? 7791 What''s the meaning of this?
7791What''s the time?
7791What''s to be done now? 7791 What''s your name?"
7791What''she''?
7791What, are you back already?
7791What?
7791Whatever have you done?
7791Whatever will the neighbors say if we do n''t dress you properly?
7791Where are you going then?
7791Where did it happen?
7791Where did you go?
7791Where the devil is he?
7791Where''ll you go to?
7791Where''s Bodil to- day?
7791Where''s Erik?
7791Where?
7791Which is the lightest, a pound of feathers or a pound of lead? 7791 Who sent Lasse for gin?"
7791Who told you that the bailiff wo n''t?
7791Who''s going to have the rest, then?
7791Who''s that out there throwing themselves away?
7791Who''s that singing?
7791Who''s there?
7791Why ca n''t you leave me alone?
7791Why do n''t you get to work?
7791Why do n''t you live there with him, then?
7791Why does n''t the Governor take them himself and punish them, when he can see in that book that they swore false?
7791Why, ca n''t you see I''m a soldier that''s had one leg shot off?
7791Why, do n''t I help you with everything?
7791Why, that''s a nightingale,said Karl Johan,"Do n''t you even know that?
7791Why, was n''t it you who fetched the handle- turner too? 7791 Will you be good, then?"
7791Will you come in here?
7791Will you have a piece of my bread- and- butter?
7791Will you have it?
7791Will you kill him quite dead, as dead as a dog?
7791Will you or wo n''t you? 7791 Will you or wo n''t you?"
7791Will you run in to Madam Olsen''s and give her this?
7791Will you soon be finished, you two cockerels, or must I have a bite too?
7791Will you stand me half a pint if I dare go up and fetch the cap?
7791Will you, eh?
7791Without coming on the parish? 7791 Wo n''t one of you come with us?"
7791Wo n''t you give me the half- krone, then? 7791 Wo n''t you go with them to the woods to- day, Erik man?"
7791Wo n''t you trust your own father? 7791 Yes, because Sweden''s much bigger than the whole world, is n''t it?"
7791Yes, yes, but can you read?
7791You are n''t afraid of me, are you?
7791You know us, do n''t you, Per Olsen? 7791 You know-- the one whose sons pulled off his trousers and shamed their own father?"
7791You surely wo n''t drive away without Anders?
7791You''ll go with them quietly, wo n''t you?
7791You''re counting the steps, I suppose?
7791You''re too grand, are you? 7791 You''re whining, are you?"
7791You''ve got some things for me, have n''t you?
7791You''ve told her, I suppose, that Mother Bengta''s dead? 7791 ''How so?'' 7791 ''Will the doctor be so kind as to wait a few days so that I can get the cow property sold?'' 7791 ''You do n''t mean to sell the cow so as to pay me? 7791 A limb is-- well?--a?--a part of the body that can move by itself, for instance? 7791 And I should fancy you''re not afraid of fetching a pail of water or that sort of thing, are you?
7791And I suppose you were going out to order a pauper''s grave for yourself, were n''t you?
7791And after all it was nothing at all-- nothing happened?
7791And all the old acquaintances-- how were they getting on?
7791And how will it go with a farm in the long run, when the farmer spends all his time on the high- roads because he ca n''t stay at home?
7791And if things became difficult, one''s surely man enough to wring a few pence out of one''s nose?"
7791And is that boy going to be confirmed?
7791And the thing that ship was tethered to-- wasn''t it a real cannon that they had planted?
7791And what do you scrabble in the air with your fingers for, and cry?
7791And why did the men call one another_"Swede"_ as a term of abuse?
7791And why were you afraid?
7791And you say their surname is Karlsson like ours, and that they live on the heath behind the stone- quarry?
7791And you think perhaps you''re clever, do you?
7791Are the babes and sucklings beginning now?"
7791Are you crazy, boy?
7791Are you deaf?"
7791Are you ill?"
7791Are you in need of money?"
7791Are you satisfied now?"
7791But I do n''t suppose I''ve got the head for it, do you?
7791But Karl Johan must get it, or what''s the good of being head man?"
7791But ca n''t you tell me something that distinguishes all limbs from other parts of the body?
7791But did he do it?
7791But do you know that your mother''s lying on her deathbed?"
7791But go to the bailiff, and tell of himself, and get the whip- lash on his bare legs?
7791But is n''t it a little unwise to speak so loud about it?"
7791But is that anything to be proud of?
7791But out on the wreck they hung stupidly in the rigging without ever moving; what in the world were they thinking about?
7791But suppose you get into trouble for playing truant, even if you do n''t deserve it?
7791But then why are n''t you in prison?
7791But then why was he mistrustful?
7791But what are you doing, laddie?"
7791But what became of the other fellow?"
7791But what did it look like in Farmer Kongstrup''s big rooms?
7791But what did you do to it, that the devil took it so quickly?
7791But what did you want to creep through that window for-- a child of sixteen and in the middle of the night?
7791But what had he done to you?"
7791But what happened to you afterwards?"
7791But what have you been crying for?
7791But what shall we do now?"
7791But what''s to be done with you?
7791But when would that be?
7791But wherever were the money- chests?
7791But who was it he was living with, then?
7791But who''d have thought he''d have turned on me?
7791But why are n''t you herding to- day?
7791But why did n''t you tell them so?"
7791Ca n''t you answer properly?
7791Can you feed the horses for me this evening?
7791Can you move your ears, then?"
7791Can you take my place at the chaff- cutting to- morrow evening?"
7791Could it be the sun itself?
7791Could it be true that he had spent five hundred krones in drinking and amusement in one evening?
7791Could n''t she let him drive out in peace to his fair charmer, whoever she was, and make it warm for him when he came home?
7791Could n''t we borrow Jens Kure''s horse, and take a little drive over the heath in the afternoon?"
7791Did you know, by- the- by, that he''s to get a ship of his own next spring?"
7791Did you notice that she said_ we_--_we_ shall, and so on-- always?
7791Did you tell a lie, and say_ she''d_ done it?"
7791Did you think she was going to foal?"
7791Do n''t you even know what a handle- turner is?
7791Do n''t you know that your father''s called Lasse-- Lasse Karlsson from Kungstorp?
7791Do n''t you remember the one that cheated Mother Bengta of her beautiful hair?
7791Do you know when the cattle are to go out?"
7791Do you say''Devil take me''?"
7791Do you think it can crawl up there?"
7791Do you understand?"
7791Do you want to keep it all to yourself?"
7791Does she know about the legacy?"
7791Does that bring in anything?"
7791Does the book say anything about that?"
7791Does the book tell you, too, about him that was such a terrible swindler?
7791Does your boy often get a thrashing?"
7791Even if they managed to get down to the wreck, what then?
7791Even they would n''t hear of nothing having happened, so what could the other rabble think?
7791For it was still there, was n''t it?
7791Fourteen or fifteen, I suppose?"
7791God... well, He had a long white beard like the farmer at Kaase Farm; but who kept house for Him now He was old?
7791Good gracious me, laddie, do n''t you know that?
7791Had the whole world changed since his time?
7791Has any one done anything to you?
7791Has any one hurt you?
7791Has she at all got over the hurt to her eye?
7791Has the engine been oiled, Hans?
7791Have n''t I openly enough acknowledged by wrongdoing?"
7791Have n''t you even learnt as much as to give a civil answer to a civil question?"
7791Have n''t you heard about it?"
7791Have there been any deaths in the parish?"
7791Have there been any deaths?"
7791Have you been resting?"
7791Have you been stealing?
7791Have you forgotten it already?
7791He was a queer fellow; but perhaps that was what people were like where he came from?
7791How are things going on in the parish?
7791How are you getting on?"
7791How are you?"
7791How could she do the same thing over and over again for twenty years?
7791How could the old, dry cows have just as young calves as the young ones?
7791How dare you tell such a lie?
7791How did you learn it, brother?"
7791How else would the fish be able to keep away from the nets?
7791How many mouths are there now?
7791How much do you generally get?"
7791I expect you''re hungry, are n''t you?
7791I hope you gave him something he''ll remember for a long time?"
7791I hope you''ve not forgotten anything in the long Christmas holidays?"
7791I say, can you see this?"
7791I suppose he''s got over the worst now, has n''t he?"
7791I suppose they must be searched for?"
7791I wonder what he made himself drunk on, the old man?"
7791I wonder what''s become of the future master of Stone Farm?"
7791I''m sure you are n''t comfortable here, are you?"
7791If Lasse now killed the pupil, then who_ would_ help them to make out the names?
7791If you''ve done no harm to any one, and given everybody their due, what can they do to you?"
7791Is he really going to be a captain?"
7791Is it long since he went?"
7791Is it your little boy who''s going to show Pelle how things go?
7791Is n''t your father''s name Lasse-- Lasse Karlsson from Kungstorp?
7791Is that all the respect you have for learning?
7791Is there anything pressing you want to do?"
7791Is your father ill?"
7791It was always"Where''s Lasse?"
7791It was most mysterious what there might be on the other side-- perhaps a secret chamber?
7791It''s your grave- clothes, perhaps?
7791Kalle stretched his out first, but as soon as she touched it, she pushed it aside, saying:"Do you think I do n''t know you, you fool?"
7791Karl Johan stationed himself with legs astride, and called across to the cliff:"What''s Karl Johan''s greatest treat?"
7791May n''t I, father?
7791No?
7791Now and then he climbed up on the molehead, put the megaphone to his mouth, and roared out over the water:"Do-- you-- hear-- any-- thing?"
7791Now what can that be used for, eh?"
7791Now you''ve got to have new school- trousers, and where are they coming from?"
7791Now, have you noticed anything special about two of these names?"
7791Oh, you were afraid?
7791Or been impudent?"
7791Or shoot with the old bellows in the smithy?
7791Or should he go in and have a game with the tiny calves?
7791Pelle answered with a superior air:"That?
7791Pelle had to give a circumstantial account, point by point,"Well, what can you do?"
7791Perhaps a warning to every one that at that moment the ship had gone to the bottom?
7791Perhaps it''s a secret?"
7791Rather than that, God would have to be angry-- if it was really true that He could see everything?
7791Sha n''t we agree to burn that?"
7791Shall I go and throw it away on drink, while she''s lying there without enough to buy bread with?"
7791Shall I run and fetch the whip?"
7791Shall we go to the expense?"
7791Shall we organize a battue?"
7791Shall we try him, laddie?"
7791She''s begun to--?
7791Should he give him the whole fifty ores for nothing at all?
7791So he ran away when you said that to him?
7791So that''s the boy''s father, is it?"
7791So they put raisins into roast pork in this country, did they?
7791So those who became devils in the next world looked like Per Olsen?
7791So you think I need do that?
7791So you were longing for me, were you?
7791Some mishap to the farmer, evidently, for now and again the mistress''s commanding voice could be heard down in the kitchen-- but what?
7791Some of us have to be servants and others masters; how would everything go on if we who work did n''t do our duty?
7791Then how is it they can breathe?"
7791Then why did n''t Father Lasse get the money in advance that he had begged for?
7791There were some days-- well, what did become of them?
7791Two shirts''ll almost be too little if you''re away, wo n''t they?
7791Was black- currant rum a thing for a poor beggar like him to begin drinking-- and on a weekday, too?
7791Was it Knut Engstrom?"
7791Was it real, or was it a creation of the heart- felt wishes of so many?
7791Well, only hold it for a little then?
7791Well, what did she ask about me to- day?
7791What changes would it bring this time for people?
7791What did the word_"practical"_ mean, which the bailiff used when he talked to the farmer?
7791What do you think, Gustav?
7791What do you think?
7791What do_ you_ say, grandmother?
7791What do_ you_ want to know them for?
7791What else should the world go round for?"
7791What had become of his father?
7791What had happened?
7791What should they do with it?
7791What was his name again?"
7791What was the use of explaining the longings of a man to a boy?
7791What was there away beyond the cliffs where the stone- quarry lay?
7791What went on behind the windows in the big house?
7791What would happen now?
7791What''ll you give me for it?"
7791What''s that?"
7791What''s the matter?"
7791What?"
7791Where is he, by the by?
7791Where the devil are you going?"
7791Where''s Lasse?
7791Who but the neighbor would keep the hens that ate their grain at home and laid their eggs at the neighbor''s?
7791Who knows what the future may bring?"
7791Who told him to go?"
7791Who''ll go and fetch it?"
7791Whose father art thou, my boy?"
7791Why could n''t the man have driven with him, as they were both going the same way?
7791Why did n''t you offer them a seat, old man?"
7791Why did the mistress cry so much and drink secretly?
7791Why should not he too for once let things go, and try to leap through the fiery hoops?
7791Will you get a thrashing when you get home?"
7791Wo n''t you show it us, Maria?"
7791Would he ever see the sun again, he wondered?
7791Would it be the best fun to sail upon the pond on two tail- boards laid one across the other?
7791Would n''t you like to be God''s child?"
7791Would you believe that I was so innocent in those days?
7791Would you believe that, you cracked old piece of shoe- leather?"
7791You surely have n''t been out stealing hens''eggs in the night?"
7791You wo n''t take a little early morning glass of something, I suppose?"
7791You wo n''t try and back out of it?"
7791You''ll give her her mother''s love, wo n''t you, Lasse?''
7791You''re his grandfather, I suppose?"
7791You''ve all found that very useful, have n''t you?"
7791_ Is n''t_ that all wrong, too?
7791he asked, picking up the thick cudgel,"and do what we have to do with just our hands?
7791he would ask wonderingly, pointing to something printed; or"What wonderful thing have you got in your lesson to- day?"
7791they said in undertones to one another, and then, so that the bailiff should hear:"Where''s the dog?
7791we see over there?"
7791where are you going to?
7791you want to fight, do you?"
29257''And what will you do, if in the end you discover that I am in the right?'' 29257 ''But why should these Wahhabis of Nejd be the most fanatical, when their doctrines are the most pure?''
29257''What say you? 29257 And did he ever go to church?"
29257And did he visit the abbey often?
29257And do you like the grape?
29257And is it not noteworthy that our life terrene at certain epochs seems to be made up wholly of these? 29257 And is there like America in all the world?"
29257And is this the gate of Paradise,he asks,"or the port of some subterrestrial city guarded by the Jinn?
29257And pray, tell me, what is the purpose of prohibiting a marriage between cousins; what chief good is there in such a ban?
29257And this young man from Baalbek,we ask,"how did he live in this forest?"
29257And walking together a pace, he points to the dizzy precipice around which I climbed and adds:''Thou seest that rock? 29257 And what are ruffles for?"
29257And what are you going to do about it? 29257 And what do you do when you are not working in your vineyard or praying?"
29257And what is the use of binding, O Reverend Father, when a little sum of money can loosen anything you bind? 29257 And when he pulls down the pyramids to build American Skyscrapers with their stones, where shall we bury then our Muhdi?"
29257And why does not the Government interfere?
29257And why,she inquired,"do you wear this black jubbah?
29257And wilt thou still add to the bewildering variety of the pageant? 29257 Anything the matter with you?"
29257But Man? 29257 But can we not obtain this sanction without paying for it?"
29257But is there not room in the garden of delight for a wheat field?
29257But we are not going to live in the desert all the time, are we?
29257But where is the rain, and where are the thunderbolts of last night? 29257 But why not try to understand me?
29257Can we not apply the bow to the telegraph wires of the world and make them the vehicle of music as of stock quotations? 29257 Did you not say that love is the splendour of God?"
29257How are you? 29257 How can they hurt me,"he asks,"if spiritually I am far from them, far above them?
29257How is your health?
29257I have not seen him for ten days,said the Poet;"and I know not where he is.--If I did?
29257Instead of starting in New York as a peddler,they say, unfolding before him one of their alluring schemes,"why not do so as a merchant?"
29257Know you not the anecdote about the enchanting Goddess Rabia, as related by Attar in his_ Biographies of Sufi Mystics and Saints_? 29257 No, Child, you shall not go,"she begs and supplicates;"listen to me, are we not together all the time?
29257No? 29257 No?"
29257Not even the physician of the soul?
29257On your way here have you not stopped to visit the hermit? 29257 Or wilt thou tarry to see the work of redemption accomplished?
29257Secure, you say? 29257 The first and the last are to be met with anywhere; but the second?
29257Then, why look for it in my eyes?
29257Then, you are not a Christian?
29257What do you mean?
29257What has my son done to be excommunicated? 29257 What is the matter with you?"
29257What then? 29257 Whence the light that flows from the wounds of martyrs?
29257Whom do you mean?
29257Whom will our Prophet marry, if among all the virgins of Egypt we can not find a consumptive for him?
29257Why do you say that? 29257 Would you cement his brain, if you were?"
29257You keep accounts, too, Reverence?
29257''And what is the use of freedom,''he exclaimed,''when it drags us to lower and darker depths?
29257''But why,''you will ask,''did you undertake it?''
29257''If there were sorrow in heaven,''he once said to me,''how many there would continuously lament the time they wasted in this world?''
29257''Is it not strange,''said he,''how the women here indraw their stomachs and outdraw their hips?
29257''Is there no swelling here?
29257''Tis very well to endeavour to unfold a few of the mysteries of one''s palingenesis, but why conceal from us his origin?
29257''What do you want,''he growled,''why are you here?''
29257''Where dost thou sleep?''
29257''Why is not one free to kill himself,''he finally asked,''if one is free to become a Jesuit?''
29257***** But on their way back to the Hotel, Khalid gives her this from Swedenborg:"''Do you love me''means''do you see the same truth that I see?''"
29257--''And what was the matter with you yesterday?
29257--Are these likely to subside the while thou wait?
29257A gown without ruffles is ugly.--So, you will buy me a sky- blue silk dress,_ ya habibi_ and a pink one, too, with plenty of ruffles on them?
29257A woman with Khalid, and in the Temple of Venus at night?
29257After coming out of the press, how many have handled this tattered volume?
29257Ah, for my dripping ceiling again, for are we not now under the running gargoyle?"
29257Alas, and is this how to treat a friend?
29257Alas, and my Khalid?
29257Alas, have I not listened for years to what I mistook to be the strong, pure voice of the naked Truth?
29257Alas, if the faith of the cheese- monger is become adulterated, what shall we say of the faith of our monkhood?
29257And I Khalid, what am I but the visible ruffle of an invisible skirt?
29257And I, amazed,''Did you not send for me?''
29257And Khalid, affecting like bucolic innocence, replies,"What do we need them for, my heart?"
29257And again he asks,"Are you sure we are better off here?"
29257And are not our Books of Revelation the truest guides of life hitherto known to man?
29257And do you take me for a soporific?
29257And her age?
29257And his eyes?
29257And his health?
29257And his lungs?
29257And how could one with that mara upon him, write of the ethics of life and religion?
29257And how, on the other hand, are we to strengthen it, to quicken its sluggish blood?
29257And if he did not want to bring the matter to our immediate cognisance, why, we ask, did he not re- write the page?
29257And if they did, what can We, their worthless descendants do for them now?
29257And is it come to this, you poor phantom- like dreamer?
29257And is it not natural that the Demiurgic Dollar should be the national Deity of America?
