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 |
---|---|
58730 | Are you going anywhere this summer? |
58730 | It made rather a shambles, did n''t it? |
58730 | Needed me? |
58730 | There, see? 58730 What''s eating you, Miss Kent?" |
58730 | ***** Was it an illusion? |
58730 | And what did that matter, if it imposed this crushing loneliness? |
58730 | Had their quarreling driven him to that? |
58730 | I know exactly what to do--""There is n''t much you ca n''t take care of for yourself, is there, Bertha?" |
58730 | Was it an illusion? |
58730 | Why do n''t you come and eat with us?" |
47614 | ''And here?'' 47614 ''Are you the spirit whose coming was foretold me?''" |
47614 | ''Jacob would n''t miss anything''is what you mean, is n''t it, Sarah? |
47614 | ''Long past?'' 47614 All night?" |
47614 | Am I put out? |
47614 | And the Treaty of Ghent was the one which ended the War of 1812, was n''t it? |
47614 | And what then? |
47614 | Are n''t you glad to see me? |
47614 | Are there any more confessions to be made? |
47614 | Are you not afraid of the candles? |
47614 | Are you the young lady who missed time by being sick? |
47614 | Are you tired? |
47614 | Are you well? |
47614 | But if I do not know what to do and nobody will tell me, how shall I find out? |
47614 | But what is coming? |
47614 | Can you explain this? |
47614 | Can you get me a lot of newspapers and spread them thickly on your floor? 47614 Could n''t any one take their places?" |
47614 | Did I oversleep myself? |
47614 | Did I stay here? |
47614 | Did Miss Ellingwood nearly murder her? 47614 Did you climb up that pole and put our flag on the beam?" |
47614 | Did you never hear of gas? |
47614 | Did you never tell her about your room- mates? |
47614 | Do n''t you want to bring your books over to my room? |
47614 | Do you take regular exercise? |
47614 | Do you tell Miss Ellingwood everything that you can find out? |
47614 | Do you think I will know those girls? |
47614 | Does he know you? |
47614 | Does_ he_ know you? |
47614 | Eugene, do you think you can carry her upstairs? |
47614 | Have the boys come? |
47614 | Have you ever been sick? |
47614 | How do you feel? |
47614 | How do you suppose she ever did it? |
47614 | How is your patient? 47614 Is any one at home in this store?" |
47614 | Is it anything I can do? |
47614 | Is it time to get supper already? |
47614 | Is n''t it her usual occupation to listen and tell? |
47614 | Is n''t there anything that can be done? |
47614 | Is she afraid we''ll eat her up, Miss Ellingwood? |
47614 | Is there anything I can do? |
47614 | It is very good,the person in white would say coaxingly, and Sarah would rejoin politely but a little wearily,--"Is it so? |
47614 | May we go fishing? |
47614 | May we write with ink? |
47614 | Miss Wenner, what is the matter? 47614 Oh,"said Gertrude,"is it you, Miss Wenner? |
47614 | Physical Geography? |
47614 | Then why do n''t you come down? |
47614 | These things do n''t belong''to you nor none of your family,''I hope? |
47614 | They''re not here? |
47614 | Was Edward with them? |
47614 | We''ll have to postpone it till after Christmas, I suppose? |
47614 | Well, sir, what is it to- day? |
47614 | Well,he said, with a smile, his voice more Pennsylvania- German than ever,"where is this Sarah Wenner, about whom I have been talking?" |
47614 | Were they hard, Sarah? |
47614 | Were those_ your_ questions? |
47614 | What are you doing here? |
47614 | What are you going to do? |
47614 | What candles? |
47614 | What did I say? |
47614 | What did she do? |
47614 | What did you say, Sarah? |
47614 | What do you mean? |
47614 | What is it? |
47614 | What is the History lesson for to- morrow, Sarah? |
47614 | What is your name? |
47614 | What makes you say that? |
47614 | What was that noise? |
47614 | What''s the matter? 47614 Where are your room- mates?" |
47614 | Where do you come from? |
47614 | Where is my brother William? |
47614 | Who is out? |
47614 | Why did you do it? |
47614 | Why would you rather stay at home, Sarah? |
47614 | Why, Mrs. Wenner, how do you do? 47614 Why, Sarah, do n''t you want any breakfast?" |
47614 | Why, what is the matter? |
47614 | Why? |
47614 | Wo n''t the Juniors be furious? |
47614 | Wo n''t you? |
47614 | Yes, what were yours like? |
47614 | You did n''t see a Junior go up this side, did you, Sarah? |
47614 | You like to study, do n''t you? |
47614 | You never heard of illuminating gas? |
47614 | You''ll come down and tell us at once how she is and what is the matter, doctor? |
47614 | _ Ach_, when can_ we_ go to the Normal? |
47614 | _ Ach_, would you please help me a little? |
47614 | A sleepy and cross"What?" |
47614 | And Sarah,"--he smiled at the sudden flush of frightened color,--"you wo n''t climb any more gymnasium beams, will you?" |
47614 | And now, what shall we do with this girl?" |
47614 | And what were childhood, wanting you?" |
47614 | And who had hung the Junior banner there? |
47614 | And who is this, and how_ are_ you?" |
47614 | And"--she looked round the disorderly room--"couldn''t we fix here a little up once?" |
47614 | Are you?" |
47614 | But could the twins be persuaded to believe such wonders? |
47614 | But oh, Sarah, are you_ sure_ you know the parts?" |
47614 | But will you tell me sometimes when I am wrong?" |
47614 | Could she take the parts? |
47614 | Could they manage the tableaux without her? |
47614 | Did n''t one have to get up? |
47614 | Did n''t they wish any breakfast? |
47614 | Did you ever report your room- mates for making a noise?" |
47614 | Gertrude, you brought a trunk- cover, did n''t you?" |
47614 | Had the girls grown suddenly deaf, or were they ill? |
47614 | Had the twins done just as they were told all day? |
47614 | Had they remembered the deserted kittens in the barn? |
47614 | Have you taken the bottle out?" |
47614 | He felt her pulse, and laughed at her frightened"Did you ever have to take such examinations?" |
47614 | How did you do it?" |
47614 | How should I?" |
47614 | How should you like to do a little extra work for me?" |
47614 | How would you like to come into the Physical Geography class with the Juniors?" |
47614 | I''m not sleepy, are you?" |
47614 | If I knew anything about it, I--""What class are you?" |
47614 | If she had such difficulty with little things, what would she do when lessons began? |
47614 | In what long- past stage of her life had she read that? |
47614 | Is that the way to say it?" |
47614 | Is this true?" |
47614 | Once she had called Ethel by her first name, and Ethel had responded with a quick,"What did you say, Miss Wenner?" |
47614 | Or would they be allowed to do as they chose? |
47614 | See, they do n''t look so awesome, do they?" |
47614 | Suddenly one of them called to her:--"Who are you, out there? |
47614 | The two battles of Saratoga? |
47614 | Then wo n''t you please eat it? |
47614 | Was it Edward Ellis? |
47614 | Was it all true, or was it only a story? |
47614 | Was it part of Geography or Physiology? |
47614 | Was it possible that a few days ago she had wished to go away? |
47614 | Was she to disgrace them all? |
47614 | Was the principal telling them that she would not pass? |
47614 | Were n''t we, Sarah?" |
47614 | What Junior had crept out on the beam? |
47614 | What can she be up to?" |
47614 | What does the school think of this plan?" |
47614 | What if they should suddenly turn on the lights and she be discovered hanging in mid- air? |
47614 | What is the matter?" |
47614 | What is the trouble?" |
47614 | What makes you say that?" |
47614 | What shall we play next?" |
47614 | What would you do then, young lady?" |
47614 | What would you do with them?" |
47614 | When one was given extra studies by mistake, did one have to take examinations in them? |
47614 | Where was the Middler banner? |
47614 | Who had dared to climb out there and remove it? |
47614 | Who was this sprite who moved about so lightly? |
47614 | Who would be Uncle Daniel and Jacob Kalb and the judge of the Orphans''Court in swift succession? |
47614 | Who would be storekeeper on the morrow? |
47614 | Who would defend them if Uncle Daniel should ever come threatening again? |
47614 | Who would draw bears and tigers and"nelephunts"and all manner of birds and beasts? |
47614 | Who would help them with their lessons? |
47614 | Why did these girls not wish to get up? |
47614 | Why have n''t you written to me? |
47614 | Would Laura be able to fix the fire for the night? |
47614 | Would she see it again? |
47614 | Would these treats be forbidden them? |
47614 | You poor little chicken, did you think that you would make a better impression on the ogress if you put on a better dress? |
47614 | Your gymnasium suit is black, is n''t it? |
10777 | And is God very angry with me? |
10777 | And is Uncle Edward going to be like them? |
10777 | And is this the small party that arrived so unexpectedly when I was here before? |
10777 | And what are they, may I ask? |
10777 | And what do you see here? |
10777 | And what is this young scapegrace going to do now? 10777 And what makes you love such a dry book as the Bible? |
10777 | And when did nurse find you? |
10777 | And will you tell me his name? |
10777 | Are we not in the world? 10777 Are you angry, uncle? |
10777 | But how can they? 10777 But how long? |
10777 | But you would n''t have hurt him? |
10777 | Did you make such nice apple dumplings for Tommy? |
10777 | Do n''t I always see you safe and sound up at the house? |
10777 | Do n''t you know Fritz might bite if you are so rough with him? 10777 Do n''t you remember? |
10777 | Do you get all your games from the Bible? |
10777 | Do you mean Tommy, uncle? 10777 Do you mean the tree that came on you? |
10777 | Do you think nurse is still angry? |
10777 | Does Uncle Edward really want me to go to bed? 10777 Eh, child? |
10777 | Have n''t they? 10777 Have you seen Tom Maxwell lately?" |
10777 | He''s a long time coming home, is n''t he, Mrs. Maxwell? 10777 How were you punished when you were a little boy, uncle?" |
10777 | I do n''t know what you mean, Major Lovell; do n''t you read the Bible? |
10777 | I expect you would like her to be sent down to you in the evening-- at dessert, perhaps, sir? |
10777 | I like singing hymns,asserted Milly, very emphatically;"everybody sings hymns to God, do n''t they? |
10777 | I s''pose he wanted to have some a-- aventures, do n''t you call them? 10777 If I had died I should have gone straight up to God, should n''t I?" |
10777 | Is it necessary? 10777 Is it?" |
10777 | Is n''t it a lovely one, Uncle Edward? 10777 It''s rather hard to understand,"said Milly, wrinkling her little brow perplexedly,"because God is everywhere, is n''t He? |
10777 | May I kneel down and ask him to forgive me now? |
10777 | Millicent,he called out sharply,"come to me at once; what are you doing?" |
10777 | Nurse, where is Miss Millicent? 10777 Oh, Maxwell,"cried Milly,"who is it?" |
10777 | Perhaps you know it all by heart? 10777 The what?" |
10777 | Uncle Edward, have you heard who Goliath really did kill? |
10777 | Uncle Edward, nurse and I are going shopping; would you like us to buy you anything? 10777 Uncle Edward, when you say your prayers to- night, will you ask God to make Tommy come back home? |
10777 | Uncle Edward,she said, a little time after,"do you know if that prodigal son you told me about last night has come back to God?" |
10777 | Well, if you do n''t want to pray for Tommy, pray for God''s probable sons, wo n''t you? 10777 Well, what is it? |
10777 | Well,he said at length, rather feebly,"I think you know the look of me now, do n''t you? |
10777 | Well,he said, looking round,"where have you been all day? |
10777 | Well? |
10777 | What are you doing now? |
10777 | What do pious people do? |
10777 | What has she been doing? 10777 What is a whipping-- like you gave Fritz when he went into the game wood?" |
10777 | What is it? 10777 What is pious?" |
10777 | What is the matter, do n''t you want to go? |
10777 | What is the trouble, Ned? |
10777 | What shall I talk about? |
10777 | What will you give Him this Christmas besides? 10777 What will you think of me if I tell you I do n''t?" |
10777 | Who from? |
10777 | Who has come? |
10777 | Who is Jack? |
10777 | Why are you looking so angry, uncle? 10777 Why did the prodigal want to get away?" |
10777 | Why ought it to make me feel happy? |
10777 | Why would you? |
10777 | Why, uncle, it would be never too late for God, would it? 10777 Why?" |
10777 | Will you take me to church with you? 10777 All of them were punished''most severely,''were n''t they? 10777 And are all these gentlemen my uncles too? |
10777 | And come down to our place for Christmas, wo n''t you? |
10777 | And every one would be just as happy, would n''t they?" |
10777 | And may I go and tell them so? |
10777 | And then, uncle, do you see those nice thin trees cuddling each other? |
10777 | And who would listen to my prayers? |
10777 | Are you angry with him? |
10777 | Are you going to take me, Maxwell?" |
10777 | Are you tired? |
10777 | Can not you pronounce your words properly?" |
10777 | Catching sight of Milly in the hall, equipped in hat and jacket, he asked,--"Are you going out with nurse?" |
10777 | Clad in white, with her dimpled hands crossed in front of her, she stood there for a moment in silence, then spoke:--"Where is my Uncle Edward?" |
10777 | Could he not trace in the events of the last few months the hand of a loving Father gently calling His wanderer home? |
10777 | Could you tell me, uncle?" |
10777 | Did he take a cab from the station?" |
10777 | Did n''t I? |
10777 | Do n''t you like looking at it? |
10777 | Do n''t you like to hear them? |
10777 | Do n''t you think it a hard case for such a confirmed bachelor as I am?" |
10777 | Do n''t you think that''s a beautiful game, uncle?" |
10777 | Do you know any one who has run away from God, uncle?" |
10777 | Do you know what I think about the stars? |
10777 | Do you like it?" |
10777 | Do you quite understand?" |
10777 | Do you read the Bible to your uncle? |
10777 | Do you remember about him, uncle?" |
10777 | Do you remember? |
10777 | Do you see my trees? |
10777 | Do you see that little tree over there? |
10777 | Do you see that nice big old tree right up there with the red leaves, uncle? |
10777 | Do you see where his eyes come? |
10777 | Do you tell him that he has been wasting his life and not fulfilling the end for which he was created, in fact, that he is a wicked sinner? |
10777 | Do you think I have been very naughty, Uncle Edward?" |
10777 | Do you think he ever will? |
10777 | Do you think it might be God''s breath, uncle?" |
10777 | Do you think it will? |
10777 | Do you think that would do?" |
10777 | Do you think, nurse, if the wind was very, very strong it would ever be able to blow me up to heaven?" |
10777 | Do you think, uncle, the wind or Goliath killed her? |
10777 | Do you understand?" |
10777 | Does n''t it make you feel happy?" |
10777 | Down at Maxwell''s, I suppose?" |
10777 | God only just saved me in time, did n''t He?" |
10777 | Have you finished your story?" |
10777 | Have you run away from God, Major Lovell?" |
10777 | His thoughts did not soothe him, for he presently raised his head with a short laugh, saying to himself,--"Where is my cigar- case? |
10777 | How long do you think it takes one of God''s prodigal sons to get back to Him, uncle?" |
10777 | I could n''t, could I, uncle? |
10777 | I feel He loves me, and I know He loves Jack just the same; does n''t He, uncle?" |
10777 | I know there''s a letter from Jack for me, is n''t there? |
10777 | I like looking out right into the world; do n''t you?" |
10777 | I suppose you have n''t one, uncle, that you would like to give him?" |
10777 | I suppose you would n''t lend me your sword hanging up in the hall, would you?" |
10777 | I''ve told God I''m sorry; do you quite forgive me?" |
10777 | Is money the only thing you can give Him, uncle?" |
10777 | Is n''t it a wonderful story, uncle?" |
10777 | Is she coming to- day? |
10777 | Is your uncle pretty well to- day?" |
10777 | Live on his father and mother, or is he going to try and do some honest work?" |
10777 | Maxwell said good- humoredly,"and do you know it has struck four ten minutes ago? |
10777 | Maxwell?" |
10777 | May I give you your medicines, and be your nurse?" |
10777 | May I make myself comfortable first?" |
10777 | May I open it for you?" |
10777 | May I stroke her?" |
10777 | May I tell you all about Tommy now?" |
10777 | May I-- all by myself?" |
10777 | May I? |
10777 | May they? |
10777 | Millicent, is n''t it?" |
10777 | Milly looked sorrowful; then brightening up, she asked--"But I may kill Goliath, may n''t I? |
10777 | Milly stroked her cat thoughtfully, then she said,--"If Uncle Edward had died, what would have happened to me? |
10777 | Mrs. Maxwell said we had music in our hearts; how can we have that, uncle? |
10777 | No one ca n''t get away from God, and why do they want to? |
10777 | No one does, do they?" |
10777 | No one else was hurt, I hope?" |
10777 | Now do n''t you think he was foolish, uncle?" |
10777 | Now, Lovell, what do you think of that? |
10777 | Now, little one, is that better?" |
10777 | Oh, Uncle Edward, may I go to them? |
10777 | Oh, Uncle Edward, why wo n''t all the prodigal sons go home? |
10777 | Ought you not to be in your bed? |
10777 | See, I''m David, and you see that big old tree standing by itself? |
10777 | Shall I bring them in?" |
10777 | Shall I tell you some more? |
10777 | She says some of God''s prodigal sons do that; do you think many do, uncle?" |
10777 | Should I have had to go to the workhouse?" |
10777 | The insides of houses are n''t His world, are they? |
10777 | Then Sir Edward asked drily,--"And what is it now?" |
10777 | Then she said in an awe- struck tone,--"And do you think that is how you had better punish me?" |
10777 | Then taking his cigar from his mouth, Sir Edward asked:"And does all your play consist in killing people?" |
10777 | There''s such a lot to be done now he has really come; and, Uncle Edward, may they kill one of the cows in the farm that are being fatted up? |
10777 | They are just shaking their heads together and whispering, are n''t they? |
10777 | This was so against all rules and regulations that his voice was very stern as he said,--"What is the meaning of this intrusion, Millicent? |
10777 | Those were the words you said; do n''t you remember?" |
10777 | Two days, or six hours, or a week?" |
10777 | Uncle Edward, do you think the trees talk to one another? |
10777 | Uncle, what did the clergyman mean by people running away from God? |
10777 | Was n''t it dreadful? |
10777 | Was n''t it nice to hear about the probable son?" |
10777 | Were you trying to choke him?" |
10777 | What are you saying? |
10777 | What does your nurse do when she punishes you?" |
10777 | What does''presence''mean? |
10777 | What else do you do besides sing hymns?" |
10777 | What hymns do you sing, Major Lovell?" |
10777 | What is a poacher, uncle?" |
10777 | What is your name? |
10777 | When will you be quite well again, uncle?" |
10777 | Where is your nurse? |
10777 | Where was I nine years ago?" |
10777 | Which do you think it is?" |
10777 | Who has brought you up in this pious fashion?" |
10777 | Who would take care of me and love me when I''m asleep? |
10777 | Why do you think Tommy cried, uncle?" |
10777 | Why should I fear that my welcome home would be less full of love and forgiveness than his?" |
10777 | Why, I might get lost in it, might n''t I? |
10777 | Will you ask God to forgive me too?" |
10777 | Will you explain it to me?" |
10777 | Will you pray for him?" |
10777 | Will you put me up for a night or two? |
10777 | Will you say,''Good- night; God bless you,''to me?" |
10777 | With the baby fingers clinging to his, what could Sir Edward say? |
10777 | Wo n''t it be lovely?" |
10777 | Would n''t it be nice to see him blown down?" |
10777 | Would you like me to read it for you?" |
10777 | Would you mind very much giving me another?" |
10777 | You could n''t see who it was, could you? |
10777 | You said there were plenty more kittens, did n''t you?" |
10777 | You see, nurse does for a mother, but fathers are so fond of their children, are n''t they?" |
10777 | You will let me go, wo n''t you?" |
10777 | what do you take me for?" |
10777 | you have been pretty bad, have n''t you? |
42230 | Am I a favorite? |
42230 | And he wants us to go and stay with him? |
42230 | And that gave you courage? |
42230 | And what made you faint in the cave, dear? 42230 And which is Philip and which is Percy?" |
42230 | And will somebody else enjoy it too? |
42230 | And you have n''t got a city of refuge here? |
42230 | And you know how to do it when you try? |
42230 | Are n''t there some dungeons underneath? 42230 Are we going to live up there?" |
42230 | Are you sure? |
42230 | Bertie,she asked, in a voice that was little above a whisper,"what_ is_ a lark?" |
42230 | But you were afraid? |
42230 | But, mama, he is n''t going to be blind, is he? |
42230 | Ca n''t we row to it? |
42230 | Ca n''t you call me Uncle Robert, like that pair of urchins, who are no kith or kin of mine, though you are? 42230 Can we really have a sail?" |
42230 | Could n''t Genefer go, mama? 42230 Could we what, Esther?" |
42230 | Did he really ask us too? 42230 Did n''t you hear me tell you to go and speak to your cousin?" |
42230 | Did n''t you think you might get hurt too? |
42230 | Did you ever complain to your mother about your hair? |
42230 | Did you know who it was? |
42230 | Did you know who was calling? |
42230 | Did you want me, mama? |
42230 | Do I hurt you? |
42230 | Do n''t what? |
42230 | Do n''t you know? 42230 Do n''t you, really? |
42230 | Do n''t you? 42230 Do you ever think about God?" |
42230 | Do you know what this letter says? |
42230 | Do you mean really? |
42230 | Do you think so? |
42230 | Do you think you will say''yes''to Uncle Arthur? |
42230 | Does he like it? |
42230 | Does your mama ever take advice, my dear? |
42230 | Earle or owl-- what''s the odds? 42230 Esther, suppose you had been afraid, and had not gone in and got Mr. Trelawny safely out of the cave, do you know what would have happened?" |
42230 | Have a governess or tutor here as well as two boys? |
42230 | Have you never found that out yet, child? 42230 How d''ye do? |
42230 | How did Mr. Trelawny find you? |
42230 | How did you cure yourself? |
42230 | How do you do, Mrs. Poll- parrot? 42230 I should like to,"answered Esther eagerly;"what is it you do?" |
42230 | I wonder why Old Bobby likes girls better than boys? |
42230 | Is anything the matter, mama? |
42230 | Is he really a magician or a wizard? |
42230 | Is n''t he? 42230 Is n''t it nice?" |
42230 | Is n''t there a lot of glass about? |
42230 | Is that so, little woman? 42230 Is that you, Essie? |
42230 | Mama? 42230 May I say you will come soon?" |
42230 | Now tell me, child,said Mr. Trelawny''s big voice,"what is the matter with my little friend?" |
42230 | Now tell me, child-- don''t be afraid to speak the truth-- do you want these young cubs to come, or do n''t you? 42230 O Mr. Earle, did they tell you too?" |
42230 | O Mr. Earle, what did they do? |
42230 | O Mr. Earle, where are the boys? |
42230 | O Pickle, can you row yourself? |
42230 | O Uncle Robert, can you really see? |
42230 | O boys, what did you do? |
42230 | O mama, you will go, wo n''t you? |
42230 | Oh, but, Bertie, is n''t it naughty? |
42230 | Oh, do n''t you see? 42230 Oh, she let on to somebody, did she? |
42230 | Oh, what did you do? |
42230 | Pickle dear,said Esther gently at last,"wo n''t you let me put you to bed? |
42230 | Shall we go and find a coral island? |
42230 | Shall we take some provisions with us, in case we''re wrecked? |
42230 | She does n''t know much, does she, Pickle? |
42230 | So you have found your way up to the old blind man, have you? 42230 Tell me what?" |
42230 | To take care of, eh? 42230 To what happy accident may I attribute the honor of this visit?" |
42230 | We are going to have some good times together, are we not? |
42230 | Well, little Miss Esther, and how do you do? 42230 Well, madam?" |
42230 | Well,he said, on seeing the children,"and what are you all in such a state of jubilation about?" |
42230 | Were n''t you afraid to go in? 42230 Were you afraid of the darkness in there just now?" |
42230 | Were you out on the water in the storm? |
42230 | What about my little Goldylocks herself? |
42230 | What are you doing here all alone, with a storm coming up? |
42230 | What can we do? |
42230 | What did I say? |
42230 | What did he say? |
42230 | What did he tell you? 42230 What did they say?" |
42230 | What did you do, Esther? |
42230 | What does the shorn sheep say herself about that? |
42230 | What fooling? |
42230 | What is it, mama? |
42230 | What is it? |
42230 | What is it? |
42230 | What is the matter? |
42230 | What is the matter? |
42230 | What is the message? |
42230 | What tanks? |
42230 | What''s that? 42230 What''s that?" |
42230 | What''s your name? |
42230 | Where did you go? |
42230 | Where is Miss Esther, Genefer? |
42230 | Where is everybody? |
42230 | Who was that funny man in spectacles sitting in Mr. Trelawny''s pew? |
42230 | Why ca n''t we live up there, instead of in this little band- box? 42230 Why did you stay such a time up there after the storm was over?" |
42230 | Why do n''t you call him father? |
42230 | Why do you call your father Crump? |
42230 | Why do you tell her? |
42230 | Why on earth not? |
42230 | Why ought you? |
42230 | Why? 42230 Why?" |
42230 | Will it always stand on end like that? |
42230 | Wo n''t he know from Milly and Bertie? |
42230 | Wo n''t it be jolly when he can go about without that horrid old shade, and without a stick, or anybody to lead him? 42230 Would he let you have a city of refuge out here?" |
42230 | Would he like some blackberries? |
42230 | Would it do if I came a little later? 42230 Would you like to learn to sketch some day?" |
42230 | You do n''t mind them, I suppose? |
42230 | You do play sometimes then? |
42230 | You''re not frightened, are you? |
42230 | And how could she leave this poor creature without seeking to do something? |
42230 | And if you knew that he could send somebody to help you if you wanted it really, why, you would n''t be afraid any more, would you?" |
42230 | And is he really our tutor?" |
42230 | And is n''t there a block or an ax or something like that? |
42230 | And what is your errand?" |
42230 | And you will help me this year, wo n''t you? |
42230 | Are we all going to live in this funny little box of a place?" |
42230 | But I suppose when she comes back we might have a turn?" |
42230 | But may I come again to- morrow to see how he is?" |
42230 | But the boys, Genefer-- what about them?" |
42230 | But what''s all that noise overhead?" |
42230 | Can I do anything else for you?" |
42230 | Can I go and see him?" |
42230 | Can we go up after tea?" |
42230 | Could she leave him like that? |
42230 | Did Mr. Earle come and fetch you?" |
42230 | Did n''t you once tell me so?" |
42230 | Did you know he was going to do it?" |
42230 | Did you mean that, Ess?" |
42230 | Do n''t we go along?" |
42230 | Do n''t you see your cousin Esther waiting to speak to you? |
42230 | Do n''t you think he''ll be pleased? |
42230 | Do n''t you think it was taking a great liberty without your mother''s leave?" |
42230 | Do n''t you think that''s Uncle Bob''s sin, Ess?" |
42230 | Do n''t you think that''s a nice, easy, short name?" |
42230 | Do n''t you understand that they are paying homage to you? |
42230 | Do you go often?" |
42230 | Do you mean you would call it a sin?" |
42230 | Do you think I can be useful to you, Uncle Robert, if I come?" |
42230 | Do you think he''ll like it? |
42230 | Do you think we ought to go?" |
42230 | Do you think your little shoulders are strong enough to bear the burden? |
42230 | Do you understand?" |
42230 | Earle''s?" |
42230 | Earle?" |
42230 | Esther caught her breath and called back,--"Is there anybody down there?" |
42230 | Esther stole back to her mother''s side, and asked timidly,--"You''re not vexed with me, mama dear? |
42230 | Esther, do you know that you are the only blood relation I have in the world?" |
42230 | Esther, do you think it''s a sin to call people by nicknames? |
42230 | Esther, should I have gone to hell?" |
42230 | Esther, suppose the boat had gone down and we had been drowned, would that have been dying in one''s sins?" |
42230 | Had she not resolved to overcome them? |
42230 | Has Mr. Earle been working you too hard?" |
42230 | Have n''t you ever been down there? |
42230 | Have you decided?" |
42230 | Have you had a walk to- day?" |
42230 | Have you taken counsel together over the blind man''s request? |
42230 | Having made this discovery, ought she not to pursue it farther? |
42230 | He looked into her face with a smile, and asked,--"What is the matter now?" |
42230 | He stopped and looked rather earnestly at Esther, and then said,--"What was it that took you into the cave to find Mr. Trelawny on Saturday?" |
42230 | How came you here, child? |
42230 | How came you to be there all alone to- day?" |
42230 | How is mama?" |
42230 | How old are they, and what are their names, mama?" |
42230 | How was it he knew anything about her headaches? |
42230 | I mean, we''ll try to be as good as we can.--Won''t we, Puck?" |
42230 | I never saw such queer marks as there were on the stones-- did you, Puck? |
42230 | I suppose that''s the sort of thing you mean, Ess? |
42230 | I think that''s quite a sin-- don''t you, Esther?" |
42230 | If one may forget everything as soon as one grows up, what''s the use of making such a fuss about learning them?" |
42230 | Is Mr. Earle a friend of his? |
42230 | Is n''t that a fine bit of molding there? |
42230 | Is the storm going to come very quickly?" |
42230 | Is this the cage you live in?" |
42230 | It''s the boys you''ll want that cane of mine for.--Eh, Esther? |
42230 | Let them go? |
42230 | Little Esther, do you think you could be a just and merciful ruler here some day? |
42230 | May I come with you, Uncle Robert, when you go to see them at dinner- time?" |
42230 | Milly jumped into the air with delight; but then suddenly looking grave, she exclaimed,--"But how shall we get there?" |
42230 | Now, do you understand?" |
42230 | O Pickle, what were you doing? |
42230 | Oh, wo n''t it be jolly? |
42230 | Or shall I come and do it?" |
42230 | Please, are you very much hurt?" |
42230 | Please, will you go to him? |
42230 | Poll- parrot?" |
42230 | She made another little movement, and then added wistfully,"Please, may I go home?" |
42230 | She stood quite still, and called timidly,--"Is anybody there?" |
42230 | So mama has sent you, has she, Miss Goldylocks? |
42230 | Then she plucked up her courage to add,"May I give you a cup of coffee after your walk?" |
42230 | Was n''t that a sort of sin?" |
42230 | Was there once a monk walled up in the cellar? |
42230 | Well, and what does she say about it?" |
42230 | Well, dear, would you like to run up and tell him that we will try the experiment? |
42230 | Were they going to take her back into it again? |
42230 | What are we going to do? |
42230 | What can I do?" |
42230 | What did you do?" |
42230 | What difference would it make?" |
42230 | What do you think about it, Esther, my dear? |
42230 | What do you want to do about it?" |
42230 | What has Esther come about to- day?" |
42230 | What was it made Mr. Trelawny cut it off? |
42230 | What would her mother say when she got home? |
42230 | What''s the good of a city of refuge if the avenger of blood sits waiting for you at the bottom of the ladder? |
42230 | Where did he come from, Uncle Bob? |
42230 | Where has it gone?" |
42230 | Where have you been?" |
42230 | Who is Crump?" |
42230 | Why do you ask?" |
42230 | Why on earth wo n''t this old tub do the same? |
42230 | Why?" |
42230 | Will that be a great nuisance, little woman?" |
42230 | Will you be my little girl now, and be good to the people when I am gone?" |
42230 | Wo n''t it be scrumptious? |
42230 | Wo n''t you try to be a little fond of me? |
42230 | Would it make life pleasanter to you or only a burden?" |
42230 | Would these boys let her keep them in order as Bertie was kept by Prissy and Milly? |
42230 | Would you like to see it first?" |
42230 | Would you like to see it? |
42230 | You can remember that, ca n''t you? |
42230 | You do believe in Jesus, do n''t you, Pickle, even though you forget and are naughty sometimes?" |
42230 | You have n''t enough on your hands as it is?" |
42230 | You know how to put her helm round, Puck, do n''t you? |
42230 | You saved his life, did n''t you?" |
42230 | You will be able to see again soon, wo n''t you?" |
42230 | You''d like that very much, would n''t you?" |
42230 | [ Illustration:"How d''ye do? |
42230 | _ Esther''s Charge._]"What is his name?" |
