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 |
---|---|
39753 | A sleigh- ride den? |
39753 | AS KATRINA PASSED THROUGH THE STORE"''I MAY GO, MAY I NOT?'' |
39753 | Ach, Gott, das war wundervoll, wundervoll,said the baker,"but tell me vy you stayed so long away?" |
39753 | Ach, Katrina, vy t''row so goot stuff away on dose children? 39753 An''are ye insinooatin'', Misther Rafferty, that my son would ever wear an old brass ring? |
39753 | An''did ye mind, Misther Rafferty,she said with a little brightness,"did ye mind, I say, that Michael had the gold ring on his finger?" |
39753 | An''does that drug- store man lay out to furnish me with the meals? 39753 And are they all sold?" |
39753 | And now it''s him that is dead, and we''ve not even a meal in the pantry-- no, nor pantry neither, and what''ll become of us now? |
39753 | And what would the likes of me be doing with everything gone, but to be getting some money to come with? 39753 Are ye sure of all that, Misther Rafferty?" |
39753 | Biddy, darling,he cried,"sure ye''re not grievin''on the blessid Christmas Eve? |
39753 | Bridget M''Carty, is it them same hen aitin''s ye''re givin''us for our dinner the morrow? 39753 Bridget M''Carty,"demanded Granny,"what on earth do ye be workin''at there that ye be puttin''out me eyes fairly, with splashin''soapsuds in them? |
39753 | But wherever did you get it? |
39753 | Dat cake? 39753 Dhramin''is it, Oi''d be?" |
39753 | Dot? 39753 Envyin''me, would she?" |
39753 | Fithers makes the birds, did ye say, Bridget? |
39753 | Hello, vat you vant? |
39753 | How come dat you forget? 39753 How many be she a- sending?" |
39753 | I''ve brought you as grand a lot of dishes as ever I saw, and do you mind them posies they have? 39753 Is he son of dat Herr Frederick Hermann dat knows not so much to stick to one job steady?" |
39753 | Is it a hen ye dreamed ye were? |
39753 | Is it tay ye''re afther havin''? |
39753 | Oh, my God, what''s this? |
39753 | Sure? 39753 Then would them saints be getting ear- trumpets like Tim Barney''s grandmother?" |
39753 | Vat did you do mit dose Christmas puddings, already? |
39753 | Vat for dat big order not delivered, and vone of mein goot customers dat leaves me much moneys? 39753 Vat''s the matter mit you?" |
39753 | Vell, vell, ain''dt one enough? |
39753 | Wait awhile,--tell me,--was you Mr. Widow M''Carty? |
39753 | What have they to do? 39753 What kind of rasonin''is that, sure? |
39753 | What''s that you''ve been buying? |
39753 | What''s to be done with the leavin''s of them thirteen puddin''s, the unlucky things? |
39753 | Who has not his pudding got? 39753 Who would I be then, but Michael M''Carty? |
39753 | Widdy, widdy, is it? |
39753 | Would they not make such a handsome window with a bit of Christmas holly on each of them? |
39753 | ''Is that all ye want?'' |
39753 | ''What would you buy?'' |
39753 | ***** But where was the faithful Hans Kleinhardt who was personally responsible for the safe delivery of those thirteen puddings? |
39753 | An''is she not ev''ry bit as fine a child as yer Michael when he wor a baby?" |
39753 | An''look at them puddin''s,--""Puddin''s? |
39753 | An''what difference does it make what kind of fithers a bird has whin he''s picked, tell me that? |
39753 | An''where''s them childers that was to be comin''home at twilve? |
39753 | And I may go?" |
39753 | And I says to Terence,''what''s two of them with twelve of us?'' |
39753 | Are you going to give them away?" |
39753 | At home haf I not said how I send out one puddings each to mein best customers, and on die card my compliments?" |
39753 | But tell me quick, where are they, and are they alive, all alive?" |
39753 | But vere haf you been this long time? |
39753 | Could n''t one of the clerks do it?" |
39753 | Den how come all dose fish at night in his basket?" |
39753 | Did any von send the Widow M''Carty her cake?" |
39753 | Finally Granny M''Carty, who had noticed Bridget''s restlessness, exclaimed:"Are ye crazy, then, Bridget M''Carty? |
39753 | Haf you said how I must haf it?" |
39753 | Haf you said how I must pay my insurance, and all der clerks in dis big store, and all der extras for Christmas? |
39753 | How will I pay for dem if my moneys comes not back again? |
39753 | I may go, may I not?" |
39753 | I will mark it, and you wo n''t forget to see that it is delivered, will you?" |
39753 | Is it my cap yer sousin''up and down, now? |
39753 | It''s not much we have, but when Dinny and Terence grow a bit more--""Grow is it?" |
39753 | Joost to trow my moneys away on you?" |
39753 | May I have a cake to send to the Widow M''Carty? |
39753 | Now, now, boys, will you mind your mother, and go to bed like good children, and be getting up bright and early with Christmas morning faces on you?" |
39753 | Oh, worra, worra, whatever shall I do without my Michael?" |
39753 | Puddin''s?" |
39753 | Saint Michael an''the old dragon, ye mind,--""An''is it meself ye''re afther callin''an old dragon?" |
39753 | Should I gif everyt''ing away? |
39753 | Tell me that now?" |
39753 | Vat does he?" |
39753 | Vat for a man is der Johann dat of a morning he comes to ask you, Tochterchen? |
39753 | Vat you tink, Hans,"--showing him the tissue papers,"joost de ting to wrap dot puddings in, nicht wahr? |
39753 | Vy should I send to the Widow M''Carty one cake? |
39753 | Was meint das? |
39753 | What would you be telling me that for again? |
39753 | When Grandad Rafferty heard this compliment to their domicile, he said,--"Picteresk is it? |
39753 | Why would she be a widdy, and me working and saving as a respectable husband should for her?" |
39753 | Wo ist dat Hans Kleinhardt?" |
39753 | Would ye, Mrs. M''Carty? |
39753 | You hear dat now?" |
39753 | You t''ink der fisherman he put dat worm on dat hook to feed der fish, eh? |
39753 | You tink I hire you for noddings, eh? |
39753 | You''re patterns in manners when you''re asleep, but where do you keep your decency daytimes? |
39753 | [ Illustration:"''I MAY GO, MAY I NOT?''"] |
39753 | and he smiled and said,"Only once is one young!--But who asked you to go on dat sleigh- ride?" |
39753 | cried Granny, when she saw Bridget setting out the dishes,"are ye usin''them dishes me poor b''y bought with his hard earnin''s? |
4729 | Ah well,said Mr. Hennessy,"who cares?" |
4729 | All over? |
4729 | Am I again''all books, says ye? 4729 An''so th''war is over?" |
4729 | An''what about th''Ph''lippeens? |
4729 | An''where have all these advintures occurred, d''ye say? 4729 An''why not, Hinnissy? |
4729 | Ar- re all th''people West iv th''park shootin''men? |
4729 | But if Hor''ce Greeley was alive today where''d he be? 4729 But if all thim gr- reat powers, as they say thimsilves, was f''r to attack us, d''ye know what I''d do? |
4729 | But whin th''decision is carried to th''pris''ner, th''warden says''Who?'' 4729 But whin?" |
4729 | By th''way,said Mr. Hennessy with an air of polite curiosity,"what relation''s he to th''impror iv Germany? |
4729 | D''ye ra- ally think a man ought to marry on twinty- five dollars? |
4729 | D''ye think a foreign fleet cud capture this counthry? |
4729 | D''ye think people likes th''newspapers iv th''prisint time? |
4729 | D''ye think they''re printed f''r fun? |
4729 | Did he rayform? |
4729 | Has he divided th''profits? |
4729 | Has n''t there annything happened? 4729 How did he do it?" |
4729 | How manny pitchers has he painted? |
4729 | How''s that? |
4729 | I wondher what Tiddy Rosenfelt thinks iv it? |
4729 | Now, what kind iv a man ought a woman to marry? 4729 So it has been done at last, has it?" |
4729 | Well, what wud ye think if ye''d had to intertain a German Prince unawares? 4729 What about?" |
4729 | What d''ye think iv th''man down in Pinnsylvanya who says th''Lord an''him is partners in a coal mine? |
4729 | What did ye say th''gintleman''s name was? |
4729 | What do I think iv him? 4729 What else wud ye have him do? |
4729 | What thribe did ye say they belonged to? 4729 What was it all about, says ye? |
4729 | What was it? |
4729 | What''s beet sugar? |
4729 | What''s he been doin''? |
4729 | What''s it all about? |
4729 | What''s it done f''r th''wurruld? 4729 What''s that?" |
4729 | Where? |
4729 | Who''d ye sind? |
4729 | Who''s Sherlock Holmes? |
4729 | Who''s that? |
4729 | Why do they do it? |
4729 | Why shud annywan want to go to th''North Pole? 4729 Ye go where?" |
4729 | Ye say he see him do it? |
4729 | Ye was niver marrid? |
4729 | ''Ar- re ye still at th''art?'' |
4729 | ''But what ar- re th''immygrants doin''that''s roonous to us?'' |
4729 | ''But what wud ye do with th''offscourin''iv Europe?'' |
4729 | ''Can ye do me?'' |
4729 | ''Did he escape?'' |
4729 | ''Gin''rous?'' |
4729 | ''Good hivins have I f''rgotten somewan?'' |
4729 | ''Has Mitchigan seceded?'' |
4729 | ''How ar- re ye gettin''on with th''Cyanide case, judge?'' |
4729 | ''How does it go?'' |
4729 | ''Is Mars inhabited?'' |
4729 | ''Is that what this is?'' |
4729 | ''Th''future iv th''Columbya river salmon,''''Is white lead good f''r th''complexion?'' |
4729 | ''Thrue f''r ye, Miles Standish,''says I;''but what wud ye do?'' |
4729 | ''What time is it?'' |
4729 | ''What''s it called?'' |
4729 | ''What''s that outlandish chune?'' |
4729 | ''What''s ye''er spishilty?'' |
4729 | ''Who ar- re ye?'' |
4729 | ''Who ar- re ye?'' |
4729 | ''Who will me brave frind have go through with this here austere but hail- fellow inquiry?'' |
4729 | ''Wud ye go back?'' |
4729 | A throlley car? |
4729 | Afther makin''a cinch, is it proper f''r to always kick th''critter in th''stomach or on''y whin ye feel like it? |
4729 | Ai n''t I a good newspaper? |
4729 | Ai n''t it cold enough here?" |
4729 | An''aven if ye get up near th''pole, what''s it good f''r? |
4729 | An''do I object to th''pursuit iv lithrachoor? |
4729 | An''does he get annything f''r it? |
4729 | An''whin ye''d shut th''dure on him, ye''d say:''Well, what d''ye think iv that?''" |
4729 | Ar- re his accounts sthraight? |
4729 | Ar- re those shoes ye have on ye''er feet? |
4729 | Be Mulligan''s Sloppy Weather out iv O''Hannigan''s Diana iv th''Slough? |
4729 | But how do I think about it? |
4729 | But where were they? |
4729 | Cuba vs. Beet Sugar"What''s all this about Cubia an''th''Ph''lippeens?" |
4729 | Cud frindship go farther? |
4729 | D''ye know annything about his parents? |
4729 | D''ye read thim all th''time?'' |
4729 | D''ye think so? |
4729 | D''ye think this is a annyooal incyclopejee?'' |
4729 | D''ye think ye can get home all right? |
4729 | Descinded, but how far? |
4729 | Did he go out iv nights? |
4729 | Did he lave much?'' |
4729 | Did n''t I tell ye he is a killer? |
4729 | Did ye iver go to an Artic exploration letcher? |
4729 | Does Miranda prisint no atthractions to th''young men iv th''neighborhood, does her overskirt dhrag, an''is she poor with th''gas- range? |
4729 | Had Dorsey said annything to him that wud''ve made him despondent? |
4729 | Has n''t anny wan been-- been kilt?" |
4729 | He has fought f''r thim an''what have they done f''r him? |
4729 | He woke up an''rubbed his eyes an''says,''Where am I?'' |
4729 | How ar- re ye, ol''commerade- in- arms? |
4729 | How can such a low blaggard as that insult me? |
4729 | How d''ye make it out, Hinnissy? |
4729 | How long shud a tinderfoot dance befure he is entitled to live? |
4729 | How much have ye got?'' |
4729 | I ast ye, I ast ye, ye fine little boys, is it meet an''proper, nay, is it meat an''dhrink f''r us, to punish him?'' |
4729 | If I cud fly d''ye think I''d want to walk?" |
4729 | If dhrivin''a horse in a cart is a game, why not dhrive a delivery wagon an''carry things around? |
4729 | If''tis fun to wurruk why not do some rale wurruk? |
4729 | If''tis spoort to run an autymobill, why not run a locymotive? |
4729 | Is Malachi near- sighted, peevish, averse to th''suds, an''ca n''t tell whether th''three in th''front yard is blue or green? |
4729 | Is he th''son or th''nevvew?" |
4729 | Is it a law that prevints thim fr''m marryin''thim fresh- faced, clear- eyed daughters iv ol''Albion or is it fear? |
4729 | Is this th''meelin- yum?'' |
4729 | Jus''as th''comp''ny was breakin''up a man whose gaiters creaked rose an''said:''Is n''t there wan more toast?'' |
4729 | Kilt a man is it? |
4729 | Modesty where was thy blush? |
4729 | Money and Matrimony"Can a man marry on twinty- five dollars?" |
4729 | Newspaper Publicity"Was ye iver in th''pa- apers?" |
4729 | No? |
4729 | No? |
4729 | Now what''s made th''change? |
4729 | Reform Administration"Why is it,"asked Mr. Hennessy,"that a rayform administhration always goes to th''bad?" |
4729 | Rights and Privileges of Women"Woman''s rights? |
4729 | Soos?" |
4729 | Swearing Did ye see what th''prisidint said to th''throlley man that bumped him?" |
4729 | Th''Avenin Fluff offers a prize iv four dollars to th''best answer to th''question:"What does th''baby think iv Miss Blim?"'' |
4729 | The End of the War"Why did th''Boers quit fightin''?" |
4729 | The Names of a Week"What''s goin''on this week in th''papers?" |
4729 | The War Game What''s this here war game I''ve been readin''about?" |
4729 | Undher what circumstances shud a Mexican not be shot, and if so, why? |
4729 | Was ayether iv thim seen in th''neighborhood th''night iv th''plant? |
4729 | Was he a dog that dhrank? |
4729 | Was he baffled in love? |
4729 | Was he payin''anny particular attintions to anny iv th''neighbors? |
4729 | Was there a dog on th''car? |
4729 | Was ye exercisin''ye- er joynt intelleck while ye was readin''? |
4729 | Was you?" |
4729 | We get out dizzy an''sick an''lay on th''grass an''gasp:''Where am I? |
4729 | Well, Watson, what d''ye make iv it?" |
4729 | Were they there? |
4729 | What did he say? |
4729 | What does a woman want iv rights whin she has priv''leges? |
4729 | What were th''habits iv Dorsey''s coyote? |
4729 | What''ll I do to make thim me frinds so that''twud be like settin''fire to their own house to attackt me? |
4729 | What''ll they iver grow up to be? |
4729 | Whin do ye begin?'' |
4729 | White House Discipline"Where did ye spind th''New Year''s?" |
4729 | Who am I to say that what wudden''t be manners in a bar- room is not all right in th''Sinit? |
4729 | Who d''ye mane?'' |
4729 | Who is th''United States?'' |
4729 | Who won? |
4729 | Who''s ye''er banker here?'' |
4729 | Why do n''t they thry ivry man before th''supreme coort an''have done with it?" |
4729 | Why is it that th''fair sect wudden''t be seen talkin''to a polisman, but if ye say''Sojer''to thim, they''re all out iv th''window but th''feet? |
4729 | Wo n''t that be nice? |
4729 | Wud ye give him a tin cup that he cud put his name on? |
4729 | Wud ye like a line on me daily routine? |
4729 | Wud ye, Hinnissy? |
4729 | Ye must be achin''all over to go down to th''livry stable an''cast ye''er impeeral ballot f''r Oscaroviski K. Hickinski f''r school thrustee?" |
4729 | Ye wudden''t expict a pathrolman to be promoted to be sergeant f''r kidnapin''an organ- grinder, wud ye? |
4729 | Ye''ve heerd iv Gainsborough? |
4729 | Ye''ve heerd iv Michael Angelo? |
4729 | Ye''ve heerd iv Millet, th''boy that painted th''pitcher give away with th''colored supplimint iv th''Sundah Howl? |
4729 | says he,''what''s that?'' |
14684 | ''Did ye see th''pris''ner afther his arrest?'' 14684 ''Has he been sane iver since?'' |
14684 | ''Ill- mated couples?'' 14684 ''What d''ye propose to do to stand this here testymony off?'' |
14684 | A sinitor:''What''s it used f''r?'' 14684 A what?" |
14684 | An''how was it all this time in dear old Mud Center? 14684 An''why shud we be taxed? |
14684 | Ar- re ye crazy fr''m th''heat? |
14684 | But what do I know about it, annyhow? 14684 But, annyhow, what diff''rence does it make whether th''navy goes to th''Passyfic or not? |
14684 | Cud a lady do that, I ask ye? 14684 D''ye suppose Dorgan, th''millyonaire, wud consint to it? |
14684 | D''ye think he''ll iver sarve out his fine? |
14684 | D''ye think th''soul can be weighed? |
14684 | Did he pay th''fine? 14684 Do I blame th''ladies? |
14684 | Do n''t ye iver take dhrugs? |
14684 | Do n''t ye think Rosenfelt has shaken public confidence? |
14684 | I wondher what we''d do if all thim infeeryor races shud come at us together? |
14684 | Since th''picnic? |
14684 | Thin what happens? 14684 Was th''sojer under th''influence?" |
14684 | Well, what''s to be done about it? 14684 Well,"said Mr. Hennessy,"what diff''rence does it make? |
14684 | What ailed him? |
14684 | What ar- re these Turkish athrocities I''ve been r- readin''about? |
14684 | What ar- re ye talkin''about? |
14684 | What books does he riccomind? 14684 What did they do?" |
14684 | What did they give him? |
14684 | What do ye raaly think? |
14684 | What does it all mean? |
14684 | What else? 14684 What kind iv a game is goluf?" |
14684 | What other nicissities, says ye? 14684 What''s it about?" |
14684 | What''s it all about? |
14684 | What''s that? |
14684 | Which wud ye rather be, famous or rich? |
14684 | Why do they call it rile an''ancient? |
14684 | Will ye go? |
14684 | Will ye have th''avenin''paper or a little iv th''old stuff off th''shelf? |
14684 | Will ye iver cross th''ocean again? |
14684 | Wud ye iver have thought''twas possible that anny wan in this counthry cud even talk iv war with thim delightful, cunning little Oryentals? 14684 ''Ai n''t we intilligent enough?'' 14684 ''An''th''beautifully jooled ladies?'' 14684 ''An''was n''t th''food fine?'' 14684 ''An''who''s that shakin''dice at th''bar?'' 14684 ''Ar- re ye guilty or not guilty?'' 14684 ''As guest or landlord?'' 14684 ''But,''says I,''why shud anny wan so young an''beautiful as ye want to do annything so foolish as to vote?'' 14684 ''Did ye not glide noiselessly through th''wather?'' 14684 ''Dock,''says he,''is it annything fatal? 14684 ''Doctor, what expeeryence have ye had among th''head cures?'' 14684 ''Does that hurt?'' 14684 ''Forward or backward?'' 14684 ''Have ye had a good manny desprit cases to- day?'' 14684 ''Have ye th''watch with ye?'' 14684 ''How am I goin''to get off there?'' 14684 ''How ar- re ye goin''to defind this crook?'' 14684 ''How do ye usually get off a movin''thrain?'' 14684 ''I''m wan iv th''best- timpered men in th''wurruld, am I not? 14684 ''Ill- mated couples? 14684 ''Is it war to hook me father''s best hat that he left behind whin he bashfully hurrid away to escape th''attintions iv Europeen sojery?'' 14684 ''Is it war to shoot my aunt?'' 14684 ''Is robbery war?'' 14684 ''Ladies,''says he,''what can I do f''r ye?'' 14684 ''My Gawd, has my clint no rights in this coort?'' 14684 ''No, what?'' 14684 ''Not th''notoryous shepherd iv that name?'' 14684 ''Now, how does th''sentence r- read?'' 14684 ''Sane?'' 14684 ''Was he in anny way bug befure th''crime?'' 14684 ''Was that war or was n''t it?'' 14684 ''Was there iver a frindship that was annything more thin a kind iv suspension bridge between quarrels?'' 14684 ''Were they all so bad, thim men that I''ve been brought up to think so gloryous?'' 14684 ''What d''ye suppose he''s like, Osman?'' 14684 ''What d''ye want, mum?'' 14684 ''What did that indicate to ye?'' 14684 ''What is it ye want, oh head iv lignum vity?'' 14684 ''What is th''number iv this here cannon- ball express?'' 14684 ''What was he doin''?'' 14684 ''What''s this man charged with?'' 14684 ''What, that little runt? 14684 ''Where''s th''pris''ner?'' 14684 ''Where?'' 14684 ''Whin was that?'' 14684 ''Who''s that man with th''plug hat just comin''out iv th''gamblin''joint?'' 14684 ''Who''s there?'' 14684 ''Why,''says she,''do ye drink this dhreadful poison?'' 14684 ''Wud it be agreeable to me Dimmycratic collague to put both feather beds an''his what''s- ye- call- it in th''same item?'' 14684 ''Ye have n''t sthruck?'' 14684 Ai n''t she goin''to have a grab at annything? 14684 Am I much sunburnt? |
14684 | An''afther all, is n''t it a good thing? |
14684 | An''who did it? |
14684 | Ar- re there anny other kinds? |
14684 | Ar- re there anny two people in th''wurruld that ar- re perfectly mated?'' |
14684 | Ar- re ye goin''to stand that?'' |
14684 | Ar- re ye ready? |
14684 | Besides are n''t we th''hope iv th''future iv th''instichoochion iv mathrimony? |
14684 | Blankets? |
14684 | But I say to thim:''Ladies, is not this a petty revenge on ye''er best frinds? |
14684 | But d''ye think ye give me enough? |
14684 | But does he have to import it fr''m abroad, I ask ye? |
14684 | But if there is such a lot iv this monsthrous iniquity passin''around, do n''t Virginya get none? |
14684 | But what care I? |
14684 | D''ye find th''larned counsel that''s just been beat climbin''up on th''bench an''throwin''his arms around th''judge? |
14684 | D''ye know Sinitor Aldhrich? |
14684 | D''ye suppose a sultan or a king that knew his thrade wud iver let anny wan take a snap- shot iv him? |
14684 | DRUGS"What ails ye?" |
14684 | Did Congress pay anny attintion to us? |
14684 | Did n''t ye know they were? |
14684 | Did ye iver hear iv Alexander th''Gr- reat or Napoleon Bonyparte havin''a snap- shot took iv him? |
14684 | Did ye miss me? |
14684 | Do they look as though they were sufferin''? |
14684 | EXPERT TESTIMONY"What''s an expert witness?" |
14684 | Flannel shirts? |
14684 | Has annything happened since I wint away on me vacation? |
14684 | Has this man iver been outside iv an aviary? |
14684 | Have a cigar?" |
14684 | He wo n''t, but will they? |
14684 | How about th''mother iv prisidents? |
14684 | How can honest citizens an''good women be brought up on such infamyous docthrine? |
14684 | How d''ye expict to get on in th''wurruld th''way ye are goin''? |
14684 | How do we know he is n''t broke like th''rest iv us?'' |
14684 | How many ladies ar- re there in ye''er Woman''s Rights Club?'' |
14684 | How will we get at him?'' |
14684 | How will ye''er honor have th''accursed swine''s flesh cooked f''r breakfast in th''mornin''when I''m through fannin''ye?'' |
14684 | I wondher will they put him away if he do n''t pay ivinchooly? |
14684 | I wudden''t f''r all th''wurruld have th''wurrud go through th''ward:''Did ye hear about Dooley''s soul?'' |
14684 | If ye think th''highest jooty iv citizenship is to raise a fam''ly why do n''t ye give a vote to th''shad? |
14684 | Is he recallin''th''happy days at Barnum''s befure brutal man sunk an ice pick into him an''dhrove him to th''park? |
14684 | Is n''t there enough American spunk? |
14684 | Is our spunk industhree dead? |
14684 | Is she alive, is she dead, does she iver dhream iv him as she ates her hay an''rubs her back agin th''bars iv her gilded cage? |
14684 | Is there no pathrite to demand that we be proticted against th''pauper spunk iv Europe? |
14684 | Is there some wan still there that he thinks iv? |
14684 | No, nor ye''er cousin, nor ye''er aunt? |
14684 | No, nor ye''er sister Katie? |
14684 | PANICS"Have ye taken ye''er money out iv th''bank? |
14684 | Sane, says ye? |
14684 | Sugar? |
14684 | THE JAPANESE SCARE"Did ye go to see th''Japs whin they were here?" |
14684 | Th''coort:''How much money have ye got?'' |
14684 | Think of that, will ye? |
14684 | Threaty rights, says ye? |
14684 | WORK"Ye have n''t sthruck yet, have ye?" |
14684 | What ar- re ye talkin''about? |
14684 | What books does he advise, says ye? |
14684 | What d''ye think ends th''free list? |
14684 | What diff''rence does it make? |
14684 | What do I know about annything? |
14684 | What does he say? |
14684 | What else? |
14684 | What good wud a mustard plasther be again this fatal epidemic that is ragin''inside iv ye? |
14684 | What have they done to injye this impeeryal suffrage that we fought an''bled f''r? |
14684 | What is he like? |
14684 | What is war annyhow?'' |
14684 | What opporchunity has he had, tell me? |
14684 | What was it, says ye? |
14684 | What was there f''r this joynt intelleck an''this household tyrant to talk about? |
14684 | What''ll ye take?" |
14684 | What''s th''difference between that kind iv tistymony an''perjury?" |
14684 | What''s that? |
14684 | What, f''r example, says ye? |
14684 | Where was I? |
14684 | Who do I blame for this wan? |
14684 | Who is it that improves men an''makes thim more ladylike, an''thin quits thim, but th''ladies? |
14684 | Who tells time be a clock? |
14684 | Who wud feed th''goold fish while he was gone? |
14684 | Who wud make a confirmed reader th''cashier iv a bank? |
14684 | Who''ll want to have his soul weighed? |
14684 | Who''s th''American consul in Chicago now? |
14684 | Whose pitchers ar- re those ye see in th''advertisemints iv th''tailorman? |
14684 | Why should he? |
14684 | Why shudden''t there be a tax on bachelors? |
14684 | Wo n''t annybody get up? |
14684 | Wo n''t annybody say that they do n''t know annything about annything worth knowin''about? |
14684 | Wo n''t somebody else get up? |
14684 | Wud ye or wud ye not lave ye''er coat in his hands as ye plunged in th''bank? |
14684 | Wudden''t the bear be surprised? |
14684 | Wudden''t the little infants be surprised? |
14684 | Ye do nt? |
14684 | Ye see these panels on th''wall? |
14684 | Ye''er mother does n''t want it, does she? |
14684 | says I? |
16958 | ''O,''said the dominie,''the butter, you know, that comes from the cow, what do you say to that?'' 16958 Ah, Reub, Ben, and Will,"she said,"when will you be such good boys as Patsy and Geny? |
16958 | Ah, aunt Judy, why have you all along denied of me all knowledge of my extraction, parentage, and race? 16958 Am I not right?" |
16958 | And are not they all Catholics here, Paul? |
16958 | And how came this relic to get into the well? |