29257And is not Khalid, like his spiritual Mother, floundering, too, in the false dawn of life?
29257And is not loafing a necessary prelude to the travail?
29257And is not this the opposite of the shape which our women cultivate?''
29257And is this genial old heretic an American avatar of the monk Bohaira?
29257And might it not be a better, a cleaner, a higher life?
29257And must I come in my ordinary Sunday dress?
29257And now, deploring, imploring, she asks:"Will you not come to me, O Khalid?
29257And now, that he has a little money laid up, has he not the right to seek in this world the cheapest and most suitable place for loafing?
29257And of a truth, if everybody were to judge themselves as strictly as Khalid, who would escape burning?
29257And still you wait in the tribune until the storm subside?
29257And the Hermit, what is your opinion of him?"
29257And the woman, taking to weeping, blubbers out,"Will thirty masses do, think your Reverence?"
29257And this of all the professions is the one on which he would graft his scion of lofty morality?
29257And those in America, are they well, are they prosperous?
29257And was this fantastic, phantasmagoric rhapsody all inspired by Najma''s simple remark on his hair?
29257And were you not, for your audacity, left to brood ten days and nights in gaol?
29257And what could Shakib do to exonerate his friend?
29257And what if the salvia, as by a miracle, blossoms on the jasmine?
29257And what if the three are wrong?
29257And what in the end might Khalid discover for us or for himself, at least, in his explorations of the Spirit- World?
29257And what is Thought, and what is God, and what is Matter, and what is Spirit?
29257And what is the difference between the jewellery you passed off for gold and the arguments of the atheist- preacher?
29257And what matters it if a dead man can stir a whole city and blow into the nostrils of its walking spectres a breath of life?
29257And what shall we say of him?
29257And what signifies his stay?
29257And what were life without this incessant striving of the spirit?
29257And what will you end, and how will You end by it?
29257And when I asked him why he had done this, he asked me in reply,''And why have you not done the same?
29257And where, if not in the Lebanon hills,"in which it seemed always afternoon,"can he rejoin the Lotus- Eaters of the East?
29257And which is the better part of valour, when one is blind-- submission or revolt?...
29257And who can assure Khalid that it did not steal into her breast along with his kisses?
29257And who can say what so many mischances might not produce?
29257And who dares say a word against them?
29257And who knows who punctured thine, O Jeremiah?
29257And who of us, thou silly Scribe, did not in his boyhood tell his dreams to his mother, who would turn them in her interpretation inside out?
29257And who shall help to free it?
29257And who shall say which it is?
29257And why do they in America cultivate the reverse of it?
29257And why not, since my purse, like my stomach, is now my own?
29257And why not?
29257And with her love, and influence superadded, what might he not do?
29257And would you sell a dead friend, would you throw him away?
29257And you are not sorry to have made such a discovery?
29257Apart from this, have we, the descendants of those honest Phoenicians, any of their inventive skill and bold initiative?
29257Are not these straggling, smelling, downcast emigrants almost as clean inwardly, and as pure, as the grumpy officers who harass and humiliate them?
29257Are there any two individuals more closely related than mother and son?
29257Are they not both instruments of deception, both designed to catch the dollar?
29257Are they not hazarded, sold by your Church for five hundred piasters?
29257Are those the cheeks, those the eyes, this the body which a year ago was a model of rural charm and beauty and health?
29257Are we then to consider this cellar as Khalid''s source of spiritual illumination?
29257Are we then to look upon Khalid as having come out of that Office with soiled fingers only?
29257Are you not going to make a resolution now, either to keep silent or to go out of the quagmires and rise to the mountain- heights?
29257Are you not ruffled and flounced when you first see the light, ruffled and flounced when you last see the darkness?
29257Are you now a monk?
29257Are you still crazy about books?
29257Art like the idiot Franje( Europeans) who come here and carry away from around the grave some stones and dust?
29257Art now in a civilised assembly?
29257Ay, and what without them would be the state of our real- estate interests?
29257Ay, how can you, without them, think, speak, or work?
29257Behold, your friend the_ kaimkam_ is gloomy and impassive as a camel; what can you do?
29257But I felt somewhat uneasy about him, when I heard the people asking each other,"Why does he not come to Church like honest folks?"
29257But alas, what are we doing to- day?
29257But are we as daring, as independent, as honest?
29257But being so far away now from the Hermitage in the Bronx, what has the"cherry in the cocktail"and"the olive in the oyster patty"to do with all this?
29257But can one be kinder than such an hostess?
29257But can they, even in that chaste and splendid nudity, dispense with ruffles and flounces?
29257But did we not say once that Khalid is slow, even slower than the law itself?
29257But does he sleep at all, you ask, and how, and where?
29257But he who lives in the three, though his life be that of a silk larva in its cocoon, is he not individually considered a good man?
29257But how is he to reconcile the fact with the truth in his case?
29257But how, with my cursed impulsiveness, can I always keep on the sidewalk of reason?
29257But is it not true?
29257But might they not have made this discovery after the said Sanchuniathon had given up the ghost?
29257But need we not be reminded of these wholesome truths, when the striving after originality nowadays is productive of so much quackery?
29257But of what good is the love of Nature that consists only in classification and dissection?
29257But should he not have divined that Khalid soon or late was coming?
29257But suddenly he braces up, runs down for his lute, and begins to serenade-- Greater New York?
29257But the many questionable pages on this curious subject of the eremite, what are we to do with them?
29257But the soul plodding up the hill under its heavy overshadowing burden, what breath has it left for song?
29257But to fry eggs in water?
29257But what could I do?
29257But where is the natural colour and beauty of these human souls, buried in bunks under hatches?
29257But where is the opaque breath of the storm, where are the clouds?
29257But who can say if this be his Kaaba, this his pine- mosque?
29257But who of his descendants to- day would as much as pass one night on the top of that pillar?
29257But why concern ourselves with like comparisons?
29257But why not spread it in Arabia as in America?
29257But why prolong these painful details?
29257But why, we can almost hear the anxious Reader asking, if the camels are ready, why the deuce do n''t they get on and get them gone?
29257By political revolutions, and insurrections, and Dasturs?
29257Can there be a sounder intuitiveness, a healthier sense of love, a grander sympathy, beneath that striped aba, than there is within thy cloak?
29257Can we not consecrate its Temple to the Trinity of Devotion, Art, and Work, or Religion, Romance, and Trade?"
29257Can we not simplify life as we are simplifying the machinery of industry?
29257Can you not come up to my height and behold there the star that you have taken for your guide?
29257Can you not find in my ideas the very essence of Buhaism?
29257Can you think of the Dowry and say that?
29257Come thou near him; descend; descend a little and see: has he not a task, and though it be of the taper- under- the- bushel kind?
29257Destroying?
29257Did I not know my own heart?
29257Did he throw it away, or give it away, or sell it?
29257Did you not even exercise therein your skill in calculation?
29257Did you not often bestow a furtive glance on some one else''s checkbook?
29257Did_ he_ not call enough to him, and aloud?
29257Do you cough any more?
29257Do you not meet with it everywhere, and foremost in the sanctuaries of the mind and the soul?
29257Do you wonder why the world is full of crusty souls?
29257Does he not seem to be still sighing for a little solitude?
29257Does not everything suffer from thy look, thy touch, thy breath?
29257Does not this seem inevitable, however, considering the palingenetic burden within him?
29257Down there, in the very loins of New York?
29257Else what is the use of solitude?
29257Everything is ready, you say?
29257For after all, what''s in a name?
29257For art thou not ever praying for thy grievous son, and for his salvation?
29257For can you escape being reproached for idleness by merely working?
29257For do I not know what clings to thee, and what beckons to thee?
29257For do not words often rob a fancy of its tongue, or a thought of its soul?
29257For does not every one whom thou favorest undergo a pitiful transformation even from the first bedding with thee?
29257For does not the eremite through his art of prayer and devotion, seek an ideal?
29257For have not the three monotheistic religions been born in this very heart of the world, in Arabia, Syria, and Palestine?
29257For how can we account for everything a child does?
29257For how can we even keep company with Khalid, who has become such a maniac on flounces?
29257For how else can he get out of Beirut and the telegraph wires throughout Syria are flowing with orders for his arrest?
29257For is it not as noble to surrender one''s self to Love as to the Turks or any other earthly despotism?
29257For is not a book greater than a pyramid?
29257For might they not, too, have stood here wondering, guessing, even as we moderns guess and wonder?
29257For was he not, in creaking boots and a slouch hat, ceremoniously married to Democracy?
29257For what avails their deeds if they are not respected?...
29257For what is a birthright in comparison?"
29257For what is the ballot box, I ask again, but a modern vehicle of corruption and debasement?
29257For who but a child dare act so freely among these polyglots of ceremony in this little world of frills and frocks and feathers?
29257For why should I then give myself the trouble?
29257Furthermore, how can we interest ourselves in his fiction of history concerning Baalbek?
29257Has he not a faith and a sincerity which in a Worm of the Earth ought to be reckoned sublime?
29257Has he not acquired a little of the delusive plausibilities of lawyers?
29257Has he not assisted his employer in the legal game of quieting titles?
29257Hast thou no eyes to see, no ears to hear?
29257Have I been all along fooling myself?
29257Have I not misrepresented my gewgaws as the atheist misrepresents the truth?
29257Have not deities been always conceived after man''s needs and aspirations?
29257Have they not hugged the damp, dark earth long enough?
29257He is going to work, to be a menial, to earn a living by honest means?
29257Her cousin Khalid is in prison, is excommunicated-- what can she do?
29257Hermon to give said Nimrod a chance to rebuild the said Temple of the Sun?
29257Hidden from the wrath of Winter, have they not squatted patiently round the primitive, smokeless fire of the mystic depths?
29257His determination to work, which was rudely shaken at a push- cart, is it not become again a determination to loaf?
29257His love of Country, which begins tremulously, fervently in the woods and streams, is it not likely to end in Nephelococcygia?
29257His love of Nature, which was spontaneous and free, is it not likely to become formal and scientific?
29257How are your children?
29257How came he by this, this young Syrian?
29257How can I then overcome you?
29257How can I turn from myself against myself?
29257How can I turn to another for the sustenance which you alone can give?...
29257How can an individual, without the aid of Time and the Unseen Powers, hope to oppose and end, or even change, this monstrous mass of things?
29257How can we bring any of these fascinating fables to bear upon our subject?
29257How can you eat, drink, walk, sleep, pray, worship, moralise, sentimentalise, or love, without them?
29257How can you live without your ruffles?
29257How can_ we_ know?
29257How is your husband?
29257How many beads each night dost thou tell, how many hours dost thou prostrate thyself before the Virgin, sobbing, obsecrating, beating thy breast?
29257How many has it entertained, enlightened, or perverted?
29257How much will it bring us?"
29257How then are we to keep this Heart pure, to free it, in other words, from the plagues I have named?
29257How then can any one disturb you?...
29257How then can we live with her in the same house?
29257I wonder what Rousseau, who called Paris the city of mud, would have said of this?
29257If my marriage to my cousin be wrong, unlawful, your Bishop in sanctioning same is guilty of perpetuating this wrong, this unlawfulness, is he not?"
29257If the German Professor''s Chair of Logic and Philosophy were set up in the Hermitage, would anything be gained or lost?
29257If the bank, where Shakib deposits his little saving, failed, would you be so indomitable, so dogged in your resolution?
29257If you can not keep him embalmed on your shelf, is it not the wiser part, and the kinder, to cremate him?"
29257In a word, how are we to attain to the pinnacle of health, and religion, and freedom,--of power, and love, and light?
29257In his journal he keeps the accounts of his masses?
29257In other words, you bind for the sake of loosening, when a good bait is on the hook, do you not?
29257Indeed, I had answered ten of hers, before I got this answer to mine:''The sister of whom, thou sayst?
29257Indeed, what are these wonders as compared with those of the City of Love?
29257Is he not a mystic, though uncreative, centre of goodness?
29257Is he not a transcendentalist, at least in the German sense of the word?
29257Is it not made in the paradise you harp upon, the paradise we are coming to?
29257Is it not something to be able to make an honest resolution and carry it out?
29257Is not a mosque or a palace better than a tomb?
29257Is not his philosophy above all the senses, as the term implies, and common sense included?
29257Is not this a miracle?
29257Is there anything like it dreamt of in your philosophy?
29257Is this the compensation of love?
29257It begins with the Boss''question,"What do you mean by writing such a letter?"
29257It''s better, billah, than breaking the bottle on her head, is it not?
29257Let me see, is n''t that the cap I bought you in New York?"
29257Letter XXV Whom do you think I met yesterday?
29257Look at your huge elaborate monuments, your fancy sepulchers, what are they but the ruffles of your triumphs and defeats?
29257Love and Faith, free from all sectarianism and all earthly authority,--what is Buhaism or Mohammedanism or Christianity beside them?
29257Love, the splendour of God?
29257Might I come to your Table to- night as a beggar?"
29257Might he not only have passed through these glades to other parts?
29257Might not the Phoenicians have asked the same questions that we ask to- day: Who were the builders?
29257My Truth, Jamïlah, can you not see that?
29257Not even the does and kangaroos that adorn the Park distracted or detained him?
29257Nothing?
29257Now, can you love me in the light of that truth?"
29257Now, is it not absurd that I should come here and pay a hard dollar to hear this heretical speechifier insult my parents and my God?
29257Now, maugre the fact that, in a postscript to this Letter, Khalid closes with these words,"And what have I to do with priests and priestesses?"
29257Now, were you not summoned to the Shamrag''s presence to answer for the crime of_ lèse- majesté_?
29257Now, when the question is resolved by hypothesis, is not even a layman free to offer one?
29257Now, where can he find an antidote, who can teach him a healing formula?
29257Now, where is the jubbah, the black jubbah of coarse wool, which we bought from one of the monks?
29257Now, who could have ordered it thus, of all the earthly powers?
29257O Khalid, have you forgotten that these"coppers"are the minions of Tammany?
29257O Khalid, wretched that thou art, can the primitive soul of this muleteer be better than thine?
29257O my Father, what sort of a mother is she who would sell two of her children to the devil for a few hundred piasters?
29257Of this striking piece of fantasy, in which are scintillations of the great Truth, we note the following:"What can you do without your flounces?
29257Once Khalid ventures to ask,"But why are others allowed to set up their stands here?"
29257One night he jumps out of bed and chases them away with his skillet, saying,"Why do n''t I make such a row, ye wantons?"
29257Or has the young philosopher abated in his clerkship the intensity of his moral views?
29257Or of those moving in high- lacquered salons above?...
29257Or wilt have another of the higher things of the mind?
29257Our poor missionary, is it worth while to cross the seas for this?
29257Pack up?
29257Paradoxical, this?
29257Pray, tell me, did not our first parents spoon and sentimentalise in the Paradise, before the Serpent appeared?
29257Rise above him?
29257Run away?
29257Sacrilegious wretch, would you set your face against the divinity in the Holy Pix of Trade?
29257She might deserve the title Shakib bestows upon her; she might be a real huri, for all we know?
29257She must have been a bad one like her brother, who was an infidel, they say, and did not know or fear God.--What wouldst thou see there?
29257Slip a purse into his pocket?
29257Still, the voice within me asked if Shakib were honest in his dealings, if I were honest in my peddling?
29257Such a marriage, O Mohammad, and such a honeymoon, and such a dowry!--is not this enough to shake the very sides of the Kaaba with laughter?
29257That Frenchman who came here in the sixties for antiquities?
29257That is what I understand by a political revolution.... And are the Ottoman people free to- day?
29257The Universe, knowable and unknowable, will it be affected a whit by it?
29257The claws of the one and the wings of the other, have I not felt and seen?
29257The cradle and the tomb, are they not the first and last ruffles of Man?
29257The cups and coffee utensils I wash and restore to the chest-- and what else have I to do to- day?
29257The fire- eating Dervish, how can he now swallow this double- tongued flame of hate and love?
29257The genius of destruction has done its work, you say, O my esteemed Master?
29257The gold dust and the dust of the road, could they withstand a drop of rain?
29257The great English physician of Cairo, why not call_ him_?
29257The lisping infant races of this Earth, when will they learn to pronounce thy name entire?
29257These he packs in the bottom of his trunk, and with them his precious dilapidated copy of Al- Mutanabbi, and-- what MS. be this?
29257They seem to take Time by the sleeve and say to it,"What''s your hurry?"
29257Think you a Tammany Boss is like your atheists and attorneys and women of the studio, at whom you could vent your ire without let or hindrance?
29257To my cousin Najma?
29257To my mother?
29257To pray for your bread or to burrow in the earth for it, is it not the same with most people?
29257To- morrow?
29257Was it out of disgust or surfeit or penury?
29257Was not the Khalid, now writing to you, born in the cellar?
29257We remember passing a pretty cottage surrounded by a vineyard in that rocky wilderness; but who would mistake that for a troglodyte''s cave?
29257Well, how are you now?
29257Were it not better burned, than sold or thrown away?
29257What Cape of Truth in the great Sea of Mystery might we not be able to circumnavigate, if only this were possible of the language of man?
29257What Colony of the chosen sons of the young and puissant Spirit, on some distant isle beyond the seven seas, might he found?
29257What avails thy logic when a little of the Mandragora can melt the material universe into golden, unfolding infinities of dreams?
29257What has he done to deserve the anathema of the Church?
29257What has he done?"
29257What have I done, I thought, to deserve this visit?
29257What if I am lost in the alcoves of the hills, if I vanish forever in the night?
29257What if the former stifles the latter?
29257What is he to these scientific Naturalists?
29257What makes that stately and sombre- looking dame open her arms, when Najib plucks a flower and, after smelling it, presents it to her?
29257What prevented me?
29257What say our Masters of the Island of Ellis?
29257What say you?"
29257What was I to do?
29257What were life without its angles of difficulty and defeat, and its apices of triumph and power?
29257What wilt thou have?
29257What, O Khalid, will you return with me?"
29257What, a Book of Verse spawned in the cellar?
29257What, with these sublimities of character, need we know of her visible charms, or lack of them?
29257Whence the rapture that triumphs over their pain?
29257Where wilt thou go?
29257Whisper in his ear?
29257Who but a child dare approach without an introduction any one of these solemn- looking tourists?
29257Who did not run away from school, whimpering, snivelling, and cursing in his heart and in his sleep the black- board and the horn- book?
29257Who in all Syria and Arabia dare openly criticise the new Owner of the Mule?
29257Who in these mountains, having been in America, took more interest in the Dreamer of Walden Woods than in peddling and trading?
29257Who of us, for instance, was not feruled and bastinadoed by the town pedagogue?
29257Who shall point out the dashes which compound the opposite loadstars in the various regions of thy Heaven?
29257Who shall supply the Vowels which shall unite the Gutturals of the Sacred Books?
29257Whom wilt thou employ?
29257Whom wilt thou follow?
29257Whose this mutilated copy of the_ Week_, we thought?
29257Why did he not cover well that said paragraph with crosses and arabesques?
29257Why did its first owner part with it?
29257Why do you not come to the Hermitage for a few days and make me your confessor?''