42230 | and did his ghost go prowling about tapping on the doors and making groans?" |
42230 | and did you dig out his skeleton? |
42230 | and what would it feel like to be relieved of that great floating mass of hair? |
42230 | and whither away so very fast?" |
42230 | and why did n''t you drive down with him too?" |
42230 | are you going to have a little carriage again?" |
42230 | could we?" |
42230 | do n''t you hear the thunder? |
42230 | hallo!--what''s this?" |
42230 | how do you know?" |
42230 | is it true?" |
42230 | is that my little Goldylocks?" |
42230 | she cried,"could we really have a pony again?" |
42230 | then can he see again?" |
42230 | were n''t you frightened?" |
42230 | what''s that?" |
42230 | why ca n''t we call people what we like? |
42230 | why did n''t you come before? |
42230 | why do you tell?" |
532 | Afraid? |
532 | Ai n''t I hooked him repeated? 532 Ai n''t I just told you that I am going to hook him this summer?" |
532 | Ai n''t it true that you served Dannie a mean little trick? |
532 | Ai n''t you comin'', Uncle Dannie? |
532 | Ai n''t you ever happy unless you are workin''? |
532 | Am I to meet another interesting character? |
532 | And first of all you''ll tell him how Jimmy lied to him? |
532 | And he did n''t take either of his fish poles? |
532 | And he did n''t tell you where he was going? |
532 | And is Dannie dilatory? |
532 | And the nature of that secret? |
532 | Anything I can do for you? |
532 | Are ye sure? 532 Are ye sure? |
532 | Are you asking me to go on a coon hunt with you? |
532 | Are you foolin''? |
532 | Are you trying to confess that you betrayed a confidence of Dannie Macnoun and married the girl who belonged to him, yourself? |
532 | Be lookin''at that, will ye? |
532 | But what will I say to my house for being a day late? |
532 | Ca n''t you fix some way? |
532 | Can you confess that mortal sin, Jimmy? |
532 | Comes here? |
532 | Could n''t you fish turn about with it? |
532 | Dannie Macnoun? |
532 | Dannie Micnoun? |
532 | Dannie,called Mary''s voice in the doorway,"has my spickled hin showed any signs of setting yet?" |
532 | Dannie? |
532 | Dannish, didsh shay y''r nash''nal flowerish wash shisle? |
532 | Did Dannie iver say a thing like that to you before? |
532 | Did I bring that thing home in that shape? |
532 | Did n''t I live there with them all those years? 532 Did ye come here purposely to find me?" |
532 | Dinna ye have to gae in fra a drink? |
532 | Dinna ye hear me mention that I intended to take a try at him mysel''? |
532 | Dinna ye know the end of this sort of thing? |
532 | Do any of ye boys happen to know what it was Jimmy had with him when he came in here? |
532 | Do what wi''the beets? |
532 | Do ye mean to say ye think she does n''t? |
532 | Do ye understand that I couldna have gone if I had known she was ill? |
532 | Do you know that stuff he''s giving off? |
532 | Do you mane, wake up, or get up? |
532 | Do you think he will die? |
532 | Do you transmute? |
532 | Do you wish to make final confession? |
532 | Does Mary know this? |
532 | For the love of Hivin, what did I say, Dannie? |
532 | Had any good news? |
532 | Has he been here? |
532 | Has he said nothing to you? |
532 | Have ye been to town in the nicht, or anything like that lately? |
532 | Have ye forgotten that I know how to fish? |
532 | Have you any idea what he was trying to tell you? |
532 | Have you left me, too? |
532 | House or town? |
532 | How about the Kingfisher? |
532 | How did it look? |
532 | How did you get her, Jimmy? |
532 | How long has it been, Jimmy? |
532 | How long have you had him here? |
532 | How many, Dannie? |
532 | How mony wad satisfy ye? |
532 | How much did you make off that? |
532 | How the nation did I get her? |
532 | How''s Mary Malone? |
532 | I wonder what he thinks he can do? |
532 | I wonder what the Vinters buy One- half so precious as the stuff they sell? |
532 | IS THAT THE TRUTH? |
532 | If Jimmy do n''t come till morning,she asked,"or comes in shape that he ca n''t fish, will you go without him?" |
532 | If Mary wants ye to go to town, why dinna ye leave me to finish your traps, and start now? |
532 | Is it true? |
532 | Is she dead? |
532 | Is that all ye need? |
532 | Is the Black Bass my fish? 532 Is there any reason why ye na want me to land the Black Bass, Mary?" |
532 | Is there one minute of the day whin you ai n''t thinkin''about my wife? |
532 | Is this my line? |
532 | Jimmy knew how long and faithfully you had loved Mary, and she had loved you----"Mary had loved me? 532 Jimmy sleeping?" |
532 | Jimmy, dear auld fellow,he said,"how long has this been going on?" |
532 | Jimmy, have ye any money? |
532 | Jimmy, if ye are in trouble, why do ye na tell me? 532 Mr. Macnoun, when were you last asleep?" |
532 | Not to marry her; and take her for your own? |
532 | Nothing more? |
532 | Now do you ixpict me to grieve for the man? |
532 | Now how about ye? 532 Now what do you suppose he has sent you?" |
532 | Now, how will we get at this fishin''to be parfectly fair? |
532 | Of course, about those fifty coons noo, what was the harm in that? 532 Oh, Jimmy, what is it?" |
532 | On what point do you seek enlightenment? |
532 | Or blackberry pie? |
532 | Or catfish, rolled in cornmeal and fried in ham fat? |
532 | Or chicken pie? |
532 | Or greens cooked wi''bacon? |
532 | Or guineas stewed in cream, with hard- boiled eggs in the gravy? |
532 | Palins all on the fence? |
532 | Say, Dannie, where do you think the Kingfisher is wintering? |
532 | Shall I go, Jimmy? |
532 | Since when? |
532 | Since you look so wise, why do n''t you tell me why? |
532 | Strangers? |
532 | Tell me why? 532 That thing Father Michael told me, is it true? |
532 | Then WHY did ye tell it? |
532 | Then she can just yell louder, or come after you, or get well, for I am going, see? 532 Then what was he trying to tell you when he died?" |
532 | Then why in the name of God did ye SAY that thing to me? 532 Then why?" |
532 | Thin why do n''t he till me so? |
532 | Was there ever any other mon like ye? |
532 | Well what do you fish with? 532 Well, what if he did?" |
532 | Well, who''s going to take a lot of hooks and rake thim out? |
532 | Wha''do ye mean? 532 What ails the things?" |
532 | What are ye going to do with them, Jimmy? |
532 | What are you driving at? |
532 | What did I tell you? 532 What did Jimmy go to town for?" |
532 | What do ye want? |
532 | What do you mean by''saw them fight?'' |
532 | What do you think? |
532 | What do you want me to do, Mary? |
532 | What does the domn fool think the Black Bass will be doin''while he is takin''in line on that young windlass? |
532 | What for ye? |
532 | What in the name of God has some woman been doing to him? |
532 | What is it? 532 What nixt? |
532 | What was it I wanted? |
532 | What would HE do if it were me? |
532 | What''s his name? |
532 | What''s the fun? |
532 | What''s the matter with me? |
532 | What''s the matter with me? |
532 | What''s the row? |
532 | What''s wrong wi''cherry cobbler? |
532 | What''s your name, little lass? |
532 | Whativer do be ailin''you, Mary Malone? |
532 | Whatsh the matter? 532 Whatsh you talkin''about?" |
532 | When did you last have a good hot meal? |
532 | When have you iver done to Jimmy Malone what he would do if he were you? |
532 | When? 532 Where do ye suppose the Black Bass is noo?" |
532 | Where have you been? |
532 | Where the Hell have you been? |
532 | Where was he? |
532 | Where''s Jimmy? |
532 | Whersh target? |
532 | Who gets the Black Bass now? |
532 | Who said she wished she had n''t married me? |
532 | Who the thunder was that come buttin''into us? |
532 | Who told ye that? |
532 | Who told ye to call me Uncle? |
532 | Who''s got the bulk of the rats all winter? 532 Why ca n''t you lave me, if Jimmy can? |
532 | Why did n''t you kiss Aunt Mary? |
532 | Why do her children dee? |
532 | Why do n''t they wait for it? |
532 | Why do n''t you take Jimmy''s gun and go yoursilf? |
532 | Why do n''t you take a short cut to the matin''-house? |
532 | Why doesna she go to bed? |
532 | Why in God''s name couldna ye have married me? 532 Why in the name of sinse did you cut out whin I was off me pins?" |
532 | Why not come along, Mary? |
532 | Why should she die now? |
532 | Whysh like me? |
532 | Will you cut? |
532 | Will you go now? |
532 | Will you go without him? |
532 | Will you till him just what Jimmy told you? 532 Winna this scare him away?" |
532 | With me shootin''bait all over his pool with this? |
532 | With no poles, and no bait, and no grub? 532 Ye dinna let her see ye laugh?" |
532 | Ye mind the time when ye were married, and I thought I''d be best away, and packed my trunk? 532 You are goin''to be my Uncle, ai n''t you, as soon as it''s a little over a year, so folks wo n''t talk?" |
532 | You did n''t find him thin, last night? |
532 | You will till him ivirything? |
532 | Your new milk pail? |
532 | ''Tite''manes drinkin''without atin'', see?" |
532 | ''Wonner wash vinters buy, halfsh precious ash sthuff shell,''shee? |
532 | A little later Jimmy shouted from the back door to the barn:"Dannie, do you hear the larks?" |
532 | Ai n''t I seen him broadside? |
532 | Ai n''t that touchin''? |
532 | And where will we fix fra Mary?" |
532 | And yet, would he do it, after what he had said about being afraid? |
532 | Are we not almost there? |
532 | Are ye sure, mon?" |
532 | Are ye sure?" |
532 | As she held it to the light,"Is your name Macnoun?" |
532 | At last will you be mine? |
532 | But when had Jimmy taken care of himself? |
532 | But, Dannie, where the nation do you suppose the Kingfisher is?" |
532 | Canna I help ye? |
532 | Cansh shoot off nothing but your mouth?" |
532 | Chapter V WHEN THE RAINBOW SET ITS ARCH IN THE SKY"Where did Jimmy go?" |
532 | Chapter VII THE APPLE OF DISCORD BECOMES A JOINTED ROD"What do you think about fishing, Dannie?" |
532 | Could he bear it? |
532 | Could he live beside her, and lose her to another man for the second time? |
532 | Could he remember Jimmy''s dreadful death, realize that he was responsible for it, and make love to his wife? |
532 | Dannie hesitated, and then he said,"Would a small loan be what ye need, Jimmy?" |
532 | Did Jimmy get anything at all said to you?" |
532 | Did he want to marry Mary? |
532 | Did he? |
532 | Did n''t I say so first?" |
532 | Did n''t you hear Dannie sayin''what it was? |
532 | Did n''t you notice how green the maples are? |
532 | Did what he said make no impression on you?" |
532 | Did ye find ye dinna love Mary after ye won her? |
532 | Did ye murder your mither or blacken your soul with some deadly sin? |
532 | Did you ever write any fiction before?'' |
532 | Dinna that stump look lonely wi''out him?" |
532 | Dinna ye see him take my gun?" |
532 | Do n''t he, boys?" |
532 | Do you know the rist?" |
532 | Do you suppose it is something from Boston?" |
532 | Do you think we could finish the corn by noon?" |
532 | Do you understand me?" |
532 | Do you want me to do anything for you?" |
532 | Do you wish the last sacrament administered, Jimmy Malone?" |
532 | Elivin, did ye say?" |
532 | From all ye know, and what I''ve told ye, could his trouble be cured as the doctor suggests?" |
532 | Good to till boysh at club about, shee?" |
532 | Got enough city, clubsh, an''all that? |
532 | Have n''t you learned by this time that I lie twice to the truth once?" |
532 | Have to hustle lively for every worm you find, do n''t you, Chickie? |
532 | Have ye never been to the doctor, and asked why ye lost them?" |
532 | Have you any spare copies? |
532 | Have''nt I always helped ye if I could?" |
532 | He had purchased peace for himself, but what about Mary? |
532 | He has been reckless about sleeping on the ground, and noo, if ye will make this confidential?" |
532 | He regained breath to ask the Thread Man:"Did you iver have a frind?" |
532 | His other until it sank to a mere gasp: favourite was the story of Clemanthe, and her lover''s immortal answer to her question:"Shall we meet again?" |
532 | How long is it now till the Kingfisher comes?" |
532 | How would you feel yourself? |
532 | Humming birds?" |
532 | I guess this IS my pole, ai n''t it?" |
532 | I sent ye to tell her that I loved her; have I ever sent ye to tell her that I''ve quit? |
532 | I wonder if we canna arrange fra one of her sister''s girls to stay with her this winter?" |
532 | If Dannie knew what she did, and did not care to marry her, how could she mention it? |
532 | If it was what she had thought all year, why did it not free Dannie to her? |
532 | If there was something more, what was it? |
532 | Is n''t he besht man, Spooley?" |
532 | Is n''t that a fine plan?" |
532 | Is that a good plan?" |
532 | Know mosht that poetry till I die, shee? |
532 | Look at that, will ye?" |
532 | May I, Mary?" |
532 | NOW, will you fight like a man?" |
532 | Nobody knowsh the tree but me, shee? |
532 | Not a taste of that fish, when he''s teased me for years? |
532 | Now what the nation did I do with that pail?" |
532 | Now, how are we going to do it?" |
532 | Oh, Dannie, tell me why?" |
532 | Oh, Jimmy, Jimmy, have ye Mary''s happiness and those three little graves to answer for?" |
532 | Oh, my girl, is the beautiful thing that the priest told me true?" |
532 | Outside he said to the nurse,"What can I do?" |
532 | Say, you wo n''t make her suffer any more, will you?" |
532 | See? |
532 | See?" |
532 | See?" |
532 | Shay, can you hit anything? |
532 | Shay, will you go?" |
532 | She kapes moaning over and over''What did I do?'' |
532 | She''s never been sick in her life, and she has lived through it twice before, why should she die now? |
532 | Should we not keep quiet from now on? |
532 | Some other time----""Could you tell me your trouble?" |
532 | Tell her? |
532 | The chewinks flashed from the ground to the fences and trees, and back, crying"Che- wink?" |
532 | The question now is, shall I go to Dannie?" |
532 | This makes three little graves on the hill, Jimmy, what do they mean to ye?" |
532 | Till me ixactly what Father Michael told you?" |
532 | To Dannie it seemed that question should have been,"Why should she live?" |
532 | WAS HE TRULY RESPONSIBLE FOR JIMMY''S DEATH? |
532 | WHERE SHOULD SHE GO? |
532 | Want to be let in on something? |
532 | Want to taste real thing? |
532 | Wasna he a grand mon? |
532 | Well, now, would she? |
532 | Were the Wabash Paradise? |
532 | What I must suffer is my own, but what''s the matter with ye, and why, when she loved and married ye, are ye breakin''Mary''s heart? |
532 | What all does she want done?" |
532 | What can we do fra her? |
532 | What d''ye say to that?" |
532 | What did she do to you?" |
532 | What did the woman want that was so necessary as to send a man to town after a day on the ice? |
532 | What do you say? |
532 | What do you suppose the adulterated stuff we read about in papers tastes like?" |
532 | What do you think?" |
532 | What had I done to you?" |
532 | What had Jimmy told the priest? |
532 | What had passed between them? |
532 | What have we got to do?" |
532 | What is it? |
532 | What was he going to say to her? |
532 | What was the use in trying to deal with him as if he were a man? |
532 | What will bring a song to her lips, licht to her beautiful eyes, love to her heart, and a living child to her arms? |
532 | What you doing?" |
532 | What''s the fun of fishin''alone? |
532 | What''s the matter with ye?" |
532 | What''s the use? |
532 | What''s your trouble? |
532 | When before had he seen her with neither trouble, anxiety or, worse yet, FEAR, in her beautiful eyes? |
532 | When did men ever compete with the work of God? |
532 | When shall I read the banns?" |
532 | Where?" |
532 | Who''s the rhymin''inkybator?" |
532 | Why are ye a discontented mon, always wishing fra any place save home? |
532 | Why are ye breaking the heart o''Mary Malone? |
532 | Why did n''t you mintion it at harvest? |
532 | Why didna I let him have the Black Bass? |
532 | Why didna I make him come home and put on dry clothes? |
532 | Why dinna ye creep into the earth and sleep through the winter, and renew your life with the spring? |
532 | Why dinna ye, or some other mon, fly like that? |
532 | Why do ye spend all ye earn foolishly, so that ye are always hard up, when ye might have affluence? |
532 | Why do you ask?" |
532 | Why does Mary lose her children, and why does she noo wish she had na married ye?" |
532 | Why had Father Michael refused to confess Jimmy until he sent Dannie to him? |
532 | Why should you do Jimmy''s work, and miss the sport, to guard the thing he holds so lightly?" |
532 | Why the Diel dinna one of us haul out that Bass?" |
532 | Will we not alarm the coons?" |
532 | Will ye be mine, Mary Malone? |
532 | Will you all go, boysh?" |
532 | Will you swear it?" |
532 | Will you till him that I have loved him always?" |
532 | Will you?" |
532 | With another man like himself, it would have been man to man, but he always had spoiled Jimmy; now who was to blame that he was spoiled? |
532 | With them club- footed fingers of yours? |
532 | Would he come home and put on dry clothing? |
532 | Would he ever take life seriously? |
532 | Would it break it for me or Dannie to do the same thing? |
532 | Would n''t that break the heart of you? |
532 | Would she marry him? |
532 | Ye will get well?" |
532 | Ye will hurry, Jimmy?" |
532 | Ye winna be afraid, will ye?" |
532 | You are pleased, ai n''t you, Uncle Dannie?" |
532 | You ever have frind hish up and drive ten milesh for you night like thish, and liesh to get you out of schrape?" |
532 | You thick- tongued descindint of a bagpipe baboon, what did you sind me in there for?" |
532 | You understand?" |
532 | You very well know Dannie expected you to fish with the same kind of pole and bait that he did; did n''t you, Dannie?" |
532 | You wo n''t?" |
36684 | ''Teacher, teacher, why am I so happy, happy, happy, In my Sunday school?'' |
36684 | About me? |
36684 | About me? |
36684 | Am I a suspect? |
36684 | And did your cook relatives marry butlers? |
36684 | And if you have the vote,went on the Professor in a louder voice, and with a kind of mock solemnity,"what will you do with it?" |
36684 | And this other girl whom you are shielding, Miss Brown, does she deserve so much generosity from you? |
36684 | And you are n''t worried any longer? |
36684 | And yours? |
36684 | Angry? |
36684 | Any one want to come along? |
36684 | Are n''t you a sophomore? |
36684 | Are n''t you ashamed, Judy? |
36684 | Are n''t you going to catch your train? |
36684 | Are those seniors? |
36684 | Are you at home to visitors this morning, Miss Brown? |
36684 | Are you running away, Judy? |
36684 | Are you sure of this? |
36684 | Are you thinking it over? |
36684 | Besides, do n''t you think that''s a little personal just now, when the whole school is talking about the wire- cutter? |
36684 | But are you going to join the debating club? |
36684 | But do n''t these things interfere with-- with lectures? |
36684 | But how can we tell? |
36684 | But how did it happen? |
36684 | But suppose she was n''t? |
36684 | But the walk? |
36684 | But what is it, Mabel? 36684 But what is it?" |
36684 | But where did you get the cards? |
36684 | Can this be the only door into the Cloisters? |
36684 | Can you find your way to Queen''s Cottage? |
36684 | Can you sew? |
36684 | Confess now,he said, smiling at all of them and looking at Molly, whom he knew best of the three,"you took me for a tramp?" |
36684 | Could you hear what I was saying to the girls? |
36684 | Cousin Edwin, why ca n''t you hire a horse in the village and ride back to Wellington with me? |
36684 | Cousin Edwin, will you sit there, next to me? |
36684 | Cousin? |
36684 | Did I hear the words''hickory nut cake''spoken? |
36684 | Did Miss Blount decide on the courses? |
36684 | Did n''t Dr. McLean tell you to go easy for the next week? |
36684 | Did n''t you know that Molly had fainted and is now ill in the hospital and the ring is lost? |
36684 | Did she mention? |
36684 | Did they do it? |
36684 | Did you ever hear of such a thing? |
36684 | Did you ever see a dog that had been kicked all its life? |
36684 | Did you write it? |
36684 | Do my eyes deceive me? 36684 Do n''t you ever give yourself a holiday?" |
36684 | Do you know,she exclaimed,"I forgot I was wearing it? |
36684 | Do you remember helping a young lady who fainted on the day of the football game? |
36684 | Do you think she''s a''le- o- pard,''Judy? |
36684 | Do you think that''s good enough? |
36684 | Does she, really? 36684 Edwin, can you put me up? |
36684 | For instance, if we were detectives and put on the case, how would we go about finding the criminal? |
36684 | For the love of heaven, ca n''t you let me in? 36684 Frances Andrews?" |
36684 | Had n''t we better be chasing along? |
36684 | Has any one in the world the heart to have a grudge against you, you sweet child? |
36684 | Has anything been lost? |
36684 | Has n''t any one else asked you yet? |
36684 | Have you ever eaten too much of something, Margaret,she said,"and then hated it ever afterward?" |
36684 | Have you lost your nerve, Judy, dear? |
36684 | Have you no idea why? |
36684 | Have you worn the coat since? |
36684 | Her mother, being the most famous clubwoman in America, has n''t spent much time at home? 36684 How are you, Frankie? |
36684 | How are you, Judith? 36684 How are you, Molly, dear?" |
36684 | How are you, my dear? |
36684 | How did you like Epiménides? 36684 How do you do it?" |
36684 | How do you do, Cousin Grace? |
36684 | How do you do, Miss Pembroke? |
36684 | How do you feel after your night''s rest? |
36684 | How do you feel now, dear? |
36684 | How do you feel on the subject, Molly? |
36684 | How do you know what I was going to say? |
36684 | I do n''t think I have got them straight,answered Judy,"but they all sound alike, anyhow, so what''s the odds?" |
36684 | I say, Ju- ju, who''s your head waitress? |
36684 | I suppose you do n''t know how her father made his money? |
36684 | I wonder how she knew I was invited to the McLean''s? |
36684 | I wonder if she could and does n''t dare tell? |
36684 | I wrote to Dodo and asked him for them,answered Judy, giving her a look, as much as to say,"What affair is it of yours?" |
36684 | If I must miss the train, I must have some, whatever it is-- cream puffs or chocolate fudge? |
36684 | If I tell you what it is, will you promise to keep it a secret? |
36684 | Indeed, and what reason does she give? |
36684 | Is Mrs. Oldham, the Suffragette, her mother? |
36684 | Is Prexy here? |
36684 | Is anything special the matter? |
36684 | Is anything the matter? |
36684 | Is everything all right? |
36684 | Is n''t it jolly? |
36684 | Is n''t it perfect, Jessie? |
36684 | Is n''t it pretty? 36684 Is n''t it?" |
36684 | Is n''t she a brick? |
36684 | Is n''t she coming up soon? 36684 Is she one of the Queen''s Cottage girls? |
36684 | Is that it? |
36684 | Is the dance to take place, then? |
36684 | Is there much out- of- door life here? |
36684 | Is this to be an evening dress affair, or what''s proper to wear? |
36684 | Is this your study? |
36684 | Is your trunk strapped? |
36684 | It was rather good fun to be sure, but would it have mattered so much, after all, if Margaret had boldly come in at the front door and explained? |
36684 | It''s Kentucky ham of the finest, what do you call it-- breed? 36684 Judy,"she said,"will you please settle down to work this instant? |
36684 | Julia Kean, what are you doing? |
36684 | Locked up? |
36684 | Louise,said the President suddenly,"Frances Andrews is one of the girls at that house, is she not?" |
36684 | Me? |
36684 | Miss Brown? |
36684 | Mrs. Anna Oldham? |
36684 | My emerald ring lost? |
36684 | Nance, have you taken any interest in this question? |
36684 | News? 36684 Not going?" |
36684 | Now, is it so, then? |
36684 | Now, where am I going? |
36684 | Of course, but who? 36684 Of course,"said Frances Andrews, who had just come in,"why all this formality, when we are to be a family party for the next eight months? |
36684 | Oh, Judy,she exclaimed,"do you remember that nice Exmoor Sophomore named''Upton?'' |
36684 | Oh, Miss Stewart, what did Frances Andrews do last year to get herself into such a mess and be frozen out by all her class this year? |
36684 | Oh, are you going to Queen''s cottage? |
36684 | Oh, have the trunks really come, Miss Oldham? |
36684 | Oh,she cried,"are we really allowed to walk in this wonderful place?" |
36684 | Play room? |
36684 | Queen''s Cottage does seem so remote and lonesome, does n''t it? 36684 Say no?" |
36684 | Shall we go down with you to meet her, Nance? |
36684 | Shall we mention it to her, or do you think we''d better wait and let her introduce the subject? |
36684 | Shall we not? |
36684 | She has been saying some horrid things? 36684 She wishes to divide the class into committees and have a chairman for each committee--""Committees for what?" |
36684 | Shielded from what? |
36684 | So that''s it, is it? |
36684 | So you are really off to- morrow? |
36684 | So you have set your heart on Miss Oldham''s going to the supper to- night? |
36684 | Supposing the ring is n''t found, what redress have I? 36684 Taking what vows?" |
36684 | Tell us exactly who sent you each bunch? |
36684 | That makes twenty, does n''t it? 36684 That was a swift remedy, was it not, Miss Oldham?" |
36684 | The Flopping of Flora; or, Who Cut the Wires? |
36684 | The violets? |
36684 | Then, on the other hand,continued Molly,"suppose my going would help her a little, do n''t you think it would be mean to turn her down? |
36684 | There to- night? |
36684 | They certainly did,answered Jessie,"and when I saw the girl afterward in the dressing room, she said to me,''Oh, Jessie, was n''t it heaven?'' |
36684 | To- morrow morning? |
36684 | Was n''t the lecture wonderful? |
36684 | Was the difference about me? |
36684 | Well, what is it? |
36684 | What are we to do now? |
36684 | What could you tell, Molly? |
36684 | What did he look like? |
36684 | What do you intend to be? |
36684 | What do you intend to be? |
36684 | What do you think of that? |
36684 | What do you think, Nance? |
36684 | What do you use, a guitar or a piano? |
36684 | What is it, Molly, dear? |
36684 | What is it? 36684 What is it? |
36684 | What is it? |
36684 | What kind of a mother is she, I''d like to know? 36684 What was your question?" |
36684 | What''s bothering you, child? |
36684 | What''s the difference, Miss Brown? |
36684 | What''s this? |
36684 | What''s to be done? |
36684 | What''s your hurry? |
36684 | What, is your mother Mrs. Anna Oldham, the famous clubwoman? |
36684 | What, that lovely blue thing? 36684 What, you do n''t mean to say it was Epiménides Antinous Green?" |
36684 | What? |
36684 | What? |
36684 | When did these letters come? |
36684 | When do you get off? |
36684 | When, as Botticelli''s Flora, you came to that night with the words,''I saw her----''you did not guess, did you, that I, too, had seen her? |
36684 | Where are you to be this summer? |
36684 | Where have you been? |
36684 | Where is Dodo? |
36684 | Where''s Lulu? |
36684 | Where''s the can opener? |
36684 | Where''s the rouge and who''s got my rabbit''s foot? 36684 Where''s the switch?" |
36684 | Where? |
36684 | Which one? |
36684 | Who are you? |
36684 | Who was it, then? |
36684 | Who''s got any cookies? |
36684 | Who''s in there? 36684 Who''s in trouble now?" |
36684 | Who''s light manager? |
36684 | Who? |
36684 | Why are you hurrying so fast on Saturday? |
36684 | Why did n''t you come sooner? 36684 Why did n''t you come to the spread?" |
36684 | Why did you put the anchovies on crackers? |
36684 | Why do n''t you earn some money, Molly? |
36684 | Why do n''t you introduce me to your friends, Judy? |
36684 | Why do n''t you join in, Eddie? 36684 Why do n''t you put your talents to some use and write, then?" |
36684 | Why do n''t you write a short story? 36684 Why does n''t he have it cleaned off?" |
36684 | Why talk about it? |
36684 | Why, Judy, dearest, what can it be? |
36684 | Why, Molly, dear, has anything happened to you? |
36684 | Why, Molly, do you think I have any mind? |
36684 | Will you please oblige the company? |
36684 | Wo n''t it give him an awful shock when he catches a glimpse of us waiting here on the hilltop? |
36684 | Wo n''t you have a popover, Miss Andrews? |
36684 | Wo n''t you look me up to- morrow? |
36684 | Wo n''t you show me the Cloisters? |
36684 | Would n''t I? |
36684 | Would n''t you like to go for a stroll before supper? 36684 Would n''t your mother and father be angry with you for giving up college and joining them uninvited?" |
36684 | Would you mind letting me see that coat? |
36684 | Yes, who are you? |
36684 | You are pleased at being asked to the McLean''s? |
36684 | You are talking of the emerald ring, are n''t you, Molly? |
36684 | You can find your way back to Queen''s by yourself, ca n''t you, Miss Brown? |
36684 | You do n''t think it was a freshman, do you, Miss Stewart? |
36684 | You funny child,exclaimed Molly;"how do you know you are not all those things right now?" |
36684 | You know exactly where it was you fell, do n''t you? 36684 You know how to wait, do n''t you? |
36684 | You lent her your overcoat that afternoon, did n''t you? |
36684 | You look like a charming and very youthful widow- lady, Judy, but how comes it you are wearing black? |
36684 | You mean to say they were anonymous? |
36684 | You must be a freshman? |
36684 | You saw what, my child? |
36684 | You will drop me there, you say? 36684 You''ll forgive me, wo n''t you, Miss Steel?" |
36684 | You''re to be left at Queen''s by yourself? |
36684 | Your name is''Molly Brown,''and you come from Kentucky, is n''t that so? |
36684 | A five- pound box ought to be the equivalent of this, eh?" |
36684 | Am I dreaming? |
36684 | And how did you finally get out?" |
36684 | And, by the way, have you got a cook, too?" |
36684 | Are n''t you?" |
36684 | Are you a detective?" |
36684 | Are you freshmen? |
36684 | But she felt nervous, as who would n''t in that lonely place? |
36684 | But should you call her balanced?" |
36684 | But that dress must be in one of them, do n''t you think so, Mary? |
36684 | But what could be done? |
36684 | But why Edwin? |
36684 | But why did the foolish girl do that mischievous thing? |
36684 | By the way, lend me some coffee, will you? |
36684 | By the way, you are not going to the lecture, are you?" |
36684 | Ca n''t you see that Nance would rather die than have people know that her mother is n''t exactly like other mothers?" |
36684 | Can you guide, Molly?" |
36684 | Did Judy understand the look of immense relief which instantly appeared on Molly''s sensitive face? |
36684 | Did he behave this way at Harvard all the time, Cousin Edwin?" |
36684 | Did she think it would reinstate her in the affections of her class to be seen in the company of the popular young freshman? |
36684 | Do n''t you find it troublesome to be so nice to so many people?" |
36684 | Do n''t you think him good- looking?" |
36684 | Do you ever put things in the pockets of your coat?" |
36684 | Do you think they''ll go round? |
36684 | Do you want Molly to pay you for your ring? |
36684 | Do you-- do you suppose Nance knows?" |
36684 | Does n''t it, Judy?" |
36684 | Doubtless you know the incident of last year?" |
36684 | Following her assistant into the next room, she whispered:"Which would you rather do, Miss Brinton? |
36684 | Go over to Queen''s and ask Nance to give you the rest of my ham or wait on the table while I go?" |
36684 | Have a popover?" |
36684 | Have you forgotten about the supper to- night?" |
36684 | Have you prescribed for her, doctor?" |
36684 | Have you thought of anything?" |
36684 | Honor bright, who sent the violets?" |
36684 | How about a walk before supper? |
36684 | How are you, Lotta? |
36684 | How do you care for this one? |
36684 | How do you like it?" |
36684 | How does she expect me to get there, I wonder, at the eleventh hour?" |
36684 | How in the world did it happen?" |
36684 | I was glad enough to answer them, because we have nothing to be ashamed of, have we, girls?" |
36684 | If you should happen to be in about four o''clock, may I call? |
36684 | Is n''t it beautiful? |
36684 | Is n''t it fine of her? |
36684 | Is n''t it the top- notch, Eddie? |
36684 | Is she one of the students or some outside person?" |
36684 | Is that it?" |
36684 | It did happen just as Molly was about to give the encore, did n''t it?" |
36684 | It read:"DEAR MISS BROWN:"Will you forgive me? |
36684 | It''s Miss Bowles, Professor in Advanced Math., who is bringing her, you know, of course?" |
36684 | Judy and I promise to go there first thing, do n''t we, Judy?" |
36684 | Kean?" |
36684 | Kentucky, did n''t you say?" |
36684 | Mabel Hinton, passing them as they started, had called out:"Art off on a picnic?" |