16958 | And where is that orphan now? 16958 And why is it that the Irishman shuns and abhors an institution which his English neighbor enjoys and petitions to enter?" |
16958 | Any news this morning, squire? |
16958 | Are you my brother? |
16958 | Are you sorry for your disobedience, now, Eugene? |
16958 | Are you sure there is nobody else in? |
16958 | Bridget, Patrick, and Eugene, will ye obey, and be said by Paul, who is the oldest? |
16958 | Can I see Paul there? |
16958 | Certainly, Pat; does not the Catechism say so? |
16958 | Did I not tell you repeatedly, Paul, that it was useless to pray for the dead? |
16958 | Did they send her word that she was sick? |
16958 | Did they take away or steal any of this poor woman''s children? 16958 Did you not hear of the donation party at brother Funny''s, last new year''s?" |
16958 | Did you remark the sort of dignified and independent motions of the fellow,continued he,"when you had him here just now?" |
16958 | Did you tell the priest? |
16958 | Do n''t we read from the mouth of truth itself, that''what entereth into the mouth defileth not''? |
16958 | Do n''t you know Mr. Scullion is a brother of mine? |
16958 | Do n''t you know so much yet, Calvin? 16958 Do n''t you know that mother told us not to grieve, but pray for her soul? |
16958 | Do not the Roman Catholics ground their doctrines on the Bible? |
16958 | Do you joke, miss? |
16958 | Do you seriously believe that we Catholics have not leave to use the Bible? 16958 Father,"said Calvin,"wo n''t Paul come with me? |
16958 | For instance, there''s celibacy; why do n''t you priests get married? 16958 God gave him the grace, and I pray that you may receive a like grace; but I suppose you allude to a different sort of conversion?" |
16958 | Have we far to go yet, sir? |
16958 | How can we help_ that_? |
16958 | How dare you interrupt me when I am not addressing you? |
16958 | How do you like that, Bridget? |
16958 | How so, Murty? 16958 How soon, Paul? |
16958 | I am glad you think so; but are not all its institutions admirable and perfect? |
16958 | I guess not, Murty,said he, shaking his head;"who is it?" |
16958 | I hope somebody will take us to mass on Sunday,said little Patrick;"and, Paul, will you ask the priest to allow me to answer mass? |
16958 | I know_ you told_ me that often,''Mandy; but am I bound to believe you, when I know the church teaches me the contrary? 16958 I suppose uncle wrote to him, and sent us money to take us home again?" |
16958 | I wonder what has Paul done with the rest of the money, after paying for the board of himself and his sister and brothers? |
16958 | Is it grounded on knowledge or well- formed opinion? 16958 Is it long since, sir?" |
16958 | Is it not astonishing,began Murty again,"that, though ye all differ in opinion, ye agree in hating and maligning the church of Christ? |
16958 | Is it not strange, then, that the Irish Papist who robbed your mother of the money does not think of restoring it? 16958 Is it possible that my senses deceive me? |
16958 | Is it slavery in one to obey his parents in what is good and useful? |
16958 | Is not this prejudice unreasonable and strange? |
16958 | Is she very ill? |
16958 | Is that a proper term to apply to the child? |
16958 | Is that the reason I must go too? |
16958 | Is this where the sick woman is? |
16958 | Is your uncle in the British sarvice, then, and a general in the army? |
16958 | Now, Patsy, my boy,he said to the elder of his younger brothers,"every time you look at that cross-- show it to me-- have you lost it?" |
16958 | Now, will any body tell me whence is this hatred? |
16958 | O Lord, what will we do? |
16958 | O ma,said Libby,"do go away from father, the ugly fool, and I will go with you, wo n''t I?" |
16958 | O, how can I help it? 16958 Pa, where were the two Paddies, Pete and Bill, that they did not mind the team while you were in meeting?" |
16958 | Pat and Eugene, can you not sing? 16958 Paul, do you promise me you will be a good boy, love God, and keep his commandments?" |
16958 | Paul, my child, why do you act so? |
16958 | Some turkey, Paul, my dear? |
16958 | Sure you would not let the Popish priest visit him, on any account? |
16958 | Tell me, have I gained thee? 16958 That''s it, eh? |
16958 | That? 16958 Think the Lord has decreed Mary for the nunnery, reverend and learned sir?" |
16958 | This is strange,said Gulvert;"why did you not tell me ye belonged to Rome, and were Irish?" |
16958 | Was it a landlord who has been the occasion of so much enjoyment to you, Murty? |
16958 | Was there ever seen any thing so_ purty_,continued the peasant,"as those ridges and mounds of snow? |
16958 | Well, Murty, how do you like this manner of travelling? |
16958 | What can I do? |
16958 | What crowd is that there below on the road? |
16958 | What harm will all that scandalous talk do the priest? |
16958 | What is this I have been hearing? |
16958 | What mass? |
16958 | What matter, O''Leary,said Father O''Shane,"as we reached in time? |
16958 | What was the answer, Murty? 16958 What''s that you say, Paul?" |
16958 | What''s this? 16958 Where in the Bible,"said Paul,"do you find it ordered to keep Sunday holy instead of Saturday, the Sabbath? |
16958 | Who are you, sir? |
16958 | Why did they call him a priest? 16958 Why did we not tell you? |
16958 | Why do n''t you come with us to our meeting, where all the decent folks go, and none of your Irish are present? |
16958 | Why should I go hear the old sinner''s stuff,said Anne,"when your own sons laugh at him and say he is a fool? |
16958 | Why so, boss? 16958 Why so, ma''am?" |
16958 | Why so? 16958 Why so?" |
16958 | Why, thou Papist boor, durst thou deny the power of prayer? |
16958 | Why, what in the world can be the matter? 16958 Will we sing, ma''am, what the Christian brothers taught us?" |
16958 | You did n''t_ advance_ them money, did you, Gulvert? |
16958 | You do n''t say the Catholics are allowed the use of the Bible, do you? 16958 You do n''t tell me so, your reverence?" |
16958 | You do? 16958 You wrote to the priest, did n''t you, to say masses for your mother''s soul in purgatory? |
16958 | Your reverence, did you ever see such a grand sight? 16958 Ai n''t this fair? |
16958 | And did you notice that sailor that saved the boy who fell overboard, what a long beard he had? |
16958 | And now, who dare say word against her? |
16958 | And who cares, Paul? |
16958 | And who ever, in need, has failed to find the good priest a friend in all emergencies? |
16958 | And will you forbid him to write to his uncle, who, I doubt not, is a very respectable gentleman in Ireland?" |
16958 | And you say he had the priest''s certificate of confession in his pocket?" |
16958 | At theology again, Amanda? |
16958 | But O, where shall I find my parents? |
16958 | But are the principles sound, and the estimate he has formed of American character and the conduct and motives of the sectarian parsons correct? |
16958 | But how were so many men to live? |
16958 | But the inside of the"great house,"who can describe it? |
16958 | But what of the Parsons Grinoble, Gulmore, Barker, Scullion, and the others, who had a hand in robbing the orphans of their faith? |
16958 | But what''s this that he finds tangled in the drowned child''s hands? |
16958 | But will this divinely decreed result be injurious to the progress or prosperity of the republic? |
16958 | But, Amanda, how do you know that I wrote any such request to the priest? |
16958 | Can we not handle the plough, use the scythe, or the cradle as well as if we were of your school of heresy?" |
16958 | Did you die on your bed, or meet with an accident? |
16958 | Did you hear that lecture he delivered last winter against Popery? |
16958 | Did you not know that I was Irish? |
16958 | Do n''t you like that, Bob?" |
16958 | Do n''t you see how proper this advice is?" |
16958 | Do n''t you think Miss Amanda is jealous of your charms? |
16958 | Do nuns ever get married, Murty?" |
16958 | Do ye hear how it blows? |
16958 | Do you ever eat meat on Friday, Pat?" |
16958 | Do you mean the talk about Miss Talebearer?" |
16958 | Do you not feel the change of heart, Mary, my love?" |
16958 | Do you understand_ that_, my fair disputant?" |
16958 | For God''s sake tell me, where is my beloved brother?" |
16958 | For who ever seriously examined and did not find the truth? |
16958 | Had he far to go?" |
16958 | Has the Lord heard my groanings, and sighs, and petitions for thy restoration to the creed of our Protestant fathers? |
16958 | Have I a brother on earth, and one so worthy as thou? |
16958 | How can he do so?" |
16958 | How could you discover whether or not Cæsar lived by the light of internal evidence? |
16958 | How did it get into the well? |
16958 | How do you know she is there?" |
16958 | How do you like this?'' |
16958 | How old did you say he was-- about fifteen? |
16958 | I ask any man, Is not this slavery? |
16958 | I think this is fair_ arguing_, Mr. Prying, do n''t you?" |
16958 | I too long regarded as my home? |
16958 | I wonder if they would put you to jail or transport you here, as they would at home, for fowling a bit in these woods?" |
16958 | In what do they exceed the Presbyterians?" |
16958 | Instead of pouring the poison into the vinegar glass, where would the Scotch Abigail empty the cruet but into the tumbler with the brandy in it? |
16958 | Is it by internal evidence you learn that such cities as Rome, Paris, or Constantinople exist? |
16958 | Is it not time to say to these hypocritical sects,"Physicians, heal yourselves"? |
16958 | Is it such conduct you call religion? |
16958 | Is it that men are less numerous than ladies? |
16958 | Is there one of her precepts, counsels, or rules, that guards not against sin and its occasions? |
16958 | Is this true, or how can you reconcile it with liberty or religion?" |
16958 | Is this true? |
16958 | Like a convicted felon, did it cry_ peccavi_--I have sinned, been misled, or misinformed? |
16958 | Mother, how do you feel? |
16958 | Mr. Prying is always wanting me to eat it every day, and so was a gentleman whom he called the_ priest_,--sure he is not a right priest, is he, Paul?" |
16958 | Must not they be very fine gentlemen here, to be so liberal? |
16958 | O my poor brother, why will you leave us?" |
16958 | O, tell me, where is he? |
16958 | O, who, who will restore this poor''exile of Erin,''to the home of her unknown parents? |
16958 | Parson Dilman, why did I listen to your seductive promises?" |
16958 | Paul communicated the wishes of his dying brother to Mr. Ephraim Prying, who answered,"Certainly, Paul; why not? |
16958 | Paul, you_ know_ the Bible, you think; where in the Bible do you find it ordered to fast from flesh on Fridays?" |
16958 | Paul,"said Pat, introducing a new subject,"ai n''t there a hell to punish the wicked, as well as a heaven to reward the good?" |
16958 | Then whose fault is it that they are? |
16958 | They had neither money, nor means, nor credit to begin with, and how were they to fulfil their contract? |
16958 | To what purpose was this big talk, loud exclamations, puzzling interrogatories, and flaming articles of the Babylonian press? |
16958 | Unhappy man, what was he to do? |
16958 | Was n''t our Lord himself hated by those whom he most loved, and put to death by them? |
16958 | Well, fifteen or sixteen-- ya-- you recollect how that old priest acted last July, at the village of Scurvy? |
16958 | What became of Aloysia, do you wish to know? |
16958 | What better gift can we receive from God than a friend? |
16958 | What can be imagined a more worthy cause for thanksgiving than the meeting with a true friend? |
16958 | What can be more foolish than to abstain from what God has given for man''s use?" |
16958 | What has become of him?" |
16958 | What have we ministers for, but to prevent this state of things? |
16958 | What is any of your ministers to great''Ould Harry''? |
16958 | What is the whole world to a man if he lose his soul? |
16958 | What is this night and all its violence compared with the sufferings of a poor soul in the next world? |
16958 | What make you be here, and all the gran''gem''men asking for you?" |
16958 | What now was become of all the talking, writing, swearing, and preaching of the dominies? |
16958 | What was he to do for a living? |
16958 | What was the cause of it? |
16958 | When they are such in"the greenwood, what would they be not in the dry"? |
16958 | Where on earth do they get the means to put up such costly buildings as they have erected in scores, within my own knowledge, these past five years?" |
16958 | Who are you, or what brings you here this hour o''night?" |
16958 | Why did I ever let you out of my sight? |
16958 | Why did I not remain in servitude and slavery, rather than let you into the care of the cruel, false- hearted stranger? |
16958 | Why did you not say so at first? |
16958 | Why do you turn away your head, my pet?" |
16958 | Wo n''t this be the best course, aunt Judy? |
16958 | Would not this lead to your certain rejection from the presence of majesty or excellency with disgrace and punishment? |
16958 | Would we have so many wild, irreligious young men, and women, too, if, instead of six preachers, we had six Catholic priests? |
16958 | Ye ai n''t subpoenaed, or going to arrest somebody?" |
16958 | and how can a man save his soul, if true religion be wanting?" |
16958 | are you, too, gone?'' |
16958 | eh? |
16958 | how can I help it? |
16958 | or how did these beads you loved so well come into this horrid, pestiferous well? |
16958 | or that there was any Bible in the world but the one Luther found in the monastery hid, in the year 1517?" |
16958 | said Murty;"what has he done that you esteem him so high?" |
16958 | said he,"where is the priest?" |
16958 | said the disinterested young man;"what money? |
16958 | said the parson;"and will you attend prayers and meeting when you are told?" |
16958 | she said, wildly,"or do I dream? |
16958 | sure you are n''t going to leave us orphans? |
16958 | what has become of you? |
16958 | where are you ordered to build churches? |
16958 | where do you find authority for establishing feasts and fasts? |
16958 | where to baptize infants?" |
16958 | where to hold synods or assemblies? |
22537 | ''Well,''says I,''d''ye raymimber th''fightin''tenth precint? 22537 A dollar iv what? |
22537 | A dollar iv what? |
22537 | A dollar of what? |
22537 | An''what''s this game iv goluf like, I dinnaw? |
22537 | And was he really innocent? |
22537 | Annything new? |
22537 | Ar- re ye goin''to cillybrate th''queen''s jubilee? |
22537 | But George Dooley, he gives th''wink to his frinds, an''says he,''What''s that man yellin''on th''shore about?'' 22537 But what do they do? |
22537 | But who are they, annyhow? |
22537 | Cousin George? |
22537 | Dewey ai n''t a sthrateejan? |
22537 | Did n''t he cure anny men? |
22537 | Did n''t ye see him? |
22537 | Did ye see what me frind Alger wrote to Chansy Depoo? 22537 Do n''t they lay eggs? |
22537 | Do n''t they lay eggs? |
22537 | Do ye, honest? |
22537 | Does Fitz believe in di- plomacy? 22537 Go''round on crutches?" |
22537 | Has th''ar- rmy started f''r Cuba yet? |
22537 | How am I? |
22537 | How ar- re they goin''to stop him? 22537 How can wan dollar be worth on''y half as much as another dollar, if they''re both dollars an''th''man that made thim is at la- arge?" |
22537 | How do I know what I think? 22537 How do I know?" |
22537 | How shud he know, is it? |
22537 | How shud he know? |
22537 | How shudden''t he know? 22537 How''s that?" |
22537 | I wondher,said Mr. Hennessy,"if thim Hadley- Markhams that''s goin''to give th''ball is anny kin iv th''aldherman?" |
22537 | Lord save us, but where was that? |
22537 | Prisints? |
22537 | Thin what is it like? |
22537 | Thin why do n''t he write something? |
22537 | Think what? |
22537 | To where? |
22537 | Wan ar- rmy, says ye? 22537 Well, in the name of the saints, what''s all this?" |
22537 | Well, whin ye dhrive up to th''tea grounds--"Th''what?" |
22537 | What ar- re ye talkin''about? |
22537 | What d''ye think about it? |
22537 | What d''ye think iv it? |
22537 | What did he say? |
22537 | What do you think ought to be done with th''fruits iv victhry? |
22537 | What does he do, thin? |
22537 | What for? |
22537 | What have they been doin''? |
22537 | What ta- alk have ye? |
22537 | What wud ye do if ye found it? |
22537 | What''ll we do with him? 22537 What''s he charged with?" |
22537 | What''s th''la- ad been doin''? |
22537 | What''s that f''r? |
22537 | What''s that? |
22537 | Where did ye hear all this? |
22537 | Where was that? |
22537 | Where ye been? |
22537 | Where? |
22537 | Who ar- re these Flora an''Fauna? 22537 Who''s that?" |
22537 | Why are n''t you out attending the reunion of the Dooley family? |
22537 | Why do n''t he tur- rn in an''fight? |
22537 | Will ye? |
22537 | Write? 22537 Write?" |
22537 | Ye''re a good deal iv a spoort, Jawnny: did ye iver thry it? |
22537 | You know Dorsey, iv coorse, th''cross- eyed May- o man that come to this counthry about wan day in advance iv a warrant f''r sheep- stealin''? 22537 ''An''did n''t What''s- his- name on th''field iv Marathon overcome an''desthroy th''ravagin''armies iv Persia?'' 22537 ''An''how about Arthur Doheny?'' 22537 ''An''if th''attack was be night?'' 22537 ''An''that''s th''new woman, is it?'' 22537 ''An''where,''he says,''was our candydate?'' 22537 ''An''ye have no har- rd feelin''about th''way th''bridges has been give out?'' 22537 ''Ar- re ye a good goluf player?'' 22537 ''Ar- re ye a mimber iv anny clubs?'' 22537 ''At who?'' 22537 ''But what do I get out iv it?'' 22537 ''But where does Germany come in?'' 22537 ''But why d''ye take th''risk?'' 22537 ''But, glory be, who iver thought th''Irish''d live to see th''day whin they''d be freed be th''Dutch? 22537 ''D''ye think ye''re votin''f''r th''best?'' 22537 ''Did ye see th''captain?'' 22537 ''Did ye vote?'' 22537 ''Do n''t ye believe in prayer?'' 22537 ''Do ye f''rgive th''way we done ye in th''beer rites?'' 22537 ''Faith, they are all iv that,''says I,''Will iver they get up?'' 22537 ''Gintlemen,''says he,''what can I do f''r ye?'' 22537 ''Gintlemin,''she says,''what is it ye want iv me?'' 22537 ''Have n''t I been lib''ral with me people?'' 22537 ''Have n''t I give freely to ye''er churches? 22537 ''Have ye a ticket to th''church to see me marrid?'' 22537 ''Have ye anny plans f''r Sampson''s fleet?'' 22537 ''Have ye th''Key to Heaven there?'' 22537 ''Have ye th''Lives iv th''Saints, or the Christyan Dooty, or th''Story iv Saint Rose iv Lima?'' 22537 ''How can I get there befure th''gospil, whin I do n''t know what time it is?'' 22537 ''How goes th''war?'' 22537 ''How''s Clarence Doolittle?'' 22537 ''I wondher who voted thim fourteen?'' 22537 ''Is it not so, Rastus?'' 22537 ''Is th''riferee again thim?'' 22537 ''Is that so?'' 22537 ''Now,''he says,''th''question is what shall we do with th''fruits iv victhry?'' 22537 ''Pat, what d''ye know about this case?'' 22537 ''Sir,''says Gin''ral Garshy,''d''ye take me f''r a dhray?'' 22537 ''Suppose th''sociable lasted all night?'' 22537 ''Suppose ye was confronted be a Spanish ar- rmy in th''afthernoon, how wud ye dhress?'' 22537 ''Tell me, was Corbett much hurted?'' 22537 ''Th''head iv what fam''ly?'' 22537 ''Thin how much d''ye want?'' 22537 ''Tis''Honoria, did Lor- rd What''s- his- name marry th''fair Aminta?'' 22537 ''Was he?'' 22537 ''Was it all right?'' 22537 ''We''ve the comityman, have n''t we?'' 22537 ''Well, boys,''says he,''how goes th''battle?'' 22537 ''Well, thin,''says he,''how ar- re we to account f''r this disgrace?'' 22537 ''Well,''says Ganderbilk,''how much d''ye want?'' 22537 ''Well,''says I,''are ye sure ye can get over th''whalin''ye got whin th''Sarsfield Fife an''Dhrum Corpse met th''Frederick Willum Picnic Band?'' 22537 ''Well,''says O''Brien,''how does it suit ye?'' 22537 ''What ails thim?'' 22537 ''What ails ye, man alive?'' 22537 ''What ar- re ye doin''here?'' 22537 ''What ar- re ye doin''here?'' 22537 ''What ar- re ye goin''to do with thim young wans? 22537 ''What d''ye mean be the new woman?'' 22537 ''What does it show?'' 22537 ''What have ye to say f''r ye''ersilf?'' 22537 ''What shall we do to stop th''ac- cursed thraffic? 22537 ''What talk have ye?'' 22537 ''What was th''matther?'' 22537 ''What''s that la- ad doin''?'' 22537 ''Where ar- re ye goin'', Petey?'' 22537 ''Where d''ye get ye''er pants?'' 22537 ''Where did he get th''hat?'' 22537 ''Where is it?'' 22537 ''Where''d ye larn that?'' 22537 ''Where''s th''Spanish fleet?'' 22537 ''Where''s the sixth precin''t?'' 22537 ''Which Dooley was it that hamsthrung th''cows?'' 22537 ''Which wan iv th''distinguished bunko steerers got ye''er invalu''ble suffrage?'' 22537 ''Whin th''battle r- raged,''he says,''an''th''bullets fr''m th''haughty Spanyards''raypeatin''Mouser r- rifles,''he says,''where was Cassidy?'' 22537 ''Who''ll go up?'' 22537 ''Who''ll we put up?'' 22537 ''Who''s relligion?'' 22537 ''Who''s this?'' 22537 ''Why do n''t ye luk at ye''er watch?'' 22537 ''Why,''says I,''carry into th''new year th''hathreds iv th''old?'' 22537 ''Why?'' 22537 Am I right? |
22537 | An''does it say pap- pah an''mam- mah, I dinnaw?" |
22537 | An''wan day, whin he''s takin''th''air, p''raps, along comes an Eyetalyan, an''says he,''Ar- re ye a king?'' |
22537 | An''what shud I do with the Ph''lippeens? |
22537 | An''who does Cleveland invy? |
22537 | An''why shudden''t he be with thim two names? |
22537 | An''ye ma- arched afther Willum J. O''Brien, did n''t ye? |
22537 | Ar- re ye much hur- rted? |
22537 | Ar- re ye niver to escape th''vigilance iv th''polis, thim cold- eyed sleuths that seem to read th''very thoughts iv ye''er pathriot sons?" |
22537 | As th''fellow says,''Can th''leopard change his spots,''or ca n''t he? |
22537 | Be Misther McEwen:''Whose bones?'' |
22537 | Be Misther Vincent:''Will ye go to th''divvle?'' |
22537 | But did Willum J. O''Brien march? |
22537 | But did he take me jaw? |
22537 | But how th''divvle can I do it? |
22537 | But what''s that to us? |
22537 | But ye come right back at him with an''upper cut:''Do ye live on th''Lake Shore dhrive?'' |
22537 | But, after his friend had gone, Mr. Dooley leaned over confidentially, and whispered to Mr. McKenna,"But who are Flora an''Fauna, Jawn?" |
22537 | D''ye raymimber th''sign th''mob carrid in th''procession las''year? |
22537 | D''ye think this here game iv goluf is a spellin''match? |
22537 | Did anny wan iver see a fireman with his coat on or a polisman with his off? |
22537 | Did he give me a watch? |
22537 | Did his wife look as though she ought to be kilt? |
22537 | Did me father iver ask thim in to share th''stirabout? |
22537 | Did n''t Leonidas, with hardly as manny men as there are Raypublicans in this precint, hold th''pass again a savage horde?'' |
22537 | Did th''goold Dimmycrats have a p''rade?" |
22537 | Did ye iver hear th''like iv that, Jawn? |
22537 | Did ye iver know a man be th''name iv Ahearn? |
22537 | Did ye iver read histhry, Jawn? |
22537 | Did ye iver see a pitcher iv him? |
22537 | Did ye see annywan th''other day that was n''t askin''to know how th''fight come out? |
22537 | Did ye see the pitcher iv that lady? |
22537 | Did ye think I''d follow a Kerry man with all th''ward lukkin''on?'' |
22537 | Did ye? |
22537 | Do n''t they lay eggs?" |
22537 | Father Kelly sniffed th''air whin he come in; an''says he,''Terence, what''s th''matther with ye''er catch basin?'' |
22537 | Have n''t I put up soup- houses an''disthributed blankets whin th''weather was cold? |
22537 | Have ye anny yellow fever in th''house? |
22537 | He had fifteen childher; an'', whin th''las''come, he says,''Dooley, d''ye happen to know anny saints?'' |
22537 | Him an''me had a shell iv beer together at th''German''s; an''says I,''What d''ye think iv th''heroes?'' |
22537 | How ar- re they goin''to stop him? |
22537 | How can I take thim in, an''how on earth am I goin''to cover th''nakedness iv thim savages with me wan shoot iv clothes? |
22537 | How manny miles to Dublin? |
22537 | How''s things goin''with ye, ol''pal? |
22537 | If yer son Packy was to ask ye where th''Ph''lippeens is, cud ye give him anny good idea whether they was in Rooshia or jus''west iv th''thracks?" |
22537 | Is n''t he a sojer in th''ar- rmy? |
22537 | Is n''t it time we wint to supper?'' |
22537 | Is th''balloon corpse r- ready? |
22537 | Is there somethin''in th''air or is it in oursilves that makes th''childher nowadays turn out to curse th''lives iv thim that give thim life? |
22537 | Is there, dear?'' |
22537 | Is this a fire''r a dam livin''pitcher? |
22537 | It is? |
22537 | It''s a pretty sintimint, Hinnissy; but how ar- re we goin''to do it? |
22537 | Man alive, do n''t ye know what a dollar is? |
22537 | Manetime where''s Cap Dhry- fuss? |
22537 | ON WAR PREPARATIONS"Well,"Mr. Hennessy asked,"how goes th''war?" |
22537 | Oh, Ireland, is this to be thy fate forever? |
22537 | Oh, what shud I do with thim? |
22537 | On th''bridge iv the New York? |
22537 | Prisidint iv th''United States, says ye? |
22537 | Question be th''coort:''Different?'' |
22537 | Suppose ye was standin''at th''corner iv State Sthreet an''Archey R- road, wud ye know what car to take to get to th''Ph''lippeens? |
22537 | Th''on''y question, thin, is, Did or did not Alphonse Lootgert stick Mrs. L. into a vat, an''rayjooce her to a quick lunch? |
22537 | Th''war is still goin''on; an''ivry night, whin I''m countin''up the cash, I''m askin''mesilf will I annex Cubia or lave it to the Cubians? |