29257Why not go home and sleep?
29257Why not go to the Hermitage since my push- cart income permits of it?
29257Why not leave me alone then with the spirits?
29257Why not, my friend, take them boiled and drink a little hot water after them?
29257Why should they not work together in Tiptology, as in Physiology and Metaphysics?
29257Why should we write it then, and for whom?
29257Why strip Man of his fancy appendages, his adventitious sanctities, if you are going to give him instead only a few yards of shoddy?
29257Why take thyself so seriously when a leaf of henbane, taken by mistake in thy salad, can destroy thee?
29257Why tarry, therefore, and ask questions?
29257Why this inflated conception of thy Me, when an infusion of poppy seeds might lull it to sleep, even to stupefaction?
29257Why were you so queer?''
29257Why, then, should he resort to deception?
29257Why?
29257Why?
29257Will it ever heal?
29257Will you continue, while in the quagmires yourself, to point contemptuously at those standing in the gutter?
29257Will you not let me nurse you?
29257Will you not?"
29257Will you, in your dishonesty, dare impeach the honesty of men?
29257Wilt thou have more?"
29257Wilt thou not beat thy cheeks in ignominy and shame, when a stranger thinks of thy mother, and reverently, ere thou dost?
29257Withal, is he not too busy, think you, to come up to the dock for the puerile, prosaic purpose of shaking hands and saying ta- ta?
29257Would he rival the Buha?
29257Would you not soften a trifle, loosen a whit, if only for the sake of your blood- circulation?
29257Yes, why?
29257Yes?
29257You are leaving our neighbourhood?
29257a little granulation on the inner surface of the eyelids, what additional misery does it bring upon the poor deported emigrant?
29257and ends with this other,"What do you mean by immanent morality?"
29257and there is nothing more to destroy?
29257and why to them this infant hour, this suckling while, is so repugnant?
29257and with what tools?
29257sighing likewise for sweeter things?
29257what might he not accomplish?
10025''Grounds''? 10025 A touch of the old trouble, Hanna?"
10025A what, then?
10025Ai n''t it cranberry between Ruby and Vetsburg?
10025Ai n''t it fair, Lenie, in love and war and business a man has got to scheme for what he wants out of life? 10025 Ai n''t it me that''s got life before me?
10025Ai n''t the missis in on this killin''?
10025Ai n''t this war just terrible, Lew?
10025Ai n''t you ashamed, a big boy like you, and Mrs. Suss with her neuralgia?
10025Ai n''t you taking the car?
10025Am I right, Mrs. Finshriber? 10025 And you?"
10025Any more cotton goods? 10025 Anything new, ma?"
10025Anything new?
10025Are you all right?
10025Are you, mommy?
10025Ask what?
10025Asleep yet, baby?
10025Aw, now, Hanna, what''s the use puttin''it that way? 10025 Aw, now, sweetness, what''s the idea?
10025Aw, say now, what''s the use digging up ancient history?
10025Blutch darlin'', you mean it?
10025Blutch, how much?
10025Blutch, how-- how much did you drop to- day? 10025 Burkhardt?"
10025Bust?
10025But not-- the crowd, Charley; just you-- and--"How''re we going to get the license, honey, this time of night without Jess? 10025 But, mama--""Is it natural, Mr. Vetsburg, I should want to work off my hands my daughter should escape that?
10025Ca n''t I jig?
10025Ca n''t tempt you with them wash silks, Mrs. C.? 10025 Ca n''t you see they''re half- dead now?
10025Can we break the receiving- line now, Lester honey, and go down with everybody? 10025 Can you blame her?
10025Charley, Charley, ai n''t there just no limit to your wildness?
10025Charley, Charley, ca n''t you understand? 10025 Charley, are n''t you tired painting this old town yet?
10025Charley, ca n''t you understand? 10025 Charley, has n''t that gang got you into enough mix- ups?"
10025Charley, you-- you have n''t run through those thousands and thousands and thousands the papers said you got from your granny that time?
10025Charley-- Charley--"Why, girl, what?
10025Comin''better, honeybunch?
10025Could you, Kit? 10025 Could-- you help me-- your little lawyer-- your--""Remember, I ai n''t advising--""Could you, Kit, and to-- to get a start?"
10025Credit? 10025 Cut cards?"
10025Did I scare you, sweetness? 10025 Did he-- did he see the morning papers?
10025Did mama''s girl have a good time? 10025 Did n''t Lester want to-- to come in for a while, Selene, to-- to see-- me?"
10025Did she? 10025 Did yuh, Edwin?"
10025Did-- did he hear about last night, Charley? 10025 Do you like it, Charley?
10025Do you like it, Mrs. Suss? 10025 Do you-- honest, Lew-- like me?"
10025Doctor-- quick-- God!--What?
10025Eh, Jimmie?
10025Eh?
10025Eh?
10025Eh?
10025For the love of Mike-- you want somebody to kiss it and make it well? 10025 For why yet he should wait till he''s got better prospects, so his mother- in- law can hang on?
10025France?
10025From your wife? 10025 Get me?"
10025Go where?
10025Goin''where, Hanna?
10025Got any my special Gold Top on ice for me, George? 10025 Gramaw''s an old--""Is it any wonder I''m down at Amy''s half the time?
10025Had your supper-- dinner, Harry?
10025Harry, I-- oh, Harry--"Why, mother, what''s the matter? 10025 Harry, what-- what would you say if I could let you have nearly all of that three thousand?"
10025Harry-- Alma Zitelle-- you mean-- Harry?
10025Have n''t you got your Loo? 10025 He did it?
10025He do n''t, do n''t he? 10025 He''s been made deacon-- not?"
10025He-- he--"Why, you think, Ruby, I been making out of myself a servant like you call it all these years except for your future? 10025 He?"
10025Hello-- Charley? 10025 Honest, Harry?"
10025Honest, ca n''t a girl go home from work in this town without one of you fellows getting fresh with her?
10025Honey, you want to go, do n''t you? 10025 How''s Burkhardt?"
10025How-- many dollars, Harry?
10025Huh?
10025Huh?
10025Huh?
10025Huh?
10025Huh?
10025Huh?
10025I am, am I?
10025I should n''t be grand yet to my-- Let''s see-- what relation is it I am to you?
10025I''ll get you out of--"Have I ever lived anywheres except in a dirty little North St. Louis flat with us three girls in a bed? 10025 I''m a bad egg, girl, and what you going to do about it?
10025I-- er--"Is there somebody else you got on your mind, baby?
10025I-- wi- ish--"What do you wi- ish?
10025I--"Go on-- you hear?
10025I--"You ai n''t fool enough to think I''m what you''d call a free man? 10025 If I could let you have twenty- six hundred seventeen dollars and about fifty cents of it?"
10025If there was a chance, you think I''d be spoiling things for gramaw? 10025 If you-- you--""Why, honey, what''s eatin''you?
10025If-- if you ai n''t sleepy awhile yet, Hanna, why not run over to Widow Dinninger''s to pass the time of evenin''? 10025 If-- if you like my company so much, ca n''t you just take a walk with me or come out and sit on our steps awhile?"
10025Is Habana in the war, Lew?
10025Is Mr.--Burkhardt-- home?
10025Is it right extras should be allowed to be brought on a table like this where fourteen other boarders got to let their mouth water and look at it?
10025Is my babe disappointed I did n''t dig her coat and earrings out of hock?
10025Is that meant to be an in- sinuating remark, Josie?
10025Is the rabbit''s foot still kicking my boy?
10025Is there?
10025It is, is it? 10025 It was Edwin coming in from school and getting me worked up with his talk about-- about--""What?"
10025It''s a faint, ai n''t it, Mr. Haas? 10025 It-- it ai n''t that, Blutch; but-- but where''s it comin''from?"
10025Jimmie-- would you-- had you ever thought about being a soldier?
10025Kit-- when you goin''back?
10025Kitchen what?
10025Know what, baby?
10025Lew-- will you-- are you-- you ai n''t kiddin''me all these weeks? 10025 Lo- o, that you?"
10025Love me?
10025Ma, are you going to stand there and let her talk to me thataway? 10025 Ma, what you mean?"
10025Ma, why did n''t you rap for Katie to come up and light the gas? 10025 Made what, honey?
10025Mama, you got enough? 10025 Mama?
10025Miss Arndt, little more? 10025 Miss Flora looked right nice in that pink waist to- night-- not?
10025Mommy, you mean it?
10025Mother,he said, pulling at his coat lapels with a squaring of shoulders,"you-- you going to be a dead game little sport?"
10025Must n''t?
10025Nice?
10025No high jinks to- night, though, Charley?
10025No kidding?
10025No, no, Blutch; only--"What, Babe?
10025Not let a fellow even spin you home?
10025Now that''s a fine question for a ten- hours''wifey to ask her hubby, ai n''t it? 10025 Now what''s the use going into all that, Millie?
10025Now, Shila''s little mama want to sleep?
10025Now, now, baby, is it wrong a mother should talk to her own baby about what is closest in both their hearts?
10025Now, you''re sure, honey? 10025 Of course I ai n''t, honey; only, with you and him goin''right over to Al''s afterward, what''s the sense of me goin''?
10025Oh, Blutch-- honey-- if only-- if only--"If only what, Babe?
10025Only my boy''s got a wife-- a brand- new wifie to support,''ai n''t he?
10025Out of what, Babe?
10025Remember the run of rotten luck you had that year in Cincinnati, when the ponies was runnin''at Latonia?
10025Ruby, are n''t you ashamed to talk like that?
10025Ruby, is-- is it something you ai n''t telling mama?
10025Ruby, should you be afraid to talk to mama, who do n''t want nothing but her child''s happiness?
10025Say, Mother Coblenz, ai n''t it about time this little girl of mine was resting her pink- satin double A''s? 10025 Say, bo, what''s one of them chicks worth?"
10025Say, have you heard the news?
10025Saying what?
10025Selene, Selene, can we keep it from her?
10025Snowing?
10025Sorry? 10025 Stag?...
10025Sure, baby? 10025 Sure?"
10025The wife ai n''t so short on looks, is she?
10025Then, mama, please-- you will-- you will-- darling?
10025Thought I was kidding you last night-- didn''t you-- about wedding- bells?
10025Tired, mommy?
10025Wanna bite?
10025Was what?
10025Was-- was your papa around, Charley?
10025Well, Jimmie?
10025Well, what?
10025Well, whatta you know about that? 10025 Well, why-- why do n''t you ask me something?"
10025What ai n''t?
10025What bells?
10025What do you mean?
10025What in-- What''s this thing that scratched me?
10025What is it, mother? 10025 What time is it, Burkhardt?
10025What ud you bring us, honey?
10025What you going to do with it-- buy us a round of fizz?
10025What you spittin''fire for? 10025 What''ll you give me, Ruby, if I tell you whose favorite color is pink?"
10025What''ll you take for one, bo?
10025What''s ailing her, Mrs. C.? 10025 What''s all this junk in this barrel?"
10025What''s new in Deadtown, Han?
10025What''s the difference, honey? 10025 What''s the idea of the comedy?"
10025What''s the idea-- chicken broth? 10025 What''s this?"
10025What''s your capital?
10025What''s your hurry, honey?
10025What-- does a person do that''s smotherin''?
10025What?
10025What?
10025What?
10025What?
10025What?
10025Whatta you know about--"What kind of a job you think you''re gon na get? 10025 Where you goin'', Hanna?"
10025Where''s my batteries?
10025Where''s my stamp- book?
10025Where?
10025Where?
10025Who cares? 10025 Who''s he?"
10025Who?
10025Who?
10025Why not, Babe-- seein''you want it? 10025 Why, Babe-- Babe, what is it?
10025Why, Hanna, what you been doin''to yourself?
10025Why, Mrs. Kaufman, do n''t you and Ruby come down by Atlantic City with me to- morrow over Easter? 10025 Why, mama-- why, mama, what is Meyer Vetsburg to-- to me?
10025Why, mommy, what-- what you crying for, dearie? 10025 Why-- why, we-- we''d just love it, would n''t we, ma?
10025Will you, Mrs. Kaufman, come or wo n''t you? 10025 Wo n''t you please?
10025Would n''t I be better off out of it? 10025 Yes, Hanna?"
10025Yes; with a husband at home in bed, I''d be a fine one chasin''around this town alone, would n''t I? 10025 Yes?"
10025You ai n''t mad at mama, baby? 10025 You ai n''t sore because I asked Joe?
10025You all right, baby?
10025You did n''t mean it, Ruby, did you? 10025 You do n''t feel like sitting with Jess and the crowd, Loo?"
10025You game, girl?
10025You hear me?
10025You know it all, do n''t you?
10025You know yourself, Ruby, how always on Annie''s Sunday out--"Well, what of it? 10025 You mean it, boy?
10025You mean that?
10025You mean you got cold feet?
10025You mean_ you_ never thought about it?
10025You there?
10025You was n''t expecting me, Jimmie?
10025You would n''t be afraid, would you, Jimmie?
10025You''ll play safe, Blutch? 10025 You''re willin'', then?"
10025You''re-- talkin''weddin''-bells, Lew?
10025You-- got faith in this Goldfinch& Goetz failure like you had in''Pan- America''and''The Chaperon,''Harry?
10025You-- you ai n''t mad at mama?
10025You-- you see for yourself, Millie, what''s dead ca n''t be made alive-- now, can it?
10025''"Ai n''t I told you?
10025''Ai n''t got the nerve to answer, have you?"
10025''Ai n''t took cold, have you, with your fur coat in hock?"
10025''Ai n''t we got just lots to be thankful for-- the business growing and the bank- book growing, and our Selene on top?
10025''Ai n''t you got everything your little heart desires?
10025''Ai n''t you men got no sense for seein''things?
10025''Go''way,''she said;''on my grandchild''s engagement day anything should be too much?''
10025A faint?"
10025A fellow ca n''t do any more, honey, to show a girl where she stands with him than ask her to marry him-- now can he?
10025Adviser to a corporation lawyer?
10025Ai n''t I the one with life before me-- ain''t I, mama?"
10025Ai n''t it a shame, Mr. Vetsburg, a girl should be so dainty?"
10025Ai n''t it cute?"
10025Ai n''t it like a dream, mama-- your little Selene all of a sudden in with-- the somebodies?"
10025Ai n''t it, girl-- ain''t it?"
10025Ai n''t it?
10025Ai n''t it?"
10025Ai n''t it?...
10025Ai n''t lit up, are you, honey?...
10025Ai n''t she entitled to die with that off her poor old mind?
10025Ai n''t she-- ain''t she just the limit?
10025Ai n''t that something?
10025Ai n''t there just nothing will bring you to your senses?
10025Ai n''t there no way to satisfy you?"
10025Ai n''t they, Vetsy?"
10025Ai n''t we going down to Sheepshead when the first thaw sets in?
10025Ai n''t we just a pair of love- birds that''s as happy as if we had our right senses?
10025Anyways, when happiness comes to you with a man like Meyer Vetsburg, don''t-- don''t it come to me, too, baby?"
10025Are you crazy?"
10025Are you deaf, honey?
10025Are you game, girl?
10025At first, Ruby, ai n''t it natural it should come like a shock that you and that rascal Leo got all of a sudden so-- so thick?
10025Baby, you ai n''t blind, are you?"
10025But after all, what are the kings and peasants, poets and draymen, but great, greater, or greatest, less, lesser, or least atoms of us?
10025But it''s what I''m cut out for, and what are you goin''to do about it?
10025But what''s a man to- day on just a fair living?
10025But what''s the use trying to keep life in something that''s dead?
10025But you think, darling, I got one minute''s happiness like this?"
10025Ca n''t you go home one evening?"
10025Ca n''t you see she''s gone back?"
10025Can we have some like them?"
10025Charley boy better be making connections with headquarters or he wo n''t find himself such a hit with the niftiest doll in town, eh?"
10025Could n''t you slip me one in a''mergency?"
10025Did n''t you promise Shila?
10025Did n''t you run the Two Dollar Hat Store that time in Syracuse and get away with it?"
10025Did n''t you walk down here to pick me up?"
10025Did you see her new white spats to- night?"
10025Did-- did you and Lester have a nice ride?"
10025Do n''t any young man got to get his start slow?"
10025Do n''t it warm your heart, Mrs. Suss?
10025Do n''t you think I know you too well for that?
10025Do you know it is said that on the Desert of Sahara, the slope of Sorrento, and the marble of Fifth Avenue the sun can shine whitest?
10025Do you know the size of Siberia?
10025Does a little mother with something like that to bank on have time to be miserable over family rows?
10025Does it, Lenie?"
10025Everything is something awful, ai n''t it?"
10025For myself a smaller house without such a show and maybe five or six roomers without meals, you think ai n''t easier as this big barn?
10025For myself, you think I ask anything except my little girl''s happiness?
10025For why once in a while should n''t a poor girl get a rich man except in books and choruses?"
10025Gee, ca n''t a feller walk?"
10025Get me?
10025Get me?"
10025Go-- you hear?"
10025Goes to show we were just cut and dried for each other, do n''t it?
10025Got the key?"
10025Gravy?
10025Grounds for what, Hanna?"
10025Harry, ai n''t there no way I can please you no more-- no way?"
10025Have I ever landed anywhere but on my feet?
10025Have n''t you got her?"
10025He did it?
10025He--""Baby, ai n''t you ashamed like it makes any difference how a good man talks?"
10025How is your mother, Mrs. C.?
10025How many will you take care of?''
10025How''s Burkhardt?
10025How''s that, sweetness?"
10025How''s that?"
10025Howdado, Sara?
10025Huh, Millie?"
10025Huh?
10025Huh?
10025I can use the lower shelf of the china- table, eh, ma?"
10025I guess you want you should look all worn out when a certain young man what I know walks down to meet our train at Atlantic City this afternoon, eh?"
10025I knew nothin''except-- except--""Except what?"
10025I wo n''t have it-- you hear?
10025I''ll be movin''along unless there''s anything you want?"
10025I''m going to take you back, dearie-- ain''t that enough?
10025I''m missing a chance, to- day that, mark my word, would make me a rich man but for want of a few--""Harry, you mean that?"
10025I-- Life''s life, Millie, and what you going to do about it?"
10025I--""Why should I give to this war?
10025If she backs out, we string her up by the thumbs-- not, Ruby?"
10025If she had it, would n''t she be willing to take the very last penny to give her girl the kind of a wedding she wants?
10025If us fellows with education do n''t set the example, what can we expect from the other fellows?
10025If your wife ai n''t the one to break it to you you''re broke, who is?
10025In thirty years, do you think you can find those graves?
10025In what school does the great army of industry earn its first experience?
10025Is eight years hasty?
10025Is eight years of buried- alive hasty?
10025Is it, Harry?"
10025Is she?
10025Is she?"
10025Is that enough, Harry, to do the Goldfinch- Goetz spectacle on your own hook?
10025Is that the way to act when Shila comes up after a good day?
10025Is-- is it any wonder, Milt, I-- I ca n''t see the joke?"
10025It ai n''t hard to guess when a woman''s got a marriageable daughter-- not?"
10025It ai n''t nice, I tell him.... Me?