36684 | McLean?" |
36684 | Mushroom sauce? |
36684 | Nance, ca n''t you do your theme after supper? |
36684 | Oldham?" |
36684 | One of them writes to me----""Girl or man?" |
36684 | She is my cousin, and her brother is as near to me as my own brother, but----""You are n''t going to tell Prexy?" |
36684 | She was engaged in mentally clearing them all out, when a voice at her elbow said:"Are you thinking of taking the vows, Miss Brown?" |
36684 | So there, will you say you have forgiven me?" |
36684 | Some other girls had cried:"Whither away so early, Oh?" |
36684 | Suppose we say we''ll go to one and listen?" |
36684 | Tell me honestly, is n''t that the truth?" |
36684 | That black- eyed Blount person?" |
36684 | Then she added:"By the way, Molly, can you spare the time to tutor me for a month or so? |
36684 | Then, someone opened a casement and a man''s voice called:"Is anyone there? |
36684 | To- morrow-- let me see, that''s New England boiled dinner night, is n''t it? |
36684 | Two freshies?" |
36684 | Was anyone else there to hear you?" |
36684 | Was it Frances, after all, who had broken up her party? |
36684 | What absurd trick of the mind had made her say"soup"? |
36684 | What can I do for you?" |
36684 | What did she have to gain by it?" |
36684 | What do they stand for?" |
36684 | What is she? |
36684 | What news?" |
36684 | What terrible disaster might not have befallen them if the rags had not been discovered? |
36684 | What time shall I come?" |
36684 | What would you think?" |
36684 | What''s the trouble, now, my children?" |
36684 | What''s this? |
36684 | Where are you stopping?" |
36684 | Where''s Molly Brown of Kentucky?" |
36684 | Who is she? |
36684 | Why could n''t she stay at home just once?" |
36684 | Why did n''t you wait and let us look?" |
36684 | Why do her classmates snub her and why did Miss Pembroke, who belonged to the faculty, wish to speak with her in her private office?" |
36684 | Why do n''t you get busy and do something?" |
36684 | Why not become friends at once, without any preliminaries?" |
36684 | Why not the youthful and blushing Dodo? |
36684 | Why, for instance, could she not have put Frances Andrews off with an excuse for a day or so? |
36684 | Will one of you girls take care of it for me? |
36684 | Will you come?" |
36684 | Will you forgive me? |
36684 | Will you forgive me?" |
36684 | Will you permit a gentleman to kiss you on the cheek, Molly?" |
36684 | Would it be more tactful to slip out of the room or to try and comfort Nance? |
36684 | Would it not be better to seize this opportunity than to wait for other chances which might not prove so agreeable? |
36684 | Would you go gallivanting off with a young man if your mother was going to give a lecture here?" |
36684 | You are going somewhere, Nance?" |
36684 | You feel better now, do n''t you?" |
36684 | You knew, Molly, dear, that I was rich, did n''t you?" |
36684 | You wo n''t think I''m patronizing if I give you a little advice, will you?" |
36684 | cried Jessie in her high, musical voice,"trying to crawl, were you? |
36684 | cried Richard Blount, starting from his chair with mock seriousness,"Where is it? |
36684 | he cried,"how am I ever going to make my apologies to you for all this trouble of which I have been the unconscious cause?" |
36684 | said Judy at last in a low voice to Molly,"what''s to be done now?" |
36684 | went on Mabel;"how it snarls and bites and snaps at anybody who tries to pet it? |
36684 | what an extraordinary thing, and how did it get there?" |
36684 | what are we going to do with you?" |
36684 | why all this excitement?" |
3634 | A man who helps your father? |
3634 | About what? |
3634 | Am I understood? |
3634 | And a little for_ your_ sake? |
3634 | And nothing more that you have forgotten, and ought to tell me? |
3634 | And they tempted you to look a little closer at them? |
3634 | And wake her? |
3634 | And when you looked at Miss Cristel, and she was too busy with her brooch to notice you, was that another signal? |
3634 | And your accident in the next room was planned, of course? |
3634 | Any ornament in it? |
3634 | Any particular color? |
3634 | Anything wrong? |
3634 | Are you coming to drink tea with my master? |
3634 | Are you determined to keep your engagement? |
3634 | Are you excited? 3634 Are you likely to come this way again?" |
3634 | Are you strong enough to carry him to his own side of the house? |
3634 | Are you the young master, sir? 3634 Are you to wait for an answer?" |
3634 | At any rate,she resumed,"you have heard of their father, Lord Uppercliff?" |
3634 | But you failed to understand him-- is that it? |
3634 | But you mean to try? |
3634 | Can we tell what may or may not happen to us, in the time to come? |
3634 | Damn it, sir,he burst out indignantly,"is n''t a Christian of more importance than a dog?" |
3634 | Did I believe her when I was meditating on our interview, alone in my room? 3634 Did he mention it in his letter?" |
3634 | Did he send you out by yourself, at this late hour, in the boat? |
3634 | Did he want you to read it? |
3634 | Did my gentleman trust you, sir, with all that writing? |
3634 | Did you know him before that? |
3634 | Did you notice the lady''s dress? |
3634 | Did you wonder, sir, what possessed her,Gloody went on,"when she burst out singing? |
3634 | Do you and your father really live alone in this solitary place? |
3634 | Do you believe that I mean well by you? |
3634 | Do you know what she has said? |
3634 | Do you like that muddy river? |
3634 | Do you mean that he has been at death''s door, like me? |
3634 | Do you mean that you are forbidden to tell me? |
3634 | Do you notice, sir, that he seems to set a deal of store by his writings? 3634 Do you think I should have been kept in ignorance of it, if my gamekeeper had been a drunkard? |
3634 | Do you think he saw through it? 3634 Does he look like the jealous monster who is plotting my destruction, and who will succeed if I am fool enough to accept his invitation?" |
3634 | Does he want money? |
3634 | Does n''t she owe her rank and her splendor, and the respect that people show to her, to the fortunate circumstance of her birth? 3634 Gloody has seen the person,"he announced;"and( what do you think, sir?) |
3634 | Going to stay with some friends perhaps? |
3634 | Harm, sir? |
3634 | Has anything happened to my voice? |
3634 | Have you been having my master watched? |
3634 | Have you been speaking kindly of me? 3634 Have you forgiven me?" |
3634 | Have you got a spare bed in the house? |
3634 | Have you killed him? |
3634 | Have you seen Gloody to- day? |
3634 | How can I help it, sir? |
3634 | How can you be sure of that? |
3634 | How did you know that he would not drink the whole contents of the jug? |
3634 | How is it you are not sure of that? |
3634 | How long did I hear the little cheering songsters who comforted me? 3634 How will it end?" |
3634 | I am afraid you are ill, Cristel? |
3634 | I amuse you, do I? |
3634 | I do n''t believe the man lives,he said,"who enjoys Contrast as I do.--What do you want now?" |
3634 | I hope I have not offended you? |
3634 | I remain, Sir, yours as you may receive me,THE DEAF LODGER I wonder what another man, in my position, would have done when he had read this letter? |
3634 | I suppose he threatened you? |
3634 | I wonder whether I know them? |
3634 | If I make a clean breast of what I know already, and if I tell you to- morrow what I can find out-- will it be worth the money? |
3634 | In the days when you were a ruffian in the prize- ring, did the other men''s fists beat all the brains out of your head? 3634 Is it a letter of your own writing?" |
3634 | Is it possible that you are Cristel Toller? |
3634 | Is it quite right, sir,she modestly objected,"for such as me to shake hands with such as you?" |
3634 | Is n''t she the daughter of a nobleman? |
3634 | Is that the impression,he asked,"produced by what I allowed you to read?" |
3634 | Is the cause there? |
3634 | Is the lodger a gentleman? |
3634 | Is there anything more,I asked,"that I ought to know?" |
3634 | Is there something going on, Cristel, that I do n''t know of? |
3634 | Is this Lady Rachel''s doing? |
3634 | Is this the hypocrite, who is deceiving me for his own wicked ends? |
3634 | Like a scene in a play, is n''t it? |
3634 | May I ask something? |
3634 | May I hope,he said,"that your visit is intended as a favorable reply to my letter?" |
3634 | May I see you to- morrow? |
3634 | May I take a long look at you? |
3634 | Must I speak of him? |
3634 | My dear child,I said grandly,"do you really suppose I am afraid of that poor wretch? |
3634 | Mysteries, my dear? |
3634 | Not to be mentioned more particularly? |
3634 | Of course that bold girl contrived to attract your notice? |
3634 | Oh, my darling,I said,"do I distress you?" |
3634 | Perhaps, you wish to have a look at the repairs? |
3634 | So you are fond of flowers? |
3634 | Still out of spirits? 3634 Surely a little coarse and vulgar?" |
3634 | Thank you, young man,she said smartly;"I wonder who you are?" |
3634 | The head gardener saw me? |
3634 | The magistrate would put questions to me-- wouldn''t he, sir? 3634 Then I now ask you, Mr. Roylake: Which are we-- enemies or friends?" |
3634 | Then what do you mean? |
3634 | Then you''re not making game of me? |
3634 | To- morrow? |
3634 | Was it a pleasant dinner- party last night? |
3634 | Was this the formidable obstacle to my tranquillity, which had prevented me from taking the rooms that I had chosen? 3634 Wednesday.--Is there some mysterious influence, in the silent solitude of my life, that is hardening my nature? |
3634 | Well? |
3634 | What accident are you thinking of? |
3634 | What am I to understand, sir, by seeing you here? |
3634 | What did he do? |
3634 | What did he say? |
3634 | What do you know of Lady Rachel, sir? |
3634 | What do you mean? |
3634 | What do you mean? |
3634 | What do you want? |
3634 | What do you wish to ask of me? |
3634 | What does he say? 3634 What does it mean?" |
3634 | What harm has he done? |
3634 | What have you been? |
3634 | What have you done? |
3634 | What is a prize- fighter? |
3634 | What is it? |
3634 | What is it? |
3634 | What is your complaint of this man? |
3634 | What is your touch intended to mean? |
3634 | What makes you doubt, sir, if father and I live alone? |
3634 | What were my habits in solitude? 3634 What wholesome influences had preserved me, so far, from moral contamination by the vile blood that ran in my veins? |
3634 | What''s come to my girl? |
3634 | What''s it all about, sir? |
3634 | What''s the matter now? |
3634 | What''s the matter with the dog? |
3634 | When? |
3634 | Where are your manners, Cristy? |
3634 | Where have you hidden her? 3634 Where should I lunch, my dear lady?" |
3634 | Where? |
3634 | Who is he? |
3634 | Who is your master? |
3634 | Who let her in? |
3634 | Who sends you with it? |
3634 | Why are you so anxious, father, to know about that portfolio? |
3634 | Why did n''t you come to my side of the house? |
3634 | Why did you ask me to notice his refusal? |
3634 | Why did you invite yourself? |
3634 | Why do you call me,''Mr Roylake''? 3634 Why not, sir?" |
3634 | Why should n''t I be Cristel Toller? |
3634 | Why should n''t it come off? |
3634 | Why? |
3634 | Why? |
3634 | Will you follow me to my side of the cottage? |
3634 | Will you hear what I want to tell you? |
3634 | Will you let him come here? |
3634 | Will you see that man, sir, waiting behind me? |
3634 | Will_ you_ inquire,he said,"if Miss Cristel is ready?" |
3634 | Wo n''t you give me some luncheon? |
3634 | Wo n''t you indulge a man who sees his fellow- creatures all talking happily round him, and feels dead and buried among them? |
3634 | Would you like to judge for yourself? |
3634 | You even believe in his letter? |
3634 | You expected that? |
3634 | You really like my sweet Lena? |
3634 | You used to be such a sweet- spoken pretty little boy,she said,"how should I know you again, with a big voice and all that hair on your face?" |
3634 | You wo n''t think I am presuming on your kindness? |
3634 | You''ll excuse me, sir? 3634 ''If your ladyship telegraphs this morning,''says he,''when will the man come to me?'' 3634 A bench of British magistrates would look at each other, and say: Where is the medical evidence? 3634 After this, need I say that the most amiable of women took me out in her carriage, and introduced me to some of the best society in England? 3634 After waiting at home for hours I was foolish enough to write, on my side; and( how could I help it?) 3634 Am I right if I think you know where he keeps it? |
3634 | Am I to give up the pleasure of seeing you, because a mad fellow is simple enough to think you will marry him? |
3634 | And doing a very indiscreet thing? |
3634 | And how is Miss Toller looking? |
3634 | And this charming girl,"he went on, turning to Cristel,"has she been trying the virtues of the spring by your advice? |
3634 | And was it helped( insensibly to myself) by his advantages of personal appearance? |
3634 | And what did I do next? |
3634 | And what did you do after that?" |
3634 | And what would be the effect on Lady Rachel, when she met with the fascinating young surgeon, and discovered the terrible change in him? |
3634 | And why, after what he had just said, did I see her eyes willingly rest on him, for the first time in my experience? |
3634 | And, oh, why did I humiliate him in your presence? |
3634 | Angry thoughts these-- and surely thoughts unworthy of me? |
3634 | Are you going to see her, you wicked man? |
3634 | Are you hitting fair now? |
3634 | Are you one of the few women who dislike an ugly man? |
3634 | Are you one?" |
3634 | But are the demands of a man''s dignity always paid in the ready money of prompt submission?) |
3634 | But could I trust the servant? |
3634 | But surely her vigorous intellect ought to have challenged your admiration; you ca n''t deny that?" |
3634 | By- the- by, do you call me''the Cur''( as I suggested) when you speak of me to other people-- to Miss Cristel, for instance? |
3634 | Can you find me a messenger to take a note to Trimley Deen?" |
3634 | Could he have reconciled it to his conscience to leave the afflicted man who had trusted him without a word of reply? |
3634 | Did Cristy tell you how badly we are off here for repairs? |
3634 | Did I feel the child''s breath, in my day- dream, still fluttering on my cheek? |
3634 | Did he by any chance suppose that I had learnt the finger alphabet? |
3634 | Did he claim his parental interest in her? |
3634 | Did he mean that she belonged to him? |
3634 | Did she think I was to be so easily frightened as that? |
3634 | Did this indicate a wise distrust of the Cur? |
3634 | Did this indicate another of the mysteries which, by her own confession, she had in preparation for me? |
3634 | Do n''t you see it yourself, Cristy? |
3634 | Do you believe she really meant that? |
3634 | Do you believe that I love you?" |
3634 | Do you love me?" |
3634 | Do you regret having followed the impulse which made you kindly offer to drink tea with us?" |
3634 | Do you suppose I would have begged and prayed of my father to send him away, without having reasons that justified me? |
3634 | Do you think she was too much staggered at the sight of him to speak? |
3634 | Do you think you can make tea that is fit for Mr. Roylake to drink?" |
3634 | Does the man live who could have taken leave of her calmly, in my place? |
3634 | Does this wretched place disgust you?" |
3634 | Eh? |
3634 | Had I startled her? |
3634 | Had the miller whom I remembered, died; and were these changes the work of his successor? |
3634 | Had we any proof to justify us? |
3634 | Has anybody ever suffered as I suffered, during that round of visits, under the desire to yawn and the effort to suppress it? |
3634 | Has he been picking the flowers?" |
3634 | Has she not told you what it is?" |
3634 | Have I done anything to offend you? |
3634 | Have I made some dreadful mistake? |
3634 | Have you been meeting her in secret?" |
3634 | He is at my house-- and I should like to keep him at Trimley Deen; but I am afraid he and the other servants might not get on well together?" |
3634 | Her parasol? |
3634 | How are you to set the circumstances in their true light, on your side? |
3634 | How can I let you suffer the discomfort of staying here? |
3634 | How could I allow it to go on? |
3634 | How did I get through the weary and wakeful hours of the day? |
3634 | How did I know that she had not opened that door, and gone to that side of the cottage, with a perfectly harmless object in view? |
3634 | How were we to communicate? |
3634 | I beg your pardon, sir, did you speak? |
3634 | I dare say you have asked yourselves: How is he going to amuse us, after tea? |
3634 | I have ceased to bear my family name; and, being out of society, what need have I for an assumed name? |
3634 | I said to myself:"Shall I walk on, and try if I can find the river and the mill again?" |
3634 | I took his book, and wrote the words-- harmless words, surely? |
3634 | I used the pencil again:"Why not?" |
3634 | I wonder how my life would have ended, if I had gone the other way? |
3634 | I wonder whether I can trust you? |
3634 | If Mrs. Roylake found out_ that_ social contrast, what would she say? |
3634 | If you have nothing better in view for him--?" |
3634 | In that strong language she expressed-- how shall I refer to it?--shall I say the sisterly interest that she felt in your welfare?" |
3634 | Is a man a gentleman, if he keeps a servant? |
3634 | Is it possible adequately to describe such infatuation as this? |
3634 | Is n''t it your business to get the things ready?" |
3634 | Is n''t that so, Mr. Gerard? |
3634 | Is n''t that so?" |
3634 | Is there a moral sense that suffers when a bodily sense is lost? |
3634 | Is there really some objection to my coming to tea tomorrow?" |
3634 | Is there something unnatural in the existence of a man who never hears a sound? |
3634 | Is_ that_ in his letter too? |
3634 | Jealous of the miller''s daughter-- in my position? |
3634 | Kind as my stepmother was, and agreeable as she was, what chance could I see of establishing any true sympathy between us? |
3634 | Knowing what you know of him, why did you stay here, when he came in? |
3634 | Let vile slang express my emotions: is n''t it jolly?" |
3634 | May I hope that you forgive me?" |
3634 | May I show what you have written to Cristel?" |
3634 | Mr. Gloody, do you know that you rather surprise me?" |
3634 | My angry humor acknowledged the harmless stranger''s salute by a rude inquiry:"What the devil do you want?" |
3634 | No? |
3634 | No? |
3634 | Now what do you say to that?" |
3634 | Oh, that river, that river, what devil set me talking about it? |
3634 | One of these days, poor Ponto may turn out to be right.--May I ask you something, sir?" |
3634 | Or did I suspect you of having robbed me of the only consolation that makes my life endurable? |
3634 | Or was it a mockery of her that had taken her place? |
3634 | Perfectly charming?" |
3634 | Perhaps you can say what the value of them may be?" |
3634 | Perhaps, I may speak for her now?" |
3634 | Possibly she had a hard heart? |
3634 | Roylake, does it strike you that the Cur is a sad cynic? |
3634 | Roylake?" |
3634 | Roylake?" |
3634 | Roylake?" |
3634 | Shall I be taking a liberty, if I ask how it was you got acquainted with him last night?" |
3634 | Shall I come in?" |
3634 | Shall I find you equally prejudiced, and equally severe, if I change the subject to dear Lady Lena? |
3634 | Shall I make another acknowledgment of weakness? |
3634 | Shall I tell him to go?" |
3634 | Shall we go to tea?" |
3634 | Shall we introduce ourselves? |
3634 | She wrote on the next blank leaf:"Shall I make the tea?" |
3634 | Suppose I offer to put them away for him? |
3634 | Suppose you knock it to pieces-- is it worth a rich gentleman''s while to sell a cartload of firewood?" |
3634 | Surely you know who the ladies are?" |
3634 | Toller?" |
3634 | Was I conscious of her touch? |
3634 | Was I wrong in advising Gloody to go to you?" |
3634 | Was he mad? |
3634 | Was his will, as compared with mine, the stronger will of the two? |
3634 | Was it her warm young breath that quickened me with its vigorous life? |
3634 | Was she mastered by love, or by despair? |
3634 | Was she the most beautiful creature I had ever seen? |
3634 | Was the miller alive and well? |
3634 | Was there no one to give Giles Toller the help that he must need at his age? |
3634 | Was this a hint? |
3634 | Was this the dear Cristel so well known to me? |
3634 | Well? |
3634 | What are you fidgeting about? |
3634 | What claim equally strong and equally tender does the other parent establish on his offspring? |
3634 | What could I do? |
3634 | What could her dear Gerard have been doing, out in the dark by himself, for all that time? |
3634 | What did I feel now? |
3634 | What did it mean? |
3634 | What do you say to having the report of the proceedings largely copied in the newspapers? |
3634 | What do you think of me now?" |
3634 | What do you think of my friend, Lady Rachel?" |
3634 | What has become of it now? |
3634 | What have you done, Mr. Gerard, to make him like you so well, in that short time?" |
3634 | What is it?" |
3634 | What is it?" |
3634 | What result would follow? |
3634 | What should I have done, if I had been twenty years older? |
3634 | What trials might the future have in store for me? |
3634 | What was going on at the mill? |
3634 | What was the right explanation of it? |
3634 | What was there in this( I wondered) to make her turn pale? |
3634 | What were you talking about, with her? |
3634 | What would Mrs. Roylake have said, if she had discovered that I was going back to the mill? |
3634 | What would they say at the great house, if they knew you had done that?" |
3634 | What''s he going to do next?" |
3634 | What''s_ your_ name?" |
3634 | When are we to have flour cheaper?" |
3634 | When may I expect you? |
3634 | When may I have the honor of expecting you to- morrow morning?" |
3634 | Where am I to go? |
3634 | Which do you admire-- that gypsy complexion, or Lena''s lovely skin? |
3634 | Which way did I turn my steps? |
3634 | Who could help pitying him? |
3634 | Who could the girl be, alone on the river at that time of night? |
3634 | Who ever yet sympathized with the sorrows and sufferings of strangers? |
3634 | Why did you bring up the subject? |
3634 | Why?" |
3634 | Will you come and speak to me in my room-- for five minutes only?" |
3634 | Will you have that? |
3634 | Will you receive her, brother Stephen? |
3634 | Will you remember the family taint, developed by a deaf man''s isolation among his fellow- creatures? |
3634 | Will you tell me what you wrote when you answered him?" |
3634 | Wo n''t you hear what I have to say? |
3634 | Wo n''t you tell me what I want to know?" |
3634 | Would he have seen in it nothing to justify some respect and some kindly feeling towards the writer? |
3634 | Would you be so good as to look at this slip of paper, Mr. Gerard? |
3634 | Yielding to one of my headlong impulses? |
3634 | You are going to keep your engagement, of course? |
3634 | You did n''t go into his room last night? |
3634 | You have had tea already? |
3634 | You heard me ask leave to make the tea?" |
3634 | You know that he has dismissed his poor old servant? |
3634 | You remember that?" |
3634 | You remember the ideal narratives of crime which I was so fond of writing at one time?" |
3634 | You saw me at the window, perhaps, with my nose and mouth protected before I opened the bottle?" |
3634 | and do it as soon as possible?" |
3634 | and take care of her? |
3634 | and what protection against them would the better part of my nature be powerful enough to afford? |
3634 | are you angry? |
3634 | are you trying to startle me by acting a part?" |
3634 | cried my stepmother,"what did I hear just now? |
3634 | hav''n''t you lunched already?" |
3634 | or had I offended her? |
3634 | or only an excuse? |
3634 | or perhaps she took a dislike to me, at first sight? |
3634 | or will you have an appropriate nick- name? |
3634 | what does it mean?" |
3634 | what have I done to deserve this? |
3634 | where is Toller?" |
46405 | A city of marble, did I say? 46405 A grand piano?" |
46405 | Ai n''t you sleepy, Eleanor? |
46405 | Am I growing mad? |
46405 | An engagement with whom? |
46405 | And after that? |
46405 | And he left nothing else? |
46405 | And that he published what he wrote? |
46405 | And then you knew him when he was a young man? |
46405 | And then? |
46405 | And then? |
46405 | And there is no Basil Everman? |
46405 | And where will you study? |
46405 | And who has touched them now? |
46405 | And you never knew or suspected that he wrote? |
46405 | And you read a great deal? |
46405 | And you will keep on writing? |
46405 | And, mother, did you ever know any one by the name of Basil Everman when you lived here long ago? |
46405 | Any with baths? |
46405 | Are n''t you interested? |
46405 | Are n''t you surprised? |
46405 | Are you acquainted in Waltonville? |
46405 | Are you hungry? |
46405 | Basil was n''t with them when he died, was he? |
46405 | But how lately have you eaten? |
46405 | But is there anything against Basil? 46405 But what do you mean? |
46405 | But where can he be? |
46405 | But who will ever read them? |
46405 | But, Richard, has it been our custom to communicate with one another by newspaper slips or written notes? |
46405 | But_ where_ is he? |
46405 | Can I get you a glass o''water, Miss Thomas''? |
46405 | Can I not? |
46405 | Could he write? |
46405 | Could he write? |
46405 | Could n''t we get them? |
46405 | Could n''t you have a winter in New York? |
46405 | Could you imagine, mother, how he felt when he knew that he could never hear again? 46405 Curious, is n''t it? |
46405 | Did Basil Everman come here? |
46405 | Did Basil never announce his departures? |
46405 | Did I know Basil Everman? |
46405 | Did he die here? |
46405 | Did he ever drink or gamble, or do anything of that kind? |
46405 | Did n''t I tell you they would ransack every chest in the attic after what Utterly said? 46405 Did she ever make any other effort to speak to you?" |
46405 | Did she? |
46405 | Did you ever hear how he disposes of his books? |
46405 | Did you ever hear of a Basil Everman? |
46405 | Did you ever hear of any one by the name of Everman? |
46405 | Did you ever hear of any one named Basil Everman? |
46405 | Did you ever hear of any one named Basil Everman? |
46405 | Did you ever hear the name Basil Everman? |
46405 | Did you ever know Basil Everman? |
46405 | Did you find him? |
46405 | Did you have a rest, mother? |
46405 | Did you know Basil Everman well? |
46405 | Did you know about his writing? |
46405 | Did you know him well, mother? |
46405 | Did you know him when he was a boy? |
46405 | Did you know that he was a writer? |
46405 | Did you know they had been published? |
46405 | Did you say you knew him well, mother? |
46405 | Did you suppose she would n''t consent? |
46405 | Did you think it was a good story? |
46405 | Did you? |
46405 | Did you_ really_ ever know of such a person? |
46405 | Do his shoelaces dangle? 46405 Do you know all the facts about Homer, or about Shakespeare, or other writers? |
46405 | Do you know anything about his relatives? |
46405 | Do you know anything of him? |
46405 | Do you know where they went after they left here-- the girl and her father, I mean? |
46405 | Do you know whether such a person lives in Waltonville now? |
46405 | Do you love me? |
46405 | Do you mean that your father could compel them to leave? |
46405 | Do you suppose I could play for him there? 46405 Do you think anything can be made of them?" |
46405 | Do you think you''ve succeeded so well, Henry, that you ca n''t take any advice? |
46405 | Do you wish me to look at them now? |
46405 | Does Eleanor know this? |
46405 | Does Miss Thomasina know about it? |
46405 | Does any one else have this notion? |
46405 | Dr. Green, if a person has talent, is it likely to be inherited, or does it spring up of itself? |
46405 | Father, do n''t you consider it a man''s work? |
46405 | Followed them? |
46405 | Goin''to git out, honey? |
46405 | Has n''t he come? |
46405 | Have you lived long in Waltonville, Miss Davis? |
46405 | Have you nothing to say? |
46405 | Have you thought of looking there? 46405 Have you?" |
46405 | He could see nothing derogatory to Basil in them? |
46405 | He was Mrs. Lister''s brother and he has been dead for many years, has n''t he? |
46405 | How did Mrs. Scott know about him? |
46405 | How did he happen to die in Baltimore? |
46405 | How do you mean to get new impressions? 46405 How he looked? |
46405 | How long have you been here? |
46405 | How much of this is suspicion? 46405 How old was he?" |
46405 | I listened with great pleasure to your boys and girls, especially to the playing of your own boy-- I believe it was your son who played the organ? |
46405 | I mean are you going to bury your talent in Waltonville or are you going into the great world? 46405 I suppose you will wish to read them?" |
46405 | I would like for you to choose a pie- anna--why was it that the one suggested the other? |
46405 | In a certain sense? |
46405 | Is Eleanor in tears? |
46405 | Is Richard anything like him? |
46405 | Is n''t that enough? 46405 Is n''t this a college town?" |
46405 | Is that a_ young_ lady? |
46405 | Is that all? |
46405 | It is a very interesting town, is n''t it? |
46405 | It makes one wish to be very diligent, does n''t it-- such a record as this lad''s? |
46405 | It was a surprise to her? |
46405 | May I come to see you to- morrow morning? |
46405 | May I say that they were written to you? |
46405 | May I see her? |
46405 | Miss Thomasina''s friend? |
46405 | Mother, in the name of common sense, what is the matter with the people in this house? |
46405 | Mother,said he impatiently,"what is the matter? |
46405 | No notes? |
46405 | No one else, I suppose? |
46405 | Nor heard anything of him but that? |
46405 | Offered me? |
46405 | Oh, yes? |
46405 | Other magazines of the period might have something, might they not? |
46405 | Perhaps with Thomasina? |
46405 | Pull? |
46405 | Sha n''t I excuse you? 46405 Shall I bring you a drink?" |
46405 | Shall I darken the room, mother? |
46405 | Shall I take myself downstairs? |
46405 | Shall I write anything on the slate? |
46405 | Shall we play? |
46405 | She plays well, does n''t she? |
46405 | Suppose I did go, what should I prepare to play? |
46405 | Tell you what about him? |
46405 | That could n''t have been inherited from me, I suppose? |
46405 | The fact that her work bears not the remotest resemblance to his has nothing to do with the question, I presume? |
46405 | Then, teaching, perhaps? |
46405 | This man said he found some stories of Basil Everman''s; was n''t that it? |
46405 | To go on, Richard--"Why did mother ever let me take lessons? |
46405 | To me? |
46405 | To take children to teach, like Thomasina, for pay? |
46405 | Virginia--Thomasina could be no longer restrained--"why do n''t you keep the doctor''s office in better order? |
46405 | Was Basil Everman an extraordinary person? |
46405 | Was he a graduate of this college? |
46405 | Was he--He turned impatiently to Dr. Lister--"Are there no interesting facts about him, no_ memorabilia_, no traditions of any kind? |
46405 | Was my Uncle Basil musical? |
46405 | Was there anything remarkable about him? |
46405 | Well, Richard? |
46405 | Well, then, what is all this fuss about? |
46405 | Well? |
46405 | Well? |
46405 | Well? |
46405 | Were we ever away from here? |
46405 | Were you going to do it for nothing? |
46405 | What are these coincidences? |
46405 | What are you going to do next? |
46405 | What are you going to do this fall? |
46405 | What are you going to do, Miss Bent? |
46405 | What are you interested in, then? |
46405 | What did she say? |
46405 | What did she say? |
46405 | What did you come for? 46405 What did you conclude from that?" |
46405 | What did you say? |
46405 | What do you do for a living? |
46405 | What do you mean by''wild''? |
46405 | What do you suppose my father and mother will say to my studying music? |
46405 | What do you want to know about him? |
46405 | What do you wish to do? |
46405 | What do_ you_ know about him? |
46405 | What does mother consider matters of no importance? |
46405 | What does she think I am? |
46405 | What does this return mean, my dear? 46405 What for?" |
46405 | What has got into the boy? 46405 What has she to do with it?" |
46405 | What in the world are you doing here? |
46405 | What is a pupil teacher? |
46405 | What is creeping out? |
46405 | What is it? |
46405 | What is it? |
46405 | What is the matter with you? 46405 What is the matter, Richard?" |
46405 | What is to come of this? |
46405 | What is your name? |