22537 | That''s th''way iv th''caddychism I learned whin I was a la- ad behind a hedge; but now''tis: Who made ye? |
22537 | Thin he turned, an''says he:''Be th''way, how did that there foul an''outhrajous affray in Carson City come out?'' |
22537 | Thin what do I say?" |
22537 | Thin ye ordher a carredge"--"Order what?" |
22537 | Thin ye''er man that ye''re goin''aginst comes up, an''he asks ye,''Do you know Potther Pammer?'' |
22537 | To which Mr. Schwartzmeister invariably retorted:"Py chapers, Tooley, where you haf been all der time, py chapers?" |
22537 | What do you think about it?" |
22537 | What happens?" |
22537 | What have ye had to do with all these things?" |
22537 | What is it th''good book says about a woman scorned? |
22537 | What is th''ambition iv all iv us, Hinnissy? |
22537 | What is their principles? |
22537 | What med ye think iv thim?" |
22537 | What th''coort ought to''ve done was to call him up, an''say:''Lootgert, where''s ye''er good woman?'' |
22537 | What th''hell an''damnation are ye standin''aroun''with that pipe f''r? |
22537 | What was it at all, at all? |
22537 | What''ll ye have to drink, Jawn?" |
22537 | What''s he been doin''again ye?" |
22537 | What''s th''news?" |
22537 | Where''s Richard Harding Davis? |
22537 | Where''s th''Gussie? |
22537 | Whin we thry to get him to wurruk, he''ll say:''Why shud I? |
22537 | Who knows but that Mack''s cat was th''rale victhor at Sandago?" |
22537 | Who made ye? |
22537 | Who was it carrid th''pall? |
22537 | Who was it judged th''cake walk? |
22537 | Who was it sthud up at th''christening? |
22537 | Who''ll tell what makes wan man a thief an''another man a saint? |
22537 | Who''s been doin''things to ye?" |
22537 | Whose ca- ards did th''grievin''widow, th''blushin''bridegroom, or th''happy father find in th''hack? |
22537 | Why did he make ye? |
22537 | Why did they make ye? |
22537 | Why shud he write? |
22537 | Will I take Porther Ricky or put it by? |
22537 | Wo n''t ye come home with me?'' |
22537 | Ye did not? |
22537 | Ye heerd iv typhoid an''yellow fever in th''threnches; but did ye hear annything iv spavin or th''foot- an''-mouth disease? |
22537 | Ye know what he done to me, tellin''people I was caught in me cellar poorin''wather into a bar''l? |
22537 | he says,''what am I sayin''?'' |
22537 | says I to young Hogan,''How goes the war between th''ac- cursed infidel an''th''dog iv a Christian?'' |
9329 | ''Tis the bank that''s ahead of you, do you moind, Jim? 9329 A party, is it?" |
9329 | Ai n''t there no other first steps? |
9329 | Ai n''t you glad we moved? |
9329 | Am I runnin''it right? |
9329 | An''what am I to do? |
9329 | An''what''s Mike to do? 9329 And can you tie up a bundle quick and slick and make it look neat?" |
9329 | And chew tobacco? |
9329 | And cigarettes? |
9329 | And did she buy anything? |
9329 | And did you think I was n''t noticin''because I did n''t say nothin''? |
9329 | And do you call that foine? |
9329 | And do you know how that looked to them that seen you? |
9329 | And drink beer? |
9329 | And good gravy, too? |
9329 | And have you come to say you ca n''t come this evenin''? |
9329 | And how am I to be like you then, if you wo n''t let me do the way you do? |
9329 | And how are you comin''on at the Gineral''s? |
9329 | And how can I tell what''s the matter with''em? 9329 And how come she to do it?" |
9329 | And how do you like parties, Jim? |
9329 | And how does your work come on? |
9329 | And how much is sixteen and fifteen? |
9329 | And if I work and study and let them things alone I can have a house like this some day? |
9329 | And is that all? |
9329 | And is that what Andy''d be at? 9329 And is the stove out?" |
9329 | And me goin''to school? |
9329 | And pipes? |
9329 | And she was to buy of you to- day, was she? |
9329 | And so that''s what the principal said, is it? |
9329 | And sure how can I tell whether you''ll have a bank or not? 9329 And that he done it with an apron on to kape from gettin''burnt and spattered?" |
9329 | And then what? |
9329 | And then? |
9329 | And what book is it you loike the best? |
9329 | And what book is that you''ve got? |
9329 | And what did you be sellin''to- day, Pat dear? |
9329 | And what did you say then? |
9329 | And what did you say to make''em buy? |
9329 | And what did you tell her? |
9329 | And what do you intend to do? |
9329 | And what do you mean, Pat? |
9329 | And what does he mean by that? |
9329 | And what else, Pat dear? |
9329 | And what for would you be goin''? |
9329 | And what have you got there? |
9329 | And what is it? |
9329 | And what is your own idea about trading? |
9329 | And what of that? |
9329 | And what was it I told you to be cookin''for supper? |
9329 | And what were you peering in at the window for? |
9329 | And what will you be doin''? |
9329 | And what would I be lickin''''em with? |
9329 | And what''s that but the puddin''? |
9329 | And when will you have him come? |
9329 | And whisky? |
9329 | And who taught you this, Pat? |
9329 | And who was they that spoke to you and what about? |
9329 | And why not? |
9329 | And why not? |
9329 | And why? |
9329 | And will_ I_ be havin''a bank, too, like the Gineral? |
9329 | Another rise? |
9329 | Are we all to be gintlemen? |
9329 | Are you doing the marketing to- day, Pat? |
9329 | Are you sellin''what you''ve got as well as you know how? |
9329 | Are you sure of it? |
9329 | Bad, is it? 9329 But could I be goin''again this evenin''after my work''s done? |
9329 | But do n''t you think that seven boys are almost more than one little woman can support? 9329 But havin''got a taste of makin''Jim Barrows kape off Andy has sort of got him in the notion of not takin''nothin''off him, do you see? |
9329 | But what will Mrs. Brady be doin''without me? |
9329 | But will you say the same for me if I tell you something? |
9329 | Ca n''t I depind on ye, b''ys? |
9329 | Could you wait till next fall? 9329 Did n''t you sell no silks and velvets and laces?" |
9329 | Did she praise you, Pat? |
9329 | Did you see thim geese a- squawkin''down by the tracks? |
9329 | Did you think I''d be willin''for you to lave school, my son? |
9329 | Do you know what you look loike, Moike? |
9329 | Do you like to buy things? |
9329 | Do you mean it, ma''am? |
9329 | Do you think I care for that? 9329 Do you think so, mother?" |
9329 | Do you think you could go down, Pat, when the dishes are finished? |
9329 | Do you, ma''am? 9329 Does Pat fight?" |
9329 | Does mother know? |
9329 | General Brady had never heard of them when Pat gave you a licking, Jim, or do n''t you remember? |
9329 | Have you come to stay, or just for the day? |
9329 | Have you enjoyed yourself? |
9329 | Have you ever seen any poor boys smoke cigars, Jim? |
9329 | Have you no better ones? 9329 Have you spoken to him yet?" |
9329 | How many''ll you have? |
9329 | I says to him,''How can I get to be like you, sir, when you wo n''t let me do the way you do?'' |
9329 | I suppose I shall have to come up to Wall''s offer if I do? |
9329 | I suppose you like housework, then? |
9329 | I''d best not be lickin''any of the boys then this evenin''? |
9329 | If I done like Pat and Mike and Andy,asked Jim hesitatingly,"would you think I was just as good?" |
9329 | In other words, you mean to protect the boy''s interests, General? |
9329 | Is he gone? |
9329 | Is it far from here? |
9329 | Is that the best way, do you think, Jim? |
9329 | Is them boys and girls the party? |
9329 | Is there them that makes it hot for''em when they can? |
9329 | It''s time you was goin'', ai n''t it, Pat? |
9329 | Ivery b''y? 9329 Let''em do just as they''re a moind to, and not raise a fuss about it?" |
9329 | May I ask you not to be spakin''? |
9329 | Mother, are you willin''? |
9329 | Mother, why ca n''t we be goin'', too? |
9329 | Mother,he said,"you think I ca n''t make a bed good, do n''t you?" |
9329 | Mrs. Brady, ma''am, would you care if I stopped at the lumber yard while I''m down town? 9329 Now how much shall I make? |
9329 | Now, b''ys, what''s the meanin''of this? |
9329 | Now, ma''am, what''s your ideas about swapin''? 9329 Now, my boy,"said the General, walking back to the stove,"what did you mean by following me?" |
9329 | Oh, has he? 9329 Oh, was n''t you?" |
9329 | Pat,began Mrs. O''Callaghan, in a tremble of eagerness and apprehension,"who do you think was here the mornin''?" |
9329 | Plaze, ma''am, will you be sayin'': I''ll be larnin''it yet, so I will? |
9329 | Plaze, ma''am, will you say: I''ll be larnin''it yet, so I will? |
9329 | Please, sir, have you any one place where you want me to be tradin'', or am I to buy where the goods suit me? |
9329 | She asked me,''Will you please not be nickin''or crackin''the dishes, Pat?'' 9329 Sure and do n''t I know that? |
9329 | That''s your name, is n''t it? 9329 The Gineral havin''to make his own gravy? |
9329 | They wo n''t have any house like this? |
9329 | Was it steak and potatoes I told you to be cookin''? |
9329 | Well, Jim, is it bigger and older than Pat you are? 9329 What ails you, mother dear?" |
9329 | What are they good for, if you ca n''t catch''em? |
9329 | What are you doin'', Moike? |
9329 | What are you thinkin''about, Jim? |
9329 | What did I be sayin''to you, Pat dear? 9329 What did Jim want?" |
9329 | What did you say, Jim? |
9329 | What do you say, b''ys? 9329 What in? |
9329 | What in? |
9329 | What is on my boy''s mind? |
9329 | What is your greatest ambition, my boy? |
9329 | What makes you think he might not like to come? |
9329 | What more do you know? 9329 What was it?" |
9329 | What''s got into little Jim? |
9329 | What''s in the oven, Jim? 9329 What''s larnin''your lessons got to do with bein''a foightin''man, sir?" |
9329 | What''s the good of me wonderin''when I''ve got Moike for my b''y? 9329 What''s the matter with these?" |
9329 | What''s the matter, Pat? |
9329 | What''s the use of lettin''''em climb up and fall down, and maybe break their legs or arms, and then take their promise? 9329 What''s your name?" |
9329 | Whativer do be makin''Pat come home with a tune loike that? |
9329 | When did you dig''em? |
9329 | When, mother, when? |
9329 | When? |
9329 | Where''d you get that rose? |
9329 | Where''s the clothes basket, mother? |
9329 | Who is he? |
9329 | Who''d''a''thought it was so hard to prove things? |
9329 | Who? |
9329 | Why ca n''t a fellow do just his own fightin'',grumbled Jim Barrows,"and let the kids look out for themselves?" |
9329 | Why, Pat,said a surprised voice,"can you cook?" |
9329 | Why, mother? |
9329 | Will you be gettin''up, mother dear, if you please? |
9329 | Will you be havin''me to take the list to General Brady, or will you be havin''me to be doin''the buyin''myself? |
9329 | Will you be makin''the beds and kapin''things shinin''and doin''the cookin''for us all? |
9329 | Will you be steppin''out, mother dear? |
9329 | Will you look at the Gineral, Jim? |
9329 | Will you promise me that? |
9329 | Will you try? |
9329 | Will you, mother? |
9329 | Would you like to walk upstairs and look about? |
9329 | Yes, sir, if you please, sir, will you be tellin''Mrs. General Brady that I''m here, sir? |
9329 | You do n''t kape Mrs. Brady''s things no cleaner, do you, Moike? |
9329 | You do n''t understand me? |
9329 | You moind the Gineral made gravy, do you? |
9329 | You niver let''em get hurted wanst, did you, Moike? 9329 ''Tis a dreadful complaint, ai n''t it? 9329 ''Tis the best I want him to be doin'', but what''s the best? 9329 ''Tis the shanty''s the luckiest place in town, for there''s naught but good news comes to it, do you see? 9329 ''Twas Gineral Brady got you the place, was it? |
9329 | ''Twas your father as was a loively man, d''ye moind? |
9329 | ''Would you tell your mother the same?'' |
9329 | A neat little house, now, with only two b''ys to a bedroom and wan bedroom for me-- what do you say to it, Jim?" |
9329 | An''there''s the dishes to be washed an''--I hate to ask you, Pat, but do you think you could larn cookin''a bit?" |
9329 | And another thing, do you belave you''ve got jist as good calicoes and ginghams and muslins to sell as there is in town?" |
9329 | And he was the best foighter they had, too?" |
9329 | And how long will it take it to bake, I wonder? |
9329 | And how will you prove it? |
9329 | And is it older than your mother you are, that''s forty years old? |
9329 | And now what''s the rest of it besides work and study?" |
9329 | And now will you help me to get the cows? |
9329 | And what do you think Mrs. Brady says? |
9329 | And when they had been told of Pat''s good fortune,"Is_ that_ all?" |
9329 | And who''s to be moindin''the geese, if you and Tommie was to go off after the cows? |
9329 | And will you be tellin''me what the b''y that swept out before you is sellin''?" |
9329 | And would Gineral Brady back you if you did n''t desarve it? |
9329 | B''ys, will you help me? |
9329 | B''ys, would you belave it? |
9329 | Breakfast was over, but what was Mike doing? |
9329 | But Jim and Barney and Tommie and Larry now-- how can I be tellin''what''s comin''of them? |
9329 | But could n''t we stick in four poles and put old boards across so''s the stove would be covered, and run the pipe out of a hole in the top?" |
9329 | But did Mrs. Brady give you money?" |
9329 | But did n''t nobody say nothin''to you?" |
9329 | But first do you notice how clean Jim kapes things? |
9329 | But what makes you all look so glum? |
9329 | But what of that when the gate''s at this end? |
9329 | But what sort of a business is that now? |
9329 | But what''s that n''ise?" |
9329 | CHAPTER IV Is Friday an unlucky day? |
9329 | CHAPTER XIII"Pat,"said his mother the next morning at breakfast,"what''s that book you used to be studyin''that larns you to talk roight?" |
9329 | Ca n''t you trust us?" |
9329 | Can you tell me this is a good piece that wo n''t fade?'' |
9329 | Could you come to me to- morrow, Mrs. O''Callaghan? |
9329 | Did I be tellin''you you was n''t too old to larn? |
9329 | Did his mother want him to drive cows in addition to his other work? |
9329 | Did n''t I be tellin''you, Pat, that I knew there was them in this town would help me that way? |
9329 | Did n''t you foind the school foine the day? |
9329 | Did n''t you tell me the Gineral said there could n''t no woman come up to him?" |
9329 | Did you notice the biggest room in the little house we rinted the day?" |
9329 | Do n''t you think''twould be a good thing, Pat?" |
9329 | Do ye think He''d''a''done ayther wan or the other if He had n''t thought I could care for''em all? |
9329 | Do you think, Pat, the Gineral and Mrs. Brady would enjoy eatin''wan of''em when it''s a bit cooler? |
9329 | Do you think, b''ys, Andy''ll be a lawyer when he comes from college?" |
9329 | Do you want to be loike him, too?" |
9329 | Do you wish to keep him?" |
9329 | Does he be goin''round fightin''in times of peace? |
9329 | Does he go foightin''in toimes of peace? |
9329 | Else why should they put the last hand in to sweepin''out and sellin''naught but ginghams and calicoes and muslins? |
9329 | Folks are mighty good to us, Mike; have you noticed?" |
9329 | For how do I know how Mrs. Brady wants her gravy? |
9329 | For sure, he''s Tim''s b''y, too, and will I be leavin''him to spoil for want of a harsh word now and then? |
9329 | Had n''t you better put some of them out-- for a time?" |
9329 | Have you heard the news? |
9329 | He covered his eyes with his hand and sat quite still for a few moments before he inquired,"What did you tell her?" |
9329 | He paused and then asked,"How will I be goin''at it to get me a house like this?" |
9329 | He was soon at liberty, and then he said,"Now, Pat, what is it?" |
9329 | He''d be givin''you the chance to bring your own good news, Moike, do you see? |
9329 | How could I be thinkin''anything else?" |
9329 | How could it be supplied? |
9329 | How had Pat divined the wish of his heart? |
9329 | How is it you come to be so like him, Pat, dear? |
9329 | How was she to get Larry along to her wash places? |
9329 | How would you do it?" |
9329 | I must jist ask him, do you see? |
9329 | I suppose he is to have, in addition, his one evening a week?" |
9329 | I wonder now if that''s a good business? |
9329 | ILLUSTRATIONS Ca n''t I depind on ye, b''ys? |
9329 | If only he could make a sale, what might it not mean to him? |
9329 | Is that what you wanted?" |
9329 | It''s to bed you must be goin'', for we''re to move to- morrow, do you moind?" |
9329 | Jim can run things to home, ca n''t you, Jim?" |
9329 | Many''s the mother as ca n''t say that to her oldest son, and all on account of the son bein''anything but a comfort, do you see? |
9329 | Pat looked a trifle astonished, but all he said was,"_ Baked beans_ is a queer name for''em, ai n''t it?" |
9329 | Shall I be sayin''the bit of a place beyant the tracks?" |
9329 | Shall we ask the landlord to put us on another room in the spring? |
9329 | She said,''Patrick, you''re elegant help, and will you come again next Saturday?" |
9329 | Suppose I correct you every time you make a mistake?" |
9329 | Suppose I set you right whenever you go wrong?" |
9329 | That gives Moike a chance to step up into his place, do you see? |
9329 | That''s what you want, ai n''t it?" |
9329 | The Widow O''Callaghan''s Boys BY GULIELMA ZOLLINGER( 1904, 10th edition)[ Illustration:"CAN''T I DIPIND ON YE B''YS?"] |
9329 | The kitchen was uncomfortably warm as a sleeping place now, but what could be done about it? |
9329 | The widow continued her musings and finally she asked,"Where is West P''int, Jim?" |
9329 | Then after a pause,"I hope you larn your lessons, Pat?" |
9329 | Then she said:"Do you know what''s the matter with this town, Moike? |
9329 | There was only wan man in the mess that could do it, you said?" |
9329 | There''s no tellin''what he can do till he gets a chance, do you see? |
9329 | Was he growing deaf? |
9329 | Was he to live out like a girl, and Mike to take his place with the work at home? |
9329 | Was she to be provided for by charity? |
9329 | Was the party over? |
9329 | Was this the answer? |
9329 | What I''m thinkin''is, will Barney and Tommie and Larry sit there, too, when their turn comes?" |
9329 | What have you got to tell?" |
9329 | What higher praise could there be for him than to be thought like his father? |
9329 | What is it?" |
9329 | What should your father''s b''ys be but gintlemen and him the best man as iver lived?" |
9329 | What was you a- doin'', Pat?" |
9329 | What would Pat say? |
9329 | What would the General think of him now? |
9329 | What''ll we do?" |
9329 | What''ll you be doin''with them boords?" |
9329 | What''s got into you, Jim?" |
9329 | What''s me gettin''wet to makin''mother comfortable? |
9329 | What''s the matter with''em? |
9329 | What''s the use of it all? |
9329 | What''s your ideas about bakin''beans, Pat? |
9329 | When may I have him?" |
9329 | Where else would your boys sit?" |
9329 | Where is she, I wonder?" |
9329 | Where was Mrs. Brady? |
9329 | Who was that, two blocks off, loitering on a corner? |
9329 | Why are the winds of March so high? |
9329 | Will I be goin''to school and sittin''there all day, and you all tired out a- washin''for us? |
9329 | Will I be showin''him how to make a bed? |
9329 | Will you be havin''the goose for Gineral and Mrs. Brady to- morrow?" |
9329 | Will you be tellin''me some more when I want to know it?" |
9329 | Will you have me to be doin''something more for you this evenin''?" |
9329 | Will you look at the Gineral, Jim?" |
9329 | Will you, Jim?" |
9329 | Would I be goin''back to live off my mother now, and her a- washin''to keep me? |
9329 | Would I be layin''all my burdens on you, when it''s six brothers you''ve got? |
9329 | Would a b''y of mine be makin''fun of Gineral Brady?" |
9329 | Would anybody have belaved it when we come with nothin''to the shanty? |
9329 | Would he do it? |
9329 | Would n''t that be a good thing? |
9329 | Would you belave it? |
9329 | Would you kindly be lettin''me go home a little while then?" |
9329 | You do n''t want to kape livin''here till you have a foine house loike the Gineral''s, do you, Jim?" |
9329 | You had others a- buyin''of you to- day, I hope?" |
9329 | You moind I was tellin''you''twas loikely there was permotions in stores?" |
9329 | You moind what I told you about permotions, Pat? |
9329 | You niver was to coort, was you, b''ys?" |
9329 | You think Pat''s cookin''tastes pretty good, do n''t you, Moike?" |
9329 | what ails you?" |
13784 | ''Can Winter beat Swift?'' 13784 ''Cap,''says th''prisident,''what ye got to say to this? |
13784 | ''Here,''says I,''mong colonel, what d''ye want with me?'' 13784 ''Let''s change th''subject,''says Duggan,''What show has Dorsey got in th''Twinty- ninth? |
13784 | ''My answer to that,''says th''witness,''is decidedly, Who?'' 13784 ''Well, sir,''says Bertillon,''what d''ye want?'' |
13784 | ''What d''ye want?'' 13784 ''What did thim write?'' |
13784 | ''What''s that?'' 13784 Afther a while Doolan woke up, an''says he,''Where''s me frind?'' |
13784 | Ah- ha,he said,"that''s th''way you keep Lent, is it? |
13784 | An''what''d ye do with Aggy-- what- d''ye- call- him? |
13784 | An''who th''divvle''s he? |
13784 | An''why shud they hang thim, Hinnissy? 13784 An''will we stay in? |
13784 | And for why? |
13784 | And what for? |
13784 | And what''ll pay for it? |
13784 | And what''s got into you? |
13784 | And where do th''nickels come fr''m? |
13784 | Anny more cyclone news? |
13784 | Are you thinking of leaving us? |
13784 | But what about th''opera? |
13784 | But what''s he been doin''of late? |
13784 | Carey or Clancy? |
13784 | D''ye know things is goin''to th''dogs in this town, Jawn, avick? 13784 D''ye mind it,--th''pome by Joyce? |
13784 | Did he die game? |
13784 | Did n''t Father Kelly do anything about it? |
13784 | Did n''t ye write an''sign it? |
13784 | Did the ghost ever come back? |
13784 | Did they hang him? |
13784 | Did ye ask him about th''Dhryfuss case? |
13784 | Does n''t it open? |
13784 | Fahrenheit? |
13784 | Gin''ral Merceer--''May I ask this polluted witness wan question?'' 13784 Give it to who?" |
13784 | How much? |
13784 | How was it he wanted to do it? |
13784 | How''s that? |
13784 | I wint home with him aftherwards; an''what d''ye think he said? 13784 In th''play?" |
13784 | Is he dead? |
13784 | Is that all that''s going on? |
13784 | Jawn,said Mr. Dooley to Mr. McKenna,"what did th''Orangeys do to- day?" |
13784 | Jawn,said Mr. Dooley,"did n''t we give it to thim?" |
13784 | Jawn,said Mr. Dooley,"did ye iver hear th''puzzle whin a woman''s not a woman?" |
13784 | Jawn,said he, as Mr. McKenna walked over and looked on curiously,"d''ye know a good man that I cud thrust to remodel th''shop?" |
13784 | Malachy or Matt? 13784 Me?" |
13784 | Now where''s Hinnery? 13784 Patrick''s Day? |
13784 | Patrick''s Day? |
13784 | Taaffe,he said musingly,--"Taaffe-- where th''divvle? |
13784 | The police? |
13784 | Was it much, I dinnaw? |
13784 | Well, I wondher will Mike come back? |
13784 | Well, sir, we ilicted Duggan; an''what come iv it? 13784 What Hogan?" |
13784 | What ar- re ye goin''to do Patrick''s Day? |
13784 | What are you talking about? |
13784 | What did he say? |
13784 | What did he say? |
13784 | What did you give the hobo? |
13784 | What has Molly Donahue been doin''? |
13784 | What have you been doin''? |
13784 | What of that? |
13784 | What shall I do? |
13784 | What''s that all got to do with freeing Ireland? |
13784 | What''s the matter with Hogan? |
13784 | What''s the matter? |
13784 | What''s this you have here, at all? |
13784 | Where''s that? |
13784 | Which Dorgan? |
13784 | Which d''ye think makes th''best fun''ral turnout, th''A- ho- aitches or th''Saint Vincent de Pauls, Jawn? |
13784 | Whin is a woman not a woman? 13784 Whin there''s battles to be won, who do they sind for? |
13784 | Whin ye come up, did ye see Dorgan? |
13784 | Who? |
13784 | Will he lose his job? 13784 Ye mind Maloney, th''la- ad with th''game eye? |
13784 | You have n''t been trying to skate? |
13784 | ''A- re ye,''he says,''men, or a- re ye slaves?'' |
13784 | ''Ah- ho,''says he,''I know it,''he says;''but,''he says,''what th''divvle do I care?'' |
13784 | ''Am I?'' |
13784 | ''An ax done it,''says ye? |
13784 | ''An''what are ye invistin''it in?'' |
13784 | ''An''what''s he makin''th''roar about?'' |
13784 | ''An''where can I get thim?'' |
13784 | ''And what may that be?'' |
13784 | ''Ar- re these th''holy bonds iv mathrimony?'' |
13784 | ''Ar- re ye men or ar- re ye slaves?'' |
13784 | ''Ar- re ye, faith?'' |
13784 | ''Ar- ren''t ye tired iv ye''er long journey?'' |
13784 | ''Be th''way,''he says,''how''re ye goin''to vote on that ordhnance?'' |
13784 | ''Billy who?'' |
13784 | ''But did anny wan iver hear iv thim doin''anny good whin th''votes was bein''cast?'' |
13784 | ''But did n''t ye go out to decorate th''graves?'' |
13784 | ''But how''m I goin''to cross?'' |
13784 | ''But what can ye expect? |
13784 | ''But what''s th''good iv swearin''off, if ye do n''t break it?'' |
13784 | ''But will he carry Illinye?'' |
13784 | ''But will he make a good fight?'' |
13784 | ''Ca n''t I make ye up a nice supper?'' |
13784 | ''Cap,''he says,''is they anny hay in th''camp?'' |
13784 | ''Child, where is ye''er dhress?'' |
13784 | ''Cudden''t ye die waltzin''?'' |
13784 | ''D''ye know that ivry thread in thim seams means a tear an''sigh?'' |
13784 | ''D''ye know that ivry time ye put on thim pants ye take a pair off some down- throdden workman?'' |