10025It''s a faint, ai n''t it?
10025It-- it''s only my-- my fear that I''m losing you, and-- and my hate for the every- day grind of things, and--""I ca n''t help that, can I?"
10025Kaufman?"
10025Little more of that stew, mother?"
10025Look at those fingers yellowing again-- looka--""They''re my fingers, ai n''t they?"
10025Mama darling?"
10025Mama,''ai n''t you got your own Shila-- your own Selene?
10025Maybe if-- when his uncle Meyer takes him in the business, we--""Baby, not Leo?"
10025Maybe, baby, I-- well, just maybe-- eh, baby?"
10025Me to own a show after all these years; me to--""Do n''t you think it means something to me, too, Harry?"
10025Miss Horowitz?
10025Mr. Krakower?
10025Mr. Schloss?
10025Mr. Suss?
10025Mr. Vetsburg, let me give you this little tender-- No?
10025Mrs. Suss?
10025My darlin''in there-- why are you hurtin''him so?
10025My old man did it?"
10025My whole life?"
10025No?
10025Not, baby?
10025Not?
10025Not?
10025Now cut it out-- you hear?
10025Now do n''t you, Loo?"
10025Now what did I say so bad?
10025Our furniture-- our--""What''s a flat?
10025Pay- day?"
10025Promise me?"
10025Put ginger in your mama, Ruby, and we''ll open her eyes on the boardwalk-- not?"
10025Remember Joe Claiborne promised us a real stage- job, and we opened a lemonade- stand on our front gate to pay his commission in advance?"
10025Round trip?"
10025See that little streak?"
10025See?
10025Shall I come out?"
10025Shall Shila read it to you?"
10025Shapiro& Stein?"
10025Simon?
10025Sure?"
10025That you?
10025That''s a new weave, ai n''t it?
10025That''s gramaw''s-- to go back--""You mean the bank- book''s hers?"
10025The marmalade- money I made the last two Christmases?
10025The velvet muff I made myself out of the fur- money you give me?
10025This morning, after we got her in Lester''s Uncle Mark''s big automobile, I says to her, I says,''Mama, you sure it ai n''t too much?''
10025Time to touch my old man, eh?"
10025Vetsburg?"
10025Vetsburg?"
10025Vetsburg?"
10025Vetsburg?"
10025Was I right, mama, when I said if you''d only let me stop school I''d show you?
10025Was I right, momsie?"
10025Was n''t I right?"
10025Was n''t it sweet for him to put it that way right off, ma?
10025Well, Sadie, it''s your turn next, eh?...
10025What court would listen to his stillness for grounds?
10025What did they do?
10025What do people think?
10025What do you say?
10025What does your speedometer register?"
10025What has there ever been?
10025What if a rainy day should come-- where would we be at?
10025What is the terrible riddle?
10025What shall we do?
10025What show you got in the end against your playin''pals like Joe Kirby and Al Flexnor?
10025What would you say, sweetness, if I told you I was down to my last few thousands?
10025What you doin''out this kind of a night?
10025What you doing?...
10025What you got special against Joe?
10025What you homesick for?
10025What you think, Ruby, I do all day without steps to run, and my gedinks with housekeeping and marketing after eighteen years of it?
10025What you wanna cheer her up with-- a corpse?
10025What''ll I do?
10025What''ll I do?"
10025What''ll you have, hon?"
10025What''s J. G. Hoffheimer got that I''ai n''t?
10025What''s a flat?
10025What''s anything?
10025What''s anything?"
10025What''s eating you now?
10025What''s eating you this time?"
10025What''s furniture?
10025What''s the difference whether you live in ten rooms like yours or in four like this as long as you''re buried alive?
10025What''s the difference who I mean?
10025What''s the hurry call this time?
10025What''s the idea calling me off when I got a business dinner on hand?
10025What''s the idea?"
10025What''s the use making yourself sick?
10025What''s the use tearing yourself to pieces with it?
10025What''s the use, seeing the way you had your heart set on-- on things?
10025What''s there in it for me?
10025What''s those things got to do with it?
10025What''s to be done?"
10025What''s, nowadays, baby, a man forty?
10025What?"
10025Whatcha got friends for?"
10025Whatta you bet?
10025When could it have been if not after my sister broke her confidence to tell me?
10025When do you think I called you up last night?
10025When she stinted and scrimped and saved on shoe- leather for the happiness of it?"
10025When your mama do n''t go this time not one step we go by ourselves-- ain''t it?"
10025Where do you think your laundry- money that I''ve been saving goes, Harry?
10025Where''d the fun be if I could n''t make this town point up its ears at my girl?
10025Where''d you dig up the spangles, Babe?
10025Where''d you get that hand- me- down?"
10025Where''s it got me these eight years?
10025Where''s it got me?
10025Where-- to jail?
10025Whither?
10025Who done your bankin''last year?
10025Who first employs the untaught hand?
10025Who has not loved beside thyme or at the sweetness of dusk?
10025Who?"
10025Why ai n''t he livin''in White Plains, where his wife and kids are?"
10025Why ca n''t you get yourself on the right track where you belong, Charley?
10025Why did n''t you get it a comb, too?"
10025Why did n''t you scare me to death and be done with it?"
10025Why do n''t I die?
10025Why do n''t I die?"
10025Why do n''t you clear-- out-- West where it''s clean?"
10025Why do n''t you wake up, mama?
10025Why do you think all of a sudden last night I seen your bluff through about Gerber?
10025Why has he stopped hollerin''?
10025Why not?
10025Why should I give to what they''re fighting for on the other side of the ocean?
10025Why, Charley-- and you not even thirty- one yet?
10025Why, Loo, do you know, I have n''t had to ask my old man for a cent since my poor old granny died five years ago and left me a world of money?
10025Why, even as they blubber, are there women whose bodies have the quality of cream, slipping in between scented sheets?
10025Why-- why, ai n''t mama forty- one, baby, and did n''t you just say yourself for sisters they take us?"
10025Will you, I ask you, or wo n''t you?"
10025Wo n''t you come in?"
10025Would you?"
10025Yes, reader; but who are you to turn away sickened and know no more of this?
10025You ai n''t afraid, Babe, your old hubby ca n''t always take care of his girl A1, are you?"
10025You ai n''t goin''to turn out like all the rest in this town?
10025You ai n''t sorry about nothing, Jimmie?"
10025You been overworking again, ironing my shirts and collars when they ought to go to the laundry?
10025You got the ring safe, honey- bee, and the license?"
10025You got your chance, boy, to show what you''re made of-- can''t you see that?
10025You hear?
10025You hear?
10025You hear?
10025You know what came out in the paper about making a new will if-- if you ever got pulled in again for rough- housing?"
10025You know, do n''t you, Vetsy?"
10025You promise me?
10025You remember, dearie-- Lester''s uncle?"
10025You sure you''re feelin''well, Babe?
10025You think I did n''t know you were flirting?
10025You think if she was, honey, I''d-- I''d see myself come butting in between you this way, like-- like a-- common girl?
10025You think it''s a pleasure I ca n''t slam the door right in Mrs. Katz''s face when six times a day she orders towels and ice- water?
10025You think it''s a pleasure I got to take sass from such a bad boy like Irving?
10025You think once he gets it?
10025You tired, Selene?"
10025You want to square up those shoulders and put on khaki, do n''t you?
10025You would n''t have missed it, eh?
10025You''ai n''t been kiddin''me, Lew?"
10025You''ll play''em close, honey?"
10025You-- we-- We could n''t be no lower than that time we got back from Latonia, hon?"
10025You--""Harry, what would you say if-- if I was to tell you something?"
10025Your poor- as- a- church- mouse days?
10025a-- a-- what?"
10025if I''m where I am on my voice, where would you be?"
10025she sobbed into her handkerchief,"why did n''t you take me when you took him?"
10025what have I got besides money to talk for me?"
10025what''ll I do, Burkhardt?
10025where do you plant it?"
7792Ah, but what do they really want?
7792Ah, so you too have been through bad times and have got to fight your way, eh? 7792 Am I in the way?"
7792Am I to hang about here listening to you maundering on?
7792An inn?
7792And all that we have thought so highly of-- what''s to become of it?
7792And do they think well of you?
7792And have a wife and kids on my back? 7792 And have we allowed it ourselves?"
7792And how are things going here?
7792And how are you doing now?
7792And how did you find your way here in the wilderness-- and at night, too? 7792 And in spite of that, you are always happy?"
7792And interest? 7792 And is Uncle pleased?"
7792And old Jeppe is alive still? 7792 And then?"
7792And what sort of a pair of Elbe barges has he got on? 7792 And what then?"
7792And where is the strong man to rest to- night?
7792And you?
7792Are mate Jensen''s boots ready?
7792Are n''t the others coming soon?
7792Are n''t they the sort of people who are making ready for the millennium? 7792 Are n''t you our uncle too?
7792Are there any more children who are hungry?
7792Are things going on all right?
7792Are you a man? 7792 Are you asleep, booby?
7792Are you asleep, booby?
7792Are you coming this way?
7792Are you done with your tomfoolery now?
7792Are you expecting any money? 7792 Are you going to leave Heath Farm, father?"
7792Are you going to travel just as you stand?
7792Are you quite well again now?
7792Are you really a farmer chap?
7792Are you really always going to be a loafer?
7792Are you really asleep, booby? 7792 Are you there, Pelle?"
7792Are you waxing it well?
7792But are you going-- again-- to send in a tender?
7792But how could you do such a thing?
7792But how did big folks like that manage to smell you out?
7792But how did you get into such a mess? 7792 But how do you manage?"
7792But what if I ca n''t keep my feet warm now in those damned leather shoes? 7792 But what poor fellow is that up on the hill?
7792But what sort of a night did you have?
7792But what_ do_ they want, then, if they do n''t want to overthrow the whole world?
7792But when were you married?
7792But where are all the things they have in the shop windows-- all the meats and cakes and sweet things? 7792 But, Pelle, are n''t you ashamed of it?
7792But, of course, that''s all lies, eh?
7792Ca n''t I speak to Karna a moment?
7792Ca n''t father get him let off the beating?
7792Ca n''t you bring this into order a bit? 7792 Ca n''t you do anything for me, Pelle?"
7792Ca n''t you get her to go, Morten?
7792Ca n''t you help me to find it, my boy?
7792Can I never get any peace from you?
7792Can you not open?
7792Can you stand it, wandering so much?
7792Can you, who are so well read, tell me what keeps the moon from falling? 7792 Come over here?
7792D''you mean the poor devils who believe in the watchmaker and his''new time''? 7792 D''you think he''s perhaps bewitched?"
7792Devil take it, Pelle, how are we going to pay every one, Pelle?
7792Did it hurt you much?
7792Did n''t she say anything to you-- not a word?
7792Did n''t we say so?
7792Did n''t we tell you so?
7792Did n''t you run that errand for mother?
7792Did n''t you weigh as much then as you do now?
7792Did they beat you-- or why are you crying?
7792Did they beat you? 7792 Did you get the money?"
7792Did you see the journeyman, Uncle Jorgen?
7792Did you throw the money away? 7792 Do n''t you see he has lost his intellect?
7792Do n''t you see she''s crying? 7792 Do n''t you see?"
7792Do they swallow it, then?
7792Do they? 7792 Do you chew?"
7792Do you find that I know so much?
7792Do you get anything decent to eat? 7792 Do you really believe that an eternal kingdom is coming-- the''thousand- year kingdom''--the millennium?
7792Do you say Lasse? 7792 Do you strike your own mother, Peter?"
7792Do you understand,he said, without opening his eyes,"how we have labored and labored, and yet have been barely able to earn our daily bread?
7792Does the consul come to see you, then?
7792For machines do n''t make masterpieces and medal work, so where will real good work come in?
7792Garibaldi dead? 7792 Had he many journeymen?"
7792Has Bjerregrav got a note of hand?
7792Has an answer come from the king?
7792Has any of you heard of him?
7792Has he been courting? 7792 Have you a pretty sister?"
7792Have you anything for us to do?
7792Have you been fighting again, you devil''s imp?
7792Have you been to the harbor again, you young devil?
7792Have you got a clay pipe?
7792Have you got bad eyes?
7792Have you got wet, little Karen?
7792Have you lost anything?
7792Have you lost something, my lad?
7792Have you news of Father Lasse?
7792Have you seen anything of Albinus? 7792 Have you seen anything of them?"
7792Healthy?
7792Here we go about imagining a whole lot of things; but what if it''s all just lies?
7792How are things going now?
7792How can they live, all those thousands of poor people, if the unemployment is so great?
7792How do I do it-- how do I do it?
7792How do you do it then?
7792How many medals have you really received?
7792How much is under cultivation here?
7792How was it they did n''t pay you for the shoes at the Chamberlain''s yesterday?
7792I have been sitting there, too-- didn''t you see me sitting next to Merchant Lau? 7792 I suppose those are the performers?"
7792I thought you did n''t want to have anything more to do with me?
7792If I were to lay a stone in his way-- why, who would be good to him, if his poor head wanted to lie soft? 7792 Is Karna still here?"
7792Is Soren delighted with the youngster?
7792Is any one there?
7792Is he quieting down, d''you think?
7792Is it for some one lying- in?
7792Is it here?
7792Is it like that with them?
7792Is it the devils?
7792Is it up by Stone Farm?
7792Is it your turn now? 7792 Is mother turning the boys''heads?"
7792Is my offer not enough for you? 7792 Is n''t the soil rather middling?"
7792Is that so? 7792 Is that so?"
7792Is that the Paris fashion?
7792Is that this sosherlism?
7792Is that you, Anders?
7792Is the schooner_ Andreas_ ready to sail?
7792Is the world coming to an end?
7792Is there some sort of beast that sits in your chest and gnaws?
7792Is this to end in my bringing you your coffee in bed?
7792Is your father still alive?
7792It''s really devilish queer,he said,"for suppose there should be anything in it?
7792Just look at the''Great Power''; could any one have had a better claim than he? 7792 Just to the thumbnail, eh?"
7792Lasse Karlson?
7792Lasse?
7792Look at me-- don''t you see how glad I am? 7792 Middling-- when all that can grow and flourish there?"
7792No, Pelle, is that you?
7792No, but here is a head that can give them some trouble-- there are knots of sense in this wood, hey?
7792No, father; what are they?
7792No; why should I be? 7792 No?
7792No? 7792 Now I have n''t touched brandy for I do n''t know how long, but what was the good?
7792Now then, what''s the matter with you?
7792Now what''s this? 7792 Now you wo n''t forget your old father?"
7792Now, Bjerregrav, have you tried it-- you know what-- since we last saw you?
7792Now, I''ve learned to conjure up spirits; will Bjerregrav make the experiment?
7792Now, is the seat of the stool ready consecrated, and prayed over? 7792 Now, my son,"he says, and strikes Pelle lightly on the shoulder,"can you fetch me something to drink?
7792Now, shall I inherit Bjerregrav''s money?
7792O Lord, is that a man?
7792Of the world?
7792Old?
7792Or do you know of anything else that tears everything down and washes it away? 7792 Ought n''t I to ask him to say a good word for me?
7792Ought they to be made of gold?
7792Pelle, you devil''s imp, can you run an errand for me?
7792Perhaps our fishermen wear leather boots?
7792Perhaps you want to take the knee- strap out with you?
7792Pinch? 7792 Plenty to do, master?"
7792Sha n''t I carry the bench for you? 7792 Sha n''t we arrange that about your washing?"
7792Sha n''t we start soon?
7792Shall we have one look at the new harbor?
7792Shall we walk a little way together?
7792She? 7792 So you are going to town, after all?"
7792So you''ve become a cobbler?
7792So you''ve been in a proper theater, eh? 7792 Soren?"
7792Strike-- what is that?
7792Suppose Bjerregrav has just sat himself down in the nettles?
7792Tell me what I should do over there, eh, Pelle?
7792That''s meant for the young master, eh?
7792That''s surely a fine lady?
7792That''s surely a new customer?
7792Then are you going to marry her when you are a journeyman?
7792Then have they begun already?
7792Then he''s got the millennium on the brain?
7792Then is n''t this Lasse?
7792Then the house was built later?
7792They drink together, do they, like the wooden shoemaker and his old woman?
7792They feed you devilish well in the town there, do n''t they?
7792They say you know something about sketching, Pelle?
7792They''ll all fall off your body soon-- why do n''t you put on something else and let me see to them?
7792Was he perhaps a relation of yours?
7792Was it here?
7792Well, are n''t you blown sky- high?
7792Well, are you working up there?
7792Well, ca n''t a man speak any longer?
7792Well, did the layer of felt answer?
7792Well, have you at last decided?
7792Well, he''s done with the wax,said Jeppe,"but the question is, can he sit?
7792Well, how''s life treating us? 7792 Well, well,"said Jeppe,"but do the Icelanders mean to go without boots?"
7792Well, what do they really want? 7792 Well, what''s going on there?
7792Well, what_ shall_ I do?
7792Well, you are a rare bird, are n''t you?
7792Well? 7792 Were n''t you afraid that she might transfer death to you?"
7792What are you doing? 7792 What are you really thinking about now?"
7792What day''s this-- Thursday? 7792 What devils?"
7792What dirty tricks are you hatching now?
7792What do I want with your money?
7792What do they want? 7792 What do they want?"
7792What do you want here?
7792What does he see now?
7792What does it matter if I''m a few hundred kroner in arrears when I have improved the property to the tune of several thousand?
7792What does that matter? 7792 What does this mean?
7792What does this mean?
7792What festivity''s going on here?
7792What have you been doing now?
7792What have you been doing to- day?
7792What in the world is it, Pelle?
7792What is Bjerregrav really thinking about when he stands like this looking down into the grave?
7792What is he up to now?
7792What is it to you?
7792What is it, father?
7792What is it? 7792 What is their madness really driving at?"
7792What shall I do?
7792What sort of a sheep''s head have you got, then? 7792 What sort of brat is that?"
7792What star is that?
7792What the devil are you doing to him now?
7792What the devil is he going to do now? 7792 What the devil is it?"
7792What the devil is that?
7792What use is it if a poor devil tries to make his way up? 7792 What will it cost?"
7792What''s it matter to us?
7792What''s the matter with father?
7792What''s the matter with you this time, father?
7792What''s the matter, then?
7792What''s the matter? 7792 What''s the matter?
7792What''s the matter? 7792 What''s your journeyman like?
7792What, are you giving yourself airs?
7792What, are you leaving the country?
7792What, is n''t he up yet?
7792What, still sitting here?
7792What? 7792 When did you celebrate hiring- day?"
7792Where are Olsen and Strom?
7792Where are they sleeping?
7792Where do you really get your knowledge of everything?
7792Where had she put it?
7792Where in the world has that little blighter got to?
7792Where is Father Lasse?
7792Who am I?
7792Who is there?
7792Who the devil would reign over us then? 7792 Who will chat with me all that time and look after everything?"
7792Who will stand me a drop?
7792Whose new boy are you?
7792Why did n''t you go sooner?
7792Why do you carry the over- fed brat?
7792Why do you do nothing but read those stupid books?