46405 | What message, Richard? |
46405 | What of him? |
46405 | What on earth does he want? |
46405 | What sort of story? 46405 What thing, mother?" |
46405 | What was he like? 46405 What works?" |
46405 | What young girl? |
46405 | What''s the matter with you? |
46405 | What''s the matter? |
46405 | What_ does_ he want here? 46405 When are you going away?" |
46405 | When did this engagement begin? |
46405 | When did you have anything to eat, my boy? |
46405 | When did you hear from them? |
46405 | When does he go? |
46405 | When will he be back? |
46405 | When will you come again? |
46405 | Where are the stories? |
46405 | Where are you going? |
46405 | Where did you get the idea for your little story? |
46405 | Where do the Listers live? |
46405 | Where have you been at this hour, Eleanor? |
46405 | Where have you been? |
46405 | Where is Richard? |
46405 | Where is your mother? |
46405 | Where to? |
46405 | Where was Richard? |
46405 | Where would you like to go? |
46405 | Who is this man Utterly? 46405 Whose?" |
46405 | Why did you go away and where did you go? |
46405 | Why do n''t you have a wife? |
46405 | Why do n''t you have a wife? |
46405 | Why do n''t you? |
46405 | Why do you ask that? |
46405 | Why was n''t I told? |
46405 | Why? |
46405 | Will you come out and speak to this gentleman? 46405 Will you come to my study for a few minutes?" |
46405 | Will you play with me? |
46405 | Will you tell me about Basil Everman? 46405 Will you tell me about him?" |
46405 | Wo n''t Scotty champ his bit? |
46405 | Wo n''t you play, now? |
46405 | Worried? 46405 Would you like that, dear?" |
46405 | Would you like to go home, mother? |
46405 | Would you like to see Basil Everman''s stories? |
46405 | Writing? |
46405 | Yes; what have they offered to pay you? |
46405 | Yes? |
46405 | Yes? |
46405 | Yes? |
46405 | Yes? |
46405 | Yes? |
46405 | You and your mother are alone? |
46405 | You are sure of all you told me, mother? |
46405 | You did n''t get my message, then? |
46405 | You did not know him as a writer? |
46405 | You have everything you need, do n''t you? |
46405 | You have had your glimpse? |
46405 | You have photographs of him, of course? |
46405 | You keep notebooks, I suppose, and record all your impressions? |
46405 | You mean he must be told about Basil? |
46405 | You mean you would like to have been a musician? |
46405 | You never caused any inquiry to be made there? |
46405 | You never saw him? |
46405 | You say that he is dead? 46405 You sure you not sick, Miss Thomas''?" |
46405 | You will go away from Waltonville? |
46405 | You''ll be back before I start? |
46405 | You''ll surely wait for me afterwards? |
46405 | You''re sure you do n''t know anything about any Evermans? |
46405 | Your story did n''t come back, did it? |
46405 | A bit of poetry came to Utterly''s mind:"Who are these coming to the sacrifice?... |
46405 | And what_ was_ she? |
46405 | Are n''t you at_ all_ nervous?" |
46405 | Are n''t you pleased?" |
46405 | Are n''t you very fond of him?" |
46405 | Are they really worth anything?" |
46405 | Are you going to stay here?" |
46405 | Are you pleased, mother?" |
46405 | Are you_ sure_ there is nothing else?" |
46405 | Basil-- who but a Professor of Greek would give his son such a name? |
46405 | Bent have never exchanged a word about-- this matter?" |
46405 | Bent in financial difficulties? |
46405 | Bent? |
46405 | Bent? |
46405 | Bent?" |
46405 | But the price of the beautiful piano must have been enormous-- had her mother been unwisely extravagant? |
46405 | But where was Richard? |
46405 | Can you spare me a few moments of your time?" |
46405 | Could I get you something-- glass of water or something? |
46405 | Could it be that she was ill, and that he had observed it and had come to remonstrate with her for not having medical advice? |
46405 | Could not anything be found by searching? |
46405 | Could she be suffering from some dangerous and treacherous disease and for that reason need constant company? |
46405 | Could there be any serious feeling between them? |
46405 | Did any boy ever like it in the history of the world? |
46405 | Did anything in the world really matter as much as this? |
46405 | Did he commit any crime? |
46405 | Did he live abroad?" |
46405 | Did he not know that she never left him? |
46405 | Did he wrong any one? |
46405 | Did n''t you find my note, mother?" |
46405 | Did n''t your father realize that here was no ordinary boy, here no ordinary talent?" |
46405 | Did she suppose I could associate day after day with a girl like Eleanor and not love her?" |
46405 | Did she think of him at all when he was not with her? |
46405 | Did you bring the story to read to me?" |
46405 | Did you ever read Maria Edgeworth, Mr. Utterly? |
46405 | Did you know him, mother?" |
46405 | Did you know of them?" |
46405 | Did you never see anything he wrote? |
46405 | Did you never suspect that he was trying to write? |
46405 | Did you not suspect, after Mr. Utterly was here, that these papers might be valuable?" |
46405 | Did you read him the story?" |
46405 | Do n''t you see that I do n''t want any one else to find out now? |
46405 | Do you feel able to speak to him?" |
46405 | Do you know about''Rosamund and the Purple Jar''?" |
46405 | Do you know anything of him?" |
46405 | Do you mean to say that he was n''t at supper?" |
46405 | Do you not see that, papa?" |
46405 | Do you not think it is the intense heat that has affected you?" |
46405 | Do you remember him distinctly? |
46405 | Do you suppose I would believe anything against Basil I did n''t have to believe? |
46405 | Do you suppose he spent his days and nights, writing and polishing in order that his compositions might lie in an old bureau in an attic? |
46405 | Do you suppose he will ever take me as a pupil?" |
46405 | Does your mother know?" |
46405 | Does''Manda have lunch ready?" |
46405 | Eleanor--""Did you say you were going to Baltimore?" |
46405 | Green?" |
46405 | Had Basil left papers? |
46405 | Had Mary Alcestis carried the key away with her? |
46405 | Had he ever even spoken to Margie Ginter before she had returned to Waltonville? |
46405 | Had he meant to conduct a sort of symposium about Basil? |
46405 | Had her mother sent for Dr. Green? |
46405 | Had his father visited his acquaintances in Baltimore and was he to be ordered to Johns Hopkins? |
46405 | Had not Mr. Utterly confirmed all her own convictions on this point? |
46405 | Had she closed the drawer? |
46405 | Had she said anything to hurt him? |
46405 | Had she thought him rude? |
46405 | Had the work which he had done been paid for? |
46405 | Had the world a right to all it could learn of the lives of geniuses, or had it not? |
46405 | Had you any words with him about anything?" |
46405 | Has the doctor come?" |
46405 | Have you repeated this to any one else?" |
46405 | He had hoped for something more interesting, but after all, what could excite a man more than conviction of his own powers? |
46405 | He had once made plans for a translation of the"Medea,"he had even begun it-- was it now too late to snatch a little fame from the passing years? |
46405 | How can you ask such a question?" |
46405 | How could a human being live in such a state when all might be put to rights in a day? |
46405 | How does he come to know?" |
46405 | How else should she have got ahead of our Richard in school? |
46405 | How long have you been here?" |
46405 | How much do you really_ know_?" |
46405 | How, she asked, with her sweetest expression, did one write? |
46405 | I asked you what you are interested in?" |
46405 | I could n''t help thinking of''Thou still unravish''d bride of quietness,''and so forth, do n''t you know?" |
46405 | I suppose it is too much to hope for-- but is it possible that anything else will turn up?" |
46405 | I suppose she will have to earn her living?" |
46405 | I think we''d better let him have his music, do n''t you?" |
46405 | I--""Faversham?" |
46405 | I--""Thomasina has been encouraging you, I suppose?" |
46405 | Is n''t that a beautiful word?" |
46405 | Is your line books?" |
46405 | It is my judgment that any one who carried about with him volumes of Euripides and Æschylus did not--""Did he do that?" |
46405 | Lister?" |
46405 | Lister?" |
46405 | Lister?" |
46405 | Mrs. Lister''s face lost its stiff look as she cried,"Why, Thomasina, when did you come back?" |
46405 | Neither her eyes nor her dark hair nor her height had come from her mother-- from whom had they come? |
46405 | On Commencement Day? |
46405 | Or-- now Mrs. Lister''s heart throbbed with hope--"Would you like to have the piano tuned, Richard?" |
46405 | Richard called out no more with tears,"Oh, mother, did you know that Handel was blind?" |
46405 | Richard--"Her bright eyes searched his troubled face--"What is the matter, my dear?" |
46405 | Scott?" |
46405 | She longed to say,"Yes, but what if no diligence avails?" |
46405 | She was so ignorant-- what should she say to so imposing and elegant a person? |
46405 | So this was the world, was it? |
46405 | The voice was not Richard''s, but Dr. Green''s older, deeper tones which asked,"Is Eleanor at home?" |
46405 | They would ferret things out, they would--""From whom would they ferret anything out?" |
46405 | Thomasina had said-- what was it Thomasina had said? |
46405 | To see me or to borrow a book?" |
46405 | Was Eleanor trying to get some sort of literary position? |
46405 | Was he angry or offended? |
46405 | Was he going to Pittsburgh now? |
46405 | Was he not coming, did she not hear steps, a voice, did she not feel-- not a hand touching her-- but a breath upon her cheek? |
46405 | Was he really here, in this house, in Waltonville?" |
46405 | Was it an ultimatum, favorable or unfavorable, about music? |
46405 | Was it not better that he should remain dead than that his sister''s heart should ache? |
46405 | Was it possible that the bed could have been empty when he looked before? |
46405 | Was it something about"a girl to go gypsying with through all the world"? |
46405 | Was it what she_ was_ that had offended Richard? |
46405 | Was she interested in modern Italy? |
46405 | Was she staying at home to watch him? |
46405 | Was that right, mother?" |
46405 | Was this dull shade the real color of the sky, this heavy vapor the atmosphere? |
46405 | Was this foolish doctor trying to conceal something from him, something which he had every right to know? |
46405 | Was yo''sick, Miss Thomas''?" |
46405 | We would have plenty for him, would n''t we, even if he does n''t succeed with his music?" |
46405 | What about?" |
46405 | What are you afraid of? |
46405 | What are you doing here? |
46405 | What are your symptoms? |
46405 | What can be found out?" |
46405 | What color were they?" |
46405 | What could be the matter now? |
46405 | What deep or wide experience could this young man have had? |
46405 | What did Mr. Faversham say about your playing?" |
46405 | What did he know? |
46405 | What did he look like?" |
46405 | What did he suppose was Mr. Utterly''s business with Eleanor Bent? |
46405 | What did he think of her friend Mr. Utterly? |
46405 | What did you do while you were away?" |
46405 | What do you mean?" |
46405 | What do you suppose would become of literary biography or of any sort of biography if all the relatives and friends of talented men acted as you do?" |
46405 | What does he want with Eleanor Bent? |
46405 | What else?" |
46405 | What had he done to be remembered except by a few persons connected with him by ties of blood? |
46405 | What had she said? |
46405 | What have they offered you to do this work, Henry?" |
46405 | What is back of this? |
46405 | What is creeping out?" |
46405 | What is his business here?" |
46405 | What is it that troubles you?" |
46405 | What is it?" |
46405 | What is it?" |
46405 | What is more likely than that she should have inherited talent from Basil Everman?" |
46405 | What is there to fear? |
46405 | What is there to suspect about Basil? |
46405 | What is this about Mrs. Lister''s brother?" |
46405 | What little town by river or sea shore, Or mountain- built with peaceful citadel, Is emptied of its folk this pious morn?" |
46405 | What might she not have put into his head? |
46405 | What other persons?" |
46405 | What was being done in Boston in a literary way? |
46405 | What was his family about?" |
46405 | What was she doing now? |
46405 | What''s worrying you?" |
46405 | What, then, was doing in New York? |
46405 | When are you going?" |
46405 | When can this work begin? |
46405 | Where is it?" |
46405 | Where is the young woman who was going to be George Eliot and Jane Austen in one, pray? |
46405 | Where?" |
46405 | Where_ is_ Richard?" |
46405 | Who was this strange, bearded, sentimental youth, robed like the lilies, who quoted poetry at first acquaintance? |
46405 | Why did n''t she go too? |
46405 | Why did you invite him here like that?" |
46405 | Why_ should_ you know?" |
46405 | Will you hear what I have to say quietly, or shall I go away and finish another time?" |
46405 | Will you not tell me everything?" |
46405 | Will you tell him, Thomasina, that I am trying to sleep?" |
46405 | Will you, oh, will you play it first?" |
46405 | Would Basil''s fame survive more than a few generations? |
46405 | Would a publisher even consider the bringing out of the work of a man so long gone? |
46405 | Would he ever come, or would he leave her to watch for him, day after day, to do nothing but watch for him? |
46405 | Would n''t old Jehu skin me alive if I failed? |
46405 | Would the Listers think of him as the editor for such a volume? |
46405 | Would you like a little cake? |
46405 | You did n''t expect to stay here forever, did you?" |
46405 | You do know that, do n''t you?" |
46405 | You do n''t suppose they have to see everything they write about, do you? |
46405 | You have been there, of course?" |
46405 | You have n''t forgotten her?" |
46405 | You know Waltonville''s attitude of mind?" |
46405 | You will help me, wo n''t you?" |
46405 | meanwhile making tatting or lambrequins with String, or are you going to improve your mind and amount to something? |
46405 | this was life? |
38608 | A boy? 38608 A real prince?" |
38608 | A refugee? |
38608 | Alma, do you think you could keep a secret? |
38608 | Am I not included? |
38608 | And could you find no way to tell who she was or where she lived? |
38608 | And did you notice how matter- of- fact she donned Bluebird''s outfit? 38608 And he did n''t beat her?" |
38608 | And how do you get the mark on the tree? |
38608 | And is there a Jimbsy to that? |
38608 | And she is really related to Vita, not kidnapped? |
38608 | And was he-- er-- handsome? |
38608 | And why some ca n''t have some? |
38608 | And you measure land, do n''t you? |
38608 | Anything? |
38608 | Are n''t they? 38608 Are you hungry?" |
38608 | Are you really a surveyor? |
38608 | Are you visiting Rocky Ledge? |
38608 | As if she could get out of bed----"Why could n''t she? 38608 Ask her if she is entertaining a boy in velvet pants?" |
38608 | Attic room? |
38608 | Bob swamp? 38608 Break up the family? |
38608 | But Chicks,said Thistle from a rumpled pillow,"is n''t that child a dream?" |
38608 | But is n''t she sweet? |
38608 | But it''s so late,she figured out,"and would it be fair to wake Cousin Ted when she is so tired and after her taking me to that beautiful picture?" |
38608 | But say, Scoutie; whatever are we going to tell the girls about the prince? |
38608 | But say, little girl, are you going back to that school where they teach you to wear silk underwear in the cold, blasty winter weather? 38608 But the prince?" |
38608 | But when you get it? |
38608 | But who dares qualify day dreams? |
38608 | But why do you come up to this dirty place? |
38608 | But why the secret? 38608 But you do think this is a pretty room?" |
38608 | Ca n''t we go to the bench and talk it over? |
38608 | Ca n''t you come and get it? |
38608 | Ca n''t you get in? |
38608 | Call that a new plan? |
38608 | Can anything have happened to her? |
38608 | Cobwebs? |
38608 | Could n''t I chop a nick in this one? 38608 Could n''t we call?" |
38608 | Could n''t we have perfectly lovely times in a little house of our own? |
38608 | Could we go over to those gardens? |
38608 | Cousin Ted gone out? |
38608 | Crazy? |
38608 | Day dreams or night dreams? |
38608 | Did he come your way? |
38608 | Did n''t even thank you? |
38608 | Did you ever see anyone so pleased as our friend? |
38608 | Did you ever? |
38608 | Did you feel sorry for her, too, Cap? |
38608 | Did you go to sleep in the trunk? |
38608 | Did you like her, Cap? |
38608 | Did you not know this was story night? |
38608 | Did you really? 38608 Did you see-- anything?" |
38608 | Do n''t you know the war made every thing democratic? |
38608 | Do n''t you like it, Vita? |
38608 | Do n''t you like them, the Scouts? |
38608 | Do n''t you love a little lake like this? |
38608 | Do n''t you remember the princes in the tower? |
38608 | Do n''t you think, Nora, we ought to go in and look around? |
38608 | Do we dress up? |
38608 | Do you suppose she went to visit anyone? 38608 Does he work on the farms?" |
38608 | Does n''t Mr. Manton like to have you go out alone? |
38608 | Does she like the water? |
38608 | Dying? |
38608 | Elizabeth? |
38608 | Everything has to be just exactly, has n''t it? |
38608 | First? |
38608 | Going in for scientific gardening when we make you a real Scout? |
38608 | Good enough to give you the right sort of nightmare, eh? 38608 Groan?" |
38608 | Had you hopes for the lunatic in the mud puddle? |
38608 | Have you been having a masquerade? |
38608 | Have you heard it before? |
38608 | He surely does, eh, old boy? |
38608 | How about that first formal ducking, with Jimbsy in the background? |
38608 | How about the woods? |
38608 | How are you today, Lucia? |
38608 | How can I tell? |
38608 | How could we wait for permission when someone was moaning to death? |
38608 | How do you know Nora was anything like that? |
38608 | How ever could one get acquainted with birds? |
38608 | How ever did you-- come here and get-- like-- this? |
38608 | How ever will we go up there in the dark? |
38608 | How would you like to go to a picture play? |
38608 | How''d you say you got it? |
38608 | How? |
38608 | I am sure she would rather have the pretty----"But, please, could I see the attic room? |
38608 | I am sure some one lighted the lights, can they have gone out looking for me? |
38608 | I do wonder why they made such a fuss about me staying in the attic? |
38608 | I have two little girls, now; yes, Lucia? |
38608 | I liked the mill story and I just loved that wild, exciting time the girls had trying to win back-- was it Dagmar? |
38608 | I mean did you see-- anything queer? |
38608 | I never let the youngsters go out on location without the big dog, do I Cap? |
38608 | I tell you a nice little story, then you go downstairs on tippy toes, yes? |
38608 | I think it is all too jolly for words,insisted Laddie,"and what do you say, girls, to our adopting Prince Adorable for our mascot?" |
38608 | I thought it was a moan? |
38608 | I''m a Girl Scout, do you know what that means? |
38608 | I-- just-- come to-- shut the window----"Oh, is there a window over there? |
38608 | If I bring you a lovely sweet pie will you come back and talk to me here? |
38608 | If our little girl wants to dream one dream out up there, why should n''t she? 38608 If you really had a picnic planned could n''t we have it, and could n''t I invite my Scout friends?" |
38608 | If your folks have not returned will you come back and stay all night? |
38608 | In those wet things? |
38608 | Is Nora going to be inducted? |
38608 | Is he to walk through ordinary mud puddles? |
38608 | Is n''t it wonderful, Cap? 38608 Is n''t it?" |
38608 | Is n''t she darling? |
38608 | Is n''t that being a very good girl? |
38608 | Is she really going to adopt the child? |
38608 | It is not ten o''clock, I hope? |
38608 | It is sort of artist work, is n''t it? |
38608 | It''s like this,she began,"that attic----""Oh, that''s it, is it? |
38608 | Jimmie is n''t your prince-- Alma? |
38608 | Just look at those-- panties? |
38608 | Letter? |
38608 | Lucia wo n''t mind if I tell you? |
38608 | Lucia,began Nora, very gently,"where did-- you-- come from?" |
38608 | Nannie? |
38608 | Near the bend, Alma? |
38608 | Nick? |
38608 | No, what? |
38608 | Now what do you say Bobbie, to a try at horse back ridin''? |
38608 | Now, are you satisfied, Alma? |
38608 | Oh, Jimbsy, where art thou? |
38608 | Oh, are you really going down the stream? |
38608 | Oh, could I help you, Cousin Ted? |
38608 | Oh, could I help? |
38608 | Oh, do you think it will be hard? 38608 Oh, have n''t you read it? |
38608 | Oh, how do you do? |
38608 | Oh, is it dangerous? |
38608 | Oh, is there? |
38608 | Once more, shall I read it? |
38608 | Please-- you do n''t tell anybody? |
38608 | Princess? |
38608 | Really, things are different when you think about them than what they are when-- you run right into them, are n''t they? |
38608 | Say Vi,called Jerry in his cheeriest voice,"who''s your friend? |
38608 | Say, Wyn,charged Thistle,"do you suppose Nora has no other interest than in your visionary prince and yellow curls? |
38608 | Secret? 38608 Serenading?" |
38608 | Shall we all go down and leave the child to rest? |
38608 | She could n''t be in the house, could she? |
38608 | She has my second best''sneaks''on now, yet she will malign me----"Why and whither away? |
38608 | She just had a spell of hysteria, did n''t she? |
38608 | She just kept me from finding out----"What? |
38608 | She knows me, do n''t you, Lucia? |
38608 | She saw a real prince in your woods one day; did n''t you, Alma? |
38608 | She''s all right now, are n''t you, Lucia? |
38608 | She''s one of our little Tenderfoots, and so romantic? 38608 Sleep well, dear?" |
38608 | Someone home? |
38608 | Suppose you and Nora take the day off and loaf? 38608 Taken in?" |
38608 | The very small line like that on Miss Baily''s thermometer? |
38608 | Then why do you not eat it? |
38608 | Then you will come? |
38608 | Then, shall I be Bobbs? |
38608 | They will bring the lunch, that is, The Lunch, but what about a little four o''clock snack? 38608 Too cool?" |
38608 | Too early for a fashionable call? |
38608 | Wanta get in again? |
38608 | Was he old enough to ride a horse? |
38608 | Was he-- gentle? |
38608 | Was n''t it over by the Nest, Al? |
38608 | Was that really it? 38608 Was there a little boy visiting the Mantons the other day?" |
38608 | We did n''t leave him to the sharks, did we? |
38608 | We have a few more days to go before time to break camp and you want to be in at the big party, do n''t you? |
38608 | We have talked it all out and the only thing that worries you is that the girls do not believe you, is n''t it? 38608 We love callers, do n''t we, girls?" |
38608 | Well, Mrs. Ted Manton said as much, did n''t she? |
38608 | Were you-- in his boat? |
38608 | What Mrs. Jerry say? |
38608 | What about it? |
38608 | What book? |
38608 | What can it mean? |
38608 | What could slam a window tonight? |
38608 | What do cobwebs do in surveying? |
38608 | What do you chore, Nora? |
38608 | What do you make of it? |
38608 | What do you suppose it can be? |
38608 | What do you think? |
38608 | What do you want I should get you? |
38608 | What else did the doctor say, Nora? |
38608 | What ever are you talking about? 38608 What ever happened to you, dear?" |
38608 | What good are picnics for Girl Scouts? 38608 What happened to her?" |
38608 | What is it? 38608 What is it?" |
38608 | What special kind of prince were you, Bobbs? |
38608 | What time? |
38608 | What was it? |
38608 | What was on it? |
38608 | What you got? |
38608 | What''ll we collect? |
38608 | What''s his name? |
38608 | What''s that? |
38608 | What''s the little weight on the string? |
38608 | What''s the matter, Nora? |
38608 | What''s the matter? |
38608 | What''s this? 38608 What''s this?" |
38608 | What''s wonderful about that? |
38608 | What''s your name, little girl? |
38608 | What? |
38608 | When I first came here I heard it----"Why did n''t you tell us? |
38608 | When can she have put it here? |
38608 | When you learned to swim? |
38608 | Where did he get it? |
38608 | Where did you see the fairies? 38608 Where do you sleep, Vita?" |
38608 | Where ever am I? |
38608 | Where has Cap been? |
38608 | Where have you girls been? |
38608 | Where is Vita? |
38608 | Where is he now? |
38608 | Where is this? |
38608 | Where will you put the pie? |
38608 | Where''s Alma? |
38608 | Where''s Alma? |
38608 | Where''s Cap? |
38608 | Where''s that Jimbsy boy? |
38608 | Where, Alma? |
38608 | Where, oh where, fair maid? 38608 Where-- is-- Vita? |
38608 | Which? |
38608 | Who are you? |
38608 | Who ever saw such a pitiful little thing? |
38608 | Who is Nick? |
38608 | Who was with you? |
38608 | Who would do anything to you? |
38608 | Whoever can it be? |
38608 | Why could n''t she go up there if she wanted to? 38608 Why did n''t I tell Alma?" |
38608 | Why do n''t you want to go over the other way, out into the pretty woodlands, Nora? 38608 Why do you hide them under a hat?" |
38608 | Why do you say''crazy''? |
38608 | Why is that such a prize? |
38608 | Why no-- that is----"And may I call the lady Aunt Elizabeth? |
38608 | Why was she shut up there? |
38608 | Why yes; why should n''t I? 38608 Why, what is the matter?" |
38608 | Why? 38608 Why?" |
38608 | Why? |
38608 | Will any one hurt you if you do n''t? |
38608 | Will this dress be all right? |
38608 | With Treble''s moth scoop? |
38608 | Wo n''t you come in and wait? |
38608 | Wo n''t you stay? 38608 Wo n''t you wait for the girls?" |
38608 | Worry? |
38608 | Would Vita get you a nice cold glass of water? |
38608 | Wyn,shouted Laddie,"ca n''t you see you are making yourself ridiculous at a time like this?" |
38608 | Yes, a number of times----"Then, if the moaner did not die before, Nora, what makes you think the present attack would be fatal? |
38608 | Yes, you know about them, do n''t you? |
38608 | You are so brave, Wynnie,said Miss Beckwith,"I wonder would you be brave enough to go in and investigate?" |
38608 | You bring her the cakes----"And you knew that, too? |
38608 | You bring pie? |
38608 | You coming in? 38608 You do n''t mean to tell me you are actually afraid of those little girls, just because they wear uniforms?" |
38608 | You do n''t tell? |
38608 | You find big snake? |
38608 | You go quick asleep? |
38608 | You have n''t seen anything? |
38608 | You know this little girl, do n''t you, Lucia? |
38608 | You know, Pell Mell, the Mantons will bring barrels of things to eat, so why should we make samples of our miserable home- cooking failures? |
38608 | You like it? |
38608 | You look delectable enough for anyone to just eat you up----"Ca n''t you girls realize this is an emergency, not a debate? |
38608 | You lose your good clothes? 38608 You mean you are sick and come here to rest?" |
38608 | You mean you do not dare tell me where you live? |
38608 | You surely do n''t think she''s twins? |
38608 | You''re really too young,continued the girl,"but you''ll grow old soon I hope, do n''t you think so?" |
38608 | Your first? |
38608 | Your name is Nora, is n''t it? |
38608 | Your nice, fat, good natured Vita? |
38608 | A companion would add to the possibilities of good times, Nora secretly admitted, but what companion could she find in these wilds? |
38608 | A horse?" |
38608 | A party?" |
38608 | Alma was quiet during all the merry chatting, but Thistle, who could not resist one more thrust, said next:"Thinking of him, dearie?" |
38608 | And do n''t you like Nora in it?" |
38608 | And does the moon sort of make faces in the windows?" |
38608 | And how was she to guess what the cost of her change of heart would mean to her? |
38608 | And if it were something else why did the woman try to conceal it? |
38608 | And was this to be the end of her precious secret? |
38608 | And why did the picture life-- the make- believe-- charm her like some secret failing? |
38608 | Are n''t you, Bobbs?" |
38608 | Are we out after hours?" |
38608 | Are you trying to hide him behind your skirts? |
38608 | Are you trying to-- scare me?" |
38608 | Besides, do n''t you really think a name is a part of one''s self and ought to be loved and respected?" |
38608 | Besides, how silly it would be to say she had actually been out in the roadway in the Fauntleroy clothes? |
38608 | But are secrets wise and are they safe to carry around in so big and open a place as Rocky Ledge? |
38608 | But for what? |
38608 | But honestly, girls, was n''t it a joke?" |
38608 | But should it have been? |
38608 | But why should she hide?" |
38608 | But why should she take it so seriously? |
38608 | CHAPTER II THE ATTIC"How''s this?" |
38608 | CHAPTER VII CAP TO THE RESCUE Where was she? |
38608 | Ca n''t you see there is something the matter?" |
38608 | Can you walk, Bobbs, or shall big Cousin Jerry carry you?" |
38608 | Come along Bob, you are going to be my helper now, are n''t you?" |
38608 | Could I see my attic room now, Aunt Elizabeth?" |
38608 | Could it be a bear or some big animal? |
38608 | Could n''t she dream and play and fancy all the wonderful things she had been storing up for so long? |
38608 | Could n''t we give him a pillow?" |
38608 | Could n''t you make out to get adopted at the Nest yourself?" |
38608 | Could she say she would so much rather walk to the Ledge? |
38608 | Could you blame them for howling? |
38608 | Did Lord Fauntleroy go out in his grounds alone? |
38608 | Did Mrs. Manton know that Vita had gone up to rouse her? |
38608 | Did he know the attic secret that she had been unable even to realize was a secret? |
38608 | Did n''t I say I''d leave a flap up?" |
38608 | Did n''t I see Lord Fauntleroy play his Dearest?" |
38608 | Did n''t you hang up your wet things yet?" |
38608 | Did other girls really like the horrid brown uniforms never pictured in books, that is, never, until very lately? |
38608 | Did she make friends with Alma and Wyn, our pet Scouts?" |
38608 | Did she really swim? |
38608 | Did you ever come across such a child?" |
38608 | Did you happen to see them pass this way?" |
38608 | Did you hear that?" |
38608 | Did you need anything? |
38608 | Did you see my little girl?" |
38608 | Do n''t you know the girls?" |
38608 | Do n''t you like it, Lucia?" |
38608 | Do they come here?" |
38608 | Do you dream an awful lot here?" |
38608 | Do you have cobwebs in there?" |
38608 | Do you know what a spook cabinet is, Nora?" |
38608 | Do you see that mark outside the little drop of alcohol?" |
38608 | Do you-- like those perfumes?" |
38608 | Does the roof slant so it gives you the nightmare on your chest, you know? |
38608 | Fulfillment THE GIRL SCOUTS AT ROCKY LEDGE CHAPTER I JIM OR JERRY: TED OR ELIZABETH"Do you mind if I call you Jim?" |
38608 | Give us a row?" |
38608 | Grown up? |
38608 | Had she screamed? |
38608 | Have you had a doctor?" |
38608 | How could Nora reach her room without being seen? |
38608 | How could she again go in among all those sensibly- clad girls in that ridiculous costume? |
38608 | How different this was from that which she knew at school? |
38608 | How do we know but the myth flew away in the night?" |
38608 | How ever did you get here?" |
38608 | How many worlds were there after all? |
38608 | How perfectly silly to fall asleep?" |
38608 | How quickly the cloud of Anxiety can darken the brightest home? |
38608 | How was Nora to know she was a very much spoiled little girl? |
38608 | How''s that?" |
38608 | I was just having the most----"But her audience had vanished and the house was empty, so to speak, so why orate or harangue? |
38608 | I''ll be Nora, and you''ll be Ted, that''s pretty: what does it mean?" |
38608 | If it were she who was up there why did she moan? |
38608 | Instead, she asked herself in the looking glass:"Wonder if I dare go outside? |
38608 | Is n''t that lovely? |
38608 | Is n''t that so, Bobbs?" |
38608 | It provided her with a personal importance-- what girl does not enjoy the possession of a knowledge others have not and everyone would love to have? |
38608 | It slam-- you hear it?" |
38608 | It was for Lucia, was n''t it?" |
38608 | It was the attic, but what part of it? |
38608 | It was those sandwiches and those cakes----""You did n''t make those, Wynnie?" |
38608 | It''s from----""The prince?" |
38608 | Manton?" |
38608 | No?" |
38608 | Now do you understand?" |
38608 | Now is n''t that gallant?" |
38608 | Oh, child,"she cried out,"what has happened to you? |
38608 | Oh, suppose it should be unconsciousness? |
38608 | Oh, where is Vita? |
38608 | Perhaps make fun of her or think her odd and foolish? |
38608 | Please tell me who you are and where you live? |
38608 | She counted the pieces, waist, jacket, knickers, sash-- where was the cap? |