13784 | ''D''ye know"Down be th''Tan- yard Side"?'' |
13784 | ''D''ye mane to say,''says Cassidy, th''plumber,''that ye wo n''t do annything f''r my son?'' |
13784 | ''D''ye mean to call me that?'' |
13784 | ''D''ye mind what I said thin?'' |
13784 | ''D''ye recognize th''pris''ner?'' |
13784 | ''Did anny man iver shoot at ye with annything but a siltzer bottle? |
13784 | ''Did n''t ye ask to be called here?'' |
13784 | ''Did n''t ye promise to invist two dollars ivry month?'' |
13784 | ''Did ye inlist in th''army, brave man?'' |
13784 | ''Did ye iver hear iv Ree- saca,''r Vicksburg,''r Lookout Mountain?'' |
13784 | ''Did ye iver see an eight- inch shell pinithrate a bale iv hay?'' |
13784 | ''Do n''t ye know that it ai n''t our Bill that''s been nommynated?'' |
13784 | ''Do ye like paper?'' |
13784 | ''Do ye take this check,''says th''clargyman,''to have an''to hold, until some wan parts ye fr''m it?'' |
13784 | ''Do you know, sir,''he says,''that thim pants riprisints th''oppression iv women an''childher?'' |
13784 | ''Do?'' |
13784 | ''Do?'' |
13784 | ''Do?'' |
13784 | ''F''r who?'' |
13784 | ''F''r why?'' |
13784 | ''Gin''ral,''says Cap Brice,''how can I thank ye f''r th''honor?'' |
13784 | ''Had I better swallow some insect powdher?'' |
13784 | ''Has Finerty gone in?'' |
13784 | ''Have ye anny British around here? |
13784 | ''Have ye seen th''divvle?'' |
13784 | ''How th''divvle can they perjure thimsilves if they ai n''t sworn? |
13784 | ''How''s all th''folks?'' |
13784 | ''In Lent?'' |
13784 | ''Is he a nice man?'' |
13784 | ''Is that enough f''r ye?'' |
13784 | ''Is that so?'' |
13784 | ''Is ye''er name Hill?'' |
13784 | ''Is ye''er name Sullivan?'' |
13784 | ''Misther Dugan, how old a- are ye?'' |
13784 | ''Monica,''says Dorsey( he had pretty names for all his goats),''Monica, are ye hungry,''he says,''ye poor dear?'' |
13784 | ''News?'' |
13784 | ''No,''he says;''but did ye see they''re puttin''up a monnymint over th''rebils out here be Oakwoods?'' |
13784 | ''Now,''says he,''what d''ye think iv a gazabo that do n''t want a monniment put over some wan? |
13784 | ''On th''dead?'' |
13784 | ''Roscommon?'' |
13784 | ''Tis,''Will ye have a new spring dhress, me dear? |
13784 | ''Tom,''says Mack, in faltherin''accints,''where have ye been? |
13784 | ''Uncle Mike,''says I to him,''what''s war like, annyhow?'' |
13784 | ''Was his answers satisfacthry?'' |
13784 | ''Was it th''Robin shell or th''day befure?'' |
13784 | ''Was ye at th''cake walk?'' |
13784 | ''Was ye dhrafted in?'' |
13784 | ''Well,''says I,''what''s th''news?'' |
13784 | ''What Wagner''s that?'' |
13784 | ''What a- are we comin''to?'' |
13784 | ''What ails ye, man alive?'' |
13784 | ''What ails ye?'' |
13784 | ''What ails ye?'' |
13784 | ''What ar- re ye doin''here, ye little farryer iv pants?'' |
13784 | ''What ar- re ye doin''there?'' |
13784 | ''What ar- re ye talkin''about?'' |
13784 | ''What are ye''er views on th''issue iv eatin''custard pie with a sponge? |
13784 | ''What d''ye mane be comin''back, whin th''landlord ai n''t heerd fr''m ye f''r a year?'' |
13784 | ''What d''ye mane?'' |
13784 | ''What d''ye mane?'' |
13784 | ''What d''ye mean?'' |
13784 | ''What for?'' |
13784 | ''What good does it do to have rayqueem masses f''r th''raypose iv th''like iv you,''he says,''that does n''t know his place?'' |
13784 | ''What is it to be Prisident?'' |
13784 | ''What rig''mint?'' |
13784 | ''What sort iv bug?'' |
13784 | ''What''ll it be, la- ads?'' |
13784 | ''What''ll we do with thim? |
13784 | ''What''ll we do?'' |
13784 | ''What''s his name?'' |
13784 | ''What''s th''hurry?'' |
13784 | ''What''s th''matter with th''pants?'' |
13784 | ''What''s that? |
13784 | ''What''s that?'' |
13784 | ''What''s that?'' |
13784 | ''What''s that?'' |
13784 | ''What''s that?'' |
13784 | ''What''s that?'' |
13784 | ''What''s that?'' |
13784 | ''What''s thim?'' |
13784 | ''What''s this?'' |
13784 | ''What''s ye''er name?'' |
13784 | ''Where''d ye wurruk last?'' |
13784 | ''Who ar- re ye, disturbin''me quite?'' |
13784 | ''Who ar- re ye?'' |
13784 | ''Who cares f''r th''Civic Featheration?'' |
13784 | ''Who stole me hat?'' |
13784 | ''Who?'' |
13784 | ''Whose fun''ral ar- re ye goin''to at this hour?'' |
13784 | ''Whose thrick is that?'' |
13784 | ''Why do n''t ye go in, an''smash th''Castiles?'' |
13784 | ''Why do n''t ye put him out?'' |
13784 | ''Why, pap- pah,''says Molly,''what d''ye mean?'' |
13784 | ''Will O''Brien win?'' |
13784 | ''Will he carry Illinye?'' |
13784 | ''Will he make a good fight?'' |
13784 | ''Will he?'' |
13784 | ''Will ye do it?'' |
13784 | ''Will ye have wan or two hip pockets?'' |
13784 | ''Would ye like to help desthroy a Dutchman,''he says,''an''perform a sarvice f''r ye''er counthry?'' |
13784 | ''Wud ye rob th''church?'' |
13784 | ''Wud ye take it?'' |
13784 | ''Wudden''t ye like to take a bath in th''shark pond before ye go?'' |
13784 | ''Yes,''says she, in a thremble, knottin''her apron in her hands an''standin''in front iv her own little wans,''what can I do f''r ye?'' |
13784 | *****"Arrah, what ar- re ye talkin''about?" |
13784 | Afther boilin''f''r five days like a-- How are ye, Dempsey? |
13784 | All they want is a chanst to go out to th''cimitry; an'', faith, who does n''t enjoy that? |
13784 | An'', whin th''time come f''r th''thrain to lave, th''girls was up to th''lines; an''''twas,''Mike, love, ye''ll come back alive, wo n''t ye?'' |
13784 | An''Buck got his eye, did he? |
13784 | An''says I,''Gintlemen,''says I,''ca n''t I do something f''r Ireland, too?'' |
13784 | An''what chance has a man got that wants to make th''wurruld brighter an''happier be rollin''car- wheels but to miss mass an''be at th''shops?" |
13784 | An''what''s changed thim? |
13784 | An''who ar- re ye, annyhow?'' |
13784 | An''why an''where an''how much?'' |
13784 | An''why not? |
13784 | As natural as life? |
13784 | Brother Teigue, dost hear in th''degree?'' |
13784 | But did ye iver notice th''scar on his nose? |
13784 | But how did he do it? |
13784 | But what cud ye ixpict? |
13784 | But what do I care? |
13784 | But what was th''use? |
13784 | But why dhrag in matthers iv no importance? |
13784 | Cud annything be clearer? |
13784 | D''ye know Molly Donahue?" |
13784 | D''ye mind Dochney that was wanst aldherman here? |
13784 | D''ye mind th''calls I made on ye, with th''stamps undher me arms, whin I wurruked in th''post- office? |
13784 | D''ye mind, Jawn, that th''r- rale estate business includes near ivrything fr''m vagrancy to manslaughter? |
13784 | D''ye mind? |
13784 | D''ye raymimber th''Carey kid? |
13784 | D''ye think he will? |
13784 | Did n''t ye have a beer bottle or an ice- pick? |
13784 | Did ye iver have it? |
13784 | Did ye iver have to wipe ye''er most intimate frinds off ye''er clothes, whin ye wint home at night? |
13784 | Did ye iver see a man that ye''d slept with th''night before cough, an''go out with his hands ahead iv his face? |
13784 | Did ye iver see an American or an Irishman an arnychist? |
13784 | Did ye iver see th''wan that wudden''t? |
13784 | Did ye niver hear it? |
13784 | Did ye write th''letter?'' |
13784 | Dinnis or Mike? |
13784 | Do n''t I know it? |
13784 | Do ye believe in side- combs? |
13784 | Do ye hear iv a manhole cover bein''blown up? |
13784 | Donaldson? |
13784 | Dooley, that,''an''''What''ll ye have, boys?'' |
13784 | Dooley,''he roars to me,''ai n''t ye goin''to do annything?'' |
13784 | Duggan listened; an''says he,''What''s the man sayin''?'' |
13784 | Folks all well? |
13784 | Had Mr. Dooley? |
13784 | Have ye e''er a Sassenach concealed about ye''er clothes?'' |
13784 | Have ye e''er a forgery about ye''er clothes, mon gin''ral?'' |
13784 | Have ye that tired feelin''? |
13784 | He come in here Thursdah night to take his dhrink in quite; an''says I,''Did ye march to- day?'' |
13784 | He lost his balance, an''fell fr''m th''scaffoldin''he was wurrukin''on; an''th''last wurruds he said was,''Did I get him or did n''t I?'' |
13784 | He turned in an alarm; but th''fire departmint was all down on Mitchigan Avnoo, puttin''out th''lake, an''"--"Putting out what?" |
13784 | He wudden''t want to? |
13784 | Hivins on earth, do n''t ye know him?" |
13784 | Honoria Casey was with him as he passed away, an''she says,''How d''ye feel?'' |
13784 | How can anny wan be annything else? |
13784 | How cud ye, ye that was born away fr''m home? |
13784 | How d''ye do, Mrs. Murphy? |
13784 | How d''ye suppose she was dhressed? |
13784 | How was himsilf? |
13784 | How''s that?'' |
13784 | How''s thricks in th''Ninth? |
13784 | I will ask that gintleman who jest wint out the dure, Does it pay to keep up appearances?'' |
13784 | If a batted ball goes out iv th''line afther strikin''th''player''s hands, is it fair or who? |
13784 | If a man has eight dollars an''spends twelve iv it, what will th''poor man do? |
13784 | If called upon to veto a bill f''r all mimbers iv th''Supreme Coort to wear hoop- skirts, wud ye veto it or wudden''t ye? |
13784 | If it had been hot elsewhere, what had it been in Archey Road? |
13784 | If not, why not? |
13784 | If so, why? |
13784 | If they let this thing go on, be hivins, why do they stop th''hootchy- kootchy?" |
13784 | Is it council to Athlone or what, I dinnaw?" |
13784 | Is that th''wan on th''lake front? |
13784 | Is the snow- ploughs out, I dinnaw?" |
13784 | Is there an accident in a grain illyvator? |
13784 | It was years ago, durin''th''time iv Napolyeon, befure th''big fire? |
13784 | Little Julia Dorgan called out,''Who stole Molly''s dhress?'' |
13784 | Look at there table, will ye? |
13784 | Me a Dimmycrat? |
13784 | Me uncle Mike was along with thim, an''he looked Cleveland over; an''says he:''Ye''ll do th''best ye can f''r us,''he says,''will ye?'' |
13784 | No reachin''f''r annything, but''Mah, will ye kindly pass th''Ph''lippeens?'' |
13784 | Now what is Mack doin''? |
13784 | Sarsfield or William Hogan? |
13784 | Says I,''Why?'' |
13784 | Says she,''Where''s me hoosband?'' |
13784 | Th''kids are thrivin'', I dinnaw? |
13784 | Thin says he:''D''ye raymimber me meetin''ye down- town a week ago on Dorney''s place, loot?'' |
13784 | Thin to th''ghost:''Have ye paid th''rint here, ye big ape?'' |
13784 | Thin what am I to do?'' |
13784 | Thin who cud''ve written it? |
13784 | Was I to stay in office, an''have me hat smashed in ivry time I wint out to walk? |
13784 | Was it a rivolution? |
13784 | Was n''t it a lovely night? |
13784 | We are ol''frinds, Dinnis, now, ai n''t we? |
13784 | What a- are we comin''to?'' |
13784 | What cud the brave men do? |
13784 | What does he do? |
13784 | What does th''prisoner think this is?'' |
13784 | What is your opinion iv a hereafther? |
13784 | What was I sayin''? |
13784 | What was I to do? |
13784 | What was it about, I dinnaw?" |
13784 | What''s that ye say? |
13784 | What''s the raysult, Hinnissy? |
13784 | What, says he, was we goin''to do about it? |
13784 | What, you again, Peekhart? |
13784 | Where did you get that hat? |
13784 | Where in all, where in all? |
13784 | Where is this here pole? |
13784 | Where was he durin''th''war?'' |
13784 | Where''d Joe spind th''night? |
13784 | Where''d they be, where''d they be? |
13784 | Where''d ye say th''la- ad come fr''m? |
13784 | Where''s th''bould Fenian? |
13784 | Where''s th''moonlighter? |
13784 | Where''s th''pikeman? |
13784 | Whin Cousin George was pastin''th''former hated Castiles, who was it stood on th''shore shootin''his bow- an- arrow into th''sky but Aggynaldoo? |
13784 | Whin a man says,''What''s that?'' |
13784 | Whin is a woman not a woman? |
13784 | Whin th''King iv Siam wants a plisint evenin'', who does he sind f''r but a lively Kerry man that can sing a song or play a good hand at spile- five? |
13784 | Whin there''s books to be wrote, who writes thim but Char- les Lever or Oliver Goldsmith or Willum Carleton? |
13784 | Whin there''s speeches to be made, who makes thim but Edmund Burke or Macchew P. Brady? |
13784 | Who are th''frinds iv th''Irish? |
13784 | Who are they, annyhow, but foreigners, an''what right have they to be holdin''torchlight procissions in this land iv th''free an''home iv th''brave? |
13784 | Who is she? |
13784 | Who protecks th''poor wurrukin''man so that he''ll have to go on wurrukin''? |
13784 | Who was it that saved the Union, Jawn? |
13784 | Who was it? |
13784 | Why shud they? |
13784 | Will th''good days ever come again? |
13784 | Ye did not? |
13784 | Ye do n''t tell me? |
13784 | Ye do n''t? |
13784 | Ye niver see a storm on th''ocean? |
13784 | Ye said jus''now, Why do I believe th''Cap''s guilty? |
13784 | Ye''d sa- ay off hand,''Why do n''t they do as much for their own counthry?'' |
13784 | Ye''re goin''over, thin? |
13784 | says Big Bill:''is that thrue? |
13784 | says I:''is th''man goin''to add canniballing to his other crimes?'' |
13784 | what''s that?'' |
11111 | A dollar a week? |
11111 | A lonely ride, is it? |
11111 | Alpaca or de laine? |
11111 | And about how many yards would be wanted, ma''am? |
11111 | And are you sure,she said, anxiously,"that there is no danger of infection?" |
11111 | And did you kneel on his breast? |
11111 | And leave me alone? |
11111 | And what did his father say? |
11111 | And what did she say, thin? |
11111 | And what did you say, mother? |
11111 | And who are you? |
11111 | And who did you fight with? |
11111 | And why not? 11111 And you do n''t think of starving yet, eh, Andy?" |
11111 | And you say your name is Burke? |
11111 | And, meanwhile, stood by and seen Alfred Parker inhumanly treated? |
11111 | Are they now? 11111 Are those your clothes?" |
11111 | Are you a good scholar, Andrew? |
11111 | Are you a-- Hibernian? |
11111 | Are you goin''? |
11111 | Are you going to Boston? |
11111 | Are you going to be there? |
11111 | Are you going to let that beggar insult me before your very face? |
11111 | Are you going to skate, Miss Priscilla? |
11111 | Are you going to stay here now? |
11111 | Are you hurt, Andrew? |
11111 | Are you insane? |
11111 | Are you jokin''? 11111 Are you related to Burke, the great orator? |
11111 | Are you sure Master Godfrey did n''t strike him first? |
11111 | Are you sure there were any burglars, Andrew? |
11111 | Are you, now? 11111 Are you, now?" |
11111 | As my husband left no will, I suppose the estate goes to my son and myself? |
11111 | As rich as me? |
11111 | At work? |
11111 | Business? |
11111 | But he has had good care-- Mrs. Burke was a good nurse? |
11111 | But who will do our work? |
11111 | By the way,he asked, merely to keep up the conversation,"are you a family man, Colonel Preston?" |
11111 | By whom? |
11111 | By whom? |
11111 | Ca n''t I go beforehand? |
11111 | Ca n''t I stay? |
11111 | Ca n''t we stay till the end of the quarter, ma''am? |
11111 | Ca n''t you? |
11111 | Can you be ready in five minutes? 11111 Can you come?" |
11111 | Can you direct me to the Boston Museum? |
11111 | Can you do it? |
11111 | Can you give us a room? |
11111 | Can you identify that pocketbook? |
11111 | Can you milk? |
11111 | Can you play, Andy? |
11111 | Dangerously? |
11111 | Dear me, did it? |
11111 | Did Colonel Preston leave a will? |
11111 | Did Godfrey tell you why I knocked him over? |
11111 | Did I? 11111 Did he leave a will? |
11111 | Did he mean to? |
11111 | Did he say anything about coming back? |
11111 | Did he tell you? |
11111 | Did they give their names? |
11111 | Did you bring the will with you? |
11111 | Did you do that, Godfrey? |
11111 | Did you ever know an Irish boy that could n''t fight? |
11111 | Did you ever know me to stale, mother? |
11111 | Did you ever study much? |
11111 | Did you fire the gun? |
11111 | Did you hear it? |
11111 | Did you leave your door unlocked? |
11111 | Did you see any? |
11111 | Did you tell her he struck me first? |
11111 | Did you tell him what you thought of his treatment of me? |
11111 | Did you, now? 11111 Do I understand that you decline to make reparation to my son?" |
11111 | Do I understand,said Mrs. Preston, in a freezing tone,"that you uphold your son in his atrocious conduct?" |
11111 | Do n''t you know the boy? 11111 Do n''t you think so?" |
11111 | Do n''t you think we could spare him to go half the day? |
11111 | Do n''t you want it? |
11111 | Do n''t you want to stand well as a scholar? |
11111 | Do n''t you? 11111 Do you call yourself a man, Andy? |
11111 | Do you expect any, ma''am? |
11111 | Do you expect me to treat him any better on that account? |
11111 | Do you feel tired? |
11111 | Do you feel tired? |
11111 | Do you hear that, Andy? 11111 Do you hear that, mother?" |
11111 | Do you know why Andrew attacked Godfrey Preston? |
11111 | Do you live here? |
11111 | Do you live in the village? |
11111 | Do you mane my mother? |
11111 | Do you mean to compare him with my son? |
11111 | Do you mean to insult me? |
11111 | Do you mean to say that I am not a gentleman? |
11111 | Do you see any gore, Priscilla? |
11111 | Do you think I am afraid of such a beggar as you? |
11111 | Do you think I will take it? |
11111 | Do you think I''d stoop to be a hired boy? |
11111 | Do you think he has? |
11111 | Do you think he''ll come here? |
11111 | Do you think so? |
11111 | Do you think you could find your way there, and around the city? |
11111 | Do you think, doctor, that Sophia will, by and by, be strong enough to return here? |
11111 | Do you want it sawed and split? |
11111 | Do you, mother? |
11111 | Does he remember Andy Burke? |
11111 | Does he think I work on nothing a year, and find myself? 11111 Does she know you are coming to- day?" |
11111 | Does your mother know where you are? |
11111 | Ever worked on a farm? |
11111 | Fightin'', Andy? |
11111 | From your own statement, this low Irish boy----"To whom do you refer, madam? |
11111 | Got through? 11111 Had he no more respect for your father''s prominent position?" |
11111 | Has Miss Grant turned you off? |
11111 | Has the man that came in with me gone out? |
11111 | Have I? |
11111 | Have you a pair of skates, Andrew? |
11111 | Have you any particular place that you think of going to? |
11111 | Have you any suspicion as to the nature of the document? |
11111 | Have you been looking around the city? |
11111 | Have you but one child, then? |
11111 | Have you ever been there? |
11111 | Have you got any money in the Merchants''Bank? |
11111 | Have you got any work for me? |
11111 | Have you got enough? |
11111 | Have you thought of any nurse? |
11111 | Have you thought of anyone for a nurse? |
11111 | Have you told my wife, doctor? |
11111 | How are you going to live? |
11111 | How can I when you have n''t told me whose it is? |
11111 | How did Mr. Stone dare to treat you in this way? |
11111 | How did he appear? |
11111 | How did you happen to be out with a gun this afternoon? |
11111 | How did you like it? |
11111 | How do I know that? |
11111 | How do you feel this morning, Colonel Preston? |
11111 | How do you like Melville? |
11111 | How far do they extend? |
11111 | How is my husband? |
11111 | How is that? |
11111 | How long can we stay, then? |
11111 | How long have you been in this country, Andrew? |
11111 | How long have you been with us, Andy? |
11111 | How much did you give the man you had before me? |
11111 | How much is it, mother? |
11111 | How much is it? |
11111 | How much money was there in it? |
11111 | How much will they cost, mother? |
11111 | How ought I to proceed? |
11111 | How soon do you go, ma''am? |
11111 | How soon shall we move to the city? |
11111 | How soon will that be? |
11111 | How was your family property lost? |
11111 | How''s that? |
11111 | I believe your name is Andrew? |
11111 | I can go to the theater as often as I please there, ca n''t I? |
11111 | I hope I find you well? |
11111 | I hope you did n''t hurt him? |
11111 | I suppose your family has been reduced to poverty, Andrew, or you would not be seeking employment of this character? |
11111 | I suppose, Colonel Preston, these are the woods you referred to? |
11111 | I suppose, as this is your first visit, you see a good deal that is new? |
11111 | I wonder what excuse she would have if she had no son for a pretext? |
11111 | I wonder what he''s going there for? 11111 I wonder will I ever have so much money?" |
11111 | I wonder would they let me go out gunning with it? |
11111 | I would come in a minute, doctor, but what shall I do with Mary? |
11111 | I''m to eat here? |
11111 | If I refuse? |
11111 | If that is the case, why, I ask, have we heard nothing of this before? |
11111 | If we should find Andy weltering in his gore? |
11111 | If you can get anything to eat, you mean? |
11111 | If you hear of anybody else that wants help, Ellen, will you send them to me? |
11111 | Indeed? 11111 Is Dr. Townley at home?" |
11111 | Is Godfrey well? |
11111 | Is he from this neighborhood? |
11111 | Is it loaded, ma''am? |
11111 | Is it possible? 11111 Is it true, doctor? |
11111 | Is it wages you mane? |
11111 | Is it you, Andy? |
11111 | Is it yours? |
11111 | Is n''t it? |
11111 | Is that Irish boy coming to school? |
11111 | Is the danger of contagion over, doctor? |
11111 | Is the road a pleasant one? |
11111 | Is there any other boy who witnessed the affair, and can substantiate what has been said? 11111 Is there any other place where your husband kept papers?" |
11111 | Is there anything wanted, sir? |
11111 | Is there much? |
11111 | Is there no meat in the house, Mary? |
11111 | It goes to me, do n''t it? |
11111 | It is n''t a crime to carry keys, is it? |
11111 | It''s an iligant washer I''d make, would n''t I now? |
11111 | It''s catching, is n''t it, doctor? |
11111 | John,said Godfrey, angrily,"will you drive that beggar away?" |
11111 | Just move away, will you? |
11111 | Kinder hard turnin'', ai n''t it? |
11111 | May I stay in the room, mother? |
11111 | Must I go back to boarding school? 11111 Must you? |
11111 | Now,thought he, after undressing,"where shall I put the money?" |
11111 | Oh, Andy, I hope you have n''t been stealing? |
11111 | Oh, Godfrey, how can you do so? |
11111 | Oh, what will mother say? 11111 Parker''s?" |
11111 | Pay? 11111 Perhaps he has shot them?" |
11111 | Reparation for what? |
11111 | Sha n''t you come back again, ma''am? |
11111 | Shall I have to go to school again, mother? |
11111 | Shall I see her? |
11111 | Shall we go in and take our seats? |
11111 | Shall we room together? |
11111 | Shure, he was an Irishman; and is n''t my name Andy Burke, and was n''t he my great- grandfather? |
11111 | So he was impertinent, was he? 11111 Sophia, will you lift the latch?" |
11111 | Suppose you do n''t find it, Andy? |
11111 | Suppose you do? |
11111 | That''s well enough to say, but do n''t you consider yourself above a man that goes round sawing wood for a living? |
11111 | The Miss Grants? |
11111 | Then what business have you leaning against my fence? |
11111 | Then who shall I pay rent to? |
11111 | Then wo n''t you work for money? |
11111 | Then you are used to agricultural labor? |
11111 | Then, do n''t trouble yourself to repeat them-- do you hear? |
11111 | Then, perhaps you would like to go to bed? |
11111 | Then, that is the reason you attacked him, is it? |
11111 | Then, what was it? |
11111 | Then, would it not be well to write to Mrs. Preston? 11111 Then, you think I had better go to school this afternoon?" |
11111 | Then,said the doctor, gravely,"you have decided to leave your husband?" |
11111 | To what nation do you belong? |
11111 | To whom do you refer? |
11111 | Was ever any woman more disgustingly selfish? |
11111 | Was ever anything more absurd than to waste five thousand dollars and a house upon that Irish boy and his mother? |
11111 | Was that all the reason? |
11111 | Was your father there? |
11111 | Well, Godfrey, what is it? |
11111 | Well, Godfrey, what''s the matter? |
11111 | Well, Henry,she said,"is the paper important?" |
11111 | Well, Herman, what do you know about it? 11111 Well, mother, what did he say?" |
11111 | Well, mother? 11111 Well, sir?" |
11111 | Well, was that all? |
11111 | Were you afraid, Andrew? |
11111 | Were you ever in Boston, Andy? |
11111 | Were you shot, Andrew? |
11111 | What are you but a beggar? |
11111 | What are you going for? |
11111 | What are you going to be when you grow up? |
11111 | What boy? |
11111 | What claim had the town on my husband,she thought,"that he should give it five thousand dollars? |
11111 | What could he have against you? 11111 What did he say?" |
11111 | What did he say? |
11111 | What did she say, mother? |
11111 | What do I mane? 11111 What do you mean by that, you little scamp?" |
11111 | What do you mean? |
11111 | What do you mean? |
11111 | What do you mean? |
11111 | What do you mean? |
11111 | What do you mean? |
11111 | What do you say to five dollars a week, mother? |
11111 | What do you say to three dollars? |
11111 | What do you want? |
11111 | What does she say? |
11111 | What for? |
11111 | What for? |
11111 | What has he done? |
11111 | What have you to say, Godfrey? |
11111 | What if there was an earlier will, or two copies of the last? |
11111 | What is his position? |
11111 | What is it you do? |
11111 | What is it, Andrew? |
11111 | What is it, sir? |
11111 | What is it? |
11111 | What is it? |
11111 | What is that? |
11111 | What is the matter with him, doctor? |
11111 | What is the matter, Godfrey? |
11111 | What is the matter, Sophia? |
11111 | What is the matter? 11111 What is to prevent my taking away the gun from you?" |
11111 | What is your name? |
11111 | What is your name? |
11111 | What made him do it? |
11111 | What made you fight with him, Andy? |