7792Why do you hit me?
7792Why do you never preach to me?
7792Why do you sit there and pinch your upper lip?
7792Why do you stand right away in the corner here, where you can see nothing? 7792 Why do you want credit?"
7792Why do you want to go now? 7792 Why do you want to lay hands on yourself?"
7792Why not Marie as well?
7792Why not? 7792 Why not?"
7792Why should I do the work and others have the honor of it?
7792Why should I preach to you? 7792 Why?
7792Why? 7792 Will my beer last out the afternoon to- day?"
7792Will you give me a thrashing now?
7792Will you go with me to- night? 7792 Will you have some eye- water?"
7792Will you hold your tongue with your jeering? 7792 Will you please put it down?"
7792Worse things than that might befall me, do n''t you think?
7792Would n''t you have done better to buy a cottage- holding with twelve or fourteen acres of land, and that in a good state of cultivation?
7792Yes, and then? 7792 Yes, look you, it often vexes me that I take everything so easily-- but what if I ca n''t find anything to be sad about?
7792Yes, you may talk, but what do you know about it? 7792 You are a nice sort of girl to me-- not to be able to buy me two skeins of thread; and the money I gave you for it-- have you thrown it away?"
7792You did n''t do it on purpose? 7792 You do n''t know?
7792You think so? 7792 You would n''t be so silly?"
7792You''ll tell me next that they can make shoes by machinery-- cut out and peg and sew and fix the treads and all? 7792 You''re a noodle, a pitiful simpleton-- whatever will become of you?
7792You''re a troublesome youngster-- you''ll allow that?
7792You''ve deserved that, have n''t you?
7792Your Majesty,he said,"how goes it with the new time?"
7792''What the devil d''you want here, Andres?''
7792... And Lasse... yes, where was Father Lasse?
7792Actor West, eh?
7792Am I to be punished all my life, perhaps, because I looked a bit higher, and let myself be led astray in a way that did n''t lead to anything?
7792And do you believe that I shall ever be a man again?"
7792And even if that were not the case-- what should I do there without Karna?
7792And how goes it with you then?
7792And how goes it with your father?
7792And in two or three years we will make the old house into a barn and build ourselves a new house-- eh, Karna?
7792And there was nothing the matter with the ship except that she had done only too well and made a big profit, eh?
7792And to work-- what at?
7792And was he now voyaging toward the land of the blessed?
7792And what becomes of me then?
7792And what do you think conies back out the town?
7792And what does a man see round about him?
7792And what''s your idea about what you are going to be in the long run-- councillor or king?"
7792And who d''you think will help him to get off again if he''s betrayed his own best friend?
7792And why not?
7792And you are always studying, are n''t you?
7792And you wo n''t forget to borrow the list of the lottery- drawings?"
7792Are n''t we, mother?"
7792Are they so fashionable?"
7792Are we getting too clever for you?
7792Are you going to put up with that?
7792Are you leaving?"
7792Are you quite certain of that?"
7792Because I am religious?
7792Blow up the breakwater?"
7792But I said,''Do you know so precisely that the good God cares anything for what you call purity, Ole Jensen?
7792But Soren-- what sort of a strayed weakling is he?
7792But a few moments later he asked inquisitively:"Did the king send them up there to make war?"
7792But about the people in the town-- are they agreeable?"
7792But could I have carried it out alone?
7792But do n''t you know anything of Albinus?"
7792But do you believe in Hell?
7792But do you suppose he''ll notice us?
7792But he did not connect any further ideas with that meeting; it was a long time ago, and--"isn''t she going to give me anything to eat?"
7792But he might have had a daughter, hey?
7792But if any insignificant person asked him:"How was it, then-- weren''t my father and you first cousins?"
7792But it has no power over the farmers and peasants-- they belong to the land, do n''t they?"
7792But it would n''t answer; no one supported us, and we got poorer goods because we were poor, and who cares about dealing with very poor people?
7792But manual work is in a wretched case to- day; there''s no respect for it, and where shall a man look for respect if he does n''t respect himself?"
7792But perhaps you are a woman after all?
7792But perhaps you are she?
7792But sha n''t we see about getting on now?
7792But what do you mean to do?
7792But what do you think, Andres, you who are so book- learned?"
7792But what does that signify?
7792But what else could I have done?"
7792But what is this?
7792But what then?
7792But what was the use?
7792But what''s the good of talking?
7792But where are the players, then?"
7792But where was it going to end?
7792But who did the work?
7792But whom must a tailor marry?
7792But why do n''t he stick to his work and leave his fool''s tricks alone?
7792But you-- have you lost the farmer''s instinct in town?"
7792By nine o''clock in the evening he had finished everything, and was able to get off; his blood was pulsing with excitement.... Would there be horses?
7792Ca n''t I keep my wife and daughter neat and have books and get myself a piano, just as he can?
7792Can a family get decent lodging and decent food and decent clothing for nine kroner a week?
7792Can any one buy_ me_?"
7792Can one of you lend me a krone?"
7792Can she compare herself with them?
7792Can she receive her guests and make fine conversation?
7792Can you hit a farmer chap so that he loses his senses?
7792Can you lend me those ten kroner for a week?"
7792Can you show me a boot that has n''t been made by human hands?"
7792Did n''t you go to Ostland, and did n''t you take over a hotel there?"
7792Did those who took their lives on account of unhappy love feel any different?
7792Did you do it on purpose?"
7792Did_ that_ hurt you very much?"
7792Do n''t I get just as much for my work as the doctor for his?
7792Do n''t you know that, Andres?"
7792Do n''t you know what you have done?
7792Do you believe in Hell?
7792Do you get fine clothes from your master, and does he treat you like a son, and will you finish up by taking over the business as his son- in- law?
7792Do you know what I''ve thought of this morning?
7792Do you mean to travel?
7792Do you think I ca n''t see that you''ve suffered shipwreck, too?
7792Do you think we''ve nothing more to do than to go running out to prayer- meetings on a working day?
7792Do you think you can keep a stiff upper- lip?"
7792Emil had said a stupid thing-- what did he mean by it?
7792Energies are wasted-- they run away like brook- water into the sea-- and the years are wasted too-- or is it lies I''m telling you?
7792Even if I wanted to keep myself decent, what should we gain by it?
7792Five per cent.?"
7792For that reason they must wander in the desert, and must blindly ask:"Where is the Promised Land?"
7792For was not Manna his betrothed?
7792For what use would it be, I ask you, supposing you commit some stupidity with your head and I smack you on the behind?
7792Had he perhaps fallen dead a little while ago, when he tumbled over the precipice?
7792Has Master Jeppe got the silver medal?"
7792Has it been a good summer?"
7792Have n''t I always said''he takes after the wrong side''?
7792Have n''t you any eyes in it?
7792Have they come to any harm?"
7792Have you been there, too?
7792Have you been trying to open another agency over there?
7792Have you come to fetch that child of God, Mr. Devil?
7792Have you done something wrong?"
7792Have you run through the lot?"
7792Have you, too, something wicked to repent of, or what is it?"
7792He heard their horrified outcry-- but what then?
7792He merely searched eagerly, and inquired:"Where were you walking?
7792He wanted to conquer-- but what must he not sacrifice first?
7792Heaven, now, that''s sheer nonsense; what happiness can we expect elsewhere if we ca n''t be properly happy here?
7792Here, were n''t you?
7792His own serving- maid?"
7792His uprightness was unrewarded, and what had become of his vindication?
7792How did he manage that?
7792How far is it, then, to Heath Farm?"
7792However did you get him to venture such a leap?"
7792I can do the work of three men-- yes, but do I get the wages of three?
7792I suppose you have read nearly all the books in the world?"
7792I would n''t stay messing about here any longer.... Well, have you seen your navel yet to- day?
7792I''m only puzzled that she''s not put on her myrtle- wreath-- I suppose nothing has happened?"
7792Imagination entered even into starvation: are you or are you not going to die of it?
7792In the first place, respect was just particularly what he had not won-- but why trumpet forth his miseries?
7792Is it Merchant Lund again, as it was last year?
7792Is it a lying story or a history book?"
7792Is it anything to her what the others have?
7792Is it fine to be a young lady?
7792Is it my fault that she did n''t come into the world a farmer''s daughter, but has to put up with being a bastard?
7792Is it true that they have a post there that a man must scratch himself against before he can sit down?"
7792Is n''t it a great thing to perform manual labor too?
7792Is that you, Pelle?"
7792Is there anything reasonable about it all, Pelle?
7792Is your father a friend of the magistrate''s?
7792Jeppe retorted contemptuously,"Who''s going to lend a poor mate''s widow three hundred kroner?
7792Lasse Karlson-- isn''t that your father?"
7792Lund, who since then had been known only as"the Herring Merchant"?
7792Master well?"
7792Not among the accidents?
7792Not any too well, as I''ve heard?"
7792Now does that come from all the ships that have gone down?
7792Now is there even one tailor in the town who has been overseas?
7792Now, you devil, are you goin''to behave?"
7792One ought to anoint the boobies back and front with honey, perhaps, like the kings of Israel?
7792Or am I talking nonsense, master?"
7792Or have you ever seen me tipsy?
7792Or is it some sixteen- year- old apprentice, a scandal to his pastor and schoolmaster, whose hands he has only just left?
7792Or is there any one who will give you a reference?"
7792Or was this the end of the world itself, of which he had heard such dreadful things said, as far back as he could remember?
7792Or what do you suppose-- can you see if they''ve got their summer seeds in the earth yet?"
7792Out of pure compassion, eh, you scoundrel?
7792Pelle was not slow in deducing the consequences-- was there not already a townsman standing and watching him at play?
7792Perhaps I can help it?
7792Perhaps he was adrift on the last scrap of earth, and was the only person still living?
7792Perhaps that will get us our daily bread?
7792See?"
7792She must n''t go to work, he says, but how can we do without her help?
7792So it was only a show?
7792So you did the poor widow a kindness, eh?"
7792Suppose you were to give it cognac?"
7792That everybody should have exactly the same?"
7792The image of the drowned child continued to follow him, and for the first time Death had met him with its mysterious"Why?".
7792Then she said slowly and solemnly, with the earnestness of a child:"Do you know what I believe?
7792Then we shut the door behind you-- and how was it then?"
7792There are plenty of trees a man can change his clothes behind-- but the shirt?"
7792There was no lovemaking between you?"
7792There was no more pother than this about the question: What was Pelle to be?
7792They say I''m a swine, and why should n''t I be?
7792They talk about Heaven, but what should I care about sitting on a damp cloud and singing''Hallelujah''?
7792They would not listen to him; what use was he if he could n''t contrive for them to do their work in peace?
7792This here is the breakwater-- supposing the water is n''t there-- and this is the basin--cut through the middle, you understand?
7792Thursday?
7792Under these conditions, who would worry himself about the future?
7792Was Father Lasse in the news?
7792Was the world coming to an end?
7792Well, and Funen?
7792Well, can you play hide- and- seek?"
7792Well, shall we go?"
7792Well, what did Emil know of the misery of others?
7792Well, what do they want?
7792Well, what in the world shall we do?"
7792What are you going out for?"
7792What are you standing there for with your mouth and your eyes wide open?
7792What becomes of all them?"
7792What can you really do, Jens?
7792What day is it really to- day?
7792What did it matter to me that he had a lot of journeymen?
7792What did it mean?
7792What did the people down there get for dinner?
7792What did you want to kiss me for?"
7792What do they care that they bring need and misery and ruin upon us?
7792What do you think of it?
7792What do you think, Karna?"
7792What do you want to do now?"
7792What else can you expect of him?"
7792What else have I ever in my life been able to pick up there?
7792What else were we there for?
7792What had become of her now?
7792What has one to show for it, master?
7792What have we ever done to the dear God that he should punish us like this?"
7792What if there should be a pair of boots yonder which Sort and Pelle wo n''t get to sole before they''re done with?
7792What injury have you suffered?
7792What sort of slaves are you to sit crouching here for fourteen hours?
7792What the devil is the use of my working and pulling us all out of the mud?
7792What was he doing here, with Father Lasse wandering among strangers, and perhaps unable to find shelter?
7792What was the good of it all?
7792What was there here for a smart youngster?
7792What would be the end of it all-- or was this perhaps death?
7792What''s a box on the ear?"
7792What''s on to- day then-- going courting, are you?"
7792What''s the name of your girl?"
7792What''s the news?"
7792What?
7792What?
7792What?
7792What?
7792Where are you going without permission?"
7792Wherever could Father Lasse be?
7792Who was it hit you like that?"
7792Why be modest?
7792Why did not they go ahead with might and main until they were well off?
7792Why do you suppose she sticks out her bosom like that?
7792Why must one go away from here without leaving the least part of one behind?
7792Why not let himself sink yet a little further; why not let destiny run its course?
7792Why should I be housed like a pig and live like a pig and yet be no pig-- is there any sense in that?
7792Why should I leave you in the lurch and take everything for myself-- would that be like the''Great Power''?
7792Why should a man always torment himself and play the respectable when he can buy peace for his soul so cheaply?
7792Why, of course; but would there be laborers, too?
7792Why?
7792Will the means of a laborer allow him to live anywhere but by the refuse- heaps, where only the pigs used to be kept?
7792Will you come with me?
7792Will you tell me that?
7792With good times for all, for the poor and the miserable?"
7792Wo n''t it give any light to- night?"
7792Would he ever hear of him again?
7792Would n''t a cold application do him good?"
7792Would you attack a man whom God has smitten?"
7792Would you, Marie?"
7792Yes, and his shirt-- and he blushed up to his ears-- was it a fortnight he had worn it, or was this the fourth week?
7792Yes, was n''t it he who got a beating at the town hall, for his brutal behavior?
7792You do n''t need any understanding there?
7792You thought I''d blossomed out into a proper fur coat?
7792You told her the_ Three Sisters_ was damaged at sea, and you took over her shares for next to nothing, did you?
7792You''d still bite, would you, you devil''s brat?
7792You''ll come again as soon as you can?"
7792are n''t you going to get up to- day?"
7792cried Pelle,"so you are going away?"
7792he cried presently,"you want some more, you damned rascals, do you?
7792he said pleadingly;"what harm can that do me?
7792he said, with a comical expression;"but deuce take it, where did you get the courage, Pelle?
27423A customer of who''s?
27423A verbal lease, hey?
27423A winner of what?
27423About not paying it?
27423About what?
27423After all,he mused as Marculescu began to turn out the lights one by one,"why should n''t I-- the very first thing in the morning?"
27423Ai n''t I always told it you you should write down always the name when people call?
27423Ai n''t I am sending him the passage tickets?
27423Ai n''t I am telling you that all the time?
27423Ai n''t Jacobowitz a name?
27423Ai n''t he a good- looking young feller?
27423Ai n''t he a picture?
27423Ai n''t he your husband?
27423Ai n''t he?
27423Ai n''t it a fine weather?
27423Ai n''t it funny how blood shows up? 27423 Ai n''t it funny,"he said,"that we ai n''t heard from Louis?"
27423Ai n''t it something which you really could say is wonderful the way that boy gets along?
27423Ai n''t it terrible the way people is related nowadays?
27423Ai n''t it?
27423Ai n''t the rest of his family heard from him?
27423Ai n''t them chairs gen- wine Jacobean chairs?
27423Ai n''t they?
27423Ai n''t we going to have no pinocle?
27423Ai n''t we going to wait for Louis Stout?
27423Ai n''t you ashamed of yourself, Elkan, keeping Yetta''s dinner waiting because you claim you''re so busy downtown?
27423Ai n''t you fashionable getting here so late?
27423Ai n''t you got no sense at all-- blabbing out your business in front of all them strangers?
27423Ai n''t you heard the boy says Borrochson is marrying the landlord''s widow? 27423 Ai n''t you in the Pitt House, Sarahcuse, no more?"
27423Also a musical show?
27423Am I?
27423An angry cat cabinet?
27423And Mr. Paul acted honest, because he did n''t know they was n''t gen- wine neither, ai n''t it?
27423And all them fellers is crazy about music too?
27423And are you going all the way home alone?
27423And are you staying down here?
27423And besides,Yetta said with sudden inspiration,"we could get up a little chafing- dish dinner in our room, ai n''t it?"
27423And did she look good in it?
27423And do you know what he says to me?
27423And do you like it?
27423And he says then,she continued,"that if that''s the case what do we want him down here for?
27423And how about the repairs?
27423And how much do you say you want for them chairs, Ringentaub?
27423And might you would know also Joel Ribnik, which he is running the McKinnon- Weldon Drygoods Company, of Cyprus, Pennsylvania?
27423And specially a contract which the boss fixes up himself-- ain''t it?
27423And suppose they wo n''t give it to us?
27423And this here Ringentaub is got furniture from a hundred years old already?
27423And what will we do with the other twenty?
27423And what will you do with the money?
27423And when did you move in?
27423And when do I get the work done?
27423And when was this?
27423And where is the agreement you fellows all signed?
27423And why did I make a change?
27423And you are telling me that big people like B. Gans and Andrew Carnegie buys this here antics for their houses?
27423Another thing,Louis Stout broke in:"Out in Johnsonhurst what kind of society do you got?
27423Antics?
27423Are n''t you feeling well to- day?
27423Are you and Mrs. Lubliner agreeable to go downtown after the show to the café on Delancey Street? 27423 Are you crazy or am I?
27423Are you crazy,_ oder_ what?
27423Are you satisfied that the tenant stays in the house until the first?
27423At the most ten dollars-- ain''t it?
27423Brown stewed fish sweet and sour, ai n''t it?
27423But I mean this here''Diners Out''starts at a quarter- past eight-- ain''t it?
27423But ai n''t I going to have no lawyer neither?
27423But ai n''t you going to protect me, Glaubmann?
27423But are you sure they''re gen- wine?
27423But could n''t I claim that I was only bluffing the feller?
27423But how comes a young feller like him to be eating at Wasserbauer''s?
27423But what should I want to meet him for?
27423But what?
27423But why do n''t you get a job in a store somewheres?
27423But, Elkan,Louis Stout implored,"why do n''t you let me talk to Flugel over the''phone?
27423But, Mr. Scheikowitz,Gifkin protested,"who did I told it your brother- in- law is a thief and a gambler?"
27423But,Benson said emphatically,"you take me, for instance-- and what was I?"
27423But,Elkan insisted as they proceeded down Lenox Avenue,"should n''t I say something to the girl?"
27423But,Elkan said,"how do you expect that Yetta would go with a_ Shadchen_ to see this here Ury Shemansky when she is already engaged to me?"
27423By Glaubmann?
27423By the name Robitscher?
27423Cat''s furniture?
27423Could anything be fairer than this?
27423Could n''t I introduce people in my own house, Stout?
27423Could n''t you make it go up there?
27423Could you blame him?
27423D''ye know what I''ll tell him?
27423Dessert after this, Mrs. Lesengeld,he replied, through clouds of contented smoke,"would be a sacrilege, ai n''t it?"
27423Did I done it?
27423Did I understand you are telling Polatkin that you never seen Fischko the_ Shadchen_ and he never seen you neither?
27423Did I?