38608 | She gave the statement a tone implying:"Why would n''t the prince be the visitor?" |
38608 | She not come back, bring doctor?" |
38608 | She picked a wonderful spray of pink clover before she asked Nora again:"Do you ever see a little boy, a very fancy dressed boy, around the cottage? |
38608 | She would always have big Cousin Jerry to stand by her, and if Cousin Ted----"Want to come to town with me, dear?" |
38608 | Suppose the Thing comes crawling down some night and Vita is not there to drive it back?" |
38608 | The woodlands were broad enough for both to roam, but it was inevitable that both should meet some day, and, under what circumstances? |
38608 | Then came the thought: How would she get Vita to give her the supplies without making known the use she was to put them to? |
38608 | These would surely supply an excuse for carrying out food, and, after all, would n''t it be a picnic for Lucia? |
38608 | This boat would sail the rapids, would n''t she, Jimmie?" |
38608 | Those t''ings not yours?" |
38608 | Volunteers?" |
38608 | Was it a woman? |
38608 | Was n''t that just what one might expect? |
38608 | Was n''t this her dream vacation? |
38608 | Was she helping Alma? |
38608 | Was that someone moaning? |
38608 | Was there even a window? |
38608 | Was there ever a story finished without"a letter"? |
38608 | Was there ever such a jolly man? |
38608 | Was this a private initiation, and am I intruding?" |
38608 | Well, what did_ he_ call call them?" |
38608 | What ails your yacht, anyway?" |
38608 | What are we going to say to her if she happens back tonight?" |
38608 | What could Vita be doing that so held her attention? |
38608 | What could be so black? |
38608 | What did that old Vita mean by her attic tricks? |
38608 | What do you want to call me?" |
38608 | What ever shall I do?" |
38608 | What ever shall we do to get in a day''s work now?" |
38608 | What is it, Cap?" |
38608 | What is it?" |
38608 | What is''secret''?" |
38608 | What should I be afraid of? |
38608 | What was the sense of being appointed a committee to investigate and not do it? |
38608 | What was your pet name?" |
38608 | What would Barbara say to this game of characters? |
38608 | What would a Girl Scout think of her in such a costume? |
38608 | What would the ladies who visited the school say to a person like Cousin Ted? |
38608 | What would the night bring? |
38608 | What''s wrong? |
38608 | Where do you go to?" |
38608 | Where had she spent the afternoon? |
38608 | Who could it be? |
38608 | Who had seen her? |
38608 | Who''s going to make the call on Mrs. Jerry Manton?" |
38608 | Why did Vita come up? |
38608 | Why did n''t you say so?" |
38608 | Why had she never known such companionship? |
38608 | Why had she waited so long? |
38608 | Why must she, little Nora, always be so far away from that pretty mother? |
38608 | Why should n''t she stroll out grandly in her princely costume? |
38608 | Will Cap come?" |
38608 | Will you hush? |
38608 | Would Mrs. Manton oblige her to be different? |
38608 | Would it suit you, Aunt Elizabeth? |
38608 | Would n''t you like that?" |
38608 | Would she ever enjoy the other now, after all this? |
38608 | Would she find the relationship too irksome? |
38608 | Would that be all right for you?" |
38608 | Would that be all right?" |
38608 | Would they all talk about her? |
38608 | Would you believe that great, big baby has a bowl of milk and two cuts of home made bread every night? |
38608 | Would you like that, Lucia?" |
38608 | You all right?" |
38608 | You can swim, of course?" |
38608 | You do n''t want to go hide in the dark any more, do you Lucia?" |
38608 | You have bad dream?" |
38608 | called out Wyn,"you come right over about daylight, will you? |
38608 | she sobbed afresh,"can you ever imagine what it is to have the-- girls-- all making fun of you?" |
11360 | Who for? |
11360 | ''A hat, ma''am?'' |
11360 | ''About me? |
11360 | ''Ah?'' |
11360 | ''Alone?'' |
11360 | ''Always alone?'' |
11360 | ''Am I so pale, then?'' |
11360 | ''And do you know what it is to- day?'' |
11360 | ''And do you think that?'' |
11360 | ''And have you never loved?'' |
11360 | ''And if you had to begin afresh?'' |
11360 | ''And no home?'' |
11360 | ''And then?'' |
11360 | ''And why did n''t you?'' |
11360 | ''And why have n''t you been?'' |
11360 | ''And you go to see him often?'' |
11360 | ''Anything wrong?'' |
11360 | ''Anything wrong?'' |
11360 | ''Are n''t you coming in?'' |
11360 | ''Are we to outrage our consciences simply because people think we have outraged them?'' |
11360 | ''Are you pretty well?'' |
11360 | ''Are you so weak, then?'' |
11360 | ''Are you so weak? |
11360 | ''Are you still in bed, then?'' |
11360 | ''Are you the_ femme de mà © nage_ of monsieur?'' |
11360 | ''Are you there, Magda?'' |
11360 | ''Are you writing in that book?'' |
11360 | ''As I am?'' |
11360 | ''Awfully good fun, is n''t it?'' |
11360 | ''Been in Paris long?'' |
11360 | ''But auntie?'' |
11360 | ''But could you see who it was from the road?'' |
11360 | ''But did n''t you think I was right?'' |
11360 | ''But have you got rooms-- a house?'' |
11360 | ''But have you no friends?'' |
11360 | ''But how can that affect us?'' |
11360 | ''But surely you ca n''t be thirsty, Diaz?'' |
11360 | ''But surely you have some tender souvenir of your child''s father?'' |
11360 | ''But surely you have tried some cure?'' |
11360 | ''But what is it?'' |
11360 | ''But what''s the matter?'' |
11360 | ''But what?'' |
11360 | ''But why? |
11360 | ''But why? |
11360 | ''But why?'' |
11360 | ''But you have friends?'' |
11360 | ''But you''ll come back?'' |
11360 | ''But you?'' |
11360 | ''But, there, what would you have? |
11360 | ''Ca n''t you guess what I mean?'' |
11360 | ''Can you be ready?'' |
11360 | ''Can you be sure that, in your quest of sympathy, you are not deceiving yourself tonight?'' |
11360 | ''Can you find the things?'' |
11360 | ''Can you start soon?'' |
11360 | ''Could you turn it into a libretto, my child?'' |
11360 | ''Diaz,''I cried,''what''s the matter with you? |
11360 | ''Did you imagine,''I began to tease him, after a pause,''that while you are working I spend my time in merely existing?'' |
11360 | ''Did you_ talk_ about it, you-- and Frank?'' |
11360 | ''Do I care for his_ femme de mà © nage_?'' |
11360 | ''Do I know who my child''s father is?'' |
11360 | ''Do I love him?'' |
11360 | ''Do n''t tell me I struck you?'' |
11360 | ''Do you always play like that?'' |
11360 | ''Do you like it?'' |
11360 | ''Do you think so?'' |
11360 | ''Does love bring happiness?'' |
11360 | ''Does she guess-- about me?'' |
11360 | ''Does that regard you?'' |
11360 | ''Dreadful? |
11360 | ''Earlier than the newspapers?'' |
11360 | ''For me?'' |
11360 | ''For whom else?'' |
11360 | ''Frank,''I said,''did n''t you think my letter was right?'' |
11360 | ''Going to publish it?'' |
11360 | ''Has Mr. Ispenlove gone?'' |
11360 | ''Has he been here long?'' |
11360 | ''Have n''t you got another one here?'' |
11360 | ''Have you come to this?'' |
11360 | ''Have you got a hat you can lend me? |
11360 | ''Have you got a servant here?'' |
11360 | ''Have you read any of them?'' |
11360 | ''Have you seen the Vicarys?'' |
11360 | ''Have you?'' |
11360 | ''How are we going to get out of it? |
11360 | ''How can I thank you? |
11360 | ''How could I know it?'' |
11360 | ''How do you do, Miss Kate?'' |
11360 | ''How does he know that I am here?'' |
11360 | ''How old are you, Diaz?'' |
11360 | ''I am certain she has a kind heart,''I said to myself, and I decided to question her:''Will you not sit down, madame?'' |
11360 | ''I inzizt-- who is it?'' |
11360 | ''I suppose it goes on all day?'' |
11360 | ''I suppose you''ve heard about me?'' |
11360 | ''I would like to ask you,''I said, leaning forward towards her,''have you ever seen him-- drunk-- before?'' |
11360 | ''If I bring you disaster, you will forgive me, wo n''t you?'' |
11360 | ''Illusion? |
11360 | ''Is it late?'' |
11360 | ''Is it not true, then? |
11360 | ''Is that right?'' |
11360 | ''Is the doctor in?'' |
11360 | ''It is my profession to make compliments,''Villedo broke in; and then, turning to Morenita,''_ N''est- ce pas, ma belle crà © ature_? |
11360 | ''Late?'' |
11360 | ''Lord Francis,''I expostulated,''how do you know that?'' |
11360 | ''Lord Francis,''I repeated,''do n''t you know me?'' |
11360 | ''Madame is going?'' |
11360 | ''Magda, will you do something to oblige me?'' |
11360 | ''Magda, you are n''t asleep, are you?'' |
11360 | ''Magda, you are perfectly capable of reading this music with me, and you will read it, wo n''t you? |
11360 | ''Magda,''he burst out passionately, seeming at this point fully to arouse himself, to resume acutely his consciousness,''why were you late? |
11360 | ''Magda,''he called again, just as I was leaving,''bring one of your books with you, will you?'' |
11360 | ''Miss Peel-- how can I tell you?'' |
11360 | ''Must I repea''wha''I said?'' |
11360 | ''Not this one, Diaz?'' |
11360 | ''Of course,''he groaned,''if we are to be governed by Mary''s sentimentality--''''Dear love,''I whispered,''what do you want me to do?'' |
11360 | ''Ought we not to think of our situation?'' |
11360 | ''Out of the way?'' |
11360 | ''Pardon, madame,''said my visitor, following and passing me; and then to the newcomer:''What is it, Alice?'' |
11360 | ''Perhaps I should fetch a doctor?'' |
11360 | ''Put something on and come downstairs, will you?'' |
11360 | ''Really?'' |
11360 | ''Remember what?'' |
11360 | ''Satisfied?'' |
11360 | ''Seriously?'' |
11360 | ''Shall we go?'' |
11360 | ''Shut the door, will you?'' |
11360 | ''So you have a little boy?'' |
11360 | ''So you''ve been writing again?'' |
11360 | ''Staying in this quarter? |
11360 | ''Suppose we go to a supper restaurant?'' |
11360 | ''The best?'' |
11360 | ''Then I am not much changed, you think?'' |
11360 | ''Then there is no hope?'' |
11360 | ''Then there is no one in your flat?'' |
11360 | ''Then when did you--? |
11360 | ''Then you love him now?'' |
11360 | ''Then you mean to give yourself time to love?'' |
11360 | ''Then, do you think you will compose it?'' |
11360 | ''Then, what shall I call you?'' |
11360 | ''This cupboard?'' |
11360 | ''To a place like this?'' |
11360 | ''To stay?'' |
11360 | ''To- morrow morning, eh? |
11360 | ''Travel?'' |
11360 | ''Truly?'' |
11360 | ''Was I dreadful last night?'' |
11360 | ''Was it not lucky they left when they did? |
11360 | ''Was_ that_ the man?'' |
11360 | ''We must travel, must n''t we?'' |
11360 | ''Well, Rebecca?'' |
11360 | ''Well, which is it to be?'' |
11360 | ''Well?'' |
11360 | ''Wha''? |
11360 | ''Wha''am I?'' |
11360 | ''What about your business?'' |
11360 | ''What am I doing to you? |
11360 | ''What am I?'' |
11360 | ''What are we to do? |
11360 | ''What are you going to do?'' |
11360 | ''What can you expect them to do?'' |
11360 | ''What do you call it?'' |
11360 | ''What do you mean?'' |
11360 | ''What do you mean?'' |
11360 | ''What do you mean?'' |
11360 | ''What does it matter what the servants think?'' |
11360 | ''What does the Fantasia mean to you?'' |
11360 | ''What for?'' |
11360 | ''What is it-- another novel?'' |
11360 | ''What is it? |
11360 | ''What is it? |
11360 | ''What is it?'' |
11360 | ''What is it?'' |
11360 | ''What is it?'' |
11360 | ''What is it?'' |
11360 | ''What is the matter?'' |
11360 | ''What is the title of the new book?'' |
11360 | ''What number?'' |
11360 | ''What shall I do with him?'' |
11360 | ''What time is it, please?'' |
11360 | ''What time is it?'' |
11360 | ''What time is it?'' |
11360 | ''What were you doing out there?'' |
11360 | ''What will happen now?'' |
11360 | ''What will you have?'' |
11360 | ''What will you think of me, disturbing you like this? |
11360 | ''What''s all that splashing?'' |
11360 | ''What''s that?'' |
11360 | ''What''s that?'' |
11360 | ''What''s the drama about?'' |
11360 | ''What''s the matter?'' |
11360 | ''What, mamma?'' |
11360 | ''What, then?'' |
11360 | ''What?'' |
11360 | ''What?'' |
11360 | ''When is luncheon served?'' |
11360 | ''Where are we?'' |
11360 | ''Where can we go?'' |
11360 | ''Where is it?'' |
11360 | ''Where to, lady?'' |
11360 | ''Where? |
11360 | ''Where?'' |
11360 | ''Who can tell?'' |
11360 | ''Who dares call me Diaz? |
11360 | ''Who is Villedo?'' |
11360 | ''Who is it?'' |
11360 | ''Who worked it?'' |
11360 | ''Who''s there?'' |
11360 | ''Who''s there?'' |
11360 | ''Who?'' |
11360 | ''Why are you so hard, Carlotta?'' |
11360 | ''Why do you call me Miss Peel?'' |
11360 | ''Why do you loathe it?'' |
11360 | ''Why do you say that?'' |
11360 | ''Why have you followed me, Frank?'' |
11360 | ''Why not, my child? |
11360 | ''Why not? |
11360 | ''Why not?'' |
11360 | ''Why not?'' |
11360 | ''Why not?'' |
11360 | ''Why not?'' |
11360 | ''Why not?'' |
11360 | ''Why should I not be frank, madame?'' |
11360 | ''Why was that?'' |
11360 | ''Why were you so late to- night?'' |
11360 | ''Will you mind getting dressed at once?'' |
11360 | ''Will you step in?'' |
11360 | ''Wo n''t you go to bed?'' |
11360 | ''Wo n''t you have something to drink?'' |
11360 | ''Wo n''t you sit down here?'' |
11360 | ''Wo n''t you sit down?'' |
11360 | ''Wonderful, is it not,''he said,''that we should be talking like this to- night, and only yesterday we were Mr. and Miss to each other?'' |
11360 | ''Would you?'' |
11360 | ''Wounded? |
11360 | ''Yes; and what years?'' |
11360 | ''You are an old tenant of this house?'' |
11360 | ''You are my friend, are n''t you?'' |
11360 | ''You are n''t going to the concert, auntie?'' |
11360 | ''You are not ill, madame?'' |
11360 | ''You are sure you are well enough?'' |
11360 | ''You are sure? |
11360 | ''You do n''t think I am?'' |
11360 | ''You do n''t want anything?'' |
11360 | ''You do not leave Paris, then?'' |
11360 | ''You do not regret? |
11360 | ''You felt as if you might faint, did n''t you?'' |
11360 | ''You had it this morning?'' |
11360 | ''You have guessed right,''he said; and then he asked me in a casual tone:''Do you ever play pianoforte duets?'' |
11360 | ''You have n''t been playing lately, have you?'' |
11360 | ''You have n''t got it in your pocket?'' |
11360 | ''You have no child, madame?'' |
11360 | ''You love him-- is that so?'' |
11360 | ''You mean she limps?'' |
11360 | ''You remember the D flat Prelude?'' |
11360 | ''You surely did n''t forget to have your dinner?'' |
11360 | ''You think so?'' |
11360 | ''You think young What''s- his- name can play Ch-- Chopin better than me? |
11360 | ''You will take him away from Paris soon, perhaps?'' |
11360 | ''You wo n''t affect not to understand?'' |
11360 | ''You wo n''t come round?'' |
11360 | ''You''re satisfied?'' |
11360 | ''You''ve begun with the overture?'' |
11360 | ''You''ve forgotten?'' |
11360 | ''You_ do_ love me?'' |
11360 | ''_ The Twilight of the Gods_--that is Wagner, is n''t it?'' |
11360 | ( But why did I choose moments when the playing of the piece demanded less than all his attention?) |
11360 | A woman could n''t help admiring his character, could she? |
11360 | After all, we loved, and in my secret dreams had I not always put love first, as the most sacred? |
11360 | Ah, why? |
11360 | An old friend?'' |
11360 | And I murmured,''Well?'' |
11360 | And Mrs. Sardis and I-- what were we but two groups of vital instincts, groping our respective ways out of one mystery into another? |
11360 | And had he not already given me far more than I could ever return? |
11360 | And if there was, would you be false to love rather than to friendship? |
11360 | And then one of the servants came in, and--''''What?'' |
11360 | And then, as no definite recommendation was offered, he said:''Do you wish that I improvise?'' |
11360 | And was this Diaz, the world- renowned darling of capitals, riding by me, a woman whom he had met by fantastic chance? |
11360 | And what did you think of the Breton peasant?'' |
11360 | And what right had he to...? |
11360 | And what_ had_ I done? |
11360 | And when we do arrive-- what then? |
11360 | And yet who but they can understandingly sympathize with the afflicted?) |
11360 | And you''ve-- Why did you run away from me? |
11360 | And, besides, how could I foresee what she would say to me and how she would affect me? |
11360 | Are we, or are we not, to be true to ourselves?'' |
11360 | Are you ready?'' |
11360 | At length I said, with that banality which too often surprises us in supreme moments:''What is it? |
11360 | But could I answer that I was her friend? |
11360 | But could I lie? |
11360 | But in case I do n''t, will you take my key? |
11360 | But is not the wisdom of the ages a medicine for majorities? |
11360 | But where to?'' |
11360 | By what negligence had I allowed him to be thus forsaken? |
11360 | Can I have some tea? |
11360 | Can we exceed nature? |
11360 | Can you go outside Nature? |
11360 | Carlotta, where shall we go?'' |
11360 | Could I rise to the height of some sufficient and kindly lie? |
11360 | Could I shrink back from my fate? |
11360 | Could it be that this was one of those psychical manifestations of which I had read? |
11360 | Could it be true that her panic flight had ruined a career? |
11360 | Could it be true that she had carried away with her, unknowing, the heart of Diaz? |
11360 | Could it breed hope? |
11360 | Could it detain youth, which is for ever flying? |
11360 | Could it keep out sorrow? |
11360 | Could she--? |
11360 | Could the toil- worn agents of this never- ending and gigantic productiveness find time for love? |
11360 | Dalbiac?'' |
11360 | Dearest girl, why do you talk like this?'' |
11360 | Did he smile furtively? |
11360 | Did not my heart bleed for her? |
11360 | Did they understand anything? |
11360 | Do I not tell you that everything has ceased between us?'' |
11360 | Do n''t you know your Wagner?'' |
11360 | Do you feel ill? |
11360 | Do you imagine I was saddened by the painful spectacle of Diaz''collapse in life? |
11360 | Do you know that your tie is under your ear?'' |
11360 | Do you like my limp?'' |
11360 | Do you love your child, honestly? |
11360 | Do you not think Chopin the greatest composer that ever lived? |
11360 | Do you permit?'' |
11360 | Do you remember?'' |
11360 | Do you see the idea?'' |
11360 | Do you still believe that there is any difference between one man and another? |
11360 | Everybody asked:''What''s that for?'' |
11360 | Frank, you can come?'' |
11360 | Had I in truth saved him? |
11360 | Had my aunt, in passing from this existence to the next, paused a moment to warn me of my terrible danger? |
11360 | Had she not even the wit to perceive that I was accustomed to be addressed as queens are addressed?... |
11360 | Had we chosen our characters? |
11360 | Had we made ourselves? |
11360 | Had you not better go back home as quickly as you can? |
11360 | Have I not thought it all out? |
11360 | Have I not?'' |
11360 | Have n''t I tried to be a good wife to him? |
11360 | Have you been sitting there like that all the time?'' |
11360 | Have you not yourself written that the only sacred thing is instinct? |
11360 | Have you still got it?'' |
11360 | He has done himself harm? |
11360 | How can I thank you?'' |
11360 | How do you know I can play at all?'' |
11360 | How had I come there? |
11360 | How?'' |
11360 | I did n''t do anything foolish?'' |
11360 | I muttered at last, angry with myself,''what is the use of all this? |
11360 | I only--''''Shall you not?'' |
11360 | I said nothing, and he repeated in his treble:''What is the matter?'' |
11360 | I said:''Why are not our school histories like this?'' |
11360 | I should have... You do n''t mind me telling you all this?'' |
11360 | I thought, Where is she, then? |
11360 | I turned round on the revolving stool and faced the fire, and felt it on my cheeks, and I asked myself:''Why am I affected like this? |
11360 | I''m going to Torquay by that eleven- thirty express-- isn''t it?'' |
11360 | I--''''You do n''t know_ Tristan_?'' |
11360 | If I loved him, could I have been so upset about Crettell? |
11360 | In England, without doubt?'' |
11360 | In the presence of the primeval and ever- continuing forces of nature, can we maintain our fantastic conceptions of sin and of justice? |
11360 | Is it not an illusion? |
11360 | Is it not strange he should know that I pay for him? |
11360 | Is it not the most delicious of avowals? |
11360 | Is n''t it delightful?'' |
11360 | Is not the polity of Londoners in London as much a part of Nature as the polity of bees in a hive? |
11360 | Is that any reason why our lives should be ruined? |
11360 | Is that it?'' |
11360 | Ispenlove?'' |
11360 | It would have been rather awkward for you to see him here, would n''t it?'' |
11360 | Just see that I''m not worried, will you?'' |
11360 | Madame, a few of us will meet there-- is it not so, Villedo? |
11360 | Mas''r of wha''?'' |
11360 | My aunt not going to the concert? |
11360 | My thought was:''What can he be thinking of me?... |
11360 | Not mine?'' |
11360 | Not your birthday? |
11360 | Nothing serious has passed, then? |
11360 | Of what use to chronicle the steps, now halting, now only too hasty, by which our intimacy progressed in that gaunt and echoing room? |
11360 | Oh, my dear, how can I tell you these things? |
11360 | Or did you walk the streets? |
11360 | Or that tragedy may not be the highest bliss? |
11360 | Ought the course of lives to be changed at the bidding of mere hazard? |
11360 | Our hand is forced, is n''t it?'' |
11360 | Since he was already drunk, why had I not allowed him to drink more, to drink himself into a stupor? |
11360 | So you''re coming home with me, eh? |
11360 | Still, could I have behaved differently? |
11360 | Strange and uncanny, is it not, that such miracles can escape the observation of a loving heart? |
11360 | Suppose it sickened, such a love as ours-- what then? |
11360 | Suppose you had arrived, in that state, dearest man, and burst into a room full of people? |
11360 | Surely you could have waited a few more minutes?'' |
11360 | That is n''t your real name, is it?'' |
11360 | The day after, shall we start? |
11360 | The grocer said to him,"Yes who, young man?" |
11360 | The men who surround a woman such as I, living as I lived, are always demanding, with a secret thirst,''Does she really live without love? |
11360 | The pride of the eye, and of the palate, and of the limbs, what can it help us that this should be sated? |
11360 | To- morrow night, eh? |
11360 | Was I mad? |
11360 | Was I not part of the immense pretence that riches bring joy and that life is good? |
11360 | Was I playing with my existence as an infant plays with a precious bibelot that a careless touch may shatter? |
11360 | Was it I who would restore him to his glory? |
11360 | Was it conceivable that they had once been real, and that we had lived through them? |
11360 | Was it joy or sadness? |
11360 | Was this man to come like an invader and disturb my morning? |
11360 | Well, what do you think of it?'' |
11360 | Were these, too, mysteries that I must not ask my lover to reveal? |
11360 | Wha''s my full name?'' |
11360 | What are your wishes? |
11360 | What can I do with you? |
11360 | What can I do? |
11360 | What did the future, the immediate future, hold for me? |
11360 | What did they understand? |
11360 | What do you advise?'' |
11360 | What does she conceal?'' |
11360 | What else could count? |
11360 | What force, secret and powerful, had urged me on?... |
11360 | What had I done? |
11360 | What in the name of Heaven could they possibly know, he and Ethel? |
11360 | What is it?'' |
11360 | What is my life? |
11360 | What is the matter?'' |
11360 | What is there in Oldcastle Street to disturb the dust of the soul? |
11360 | What matter? |
11360 | What other consideration should guide the soul on its mysterious instinctive way? |
11360 | What reason, therefore, for deceit?'' |
11360 | What shall I do? |
11360 | What shall I play?'' |
11360 | What shall we decide to do?'' |
11360 | What was Diaz but the instrument of the god? |
11360 | What was Torquay but an almost sublime example of what the human soul can accomplish in its unending quest of an ideal? |
11360 | What was love to him, or the trivial conventions of a world which he was already quitting? |
11360 | What will people say? |
11360 | What will you think?'' |
11360 | What would they have thought? |
11360 | What would you have? |
11360 | What? |
11360 | When, after the theatre, a woman precedes a man into a carriage, does she not publish and glory in the fact that she is his? |
11360 | Where are you going to?'' |
11360 | Where are you?'' |
11360 | Where did you put it last night?'' |
11360 | Where did you sleep last night? |
11360 | Where is that which I loved? |
11360 | Where is that which loved me without understanding me? |
11360 | Where is the soul? |
11360 | Where should I have looked?'' |
11360 | Where would she go with her mauve_ peignoir_? |
11360 | Whereas, was it not I who had disturbed his? |
11360 | Which floor is it?'' |
11360 | Which is the top end of it?'' |
11360 | Who can tell? |
11360 | Who could protest on such a night? |
11360 | Who is it addrezzes you, madame?'' |
11360 | Who knew through what difficult channels we might not have to steer, and from what lee- shores we might not have to beat away? |
11360 | Who will dare to say that the spirit can not burn with pleasure while drowning in grief? |
11360 | Why am I what I am?'' |
11360 | Why did I exult in the tremendous and impetuous act, like a martyr, and also like a girl? |
11360 | Why had I been born with a vein of overweening honesty in me? |
11360 | Why had I, with a word-- nay, without a word, with merely a gesture and a glance-- thrown my whole life into the crucible of passion? |
11360 | Why had they always been sad in their house? |
11360 | Why should I have felt so near to them? |
11360 | Why should I have sacrificed everything to the pride of my conscience, seeing that consciences were the product of education merely? |
11360 | Why was I angry? |
11360 | Why was I not still her friend? |
11360 | Why was I so fiercely, madly, drunkenly happy when I gazed into those eyes? |
11360 | Why, what do you imagine? |
11360 | Why? |
11360 | Why?'' |
11360 | Will it last?--who knows? |
11360 | Will that benefit Mary? |
11360 | Will you give me some cold water first?'' |
11360 | Wo n''t you get up in the meantime?'' |
11360 | Would your charity be strong enough to overcome your instincts?'' |
11360 | You are n''t''shamed of me?'' |
11360 | You had everything that a woman can desire, and I come into your life and offer you-- what?'' |
11360 | You know the story?'' |
11360 | You know?'' |
11360 | You live in London?'' |
11360 | You wo n''t give it me?'' |
11360 | You''re sure you wo n''t have anything?'' |
11360 | You''ve been away from London all this time?'' |
11360 | Yvonne came to my room and told me that Mrs. Ispenlove was here, and was either mad or very unwell, and would I go to her? |
11360 | how can I thank you? |
11360 | how do you do, Miss Peel?'' |
11360 | you are my friend, are n''t you?'' |
61925 | Where would you be without my army? |
61925 | Where would you be without my money? |
61925 | ''A flirt?'' |
61925 | ''A little, I think,''said Julian,''will you go?'' |
61925 | ''A woman?'' |
61925 | ''Ah, do n''t you see, Julian, when I am sincere?'' |
61925 | ''Ah? |
61925 | ''Am I? |
61925 | ''And that is all you consider?'' |
61925 | ''And then?'' |
61925 | ''And what am I?'' |
61925 | ''And what if she does?'' |
61925 | ''And what will he do if you throw him over?'' |
61925 | ''And why is that surprising? |
61925 | ''And why?'' |
61925 | ''And you demand of me?'' |
61925 | ''And you tried to kill me with a dagger; do you remember?'' |
61925 | ''And you will remember my hint about the Davenants?'' |
61925 | ''Any news? |
61925 | ''Are we all crazy?'' |
61925 | ''Are you laughing at me? |
61925 | ''Are you tired of me already?'' |
61925 | ''Asleep? |
61925 | ''At what time is the procession due?'' |
61925 | ''At your dressing- table?'' |
61925 | ''Away from Aphros?'' |
61925 | ''Because I am sure she is the type of woman he would marry, stately and correct; am I not right?'' |
61925 | ''But of course,''said Julian quickly,''you do n''t allow Malteios to suspect this?'' |
61925 | ''But why apologise?'' |
61925 | ''But why remain thus, as it were, at bay?'' |
61925 | ''But why should she hamper me, Anastasia? |
61925 | ''But you will return, Kyrie?'' |
61925 | ''But, Julian, what could I do?'' |
61925 | ''But, dearie, what''ll your mother thay?'' |
61925 | ''But-- marry, Julian?'' |
61925 | ''Can I go up to Eve''s room, Nannie?'' |
61925 | ''Can you never forget yourself? |
61925 | ''Championship? |
61925 | ''Coastal steamers, fort tugs, old chirkets from the Bosphorus-- who was the admiral, I wonder?'' |
61925 | ''Come with the gipsy?'' |
61925 | ''Come, Eve, why are we quarrelling? |
61925 | ''Could I stop you if I tried?'' |
61925 | ''Darling, to please me?'' |
61925 | ''Dead? |
61925 | ''Did you tell Kato?'' |
61925 | ''Do I deserve that you should say that to me? |
61925 | ''Do I regret the course I chose? |
61925 | ''Do you approve of her very intimate friendship with that singer, Madame Kato?'' |
61925 | ''Do you expect me to say that you are pretty?'' |
61925 | ''Do you imagine that we have nothing to do,''Don Rodrigo Valdez said to him,''that you set out to enliven the affairs of Herakleion?'' |
61925 | ''Do you think,''she asked,''that you will be believed?'' |
61925 | ''Do you want to stop me from going?'' |
61925 | ''Does one come, ever, to a clear conception of one''s ultimate ambitions? |
61925 | ''Does she usually behave like this, Nana?'' |
61925 | ''For the Islands, and may I not say,''said Kato, spreading her hands with a musical clinking of all her bangles,''for ourselves also? |
61925 | ''For the Islands?'' |
61925 | ''For_ maman_ Lafarge? |
61925 | ''Fru Thyregod again?'' |
61925 | ''Fru Thyregod?'' |
61925 | ''Glad I''ve come back, Nannie?'' |
61925 | ''Has he still not arrived?'' |
61925 | ''Have I?'' |
61925 | ''Have they really taken you in? |
61925 | ''Have you a theory, Alexander?'' |
61925 | ''Have you tormented me long enough?'' |
61925 | ''He is completely covered over?'' |
61925 | ''He told you he loved you?'' |
61925 | ''Herakleion?'' |
61925 | ''His grandfather? |
61925 | ''How can I tell what I have been saying to you? |
61925 | ''How dare you accuse me?'' |
61925 | ''I expect you have seen a great deal; forgotten all about Paul? |
61925 | ''I have had enough of these topics,''he said,''will you leave them?'' |
61925 | ''I have never seen that man before; who is he?'' |
61925 | ''I knew you were hostile, how could I fail to know it? |
61925 | ''I should lose caste in your eyes?'' |
61925 | ''I suppose they are really treated with unfairness?'' |
61925 | ''I told you I had no strength of character,''she said with bitterness,''what are my gifts, such as they are, to me? |
61925 | ''I wonder how much you promised Zapantiotis?'' |
61925 | ''I''ve called you changeling sometimes, have n''t I?'' |
61925 | ''If I am mad, you are unutterably cruel,''she said, twisting her fingers together;''will you answer me, yes or no? |
61925 | ''If it were?'' |
61925 | ''If you could find a woman who was a help and not a hindrance?'' |
61925 | ''In the meantime, go back to Fru Thyregod; why trouble to lie to me? |
61925 | ''In the water?'' |
61925 | ''Including me?'' |
61925 | ''Is anything wrong?'' |
61925 | ''Is life to be one long carnival?'' |
61925 | ''Is n''t that too much to hope?'' |
61925 | ''Is that a threat?'' |
61925 | ''Is that all you were going to say?'' |
61925 | ''Is that all?'' |
61925 | ''Is that indeed so? |
61925 | ''Is that so, Eve? |
61925 | ''It is true that we have talked of them by the hour,''she answered,''have we talked of them so much that they and I are entirely identified? |
61925 | ''It is true, then?'' |
61925 | ''It means revolt at last; you will not desert us, Kyrie?'' |
61925 | ''It was a crafty thought, was it not? |
61925 | ''Julian, have I not been consistent, all my life? |
61925 | ''Julian,''she said,''I rarely boast, as you know, but I am wondering now how many people in Herakleion would abandon their dearest ideals for me? |
61925 | ''Julian?'' |
61925 | ''Kato may return to Herakleion with you?'' |
61925 | ''Keep away from Herakleion?'' |
61925 | ''Kyrie,''said Tsigaridis,''should we not move into shelter?'' |
61925 | ''Lotus- land, then?'' |
61925 | ''Marry?'' |
61925 | ''May an old man,''he said with his deliberate but nevertheless charming suavity,''intrude for a moment upon the young?'' |
61925 | ''My little Julian, have you washed the lap- dog to- day? |
61925 | ''My young friend,''he said,''they tell me you are leaving Herakleion? |
61925 | ''No? |
61925 | ''Nobody that I loved,''she replied without hesitation,''but, Julian, Julian, you do n''t answer my question?'' |