11111 | What made you? 11111 What makes you say so, mother?" |
11111 | What of him? |
11111 | What should I know of your mother, you beggar? |
11111 | What was it about? |
11111 | What was your reason for punishing him? |
11111 | What will I do, ma''am? |
11111 | What will he think? |
11111 | What will we do? |
11111 | What would you give to know? |
11111 | What''ll you have? |
11111 | What''s all this, Godfrey? |
11111 | What''s he in such a hurry for? |
11111 | What''s his name? |
11111 | What''s that affair you were talking about, young man? |
11111 | What''s the matter, Miss Priscilla? 11111 What''s the matter, Sophia?" |
11111 | What''s wanted? |
11111 | What''s wanted? |
11111 | What''s your name? |
11111 | What''s your name? |
11111 | What, Godfrey Preston? |
11111 | What, already? 11111 What, sir; before we have spoken on the subject?" |
11111 | What, wid the gun? |
11111 | What? 11111 What?" |
11111 | When did you buy that house, Colonel Preston? |
11111 | When do you go away? |
11111 | When do you go to Colonel Preston''s, mother? 11111 When is she going?" |
11111 | When shall I begin? |
11111 | When shall I get mine? |
11111 | Where are you going with it? |
11111 | Where are you going, Godfrey? |
11111 | Where are you stoppin''? |
11111 | Where can I see him? |
11111 | Where did I get them? 11111 Where did it come from, then?" |
11111 | Where did you get so much, Andy? |
11111 | Where did you get the money to pay for your ticket? |
11111 | Where did you get them, Andy? |
11111 | Where did you work? |
11111 | Where do I live? 11111 Where do you keep it?" |
11111 | Where do you live? |
11111 | Where do you live? |
11111 | Where does she live? |
11111 | Where have you been, Andy? |
11111 | Where is the Adams House? |
11111 | Where is the Merchants''Bank? |
11111 | Where is the gentleman who wished to be introduced to me? |
11111 | Where shall I put it? |
11111 | Where''s Godfrey? |
11111 | While you were asleep? |
11111 | Who are you talking to? |
11111 | Who are you? |
11111 | Who is that? |
11111 | Who told you such a big falsehood as that, now? |
11111 | Who will catch? |
11111 | Who''s goin''to punish me? |
11111 | Who''s got it? |
11111 | Who? |
11111 | Whose gun is that? |
11111 | Whose skates did you borrow? |
11111 | Why did n''t you come with her? |
11111 | Why did n''t you do it? |
11111 | Why did n''t you let Alfred up? |
11111 | Why did n''t you wait till they appeared at the window, Andrew? |
11111 | Why do n''t you knock at the balls? |
11111 | Why do you call him low? |
11111 | Why do you complain, then, of being treated in a similar manner by Andrew? |
11111 | Why not? |
11111 | Why not? |
11111 | Why not? |
11111 | Why not? |
11111 | Why should I, now? 11111 Why should I?" |
11111 | Why should a stout boy in good health be discouraged? |
11111 | Why should he send me so much money? |
11111 | Why, ma''am? |
11111 | Why? 11111 Will I find the house where my mother lives, easy?" |
11111 | Will he stop with you? |
11111 | Will you give me ten dollars, father? |
11111 | Will you have it rare or well done? |
11111 | Will you have them boiled or fried, Andy? |
11111 | Will you help me to take the necessary steps? |
11111 | Will you introduce me? |
11111 | Will you require Andy Burke to apologize to Godfrey? |
11111 | Will you take back what you said agin''my mother? |
11111 | Wo n''t he need to try them on? |
11111 | Wo n''t it be more proper for you to make the search, Squire Tisdale? |
11111 | Wo n''t mother be glad to get it? |
11111 | Wo n''t you ride over with me this afternoon, Mr. Fairfax? 11111 Wo n''t you take supper at my home this evening?" |
11111 | Would I dare, is it? |
11111 | Would I like it, ma''am? 11111 Would n''t you like to hire a good strong boy?" |
11111 | Would you leave me alone? |
11111 | Would you like to go home and tell her? |
11111 | You are a large owner of the mill stock; are you not, Colonel Preston? |
11111 | You dine here, then? |
11111 | You do n''t mean ter say you expect anything for that? |
11111 | You do n''t think my husband will have a relapse? |
11111 | You have n''t lost any money, ma''am, have you? 11111 You mean Andy Burke? |
11111 | You take this Andrew Burke''s word against his? |
11111 | You want her to have it at Christmas, then? |
11111 | You will go into your husband''s chamber and bid him good- by? |
11111 | You''re not goin''to turn her out of her house, sure? |
11111 | You''re not sick, are you? 11111 You''ve lost your place, have n''t you?" |
11111 | Am I seriously sick?" |
11111 | And what did the ould lady say then?" |
11111 | And you are poor?" |
11111 | And, if so, how much did he leave me?" |
11111 | Andrew, can you fire off a gun?" |
11111 | Andy Burke? |
11111 | Andy had now come up, so that Charles Fleming did not reply, but called out, cordially:"Are you coming to school, Andy?" |
11111 | Are you discouraged now?" |
11111 | Are you going to bed now?" |
11111 | Are you going to cut your father''s acquaintance for that reason?" |
11111 | Are you going to stay in the city long?" |
11111 | Are you sick?" |
11111 | Are you sure you''re well, lad?" |
11111 | Are you working for Miss Grant now?" |
11111 | As Christmas approached, Miss Priscilla said one day to her sister:"Do n''t you think, Sophia, it would be well to give Andrew a Christmas present?" |
11111 | Burke?" |
11111 | But do n''t you think it might be more prudent for me to defer my return until next week? |
11111 | But how could he escape? |
11111 | But how did it happen that Andy did not recognize Fairfax? |
11111 | But was he to be thwarted in the very moment of his triumph, by a boy? |
11111 | But what is that stain on your coat, Godfrey? |
11111 | But what will Mrs. Preston say?" |
11111 | But what would Godfrey do if both his father and mother should die?" |
11111 | But why did n''t I know before?" |
11111 | By the way, where do you pass the night?" |
11111 | CHAPTER VII ANDY OBTAINS A PLACE"Do you understand the care of a garden?" |
11111 | CHAPTER XXV THE MERCHANT FROM PORTLAND"Look here, young chap,"said Andy,"what made you tell me that was the Merchants''Bank?" |
11111 | Can you not content yourself here?" |
11111 | Did any burglars try to get in?" |
11111 | Did he tell you that?" |
11111 | Did you attack Alfred Parker, as he says?" |
11111 | Did you ever hear of his making any?" |
11111 | Did you want to find him?" |
11111 | Do you carry a pistol?" |
11111 | Do you know if she''s well?" |
11111 | Do you stay in the city overnight?" |
11111 | Do you think a hundred dollars so much to pay for your husband''s life?" |
11111 | Do you think you would dare to?" |
11111 | Does he know it?" |
11111 | Does he think I''m made of money?" |
11111 | Does n''t he live in the neighborhood?" |
11111 | Fairfax?" |
11111 | Fairfax?" |
11111 | For to- day, you mean?" |
11111 | Godfrey saw them, also, and his thought was a characteristic one:"What business has that Irish boy at my father''s funeral? |
11111 | Has anything happened?" |
11111 | Have I done anything wrong?" |
11111 | Have you been vaccinated?" |
11111 | How do you like it?" |
11111 | How does he leave his property?" |
11111 | How long since you saw your mother?" |
11111 | How much do you think I get besides board, mind?" |
11111 | How much rent did she pay before my husband bought the house?" |
11111 | How much would it cost?" |
11111 | I do n''t hurt it, do I?" |
11111 | I hope Mr. Preston understands my motives in going away?" |
11111 | I hope you will write me daily how my poor husband is getting along?" |
11111 | I suppose I can easily engage someone to bring me back to Melville?" |
11111 | I suppose we''d better go soon?" |
11111 | I suppose you are going to the afternoon performance?" |
11111 | I suppose you never saw the other will?" |
11111 | I wonder who lives there?" |
11111 | Is it to- morrow?" |
11111 | Is it true?" |
11111 | Is the old lady as ugly and big- feelin''as the son?" |
11111 | Is this true?" |
11111 | It was important that he should do so, he reasoned to himself, for might not a burglar come that very night? |
11111 | Marvin?" |
11111 | May I ask if you expect him to be treated with deference, because his father is richer than those of the other boys?" |
11111 | May I ask where you live?" |
11111 | May I come along the road sometimes?" |
11111 | Mr. Fairfax, what do you mean?" |
11111 | Now, if we send you, do you think you can get to the bank, get the money, and bring it back safe?" |
11111 | Now, the question is, what do boys like?" |
11111 | Of course her duties are lighter now, and six dollars a week for the remainder of the time will be enough-- don''t you think so?" |
11111 | Of course, you would be willing to pay a liberal price?" |
11111 | Perhaps you''d like to dine there?" |
11111 | Preston?" |
11111 | Preston?" |
11111 | Preston?" |
11111 | Seated at the supper table, about this time, Mrs. Townley said, suddenly:"Henry, how long is it since Colonel Preston died?" |
11111 | Shall I give you some meat?" |
11111 | Shall I lend you the money?" |
11111 | Shall we give him less wages?" |
11111 | Shall we have a new firm in the village? |
11111 | So, when he got into the street, he asked a gentleman whom he met:"Sir, can you direct me to the Merchants''Bank?" |
11111 | Sophia, shall we go to our own room?" |
11111 | Sophia, why do you tantalize me so?" |
11111 | Stone?" |
11111 | That would n''t be fair, would it?" |
11111 | The time having expired----""May I ask what are the provisions of this pretended will?" |
11111 | Then it''s them you''re workin''for?" |
11111 | Then what made you ask me?" |
11111 | Then what made you ask?" |
11111 | Then, your mother has no paper to show in proof of what you assert?" |
11111 | There was nothing in her words, but something in her tone, which led Andy to ask:"What''s the matter, mother? |
11111 | Till after midnight?" |
11111 | To the clerk who was at the desk he said, as he surrendered his key:"How late do you keep open? |
11111 | Townley?" |
11111 | Townley?" |
11111 | Was it in his features, or in his voice? |
11111 | We wo n''t starve while them last, will we?" |
11111 | Well, Andy, if that''s your name, how is it that I catch you fighting with my son? |
11111 | Were n''t you afraid?" |
11111 | Were you present?" |
11111 | What are you going to do about it?" |
11111 | What compensation do you require?" |
11111 | What could you do if a burglar tried to get in?" |
11111 | What did he say?" |
11111 | What do I care for these people? |
11111 | What do they kick with? |
11111 | What do they look like, Nancy?" |
11111 | What do you say? |
11111 | What do you say?" |
11111 | What for?" |
11111 | What is his name?" |
11111 | What is it now?" |
11111 | What makes you say so?" |
11111 | What shall we do?" |
11111 | What should he do about it? |
11111 | What will the ould wimmen say? |
11111 | What''s happened?" |
11111 | What''s yours?" |
11111 | When Andy had returned from skating, Priscilla said:"How did you like the skating, Andrew?" |
11111 | When Fairfax found out the worthlessness of his booty, would he not come back and search for the real treasure? |
11111 | When are you coming back?" |
11111 | When he and his mother were left alone, he showed his resemblance to her, by asking:"Do you know how much property father left?" |
11111 | Where shall we go?" |
11111 | Which was better, to give him that sum, or to lose eight hundred?" |
11111 | Whose money is it?" |
11111 | Why ca n''t you tell me some news? |
11111 | Why did n''t I stop long enough to open the pocketbook before I came away? |
11111 | Why should I not burn it? |
11111 | Why, do you want to take my place?" |
11111 | Will you be good enough to give me the money at once? |
11111 | Will you sit with me? |
11111 | Would n''t I, though? |
11111 | Would you be willing to part with any of it?" |
11111 | Would you like to come with me?" |
11111 | You come to the city occasionally?" |
11111 | You do n''t see any traces of them outside, do you?" |
11111 | You remember how he saved Colonel Preston from the robber?" |
11111 | You wish me, then, to engage a nurse?" |
11111 | ejaculated the bewildered boy,"is it dead I am? |
11111 | what will become of me?" |
27925 | A theory of disappearing? |
27925 | Ah, this was your prey, wolf? |
27925 | All your days you were devoted to one man, were n''t you? 27925 An''why should n''t I know you? |
27925 | An''would you take the position of secretary to the chief an''so get acquainted with everything an''everybody? |
27925 | And are you still afraid of Arthur? 27925 And did you meet her since you left her... that woman?" |
27925 | And divide the party? |
27925 | And do you think that the critics will read it and be overcome? |
27925 | And happy? |
27925 | And how about that other woman...? |
27925 | And how am I to know all these people, mother? |
27925 | And how did you come to mix Louis up in the thing? |
27925 | And if I agree to it, what do I get? |
27925 | And if your uncle should not run? |
27925 | And of course you have news? |
27925 | And the others? 27925 And the real Arthur Dillon? |
27925 | And the reason not to be controverted? |
27925 | And they are all gone? |
27925 | And what becomes of your dream? |
27925 | And what do they make of the hair? |
27925 | And what do you know of us? |
27925 | And what good would my interference do? |
27925 | And what had she to tell you, may I ask? |
27925 | And what has patriotism done for you? |
27925 | And what is a free hand? |
27925 | And what luck will there be in it for him? |
27925 | And where can we get that? |
27925 | And who are the Ledwiths? |
27925 | And why not Ireland''s sorrows as well as those of America, or any other country? |
27925 | And why should I give up now of all times? 27925 And why should n''t he?" |
27925 | And you are happy, really happy? 27925 And you are ready for any ill consequences, the resentment and suit of Mr. Dillon, for instance? |
27925 | And you lived through it all, mother? |
27925 | And you think I descend? |
27925 | And you were sitting there, in the cabin, not ten feet off, listening to him and me? |
27925 | And your child? 27925 Anything more, mum?" |
27925 | Are you afraid to ask Ledwith for an opinion? |
27925 | Are you as much in love as that? |
27925 | Are you friends of Lord Leverett? |
27925 | Are you satisfied, then,said Arthur,"that we are all right?" |
27925 | At eight o''clock this evening where will Miss Conyngham be, Sister? |
27925 | At the expense of my modesty,said Arthur,"ca n''t I mention myself as one of the brighter spots? |
27925 | Ay, indade,Judy said tenderly,"an''did ever a wild boy like him love his own more? |
27925 | But about your theory, Monsignor? |
27925 | But do n''t you see, my pet, that if this man is as clever as you would have him he has already seen to these things? 27925 But how?" |
27925 | But if, before the alliance came to pass, the Irish question should be well settled, how would that affect your attitude, Senator? |
27925 | But is it enough to give you Honora? 27925 But not everything, hey?" |
27925 | But this next man about whom you have been hinting since you came up here? 27925 Can he do this?" |
27925 | Can you deny that what I have spoken is the truth? |
27925 | Can you tell me, then, how I am to satisfy you in Ledwith''s case? |
27925 | D''ye hear that, Father Phil? |
27925 | Did he say all that? |
27925 | Did n''t she inform him of her triumph over Livingstone in London? 27925 Did n''t you tell me Father William was going to America this winter on a collecting tour? |
27925 | Did you ever dream in all your rainbow dreams,said Grahame,"of marching thus into Cruarig with escort of Her Majesty? |
27925 | Did you ever see the like of him? |
27925 | Did you get out any plans? |
27925 | Did you know Endicott? |
27925 | Did you say you had fixed the day, Honora? |
27925 | Do I fear Livingstone and the lawyers? 27925 Do n''t you know who''s paradin''to- day?" |
27925 | Do n''t you know,said he with the positiveness of a young theologian,"that Arthur will probably never marry? |
27925 | Do you know anything about Arthur''s history in California? |
27925 | Do you know anything about the earlier years of Arthur Dillon? |
27925 | Do you know the old house is still in Madison street, where we played and ate the pie? |
27925 | Do you know what I think, Dick Curran? |
27925 | Do you know what Livingstone and Bradford and the people whom they represent think of that temple? |
27925 | Do you know what this passion for justice has done for me, Mr. Livingstone? 27925 Do you know who sent me here, your Excellency, with the request for your aid?" |
27925 | Do you recognize him? |
27925 | Do you remember how we read and re- read it on the_ Arrow_ years ago? 27925 Do you remember what you said then, Honora, when Curran declared he would one day find Tom Jones?" |
27925 | Do you see any likeness? |
27925 | Do you tell me that? |
27925 | Do you think I have influence? |
27925 | Do you think that we can let you go easily? |
27925 | Do you think there is anything?--do you think there could be anything with regard to Honora Ledwith? |
27925 | Do you think you can catch a man like Arthur napping? |
27925 | Do you think you can do it, me boy? |
27925 | Do you wish to be made sure of it? |
27925 | For President? 27925 For a scene with the man who ran away from his wife before he deceived me, and then made love to you? |
27925 | Goin''to take off the ribbon? |
27925 | Has Everard anything against you? |
27925 | Has he any marks on his body that would help to identify him, if he undertook to get the gold mine that belongs to him? |
27925 | Has n''t it all been good? |
27925 | Has she any regard for you? |
27925 | Has the house gone mad? |
27925 | Have I ever stood in your way, Honora? |
27925 | Have I found thee, O mine enemy? |
27925 | Have n''t I the evidence of my own senses? 27925 Have ye ever thraveled beyant Donegal, me good little man?" |
27925 | Have you a picture of the young man? |
27925 | Have you not heard her talk of your friend, Louis Everard? 27925 Honora, has she been lying to you, this fox, Sister Claire, Edith Conyngham, with a string of other names not to be remembered? |
27925 | Honora,he cried,"was I ever faithless to Erin? |
27925 | How about the legs of the publishers? |
27925 | How came that feeling there touching people of whom you knew next to nothing? |
27925 | How can you ever think of giving him up? |
27925 | How can you let him go? |
27925 | How did it happen,he inquired of Mary,"that he took up the idea of being a priest? |
27925 | How do men reason themselves into such absurdities? |
27925 | How in the name of Heaven,said he,"did you conceive this scheme of converting this woman?" |
27925 | How long will it last? 27925 How will that sound among the brethren?" |
27925 | How would you feel if some hussy cheated Louis out of his priesthood, with blue eyes and golden hair and impudence? 27925 How, not wisely?" |
27925 | I am ready now to lay before you the conditions----"Are you going to send me to jail? |
27925 | I am sure,he said to the cabinet minister,"that in a matter so serious you want absolute sincerity?" |
27925 | I feared you would misunderstand... what can one like you understand of sin and misery?... 27925 I said that, did I?" |
27925 | I want to know what is the meaning of this,Everard sputtered,"this violence? |
27925 | I would like to know if you are acquainted with Mr. Horace Endicott? |
27925 | If it comes to a trial,said Arthur,"wo n''t Ledwith get the same chance as any other lawbreaker?" |
27925 | In God''s name what connection has your gorgeous cathedral with any one''s freedom? |
27925 | In this case would it not be better to get an advantage by declaring yourself, before Livingstone can bring suit against you? |
27925 | Is England so hateful then? |
27925 | Is Mr. Livingstone''s name among your papers? |
27925 | Is it as warm as that? |
27925 | Is it possible? |
27925 | Is it that you feel certain of giving me my last sleep, my last kiss as you steal the breath from me? 27925 Is it true, what I heard whispered,"said she,"that they will soon be looking for a minister to England, that Livingstone is coming back?" |
27925 | Is n''t it rather late in history for such things? |
27925 | Is not that just what we are to do, not after your fashion, but after the will of God, Arthur? 27925 Is that all?" |
27925 | Is that the meaning of the look on your face since your return? |
27925 | Is that the present name? |
27925 | Is there a moment in the last four years that he has been asleep? 27925 Is there any man in love with me, and planning to steal away my convent from me? |
27925 | Is this Arthur Dillon handsome, a dashing blade? |
27925 | Is this the result of your clever story- telling, Dick Curran? |
27925 | It is not affection, then, which prompts the actions of my client? 27925 It''s pleasant on a day like this for you to feel that you are just where nature intended you to be, is n''t it? |
27925 | Knew you, is it? |
27925 | Know what day o''the month it is? |
27925 | Live near New York? |
27925 | Locked in? |
27925 | May I suggest,said Arthur blandly,"that you wear it in his stead?" |
27925 | Mona, do you mean to tell me that every one knew it? |
27925 | Much as I hate England, what is it to my love for her victim? 27925 Nothing more than the fact, and the failure to find the young man?" |
27925 | Oh,cried Honora with a gasp of pain,"can there be such women now? |
27925 | Perhaps you are not sure about what Horace knew? 27925 Perhaps,"she said calmly,"this would be a good time to talk to you, Arthur, as sister to brother... ca n''t we talk as brother and sister?" |
27925 | Risking her own safety and happiness? |
27925 | See the green plumes an''ribbons? |
27925 | Since what began? |
27925 | So you have made a beginning? 27925 So you knew me, Judy, in spite of the whiskers and the long absence?" |
27925 | Tell me, partner,said Arthur lightly,"would you recognize me with whiskers?" |
27925 | That woman was the so- called escaped nun? |
27925 | The Senator, is it? |
27925 | The question is how to use our advantage? |
27925 | The question is, can I deal with her myself? 27925 Then Endicott must have known the priest before he disappeared: known him so as to trust him, and to get a great favor from him? |
27925 | Then how do you account for this, smart one? 27925 Then it''s all true... what he has been telling me?" |
27925 | Then the next question is: is it worth while to make inquiries among the Irish, his friends and neighbors, the people that knew the real Dillon? |
27925 | Then why keep up the movement, if nothing is to come of it? |
27925 | Then you are to stand in my way too? |
27925 | Then you do not desire the nomination of Tammany Hall? |
27925 | Then you have suffered too? 27925 Then you''ve done with fighting, uncle?" |
27925 | Then, you are prepared to convince Mrs. Endicott that she has more to lose than to gain by bringing you into her divorce suit? |
27925 | This for the beginning? |
27925 | This is your child? |
27925 | To the question: how do you hope to woo and win Everard? |
27925 | Tut, tut,said Monsignor,"are you not as good as the best, with the blood of the Montgomerys and the Haskells in your veins? |
27925 | Want to know why, stupid? 27925 Was there any money awaiting Tom? |
27925 | Was there any reason alleged for the remarkable disappearance of the young man? 27925 Was your husband a speaker?" |
27925 | We do it in America, and why not here? 27925 Well, are you surprised? |
27925 | Well, is n''t she able to recognize her own husband? 27925 Well, what do you think of my acquaintance with your history?" |
27925 | Well? |
27925 | Were they so considerate when our moments were trying and they could embarrass us? |
27925 | Were you blessed with fluency in-- your earlier years? |
27925 | Were your troubles very great, mother? |
27925 | What are you raving about, Artie? |
27925 | What blood do you think there''s in him? |
27925 | What can I do,he whispered to Anne,"since it''s plain he wants me to give in-- no, to avoid the comic papers?" |
27925 | What do you know of my lovely Honora? |
27925 | What do you mean? |
27925 | What do you think I can do for you? |
27925 | What do you think of it? 27925 What do you think of it?" |
27925 | What do you wish me to do? |
27925 | What does it mean that an Irish army on Irish soil should have for its leader a brilliant general like Sheridan? |
27925 | What does that mean? |
27925 | What effect would these notifications have? |
27925 | What have I to do with the doubts of an escaped nun, and of Mrs. Endicott? 27925 What have we to do with the past? |
27925 | What is the meaning of it, Louis? |
27925 | What is the meaning of it? |
27925 | What is to be done? |
27925 | What shall we do? |
27925 | What sort of a boy was-- was I at that age, mother? |
27925 | What was the baby doing when you left the house? |
27925 | What''s he got to do with it? |
27925 | What''s his little game? |
27925 | What''s their game? 27925 What''s to be done?" |
27925 | What''s up? |
27925 | What''s wrong with Everard? |
27925 | What''s wrong with our representative? |
27925 | When did you evolve this new fallacy? |
27925 | When, where, with what title, binding and so forth? |
27925 | Where did you get your artiste, August? |
27925 | Where do the frowsy children come in? |
27925 | Where is she? 27925 Who are the people interested in Ledwith, may I ask?" |
27925 | Who are these people, these Americans, do you know, Captain? 27925 Who are you, anyway?" |
27925 | Who are you? |