27423Did Scharley got any objections?
27423Did n''t he tell you her name?
27423Did you ever hear the like?
27423Did you ever try to market a symphony? 27423 Did you get this style from that third case there, Miss Holzmeyer?"
27423Did you got your lunch on the train, Elkan?
27423Did you seen her?
27423Did you tell him that I was n''t Ury Shemansky at all?
27423Difficulty?
27423Do I understand that, if Elkan Lubliner buys the house to- day, we''ve got to move out?
27423Do n''t you feel so good?
27423Do n''t you suppose Joe''s got a look- in- here?
27423Do n''t you?
27423Do you ask me an advice when you are sending away money to the old country?
27423Do you claim his wife ai n''t sick?
27423Do you got maybe a couple Florentine frames, Ringentaub?
27423Do you got the contract here?
27423Do you happen to know his name?
27423Do you like maybe to hear good music?
27423Do you mean Elkan Lubliner?
27423Do you mean Julius Flixman?
27423Do you mean Max Kapfer, the feller which took over Flixman''s store?
27423Do you mean a sort of soup_ mit_ beets and-- and-- all that?
27423Do you mean that this here feller was trying to make up a match between Elkan and Miss Birdie Maslik?
27423Do you mean to say he is afraid of a boy like Joe Borrochson?
27423Do you mean to say you want me I should put up twenty dollars on a horse which it is running with other horses a race?
27423Do you mean to tell me,he said at last,"that this here Miss Silbermacher is Julius Flixman''s a niece?"
27423Do you mean to told me you are going to send that loafer money he should come over here and bum round our shop yet?
27423Do you think I am a dawg?
27423Do you think I am going to buy a house in a neighbourhood which I do n''t want to live in at all just to oblige a customer?
27423Do you want to speak to Mr. Kovner, Glaubmann?
27423Do you?
27423Does Paul sell all the antiques he collects?
27423Does he?
27423Flaxberg,Scheikowitz cried,"what are we showing here anyway-- garments_ oder_ shoes?
27423For me? 27423 For me?"
27423Get the idee? 27423 Gifkin?"
27423Goldstein,he said hoarsely,"is it assault that some one paints you from head to foot with calcimine?"
27423Have you been in town long?
27423He is, is he?
27423He only says he would pay you the money, Scheikowitz, ai n''t it?
27423Hello, Kovner,he said,"are you in this deal too?"
27423Horseracing?
27423How about that?
27423How do you do when you are getting all of a sudden company?
27423How do you know he''s worth that much?
27423How much more a month would it cost you to live uptown?
27423How was he feeling, Philip?
27423How would you spell Bridgetown?
27423How''bout it, Glaubmann?
27423How''s the drygoods business in Pittsburgh?
27423I am a goose, am I? 27423 I am engaged to his only daughter?
27423I am going to the''Diners Out''_ mit_''em?
27423I could get lots of partners with big money, Mr. Lubliner,he said,"but why should I divide my profits?
27423I did told him,Elkan insisted;"but what is the use talking to a couple of old- timers like them?"
27423I do n''t doubt your word for a minute, Merech;_ aber_ what is all this got to do_ mit_ me?
27423I got a right to talk to you and you got a right to talk to me-- ain''t it?
27423I guess he''s often spoken to you about Jake Scharley, ai n''t it?
27423I guess you seen this young feller before?
27423I know he ai n''t,Goldstein retorted;"but what''s the difference, Feldman?
27423I suppose, Klinger,he said,"your poor mother,_ olav hasholom_, did n''t wear a_ sheitel_ neither, ai n''t it?"
27423I suppose,he said,"that them chairs over there is also gen- wine Jacobean chairs?"
27423I think it was you and Kamin told me that real estate is a game the same like auction pinocle?
27423I thought the show started at a quarter- past eight-- ain''t it?
27423I would n''t tell him nothing of the sort,Polatkin said,"because, in the first place, what for a_ Schreiber_ you think I am anyway?
27423If I carry a house six months and sell it at a couple thousand dollars''profit, what is it?
27423If the feller lies we could easy prove it-- ain''t it? 27423 If we did n''t,"he continued,"there''s plenty of solvent concerns would be forced to the wall-- ain''t it?
27423In Minsk?
27423In this little place here?
27423Is Glaubmann gone?
27423Is Julius Flixman dead?
27423Is he also a collector?
27423Is he dead?
27423Is it my fault your partner is such a_ Klatsch_? 27423 Is it so strange we should bring Elkan back here for the chance of doing some more business?
27423Is she a good cook?
27423Is some one willing to pay you five thousand dollars you should remain single, Elkan? 27423 Is that so?"
27423Is that so?
27423Is that so?
27423Is there a place we could sit down here? 27423 Is this the fellow?"
27423It''s a funny quincidence,Rashkind replied;"but you remember, Mr. Polatkin, I was talking to you the other day about Julius Flixman?"
27423Julius Flixman?
27423Kapfer,he said,"who was that feller which he was just here talking to you?"
27423Leave the boy alone, ca n''t you?
27423Louis Stout, from Flugel& Stout?
27423Lubliner was here last night after we are going home?
27423Marcus,he cried,"for Heaven''s sake, what are you doing?
27423Markulies,Polatkin cried out,"for Heaven''s sake, what is it?"
27423Max Kapfer?
27423Max,he said,"do you got maybe a grudge against that piece of goods, the way you are slamming it round?"
27423Max,he said,"what''s the matter with you?
27423Me arrested?
27423Me hold hard feelings for you?
27423Meyer Gifkin says that?
27423Might you could find another of them genius fellers for me maybe, Max?
27423Mr. Gans tells you he is just as happy if they ai n''t gen- wine-- ain''t it?
27423Mr. Lubliner,he cried,"could I speak to you a few words something?"
27423Mr. Polatkin,he said,"could I speak to you a few words something?"
27423My own flesh and blood I must got to look out for, ai n''t it? 27423 Naturally he could n''t keep his eye on all them people at oncet-- ain''t it?
27423Never mind the kissing,he said;"where''s your father?"
27423No relation to Shemansky who used to was in the customer pedler business on Ridge Street?
27423Not Elkan Lubliner, from Polatkin, Scheikowitz& Company?
27423Now you remember''The Diners Out,''Ryan& Bernbaum''s production last season?
27423Now, Kovner,he commenced,"you claim you''ve got a verbal lease for a year of this Linden Boulevard house, do n''t you?"
27423Now, Mrs. Lubliner,he began,"your husband is a business man-- ain''t it?
27423Nu, Philip,Marcus said, sitting down beside young Borrochson,"could the boy help it if his father is a_ Ganef_?"
27423One foreman?
27423Pastel shades?
27423Sam,he bellowed,"who asks you you should whistle round here?"
27423Say, lookyhere, Marcus,Scheikowitz asked,"what has Pincus Lubliner got to do with this?"
27423Say, lookyhere, Mr. Polatkin,he sputtered at last,"who is going to live in this house-- you_ oder_ me?"
27423Say, lookyhere, young feller,Lapin cried,"what are you driving into anyway?
27423Say, lookyhere,he growled,"what is the use talking nonsense, Mr. Merech?
27423She told you that, did she?
27423Should I tell Paul and Gans the chairs ai n''t gen- wine,_ oder_ not?
27423Show it?
27423So long as you are the only one standing out, why do n''t you make an end of it? 27423 So soon?"
27423So you ai n''t never been to a symphony concert before?
27423So you are buying some antique furniture for your flat?
27423So, therefore, what is the use talking, Polatkin?
27423So,Goldstein declared,"you made a verbal agreement before September thirtieth for a lease of one year from October first?"
27423Sure, I know,Yetta exclaimed:"but what would we put in its place?"
27423Sure; why not? 27423 Sure; why not?"
27423Symphonies, concerti and such things?
27423Symphonies?
27423Tell me, Flaxberg,Polatkin cried as he entered,"what are you going to do about this here account of Appenweier& Murray''s?"
27423The bell do n''t ring?
27423The boy is right, Philip,he said,"and anyhow what does this loafer come butting in here for?"
27423The premises is occupied-- ain''t they?
27423The symphony is all right,he said;"but, with all them operators there, what is the use they are trying to save money hiring only one foreman?"
27423The wedding?
27423The widow?
27423Then I guess they must pay''em by piecework-- ain''t it?
27423Then what is the use of talking, Sammet?
27423Then what''s the use talking?
27423Then who in thunder are you engaged to?
27423Then you heard the whole thing?
27423This is Mr. Rashkind, ai n''t it?
27423This is Mr. and Mrs. Lubliner-- ain''t it?
27423Used to was Lesengeld& Schein in the pants business?
27423Well, Elkan,he said,"going to entertain any more_ fromme Leute_ in the Garden to- night?"
27423Well, Elkan,he said,"what you been doing with yourself lately?
27423Well, Mr. Gans,Klinger said with a sidelong glance at Elkan,"what are you going to eat to- night-- brown stewed fish sweet_ und_ sour?"
27423Well, Scheikowitz,he began,"what did I told you?
27423Well, ai n''t I a peach?
27423Well, if he was willing to come back for twenty dollars a week why did n''t he come back before? 27423 Well, then, who is this boy?"
27423Well, what d''ye think for a_ Rosher_ like that?
27423Well, what do you think of that for a lowlife bum?
27423Well, what''s the difference?
27423Well, why did n''t you tell me that, Kapfer?
27423Well, why do n''t you say something about it before?
27423Well,Jassy asked,"if you feel there''s such a future in it why do n''t you raise a thousand dollars and finance Volkovisk?"
27423Well,Merech said at last,"what of it?"
27423Well,Milton asked,"what do you think of it?"
27423Well,he said,"what did I told you, Elkan?"
27423Well,he said,"why not?
27423Well?
27423What Jacobowitz is this?
27423What am I going to do about it?
27423What are you bothering about that for now?
27423What are you kicking about?
27423What are you talking about-- a_ Schwindler_?
27423What are you talking about-- rotten time?
27423What are you trying to do-- break up our whole office yet? 27423 What are you trying to tell me?
27423What brings you here?
27423What brings you to New York?
27423What could I do for you?
27423What could I do, Marcus?
27423What could I do?
27423What could you expect from a feller which is content at fifty years of age to be a collector only?
27423What d''ye ask me for?
27423What d''ye mean I could afford to deal there before long?
27423What d''ye mean I did n''t like her?
27423What d''ye mean I got what I deserved?
27423What d''ye mean I promised him the decorations from the house I am buying?
27423What d''ye mean a picture?
27423What d''ye mean cat''s furniture?
27423What d''ye mean do n''t go down with you?
27423What d''ye mean he ai n''t there?
27423What d''ye mean insult this lady?
27423What d''ye mean insult you?
27423What d''ye mean she''s got money in savings bank?
27423What d''ye mean sue us in the courts?
27423What d''ye mean the next time?
27423What d''ye mean you do n''t want it?
27423What d''ye mean you should know?
27423What d''ye mean you''re surprised to hear it?
27423What d''ye mean your professional integrity?
27423What d''ye mean, a raise?
27423What d''ye mean, ambitious?
27423What d''ye mean, particularly Scharley?
27423What d''ye mean, stuff?
27423What d''ye mean, you would remain single?
27423What d''ye mean-- getting fired?
27423What d''ye mean-- missing, Mr. Scheikowitz? 27423 What d''ye mean-- piker?"
27423What d''ye mean?
27423What d''ye mean?
27423What d''ye mean_ her_ time of life?
27423What d''ye think, Yetta?
27423What d''ye want from us now?
27423What d''ye want to know for?
27423What did I told you?
27423What did I told you?
27423What did he tell you about him?
27423What did your father do with the ticket and the money I sent him?
27423What difference does it make if he is a crook?
27423What difference does that make?
27423What difference does that make?
27423What do they mean you ai n''t got no shame?
27423What do you mean a picture?
27423What do you mean bring him up here?
27423What do you mean bum round our shop?
27423What do you mean by it?
27423What do you mean pretty near kill him?
27423What do you mean that feller gets here before you?
27423What do you mean the boy ai n''t Yosel Borrochson?
27423What do you mean-- three- fifty a week?
27423What do you mean?
27423What do you think I am anyway?
27423What do you think of him now?
27423What do you want from me?
27423What do you want to do here-- choke us all to death?
27423What do you want to do?
27423What do you wish, madam?
27423What for a business?
27423What for a garment could you got for two dollars?
27423What for a piker do you think I am anyhow?
27423What for a show is this we are going to see?
27423What for a_ Shidduch_?
27423What for you are insulting this lady?
27423What for?
27423What for?
27423What good is figures to them fellers? 27423 What has all this_ Stuss_ about the I. O. M. A. got to do_ mit_ Dishkes here?"
27423What have I got to do with your partner?
27423What have you got to do with the landlord?
27423What house?
27423What is all this about, anyhow? 27423 What is all this?"
27423What is it Wasserbauer''s business what you want me for?
27423What is it my business?
27423What is it you want from me?
27423What is it your business supposing I am sending money to the old country?
27423What is it your business what I done with''em?
27423What is symphonies?
27423What is that for something to worry about?
27423What is that our business?
27423What is the matter with you anyway?
27423What is the motto of the I. O. M. A., Sammet?
27423What is the trouble you are looking so_ rachmonos_, Elkan?
27423What of it?
27423What right do you got to promise deliveries on them 2060''s in a week?
27423What the devil you are talking about, fine? 27423 What the devil you are talking about?"
27423What time do you eat dinner?
27423What was B. Maslik in the old country? 27423 What was the feller''s name?"
27423What wedding?
27423What widow?
27423What you must got to do?
27423What''s his name?
27423What''s kept you? 27423 What''s that got to do with it?"
27423What''s that got to do with it?
27423What''s that got to do with it?
27423What''s that got to do with it?
27423What''s the matter now?
27423What''s the matter now?
27423What''s the matter with the café?
27423What''s the matter with you? 27423 What''s the matter with you?
27423What''s the matter you are acting so quiet this afternoon?
27423What''s the matter, Dishkes?
27423What''s the matter, Elkan?
27423What''s the matter, Ringentaub?
27423What''s the matter-- you are getting fired?
27423What''s the matter? 27423 What''s the matter?"
27423What''s the matter?
27423What''s the matter?
27423What''s the matter_ mit_ brown stewed fish sweet and sour, Klinger?
27423What''s the trouble you ai n''t talking, Lubliner?
27423What''s this, Scheikowitz?
27423What''s this?
27423What?
27423What?
27423What_ is_ that?
27423When I decided to buy the house? 27423 When did he told you that?"
27423When we got the right goods at the right price, Mr. Polatkin, why should we got to give a merchant dinners yet to convince him of it?
27423Where are you going now?
27423Where are you going?
27423Where do yous think you''re going?
27423Where does he get the money from he should eat there?
27423Where in blazes do you think you are, Goldstein?
27423Where is all them 1080''s and 2060''s?
27423Where is he?
27423Where is your father?
27423Where to?
27423Where was you?
27423Where''s Fischko?
27423Where''s your written authorization from the owner?
27423Where?
27423Which Bridgetown?
27423Which bank?
27423Who are you two anyway?
27423Who calls you down?
27423Who d''ye suppose?
27423Who do you suppose fixed it? 27423 Who done it?"
27423Who fixed it?
27423Who fixed it?
27423Who fixed it?
27423Who in blazes are you?
27423Who in thunder are you? 27423 Who is everybody, Elkan?
27423Who is he?
27423Who is knocking the boy?
27423Who is this which you are knocking now?
27423Who says it do n''t?
27423Who the devil you think you are talking to?
27423Who told you?
27423Who''ll be here Saturday?
27423Who''s this crazy feller?
27423Why ai n''t it?
27423Why ai n''t there?
27423Why ai n''t you told me that before?
27423Why ai n''t you willing to wait, Sammet?
27423Why did n''t you tell me he is coming back?
27423Why did n''t you told him we are getting next week paid off for five thousand dollars a second mortgage?
27423Why do n''t you get a partner?
27423Why do n''t you then?
27423Why not?
27423Why not?
27423Why should I want to get out? 27423 Why, ai n''t you heard about Scharley?"
27423Why, then it''s the same house-- ain''t it, Lubliner?
27423Why, what could I do about it? 27423 Why, what d''ye mean?"
27423Why, what do you think I am, Mr. Flaxberg? 27423 Why, who told you about it?"
27423Why, you dirty faker you, what the devil you are coming round here bluffing that you want to buy a dress for your wife for?
27423Will it?
27423Will you do me the favour and let me show you something?
27423With relations maybe?
27423With the rotten plumbing it''s got?
27423Wo n''t you come upstairs and take your things off?
27423Yes, Flaxberg,Polatkin added,"you could get down here so early like you would be sleeping in the place all night yet, and what is it?
27423Yes, Mr. Flaxberg,he said as he commenced the fourth of a series of dill pickles,"compared with a salesman, a cutter is a dawg''s life-- ain''t it?"
27423Yesterday?
27423Yetta likes the house-- ain''t it?
27423Yetta,Elkan began,"I think you seen Mr. Merech before-- ain''t it?"
27423You ai n''t scrapping again,he said,"are you?"
27423You are after me, too, ai n''t it?
27423You are coming from Rumania, ai n''t it?
27423You are doing a rushing business here-- ain''t it? 27423 You are pretty early, ai n''t it?"
27423You did n''t say nothing to Scheikowitz about it, did you?
27423You did n''t?
27423You do n''t say so?
27423You do n''t tell me?
27423You do n''t tell me?
27423You do n''t tell me?
27423You go up there?
27423You made out fine at the meeting this morning-- ain''t it?
27423You mean Henri Quatre furniture?
27423You mean a second- hand store?
27423You mean he is speculating in these here stocks from stock exchanges?
27423You mean to say you got to do washing here?
27423You mean we ai n''t got a lease for a year?
27423You sent him the money?
27423You was telling me you are coming originally from somewheres near Rumania,Elkan began without further preface,"and-- why, what''s the matter?
27423You was the cause of it,Scheikowitz retorted;"and, anyhow, who are you ringing up at the Prince Clarence?"
27423You''ll see me before then, because me and Yetta is coming round this afternoon sure-- ain''t we, Yetta?
27423Your business?
27423Your wife?
27423_ Aber_ how are you going to get the feller down here, if you would n''t entertain him or something?
27423_ Aber_ who does he borrow it from? 27423 _ Aber_ who would you find stands willing he should invest in Volkovisk''s music a thousand dollars?
27423_ Aber_, who lives there?
27423_ Nu_, Elkan,Scheikowitz asked,"what''s biting you now?"
27423_ Nu_, Elkan,Scheikowitz demanded,"are you coming?"
27423_ Nu_, Elkan,he said,"what is the use beating bushes round?
27423_ Nu_, Mr. Flaxberg,Markulies cried,"what brings you round so early?"
27423_ Nu_, Mr. Merech,he said at last,"am I right or am I wrong?
27423_ Nu_,he said at last;"so that is what you wanted to talk to me about?"
27423_ Nu_,he said conciliatingly,"what is it now?"
27423_ Nu_,said the latter as the deal passed,"what is the matter with popular music?
27423_ Nu_,she said,"what_ is_ it?"