61925 | ''Not for the world, but why keep me in suspense? |
61925 | ''Oh, Julian, what is it? |
61925 | ''Oh, but you? |
61925 | ''Oh,''she said, carried away by her interest,''is that Julian Davenant? |
61925 | ''Only a toy?'' |
61925 | ''Our losses?'' |
61925 | ''Shall I make Julie sing?'' |
61925 | ''Shall we be allowed to go free?'' |
61925 | ''She is unhappy?'' |
61925 | ''Since when?'' |
61925 | ''Steal you? |
61925 | ''Surely even you must find it too hot for battle?'' |
61925 | ''Tell me, Eve, how do you explain your difference? |
61925 | ''The men are all at their posts?'' |
61925 | ''The mice can not run over his face?'' |
61925 | ''The only occasion, I think, Julian, when I ever boasted to you of such a thing? |
61925 | ''Then why had Fru Thyregod her hair down her back? |
61925 | ''There was indeed,''he replied;''do you remember an absurd tiny republic named Herakleion, which has since been absorbed by Greece?'' |
61925 | ''This can never be; have you bewitched me? |
61925 | ''To Aphros?'' |
61925 | ''To me?'' |
61925 | ''Tsantilas, listen: can you distribute two orders for me by nightfall? |
61925 | ''Was that fair?'' |
61925 | ''Well, Julian?'' |
61925 | ''Well, Nicolas?'' |
61925 | ''Well, your verdict?'' |
61925 | ''Were you calling Mith Eve, Mathter Julian? |
61925 | ''What about him?'' |
61925 | ''What am I to do? |
61925 | ''What answer shall you send?'' |
61925 | ''What are these stories I hear of you, young man? |
61925 | ''What do you know? |
61925 | ''What do you mean?'' |
61925 | ''What do you want done with your clothes? |
61925 | ''What else is there to consider?'' |
61925 | ''What is it you want of me?'' |
61925 | ''What is it, Eve?'' |
61925 | ''What is it?'' |
61925 | ''What is there to say?'' |
61925 | ''What must I do?'' |
61925 | ''What qualities have you? |
61925 | ''What secrets have you with Kato, that you must keep from me?'' |
61925 | ''What will the islanders think?'' |
61925 | ''What,''thought Julian,''does this old scapegrace politician, who must have his mind and his days full of the coming elections, want with Eve? |
61925 | ''Where are you taking me, Julian?'' |
61925 | ''Where did that come from?'' |
61925 | ''Where is my father?'' |
61925 | ''Where is the Eve of Herakleion? |
61925 | ''Where shall I put you down?'' |
61925 | ''Which is the larger?'' |
61925 | ''Which of you made this discovery?'' |
61925 | ''Who is he?'' |
61925 | ''Why did n''t you trust yourself to me, Julian, my beloved?'' |
61925 | ''Why do I always talk about myself to you?'' |
61925 | ''Why do n''t you steal me, Julian?'' |
61925 | ''Why do we, every one of us, refute the experience of others, preferring to gain our own? |
61925 | ''Why do you stand over there, Julian?'' |
61925 | ''Why does he come?'' |
61925 | ''Why have you changed?'' |
61925 | ''Why must she be his wife?'' |
61925 | ''Why not? |
61925 | ''Why not? |
61925 | ''Why not?'' |
61925 | ''Why should he want to marry you?'' |
61925 | ''Why, I have been there in a yacht, I believe; a little Greek port; but I did n''t know it had ever been an independent republic?'' |
61925 | ''Why, how do you think of me now?'' |
61925 | ''Why, then, withhold Julian from the Islands?'' |
61925 | ''Why? |
61925 | ''Why? |
61925 | ''Will there be fighting?'' |
61925 | ''Will you go out to Eve in the garden, father? |
61925 | ''Will you not come with Eve to my concert on Wednesday? |
61925 | ''Would he remain in shelter for long?'' |
61925 | ''Would she leave Aphros? |
61925 | ''Would you do as much for me? |
61925 | ''Would you marry me if I wanted you to?'' |
61925 | ''You are going away?'' |
61925 | ''You are going to marry him?'' |
61925 | ''You are not interested, Eve?'' |
61925 | ''You are not musical, are you, Julian? |
61925 | ''You have never got over that, have you?'' |
61925 | ''You know, I suppose,''she said to him,''that Madame Kato is a friend of Eve''s? |
61925 | ''You know?'' |
61925 | ''You odd little thing,''he said,''why the adjective?'' |
61925 | ''You sound incredulous; why?'' |
61925 | ''You vain, you delicate, unreal thing, do you understand at all? |
61925 | ''You want me to come with you?'' |
61925 | ''You will never marry?'' |
61925 | ''You would do that-- without remorse?'' |
61925 | ''You would not?'' |
61925 | ''You''d sacrifice Aphros to me?'' |
61925 | ''Zapantiotis sold his soul for money-- was it money you promised him?'' |
61925 | A Platonic alliance?'' |
61925 | A bomb has been thrown,''--(''_Mais ils sont donc tous apaches?_''cried Condesa Valdez. |
61925 | A glimpse of her life had been revealed to him, but what secrets remained yet hidden? |
61925 | A philosophic friendship? |
61925 | A question left the lips of the postmaster,--''President of what?'' |
61925 | Am I not right?'' |
61925 | Am I right? |
61925 | Am I to understand that you have permanently replaced your cousin in the-- ah!--presidency of Hagios Zacharie?'' |
61925 | And how soon before you return? |
61925 | And why should Malteios return to- day, when in the preceding week, according to Nana, he had been so casually forgotten? |
61925 | And why? |
61925 | And you will remember the goodwill of Platon Malteios?'' |
61925 | Anger revived her--''Am I to waste myself on him?'' |
61925 | Are all women so irrational? |
61925 | Are all women''s friendships so unstable?'' |
61925 | Are all women, I wonder, as vain as you?'' |
61925 | Are you going to bury yourself on those Islands of yours, growing grapes, ripening olives? |
61925 | Are you so self- centred, so empty- headed? |
61925 | Are you taking me seriously? |
61925 | Are you to be trusted?'' |
61925 | Are you treating what I tell you with the gravity it deserves? |
61925 | As he said nothing, she added,--''Besides, have I ever shown myself any of those things to you? |
61925 | At that moment Tsigaridis, overcome by his anxiety, stretched out his hands towards him, surrendering his dignity in a supreme appeal,--''Kyrie? |
61925 | But Eve has told me that you do not care for music?'' |
61925 | But for Eve... a girl.... After all, what is Madame Kato but a common woman, a woman of the people, and the mistress of Malteios into the bargain?'' |
61925 | But how could I have known? |
61925 | But they must be blind to have seen nothing? |
61925 | But what is to be done? |
61925 | But, after all, what is this society? |
61925 | But, of course, I was forgetting: Madame Kato is your companion here, is she not? |
61925 | But_ I_ remain; shall I watch for you? |
61925 | Ca n''t I put it right? |
61925 | Can I not entertain you until then?'' |
61925 | Can you calmly contemplate the existence of an independent archipelago a few miles from your shore?'' |
61925 | Can you ride?'' |
61925 | Cowardly? |
61925 | Did her voice mock him? |
61925 | Did she care for Miloradovitch? |
61925 | Did you give yourself to Zapantiotis? |
61925 | Did you mean to create a revolution?'' |
61925 | Did you mean to ship me off to Athens, you and your accomplices, while you waited here in this room--_our_ room-- for your lover?'' |
61925 | Did you perhaps promise him yourself? |
61925 | Do I mean less to you than the Islands? |
61925 | Do n''t you hear the call of Paris and the world?'' |
61925 | Do you care nothing for the Islands? |
61925 | Do you ever look forward to the procession of your life? |
61925 | Do you know that I am betraying all the truth? |
61925 | Do you know what monstrous things I am thinking? |
61925 | Do you pay me the compliment of denying me the mean existence of an ordinary woman?'' |
61925 | Do you understand? |
61925 | Do you want me to return to such an existence?'' |
61925 | Do you want to go back?'' |
61925 | Do you want what I offer you? |
61925 | Do you, mademoiselle, know anything of your sex? |
61925 | Does Eve listen when you talk about the Islands?'' |
61925 | During those hours, surely, his private troubles had been forgotten? |
61925 | Eve he certainly could not trust; could he trust himself? |
61925 | Eve heard Julian saying,--''Nicolas sends for me? |
61925 | Eve, what do I care? |
61925 | Eve? |
61925 | Familiar to you, what? |
61925 | Fru Thyregod, for instance? |
61925 | Grbits replied sententiously, with the air of one creating a new proverb,--''Herakleion is open to invasion, but who wants to invade Herakleion?'' |
61925 | Hand the Islands over to Italy?'' |
61925 | Have you a boat?'' |
61925 | Have you been wearing a cap of invisibility?'' |
61925 | Have you considered?'' |
61925 | Have you ever seen a dead man? |
61925 | Have you forgotten that in the last generation a Davenant caused himself to be elected President?'' |
61925 | Have you heard this woman, Kato?'' |
61925 | He found himself banishing the thought of Miloradovitch....''Have you changed?'' |
61925 | He has created a ridiculous disturbance; well, let that pass; we overlook it, but this persistence.... Where is it all to end? |
61925 | He insisted,--''When did you really become aware of your own heartlessness?'' |
61925 | He loved you? |
61925 | He said, pursuing his thought,--''You have never the wish of other women-- permanency? |
61925 | He speculated amusedly as to the priest''s difficulties: an insurgent member of the flock? |
61925 | He spoke to Tsigaridis,--''You asked for me, Tsantilas?'' |
61925 | Her voice broke upon his reflections,--''Thinking of the Islands, Julian?'' |
61925 | Here were all the vivid traces of her passage, but where was she? |
61925 | How am I to know? |
61925 | How am I to know?'' |
61925 | How do you find your father? |
61925 | How many secrets like the secret of Paul are buried away in your heart? |
61925 | How much time have you?'' |
61925 | How soon will it be before you forget the Islands?'' |
61925 | How soon will it be before you forget? |
61925 | How soon will the launch be ready?'' |
61925 | I forget whether you are twenty- two or twenty- three?'' |
61925 | I suppose you saw yourself holding Panaïoannou at bay? |
61925 | I understand that you have organised a system of communications?'' |
61925 | I want to ask you, Julian,''he said at once,''whether the story I have heard in the club to- night is true? |
61925 | If not, one must surely spend the whole of life working in the dark? |
61925 | In shame the words tore themselves from him,--''Had he any trouble?'' |
61925 | Interested and curious, he said,--''To please you, I should give up Kato?'' |
61925 | Irretrievably?'' |
61925 | Is he here by appointment with you to- day?'' |
61925 | Is it not magnificent? |
61925 | Is it possible? |
61925 | Is it true?'' |
61925 | Is n''t that profoundly illuminating?'' |
61925 | Is one simply deluded by your charm? |
61925 | Kato exclaimed,''you have heard, Platon has gone?'' |
61925 | Kato played louder; she bent towards him,--''You love her so much, Julian?'' |
61925 | Like Samson, she had her hands upon the columns....''Madame Kato lives in this house?'' |
61925 | Looking at the plan, are you? |
61925 | Madame Lafarge addressed herself to the group of men,--''I did not see you at the races?'' |
61925 | Madame?'' |
61925 | Malteios, you say? |
61925 | May I come and talk to you?'' |
61925 | Middle- age-- I have been told there is such a thing? |
61925 | Must your outlook be always so narrowly personal? |
61925 | My poor misguided boy, do you not realise that your effort is_ bound_ to end in disaster, and will serve but to injure those you most desire to help? |
61925 | Not a sexless means? |
61925 | Now, a man is arrested on the Islands by the authorities, and what happens? |
61925 | Of course they were lying; how could they not be lying? |
61925 | Oh, what is there now for me to do? |
61925 | One of the messages which reached him as he sat in the assembly- room had been from her: Would he send a boat to Herakleion for Nana? |
61925 | Only once she spoke, to ask a question,''He would leave Herakleion?'' |
61925 | Or had the expedition been kept a secret from the still sleeping Herakleion? |
61925 | Or had they been present, gnawing, beneath the mask of sympathy? |
61925 | Or is he coming to- night for his reward? |
61925 | Or, better, will you come to my house on Wednesday evening after the concert? |
61925 | Perhaps you will tell this imaginary woman with whom you are to fall in love, about our Islands?'' |
61925 | Poor Carl,''she said reminiscently,''perhaps I have made him suffer; who knows?'' |
61925 | Prince of Aphros?'' |
61925 | Rowing- boat? |
61925 | Seeing that her companion remained silent in uncertainty, she murmured an introduction,--''Do you know my cousin Julian? |
61925 | Shall I go-- to whom?--to Malteios? |
61925 | Shall I have the pleasure of seeing her?'' |
61925 | Shall I help you? |
61925 | Shall I refuse? |
61925 | Shall I tell you something? |
61925 | Shall we escape?'' |
61925 | Shall we play a game with them? |
61925 | She added, smiling,''In the realms of the impersonal? |
61925 | She had spoken the last words with such impatience, that, torn from his speculations, he asked,--''Annoying you? |
61925 | She laughed, and danced away, stretching out her hands towards him,--''Join in the saraband, Julian?'' |
61925 | She might, who knows? |
61925 | She murmured again,--''And what am I? |
61925 | So she must contend, not only against the Islands, but against Kato also? |
61925 | So you think Herakleion will beat me? |
61925 | Stay,''she added, searching in her memory,''was n''t there some extraordinary story about him as a young man? |
61925 | Still a horror held him back: was it Eve, the child to whom he had been brotherly? |
61925 | Surely men and women live in different worlds?'' |
61925 | Tell me what you mean by sordid and ugly-- what is there sordid or ugly in love?'' |
61925 | Tell me, are you fond of Eve?'' |
61925 | Thall I tell her?'' |
61925 | That I should leave you? |
61925 | That you went to Aphros, and entered into heaven knows what absurd covenant with the people?'' |
61925 | That you will never betray? |
61925 | The house of Platon Malteios-- Premier or ex- Premier? |
61925 | The lazy voice, after a moment of silence, queried,--''Nana?'' |
61925 | The tongue was babbling in an empty body while the spirit journeyed in unknown fields, finding there what excruciating torment? |
61925 | To break the image, he called out aloud,--''You were very deeply immersed in your thoughts, father?'' |
61925 | To this they received no answer, nor any to their next remark,--''Why so much mystery? |
61925 | Under the fury of his unexpected outburst, she protested,--''Julian, why attack me? |
61925 | Unnatural existence; unnatural? |
61925 | Very naïf, very charming, very candid, very fawn- like-- or is it, hideous suspicion, a pose?'' |
61925 | Was it money you promised Zapantiotis?'' |
61925 | Was it possible that Eve made part of a limited brotherhood? |
61925 | Was it possible that Eve was mixed up in Malteios''political schemes? |
61925 | Was it possible that he should be attracted by Eve? |
61925 | Was it possible that the attack had finally drawn away? |
61925 | Was no sense of proportion or of responsibility ever to weigh upon her beautiful shoulders? |
61925 | Was she to blame for her cruelty, her selfishness, her disregard for truth? |
61925 | Was the standard of cardinal virtues set by the world the true, the ultimate standard? |
61925 | We will work together?'' |
61925 | Well, what do you propose to do, my dear Julian? |
61925 | Were the most radiant moments the moments in which one stepped farthest from the ordered acceptance of the world? |
61925 | What am I to believe?'' |
61925 | What are you? |
61925 | What do I, Kato, know of the houses you will live in in England, or of your English friends? |
61925 | What do they hope to kill? |
61925 | What do you do there? |
61925 | What do you know? |
61925 | What do you think?'' |
61925 | What else did you suppose? |
61925 | What have I done? |
61925 | What have I to do with a banking house in Herakleion, you with a few vineyards near the coast? |
61925 | What have you done to my Kato? |
61925 | What have you seen? |
61925 | What is he thinking about? |
61925 | What is it you want? |
61925 | What is the grievance of the Islands? |
61925 | What madness made me do it? |
61925 | What part have I got in this world of yours?'' |
61925 | What part would she, the spoilt, the exquisite, play if there were to be bloodshed on Aphros? |
61925 | What report of Aphros could I carry to Herakleion?'' |
61925 | What right have you to dictate to me?'' |
61925 | What spoken or unspoken understanding existed between the inscrutable brothers? |
61925 | What then? |
61925 | What was it, this bond of flesh? |
61925 | What''ll you drink? |
61925 | What''s at the bottom of that instinct? |
61925 | What''s this instinct of wanting to stand alone, to be oneself, isolated, free, individual? |
61925 | What? |
61925 | When he had finished speaking, she asked him another question,''He could never trace the thing to me?'' |
61925 | When their greetings were over, Julian said,--''I believe you were asking for my cousin, sir?'' |
61925 | Where can one look for fidelity? |
61925 | Where is William Davenant now, do you know?'' |
61925 | Where was Herakleion, stucco- built and tawdry, city of perpetually- clanging bells, revolutions, and Prime Ministers made and unmade in a day? |
61925 | Where? |
61925 | Which are we to use?'' |
61925 | Who had betrayed him? |
61925 | Who has? |
61925 | Who in their senses would harness the divine courser to a mail- cart?'' |
61925 | Who is she? |
61925 | Who knows that the two ruffians I saw winking were not the very men we were after? |
61925 | Why do we fight against government? |
61925 | Why does instinct push us towards individualism, when the great wellbeing of mankind probably lies in solidarity? |
61925 | Why had n''t I the strength to remain solitary? |
61925 | Why should Kato apologise to him for the unexpected arrival of her lover? |
61925 | Why so patient, so long- suffering, with Eve? |
61925 | Why suggest it? |
61925 | Why this mania for capture? |
61925 | Why? |
61925 | Why? |
61925 | Why?'' |
61925 | Will I exercise my influence with Malteios to get his brother released? |
61925 | Will he think me bad? |
61925 | Will you come?'' |
61925 | Will you kill me?'' |
61925 | Will you not come and speak to her?'' |
61925 | Will you take the responsibility of refusing it?'' |
61925 | With an upheaval of sheets he heard her sit upright in bed, and her exclamation,--''Who said you might come in here?'' |
61925 | Wo n''t you realise that I am responsible for five thousand lives? |
61925 | Would he urge his father''s interference? |
61925 | Would he, Julian, who was young, be merciful? |
61925 | Would they never succeed in getting away from the topic? |
61925 | Would you like the tropics, I wonder, Julian? |
61925 | Would your cousin leave Aphros? |
61925 | You are not very jealous of me, are you, Julian?'' |
61925 | You assume or bequeath very lightly the mantle of government, do you not? |
61925 | You go to England?'' |
61925 | You will come back? |
61925 | You, placid, unemotional, unawakened? |
61925 | You, unimpressionable? |
61925 | Young Zapantiotis called to him from another window,--''You see them, Kyrie? |
61925 | Your eyes smoulder; I am near the truth?'' |
61925 | Your father said to me apprehensively,"I am told Madame Kato''s flat was wrecked last night?" |
61925 | Your intentions, excellent; but your judgment perhaps a little precipitate? |
61925 | Youth-- were the years of youth the intuitive years of perception? |
61925 | _ Allons donc!_ You, apathetic? |
61925 | _ Je me fiche des Balcans._ And you? |
61925 | _ un tas de rastas._ Do you think I shall remain here long? |
61925 | a fish? |
61925 | a house with me? |
61925 | a necessary repair to the church? |
61925 | and want so badly that he can perform the feat of coming out here from Herakleion in the heat of the afternoon?'' |
61925 | any news?'' |
61925 | but you?'' |
61925 | can you explain?'' |
61925 | dying down like a flame, to revive again? |
61925 | had a wave, washing forward, deposited it gently, and retreated without its burden? |
61925 | he shouted at her, seizing her by the arm,''or was he, perhaps, like Paul, in love with you? |
61925 | how could I have known?'' |
61925 | leadership? |
61925 | me black?'' |
61925 | meaningless because unnecessary in such a realm of serenity? |
61925 | my own generation"?'' |
61925 | never the inkling of such a wish?'' |
61925 | nineteen? |
61925 | now? |
61925 | only answer me, are you trying to tell me that you have fallen in love? |
61925 | or Eve, the woman? |
61925 | or Herakleion independent of Greece? |
61925 | or Kato?'' |
61925 | or Kato?'' |
61925 | or is there a deeper truth? |
61925 | or the Islands independent of Herakleion? |
61925 | shall I tell you why? |
61925 | she cried;''I would n''t have treated you so, Julian; why did n''t you trust yourself to me?'' |
61925 | she forced herself to ask, and then, relapsing,''Which will fade first in your memory, I wonder-- the Islands? |
61925 | she interrupted with scorn,''what has reason got to do with love?'') |
61925 | so material, yet so imperative, so compelling, as to become almost a spiritual, not a bodily, necessity? |
61925 | so transitory, yet so recurrent? |
61925 | so unimportant, so grossly commonplace, yet creating so close and tremulous an intimacy? |
61925 | some crazy adventure he engaged in? |
61925 | that swept aside the careful training, individual and hereditary, replacing pride by another pride? |
61925 | their exuberance, their vulgarity?... |
61925 | this fallacious yet fundamental and dominating bond? |
61925 | this unique and mutual secret? |
61925 | this wanting to take from me my most treasured possession-- liberty? |
61925 | to be forgiven all for the sake of the rarer, more distant flame? |
61925 | was indeed a citizen of some advanced state of such perfection that this world''s measures and ideals were left behind and meaningless? |
61925 | was she, not evil, but only alien? |
61925 | what do you suppose? |
61925 | what have you heard? |
61925 | what on earth do you mean? |
61925 | when the social system in its most elementary form starts with men clubbing together for comfort and greater safety? |
61925 | where are you going?'' |
61925 | which is it to be?'' |
61925 | why are they ringing the bells? |
61925 | why are you dressed? |
61925 | why do I want to be independent of my father? |
61925 | why? |
61925 | why?'' |
56838 | A check payable to Barker? |
56838 | A street- car fare would n''t help me to get into the house, would it? 56838 Alone?" |
56838 | Am I too early? |
56838 | And Gene will now go free? |
56838 | And did he make you sign a check? |
56838 | And he is n''t dead or moved away or anything like that? |
56838 | And him you do not know? |
56838 | And little Jean sent it to me, you say? |
56838 | And make him give back the thousand dollars? |
56838 | And no one knows that fact? 56838 And now will you be friends with me, instead of treating me as though I probably needed a snubbing to keep me on my good behavior?" |
56838 | And tell you? |
56838 | And the murderer gone by the window, eh? 56838 And there was no one with you? |
56838 | And was n''t that true? |
56838 | And went home? |
56838 | And with that thought in your mind, you went off and shot him, did you? |
56838 | And you did? |
56838 | And you never heard Diavolo''s real name? |
56838 | And you told Eugene? |
56838 | Another? |
56838 | Anyone else you remember? 56838 Apples?" |
56838 | Are violets your favorites? |
56838 | Are you accustomed to champagne? |
56838 | Are you certain it was that book and no other you read? |
56838 | Are you following me? |
56838 | Are you reading De Senectute? |
56838 | Are your prophetic friends safely out of the way? |
56838 | Barney, what is it? |
56838 | Beginning with the banquet? |
56838 | Believe that it can be exercised? 56838 Brainstorm idea? |
56838 | But he did n''t come that evening? |
56838 | But how had Clyde got the warning? |
56838 | But if Garney killed him, what about Benbow? |
56838 | But if I remember shooting Barker, that is the main thing, is n''t it? |
56838 | But if the sentence was unwarranted? |
56838 | But is n''t it the best way? |
56838 | But should n''t it go to Gene? |
56838 | But when he was not made up? 56838 But who could ever have known that the catch did n''t work?" |
56838 | But whom could he care for so much as that? |
56838 | But why did n''t you think of doing that last night? |
56838 | But would n''t we have heard of it? |
56838 | But you do n''t remember that, do you? |
56838 | But you do n''t remember what the man looked like? 56838 But you eat them?" |
56838 | But you had no reason at that time to suppose that Mr. Clyde was in danger? |
56838 | But you saw him leave the house? |
56838 | But you''ll give me something, wo n''t you? |
56838 | But-- you do think there is a possibility of getting him off, do n''t you? 56838 By the way, how did you know Barker when he came in?" |
56838 | By the way, how did you know that Barker''s office was in the Ph[oe]nix Building? |
56838 | By whom? |
56838 | Can you catch him?--stop him? 56838 Can you describe the office,--the arrangement of the furniture, for instance?" |
56838 | Can you direct me to Mr. Barker''s office? |
56838 | Can you hear the door- bell from your room? |
56838 | Can you make a wax model like that, so as to hold that record permanently? |
56838 | Can you tell me the whole situation? |
56838 | Collier is in charge, then? |
56838 | Could I not help in some way? 56838 Could he get in without your knowing?" |
56838 | Could n''t you have trusted me? |
56838 | Diavolo woke him up, did n''t he? |
56838 | Did Mr. Garney ever speak to you of Alfred Barker? |
56838 | Did anything come up that annoyed you? 56838 Did he bite that?" |
56838 | Did he do it? |
56838 | Did he ever look at you? |
56838 | Did he get you into trouble? |
56838 | Did he go anywhere else, so far as you know? |
56838 | Did he know you knew? |
56838 | Did he leave any effects here? |
56838 | Did he make good? |
56838 | Did he speak to you? |
56838 | Did he? |
56838 | Did you drink much? |
56838 | Did you ever allow him to hypnotize you? |
56838 | Did you ever hear Barker address Diavolo by name? |
56838 | Did you ever hear of William Jordan? 56838 Did you happen to have any young man in particular in mind,"I asked,"or is the position vacant?" |
56838 | Did you know that Barker had a partner? |
56838 | Did you know that Mr. Garney had hypnotic powers? |
56838 | Did you know the farmer? |
56838 | Did you leave the house at all after letting her in? |
56838 | Did you let Diavolo hypnotize you? |
56838 | Did you remember afterwards what he had said or done to you while you were hypnotized? |
56838 | Did you see any signs of bad feeling between them afterwards? 56838 Did you see him that evening at all?" |
56838 | Did you see me? |
56838 | Did you see your brother yesterday? |
56838 | Did you speak to him at all? |
56838 | Did you tell Miss Benbow that you had seen her brother leave the house at three? |
56838 | Distinct, are n''t they? |
56838 | Do n''t you live there, too? |
56838 | Do n''t you see that Mr. Garney was merely deceiving you? 56838 Do you know him?" |
56838 | Do you know if anything happened at his supper to excite him? |
56838 | Do you know what dentist he visited? |
56838 | Do you know whether he was married? |
56838 | Do you mean she will marry him? |
56838 | Do you remember what you were reading? |
56838 | Do you say that just to keep me from fretting,she asked gravely,"or do you really know anything that is going to save Gene? |
56838 | Do you see a weapon anywhere about? |
56838 | Do you think I was out of my head that night? 56838 Do you think he would take it?" |
56838 | Do you think it is ever right to kill? |
56838 | Do you think you can possibly discover who bought that check? |
56838 | Dressed? |
56838 | Ellison is young Benbow''s uncle, is n''t he? |
56838 | Forget what? |
56838 | Gone, has she? 56838 Had Mr. Barker been long with you?" |
56838 | Has Clyde been arrested? |
56838 | Has he ever talked about avenging his father''s death? 56838 Have they found the murderer?" |
56838 | Have you any idea how Benbow knew that Barker was in the Ph[oe]nix Building? 56838 Have you any idea where Clyde is?" |
56838 | Have you any record of issuing a marriage license for Jean Benbow within the last few days? |
56838 | Have you ever heard him express vengefulness toward Barker? |
56838 | Have you had any experience in writing that special kind of a letter? |
56838 | Have you married these two, sir? |
56838 | Have you really had nothing all day? |
56838 | He had the good taste then to admire Miss Thurston? |
56838 | He merely does n''t care for newspaper fame,--and who does? 56838 He will be two hundred and fifty dollars ahead, since Barker did n''t cash the check, eh?" |
56838 | He''s gone, then? |
56838 | Hello, how''s the lawyerman? |
56838 | How could you frighten me so? |
56838 | How did he get your thousand? |
56838 | How did he know I had given you the locket? |
56838 | How did it turn out in your story? |
56838 | How did it turn out? |
56838 | How did you get information about him? |
56838 | How do you do? |
56838 | How do you know he has them? |
56838 | How do you know that? |
56838 | How do you know? |
56838 | How has he done well by them? 56838 How in the world do you know that?" |
56838 | How long ago did she leave the house, according to Minnie? |
56838 | How long has he lived with you? |
56838 | How long have you been here? |
56838 | How long have you known this fact, Fellows? |
56838 | How much does the man know? 56838 How often did you put yourself under his influence?" |
56838 | How shall I find out? |
56838 | How? 56838 How? |
56838 | How_ did_ it make you feel? |
56838 | I suppose you feel that you have to fight for me, as my lawyer, but-- what''s the use in this case? 56838 I went down to the Ph[oe]nix Building--""Did you walk?" |
56838 | I went up to Barker''s office on the second floor,--"How did you know that it was his office? 56838 I? |
56838 | I? 56838 If I should tell you it was I?" |
56838 | If you will tell me what you want to know,--"When did the idea of killing Barker come to you? |
56838 | In what, child? |
56838 | Indeed? |
56838 | Is Mr. Clyde in the house? |
56838 | Is he great friends with Miss Thurston? |
56838 | Is n''t his mind right? |
56838 | Is n''t that enough? |
56838 | Is n''t there any way I could get into Gene''s room for a minute without having that horrid man watching? |
56838 | Is that all you have found out? |
56838 | Is that impertinence, Barney? |
56838 | Is that possible? |
56838 | Is that you, Mr. Hilton? 56838 Is that your only reason for staying, young lady?" |
56838 | Is there anyone on this floor at this time? |
56838 | Is there anything the matter with him? 56838 Is there anything the matter, Miss Jean?" |
56838 | Is this Mr. Barker''s writing, do you know? |
56838 | It is an adult, is it not? |
56838 | It was a shock to you to find that he was dead, was it not? |
56838 | It was morning, then? |
56838 | It was you who let Miss Benbow in, was n''t it? |
56838 | It''s a very pretty plan, Miss Jean, but your brother is quite a bit taller than you are, is n''t he? 56838 Jean? |
56838 | Jean? |
56838 | Jerome? 56838 Just where did you go?--what streets?" |
56838 | May I ask if the day is set? |
56838 | May I ask if you know the amount? |
56838 | May I ask who compose your household? |
56838 | Mr. Clyde, I presume? |
56838 | Mr. Garney, do you know anything to Eugene Benbow''s discredit? |
56838 | No, I must have gone home first, must n''t I? 56838 Not Mr. Fellows? |
56838 | Not the opera? |
56838 | Nothing bad, I hope? |
56838 | Nothing in his life to hide? |
56838 | Now will you tell me again just what happened that evening,--the order of the events? |
56838 | Off to the street, you mean? |
56838 | Oh, is that so? 56838 Oh, is there anything wrong? |
56838 | Oh, may n''t I go with you? |
56838 | Oh,--"Some young man who was desperately in love with you, of course? |
56838 | Or how he was dressed? 56838 Or in the building?" |
56838 | Payable to whom? |
56838 | Settle what? 56838 Shall I put you on the car here, then? |
56838 | Since you meant to give yourself up to the police, why did you go down the fire- escape instead of out through the hall? |
56838 | So soon? |
56838 | Tell him what? 56838 Tell me this, first,--when you came into the house that evening, after you left the boys at the banquet, was the house lit up or dark?" |
56838 | That''s all you know? |
56838 | The mayoralty? 56838 Then a judicial error can never be corrected?" |
56838 | Then can you tell me when Mr. Benbow came in? |
56838 | Then how are we going to arrange to get him out? |
56838 | Then how did you know it was n''t Barker? |
56838 | Then if I ever get my hands on Diavolo, you can identify him, regardless of grease paint and wig? |