27925 | Who could insult the author of the_ Confessions_? 27925 Who is he?" |
27925 | Who that knew Horace Endicott would look for him in a popular Tammany orator? 27925 Who would n''t? |
27925 | Why are you so sure of that? |
27925 | Why beyond them? |
27925 | Why do you let him talk to me so? |
27925 | Why do you think him so clever? 27925 Why do you think so?" |
27925 | Why has that name a familiar sound? |
27925 | Why should he neglect them like that? |
27925 | Why should n''t I think well of it? 27925 Why should n''t I? |
27925 | Why should n''t she enjoy herself in her own way? |
27925 | Why should you mind it so, after a year? |
27925 | Why, how can that be? |
27925 | Will that impress John Everard? |
27925 | Will you have a fit if I come any nearer? |
27925 | With you there is always an increasing hatred of England? |
27925 | With you to defend me? |
27925 | Would you go to Washington if you were sure Livingstone backed Sister Claire? |
27925 | Would you go to Washington if you were sure he backed the woman? |
27925 | You are going to bring Sonia down, then? |
27925 | You are not aware, then, that he has provided the money for your enterprise? |
27925 | You are one of those that can prove anything----"If you were sure of his responsibility, would you go to Washington? |
27925 | You are to compose and to read the poem on the Pilgrim Fathers? |
27925 | You have fair evidence I suppose that he is Horace Endicott, madam? |
27925 | You have made a great hit in this city, Sister Claire,he began----"And you think I am about to ruin my chances of a fortune?" |
27925 | You have recognized him? |
27925 | You heard of Fritters? |
27925 | You knew Horace Endicott? |
27925 | You may be very tired before our little talk is concluded----"Am I to receive your insults as well as your agent''s? |
27925 | You saw how well she dances, hey? 27925 You think she''s the hinge of the great scheme?" |
27925 | You will stay with your father of course? |
27925 | You would be willing then to declare that Arthur Dillon----"Is Mrs. Dillon''s son? 27925 You would not like the case to come to trial?" |
27925 | You, Arthur, you the victim of that shameful story? |
27925 | Am I not patient? |
27925 | An appeal to the people on the score of humanity, brotherhood, progress, what you please? |
27925 | An''d''ye think people that thraveled five thousan''miles to spind a few dollars on yer miserable country wud luk at the likes o''ye? |
27925 | An''is there a woman in the whole world that''s had greater luck than yerself?" |
27925 | An''was there a day afther that I did n''t have something to do wid ye? |
27925 | And did n''t I witness the whole scene from the point yonder? |
27925 | And how did he come to be lost?" |
27925 | And how did you come to see the Pope so easy, and it in the summer time?" |
27925 | And if you do n''t object I''ll stay... by the way, where is her office?" |
27925 | And is n''t he to be the next ambassador, and more power to him?" |
27925 | And the English friends who are to take up my duties where I desert them?" |
27925 | And to the applause of the crowd, were n''t you? |
27925 | And to the cause of a nation, were n''t you? |
27925 | And what would induce me to expose her to the public gaze as the chief victim, or the chief plotter in a fraud? |
27925 | And who are we that you need care? |
27925 | And who is Lord Constantine? |
27925 | And who is the crowd?" |
27925 | And, by the way, do n''t you remember old Ledwith, the red- hot lecturer on the woes of Ireland? |
27925 | Anne has the pride in her, an''she wants all the world to believe he kem home of himself, d''ye see? |
27925 | Are the courts goin''crazy?" |
27925 | Are there any mementoes of his past in his private boxes? |
27925 | Are yez fit for that great city? |
27925 | Are you going to make your famous speech over again?" |
27925 | Are you more willing to believe in it when it says: Arthur Dillon is Horace Endicott?" |
27925 | Are you satisfied, Colette, that this time everything must be done as I have ordered?" |
27925 | Are you short on self- respect? |
27925 | Are you to make strange with all this magnificence, as if you were Indians seeing it for the first time?" |
27925 | Arthur continued to adore at her shrine as he had done for years, and she studied him with the one thought: how will he bear new sorrow? |
27925 | As the life which is past fades, for all its reality, into the mist- substance of dreams, why should not the reverse action occur? |
27925 | Before we start for California?" |
27925 | Between them what becomes of the alliance? |
27925 | But how go on for a month in dread of what was to come? |
27925 | But the question now is, what are we to do with the magistrate? |
27925 | But this dear Colette, she is to be my good angel and lead me to success, are n''t you, little devil? |
27925 | But what can a mother do? |
27925 | But what use to curse, to look and curse again? |
27925 | But what''s the use o''talkin''? |
27925 | But will it do any good, and may n''t it do harm? |
27925 | But you can not say that I have not atoned for them as nearly as one man can?" |
27925 | By the way, what became of the boy?" |
27925 | Ca n''t a blind man see they wor made to be man an''wife? |
27925 | Ca n''t you see that this Horace went to the very place where you were sure he would not go?" |
27925 | Ca n''t you see yet the wonderful''cuteness of this man, Endicott? |
27925 | Can any one expect that the first glance will pierce his disguise? |
27925 | Can even this perverse man deny me? |
27925 | Can your hate add anything to the joy of the blessed, or the woe of the lost?" |
27925 | Canst thou not minister to a mind diseased, Pluck from the memory a rooted sorrow? |
27925 | Colette reminded him of a face, which he had seen... no, not a face but a voice... or was it a manner?... |
27925 | Could Horace Endicott have ever descended to this view of his world, this rawness of thought, sentiment, and expression? |
27925 | Could any worker ask more of life? |
27925 | Could he be surprised into admissions of his real character by some trick, such as bringing him face to face on a sudden with Sonia? |
27925 | Could he by any fatality descend to this shame? |
27925 | Could her belief and her delight in that holy life have been dim for an instant? |
27925 | Could it be that my boy played Horace Endicott in Boston and married that woman, and then came back to me?" |
27925 | Could n''t any wan see that I accepted him as my son? |
27925 | Could this passionless stranger, this Irish politician, looking at her as indifferently as the judge on the bench, be Horace? |
27925 | Curran?" |
27925 | Curran?" |
27925 | Did I ever hesitate when it was a question of money, or life, or danger, or suffering for her sake?" |
27925 | Did I not tell you I would be in the hall? |
27925 | Did he discover therein any selfishness? |
27925 | Did it explain that suffering so clearly marked on his face? |
27925 | Did n''t I hould ye in me own two arrums the night you were born? |
27925 | Did n''t I watch for years, so that I might find out what was wrong with him, and make some money?" |
27925 | Did n''t you know her?" |
27925 | Did n''t you play on her doorstep in Madison street, and treat her to Washington pie?" |
27925 | Did she know of Lady Cruikshank''s effort to file off the Dublin brogue?" |
27925 | Did she rage at the depths of that sea which in an instant had engulfed her fool- husband and his fortune? |
27925 | Did the scamp need much persuading? |
27925 | Did you ever hear of Jezebel and her fate? |
27925 | Did you ever in your life see such a daughter and such a father?" |
27925 | Did you ever show mercy to any one? |
27925 | Did you notice her?" |
27925 | Did you tell them what we think of Artie? |
27925 | Dillon?" |
27925 | Do n''t you believe that Livingstone is the patron of Sister Claire? |
27925 | Do n''t you think I have a chance?" |
27925 | Do n''t you think, Dicky dear, I can do the dying act to perfection?" |
27925 | Do you know Horace Endicott?" |
27925 | Do you know Lord Constantine?" |
27925 | Do you know that I hate that fat fool, that wretched cuckold who had not sense enough to discover what the uninterested knew about that woman? |
27925 | Do you know that he is n''t a Catholic? |
27925 | Do you know that he never goes to communion? |
27925 | Do you know that he''s strange to all Catholic ways? |
27925 | Do you not see, Monsignor, that the same reasons which sent me out of it hold good to keep me out of it?" |
27925 | Do you remember on the_ Arrow_ Captain Curran''s story of Tom Jones?" |
27925 | Do you remember this?" |
27925 | Do you see the point? |
27925 | Do you see? |
27925 | Do you see? |
27925 | Do you think Conny was as secret as you? |
27925 | Do you think that a fair average?" |
27925 | Do you think we can get on his trail right away, Curran?" |
27925 | Do you understand? |
27925 | Do you wish to be made sure of this man''s atrocious guilt and your own folly?" |
27925 | Does he talk in his sleep? |
27925 | Does the Monsignor still hold his interest in me?" |
27925 | Edith Conyngham? |
27925 | Endicott?" |
27925 | Fine? |
27925 | For him, no; but for them? |
27925 | Had Arthur Dillon, always a strange fellow, gone mad? |
27925 | Had Louis kept his engagement and received the vows and the confession of the audacious tool of Livingstone? |
27925 | Had he made the dreadful mistake of losing a grand opportunity for his brother, soon to undertake a laborious mission? |
27925 | Had he omitted any point in the fight? |
27925 | Had present comfort shaken her resolution? |
27925 | Had she been to blame? |
27925 | Had she blundered as well as the detective? |
27925 | Had she not made him live over again the late reception by her questions as to what was done, what everybody said, and what the ladies wore? |
27925 | Had she not suggested this very suspicion to Anne? |
27925 | Had this sad- hearted man ever known that blissful state? |
27925 | Has he any money?" |
27925 | Has he looked at a girl in that way since he came back from California? |
27925 | Has she become reconciled to her small income, I wonder? |
27925 | Have I your promise to be silent?" |
27925 | Have n''t I seen her look at him, when she dared to say a sharp thing? |
27925 | Have n''t you had a lot of them?" |
27925 | Have they ever regarded me as sane?" |
27925 | Have you a copy of this? |
27925 | Have you any copies of them?" |
27925 | Have you no manhood left in you? |
27925 | Have you thought of that? |
27925 | He can give a good imitation maybe, d''ye hear? |
27925 | He has removed the birthmarks and peculiarities of Horace, and adopted those of Arthur? |
27925 | He was a fool in love, was n''t he? |
27925 | He was in another man''s shoes; would they fit him? |
27925 | He was never found?" |
27925 | Her anxiety to find him is very properly to get her lawful share in that property, that is, alimony with her divorce?" |
27925 | Her pity for him grew, and prompted deeper tenderness; and how could she know, who had been without experience, that pity is often akin to love? |
27925 | His was a lover''s story, clear, yet broken with phrases of love; for was he not speaking to the heart, half his own, that beat with his in unison? |
27925 | How can I help but listen?" |
27925 | How can any one prove themselves to be themselves, Misther Curran? |
27925 | How can that be got, and keep away from the courts?" |
27925 | How could I have asked any other love? |
27925 | How could he bind her in bonds at the very moment of their bitter separation? |
27925 | How could he keep so high a courage with the end so dark and so near? |
27925 | How could he shatter their dreams? |
27925 | How could she be happy and he suffering without the convent gates? |
27925 | How could the poor man help himself? |
27925 | How did it get there? |
27925 | How did we know, Miss Cleverly? |
27925 | How did you ever get over it, mother?" |
27925 | How did you leave the baby?" |
27925 | How did you suspect my acquaintance with a man whom I met so casually? |
27925 | How do I know? |
27925 | How do you think these people would stand questioning as to who your little boy, called Horace Endicott, really is?" |
27925 | How have all these wonders come about?" |
27925 | How is he spending it just now? |
27925 | How much did you, with all your cleverness, get out of him in the last five years?" |
27925 | How would politics in New York suit you?" |
27925 | However pleasant these things looked to the Minister, of what account could they be to a mere citizen returning to private life in New York? |
27925 | I can appeal to you as did Augustus to his friends on his dying- bed: have I not played well the part?" |
27925 | I can make another sacrifice, but is n''t it now her turn? |
27925 | I cried my eyes out night after night... and your poor mother... and indeed all of us... how could you do it? |
27925 | I felt no need of them, for was I not rich, and happily married? |
27925 | I have n''t time to explain them..."Arthur grinned..."but they make imperative a certain way of acting, d''ye see? |
27925 | I mean those just now stopping with the Countess of Skibbereen?" |
27925 | I presume you know something about the Endicott disappearance?" |
27925 | I saw Pat sick once at the same age... Pat was his father, d''ye see?... |
27925 | I''m not sorry they can stand up for themselves, are you? |
27925 | If I am Horace Endicott, as you pretend to believe, do I not know the difference between my own child and another''s? |
27925 | If I could tell my son after ten years, when he had grown to be a man, ca n''t she tell her own husband after a few years? |
27925 | If not Arthur Dillon, who was he? |
27925 | If we had not God to lift us up, and repay us for our suffering, to what would we come? |
27925 | If you ca n''t see any resemblance between Arthur and the pictures of Horace Endicott, what can Sonia see?" |
27925 | In a convent, there will be no man, no Ireland, and no crowd, will there? |
27925 | In particular his last words... what were those last words? |
27925 | In what circumstances had Hamlet been brought up, that religious feeling should have so serious an effect upon him? |
27925 | Is it his plan to sink the Mayor deeper in his own mud?" |
27925 | Is n''t it a fair release?" |
27925 | Is n''t it fair to think that you are going mad, Everard?" |
27925 | Is n''t that enough?" |
27925 | Is n''t that one fact, that the priest knew Horace Endicott, worth all your foolish reasonings? |
27925 | Is n''t that quare now?" |
27925 | Is n''t that what an alliance must depend on? |
27925 | Is she changed?" |
27925 | Is that true?" |
27925 | Is the prize worth the pain?" |
27925 | Is there not enough bigotry now?" |
27925 | Is this the man?" |
27925 | It looks like a trap, does n''t it? |
27925 | It was not in his mind ten years back?" |
27925 | It''s a troublesome time, d''ye see? |
27925 | Judy in the kitchen, Mona in the nursery, Louis in the parlor, Arthur on the lawn?" |
27925 | Know him to be Pat''s son? |
27925 | Looking upon its majestic beauty, who could doubt their powers, though the books printed English slanders in letters of gold? |
27925 | May I introduce to you my friend, Miss Edith Conyngham?" |
27925 | Meanwhile what of the world and the woman he had left behind? |
27925 | My friend, young Everard?" |
27925 | Naturally the next question would be, have you seen the young man since that time? |
27925 | Not here, Honora?" |
27925 | Nothing wrong, I hope?" |
27925 | Now is n''t that McMeeter all over? |
27925 | Now who would mourn over the diatribes of such cats?" |
27925 | Now why do you trouble this poor girl, after her scene with the Englishman, with hints of Arthur? |
27925 | Now, will you coax Sonia Endicott down here to have a look at this Arthur Dillon? |
27925 | O, God, ruling in heaven, but not on earth, why do you torture us so? |
27925 | Oh, how can this be?" |
27925 | Oh, you recall how the dogs worried her bones, do you? |
27925 | On the contrary the search of a clever detective... he''s really clever, is n''t he, Edith?... |
27925 | Or do men ever really love the object of passion? |
27925 | Or even his uncle? |
27925 | Or was this scene a hint of murder? |
27925 | Or, that he had been overthrown? |
27925 | Out of what depths had this new personality been conjured up? |
27925 | Says I,''Wud ye insult the Pope be shakin''a milliner''s bill in his face as ye go in the dure?'' |
27925 | Shall I have long to wait? |
27925 | Shall I tell you what Horace knew?" |
27925 | Shall I tell you? |
27925 | Shall I translate the praises of these great men for you? |
27925 | She may have good reason for playing the part... she may have suffered?" |
27925 | She never answered me, but walked in an''presented her bill to a Mounsinnyory----""What''s that?" |
27925 | She was lingering still? |
27925 | She wishes to make sure of the existence or non- existence of her husband before entering upon this other marriage?" |
27925 | Should not love, the best of God''s gifts, be wisdom too? |
27925 | Since these are well paid for their trouble, why should they not keep on?" |
27925 | So you saw the Pope?" |
27925 | Suffer? |
27925 | Surely he had never read this play before? |
27925 | Tell me, what became of Curran?" |
27925 | The Brand who held forth at the gospel hall? |
27925 | The boy that ran away must have had some marks.... Judy Haskell would know... are they on Endicott''s body?" |
27925 | The childlike eyes, the beautiful, lovable face, the modest glance, the innocent blushes-- had nature such masks for her vilest offspring? |
27925 | The description I have just given you of your life and mine is also----""One moment-- pardon me,"said Horace,"how did you know I was married?" |
27925 | The enemy we fight sacrifices the flower of English youth to maintain its despotism; why should we shrink from sacrifice?" |
27925 | The loom ceased its working a while, and the thought rose up, is vengeance worth the trouble? |
27925 | The love of Arthur, fame as a singer, beauty, and a passion for the perfect life? |
27925 | The next question is: how many people know at this moment who Dillon really is?" |
27925 | The question now is, can we persuade the Irish to overlook his peculiarities about the green and St. Patrick''s Day?" |
27925 | The trap? |
27925 | The woman who had led him into the pit, what of her? |
27925 | The wretched woman has sought him long----""Why do n''t you put her on the track?" |
27925 | Then a suspicion overcame him, and he cried out bitterly:"Do you say the same, Artie?" |
27925 | Then a trainman came running, white and broken- tongued, crying out:"There was a priest on the train-- who has seen him?" |
27925 | Then did you ever meet a merrier lad? |
27925 | Then it would never do for me, with my little career in California unexplained, to have stories of a double identity... is that what you call it?... |
27925 | Then the fact of my wife''s existence did not disturb you at all?" |
27925 | Then the first question I ask myself is: who helped Horace Endicott to become Arthur Dillon?" |
27925 | This fact the nun emphasized by whispering to him as she was about to leave:"I hope you have not neglected your religious duties?" |
27925 | Though certain Edith''s theory was wrong, why should he act like a donkey in disproving it? |
27925 | To change the unchangeable? |
27925 | To whom could he confide him? |
27925 | To- morrow I seek the seclusion of the convent at Park Square-- isn''t_ seclusion_ good? |
27925 | Took a cramp, I reckon?" |
27925 | Was Edith Conyngham the third?" |
27925 | Was he conscious of his own motives? |
27925 | Was it not an American bishop who protested in behalf of the Chinese of San Francisco that they were more desirable immigrants than the sodden Irish? |
27925 | Was it not the rotten reed which he had leaned upon, the woman Sonia, rather than these? |
27925 | Was it possible that the exterior man had changed so thoroughly to match the inner personality which had grown up in him? |
27925 | Was it wonderful that she left the cathedral drawn to her hero as never before? |
27925 | Was n''t that beautiful now? |
27925 | Was she planning for his career? |
27925 | Was sin such a magician that in a day it could evolve out of merry Horace and innocent Sonia two such wretches? |
27925 | Was that her theme?" |
27925 | Was there any straw afloat which could be of service? |
27925 | Was there ever such luck? |
27925 | Was this the grief which made the parting moment terrible? |
27925 | We can see to the first, who will be the other?" |
27925 | Well, why do n''t you speak?" |
27925 | Well,"waking up suddenly to business,"are you all ready for the_ grand coup_--press, manager, all details?" |
27925 | Well,"with a sigh of pleasure,"if that does n''t take among the Methodists and the general public out West and down South, what will?" |
27925 | Were not all Livingstone''s friends on the committee which exposed Sister Claire?" |
27925 | Were not these same sorrows, from their constancy and from repetition, become the joke of the world? |
27925 | What are love and loving without God? |
27925 | What are yer wages here? |
27925 | What are you going to do in a case of that kind? |
27925 | What business had Honora with so much luck? |
27925 | What can he do but kill me?" |
27925 | What can the cleverest man discover, when he''s sure beforehand that there''s nothing to discover?" |
27925 | What can you expect?" |
27925 | What cared the officials for mere cries of rage? |
27925 | What chance has the alliance of success? |
27925 | What conscience flamed so dimly in the Danish prince that he could hesitate before his opportunity? |
27925 | What could a man want to deceive a poor mother so? |
27925 | What could be more sensible than his speech? |
27925 | What could she do but accept his terms, protesting that death was preferable? |
27925 | What course of thought, what set of circumstances, could turn the Puritan mind in the Celtic direction? |
27925 | What crowd?" |
27925 | What d''ye think she''s planning now? |
27925 | What did he care that his enemies had triumphed? |
27925 | What did it matter just then? |
27925 | What did she think of Mona''s remarks?" |
27925 | What did you do for the scattered children of the household? |
27925 | What do they say?" |
27925 | What do you know about her motives? |
27925 | What do you say, Curran?" |
27925 | What do you say? |
27925 | What do you think of it, Senator?" |
27925 | What do you want it for?" |
27925 | What had she to tell? |
27925 | What had we done?" |
27925 | What have I not done to do away with it? |
27925 | What if Claire appeared tall, portly, resonant, youthful, abounding in life, while Edith seemed mute, old, thin, feeble? |
27925 | What if Honora refused this gift laid so reverently at her feet? |
27925 | What if he should decide against you? |
27925 | What if he should scorn it?" |
27925 | What if she should decide against you?" |
27925 | What is doing against it?" |
27925 | What is life without love and loving? |
27925 | What is she to sing?" |
27925 | What is the future but a bare plain with no emphasis at all? |
27925 | What is the meaning of it? |
27925 | What is the past after all but a vague horizon made emphatic by the peaks of memory? |
27925 | What is to be the end of it?" |
27925 | What is your plan?" |
27925 | What land was like this country of the West? |
27925 | What made this strange man so unlike all other men? |
27925 | What more could I ask?" |
27925 | What need to disturb the Irish by naming a man who had always irritated and even insulted them? |
27925 | What remains? |
27925 | What should the third room be? |
27925 | What standard of womanhood and wifehood remained to such men? |
27925 | What tragedy had driven him from one life into another? |
27925 | What would Grahame here, Sullivan, Senator Dillon, or myself have been at this moment had we remained in Ireland? |
27925 | What would be the effect of his disappearance on Sonia and her lover? |
27925 | What would be the effect upon himself? |
27925 | What would be the end of it? |
27925 | What would your superiors say?" |
27925 | What wud yez be doin''in New York, wid yer clothes thrun on yez be a pitchfork, an''lukkin''as if they were made in the ark? |
27925 | What''s all this to do with Ledwith?" |
27925 | What''s the reason for the independent ticket? |
27925 | What''s your aim anyway?" |
27925 | Where do you go now?" |
27925 | Where does Arthur Dillon keep his money? |
27925 | Where had he seen and heard this woman before? |
27925 | Where was it kept before that? |
27925 | Which would cause more pain, to give up your art and your cause, or to give up the convent?" |
27925 | Who asked you to tremble? |
27925 | Who but Horace Endicott could know her crimes? |
27925 | Who but you could play so many parts at once?" |
27925 | Who can follow the way of the world? |
27925 | Who can measure the mind? |
27925 | Who can say? |
27925 | Who could resist the delight of these things? |
27925 | Who could tell when she was not acting? |
27925 | Who discovered it? |
27925 | Who is at the bottom of this thing?" |
27925 | Who knows what is best in this world of change? |
27925 | Who was he to be dealing with such a character as this dubious and disreputable woman? |
27925 | Who was he? |
27925 | Who was to blame? |
27925 | Who would regret the sorrow which led to such a revealing of hearts? |
27925 | Who''s within? |
27925 | Whose hands raised it? |
27925 | Why could he not leave the matter untouched and keep up appearances before the world? |
27925 | Why do men care for us poor creatures so much, Mona?" |