27423_ Wie gehts_, Mister Scheikowitz?
27423''Why do n''t you come to my bank?''
27423''Why do you bother yourself you should go into this bank and that bank?''
27423("... Flixman''s store?"
27423("What time do you eat dinner?")
27423*****"Well, Lubliner,"Kapfer cried as Elkan came into the café of the Prince Clarence the following morning,"you did n''t like her-- what?"
27423*****"What''s worrying you, Lubliner?"
27423A bank maybe-- what?"
27423Ai n''t I am right?"
27423Ai n''t it enough you are putting all our chairs on the bum already?"
27423Ai n''t it?
27423Ai n''t it?
27423Ai n''t it?"
27423Ai n''t it?"
27423Ai n''t it?"
27423Ai n''t it?"
27423Ai n''t it?"
27423Ai n''t it?"
27423Ai n''t it?"
27423Ai n''t it?"
27423Ai n''t it?"
27423Ai n''t it?"
27423Ai n''t it?"
27423Ai n''t it?"
27423Ai n''t it?"
27423Ai n''t that right, Elkan?"
27423Ai n''t you coming in to meet my wife?"
27423Am I right or wrong?"
27423And how did I done it?
27423And was it my fault you are firing me?
27423And what else d''ye think he says?"
27423Benson?"
27423Benson?"
27423Boris asked--"money?
27423Could a man get married on wind, Gifkin?"
27423Could n''t you afford it to spend on the boy a hundred dollars?"
27423Could n''t you ring the bell?"
27423Did Volkovisk ever try to get anybody with money interested in his stuff?
27423Did he say to you anything about it, Elkan?"
27423Did you ever hear the like?"
27423Do n''t I know it, Mr. Polatkin, when with my own eyes I seen this here boy throw the stone yet?"
27423Do n''t you feel good?"
27423Do you get the idee?"
27423Do you got maybe a dress for twenty- eight dollars which it is worth, anyhow, twenty- five dollars?"
27423Do you know Louis Dishkes, which runs the Villy dee Paris Store in Amsterdam Avenue?"
27423Do you mean to told me the boy ai n''t paying you five dollars a week board?"
27423Do you think I''m looking for your business now, Kamin?
27423Do you think that feller would do it?
27423Do you think we got from charity to fix it?
27423Elkan asked--"especially a silk garment?"
27423Flaxberg nodded and made a gesture implying more plainly than the words themselves:"Can you beat it?"
27423Flaxberg?"
27423Flixman?"
27423Flixman?"
27423Flixman?"
27423Flugel?"
27423For instance, I bet yer you are taking every day your lunch in a bakery-- ain''t it?"
27423Gans?"
27423Gans?"
27423Glaubmann?"
27423He meets oncet in a while people, Mr. Redman; while, with us, what is it?
27423How long an extension does Dishkes want?"
27423How much you are asking for this one, please?"
27423How should I know she is getting tickets for the theaytre that evening, Mr. Flaxberg?
27423How would it be if I could fix up a good_ Shidduch_ for Elkan myself?"
27423I guess you noticed that he looks pretty shabby-- ain''t it?"
27423I says----""Did Lubliner have anything with him when he came out?"
27423I suppose nobody here never seen it before, ai n''t it?"
27423I think I got a right to know-- ain''t it?"
27423In the first place, Feinermann, what for a neighborhood is Pitt Street to live in?
27423In the first place, where is Elkan?"
27423Is that agreeable, Feinermann?"
27423Is that the idee?"
27423Is the chairs gen- wine_ oder_ not?
27423Jacob Scharley== On Tuesday the first of October== at San Francisco, California="And what are we going to send them for a present?"
27423Kaller,''I says to her,''why do n''t you give me once in a while a change?''
27423Kamin?"
27423Kapfer?"
27423Kapfer?"
27423Kapfer?"
27423Kaplan,''I says,''how do you got all the time such fresh, nice smoke- tongue here?''
27423Kovner?"
27423Lesengeld?"
27423Lesengeld?"
27423Lesengeld?"
27423Lesengeld?"
27423Lubliner?"
27423Lubliner?"
27423Lubliner?"
27423Lubliner?"
27423Lubliner?"
27423Lubliner?"
27423Lubliner?"
27423Maslik?"
27423Max Merech asked;"could n''t you afford it here somehow a little light?"
27423Merech?"
27423Merech?"
27423Merech?"
27423Might you also know Julius Tarnowitz, of the Tarnowitz- Wixman Department Store, Rochester?"
27423Might you do n''t need our business, neither, maybe?"
27423More customers in the back room too?"
27423Must be new beginners in the garment business-- ain''t it?"
27423Now, if you would n''t mind my asking, who is putting in the capital for that show?"
27423Ortelsburg?"
27423Paul?"
27423Polatkin?"
27423Rashkind inquired--"Bridgetown, Pennsylvania,_ oder_ Bridgetown, Illinois?"
27423Redman?"
27423Scharley?"
27423Scheikowitz pleaded--"bite off your nose to spoil your face?"
27423Scheikowitz?"
27423Scheikowitz?"
27423Scheikowitz?"
27423Scheikowitz?"
27423Scheikowitz?"
27423Scheikowitz?"
27423Scheikowitz?"
27423Shall I order another bottle before I go?"
27423She''s stopping at the Salisbury, ai n''t you, Yetta?"
27423Something is bound to turn up, ai n''t it?"
27423Supposing his father is a crook, Marcus, am I right or wrong?"
27423The point is you are in a hole and you want me I should help you out-- ain''t it?"
27423The point is: How do you claim the lease was made?"
27423Thee- aytres and restaurants, I suppose?"
27423We are shut up here like we would be sitting in prison-- ain''t it?"
27423We are up here on a fool''s errand-- ain''t it?"
27423What are you trying to drive into?"
27423What d''ye take me for-- a crook?"
27423What did you done with the samples you took away from here?"
27423What do you come down here at all for, Scheikowitz?"
27423What harm would it do supposing you would go up there to- night with this here Rashkind?"
27423What harm would it do you, supposing you and Yetta should go out to Burgess Park next Sunday?
27423What time does the boat arrive?"
27423What?"
27423What_ was_ it about this here old lady?"
27423Which shall it be?"
27423Who did it?"
27423Who says I decided to buy the house?"
27423Why did you ask?"
27423Why do n''t he fetch you round to take a hand?"
27423Why do n''t you help Volkovisk out?
27423Why do n''t you move uptown, Feinermann?"
27423Why should n''t I go up there and meet this here Fischko?"
27423Why should n''t we try to sell Glaubmann''s house to him while he''s down here?
27423Why, would you believe it, Mr. Kapfer, that girl''s own mother and me comes pretty near being engaged to be married oncet?"
27423Williams?"
27423Would he ever get back his thousand dollars even, let alone any profits?"
27423Would n''t you step inside?"
27423Y''understand?"
27423You ai n''t got no objections?"
27423You also would be there-- and d''ye know who else would be there?"
27423You know J. Kamin, of the Lee Printemps, Pittsburgh?"
27423You want me I should protect you and let my other creditors go to the devil-- ain''t it?
27423You''ve been crying?"
27423_ Verstehst du?_""Yess- ss,"Yosel replied, uttering his first word of English.
27423he asked in colloquial tones--"in a barroom?"
27423he said;"what''s the trouble here?"
7793''What ails you?'' 7793 ''What shall I do first?''
7793''You are starving and complain of your brothers, who have set forth food for you in abundance?'' 7793 Ah, you donkey, do you think I do n''t know you?"
7793Ah, you''d like to, would you? 7793 Am I one of you?
7793Am I to have that?
7793And all those who were crowding round the notice- board-- were they idle hands too?
7793And can you give them food, then? 7793 And do you know why?
7793And do you live here?
7793And does that provide you with an average good employment every day?
7793And how are things going with you, lad?
7793And how''s the''Family?'' 7793 And now I suppose you''ve heard the whole thing and are ashamed of your old father?"
7793And suppose it does n''t come off?
7793And supposing they do n''t get better conditions?
7793And that could really be made a regular calling?
7793And what did you say to that?
7793And what does it all matter to me?
7793And where was Young Lasse then?
7793And why do n''t you come over to see us any more?
7793And yet it is n''t caused by brandy?
7793And you say that, who have been father and mother to me? 7793 Any one going to stand a glass of Christmas beer?"
7793Are n''t you coming to us this evening?
7793Are n''t you the fellow who lives in Jaegersborg Street?
7793Are those the angels I hear singing?
7793Are those the new ideas? 7793 Are you a weather- prophet, Pelle?
7793Are you coming to spit at me?
7793Are you engaged?
7793Are you going to travel?
7793Are you only off duty now?
7793Are you ready, son- in- law? 7793 Are you shivering?"
7793Are you standing there naked in the cold?
7793As a strike- breaker? 7793 But are we going on like this all our lives?"
7793But do n''t you get tired of having all this to look after?
7793But how?
7793But if he comes here to look for me?... 7793 But seriously, who is the girl and where does she live?"
7793But suppose they try to get on top of us again? 7793 But what are you going to give us with our coffee?"
7793But what do you think they''ll say of old Lasse? 7793 But what will your parents say if you go dragging me home?"
7793But what''s this about Due?
7793But what''s wrong with Petersen-- is he going to resign?
7793But where did you get the money?
7793But where has the shopwalker got to?
7793But where is there a quick way out of this evil? 7793 But where''s the joyful Jacob?
7793But why do you ask me?
7793But why should n''t we have splendid things right away?
7793But why? 7793 But you are forgetting to reward me for my escort?"
7793But you are perhaps of opinion that we can better bear the loss of time?
7793But you''ll do something for the cause?
7793But, damn it all, why should a man have so much compassion when he himself has been so cruelly treated? 7793 Ca n''t we have your father here to- morrow?"
7793Ca n''t you come on board with me and say how d''ye- do to the old man?
7793Ca n''t you talk reasonably?
7793Can He really have thought about us poor vermin, and so long beforehand?
7793Can I become a member of the Union?
7793Can I oblige you in any other way-- with work, for example? 7793 Can you hold what you have n''t got, Pelle?"
7793Can you indulge yourself so far?
7793Can you understand what has happened to Peter? 7793 Can you understand what''s amiss with him?"
7793Can you understand what''s the matter with her, Pelle? 7793 Countrified?
7793Curse it all, what are you thinking of? 7793 Damn it all, how else should a man kill the time in this infernal place?
7793Dare you repeat what you said?
7793Did he hit you?
7793Did he say that?
7793Did you hear, mother? 7793 Did you imagine I was living in one of the royal palaces?"
7793Did you see the old man? 7793 Do I, indeed?"
7793Do n''t you believe in improving the lot of the poor, then? 7793 Do you condemn the Movement, then?
7793Do you know him, then?
7793Do you know what you are? 7793 Do you know you are gradually getting quite famous?"
7793Do you prefer to injure your own comrades?
7793Do you realize that you are refusing to perform your duty?
7793Do you remember still, how I once showed you that you are the most important workers in the city, Lars Hansen?
7793Do you say a walk in the fresh air, Madam Stolpe? 7793 Do you say that?"
7793Do you say you bought them?
7793Do you see this pipe, Pelle? 7793 Do you think it can be on that account?
7793Do you think we are going to have a hard winter?
7793Do you think we give bread to people that undermine us? 7793 Do you want to accept the applause and the honor, and sneak out of the beastliness and the destruction?
7793Do you want to drive them all onto the Common and shoot them? 7793 Does any one stand in the front of things like father does?
7793Dreadfully angry? 7793 Father, you must come home with me now-- do you hear?"
7793From the North Gate? 7793 Get taken on here?"
7793Going very well, are they? 7793 Good God, have n''t you heard?
7793Good Lord, what is he to protect you from? 7793 Grandmother, what''s that funny noise?"
7793Had n''t I better jump a bit?
7793Had n''t we better pack up and go at once? 7793 Have I done anything to offend you?
7793Have the gentlemen seen anything of our ladies?
7793Have you any fault to find with my work?
7793Have you been to the machine- works this morning, father- in- law?
7793Have you been to work?
7793Have you forgotten me?
7793Have you got some nice leather for us to- day, Pelle?
7793Have you got your killer with you, Eriksen?
7793Have you heard yet? 7793 Have you looked in the cellar of the Merchant''s House over yonder?"
7793Have you seen how fine she is, Pelle?
7793Have you seen_ him_ again?
7793Have you, too, been down in that loathsome rubbish- store?
7793He has a sweetheart already?
7793He was crying, was n''t he?
7793Hi,he said to one of the workers, who was taking a breath,"can a man get taken on here?"
7793Hide one of my arms?
7793How are things going out there?
7793How can we do that when they are locked in, and the police are patrolling day and night in front of the gates? 7793 How can you take it to heart so?"
7793How did you get those?
7793How did you know that?
7793How many hams did you buy last month? 7793 Humanity is holy?"
7793Hungry, ai n''t you? 7793 I can rest, can I?
7793I have still ten kroner-- will you take them?
7793I hope nothing bad?
7793I lie to you? 7793 I think we might have a drop of beer, mother?"
7793I''ll soon finish it for you; you just put your best clothes on; you look like a--"Like a working- man, eh?
7793In God''s keeping, did he say?
7793Is anything wrong at home?
7793Is he coming to- morrow, then?
7793Is it over already?
7793Is that all you want me for?
7793Is that any one new?
7793Is that what they call her?
7793Is that where you got that black sign on your forehead? 7793 Is that you, Pelle?"
7793Is that you, lad? 7793 Is the wall at Olsen''s always warm, then?"
7793Is there any news?
7793Is there anything you need?
7793Long? 7793 May I see you home to- night?"
7793Mus''n''t Paul''peak?
7793Must one always mean something by it, little mother? 7793 My name?
7793New man?
7793No need to tell me that-- and do you know what I''ve hit on, so that the bloodhounds sha n''t wonder what I live on? 7793 No, Pelle, no, what should I have to do with him?
7793No, really? 7793 No, what''s to- day?
7793No; d''you think we are going to break our necks for the like of him?
7793No? 7793 Not to- day again?
7793Now perhaps people will think we are a couple of lovers-- but what does it matter? 7793 Oh, nothing.... Will you do me a favor, Morten?
7793Oh, so you think I do n''t know all about it? 7793 Oh, what should I talk about?"
7793Oh, you do n''t want to gain anything more than happiness? 7793 Pelle, why do n''t you dance with me oftener?
7793Pelle,she cried, rejoicing,"are you still at liberty?
7793Pelle,she whispered anxiously,"it''s so near now-- would you run and fetch Madam Blom from Market Street?
7793Perhaps you are sending what you earn to your wife and children? 7793 Perhaps you can tell me where he could be found?"
7793Perhaps you think I''m afraid to say what I like to you? 7793 Perhaps you would like to join the Union?"
7793Peter, what''s the truth of it-- are you one of us?
7793Sha n''t we go, then?
7793Sha n''t we pack a picnic- basket and go out to one of the beer- gardens on Sunday? 7793 Sha n''t we work a little this evening-- just a quarter of an hour?"
7793Shall I do that?
7793Shall I say something still worse? 7793 Shall I tell you something?"
7793Shall I truly have done my share in what you have done for the Cause of the poor? 7793 Shall I wash out your blouse or do up your shirt?"
7793Shall we deprive the rich of all their wealth and power?
7793Shall we get fine weather to- morrow?
7793Shall we go anywhere to- day?
7793Shall we say three days?
7793So your father''s still living? 7793 So?
7793Starving? 7793 Surely he ca n''t have gone on the roof?"
7793That so, really? 7793 That speaks for itself, eh?"
7793That was surely a crane, do n''t you think so? 7793 That would be diplomatic, would n''t it?
7793That''s something like a view, eh?
7793The Princess?
7793The landlord has taken out the doors and windows; he wanted to turn us into the street, but we are n''t going, for where should we go? 7793 Then do n''t you believe in greatness?"
7793Then he''s dead now, is he?
7793Then sha n''t we go there to- night and have supper? 7793 Then why did n''t you tell me?"
7793Then why have n''t we long ago got a bit more forward than this?
7793There, that''s to the point, eh? 7793 Think I''m going to have you loafing about?"
7793Thinking over? 7793 Thinks nothing of it?
7793Trousers, did you say, young man? 7793 We have so much in common, he and I. Shall I make short work of it and go and look him up?"
7793Well, comrades, are you finding the days too long?
7793Well, have you thought over my proposal?
7793Well, how goes it?
7793Well, now, what do you think of our home?
7793Well, what do you think of it?
7793Well, what''s a few weeks in prison?
7793Well,he said briefly,"shall we have our coffee now?"
7793What are other people to me?
7793What are you doing, child?
7793What are you staring at me for?
7793What are you staring at?
7793What are you thinking of now?
7793What can I offer you?
7793What can you gain by it, then? 7793 What do I want with a winter coat?"
7793What do you say to that?
7793What do you say? 7793 What do you think Peter and Karl would say to your chucking your money about like that?
7793What do you think-- suppose I were to go with you?
7793What do you want with me?
7793What do you want, father?
7793What does that matter? 7793 What does that mean?"
7793What good can it do me to club folks on the head till they look at me? 7793 What have you there?"
7793What have you to consider? 7793 What if he never comes back at all?
7793What is it to be now, then-- the story of the old wife? 7793 What is it, father?"
7793What is that?
7793What is the story called?
7793What now?
7793What now?
7793What of that? 7793 What proposal?"
7793What should I do there? 7793 What sort of a fellow are you, damn it all, that you ca n''t stand a drubbing?"
7793What sort of stuff is this, now?
7793What the devil are we to do if there''s no one who can lead us?
7793What the devil-- has Pelle come?
7793What the dickens were you really doing there?
7793What then? 7793 What then?"
7793What was really the matter with you?
7793What will become of us?
7793What will the shoes cost?
7793What would you do if the authorities were sneaking after you?
7793What''s a poor devil to do when her frying- pan''s too small?
7793What''s become of the Vanishing Man?
7793What''s he going to do there?
7793What''s his name, then?
7793What''s that you say, mother?
7793What''s that you say? 7793 What''s that?"
7793What''s the girl doing?
7793What''s the good of running your head against a wall when there are reasonable things in store for us? 7793 What''s this again?"
7793What''s up here?
7793What, are you going already?
7793What, are you still at liberty?
7793When do you think you''ll be back?
7793Where are my Sunday trousers?
7793Where does she live?
7793Where is Father Lasse?
7793Where is mother?
7793Where will you get it?
7793Who are you talking to, you Laban?
7793Who dares to disturb our Christmas rejoicings?
7793Who sits in mother''s eyes now?
7793Who told you that?
7793Who will look after him? 7793 Who''ll give me a glass of beer?"
7793Why are we hurrying like this?
7793Why are you like this, Marie?
7793Why are you stopping here, you?
7793Why did the fire- engines take so long?
7793Why did you do it, father? 7793 Why did you say''my sweetheart''?"
7793Why do n''t you eat any of this nice food?
7793Why do n''t you ever come to see me now?
7793Why do n''t you talk to me, Pelle?
7793Why do you hesitate? 7793 Why do you say that?"