56838 | Then if he puts himself in the hands of the law, there will be nothing left but to see the execution of the sentence? 56838 Then this man--?" |
56838 | Then you agree with Jerome''s theory that the villain always returns to the scene of his crime in the last act? |
56838 | Then you believe that he really shot Barker? |
56838 | Then you came back here? 56838 Then you threw yourself down there when you came in and went to sleep, just as you did earlier in the evening, when you came home from the supper?" |
56838 | Then you would n''t know whether he came in at all last night? |
56838 | There was no one else in the room with you? |
56838 | There''s no statute of limitations to run on a sentence of the court, is there? |
56838 | To what am I indebted,--? |
56838 | To whom did you show the room yesterday? |
56838 | Was Barker married? |
56838 | Was Mr. Benbow alone? |
56838 | Was he tall or short? |
56838 | Was it hard to go to sleep? |
56838 | Was it you? |
56838 | Was n''t this made from his mouth? |
56838 | Was that all you heard? 56838 Was that the direction in which his suggestions were made?" |
56838 | Was that what he meant to tell me when we were married? |
56838 | Was there anything peculiar about the formation of his jaw, do you remember? 56838 Was your revolver in the library?" |
56838 | We don''t-- usually--"But you did on this occasion? |
56838 | Well, little Story- Book Girl, are you waiting for the prince? |
56838 | Well, what is the question? |
56838 | Well, what would you do with him? 56838 Well?" |
56838 | Well? |
56838 | Were both the women away last night? |
56838 | What am I doing here? |
56838 | What are you going to do for him? |
56838 | What are your plans now? |
56838 | What can I do for you? |
56838 | What damn foolishness is this? |
56838 | What dentist did you send him to? |
56838 | What did Alfred Barker have to do with it? |
56838 | What did Diavolo look like? |
56838 | What did he do? |
56838 | What did he mean about an ex- convict? |
56838 | What did you do about it? 56838 What did you do with the revolver afterwards?" |
56838 | What did you have to drink at your spread? |
56838 | What did you want to follow him for? |
56838 | What do you know of him? |
56838 | What for? |
56838 | What happened? 56838 What have you found instead?" |
56838 | What have you found? |
56838 | What in the world do you mean, child? |
56838 | What in thunder is the matter with you today, Fellows? 56838 What is his name? |
56838 | What is it? |
56838 | What is it? |
56838 | What is the best way of dealing with a blackmailer? |
56838 | What is your own theory of the affair and of the missing third man? |
56838 | What made you think that he would be there at that time of the night? 56838 What makes you so sure?" |
56838 | What makes you think that? |
56838 | What makes you think that? |
56838 | What of it? |
56838 | What sort of a boy is he? 56838 What sort of associates?" |
56838 | What sort of information? |
56838 | What was he doing there? |
56838 | What were you telling that girl? |
56838 | What will become of it, then? |
56838 | What''s all this? |
56838 | What''s the matter with him? |
56838 | What, specifically, did you come back for? |
56838 | What? |
56838 | What_ can_ be done for the poor boy? |
56838 | When and where did you get this, Barney? |
56838 | When did you think of it? |
56838 | When he came to try his hypnotic stunts? |
56838 | When you woke up and remembered what you had done, you wanted to give yourself up at once to the police? |
56838 | When you woke up this morning, where were you? |
56838 | When? 56838 When? |
56838 | When? |
56838 | Where did you get that bit of information? |
56838 | Where did you meet Diavolo? |
56838 | Where do you suppose her soul was? |
56838 | Where were you? |
56838 | Where''s my rosebud, you rascal? |
56838 | Where? |
56838 | Which one do you mean by the little man? |
56838 | Who is Diavolo? |
56838 | Who is his tutor? |
56838 | Who is making the comments? |
56838 | Who was he? |
56838 | Who was it? |
56838 | Who was on this wire just now? |
56838 | Who would have thought that he had a wife? |
56838 | Who would write the letters? |
56838 | Whom? |
56838 | Whose? |
56838 | Why did n''t he have sense enough to go to South America or Africa, or the South Sea Islands when he first escaped? |
56838 | Why did n''t you come home earlier? |
56838 | Why should she be afraid? 56838 Why, pray?" |
56838 | Why? |
56838 | Why_ did_ you shoot him? |
56838 | Will they-- I mean, is it-- will he-- be hung? |
56838 | Will you come down to my office this afternoon and let me take your deposition about what happened at the birthday supper? 56838 Will you tell me something about the young man? |
56838 | With spectacles? |
56838 | With whom? |
56838 | Would n''t you know? 56838 Would that peculiarity be enough to establish the man''s identity?" |
56838 | Would you know him again if you saw him without his hair and beard? |
56838 | Would you know him if you saw him? |
56838 | You are going away? |
56838 | You are going down to the jail? |
56838 | You are sure about that? |
56838 | You ca n''t help me by a guess? |
56838 | You ca n''t help sympathizing with the man who shot him, can you? |
56838 | You did n''t come for me? |
56838 | You did n''t have another copy of De Senectute about? 56838 You did n''t see any stranger here during the evening, either with Mr. Benbow or otherwise?" |
56838 | You did n''t tell him? 56838 You did not know, then, that there was enmity between the two men?" |
56838 | You do n''t advise me to stay and brazen it out, then? |
56838 | You do n''t mean trivial faults? |
56838 | You do n''t suppose that Garney hypnotized him,_ and sent him to shoot Barker?_ That would be neat! 56838 You do n''t think of anything else that I ought to know,--anything having a bearing on Benbow''s actions or his state of mind?" |
56838 | You have seen the paper? |
56838 | You know Barker, then? |
56838 | You know of no absorbing entanglement, either with man or woman? |
56838 | You mean I am to go with you now? |
56838 | You mean after I left that perfectly beautiful old soldier? 56838 You mean in killing Senator Benbow?" |
56838 | You mean that dude that was here in the summer and read people''s thoughts at the Orpheum? 56838 You mean that you went home and went to sleep last night?" |
56838 | You never caught up with them? |
56838 | You never heard of Diavolo? |
56838 | You never heard of him? |
56838 | You remember that you thought in the morning that you had killed Barker in the night,I said sharply,"but do you remember killing him? |
56838 | You saw no one else at any time except the man who came into the outer office? |
56838 | You spoke to no one of your plan? |
56838 | You think it will hurt him? |
56838 | You think of nothing that would prompt him to assert his guilt, if, in point of fact, he should not be guilty? |
56838 | You think that is n''t enough to induce her to come forward? |
56838 | You think the mayoralty is worth the risk? |
56838 | You think then that this was not his first appearance on the stage? |
56838 | You think you must have,--but do you_ remember_ it, as you do the first? |
56838 | You think, then, that there might be some element in the situation that would perhaps complicate it? |
56838 | You were n''t afraid? |
56838 | You wish him to know? |
56838 | You''ll go at once, of course? |
56838 | You_ are_ going away, are n''t you? |
56838 | You_ do_ remember that? |
56838 | You_ would_ do that? |
56838 | ''Beg pardon,''he said,''but you''re Mr. Clyde, are n''t you?'' |
56838 | ''Indeed?'' |
56838 | ( Is n''t that like youth? |
56838 | ( Was n''t that neat, and dear of her?) |
56838 | A gentleman would have to do that, would n''t he?" |
56838 | Agreed?" |
56838 | And if he should hesitate on my account, and talk about not letting me sacrifice myself,--he may, you know,--will you make him-- understand?" |
56838 | And if so, why?" |
56838 | And that is the only thing that is really important, is n''t it?" |
56838 | And we only had two bottles--""Among how many?" |
56838 | And what would he have to do with it?" |
56838 | And will you bring two or three others,--fellows who were there and heard it all? |
56838 | And yet what possible motive could he have for making a false confession? |
56838 | Any irregularity, for instance?" |
56838 | Anything else you would like to know?" |
56838 | Anything identifying?" |
56838 | Anything?" |
56838 | Are you married?" |
56838 | Benbow?" |
56838 | Benbow?" |
56838 | Business suit, or evening dress?" |
56838 | But I infer that you did know something of his practices in private?" |
56838 | But are n''t you taking a good deal for granted in assuming that you are going to be married? |
56838 | But he goes and shoots him, and what is there interesting in that? |
56838 | But now that the cabman is disposed of, how are you going to get into the house?" |
56838 | But now the question is, what are you going to do? |
56838 | But there is n''t anything new?" |
56838 | But there_ is_ someone--?" |
56838 | But this idea of avenging him,--have you cherished it all these years?" |
56838 | But who was it that knew, before the papers were fairly on the street, that Barker was dead? |
56838 | Can it be true?" |
56838 | Can you guess my elation? |
56838 | Clyde?" |
56838 | Could it be possible? |
56838 | Could you, perhaps, make a set of teeth that would fit those marks?" |
56838 | Did Garney hypnotize you the day that you hunted up Barker to shoot him?" |
56838 | Did he know where you kept it?" |
56838 | Did n''t Barney bring her home in a cab an hour ago? |
56838 | Did n''t you see the man''s face?" |
56838 | Did she think that she could hide away from her hubby? |
56838 | Did that have anything to do with it?" |
56838 | Did you go direct to the Ph[oe]nix Building?" |
56838 | Did you know anything of her plan to be married? |
56838 | Did you know him?" |
56838 | Did you send a thousand dollars to William Jordan, and if so, why?" |
56838 | Do n''t it, now?" |
56838 | Do n''t you remember?" |
56838 | Do n''t you see? |
56838 | Do n''t you see?" |
56838 | Do you know Benbow''s associates or friends outside of the University?" |
56838 | Do you know anything that would help me to identify him? |
56838 | Do you know his plans, Hilton?" |
56838 | Do you know where Clyde is?" |
56838 | Do you know where she is?" |
56838 | Do you know whether Barker was ever married?" |
56838 | Do you know whether he has anything to prove his charges?" |
56838 | Do you mean that I was hypnotized when I shot Barker?" |
56838 | Do you mean to say that you think the confession false? |
56838 | Do you remember you told me you saw a stranger come in?" |
56838 | Do you remember, as a matter of fact, going to his office? |
56838 | Do you see that?" |
56838 | Do you suppose it was the champagne?" |
56838 | Do you think she could possibly have gone to that man?" |
56838 | Do you want to go home? |
56838 | Does he say that?" |
56838 | Does it make any difference?" |
56838 | Ellison?" |
56838 | Ever see him?" |
56838 | Faint?" |
56838 | Garney?" |
56838 | Garney?" |
56838 | Garney?" |
56838 | Had Barker been levying blackmail on him also? |
56838 | Had Benbow been drinking,--enough to affect him?" |
56838 | Had he been nerving himself for the discovery? |
56838 | Had he, too, come to look up Mr. Barker? |
56838 | Had someone been with Benbow? |
56838 | Has that been on his mind?" |
56838 | Have n''t you any friends in the neighborhood?" |
56838 | Have you anything to support your extraordinary hypothesis beyond your natural desire to clear your client?" |
56838 | Have you heard about Clyde?" |
56838 | He fainted on the street, you say? |
56838 | He lives with you?" |
56838 | He was a friend of yours, was n''t he?" |
56838 | He was a sure- enough swell off the stage, was n''t he?" |
56838 | Hilton?" |
56838 | Hilton?" |
56838 | Hilton?" |
56838 | Hilton?" |
56838 | How about my personal papers? |
56838 | How about your revolver, Gene? |
56838 | How are you going to get away?" |
56838 | How could you do so mad a thing?" |
56838 | How did I get here?" |
56838 | How did you get away?" |
56838 | How did you know about him and me, by the way?" |
56838 | How do ideas come to us? |
56838 | How in the name of mystery did you get in here?" |
56838 | How in the name of wonder had Fellows picked up an acquaintance with her? |
56838 | How is Miss Benbow?" |
56838 | How much have you about you?" |
56838 | How old is he?" |
56838 | How should I?" |
56838 | How would he take the news? |
56838 | How?" |
56838 | I have an idea that he is a pretty hard student,--""Has he been working hard?--overstraining himself?" |
56838 | I merely asked,"What sort of a place is the back entry?" |
56838 | I went away with this new and puzzling question putting everything else out of my mind,--Was his confession true? |
56838 | I''m terribly worried--""What makes you think she is gone? |
56838 | If Garney shot Barker, why did Gene say he did? |
56838 | If I mention in the right place that you and the hypnotist Diavolo are one and the same, where will you be then?'' |
56838 | If I regard life for myself as of dubious value under such conditions, do you think I am so hopelessly mean as to ask anyone to share it with me?" |
56838 | If a man could be identified by his finger print, why not by the print of his teeth? |
56838 | If he is taken, or gives himself up, what prospect is there that he will ever be cleared?" |
56838 | If you are satisfied yourself that your actions are justified, what have you to do with the opinions of other people or the upbraidings of conscience? |
56838 | If you wanted him again, how would you go to work to find him?" |
56838 | In the eyes of the law, he is merely an escaped convict?" |
56838 | Is it too late?" |
56838 | Is n''t it a shame?" |
56838 | Is that it?" |
56838 | Is that so?" |
56838 | Is that what you mean?" |
56838 | Is that what you mean?" |
56838 | Is there anything further to investigate?" |
56838 | It will not be necessary for you to do anything more than to look at him, will it?" |
56838 | It wo n''t be any trouble? |
56838 | Know him?" |
56838 | Let me have that stick of yours, will you? |
56838 | May I not go with you?" |
56838 | Mr. Garney could not have come in unless you yourself admitted him, could he?" |
56838 | No business to be here, mixing up in things that concern men, but what can you expect nowadays? |
56838 | Now do you wonder that I liked Miss Thurston? |
56838 | Now when can you go with me to the morgue? |
56838 | Now will you marry me?" |
56838 | Of what was Eden Valley reminiscent? |
56838 | On both sides the upper teeth formed a V.""Like this?" |
56838 | Or of Eden Valley?" |
56838 | Really and truly clear him and-- and give him back to me?" |
56838 | Revengeful?" |
56838 | Say, it''s a funny stunt, is n''t it? |
56838 | Say, that''s a great stunt, is n''t it? |
56838 | She says now that I must not stand here and keep you talking, though really I know it is I that is talking,--or should I say am talking? |
56838 | Should you say there was anything peculiar about those teeth? |
56838 | Suppose they had quarreled to the death? |
56838 | Tell me everything, ca n''t you? |
56838 | That check for$ 250--you remember?" |
56838 | The charge is so incredible that we may well be asked,--Where lies the proof of identity, beyond the word of Alfred Barker, now cold in death? |
56838 | The jaw is uncommonly narrow for an adult--""But you are sure it is an adult?" |
56838 | The recollection was almost like a voice,--"Don''t you remember?" |
56838 | Then one night I saw her cryin'',--""Where?" |
56838 | Then this letter,--she brought you this yesterday?" |
56838 | Then what did you do? |
56838 | Then when the trouble came you were known by that name instead of your own?" |
56838 | Then, deliberately,"Are you married yet?" |
56838 | Then, dropping his voice,"Is the death penalty in force there?" |
56838 | This had been your home before?" |
56838 | This your street? |
56838 | Though I suppose that is what real life is like, maybe?" |
56838 | To whom am I indebted?'' |
56838 | Under those circumstances would you advise me to hunt for an open window?" |
56838 | Violent? |
56838 | Was I to stand by and say nothing while he tumbled his wits at her feet? |
56838 | Was I-- was I-- under his influence? |
56838 | Was Miss Benbow waiting outside till three in the morning?" |
56838 | Was anything said-- about Barker, for instance?" |
56838 | Was he married?" |
56838 | Was it Garney? |
56838 | Was it not most probable that that was what had happened later? |
56838 | Was that mentioned?" |
56838 | Was that you?" |
56838 | Was there a tall young man, fresh- shaven, with rather a blue- black tint where the beard had been taken off?" |
56838 | Was there any more quarrelling?" |
56838 | Was there anything else?" |
56838 | What are you saying? |
56838 | What can have happened?" |
56838 | What did Diavolo say to that?" |
56838 | What did he look like?" |
56838 | What do you think of it?" |
56838 | What is conscience? |
56838 | What makes you think he knows anything about it?" |
56838 | What next?" |
56838 | What novel did you get that from?" |
56838 | What of that?" |
56838 | What then?" |
56838 | What then?" |
56838 | What time was it?" |
56838 | What was he like?" |
56838 | What was the use of talking common- sense to a creature like that? |
56838 | What would have happened if I had stayed in the room? |
56838 | What''s on your mind?" |
56838 | What''s respectability compared to the coin?'' |
56838 | What''s the joke?" |
56838 | What''s the use of being twins, if it does n''t count for something?" |
56838 | When brought to trial, he succeeded in convincing the jury that he believed(?) |
56838 | When had he been shot? |
56838 | Where do you think you are going?" |
56838 | Where is he to be found?" |
56838 | Where, and with whom?" |
56838 | Where? |
56838 | Who had killed Barker? |
56838 | Who is Gene? |
56838 | Who is the young lady this time?" |
56838 | Who was Diavolo? |
56838 | Who was it that would cry, with passion,"_ Now_ will you marry me?" |
56838 | Whom do you think I saw there, of all persons in the world? |
56838 | Whom else do you suspect?" |
56838 | Whom would Gene Benbow wish to save at any cost? |
56838 | Why had n''t I thought of that before? |
56838 | Why has the Lord made so many stupid people? |
56838 | Why should I? |
56838 | Will I be allowed to turn them over to you?" |
56838 | Will you let me know if there ever is anything I can do?" |
56838 | Will you see to that?" |
56838 | Would he have shot his victim just the same? |
56838 | Would n''t it be best for some member of your family or some friend to come for you?" |
56838 | Would one name answer all three questions? |
56838 | You advise me, then, to bury myself somewhere beyond reach of the extradition laws?" |
56838 | You are sure of that?" |
56838 | You did n''t recognize me as the man?" |
56838 | You do n''t dislike emeralds?" |
56838 | You here?" |
56838 | You here?" |
56838 | You saw him here in the hotel in his natural guise, did n''t you?" |
56838 | You want me?" |
56838 | You were out for dinner, too, last night, were you not?" |
56838 | You were quite alone all the time?" |
56838 | You will take the necessary steps, Hilton?" |
56838 | Your name--?" |
13218 | A fine sight? 13218 A friend of his?" |
13218 | A house? |
13218 | A little something? |
13218 | After all, what could you do? |
13218 | After all-- perhaps it is more foolish to say,''I advise you to do so and so,''than to ask,''Why do you not do so and so?'' 13218 After it was yours?" |
13218 | Against what? |
13218 | Agreeably or disagreeably? |
13218 | Ah-- what interest? 13218 Ah? |
13218 | Ah? |
13218 | Alive or dead, Gouache? 13218 All this mythology is too complicated-- too Pompeian-- how shall I say? |
13218 | All? 13218 Am I a parrot? |
13218 | Am I enthusiastic? |
13218 | Am I humble enough? 13218 Am I indiscreet?" |
13218 | Am I not saying it? |
13218 | Am I to understand that this does not suit your wishes? |
13218 | Am I, mother? 13218 Am I? |
13218 | And I am a masterpiece-- of what? 13218 And I?" |
13218 | And beautiful? |
13218 | And charming? |
13218 | And could you not-- how shall I say? 13218 And do you believe in friendship, Don Orsino?" |
13218 | And do you believe in such absurd superstitions? |
13218 | And do you not think that there is even a remote possibility of an improvement in business, so that nobody will fail at all? |
13218 | And have you changed your mind? |
13218 | And have you nothing for me? |
13218 | And he distinctly told you this, did he? |
13218 | And he is the only son? |
13218 | And her mouth? |
13218 | And his father? 13218 And how about an ugly woman?" |
13218 | And how about the difference in ready money, which ought to go to the present owners? |
13218 | And how am I to prove that you are wrong and I am right? |
13218 | And how does your business go on, Orsino? |
13218 | And if my choice does not meet with your approval? |
13218 | And if they had failed, what would have happened? |
13218 | And in all other respects exactly like all the women in society to whom you repeat the same commonplaces every day of your life? |
13218 | And is Don Orsino afraid of you? |
13218 | And she would have consented? 13218 And since his marriage?" |
13218 | And that is what brings you? 13218 And the bank refuses to discount any more of his paper?" |
13218 | And the birds, Signore? 13218 And the third plan-- what is it?" |
13218 | And then-- what? |
13218 | And there is nothing which would induce you to go there? |
13218 | And was Monsieur d''Aranjuez also Italian? |
13218 | And weary you with my grievances? 13218 And what did he say? |
13218 | And what in the world is the attraction here? 13218 And what is their caring to you or me?" |
13218 | And why not, if I please? |
13218 | And why not? |
13218 | And why not? |
13218 | And you will not go? |
13218 | And you, Don Orsino, have you ever been loved-- loved in earnest-- by any woman? |
13218 | Another, then? |
13218 | Are all your people out of town? |
13218 | Are her eyes really like these? |
13218 | Are you Italian, then, Madame? |
13218 | Are you accustomed to being doubted, that you ask? |
13218 | Are you afraid to call upon Madame Del Ferice? |
13218 | Are you angry with me still? |
13218 | Are you aware, my father, that you have ruined all my life from the first? 13218 Are you going home in a cab?" |
13218 | Are you going out, Orsino? |
13218 | Are you going to unsay it? |
13218 | Are you going? |
13218 | Are you happy now? |
13218 | Are you in her power? |
13218 | Are you playing with me, Consuelo? |
13218 | Are you really angry? |
13218 | Are you spending the winter in Rome, Madame? |
13218 | Are you sure nothing of the kind has happened here? |
13218 | Are you sure of what you are telling me? |
13218 | Are you sure there is no way? 13218 Are you threatening me again?" |
13218 | At present-- but in the future of all possible possibilities? |
13218 | Bad news, Signor Conte? |
13218 | Beautiful-- eh? 13218 Because I can not and will not stop her? |
13218 | Because I would not receive you? 13218 Because a boy makes the acquaintance of a stranger at a studio--""Oh-- it was at a studio? |
13218 | Because it makes enemies, Madame? |
13218 | Beloved-- no-- how can you think I meant it? |
13218 | But I am not in actual need of money at all--"Then what the devil are you in need of? |
13218 | But how in the world are you going to begin? 13218 But you can not guess what the reason was?" |
13218 | But you know them intimately? |
13218 | But you know your father-- you know his name at least? |
13218 | But you might send him away? |
13218 | But you will come back next winter, will you not, Madame? |
13218 | But you will not? 13218 By Don Orsino?" |
13218 | By circumstances? |
13218 | By the way, Saracinesca, do you not think there might be a little more light just over the left eye? |
13218 | Can I trust you? |
13218 | Can I? |
13218 | Can not marry her? 13218 Can we draw a cheque-- a plain unadorned cheque and not a draft-- for a hundred thousand francs to- day? |
13218 | Can you help me to try my luck-- in a very small way-- in one of the building enterprises you manage? |
13218 | Can you help me to try my luck? |
13218 | Can you not guess? |
13218 | Can you tell me a little more definitely what is the matter? 13218 Could you love me?" |
13218 | Could you not have taken a little more time? |
13218 | Could you spare me a quarter of an hour? |
13218 | Did I say she was not? |
13218 | Did he say that? |
13218 | Did he tell you, before he died-- about me? |
13218 | Did he? |
13218 | Did my maid tell you? |
13218 | Did the mythological personage whose name I have forgotten laugh when the sphynx proposed the riddle to him? |
13218 | Did you find Del Ferice last night? |
13218 | Did you not speak to Gouache about it? |
13218 | Disagreeable? 13218 Discontented?" |
13218 | Do I offend you? |
13218 | Do I? 13218 Do not ask me-- how could I tell you?" |
13218 | Do not men of great genius notoriously forget themselves, forget to eat and drink and dress themselves like Christians? 13218 Do they? |
13218 | Do unfinished houses always look like this? |
13218 | Do you care to talk of me? |
13218 | Do you dare to pass judgment on me after an hour''s acquaintance? |
13218 | Do you dare to think that I care what your birth may be? |
13218 | Do you doubt yourself, that you should doubt me? |
13218 | Do you give me your word that she can not? |
13218 | Do you imagine that I will stand? 13218 Do you know Monsieur Gouache?" |
13218 | Do you know that it is very rude to speak like that? |
13218 | Do you know what this means to you and me? |
13218 | Do you know what you are saying? |
13218 | Do you know why? |
13218 | Do you know, yourself? |
13218 | Do you know,said Orsino,"that all this mystery is a very serious hindrance to friendship?" |
13218 | Do you know? 13218 Do you like comfortable chairs?" |
13218 | Do you love me better than you did then, Corona? |
13218 | Do you love me, Madame? |
13218 | Do you mean me to doubt that Madame d''Aranjuez speaks the truth? |
13218 | Do you mean that Don Orsino leads that sort of life? |
13218 | Do you mean that there are reasons which may prevent me from being a good friend of yours? |
13218 | Do you mean to say that people still have days in Rome? |
13218 | Do you mean to say that you were watching me all winter? |
13218 | Do you mean to tell me that you are in some way in her power, so that you are bound to keep her always? |
13218 | Do you mean to tell me that you have asked that lady to marry you because I suggested it? |
13218 | Do you not know that I would? |
13218 | Do you not know? |
13218 | Do you not see it? 13218 Do you not understand them? |
13218 | Do you notice whether I come or not? |
13218 | Do you read much, my dear Consuelo? |
13218 | Do you remember that I once said I wished you might marry her? |
13218 | Do you think I am too old to become an artist? |
13218 | Do you think he will bring the tiger? |
13218 | Do you think it is a defect? 13218 Do you think it is this sudden interest in business that has changed him so?" |
13218 | Do you think she will come to- day? |
13218 | Do you think so? 13218 Do you think so? |
13218 | Do you think that I would hurt you willingly, in any way? |
13218 | Do you think that any two understand the same thing when they speak of love? |
13218 | Do you think that is necessary? |
13218 | Do you think that is what he means to do? |
13218 | Do you think that you are the kind of man a woman chooses for her friend? |
13218 | Do you think what he said about you so altogether absurd? |
13218 | Do you think you could help me? |
13218 | Do you understand me now? |
13218 | Do you understand that? |
13218 | Do you? |
13218 | Does Corona cut your allowance when you tell fibs? |
13218 | Does he make speeches? |
13218 | Does it not seem to you,he asked,"that if you receive him at all, you might at least conceal something of your hatred for him?" |
13218 | Does the world grow sweeter as one grows older? |
13218 | Don Orsino? 13218 Donna Faustina?" |
13218 | Eh? 13218 Excuse me-- does your wife know her?" |
13218 | For blueness? |
13218 | For how long? |
13218 | Good? 13218 Gouache,"he said, entering the artist''s studio a quarter of an hour later,"do you know anything about Madame d''Aranjuez?" |
13218 | Has a cat five claws? |
13218 | Has anything happened? |
13218 | Has she been here long? |
13218 | Have I given you any right to say that? |
13218 | Have I? 13218 Have you acceptances due to- morrow?" |
13218 | Have you acted like a friend towards me? |
13218 | Have you always thought so? |
13218 | Have you any reason to believe that there is anything irregular about this Madame d''Aranjuez? |
13218 | Have you any reason to suppose that I, and I especially, know anything about this lady? |
13218 | Have you at last heard that your cousin''s tea is good? |
13218 | Have you been drinking from the Trevi fountain by moonlight, like those mad English? |
13218 | Have you lost money? 13218 Have you never heard that a man should always talk to a woman about himself or herself?" |
13218 | Have you not even enough in reserve for that? |
13218 | Have you read him, Madame? |
13218 | Have you rested well? |
13218 | Have you tried Spicca? |
13218 | Have you tried it? |
13218 | Her family? 13218 His father? |
13218 | How can I advise you? 13218 How can I tell? |
13218 | How can I? |
13218 | How can you doubt it? |
13218 | How can you know? 13218 How can you say that-- even if the rest were true?" |
13218 | How can you say that? |
13218 | How could I possibly not be? |
13218 | How do you expect me to occupy myself during the next ten years? |
13218 | How do you know? |
13218 | How long do you think we shall last? |
13218 | How long will all that take? 13218 How long will you stay away?" |
13218 | How much do we owe the bank? |
13218 | How much of that paper do you think Del Ferice has taken up himself? |
13218 | How shall I explain? 13218 How should I know? |
13218 | How should I know? 13218 How should I know?" |
13218 | How should I? 13218 How should you?" |
13218 | How so? |
13218 | How then? |
13218 | How? 13218 I can not talk at all--""Without holding my hands?" |
13218 | I lose myself--"Where? |
13218 | I mean, am I to have nothing to do with the work? |
13218 | I mean-- is she indifferent, cold, in love with some one else? |
13218 | I never heard that--"No? 13218 I offended you the other day, Madame, did I not? |
13218 | I suppose I can always find you if I need your advice-- and you will advise me? |
13218 | I suppose that she will let you know where she is, will she not? |
13218 | I suppose you understand these things, Signor Contini? |
13218 | I told you too much yesterday--"Too much? |
13218 | I? 13218 I? |
13218 | I? 13218 I? |
13218 | If I had imagined that you could be displeased--"Is it so surprising? 13218 If we take another contract from the count,"he said,"is there any reason why we should not take a larger one, if it is to be had? |
13218 | In order to be discontented, as you are? |
13218 | In ten days? 13218 In the social contract? |
13218 | In your carriage? 13218 Indeed? |
13218 | Indeed? |
13218 | Indeed? |
13218 | Instead of that hideous mirror, you mean? 13218 Irreligious? |
13218 | Is Del Ferice a case of that? |
13218 | Is Donna Tullia ill? |
13218 | Is Madame d''Aranjuez coming back next winter? |
13218 | Is it a compliment to compare you to the sky of Italy? |
13218 | Is it a warning? |
13218 | Is it manly to be brutal because you are strong? |
13218 | Is it not perfectly clear? 13218 Is it not splendid?" |
13218 | Is it possible that you will submit to such a thing from a servant? |
13218 | Is it so hard to think of? |
13218 | Is it sure that Madame d''Aranjuez goes to- night? |
13218 | Is it very hard to find such a person? |
13218 | Is it your ambition to be good? |
13218 | Is it? 13218 Is it? |
13218 | Is it? 13218 Is it? |
13218 | Is it? |
13218 | Is it? |
13218 | Is not a tiger a cat? 13218 Is she any relation of your mother''s family, Giovanni?" |
13218 | Is she blue, then? |
13218 | Is that all? 13218 Is that not cynical?" |
13218 | Is that possible? |
13218 | Is that reflection your own? |
13218 | Is there any way of helping you, without knowing your secret? |
13218 | Is this a trial of strength? |
13218 | Is this the way you help me? |
13218 | Is your father so severe with you? |
13218 | Madame d''Aranjuez? |
13218 | Madame? |
13218 | Makes what worse? |
13218 | Married? 13218 May I ask who told you the stories?" |
13218 | May I ask you one serious question? |
13218 | May I come and see you? |
13218 | May I come to- morrow? |
13218 | May I come to- morrow? |
13218 | May I come to- morrow? |
13218 | May I not take you home? |
13218 | May I offer you a cigarette? |
13218 | May I read it? |
13218 | May I say something that strikes me? |
13218 | May I serve the breakfast? |
13218 | Mean? 13218 Mine? |