27925 | Why do n''t you go and talk with Artie about it?" |
27925 | Why do you say,''triumph''?" |
27925 | Why do you throw doubt upon it?" |
27925 | Why go back on your own work? |
27925 | Why had she delayed her entrance into the convent a year beyond the time? |
27925 | Why not, if nothing else could be done, go and set fire to Claire''s office, the bishop''s house, and the Livingstone mansion? |
27925 | Why should n''t you say it for yourself? |
27925 | Why should you want to kill her, and put the trail of blood over it all?" |
27925 | Will it be too painful for you to hear the story? |
27925 | Will the lawyers do any better?" |
27925 | Will you ever forget it, Monsignor dear, the night that Honora sang as the Genius of Erin? |
27925 | With all his confidence in Anne''s cleverness, how could he expect her to do the impossible? |
27925 | With all their beauty, what do these abstract loves bring us? |
27925 | Would his own mother mistake him? |
27925 | Would it be his fate to lose Arthur to Ireland by consideration for others? |
27925 | Would it not be better to live under his own name in remote countries, and thus be ready, if fate allowed, to return home at the proper time? |
27925 | Would it not be better to settle forever the last doubts in so peculiar a matter?" |
27925 | Would n''t that be worth seeing? |
27925 | Would n''t you venture on a little protest against his exposing himself to needless danger?" |
27925 | Would she retire to the convent, or find her vocation in the world? |
27925 | Yet were you free, where would be the advantage? |
27925 | You know the marks on Endicott''s body, birthmarks and the like... are they on Dillon''s body? |
27925 | You may remember the effective Sister Claire?" |
27925 | You think, then, that she... but what could be her motive?" |
27925 | You, the clever one? |
27925 | am I to tremble at your frown----?" |
27925 | are you fighting over it already? |
27925 | or was it her look, which seemed intimate, as of earlier acquaintance?... |
27925 | that all the neighbors accepted him? |
27925 | that he does n''t know how to hear Mass, to kneel when he enters a pew, to bless himself when he takes the holy water at the door? |
27925 | that he is indirectly responsible for that scandal?" |
27925 | what makes you think you know it?" |
27925 | what was it? |
27925 | when I am a success?" |
27925 | would I let you mesmerize her at the start by telling her how little you think of my idea and my plans? |
27925 | you spoke of a child?" |
31718 | ''Be aisy, Mrs. O''Brien,''says she;''or ye''ll be spoilin''yir milk and then what''ll ye do?'' 31718 ''Mickey?'' |
31718 | ''Where''s Mickey?'' 31718 A new hat, Ellen? |
31718 | Able for her, Rosie? 31718 About us, Rosie? |
31718 | Ah, Terry lad, how can you talk so? 31718 Ah, now, Rosie, what if we was all to get drownd- ed? |
31718 | Ah, now, baby, what can be ailin''ye? 31718 Ah, now, do you see, Rosie?" |
31718 | Ai n''t I nice all the time, Rosie? 31718 Ai n''t I sensible in other things?" |
31718 | Ai n''t it a great beau we got now? |
31718 | Ai n''t it funny with a fella that''s got so much sense about other things? |
31718 | Ai n''t it unladylike, Jarge, if it''s in self- defence? |
31718 | Ai n''t she the limit? |
31718 | And are you glad to see Rosie? |
31718 | And are you going? |
31718 | And did n''t he booze then, Janet? |
31718 | And how do you suppose I got it? |
31718 | And if you do, Jarge?... |
31718 | And is that all you''ve got to tell me? |
31718 | And it ai n''t some one we know? |
31718 | And then, Jarge, when you had him down, what did you do? |
31718 | And what do you want to be, Rosie? |
31718 | And, Daddy dear, did they take off that car that had a flat wheel? |
31718 | And, Janet dear, are you sure that Tom''ll tell his mother? |
31718 | And, Jarge dear, if you do go marry her and carry her off to the country, what will you do with her out there? 31718 And, Jarge, did he get off?" |
31718 | And, Ma,she continued,"do you suppose if my father beat me, I''d go around pretending he was the best ever? |
31718 | And, Rosie, do you think you could lend me a quarter? 31718 Are n''t you coming in?" |
31718 | Are n''t you going to kiss me good- night, Rosie? |
31718 | Are n''t you my friends, I''d like to know? 31718 Are n''t you paying me good money?... |
31718 | Are they paid for already? |
31718 | Are you having any trouble? |
31718 | Are you perfectly sure, Danny, they do sometimes fall out again? |
31718 | Are you selling many tickets, Jarge? |
31718 | Are you sure you''ll have any more on Saturday? |
31718 | Are-- are you sure he wo n''t wake up and make trouble? |
31718 | Arguin''with your own father, eh? |
31718 | At you, do you say, Rosie? 31718 Aw now, Danny, why do you always talk about that? |
31718 | Aw, now, Ma, why ca n''t you let up on Janet? 31718 Aw, now,''tain''t that bad, is it, Rosie?" |
31718 | Aw, what do I care how men like their stenogs? 31718 Aw, what do I want to go chasing girls for? |
31718 | Aw, why do n''t you call him Jarge? 31718 Been in swimmin'', kid?" |
31718 | Boarding, do you say? |
31718 | But about Jarge, Terry-- did he get pulled in that night? |
31718 | But could n''t you talk about something else besides that black eye? |
31718 | But do n''t you miss the quiet of the country? 31718 But what if he gets all sunburnt again and maybe drownd- ed?" |
31718 | But what''s a chin- chopper, darlint? |
31718 | But where does Jarge come in? 31718 But where, Ellen, where are you going in for it? |
31718 | But why do you got to say anything? 31718 But why does he love her?" |
31718 | But why is he in love? |
31718 | But will she do it? |
31718 | But you''d like to take care of him all the time, would n''t you, Rosie? |
31718 | But you''ll stop awhile tomorrow, darlint, wo n''t you? 31718 But you''re coming again, Rosie dear, are n''t you? |
31718 | But, Danny, what sense has a thing like that got? 31718 But, Danny, wo n''t Jarge be too old then?" |
31718 | But, Danny,Rosie wailed,"what if he was to get drownd- ed?" |
31718 | But, Ellen dear,--Mrs. O''Brien stretched out an appealing, indefinite hand--"what''s this you''re saying when you''ve got the money right there? |
31718 | But, Ellen dear,she asked,"why does he want to be coming up here?" |
31718 | But, Janet dear, how about your father? |
31718 | But, Jarge dear, why ca n''t you be sensible? 31718 But, Jarge, how did they get it away from you so many times?" |
31718 | But, Ma--Rosie''s voice dropped to a whisper, and a look of horror came into her face--"do you mean he used to-- beat you?" |
31718 | But, Ma, what am I going to do? |
31718 | But, Ma,Rosie cried,"what about poor Jarge?" |
31718 | But, Rosie dear, ca n''t you see that Jackie''s a big b''y now, well able to take care of himself? |
31718 | But, Rosie, do you think you''re big enough? 31718 But, Terence lad, what could I do? |
31718 | Ca n''t we keep Janet, Ma? 31718 Ca n''t you take''em with you and wash''em in the country?" |
31718 | Ca n''t you tell me something that''s got some sense to it? |
31718 | Can he fight? |
31718 | Can she, Terry? |
31718 | Chin- chopper? 31718 Could n''t you run over to the grocery now?" |
31718 | Crazy? 31718 Dad, do n''t you know that St. Louie is where Harry lives?" |
31718 | Dan Agin, what do ye mean, puttin''such nonsense into Rosie''s head? 31718 Dan Agin, what''s this ye''ve been sayin''to Rosie?" |
31718 | Danny,Rosie said solemnly,"do you know what I''d do if I was a boy?" |
31718 | Dear Jarge,he read slowly;"Wo n''t you please come in on Saturday night? |
31718 | Did he? 31718 Did n''t he say your mother would be all right soon?" |
31718 | Did n''t you love Mary? |
31718 | Did n''t you say you wanted to see me about something, Rosie? |
31718 | Did they send for an ambulance? |
31718 | Did they take you to the hospital, too? |
31718 | Did you know,Terry asked,"that Dave McFadden got pulled in while you were away? |
31718 | Did you lick him, Jarge? |
31718 | Did you throw him off? |
31718 | Do I look all right, Rosie? 31718 Do I think so? |
31718 | Do I think so? 31718 Do n''t he know yet that she''s married to the other fella?" |
31718 | Do n''t they, Danny? |
31718 | Do n''t you remember what you asked me to ask Danny Agin? |
31718 | Do n''t you think, Ellen,he ventured at last,"it might be just as well if I waited till Christmas?" |
31718 | Do n''t you want me to help with your papers this afternoon? |
31718 | Do n''t you want to do something? |
31718 | Do n''t you want to hear what Danny said? |
31718 | Do you got to boil''em? |
31718 | Do you hear that, Ma? 31718 Do you know the life she''s chosen?" |
31718 | Do you mean of him? |
31718 | Do you mean to say Tom Sullivan told you I was mad? 31718 Do you mean to say you''ve got the cheek to expect me to go sporting some fool girl every day?" |
31718 | Do you mean to tell me, Ellen, that, as a married woman, you''re keeping on working? |
31718 | Do you mean,Mrs. O''Brien quavered,"do you mean, Ellen dear, that he paid you?" |
31718 | Do you really mean it, Danny? |
31718 | Do you really think so, Danny? |
31718 | Do you remember, Terry, how you used to come home after your first swim every summer? |
31718 | Do you suppose my mother works like she does because she wants to? 31718 Do you think Terry would give me a job, Rosie?" |
31718 | Do you think that''s the only reason for going to school-- so''s to be a teacher? |
31718 | Do you want me to spit in her eye? |
31718 | Does that Schnitzer bother you every afternoon, Rosie? |
31718 | Ellen O''Brien, what do you mean? 31718 Ellen will do the dishes, wo n''t you, Ellen dear?" |
31718 | Ellen, Ellen, Ellen,Mrs. O''Brien wailed forlornly,"what makes you talk that way?" |
31718 | Ellen, Ellen,Mrs. O''Brien cried reprovingly,"is that the way you talk to poor little Rosie and her just in from the country? |
31718 | Ellen, Ellen,she wailed,"what makes you talk so? |
31718 | Ellen, I want to know one thing: Have you told this Harry about Jarge Riley? |
31718 | Ellen,she said, looking straight at her sister,"have you told him about Jarge Riley?" |
31718 | Ellen? |
31718 | Er-- do you remember, Jarge, what I was going to talk to you about last night? |
31718 | For God''s sake,he implored,"ca n''t you let up on me?" |
31718 | Friday night, did you say, Jarge? 31718 Good? |
31718 | Great friends? 31718 Guess he can learn, ca n''t he?" |
31718 | Ha, ha, Jack, old boy, how''s your sunburn? 31718 Has n''t Janet been in to see you, Danny?" |
31718 | Has she dared to go and break into your trunk? |
31718 | Has some one been offering you that kind of a position? |
31718 | Have you been chin- chopperin''some more of them, Rosie? |
31718 | Have you ever let up on us? |
31718 | Have you heard, Jarge, the frightful experience poor Ellen had at that office? 31718 Have you never seen it, Rosie?" |
31718 | He was able for her that time, was n''t he? |
31718 | He''s not like your old friend, Mr. Hawes, is he, Ellen? |
31718 | How can he know when no one''s told him? 31718 How could you? |
31718 | How did Ellen take it? 31718 How did it happen, do you ask? |
31718 | How do you do, Ellen? |
31718 | How do you know? |
31718 | How is Danny, Mis''Agin? |
31718 | How long may that be? |
31718 | How would you want her to be treating him? |
31718 | I did n''t, eh? |
31718 | I do n''t see why Aunt Kitty''s got to talk about it, do you? 31718 I suppose, now, if she was only in the country, she''d be all right, would n''t she?" |
31718 | I wonder what it was that started him that way? |
31718 | I''ll wager, Rosie dear, ye''ve never lain awake o''nights wondering what it was that made the world go round, have you now? |
31718 | I''m not leaving anything, am I? |
31718 | I''m sure I do n''t know why it is,she said to Janet McFadden,"but people are pretty nice to me, are n''t they?" |
31718 | I''m sure Rosie is not going to interfere, are you, Rosie? |
31718 | I-- I was going up to count my money, Jarge, and what do you think? 31718 I?" |
31718 | If I was to write him, Danny, what would I say? |
31718 | If ever I get a home of my own in St. Louie, will you come and make me a visit? |
31718 | Is he a sport, Ellen? |
31718 | Is he beating Janet? |
31718 | Is he like Jarge, Ellen? |
31718 | Is he pretty well? |
31718 | Is he really, Janet? 31718 Is it Ellen? |
31718 | Is it because you''re afraid of spending a cent? |
31718 | Is it cool in the country, Jarge? |
31718 | Is it peeling yet? |
31718 | Is it that you''re going to marry Jarge Riley? |
31718 | Is it yourself, Rosie O''Brien, that''s askin''me why? |
31718 | Is it yourself, Rosie O''Brien? 31718 Is it-- is it that you''re getting married?" |
31718 | Is it? |
31718 | Is that all it is, Rosie? |
31718 | Is that all, Danny? |
31718 | Is that all? |
31718 | Is that so? |
31718 | Is that so? |
31718 | Is that the way they teach you at the Business College to talk to your employer? |
31718 | Is that you, Rosie? |
31718 | Is there any more? |
31718 | Is there anything the matter with Jarge? |
31718 | Is your father home? |
31718 | Is your mother sick? |
31718 | It would just serve that Otto Schnitzer right, do n''t you think so, Danny? |
31718 | It''d be a pretty hard letter and, as you say yourself, why should you? |
31718 | Janet? |
31718 | Jarge Riley, what are you telling Jackie? |
31718 | Jarge dear, tell me one thing: why are you in love with her? |
31718 | Jarge, do you mean your mother has invited Geraldine and me out to the country for a couple o''weeks? |
31718 | Jarge? 31718 Kind? |
31718 | Laughin'', is it? 31718 Lost your job?" |
31718 | Love her, do you say? 31718 Ma, do n''t you really know how Janet got that black eye?" |
31718 | Ma, has Geraldine a clean dress to go out this afternoon in the baby- buggy? |
31718 | Ma, how can you talk that way? 31718 Ma, is he really waiting for me?... |
31718 | Ma, what do you mean? |
31718 | Ma, who took Rosie''s money? |
31718 | Ma,she sobbed,"you''re well, are n''t you?" |
31718 | Mad? 31718 Mad?" |
31718 | Mary? 31718 Me, Rosie dear, am I well, do you say?" |
31718 | Meaning yourself, Rosie? |
31718 | Murderous? |
31718 | My mother? |
31718 | Nice? |
31718 | Not save? 31718 Now I suppose, Rosie, you think you and Terry are great friends, do n''t you?" |
31718 | Now are we ready? |
31718 | Now tell the truth, George, are n''t you glad it''s Rosie instead of me? |
31718 | Now then,George began briskly,"what''s the first thing I''m to do?" |
31718 | Now, Jackie dear, what''s the matter? 31718 Now, Terry lad, how do I know who took it? |
31718 | Of course it''s nice and we''re going to Boulevard Place every afternoon, are n''t we, Geraldine? 31718 Oh, Ellen dear, you have n''t lost your job, have you? |
31718 | Oh, Ellen,she repeated,"how does it come that ye''ve lost it?" |
31718 | Oh, George, I wonder if you''ll ever forgive me for the way I''ve been treating you? |
31718 | Oh, Jarge, did he really? 31718 Oh, Jarge, do you mean you knocked him down on the floor of the car?" |
31718 | Oh, Rosie, ca n''t I have it now? 31718 Oh, Rosie, what do you think? |
31718 | Oh, Terry, did you used to get sunburned, too? |
31718 | Pretty well, do ye say? 31718 Pretty? |
31718 | Really, Jarge? |
31718 | Risky? 31718 Rosie dear, do ye think just for tonight ye could cook the supper for me? |
31718 | Rosie dear, like a good child, will you bring me me pipe and a few matches? |
31718 | Rosie dear, why do you always be so sharp to your poor ma? 31718 Rosie dear, why do you be so hard on your poor ma? |
31718 | Rosie''s not going to be a stenog, is she? |
31718 | Rosie, will you do something for me? 31718 Rosie,"Danny asked slowly,"are you in love with Jarge?" |
31718 | Say, Dad, if you was to get awful mad at me, what would you do? |
31718 | Say, Dad, what do you think of a girl doing a trick like that on two decent fellows? |
31718 | Say, Dad,she opened again, in a coaxing, confidential tone,"did you have a good run today?" |
31718 | Say, Daddy,she whispered,"if I was awful bad, what would you do to me? |
31718 | Say, Ellen O''Brien, what do you think you are? 31718 Say, Jack, what do you say to goin''down now? |
31718 | Say, Jackie, do you want to come with me this afternoon? 31718 Say, Janet, do n''t you think she''s a nice baby?" |
31718 | Say, Janet, why do n''t you get a job? 31718 Say, Jarge, can you lend me twenty- five cents until tomorrow night? |
31718 | Say, Jarge,she whispered coaxingly,"will you do something for me?" |
31718 | Say, Ma, what do you think I am? 31718 Say, Rosie, ai n''t we winners?" |
31718 | Say, Rosie, do n''t it beat all the way she goes along doing just as she pleases? 31718 Say, Rosie, is he still dead gone on Ellen?" |
31718 | Say, Rosie, what do you think? 31718 Say, Rosie, why do n''t you try it on him? |
31718 | Say, Rosie, would n''t it be fun if Jarge happened in? 31718 Say, Rosie,"he chuckled confidentially over her shoulder as she climbed down to the next deck,"did you see old Janet? |
31718 | Say, Sis, is this fellow married? |
31718 | Say, Terry, is she worse since she''s got a job? |
31718 | Say, Terry, what do you know about that? |
31718 | Scared, Rosie? 31718 See this, Rosie? |
31718 | Sense, Rosie? |
31718 | Shall we sit out here awhile? |
31718 | Shall we tell them? |
31718 | Six years, do you say? |
31718 | So can I tell him to come? |
31718 | So he''s that kind of a scoundrel, is he? |
31718 | So it was Ellen, was it? 31718 So she looked at you like a black thunder- cloud, did she?" |
31718 | So she''s lost her job already, has she? |
31718 | So you think I''m right to save for skates, do you, Danny? |
31718 | Sounds easy, do n''t it? 31718 Tell me, Terry, what did he do?" |
31718 | Terry, Terry,Mrs. O''Brien murmured wearily,"why do ye be talkin''that way of your own sister? |
31718 | Thanksgiving, do you say? 31718 That so?" |
31718 | That so? |
31718 | That''s it, is it? |
31718 | Then what did he say? |
31718 | Then what? |
31718 | Then when will I see you? |
31718 | Then why do n''t you do as I tell you? |
31718 | Three weeks, do you say? 31718 Uncle Matt?" |
31718 | Understand what? |
31718 | Was he drunk, Jarge? |
31718 | Was it anything special? |
31718 | Well, Dad, did you report it? |
31718 | Well, Danny, listen here: if Harry comes on Saturday, shall I tell Jarge? |
31718 | Well, Janet, what did the doctor say? |
31718 | Well, Rosie dear, what do you want to do? |
31718 | Well, Rosie, what do you want me to do? |
31718 | Well, Rosie,he began,"how does it seem to be back?" |
31718 | Well, anyway, it''s all in the future, so why are we arguin''now? 31718 Well, do n''t I love you?" |
31718 | Well, then, do n''t you think that perhaps he''d better make you a little call down at the shop? 31718 Well, then, tell me this: how''s a born fool to act sensible?" |
31718 | Well, then, what I want to know is this: How can they want a thing when they do n''t want it? |
31718 | Well, what about them? |
31718 | Well, what happened at the ball? |
31718 | Well, what would you say to a man who chased his wife with a butcher- knife? |
31718 | Well, why ca n''t you put her in the front room? 31718 Well,"--Rosie tried to speak quietly--"what did Jarge do?" |
31718 | Well,asked Terry,"what did he say?" |
31718 | Well? |
31718 | Were you at home, Janet? |
31718 | What about Rosie''s hands? |
31718 | What am I going to do? |
31718 | What did I do? 31718 What did I do? |
31718 | What did Jarge do? 31718 What did he do? |
31718 | What did he say? 31718 What did n''t you know?" |
31718 | What did that fellow do to you? |
31718 | What did you tell him? |
31718 | What do I care about being good and kind? 31718 What do I care what all boys do? |
31718 | What do you expect? 31718 What do you mean by''the little time that''s left you''?" |
31718 | What do you mean, Ellen? 31718 What do you think about the eye I''ve got on me? |
31718 | What do you think, Rosie? 31718 What does it depend on, Janet?" |
31718 | What if it is? 31718 What is it hurts, Jackie?" |
31718 | What is it you want me to do? |
31718 | What is it, Janet? 31718 What is it, Rosie darlint? |
31718 | What ladies? |
31718 | What makes you say that, Rosie? |
31718 | What mistake did she make this time? |
31718 | What scar? |
31718 | What two? |
31718 | What you got tonight? |
31718 | What''s ailin''you, Rosie? |
31718 | What''s happened now? |
31718 | What''s he been sayin''to you, dear? |
31718 | What''s the matter now? |
31718 | What''s the matter with her? |
31718 | What''s the matter, Ellen? |
31718 | What''s the matter, Rosie dear? 31718 What''s the matter, Rosie? |
31718 | What''s the matter, Rosie? |
31718 | What''s this ye''re sayin'', Rosie? |
31718 | What''s this ye''re sayin''? 31718 What''s this ye''re sayin''? |
31718 | What''s this ye''re sayin''? |
31718 | What''s troublin''you, Rosie dear? |
31718 | What? |
31718 | What? |
31718 | When did it happen, Janet? |
31718 | Where you going, Jackie? |
31718 | Where''s your mother? |
31718 | Who are all the same? |
31718 | Who did you say was gone, Rosie? |
31718 | Who''s Jarge? |
31718 | Why ca n''t you always be like this to me, Ellen? 31718 Why did n''t you tell me, Rosie dear, before they got started?" |
31718 | Why do I got to say anything? |
31718 | Why do n''t you just tell Terry on him? |
31718 | Why do n''t you save it and buy roller skates, Rosie? 31718 Why do n''t you stay here for supper?" |
31718 | Why do you say that, Danny? |
31718 | Why does he deserve credit for doing what he ought to do? |
31718 | Why would I have to? |
31718 | Why''d I tell you? 31718 Why, Danny, how can you say a thing like that? |
31718 | Why, Ellen dear,her mother gasped,"what''s ailin''you?" |
31718 | Why, I''ve been asleep, have n''t I? |
31718 | Why, Rosie dear, what''s come over you? |
31718 | Why, Rosie dear, what''s this ye''re askin''me? 31718 Why, Rosie, ai n''t they all bottle- babies? |
31718 | Why, Rosie, are n''t you just afther tellin''me about the scar that was n''t there? |
31718 | Why, Rosie, what ails you? 31718 Why-- why, Ellen dear,"she stammered,"what''s this I hear you saying?" |
31718 | Why? |
31718 | Will lard do? |
31718 | Will that suit you? |
31718 | Will you do something for me, Terry? |
31718 | Will you, Rosie? |
31718 | With a hatchet, did you say, Rosie? |
31718 | With all I''ve got to do, how can I get up a fine supper for a sporty young gent like Mr. Harry? 31718 Wo n''t I have a whole week''s wages?" |
31718 | Wo n''t talking be good enough? |
31718 | Wo n''t you have me just the same, even if you are in the country? 31718 Would n''t I now? |
31718 | Would n''t he smother in there with the door shut? |
31718 | Would n''t it just be wonderful to have a baby really and truly your own? |
31718 | Would you, Rosie? 31718 Yes, Rosie dear, but what''d you do if you''d been like your poor ma and had had eight babies? |
31718 | You do love me, do n''t you? |
31718 | You have, have you? 31718 You like peanuts, do n''t you, Rosie? |
31718 | You promise me faithfully you wo n''t go in? |
31718 | You wo n''t be scared tonight, will you? |
31718 | You''ll come, wo n''t you, Rosie? |
31718 | You''re in love with her, Jarge, are n''t you? |
31718 | You''re not going to, eh? 31718 You''re that close to the finish, are you, Rosie?" |
31718 | Your poor da, did you say, Rosie? 31718 _ My dear little Sweetheart,_"it ran;"_ Say, what do you think? |
31718 | ''That''s how you feel, is it?'' |
31718 | ''Who do I think I am?'' |
31718 | ''Why, did n''t I see Mickey start off with the b''ys? |
31718 | --_Chicago Record- Herald._ WILLIAM DE MORGAN''S NOVELS"WHY ALL THIS POPULARITY?" |
31718 | A mother is a teacher, is n''t she?" |
31718 | A real live lady? |
31718 | A woman who was sweeping the steps in front of the tenement where the McFaddens lived, made the friendly inquiry:"Lookin''for Janet?" |
31718 | After a decent interval, Rosie began again:"Say, Dad, what''d you think of a man who chased his wife with a hatchet?" |
31718 | After a moment, Ellen quavered:"Even-- even yet, George?" |
31718 | After several seconds had elapsed, he turned his head slightly and said:"Well, Rosie?" |
31718 | Again Jamie took an exasperating time to answer, and again his answer took the form of the question:"Is it some one we know, Rosie?" |
31718 | Aggrieved and injured, Ellen appealed to her father:"Say, Dad, what do you know about that?" |
31718 | Ah, she remembered and, as she remembered, all fear seemed instantly to leave her heart and she cried out in ringing tones:"Who do I think I am? |
31718 | Ai n''t I right?" |
31718 | Ai n''t he been boarding with us a whole week now?" |
31718 | Ai n''t her food agreeing with her?" |
31718 | Ai n''t it a beaut?" |
31718 | Ai n''t it just tough the way poor little babies have to pay up for things like that?... |
31718 | Ai n''t that right, Rosie?" |
31718 | Ai n''t that right, Rosie?" |
31718 | Am I, Rosie?" |
31718 | And I do n''t think Ellen and your mother would have liked each other either and they would have to live together and then where would you be? |
31718 | And for that matter, darlint, is n''t a mother the greatest teacher in the world? |
31718 | And has n''t my poor mother worked harder than your mother has ever worked? |
31718 | And he says, how''s farming? |
31718 | And if she was willing to serve him, why, pray, should other people object? |
31718 | And if some one from downtown did see her, how would they know she was your sister? |
31718 | And is it some one around here that we know?" |
31718 | And may I ask what Jarge Riley''s got to with it?" |
31718 | And she''s going to take care of her all summer, is n''t she? |