7793Why do you tell me all this as if I belonged to the upper classes?
7793Why have you been so stand- offish to- day?
7793Why should I be forced to dance with anybody, with somebody I do n''t know at all?
7793Why should I be tired? 7793 Why?"
7793Why?
7793Why?
7793Will it be any use to understand boxing when the fight comes on?
7793Will you come somewhere with me-- where we can hear music, for example?
7793Will you go to the dance with me?
7793Will you take me for a walk, Pelle?
7793Will you tell me the truth? 7793 Wo n''t there be any more poverty then?"
7793Wo n''t you change?
7793Wo n''t you give up going out to work?
7793Wo n''t you just see her pictures?
7793Wo n''t you try to sleep a little? 7793 Would you care for that?"
7793Would you care to come home with us?
7793Would you care to come out with me? 7793 Yes, have n''t I wonderful luck?
7793Yes,replied Hanne breathlessly,"yes, why not?
7793Yes; do n''t you think it''s very clever of me?
7793You do n''t want to go out all alone?
7793You forgot it before-- why did n''t you do it then?
7793You go the same way, do n''t you, Ellen? 7793 You have won again already, you say?
7793You mean we shall come to an end first?
7793You say you saw me spit at him?
7793You''re angry, are n''t you?
7793You''ve been properly in the fire, have n''t you?
7793You''ve pawned my best trousers?
7793''Damn and blast it all, where has the Vanisher got to?''
7793''What does that matter to us, boy?
7793''What has become of him?''
7793''What may he not bring with him?''
7793''What''s that?''
7793--"Do you remember we were at the factory together?"
7793A man ought to marry while he''s still young; what''s the good of going about and hankering after one another?"
7793A search- but what was there at his house that every one might not know of?
7793A thought occurred to him-- whether she was going on with_ that_?
7793Ah, yes-- how will the new period take shape?
7793All glowing and lightly clad in the blue of forget- me- nots, with a rose in her fair hair?
7793Am I not pretty?
7793And Ellen-- what was the matter with her?
7793And Hanne, whence did she get her finery?
7793And I behaved like a clown and kept out of your way?
7793And are you certain of the goal?"
7793And could he justify himself for leaving them all in the lurch because of his own good fortune?
7793And do you really believe that something will come of it?"
7793And how could one accomplish more than by remaining in harmony with the whole?
7793And how in all the world has she grown so beautiful?
7793And in this weather?"
7793And is there anybody here who is really sure of his daily bread?
7793And now there''s the rent, mother-- where the devil are we to get that?
7793And put up with all that?"
7793And shake off Meyer as he had shaken off Pipman?
7793And shall we be afraid to suffer a little-- we, who have suffered and been patient for hundreds of years?
7793And that''s why I''d like to have a trustworthy man in the business; for what good is it to me that I''ve got nothing when they all believe I have?
7793And the quarrelsome women''s voices, which would suddenly break out over this or that railing, criticizing the whole court, sharp as so many razors?
7793And then?
7793And they''ve had nothing to eat to- day-- can''t you see by looking at them?"
7793And to wander about abroad as an outlaw, when his task and his fate lay here could he do it?
7793And what d''you mean by saying it''s a worse look- out for us?
7793And what of the evening carouse of the hearse- driver, for which his wife would soundly thrash him?
7793And what was the real motive of the conflict?
7793And where does that land lie?
7793And where does the money come from?
7793And where should their road lie if not through the capital?
7793And whither are they going?
7793And who so innocent as she?
7793And why did you come here if they are nearly winning outside?
7793And you ask me where your trousers have got to?
7793And you let Pelle sit there and watch you uncovering your youth-- aren''t you ashamed of yourself?"
7793And you saw, too, how we were turned out of St. Hans Street-- the tenants forced us to go-- didn''t you see that?
7793And you, Pelle, will you join us now?
7793And, besides, do n''t you think she''s fascinating?
7793Are you a fortunate person?"
7793Are you a spy, or what do you want here?
7793Are you angry with me as you used to be, and why are you so hard and cold?
7793Are you going to eat up the Germans again, as in my young days, or what is it you are after?"
7793As for all the others, who go hungry in silence, what do they do?
7793Ay, but what is posterity to us?
7793But Peter-- what was to become of him?
7793But are we to enjoy ourselves and look on while the others are fighting for dry bread?
7793But ca n''t you tell me what''s become of Peter?
7793But do you know what the women say about you?
7793But do you know what?
7793But have you noticed how blue the sky is?
7793But how comes it then that she has the discreet Pelle on her arm?
7793But listen, Pelle-- do you know what?
7793But now you have won the wreath after all, have n''t you?
7793But of what avail was that?
7793But one day the springs would run dry-- and what then?
7793But ought n''t you to be at your meeting?"
7793But ought n''t you to go home to Ellen now?
7793But then the employers will declare a lock- out for the whole trade-- what do you think of that?
7793But then you''ll say I belong to you, wo n''t you?"
7793But they kept themselves politely in the background, for a fire went out of him at such times-- do you understand?
7793But to whom is that due?
7793But were the census- papers distributed among the homeless?
7793But what are those people there, who stand there and look so dismal and keep their hands in their pockets?"
7793But what did it profit a man to put his trust in anything?
7793But what good is that when there''s no money?
7793But what in the world was he thinking of?
7793But what is this?
7793But what sort of wanderer was this?
7793But what the devil do you want with two pairs of trousers, comrade?
7793But what was the matter in front there?
7793But what was the use?
7793But what''s this?
7793But what?
7793But where do you live?
7793But where in all the world was he to get a"blue"?
7793But where, really, did you come from?
7793But whither should he flee?
7793But why are you taking Pelle''s arm, Hanne?
7793But why the devil did he take such a long time about it?
7793But why?
7793But you must n''t in any case say where we live-- do you hear?
7793But, anyhow, we''re only working- folks, and where''s it going to come from?
7793But, anyhow, you saw her sitting up in bed and looking like wax?
7793By the way, do you still remember Peter, who was at Jeppe''s with your brother Jens and me?
7793Ca n''t you come and get me out?
7793Can I help it if they go pulling everything down?
7793Can I sit here and look on, while you get thinner day by day, and perish with the cold?
7793Can no one say?
7793Can one understand such a thing?
7793Can we buy two dozen at once?''
7793Can you do more than make them feel their hunger even more keenly?"
7793Can you understand what''s wrong with her?"
7793Could n''t even Pelle keep it together?
7793Could not Pelle himself establish relations with his customers?
7793Could we hold out?
7793Could you suspend work this night?"
7793Curse it, why do n''t they leave me in peace?"
7793D''ye see, mate?"
7793Did I lie when I spoke well of you?"
7793Did the employers really fall into the trap, or was the fate of the strike- breakers really indifferent to them?
7793Did they perhaps foresee that those three blows were the signal for a terrible conflict?
7793Did you really say trousers?
7793Did you see how gentle her eyes were?
7793Do n''t you agree with me?"
7793Do n''t you read your paper?"
7793Do you belong to those idiots outside?"
7793Do you feel that that''s endurable?"
7793Do you gain anything by it?"
7793Do you know what the locked- out workers call you?
7793Do you know what, Pelle?
7793Do you know where he had put it?
7793Do you love me?"
7793Do you really think that''s it?
7793Do you understand?
7793Do you want me, Pelle?
7793Do you want to ruin yourself without profiting others?
7793Eh?
7793Everybody going home already?"
7793Five and twenty kroner, eh?
7793Gentleman''s coachman?
7793Had n''t we better leave them where they are?
7793Had the like ever been seen?
7793Has your home gone to pieces too?
7793Have n''t you a clever wife?"
7793Have n''t you had enough of listening to your own crazy nonsense?
7793Have you a wife and children crying for bread?
7793Have you become a missionary?"
7793Have you brought me happiness from a foreign land with you?"
7793Have you ever heard of a conjuring- trick like that-- to send money from England to Bornholm over the telegraph cable?
7793Have you got a bottle of beer?
7793Have you heard yet?
7793Have you seen my wife lately?
7793He blushed for shame-- yet how could he have prevented it?
7793He could see it in their faces, and with a leap he was at them:"Do you know of anything more infamous than to sell your mother- country?
7793He gave the fellow a few sound boxes on the ear, and asked him which he would rather do-- hold his mouth or take some more?
7793He had played a great part in the great revolt-- was he to be excluded from the battle?
7793He looks so pale-- does he get out into the sun properly?"
7793He who has sold his own youth to the devil, in order to alleviate poverty?
7793He''s a clever man, and his comrades respect him too, but what does all that signify if a man hiccoughs?
7793He?
7793Here, damme, what''s your name, you there?"
7793His mother had cried such a lot before he was born, d''ye see?
7793Home?
7793How can you jest so brutally about life and death?
7793How does it really come about that you''re such a smart fellow now?"
7793How is Young Lasse?
7793How long had you been out of work before you gave in?"
7793How much did you get?
7793How was he going to live alone with himself, he who only breathed when in the company of others?
7793How would it be if he were to employ the same method and, quite secretly, take Meyer''s workmen away from him?
7793How would she accept this?
7793However did anybody hit on the idea of packing folks away like this, one on top of another, like herrings in a barrel?
7793I do n''t understand how you manage to find employment here, Karl?"
7793I get food and drink here-- I earn it by helping her--and how many others can say this winter that they''ve their living assured?
7793I must be a fool, but wo n''t you look into it?"
7793I shall have the money to- morrow?
7793I was just sixteen when I came here for purposes of my own-- where was a pretty girl to find everything splendid, if not here?
7793If there were a law forbidding the poor man to breathe the air, do you think he''d stop doing so?
7793In other countries matters were progressing as here, so why not summon all countries to one vast work of cooperation?
7793Is he ill?"
7793Is it my fault that I''m so terrified of poverty?
7793Is it not Summer herself stepping into the hall?
7793Is n''t it a story about a boy who goes out into the world?"
7793Is n''t it insane, that the two ends should bend together and close in a ring about a human life?
7793Is she suffering from vertigo or St. Vitus''s dance, in her widowhood?
7793Is that a thing to think over?
7793Is there a soul in the''Ark''that did n''t begin with a firm belief in something better?
7793Is there no one anywhere who has the courage to lead us?"
7793Is this then the beginning of a new world for you?
7793It was as though they asked him:"Well, have you found employment?"
7793It''s just like the wife of a public- house keeper I remember at home, who used to tell travellers,''What would you like to eat?
7793It''s not at all a bad business, growing fat on the pence of the workers, eh?"
7793It''s true we were there the day before yesterday-- but what does that matter?
7793Look at them-- d''you think they get too much to eat?"
7793Lord, how long is he going to squat up there and earn bread for that sweater?
7793Make haste and get Pelle to turn the stream before a catastrophe occurs!--Pelle?
7793Now can you get us some breakfast?"
7793Now how is it, really, with the old folks?"
7793Now she had another to care for-- and who was its father?
7793Now then, what''s the matter there?"
7793O does he think of me, my only joy, Who have no other treasure here below?
7793Or are you a lot of dukes, that you ca n''t quietly stand by the rank and file?
7793Or is the curse eternal that brings you into the world to be slaves?
7793Or the land of the living?
7793Or was it not merely a deceitful dream, engendered by hunger?
7793Or were his eyes merely exaggerating that which was occupying his thoughts?
7793Or were they merely following their first angry impulse?
7793Pelle, to whom all looked up?
7793Perhaps the rascal''s wondering, who is this wrinkled old man standing there and coming to see me in his old clothes?
7793Perhaps we do n''t yet know what we want?
7793Perhaps you remember how he used to drink out of the bottle?
7793Pipman-- he knows the trick, eh?
7793Poor storm- beaten birds, what was this splendid experience which outweighed all their privations?
7793Seems to me you fell down from heaven?"
7793Shall we begin, mother?"
7793Shall we fetch him into the doorway and pull his coat off?"
7793So now they''ve got the bailiffs to turn me out, see?"
7793So that was what she meant?
7793So you are here?"
7793So you want to go begging favors for me, eh?
7793Some of them had rings and watches, and Cerberus had ready cash-- what sort of dearth was that?
7793Stolpe kept on asking it,"What would you like to smoke, Hansie?"
7793That a man should steal bread of all things-- bread, do you understand?
7793That sounds just like when they ask you-- have you found Jesus?
7793The Pipman had the old ones on, but where were the new?
7793The devil-- what did he want to break his word for?"
7793The docker stared at him-- was he going to sleep on his feet?
7793The emptiness that gave birth to you and even yet surges crazily in your starving blood?
7793The masses were still enduring the conditions with patience, but how much longer would this last?
7793The old man lay considering his son with a pondering glance,"Are you happy, too, now?"
7793The question to- day is-- forward or back?
7793Then whence did we get all that makes us so strong and causes us to stand together?
7793Then why are they in want?
7793There has been a census lately-- well, did you observe what happened?
7793There is blood on your hands-- but is any of it your own blood?"
7793There was some sense in winning back his own-- but how?
7793There were only four of them who stuck to their refusal; and what use was it when others immediately took their place?
7793This threatening silence would n''t do; what would it lead to?
7793Those big- nosed masons, what can they do?"
7793To hell with the comrades and their big words-- what have they led to?
7793Twice running?"
7793Twice?
7793Understand-- what was he to understand?
7793Was Marie pleased with the shoes?
7793Was he in his arrogance to repudiate the place that had formed him?
7793Was he living out here in the Rabarber ward?
7793Was he not Pelle, who had conducted the great campaign?
7793Was he to be made responsible for the situation?
7793Was it not her gentle voice that he now heard singing with him?
7793Was it really of any use to hold the many together?
7793Was she so fine?"
7793Was the child still alive?
7793Was the whole stupendous plan of federation a piece of madness, and was he a fool to propound it?
7793Was there another man in the world who would pay money for flowers?
7793Was this the truth- loving Morten who stood there lying?
7793Was this the"new time"all over again?
7793We have fought so many battles by their side, we have shared good and evil with them-- are we to enter into the new conditions without them?
7793Well, and how are things looking outside?
7793Well, how goes it with the strikers?"
7793Well, mother, have you got a warm welcome ready for us?"
7793Well, why not?
7793Were n''t they nearly ready to surrender?
7793Were the people so kind and cheerful on that account?
7793Were these strange footsteps in his own mind, then?
7793Were your parents as you are?
7793What are all these preliminaries for?"
7793What are you going to call him?"
7793What bit of luck, eh?
7793What can happen to poor fellows like us?"
7793What did the thermometer know of a hard winter?
7793What do you say to that, Pelle?"
7793What do you say to that?"
7793What do you think about it?"
7793What do you think of that?
7793What do you want here, lad?
7793What does any man want with thieving who eats enough?
7793What does he want here on the dancing- floor?
7793What had he to complain of?
7793What has the poor man to do with the law?
7793What if he finally crept up to the very topmost point, and established an eight- hour day and a decent day''s wage?
7793What is it about?"
7793What is it yonder?
7793What is there strange about you?
7793What is your real name, if I may make bold to ask?"
7793What more can he want?"
7793What nonsense had it been that induced him to leave them?
7793What novel kind of demonstration is this?
7793What shall I do first?''
7793What sort of a social order was this?
7793What the devil-- why should they want a reason referring to yesterday precisely?
7793What then was the meaning of this inward admonition, that seemed to tell him that he was sinning against his duty?
7793What was all the rest of the city to them?
7793What was in that?
7793What was the matter?
7793What was wanted of him now-- hadn''t he worked loyally enough?
7793What weird, hungry, unkempt world is this that has suddenly risen up from obscurity to take possession of the highway?
7793What were they thinking of doing now?
7793What would become of us both?
7793What''ll you give me for that, eh?"
7793What''s to be done?"
7793What, is there no end to them?
7793What, what?
7793Where did you get the idea from?"
7793Where do you come from?"
7793Where were they now, the grimy, joyful children?
7793Whither?
7793Who could fail to be warmed by her?
7793Who could say that he had lifted the veil of the future and could point out the way?
7793Who d''you work for, if I may ask?"
7793Who is she?
7793Who would dream of heating a room where the joy of life was burning?
7793Who would help them now over the difficult places without letting them see the helping hand?
7793Who would venture to hew a way into it?
7793Why did n''t things get going again?
7793Why did n''t you get a husband where you got the child from?"
7793Why did they not assemble the multitudes on the night of Christ''s birth and announce the Gospel to them?
7793Why do I tell you this, you ask?
7793Why do we slink round the point like cats on hot bricks, why all this palaver and preaching?
7793Why do you sit in the corner there always and sulk?
7793Why do you stare in that funny way?
7793Why does n''t he make a slip?"
7793Why does n''t some one give me a good beating?
7793Why does so little happen, although we are all waiting for something, and are ready?
7793Why have you never been stronger than I?
7793Why have you never taken me?
7793Why not?
7793Why should I have taken Hanne?"
7793Why should he hang about idle and killing time when there was nothing to eat at home?
7793Why should they still doubt?
7793Why should we bake their bread?
7793Why should we look after their cleanliness?
7793Why the devil could n''t he bluster like a proper man instead of sitting there and making his damned allusions?
7793Why was he not with them?
7793Why, really, do n''t you go to see Hanne any longer?"
7793Why, then, did this feeling possess him?
7793Wife and child, and the whole lot without food-- what?
7793Will you come with us?"
7793Will you have a drink?"
7793Will you see to the matter?"
7793Wo n''t you come home with me, so that you can see where we''ve both got to?
7793Wo n''t you come over this evening?"
7793Would n''t it perhaps be better if I were to turn back?"
7793Would n''t one think she was a cuckoo''s child?
7793Would n''t you like to, Fredrik?
7793Would you believe that?
7793Yes, the men are a queer race; they pretend they would n''t dare-- and yet who is it causes all the misfortunes?"
7793Yes, what do you want with two pairs of trousers?"
7793You be gone-- at once, will you?
7793You do the work and he takes the money and drinks it, eh?"
7793You have n''t tried joining the movement?"
7793You have no right to thrust success away from you?
7793You know yourself it''s all lies; but what is that to me?
7793You know, I expect, that they mean to put you at the head of the Central Committee?
7793You understand?"
7793You''d like to help everybody; but what can we do?
7793You''ll let them put you up?"
7793and a thousand candles?
7793asked Pelle, who wanted to open the book;"are you still writing in your copybook?"
7793asked the old wife, when she had eaten;''shall I sleep first or work?
7793has any of your watchers seen it?
7793he asked,"or how do you know all this?"
7793he asked,''and who are you?''
7793he cried scornfully--"they never have anything themselves, and I ca n''t even read--how should I learn how to study?
7793he growled, panting,"then why did he cry out about stealing before ever I had mentioned the word?
7793hey?
7793said Carpenter Stolpe;"do n''t you see they''re sitting laughing at you?
7793said Ellen,"has anything happened?"
7793said Lasse;"so they have stone here?
7793said Pelle, laughing,"does n''t Young Lasse like the''Ark''?
7793said the old wife, when she went to work;''eat or sleep?
7793thought Pelle,"is her dream over already?
7793with you staring at me with that face?
7793your people are leaving you?"