13218 | Monsieur de Saracinesca, will you not sit down? 13218 My friend? |
13218 | My staying? |
13218 | No right? 13218 No? |
13218 | No? 13218 No? |
13218 | No? 13218 No? |
13218 | Of course-- what else? |
13218 | Of what truth does she speak? 13218 Of what use can it be to tell him those old stories?" |
13218 | Of whom, you have charge? |
13218 | Oh, if I only could-- if you knew how I hate the woman--"But then--"Yes? |
13218 | Oh-- have you? |
13218 | Oh-- it often happens, does it? |
13218 | Oh-- she said that, did she? |
13218 | One does not like people so easily as that,said Madame d''Aragona,"How have you arranged about the seat?" |
13218 | Possible? |
13218 | Prince Saracinesca? |
13218 | Really? |
13218 | Saracinesca? |
13218 | Seriously? |
13218 | Shall I change the damask cloak to a tiger''s skin? 13218 Shall I open the window?" |
13218 | Shall I? |
13218 | Shall we drive, or at least sit in my carriage? 13218 Shall we go in?" |
13218 | Shall we make an appointment for to- morrow? |
13218 | She told you that I was mad? |
13218 | Should I be doing you a service in telling you that we are, or are not related? |
13218 | Since you advise it--"Have I said that I detest you? |
13218 | So long as they leave no sign of age, what does it matter? |
13218 | So soon as that? |
13218 | Speaking of history,he said, after a very slight pause,"why did you thank me yesterday for having got you a card?" |
13218 | Spicca? 13218 Tell it? |
13218 | Tell me the truth, Don Orsino-- have you seen a centime of all these millions which every one is dealing with? 13218 Tell me, Orsino,"he continued, when he had finished the draught,"are you in love with that lady?" |
13218 | Tell me, my friend-- are you unhappy? 13218 That I had not gone to his wife''s party, you would say? |
13218 | That I should love you? |
13218 | That means that they will talk, does it not? 13218 The Jubilee, Madame? |
13218 | The dew- claw? |
13218 | The next sitting? 13218 The painter? |
13218 | The right to be unjust? |
13218 | The usual accommodation, I suppose? 13218 The winter?" |
13218 | Then in heaven''s name, what do you mean, Madame? |
13218 | Then is there no truth in that woman''s statement? |
13218 | Then it is the truth? 13218 Then the way to win a woman''s love is to praise her acquaintances? |
13218 | Then there is no difficulty about discounting? |
13218 | Then what do you mean? |
13218 | Then what in the world is she? |
13218 | Then what possible interest had the maid in inventing the lie? |
13218 | Then why did you act as though you were? |
13218 | Then why did you suddenly cease to visit her? |
13218 | Then why should I not lose, if I take it? |
13218 | Then why should we think differently about the same thing? 13218 Then you are a man of heart?" |
13218 | Then you do not believe in Saints? |
13218 | Then you incline to the belief that she dropped the Signor Aragno quietly overboard in the neighbourhood of the equator? |
13218 | Then you never suspected it? |
13218 | Then you object to my trying this? |
13218 | Then you think me agreeable? |
13218 | Then, if you will allow me? 13218 This dear Gouache-- he is charming, is he not?" |
13218 | This morning? |
13218 | This morning? |
13218 | To Del Ferice? |
13218 | To- morrow? 13218 Tolerably tolerable tolerance tolerates tolerable tolerance intolerably--""You speak Italian?" |
13218 | Truly? |
13218 | Unless you will tell me, how can I know? |
13218 | Upon me? |
13218 | Was it advice? 13218 Was it so pleasant?" |
13218 | Was to have been? |
13218 | We must stop the works instantly--"Why? 13218 Well, Orsino? |
13218 | Well, and if he has? 13218 Well, my boy, are you ruined yet?" |
13218 | Well, then-- what are you waiting for? |
13218 | Well? 13218 Were you at the Jubilee on the first day?" |
13218 | Were you going out together? |
13218 | What I mean by love? 13218 What amuses you?" |
13218 | What are they? |
13218 | What are you for? |
13218 | What are you thinking about? |
13218 | What are you two laughing at? |
13218 | What becomes of me? 13218 What can I say, Madame? |
13218 | What can I say? 13218 What can I say? |
13218 | What can one do? 13218 What can people say?" |
13218 | What could have been her object in the lie? |
13218 | What could you do that others would not do as well, if they could, and with a better right? |
13218 | What danger is she in now? |
13218 | What did he do, mother? 13218 What did she say?" |
13218 | What difference does it make? 13218 What difference does it make?" |
13218 | What difference will it make, if we are married immediately? |
13218 | What difficulty? |
13218 | What do you do with your spare time? |
13218 | What do you mean by that? |
13218 | What do you mean? |
13218 | What do you mean? |
13218 | What do you mean? |
13218 | What do you mean? |
13218 | What do you mean? |
13218 | What do you mean? |
13218 | What do you think it is? |
13218 | What does it matter, when I love you so, and you love me? |
13218 | What does it matter? 13218 What does it matter?" |
13218 | What does it matter? |
13218 | What does it mean? |
13218 | What does that mean? |
13218 | What else is there for him to do? |
13218 | What for? 13218 What had we better do, Contini?" |
13218 | What harm if I do? 13218 What has happened, my friend?" |
13218 | What has that to do with the matter? 13218 What have you been doing to- day?" |
13218 | What have you to say, dearest? |
13218 | What if he falls seriously in love with this woman? |
13218 | What is Del Ferice to me, that I should be made the victim of his suggestions, as you call them? 13218 What is her name?" |
13218 | What is history? |
13218 | What is it, Santi? |
13218 | What is it? |
13218 | What is it? |
13218 | What is she like? |
13218 | What is she then? 13218 What is talent but a combination of the desire to do and the power to accomplish? |
13218 | What is that? |
13218 | What is that? |
13218 | What is that? |
13218 | What is the difference? 13218 What is the matter with you, Orsino? |
13218 | What is the moral failure to me? |
13218 | What is the other story? |
13218 | What is the use of warning? |
13218 | What is there so very unusual about my eyes? |
13218 | What makes you think so? |
13218 | What makes you think so? |
13218 | What may I call you? 13218 What number?" |
13218 | What object? 13218 What objections? |
13218 | What other things? |
13218 | What other things? |
13218 | What shall I say, Madame? |
13218 | What shall I say? 13218 What shall we do this morning?" |
13218 | What shall we talk about, mother? |
13218 | What sort of an assistant? |
13218 | What sort of people are Madame Del Ferice''s friends? |
13218 | What sort of person is he? |
13218 | What then? |
13218 | What then? |
13218 | What things? |
13218 | What was the other deception? |
13218 | What we were laughing at? 13218 What were you going to say about my mother?" |
13218 | What were you going to say? |
13218 | What would happen, if at the right moment the right man could stir such a crowd as this? |
13218 | What would you think if I were not a little severe? |
13218 | What, Madame? |
13218 | What? |
13218 | Where can I find you, to hear your decision? |
13218 | Where did you learn that? |
13218 | Where do you live, Signor Contini? 13218 Where have you been to- day, Orsino?" |
13218 | Where is she? |
13218 | Where we are? |
13218 | Where? 13218 Who are you, my son?" |
13218 | Who can tell? |
13218 | Who is Spicca? |
13218 | Who is he? |
13218 | Who is she? |
13218 | Who is she? |
13218 | Who is that magnificent woman? |
13218 | Who is the lady, my boy? |
13218 | Who knows? 13218 Who knows? |
13218 | Who knows? |
13218 | Who told you that I was a foreigner? |
13218 | Who was the lady who sat with her? |
13218 | Whom have you seen to- day, Consuelo? 13218 Why a pity?" |
13218 | Why are we talking a foreign language? |
13218 | Why are you going at all? |
13218 | Why are you so angry? |
13218 | Why are you so cautious? |
13218 | Why are you so unkind? |
13218 | Why did you kill him? |
13218 | Why did you marry him? |
13218 | Why did you not seize it then? |
13218 | Why do you change so quickly? |
13218 | Why do you hate her so? |
13218 | Why do you laugh? |
13218 | Why do you not say anything? 13218 Why do you receive him at all?" |
13218 | Why do you say that? 13218 Why do you snatch your hand away? |
13218 | Why do you stand aloof and let things go from bad to worse when you might really do good by joining in the affairs of the day? |
13218 | Why do you struggle? 13218 Why do you take the trouble to deny such things?" |
13218 | Why do you talk of him? |
13218 | Why do you thank me? |
13218 | Why do you wish to see us together? |
13218 | Why does she not exist, as you call it? 13218 Why have you not said the same thing before? |
13218 | Why him? |
13218 | Why least with me? |
13218 | Why not go to Sorrento? |
13218 | Why not here, then? |
13218 | Why not say our love? |
13218 | Why not say to- day? |
13218 | Why not, dear one? 13218 Why not?" |
13218 | Why not? |
13218 | Why not? |
13218 | Why not? |
13218 | Why say, Monsieur? |
13218 | Why should I be afraid? 13218 Why should I not do as I please?" |
13218 | Why should I not? |
13218 | Why should I? 13218 Why should you do anything? |
13218 | Why should you know them? |
13218 | Why will you not tell me? |
13218 | Why, again? |
13218 | Why? 13218 Why? |
13218 | Why? |
13218 | Why? |
13218 | Why? |
13218 | Why? |
13218 | Why? |
13218 | Why? |
13218 | Will you believe me? |
13218 | Will you do nothing for my asking? |
13218 | Will you forgive me? |
13218 | Will you give me a cup of tea, Flavia? |
13218 | Will you introduce me? |
13218 | Will you kindly explain yourself? |
13218 | Will you let me go, if I forgive you? |
13218 | Will you not even tell me why you send me away? |
13218 | Will you not love me to- morrow? |
13218 | Will you not take my cab? 13218 Will you play, Count?" |
13218 | Will you stay if I ask you to? |
13218 | Will you tell me how? 13218 Will you write out the address for me?" |
13218 | Without indiscretion--? |
13218 | Would the information be of any use to you? |
13218 | Would you advise me to enter upon such a business without my father''s knowledge? |
13218 | Would you like the animal alive or dead? |
13218 | Would you like to see my certificates, Signor Principe? 13218 Yes-- but there is one thing I wanted to ask you--""What is that?" |
13218 | You are very fond of music, then? |
13218 | You are? 13218 You can not be in earnest?" |
13218 | You do not always believe that I love you? |
13218 | You do not lack-- what shall I say? 13218 You do not mind my staying a few minutes?" |
13218 | You envy Gouache? 13218 You hate Spicca?" |
13218 | You have never shot one? |
13218 | You have no applicant, then? |
13218 | You have suspected her before? |
13218 | You know her? |
13218 | You mean that Madame d''Aranjuez is-- mentally deranged, and that you are her keeper? 13218 You mean the patient and not the agent, I suppose?" |
13218 | You think that Madame d''Aranjuez had instructed her? |
13218 | You will allow me to say a few words? 13218 You will let him send it to the Salon in Paris, of course?" |
13218 | You will not do me this service? |
13218 | You will not make me regret having told you this-- will you? |
13218 | You will not stay a little longer? 13218 You will not?" |
13218 | You will send the woman away of course? |
13218 | You would not accept? 13218 You would not care to learn the mandolin yourself, Signor Principe? |
13218 | You wrote? |
13218 | You? 13218 You?" |
13218 | Young? 13218 Your sadness? |
13218 | Yours? |
13218 | ''Business? |
13218 | ''That old Methuselah of a Saracinesca, how has he the face to go on living?'' |
13218 | ''The Church, perhaps?'' |
13218 | ''The Church? |
13218 | ''What? |
13218 | A month or two?" |
13218 | After all, why should you risk anything? |
13218 | Am I right or not?" |
13218 | Am I right, or not?" |
13218 | And I write now-- why? |
13218 | And Spanish?" |
13218 | And do you know? |
13218 | And do you think I do not suffer at the mere idea of it?" |
13218 | And now you say that we must not love each other, as though we had a choice to make-- and why? |
13218 | And to whom? |
13218 | And what am I to do in the meantime?" |
13218 | And who is Madame d''Aranjuez? |
13218 | And why not now, if then? |
13218 | And you can tell me nothing?" |
13218 | And you, Don Orsino, will you not come too? |
13218 | And you, Don Orsino? |
13218 | And you, Ugo? |
13218 | And you?" |
13218 | Are other people curious, too? |
13218 | Are there such women nowadays? |
13218 | Are we to talk for ever of oysters, and business and snakes? |
13218 | Are you afraid of me?" |
13218 | Are you ashamed to answer?" |
13218 | Are you brown or are you olive, my friend? |
13218 | Are you dangerous?" |
13218 | Are you going to do that?" |
13218 | Are you going to talk to me about Jean- Jacques?" |
13218 | Are you going, Prince?" |
13218 | Are you happy, as well as peaceful? |
13218 | Are you ill? |
13218 | Are you in love?" |
13218 | Are you nearly related to Madame d''Aranjuez?" |
13218 | Are you not rich? |
13218 | Are you not the heir, and will you not be the head of the family some day? |
13218 | Are you not utterly out of sympathy with your surroundings? |
13218 | Are you so modest as that?" |
13218 | Are you so sensitive about her?" |
13218 | Are you still working at that business in which you were so much interested? |
13218 | Are you surprised? |
13218 | Are you the typical woman of the ending century?" |
13218 | Are you vain?" |
13218 | Because my first acquaintance in Rome-- who was Gouache-- is so''indifferent,''and because you-- my second-- are a pronounced clerical? |
13218 | Become the blind instrument of a scheming, dishonest ministry? |
13218 | Besides, I suppose you would lend me a few thousands if we needed them, would you not, mother?" |
13218 | Better or worse? |
13218 | But even then, after you had taken the trouble to marry my mother, why did you give me another name? |
13218 | But it would be kind of you-- I should be grateful if you would tell me-- has any woman ever loved you dearly?" |
13218 | But my dear Don Orsino, why should I refuse pleasant things when they come into my life?" |
13218 | But tell me, is it not absurd that you should hate these people as you do-- you can not deny it-- merely because they are whites?" |
13218 | But to keep a maid whom you can turn away at any moment--""Yes-- but can I?" |
13218 | But what does it matter? |
13218 | But what in the world does Gouache want of it? |
13218 | But what of that? |
13218 | But why has not the count given all this work to some old established firm of his acquaintance?" |
13218 | But you do believe that I love you, dearly, tenderly, very-- well, no matter how-- you believe it?" |
13218 | But, after all, why need I appear before the public?" |
13218 | But-- dear-- do you know where we are?" |
13218 | By your own? |
13218 | Can I do anything? |
13218 | Can I say more than that? |
13218 | Can more be said for these? |
13218 | Can not one quote a common proverb?" |
13218 | Can she be blamed for that? |
13218 | Can submission go farther?" |
13218 | Can we not talk freely for half an hour, as we used to talk, and then say good- bye and part good friends until you come to Rome again?" |
13218 | Can you give me any advice?" |
13218 | Can you not even tell me why you hate him, or ought to hate him?" |
13218 | Can you not take my part against that graceless husband of yours? |
13218 | Can you not teach me?" |
13218 | Come-- how much do you want? |
13218 | Consuelo, my dear, do you like oysters, or do you not? |
13218 | Consuelo-- my darling-- are you out of your senses?" |
13218 | Could I forget it?" |
13218 | Could San Giacinto help him to occupy himself by investing the sum in a building speculation? |
13218 | Could civilisation do more? |
13218 | Could she not help him to discover where it lay in this case? |
13218 | Could they not write to each other and find it out together? |
13218 | Did I put water in my wine and sit up like a model little boy at my papa''s table and spend my evenings in carrying my mamma''s fan? |
13218 | Did I spend my youth over accounts, in the society of an architect? |
13218 | Did he manage it?" |
13218 | Did he not do likewise in his youth?" |
13218 | Did she call me a devil in her letter?" |
13218 | Did she mean what she said, or more, or less? |
13218 | Did you ever hear a harsh word from his lips during those months of waiting? |
13218 | Did you think I was in earnest? |
13218 | Did you think you were any better than Montevarchi? |
13218 | Did you waste the best years of your life in counting bricks and measuring mortar?" |
13218 | Do I look as though I were indifferent?" |
13218 | Do they still teach the dear old tale in these modern schools? |
13218 | Do they talk about me?" |
13218 | Do you believe in mental suggestion, Madame?" |
13218 | Do you believe they really exist? |
13218 | Do you dislike being thanked for your good offices? |
13218 | Do you hear me? |
13218 | Do you know anything about her?" |
13218 | Do you know that bad as our farming is, and absurd as is our system of land taxation, we are food exporters, to a small extent? |
13218 | Do you know that it is sometimes more profitable to take over a half- finished building, than to begin a new one? |
13218 | Do you know that there is blood of Cola di Rienzo in my veins?" |
13218 | Do you know that when the Serristori barracks were blown up she ran out alone to find me merely because she thought I might have been killed? |
13218 | Do you know what he did? |
13218 | Do you know what he once said to me? |
13218 | Do you know what sort of a place this world is?" |
13218 | Do you know what we rich men, or we men who are to be rich, are expected to be? |
13218 | Do you know what will happen? |
13218 | Do you know where the millions really are? |
13218 | Do you know why he is ruined?" |
13218 | Do you know, dear? |
13218 | Do you know? |
13218 | Do you like him?" |
13218 | Do you mean to say that a young girl-- you were nothing more-- has a right to throw away her life out of sentiment by making a promise of that kind? |
13218 | Do you mind calling that cab?" |
13218 | Do you mind if I stay till she comes? |
13218 | Do you not feel it?" |
13218 | Do you not hate the Corso as an omnibus horse hates it? |
13218 | Do you not think so yourself?" |
13218 | Do you not think so, Don Orsino?" |
13218 | Do you not want them any more?" |
13218 | Do you remember all you said to me?" |
13218 | Do you remember how Beethoven congratulated a young composer after the first performance of his opera? |
13218 | Do you remember how angry I was long ago, because you agreed to meet Del Ferice in my drawing- room? |
13218 | Do you remember our first interview on the steps of Monte Citorio? |
13218 | Do you remember what I said I would do to any man by whom harm comes to her? |
13218 | Do you remember what you said when I bade you good- night at the window of your carriage after Del Ferice''s dinner? |
13218 | Do you remember, Tullia? |
13218 | Do you see me as Companion and general amuser to an old lady-- over seventy years of age? |
13218 | Do you see? |
13218 | Do you still hold my hand?" |
13218 | Do you suppose I do not know how they talk? |
13218 | Do you suppose that I shall abandon you after having led you into this scrape, and after having learned to like you and understand your talent? |
13218 | Do you suppose that nobody is aware of our-- our intimacy during the last month?" |
13218 | Do you think I mean to spend six months alone in your company, especially when you are away all day at that wretched office of yours? |
13218 | Do you think she would have the right to call herself a faithful woman?" |
13218 | Do you think she would respect herself more or less? |
13218 | Do you think that not to love is the normal condition of mankind?" |
13218 | Do you think that ten francs is enough?" |
13218 | Do you think that would be easy? |
13218 | Do you understand? |
13218 | Do you understand? |
13218 | Does that constitute nationality?" |
13218 | Does that satisfy you?" |
13218 | Does your father know about it?" |
13218 | Donna Maria?" |
13218 | Everybody hates her-- I saw that by the way they bowed to her while we were waiting-- why? |
13218 | French, Spanish-- South American?" |
13218 | Go to one of the clerical deputies and say that you want the ticket for your wife--""And then?" |
13218 | Had I known all the truth on that afternoon-- do you remember the thunderstorm? |
13218 | Had she not spent twenty such years herself? |
13218 | Has anything happened?" |
13218 | Has no one got a tiger? |
13218 | Has she been here long?" |
13218 | Has she spoken to you about it?" |
13218 | Have there been any more failures to- day?" |
13218 | Have you any other personal observations to make? |
13218 | Have you forgotten what I told you yesterday?" |
13218 | Have you forgotten what happened yesterday? |
13218 | Have you looked at the card?" |
13218 | Have you never thought of plotting on your side?" |
13218 | Have you no stronger expression than that?" |
13218 | Have you not received the most liberal education? |
13218 | Have you not the world before you? |
13218 | Have you quarrelled with him, or had words together?" |
13218 | Have you thought of them all?" |
13218 | Here is another dish of poison-- do you call that thing a fish, Checco? |
13218 | How can I believe you?" |
13218 | How can I tell how much you love me?" |
13218 | How can I turn my head? |
13218 | How can matters have changed so suddenly?" |
13218 | How can you judge of my life? |
13218 | How could Orsino understand all that had gone before? |
13218 | How could a woman be placed in such a position?" |
13218 | How could he fail?" |
13218 | How did you find it out?" |
13218 | How do I know it? |
13218 | How do you know what happened to me? |
13218 | How have you acted, how have you spoken with me? |
13218 | How is your mother?" |
13218 | How long ago was that? |
13218 | How many claws has a tiger, Don Orsino? |
13218 | How shall we do it?" |
13218 | How so?" |
13218 | How would her son judge her? |
13218 | How?" |
13218 | I am not curious, am I, Orsino? |
13218 | I ask you again, am I right or wrong?" |
13218 | I do not know whether you have any right to be-- have you?" |
13218 | I had not thought of that; and he is dead, you say?" |
13218 | I saw you speak to him and get into his carriage-- was it not you?" |
13218 | I should have had no ticket-- where shall I sit?" |
13218 | I should not have thought--""No? |
13218 | I suppose I do not exist? |
13218 | I torment you? |
13218 | I wish to know why you have hated your daughter all her life, why you persecute her in every way, why you--""Will you kindly stop?" |
13218 | I wonder whether this woman expects me to tell her who I am? |
13218 | I wonder who she is?" |
13218 | I, who carried a rifle at Mentana? |
13218 | If I do?" |
13218 | If I were mad I should--""What?" |
13218 | If Paolo and Francesca had not been murdered, would they have loved each other for ever? |
13218 | If San Giacinto thought farming the great profession of the future, why did he not try it himself? |
13218 | If he can not discount any more, what will happen?" |
13218 | If that is not enough I will say more-- I will even ask you to forgive me-- can I do more?" |
13218 | If there were no contrasts what would the world be? |
13218 | If you desire the happiness of Madame d''Aranjuez why do you wish us to fall in love with each other? |
13218 | In a good cause? |
13218 | Is Del Ferice coming this afternoon?" |
13218 | Is anything the matter?" |
13218 | Is he painting you in skins-- the primeval youth of the forest?" |
13218 | Is he perhaps painting your portrait?" |
13218 | Is he punctual?" |
13218 | Is it brutal to suggest that a young and beautiful woman has a right not to be compromised? |
13218 | Is it incredible to you that a woman should love twice? |
13218 | Is it incredible to you that, loving one person, a woman should respect the memory of another and a solemn promise given to that other? |
13218 | Is it not true, Corona? |
13218 | Is it not true? |
13218 | Is it possible that you have been forgotten?" |
13218 | Is it right of me to say it? |
13218 | Is it the inspiration that you need?" |
13218 | Is it?" |
13218 | Is not a vow made ten times more sacred when the one for whom it was taken is gone? |
13218 | Is not an oath an oath, however it is taken? |
13218 | Is not that a sign that you need no friend at all, and that your questions are not seriously meant?" |
13218 | Is not that true?" |
13218 | Is she a-- an incorrect person?" |
13218 | Is she, Spicca?" |
13218 | Is that a difference? |
13218 | Is that a satisfaction to you? |
13218 | Is that all you know?" |
13218 | Is that any reason why you should compromise her reputation as you propose to do?" |
13218 | Is that her own name?" |
13218 | Is that it?" |
13218 | Is that it?" |
13218 | Is that it?" |
13218 | Is that the truth, or not?" |
13218 | Is that the way you talk to your compatriots?" |
13218 | Is that too mysterious? |
13218 | Is that true?" |
13218 | Is there any difference between my promise and that made before the altar by a woman who gives up the world? |
13218 | Is there so much joy in your life that you can despise this? |
13218 | Is there, Ascanio?" |
13218 | It is amusing, is it not? |
13218 | It is necessary, is it not?" |
13218 | It is not often that I ask anything of you, is it? |
13218 | Marriageable? |
13218 | Married? |
13218 | May I not tell you how I love you? |
13218 | May I say as much as that of myself?" |
13218 | May I take it?" |
13218 | Must I go all over it again? |
13218 | My dear friend, why not be a farmer?" |
13218 | Never mind-- we were talking-- where were we?" |
13218 | Not Count Spicca?" |
13218 | Of art? |
13218 | Of caprice? |
13218 | Of consistency?" |
13218 | Of course you never got the letter?" |
13218 | Of course-- what do you expect? |
13218 | Of what use is it for her to stay? |
13218 | Old? |
13218 | One, two, three, four-- are you sure a tiger has only four claws? |
13218 | Or have you given it up and gone back to the life you used to hate so thoroughly? |
13218 | Or shall we be able to draw it to- morrow? |
13218 | Or the written directions of the doctors? |
13218 | Quite dead-- but do not say that I was afraid--""Afraid? |
13218 | Quite sure?" |
13218 | Sacrifice your convictions? |
13218 | Seriously, do you think that any intelligent being would consider you bound by such a promise? |
13218 | Shall I be here next month, next week? |
13218 | Shall I cultivate a little more assurance of manner?" |
13218 | Shall we name an hour? |
13218 | Shall we talk of you, then, Madame?" |
13218 | Should I be any better, if I broke mine, than the nun who broke hers?" |
13218 | Should I understand that, too?" |
13218 | Since I am here, shall I sit for you? |
13218 | Since I was your daughter why did I not bear your name when I was a little girl? |
13218 | So nobody gave you a word of encouragement?" |
13218 | Tell me-- has he really made money? |
13218 | That is next month, is it not?" |
13218 | The only question is, how are we to begin? |
13218 | The poor Signora has had terrible trouble during the last few years, and at times-- you understand? |
13218 | The question is, can they be sold?" |
13218 | The usual cash, I suppose, Signor Principe? |
13218 | Then I go as your wife?" |
13218 | Then she has told you about those certificates?" |
13218 | Then what are you?" |
13218 | Then why say that it is only approximately true?" |
13218 | Then why should not all the rest be possible? |
13218 | These men of genius-- what would you have? |
13218 | This once?" |
13218 | Twelve, fourteen, fifteen months? |
13218 | Very like real life, is it not? |
13218 | Was San Giacinto more encouraging than he? |
13218 | Was it cowardly of him to face the first swordsman in Europe? |
13218 | Was that necessary? |
13218 | Was the sum sufficient as a beginning? |
13218 | Was there not a fourth somewhere? |
13218 | Well, must I tell you? |
13218 | Well? |
13218 | What about her?" |
13218 | What becomes of religion? |
13218 | What did I say? |
13218 | What did she try to make you believe?" |
13218 | What did you expect? |
13218 | What difference could it make? |
13218 | What do you say, Don Orsino?" |
13218 | What do you think of my portrait? |
13218 | What do you think that chance was? |
13218 | What have I done to- day that you should torment me as you do?" |
13218 | What have I done? |
13218 | What have I said? |
13218 | What is become of that old time-- that was an hour ago?" |
13218 | What is goodness, my friend? |
13218 | What is it, love? |
13218 | What is it?" |
13218 | What is she like?" |
13218 | What is that?" |
13218 | What is the best way?" |
13218 | What is the reason?" |
13218 | What is the worst thing you can do to your social enemy? |
13218 | What is this person? |
13218 | What is to become of young men brought up in that way? |
13218 | What nauseous mess are we to swallow to- night? |
13218 | What right has your father to laugh at you? |
13218 | What then?" |
13218 | What was it?" |
13218 | What was the peasant of Aquaviva, for instance, to Orsino? |
13218 | What will you do?" |
13218 | What woman who has been first for a quarter of a century can give up her place without a sigh? |
13218 | What would such a woman feel, if she found herself forgetting such a love as that after two or three years, for another man? |
13218 | What would they represent to us? |
13218 | What would you think if I were not a little severe, I say? |
13218 | What? |
13218 | When may I be so fortunate as to see you again, Madame?" |
13218 | Where is the creature''s thumb-- what do you call it? |
13218 | Where were we an hour ago? |
13218 | Where will he find another Andrea Contini and Company to make worthless property valuable for him? |
13218 | Who can say? |
13218 | Who gave you the address? |
13218 | Who gave you the address? |
13218 | Who has told you that legend? |
13218 | Who is he?" |
13218 | Who is she?" |
13218 | Who knows what new surprises history might have found for her play? |
13218 | Who knows? |
13218 | Who knows? |
13218 | Who knows? |
13218 | Who knows?" |
13218 | Who was she?" |
13218 | Whom did you think I meant? |
13218 | Why Spicca?" |
13218 | Why did you change the subject just now?" |
13218 | Why did you not tell me the truth in the summer, Orsino? |
13218 | Why do you not laugh?" |
13218 | Why do you stay? |
13218 | Why do you take such a gloomy view, Madame?" |
13218 | Why have you let me imagine that you were prospering all along, when you have been and are at the point of failure? |
13218 | Why imagine anything so impossible?" |
13218 | Why not? |
13218 | Why not? |
13218 | Why not? |
13218 | Why should I refuse all that? |
13218 | Why should he not walk with Madame d''Aragona and talk to her? |
13218 | Why should it be? |
13218 | Why should not I?" |
13218 | Why should she not understand him now, when he most needed a friend, and give him sympathy now, when he stood most in need of it? |
13218 | Why should you lift a hand?" |
13218 | Why should you not remain? |
13218 | Why? |
13218 | Why? |
13218 | Why? |
13218 | Why? |
13218 | Will they say them?" |
13218 | Will you allow me the honour of undertaking the matter?" |
13218 | Will you believe that I am sorry for it, though I only dimly comprehend my fault? |
13218 | Will you come into my office?" |
13218 | Will you have the patience to read what I write? |
13218 | Will you lend it to me?" |
13218 | Will you name some of those reasons-- or even one?" |
13218 | Will you not come and dine with us, Madame? |
13218 | Will you send me your architect to- morrow, since you are so kind as to offer his help?" |
13218 | Will you tell me?" |
13218 | Will you try to read my explanation?" |
13218 | With, a Saracinesca and a Gouache to defend your life, Madame? |
13218 | Would it be an act of friendship to free you from her or not?" |
13218 | Would it suit you?" |
13218 | Would not your lodging do?" |
13218 | Would you have me break such a vow?" |
13218 | Would you like that?" |
13218 | Would you not be willing to give me lessons in book- keeping instead of teaching some one else to play the mandolin?" |
13218 | Would you really like to know what I am doing?" |
13218 | Yet there are heroes--""Where?" |
13218 | You can not? |
13218 | You do not understand? |
13218 | You mean his suggestion that I should try a little speculation? |
13218 | You mean that? |
13218 | You remember that little affair last year, in England? |
13218 | You remember the story about Lucrezia Ferris? |
13218 | You understand now? |
13218 | You who are enthusiastic, can you not help us?" |
13218 | You will excuse me?" |
13218 | You will forgive me? |
13218 | You will not let me try?" |
13218 | You would never have thought of a turret, would you, Don Orsino?" |
13218 | because I do not speak Italian? |