31718 | And the same way, take decent hard- working people and what do you find? |
31718 | And then he looks down at me and grins like a jackass and says:''Who do you think you are?'' |
31718 | And then what did you do?" |
31718 | And there was a postcard this morning and what do you think it said? |
31718 | And was this the thing she used to be afraid of? |
31718 | And what did he feel he was receiving? |
31718 | And what for, do you think? |
31718 | And what would you say, Rosie, to a poor man havin''to live, day in and day out, for forty years with an everlastin''conthradiction like that? |
31718 | And what''s more, women have got just as much right to use it as men, have n''t they?" |
31718 | And where was there a prettier or a sweeter baby than Geraldine? |
31718 | And why? |
31718 | And will you tell me, me lady, what is it you can do so much better than stenography?" |
31718 | And would his own child acknowledge this? |
31718 | And you know about Jake Mullane dying last week, do n''t you? |
31718 | And you think it''s a good idea, do you, Jarge?" |
31718 | And, George, do you know about Janet? |
31718 | And, Rosie, what do you think? |
31718 | And, after all, what does it matter if ye do n''t? |
31718 | And, besides, if she has n''t got a good education herself, how can she teach her children? |
31718 | Another asked facetiously:"Well, kid, how does this weather suit you?" |
31718 | Any one been teasing you?" |
31718 | Anyway, ca n''t Janet McFadden take them?" |
31718 | Are n''t all Rosie''s friends my friends?" |
31718 | Are n''t you sitting down with the rest of us?" |
31718 | Are n''t you yourself Geraldine''s teacher every day of your life?" |
31718 | Are you glad he''s gone?" |
31718 | As I''ve said to Ellen, many''s the time,''Why do n''t you bring your friend out to see me? |
31718 | As Janet made no comment, Rosie demanded:"Do n''t you think he does?" |
31718 | At length he asked:"Well, Rosie, what is it?" |
31718 | At twenty- four a lad''s getting on, ai n''t he? |
31718 | Aw, why do you let her fool you? |
31718 | Because why? |
31718 | Before he realized what he was saying, he asked:"Has n''t your mother any money?" |
31718 | Believe her? |
31718 | Besides, what would your poor mother say if you did n''t come now that you could? |
31718 | But I do say it''s disgraceful in a mother of eight.... Why, do you know what ma was feeding Geraldine when I took hold of her? |
31718 | But I do want to see poor old Jarge.... Say, Terry, do n''t it beat all the way a good sensible fellow like Jarge goes crazy over a girl like Ellen? |
31718 | But I will say one thing: You think Terry''s awful nice, do n''t you? |
31718 | But a short time ago he would have jumped down from his chair and rushed over to her with an eager:"Oh, Rosie, where you going? |
31718 | But before you go, will you please give me a quarter? |
31718 | But ca n''t you sit down for a minute and talk to a body?" |
31718 | But do we ever save ourselves? |
31718 | But do you ever hear them giving any credit to the decent hard- working men who support their families every day of the year? |
31718 | But do you know what he''d do to me if I was to lose one of his paper customers? |
31718 | But do you think Mis''Agin would want me to take them?" |
31718 | But does n''t it kind of scare you, Rosie, to think of a big strong man like Jake being dead and buried before you can turn around?... |
31718 | But how much money have you got salted away in the bank? |
31718 | But if I was to marry, do you know the kind of man I''d pick out? |
31718 | But if it was once granted that her mother was unable to give Geraldine proper care, was the child, Rosie asked herself, never to receive such care? |
31718 | But it''s kind of a new idea: the city''s quiet and the country''s noisy, is that it?" |
31718 | But the question is: why did I love her or why did she love me? |
31718 | But tomorrow afternoon-- will you stop for me then? |
31718 | But what does it all amount to? |
31718 | But what to do next? |
31718 | But where had he got the deep vibrating tone with which he spoke it? |
31718 | But why did you have to be so crooked with him? |
31718 | But why do n''t you see that I''ve got the same right? |
31718 | But why should n''t he still be a baby? |
31718 | CHAPTER II THE SCHNITZER"Tell me now, Rosie, are you having any trouble with your papers?" |
31718 | CHAPTER XXVII ROSIE URGES COMMON SENSE"Why is he in love?" |
31718 | Ca n''t some o''you do something for it?" |
31718 | Ca n''t you do something to make it stop hurting?" |
31718 | Ca n''t you keep him out, Ellen? |
31718 | Ca n''t you see your poor ma is working herself to death to get your nice clean clothes all ready for you? |
31718 | Could n''t you see that this morning?... |
31718 | Could she take this baby and raise it as she had Jackie?... |
31718 | Dave boozes, does he? |
31718 | Did n''t I tell you that dad and Billy are going to drive down to meet you?" |
31718 | Did n''t me knees go weak at sight of her and me head dizzy? |
31718 | Did she tell him once for all she''d never have him?" |
31718 | Did that Hawes fellow say something to you last night at the Island?" |
31718 | Did you ever think of that before? |
31718 | Did you have a good run today, dearie?" |
31718 | Do I look like I was born yesterday?" |
31718 | Do n''t I do my share of work in the family?" |
31718 | Do n''t I have to wash him and button his shoes and put him to bed?" |
31718 | Do n''t I know the hard time poor Mary Agin has at home and do n''t I say the same of her? |
31718 | Do n''t I work as hard as you? |
31718 | Do n''t he now?" |
31718 | Do n''t she look like a little flower-- a sweet- pea or something? |
31718 | Do n''t you call that pretty fine for a poor girl who is just starting out in life? |
31718 | Do n''t you know if Ellen''s to be a stenog, she''s got to be careful of her appearance? |
31718 | Do n''t you know it makes you kind o''sick inside to let yourself get so mad at any one?" |
31718 | Do n''t you know that Geraldine is a bottle- baby?" |
31718 | Do n''t you see the tears?" |
31718 | Do n''t you see, George? |
31718 | Do n''t you see?" |
31718 | Do n''t you suppose I''m tired, too?" |
31718 | Do n''t you think so?" |
31718 | Do n''t you think, Ellen dear,"she went on a little timidly,"that perhaps you''d better tell Mr. Harry not to come this week?" |
31718 | Do n''t you?" |
31718 | Do ye see? |
31718 | Do you hear me? |
31718 | Do you know what he''d do to you if you was to lose one of his paper customers? |
31718 | Do you like''em fat or do you like''em thin? |
31718 | Do you mean about both of us?" |
31718 | Do you mean to tell me that you''re willing to be a milliner when you might be a stenographer? |
31718 | Do you mind, Ellen, the way your da''s been talkin''? |
31718 | Do you really mean it?" |
31718 | Do you remember all the times you took me to the movies and for street- car rides and things like that? |
31718 | Do you think I can get curls on tick?" |
31718 | Do you think I''m very awful, Rosie?" |
31718 | Do you think Jarge''d mind?" |
31718 | Do you think it''s becoming to call a man a stranger who''s sitting down with you at your own table?" |
31718 | Do you understand?" |
31718 | Do you want a blonde? |
31718 | Do you want me to go to the hospital to see her?" |
31718 | Do you want to come with me?" |
31718 | Do you want to get it, Rosie?" |
31718 | Either he was sobbing, or----"Danny Agin, are you laughing?" |
31718 | Ellen, for some reason, did not feel this instinctively and, if a girl does not feel it instinctively, how is she to be made to feel it? |
31718 | Every one who saw her stopped to call out:"Back again, Rosie? |
31718 | George Riley and Danny Agin and Janet McFadden and Terry and her mother-- hadn''t each of them said the same thing? |
31718 | George gasped an incredulous,"Really, Ellen? |
31718 | George laughed a good- natured"All right,"and Rosie, turning around, said to Janet:"Jarge do n''t want me any more, do you, Jarge? |
31718 | George spoke with an effort:"Why do you think it was Ellen?" |
31718 | George, looking a little sheepish, called after her:"Are n''t you going to kiss me good- night, Rosie?" |
31718 | George, swallowing hard, forced out the question:"Why not?" |
31718 | Geraldine darlint, do ye hear what sister Rosie says?" |
31718 | Had Rosie seen old Janet? |
31718 | Had n''t everybody, Rosie herself included, been crazy with the heat? |
31718 | Had n''t other people as well? |
31718 | Ham again? |
31718 | Hardly outside the gate, Janet began:"You''re not mad at me, Rosie, are you?" |
31718 | Harry?" |
31718 | Has she been doing something to him again?" |
31718 | Has that fellow been insulting you?" |
31718 | Have n''t I a right to all those things? |
31718 | Have n''t I always got to say somethin''? |
31718 | Have n''t I got to keep my hands nice if ever I''m going to be a stenog?" |
31718 | Have ye ever heard me, all the years of your life, breathe a whisper against Jamie O''Brien?" |
31718 | Have you ever thought, Rosie dear, of the queer ch''ices men make when they marry?" |
31718 | Have you got anything else on for Friday night next week?" |
31718 | Have you something for Rosie?" |
31718 | Hawes?" |
31718 | He bolted a knifeful of fried potatoes, then asked:"What''s ailing Geraldine? |
31718 | He stared about helplessly and asked, with the querulousness, almost, of a child:"What is it you want me to do? |
31718 | He wants you, Janet, do n''t you, Jarge, want Janet? |
31718 | He would have said more but Terence interrupted:"What''s the matter, Rosie? |
31718 | Her first way of doing this was by saying to him as she handed him his supper- pail at six o''clock:"Oh, Jarge, what do you think? |
31718 | Here is what she wrote: DEAR GEORGE, How are you and how is your mother and how is your father? |
31718 | His little blue eyes twinkled Rosie a welcome, and his jolly cracked voice called out:"How are you today, Rosie?" |
31718 | How could any one be unhappy who had a friend as good and as kind as George Riley? |
31718 | How could he? |
31718 | How could she ever put herself right with him?... |
31718 | How could there be? |
31718 | How do you account for it?" |
31718 | How do you like''em? |
31718 | How''s the country?" |
31718 | How''s your poor mother and is your father still on the water wagon?" |
31718 | I bet anything he''s coming to spend Sunday with her and, if he does come, what in the world am I to do about it?" |
31718 | I bet he sells a good many, do n''t you?" |
31718 | I got two new customers, did n''t I, Terry? |
31718 | I know I ought to be ashamed, but can I help it? |
31718 | I think a girl ought to go through High School, do n''t you, George? |
31718 | I told you, did n''t I, that twenty- five cents is what''s coming in to me now every week regular?" |
31718 | I was just saying, what would you think of a man who did that?" |
31718 | I wonder how soon he''ll know?" |
31718 | I''ll be back soon, wo n''t I, Ma?" |
31718 | I''m not surprised at that, are you? |
31718 | I''m sure my mother has, do n''t you think so, George? |
31718 | I-- I know I''m ugly, but-- can I help it?..." |
31718 | If Rosie was to make her living selling papers, who''d know about it downtown? |
31718 | Instead he asked:"How much do you reckon this fool scheme would cost a fellow?" |
31718 | Is it serious?" |
31718 | Is n''t George coming on Thanksgiving and are n''t we to be married in the spring? |
31718 | Is n''t it Ellen''s little party?" |
31718 | Is that all you got to say?" |
31718 | Is that the way for you to be treatin''a gentleman who''s taking supper with us? |
31718 | Is that the way to talk to your poor Rosie?" |
31718 | Is there enough?" |
31718 | It had looked then as if they were talking about her, had n''t it now? |
31718 | It was Rosie who demanded in desperation:"But, Jarge, what is a chin- chopper?" |
31718 | It''s dangerous to go in swimming, and Jackie''s never going again, are you, Jackie?" |
31718 | It''s from mother; and what do you think? |
31718 | Jack wants to hear all about the pigs and cows, do n''t you, Jackie dear?" |
31718 | Jack''s yir own baby, as it were; but, whist, darlint, he ca n''t be always taggin''after ye, do n''t ye see? |
31718 | Jackie''s never going in again, are you, Jackie?" |
31718 | Janet heard her out and then said:"But, Rosie, do n''t all boys go swimming?" |
31718 | Janet''ll take that bundle, wo n''t you, Janet? |
31718 | Jarge is in the country and not likely to pop in on her, is he?" |
31718 | Lamb chops and porterhouse steak?" |
31718 | Let''s see how old you''ll be then? |
31718 | Let''s see: was it in the right cheek or the left? |
31718 | Living right here with us would n''t you suppose he''d get to know her?" |
31718 | Mercy on us, where would we be if she did n''t? |
31718 | Mr. Long, sir, will you be so good as to explain things?" |
31718 | Mrs. O''Brien called after him excitedly:"Why, Jarge lad, where''s this you''re going? |
31718 | Mrs. O''Brien crooned tearfully,"and does nobody love you? |
31718 | Mrs. O''Brien gasped,"what''s come over you? |
31718 | Mrs. O''Brien gasped:"What''s this you''re saying, Harry?" |
31718 | My, my, George, did you ever think how fast time flies? |
31718 | Nearly a month.... Well, now, Mr. Long, since you''ve got a wife and a few debts, is it your idea, if I might ask you, to start housekeeping?" |
31718 | Now I ask you frankly, do n''t you think so yourself?" |
31718 | Now I ask you truthfully, ai n''t that so?" |
31718 | Now do you call that fair? |
31718 | Now do you remember?" |
31718 | Now how do you make that out?" |
31718 | Now is it so awful hard to tell a girl you''re crazy about her if you are? |
31718 | Now stop your cryin'', darlint, or your poor ma wo n''t be able to iron right, and then what''ll sister Ellen say when she comes in? |
31718 | Now that she was back to it, already her weeks in the country seemed far off and vague.... Had she ever been away? |
31718 | Now what do you know about that?" |
31718 | Now what was it, I ask you, that put love between us?" |
31718 | Now you would n''t want your poor ma to be scolded by Ellen, would you? |
31718 | Now, Danny, do you think it''s nice for a girl that''s engaged to let another fella send her postcards and sign''em''Harry''?" |
31718 | Now, Danny, what can that mean? |
31718 | Now, is n''t that the silliest thing you ever heard, Mis''Agin? |
31718 | Now: Are you going to be sensible or are n''t you?" |
31718 | O''Brien?" |
31718 | O''Brien?" |
31718 | Oh, Jackie, how can you take poor Rosie''s money and then act that way?" |
31718 | One boy called out,"How''s business, old gal?" |
31718 | One girl called out in passing:"Gee, Rosie, ai n''t this the limit?" |
31718 | Or the movies or a walk? |
31718 | Poor Jarge was always just like one of the family, was n''t he?" |
31718 | Presently Rosie said:"Tell me, Janet, has he always boozed like this?" |
31718 | Pretty good pay for two days''work-- what?" |
31718 | Ride down with me on my last trip? |
31718 | Rocks?" |
31718 | Rosie bounced the baby- carriage vigorously and made direct appeal to Geraldine herself:"Does n''t sister Rosie love her own baby? |
31718 | Rosie caught him up sharply:"Not even for Ellen?" |
31718 | Rosie interrupted politely:"Jackie, will you come into the house a minute? |
31718 | Rosie knew perfectly well what Danny meant but, for conversational reasons, she asked:"Where in the country, Danny?" |
31718 | Rosie obeyed and, after a slight pause, Danny continued:"You''re troubled about Jarge, are n''t you, Rosie?" |
31718 | Rosie opened the door and Danny received her with a friendly,"Ah now, and is it yourself, Rosie? |
31718 | Rosie paused, then concluded in triumph:"Do n''t I know my own brother Terry? |
31718 | Rosie picked out the homeliest of them all and wished she had George down beside her so that she could say to him:"Do you see that woman? |
31718 | Rosie protested at once:"Why are they awful? |
31718 | Rosie went to the drug- store herself with the money, did n''t you, Rosie?" |
31718 | Rosie, accusing angel and stern judge rolled into one, demanded gravely:"And now that he''s gone what are you going to do?" |
31718 | Say, Rosie, ai n''t women fools? |
31718 | Say, Rosie, listen:"--Janet paused a moment--"do you think Tom and me and you and Jarge could all go together? |
31718 | Say, Rosie, what have you filled your jelly glasses with? |
31718 | Say, Sis, do you have to pay your own carfare?" |
31718 | Say, how''s the water?" |
31718 | She just sits around and complains and what do you think? |
31718 | She paused now before seating herself, to remark in shocked tones:"Why, Janet McFadden, what''s this ye''re tellin''? |
31718 | She waited expectantly, and Jack finally grunted out in bored politeness:"That so?" |
31718 | She''ll pay you back as soon as she gets a job, wo n''t you, Ellen dear?" |
31718 | She''s got her own work to do at school and I''m sure it''s hard work, ai n''t it, Ellen dear?" |
31718 | Since when have you got so particular about what your Aunt Kitty thinks or does n''t think? |
31718 | So I thought---- Oh, you understand now, do n''t you, Rosie? |
31718 | So they scared you, Rosie?" |
31718 | So will you let Tom Sullivan take me?" |
31718 | So you''re back, are you?" |
31718 | Somebody dead?" |
31718 | Tears of self- pity came to Rosie''s eyes and she wanted to cry out:"And what about me? |
31718 | Tell me, Jamie, when was it?" |
31718 | Tell me, ai n''t that so?" |
31718 | Terence drew Ellen back to her story:"Well, Sis, after that, what did you say and what did he say?" |
31718 | That stands to reason, do n''t it now?" |
31718 | That''s it, ai n''t it?" |
31718 | That''s it, is it? |
31718 | The next time she gets a job, I''m sure she''ll begin payin''board the first thing, wo n''t you, Ellen dear?" |
31718 | The wind kept blowing Rosie''s streamers into her eyes until she was ready to tear them off.... Would they never get home? |
31718 | Then he added:"But do n''t you want a piece of it yourself?" |
31718 | Then he leaned in over Rosie and demanded:"What''s the matter, Ellen? |
31718 | Then she gasped:"How-- how did it happen?" |
31718 | Then she gasped:"Why, Jarge, what do you mean?" |
31718 | Then, to change the subject:"What does your mother say about Geraldine?" |
31718 | There are others like ye, do ye say? |
31718 | There you are, wanting to make love to Ellen and what do you do? |
31718 | They always make it so awful pleasant for us, do n''t they?" |
31718 | This is the end of Terry''s route and he gets here so late that if I do n''t help him he''ll lose his customers, wo n''t you, Terry?" |
31718 | To the small ones she gave the initial_ J_, to the large ones G."Do you suppose those two are spoonin''up there yet?" |
31718 | Turning to his mother he demanded:"Did you give her the two dollars you begged from me for the baby''s food?" |
31718 | Uncle Dave makes good money, does he? |
31718 | Was he to cause her failure? |
31718 | Was n''t it for talkin''purposes that the Lord put a tongue in me head?" |
31718 | Was n''t it sweet of Janet not to refer to the coldness of their last meeting? |
31718 | Was she the member of the family who was given to chasing men like Philip Hawes? |
31718 | Was there anything on earth sweeter than a dimpled baby?... |
31718 | Was this comfortable income of twenty cents a week now, at the last moment, to be snatched from her? |
31718 | We always had such good times together, did n''t we? |
31718 | We just could n''t leave it, could we, baby? |
31718 | We''ll be back soon, wo n''t we, Joe?" |
31718 | We''re going out in front by ourselves, are n''t we?" |
31718 | We''re not muckers just because we''re poor, are we, Danny?" |
31718 | We''re terribly careful to save the neighbours, and why? |
31718 | Well, have I got a good steady job? |
31718 | Well, who do you think you are, anyway?" |
31718 | What about Polly Russell?" |
31718 | What about my papers?" |
31718 | What are you going to do with it all?" |
31718 | What are you going to do with them?" |
31718 | What are you talking about? |
31718 | What did those Slattery boys do to you?" |
31718 | What did you bring me from the country?" |
31718 | What do I care? |
31718 | What do you know about that? |
31718 | What do you mean, Rosie? |
31718 | What do you say to that?" |
31718 | What do you think I am? |
31718 | What do you want to do tomorrow night? |
31718 | What do you want with a girl like Ellen? |
31718 | What else could I think with the sight I''ve had of all the lads I''ve ever known fallin''in love and most of them fallin''out again?" |
31718 | What for?" |
31718 | What had she ever done to this great lout of a boy that he should be annoying her thus? |
31718 | What if he had forgotten himself once? |
31718 | What kind of an answer was that for a father to give his child? |
31718 | What more could there be? |
31718 | What next? |
31718 | What shall it be, a street- car ride or the movies?" |
31718 | What time, may one ask, would Rosie have for this work if she burdened herself with Geraldine? |
31718 | What was it I was sayin''now? |
31718 | What were you scared about?" |
31718 | What would it matter, anyway, if he never woke up? |
31718 | What would you do with her if you had her? |
31718 | What you cryin''about?" |
31718 | What''s eating Tom Sullivan? |
31718 | What''s happened to make you change your mind? |
31718 | What''s happened to your back and shoulders? |
31718 | What''s happened?" |
31718 | What''s happened?" |
31718 | What''s happened?" |
31718 | What''s this new picnic, and when is it to be?" |
31718 | What''s this ye''re sayin''? |
31718 | What''s troublin''you?" |
31718 | What, for instance?" |
31718 | When they reached home, George said to Ellen:"Do n''t you want to sit out here on the porch a little while?" |
31718 | Whenever I go to Aunt Kitty''s or when Tom comes to our house, the first thing he says is,''How''s Rosie O''Brien these days?'' |
31718 | Where are you?" |
31718 | Where did you come from?" |
31718 | Where else can I put the poor child but right here? |
31718 | Where have you been all this time?" |
31718 | Where you going? |
31718 | Where you going?" |
31718 | Where''s the corn- starch?" |
31718 | Which would you rather have, rhubarb or apple?" |
31718 | Who could resist so handsome a son- in- law? |
31718 | Who do you think you are, anyway? |
31718 | Who thought of it, Danny or you?" |
31718 | Who would n''t believe her? |
31718 | Who''s going to tell him?" |
31718 | Why do either of you got to say anything?" |
31718 | Why do n''t you make her do something?" |
31718 | Why do n''t you pick out a few nice ones?" |
31718 | Why do n''t you spit it out quick?" |
31718 | Why do you want to do anything? |
31718 | Why has n''t he always done this? |
31718 | Why in the world do people pretend a thing when they know perfectly well that they are pretending? |
31718 | Why is he so crazy about Ellen?" |
31718 | Why not with Geraldine? |
31718 | Why not?" |
31718 | Why should n''t she ask him? |
31718 | Why would n''t she? |
31718 | Why, Rosie, is there anything in the world you''d rather do than go up to Boulevard Place with a pair of fine skates? |
31718 | Why, do n''t you know what a chin- chopper is?" |
31718 | Why, forsooth, should Ellen be giving her such advice? |
31718 | Why, she''d clean out your savings in two weeks, and then where would you be and where would your mother be and where would the farm be?" |
31718 | Why, what''ll you do if you throw up this fine position with Mr. Hawes? |
31718 | Will he be in his office tomorrow, around noon?" |
31718 | Will you promise me to come down and see the graduation? |
31718 | Wo n''t you sit down, Mr.--I mean, wo n''t you sit down, Harry? |
31718 | Would n''t that be fun?" |
31718 | Would n''t you just beat me?" |
31718 | Would she like a street- car ride tonight? |
31718 | Ye''ll niver take to water, will ye, baby dear?" |
31718 | You believe me, Rosie, do n''t you?" |
31718 | You believe me, do n''t you, Rosie?" |
31718 | You ca n''t guess what''s in it, can they, Geraldine? |
31718 | You can just suit yourself and no one''s going to say a word to you.... What kind of girl do you think you''d like? |
31718 | You did n''t really say that to the gentleman, did you?" |
31718 | You do n''t fight''em, Rosie, and call''em names, do you?" |
31718 | You do n''t mean to say, Rosie, you''ll let him come down on Thanksgiving without a word of warning?" |
31718 | You do n''t think his father''ll lick him, do you?" |
31718 | You do n''t want to be a mucker, do you?" |
31718 | You know Janet McFadden? |
31718 | You see it''s this way, Rosie: When a girl''s engaged she''s usually in love with the fella she''s engaged to, or why is she engaged to him? |
31718 | You see, Ma, Janet''s poor mother----""Ah, and is it that that''s troublin''you?" |
31718 | You wo n''t forget, will you? |
31718 | You wo n''t hear a sound out o''me, will she, baby darlint? |
31718 | You''ll forgive me, wo n''t you? |
31718 | You''ll take me home, wo n''t you? |
31718 | You''re company for one day at least, ai n''t she, Jamie? |
31718 | You''re going to let me have it now regular, are n''t you?" |
31718 | You''re not sick, are you, Jamie?" |
31718 | You''re not sick, are you? |
31718 | Your own poor da never talked that way to me, did you, Jamie dear? |
31718 | _ Who do you think you are?_ Where had Rosie heard those insulting words before? |
31718 | _ Who do you think you are?_ Where had Rosie heard those insulting words before? |
31718 | screamed Ellen,"are you going to let her meddle with my affairs like that? |